·e g - meaning and definition. What is ·e g
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What (who) is ·e g - definition

ENGLISH ARCHITECT (1823-1895)
Edward Paley; List of works by E. G. Paley; E. G. Paley; E G Paley
  • alt=A stone church seen from the south-west with a large battlemented tower
  • alt=Part of a three-storey building with a tower surmounted by a Mansard roof
  • alt=A stone church seen from the west with a broad battlemented tower
  • alt=A stone Gothic style church with a tall steeple

G. E. Berrios         
PERUVIAN PSYCHIATRIST
G.E. Berrios; G E Berrios; GE Berrios
Germán Elías Berríos FMedSci, FRCPsych (17 April 1940) is a professor of Psychiatry at Cambridge University in the United Kingdom.
R. E. G. Davies         
BRITISH WRITER
R E G Davies; REG Davies; R.E.G. Davies; Ronald Edward George Davies; Davies, R.E.G.; Davies, R. E. G.; Paladwr Press
Ronald Edward George Davies (3 July 1921 – 30 July 2011) was an English specialist in airline and air transport history, and commercial aviation economic research.
W. E. G. Louw         
SOUTH AFRICAN POET
W.E.G. Louw; W E G Louw; WEG Louw
William Ewart Gladstone Louw (31 May 1913 in Sutherland, formerly Cape Province, now Northern Cape Province in South Africa – 24 April 1980 in Stellenbosch, Western Cape Province, South Africa), was an Afrikaner poet and is in the main known to the literary world merely as W.E.

Wikipedia

Edward Graham Paley

Edward Graham Paley, usually known as E. G. Paley (3 September 1823 – 23 January 1895), was an English architect who practised in Lancaster, Lancashire, in the second half of the 19th century. After leaving school in 1838, he went to Lancaster to become a pupil of Edmund Sharpe, and in 1845 he joined Sharpe as a partner. Sharpe retired from the practice in 1851, leaving Paley as the sole principal. In 1868 Hubert Austin joined him as a partner, and in 1886 Paley's son Henry (who was usually known as Harry) also became a partner. This partnership continued until Edward Paley's death in 1895.

Paley's major work was the design of new churches, but he also rebuilt, restored, and made additions and alterations to existing churches. His major new ecclesiastical design was that of St Peter's Church, Lancaster, which became Lancaster Cathedral. He also carried out secular commissions, mainly on country houses in the north-west of England. His largest and most important secular work was the Royal Albert Asylum in Lancaster. When designing churches, Paley mainly used the Gothic Revival style, but in his secular works he employed a greater variety of styles, including Tudor Revival and Scottish Baronial as well as Gothic Revival.

Paley played little part in the political life of Lancaster, but he was involved with cultural events and sports in the town. His interests included music and archaeology, and he was involved in archery and rowing. In addition to designing the Royal Albert Asylum, he served on its committee, as well as being on the committees of local schools and the Mechanics' Institute. His work tended to be eclipsed in the later part of his career by Austin, and Paley is regarded as having been a competent architect, rather than a great one.

Pronunciation examples for ·e g
1. The name "Abegg" is actually A-B-E-G-G,
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2. N-E-G-R, we’re gonna have to riot now aren’t we?
How to Be Black _ Baratunde Thurston _ Talks at Google
Examples of use of ·e g
1. He seems to have caught the New Labour ability to see sleaze and corruption in other people but not in himself. – Mr E G Thompson, Bexleyheath England View all Add your comment Name: Your email address will not be publishedEmail: Town and country: Terms and conditionsYour comment: make text area biggerYou have characters left.
2. The EU costs us a fortune and gives us nothing we didn‘t have before when we traded with other Commonwealth countries many of whom were dumped on Britains entry into the EU. – E G, St Albans, England This is going to be another tax for the UK citizens, which no other EU country will bother about.
3. She is the only person talking sense about this immigration issue and most of what she suggests could be easily implemented today and not in ten years time. – E G, St Albans, England ‘It‘s only words,and words are all I have.....‘ so the Bee Gee‘s song goes.
4. The proposal calls for students in four–year courses to graduate within six years of matriculation, while in schools requiring longer attendance (e g. five years in Technical University departments and six years for medical schools) students will be given an extra three years to graduate.