C F Caunter - meaning and definition. What is C F Caunter
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is C F Caunter - definition

SCOTTISH FOOTBALL CLUB BASED IN ABERDEEN
Hermes F C; Hermes F. C.

C. F. Caunter         
BRITISH HISTORIAN
C.F. Caunter; Cyril Francis Caunter
Cyril Francis Caunter (22 March 1899 in Ilford, Essex – 10 April 1988), was a British aviation historian and author.
John Hobart Caunter         
  • ''The Romance of History. India'' (1872 edition, held by the British Library)
  • Eiz-ood-Deen and the Parsee's Daughter. Illustration from ''The Romance of History. India'' (1872 edition)
  • The start of Caunter's picaresque novel ''The Fellow Commoner'' (1836)
  • A volume of ''Tableaux pittoresques de l'Inde'', P.J. Auguste Urbain's French translation of ''The Oriental Annual''
  • John Hobart Caunter's coat of arms, as depicted in ''Caunter Family History'' by F. Lyde Caunter
BRITISH WRITER AND CLERIC
Hobart Caunter; J. Hobart Caunter
John Hobart Caunter (21 June 1792 – 14 November 1851) was an English cleric and writer. Serving briefly in India as a cadet, he entered the Church and was for 19 years the Incumbent Minister of Portland Chapel in Marylebone, London.
John Alan Lyde Caunter         
BRITISH GENERAL
J.A.L. Caunter; John Caunter
Brigadier John Alan Lyde Caunter (17 December 1889 – 20 April 1981) was a senior British Army officer and a pioneer shark angler off the British coast. He published an account of his escape from Germany as a prisoner of war in World War I.

Wikipedia

Hermes F.C.

Hermes Junior Football Club are a Scottish football club from Bridge of Don, an area of the city of Aberdeen. Founded in 1968 by pupils of Robert Gordon's College, the club initially played at amateur level before becoming members of the Scottish Junior Football Association in 1993. They currently play in the SJFA North Superleague and their home ground is Lochside Park.

The club are so named after a founder member saw an advert in a magazine for a Hermes 2000 typewriter.

The club finished as champions in 2011–12 season, winning the SJFA North Region Superleague title for the first time. Hermes set a new SJFA Superleague points record of 73 points during the championship winning season, the previous record being held by Formartine United. Hermes were undefeated at home and only lost one game all season. The top goalscorer for the season was Marek Madle.