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Vyse

Vyse may refer to:

  • Richard William Howard Vyse (1784-1853), British soldier, anthropologist and Egyptologist
  • Richard Vyse (1746-1825), British soldier, father of Richard William Howard Vyse
  • Vyse, main character in the console role-playing game Skies of Arcadia

Usage examples of "vyse".

We must see this Charles Vyse, certainly, but the idea seems fantastic.

Charles Vyse was in his office at twelve-thirty this morning, then it was not he who fired that shot in the garden of the Majestic Hotel.

Mr Vyse would see us now, he led us across the passage, tapped on a door and stood aside for us to pass in.

Mr Vyse, if I may ask, is there any chance of that property being in the market?

Well, there again we have the word of the observant Madame Croft that both Charles Vyse and Commander Challenger are in love with the young lady.

Now, if Charles Vyse felt that he were supplanted, would he be so powerfully affected that he would kill his cousin rather than let her become the wife of another man?

And now Charles Vyse, a final nod of the head, took his place at the head of the table, and Poirot slipped unobtrusively into a seat next to Lazarus.

I direct that all my funeral expenses should be paid and I appoint my cousin Charles Vyse as my executor.

Colonel Howard Vyse with the assistance of two civil engineers, John Perring and James Mash.

Ultimately Vyse sent the mysterious artefact, together with the certifications of Hill, Perring and Mash, to the British Museum.

Like Vyse, he had a theory that there was another entrance, and he believed that, with the proper combination of his favorite ingredients, he could find it.

Thanks Allysen Palmer, for my first fan letter, Merilyn Vyse, for offering to be my first fan club president, and to all at Orillia Smith-books.

When those intrepid but unscientific explorers, Perring and Vyse, explored the passages in 1839, they found only scraps of wood and baskets, and a few mummified bats, inside a wooden box.

Here the first European to break in had been a British colonel, Howard Vyse, who had entered the burial chamber in 1837.

Unfortunately, however, nobody had the opportunity to examine it because it had been lost at sea when the ship on which Vyse sent it to England had sunk off the coast of Spain.