Coventry$95508$ - definizione. Che cos'è Coventry$95508$
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Cosa (chi) è Coventry$95508$ - definizione

ZIMBABWEAN SWIMMER
Kirsky Coventry; Kristy Coventry
  • Coventry in 2009

Coventry         
  • A 1972 [[Hillman Avenger]], produced in Coventry by Chrysler Competitions Department
  • Flèche]] (spire) on top of the new Coventry Cathedral in 1962.
  • Broadgate Square in Coventry
  • [[Coventry railway station]]
  • Coventry Canal Basin
  • The ruins of the old cathedral
  • center
  • cathedral]] and the remaining spire of the ruined Christ Church (right).
  • Coventry city centre being redeveloped in 1936 during modernisation
  • The Coventry city flag, showing Lady Godiva
  • Coventry precinct with spire of ruined cathedral in the background, part of the post-war redevelopment of the city centre
  • Two of Coventry's "three spires"
  • The Alan Berry building, Coventry University.
  • [[Godiva Festival]], a major event on the Coventry arts and culture calendar
  • Statue of [[Lady Godiva]]
  • The city centre at night, seen in April 2013
  • city walls]]
  • Millennium Square by night, showing the Time Zone Clock designed by Francoise Schein with the Whittle Arch soaring above
  • Market Way, 1964
  • CBS Arena]] in 2007, then called the Ricoh Arena.
  • [[St Mary's Guildhall]], dating from the 14th century; one of the most notable surviving medieval buildings in Coventry
  • Swanswell Gate, one of the remaining fragments of Coventry's city walls
  • The Council House, Coventry]]
  • Warwick Arts Centre in Warwick University Campus in the 1990s
  • Exhibits in Coventry Police Museum
  • The "Whittle Arch" outside the Transport Museum, named after Sir [[Frank Whittle]]
CITY IN THE WEST MIDLANDS IN ENGLAND, UK
Coventry, England; City of Coventry; Coventry (city); Metropolitan Borough of Coventry; Coventry (borough); Coventry City council; Coventry, United Kingdom; Cofantre; County Borough of Coventry; COVENTRY; Coventry, Warwickshire; Coventry, UK; West Orchards Shopping Centre; Church End, Coventry; Football in Coventry; Universities in Coventry; Education in Coventry
n. (esp. BE) to send to Coventry ('to ostracize')
Coventry         
  • A 1972 [[Hillman Avenger]], produced in Coventry by Chrysler Competitions Department
  • Flèche]] (spire) on top of the new Coventry Cathedral in 1962.
  • Broadgate Square in Coventry
  • [[Coventry railway station]]
  • Coventry Canal Basin
  • The ruins of the old cathedral
  • center
  • cathedral]] and the remaining spire of the ruined Christ Church (right).
  • Coventry city centre being redeveloped in 1936 during modernisation
  • The Coventry city flag, showing Lady Godiva
  • Coventry precinct with spire of ruined cathedral in the background, part of the post-war redevelopment of the city centre
  • Two of Coventry's "three spires"
  • The Alan Berry building, Coventry University.
  • [[Godiva Festival]], a major event on the Coventry arts and culture calendar
  • Statue of [[Lady Godiva]]
  • The city centre at night, seen in April 2013
  • city walls]]
  • Millennium Square by night, showing the Time Zone Clock designed by Francoise Schein with the Whittle Arch soaring above
  • Market Way, 1964
  • CBS Arena]] in 2007, then called the Ricoh Arena.
  • [[St Mary's Guildhall]], dating from the 14th century; one of the most notable surviving medieval buildings in Coventry
  • Swanswell Gate, one of the remaining fragments of Coventry's city walls
  • The Council House, Coventry]]
  • Warwick Arts Centre in Warwick University Campus in the 1990s
  • Exhibits in Coventry Police Museum
  • The "Whittle Arch" outside the Transport Museum, named after Sir [[Frank Whittle]]
CITY IN THE WEST MIDLANDS IN ENGLAND, UK
Coventry, England; City of Coventry; Coventry (city); Metropolitan Borough of Coventry; Coventry (borough); Coventry City council; Coventry, United Kingdom; Cofantre; County Borough of Coventry; COVENTRY; Coventry, Warwickshire; Coventry, UK; West Orchards Shopping Centre; Church End, Coventry; Football in Coventry; Universities in Coventry; Education in Coventry
¦ noun (in phr. send someone to Coventry) chiefly Brit. refuse to associate with or speak to someone.
Word History
The origins of the phrase send someone to Coventry, recorded since the 18th century, are uncertain. It is sometimes said to derive from the treatment suffered in the past by soldiers stationed in the west Midlands city of Coventry, who were unpopular with the townspeople. Alternatively, it may have arisen because Royalist prisoners were sent there during the English Civil War (1642-9): the city was held by Parliamentary forces and was thus unlikely to give the prisoners a warm welcome.
Coventry         
  • A 1972 [[Hillman Avenger]], produced in Coventry by Chrysler Competitions Department
  • Flèche]] (spire) on top of the new Coventry Cathedral in 1962.
  • Broadgate Square in Coventry
  • [[Coventry railway station]]
  • Coventry Canal Basin
  • The ruins of the old cathedral
  • center
  • cathedral]] and the remaining spire of the ruined Christ Church (right).
  • Coventry city centre being redeveloped in 1936 during modernisation
  • The Coventry city flag, showing Lady Godiva
  • Coventry precinct with spire of ruined cathedral in the background, part of the post-war redevelopment of the city centre
  • Two of Coventry's "three spires"
  • The Alan Berry building, Coventry University.
  • [[Godiva Festival]], a major event on the Coventry arts and culture calendar
  • Statue of [[Lady Godiva]]
  • The city centre at night, seen in April 2013
  • city walls]]
  • Millennium Square by night, showing the Time Zone Clock designed by Francoise Schein with the Whittle Arch soaring above
  • Market Way, 1964
  • CBS Arena]] in 2007, then called the Ricoh Arena.
  • [[St Mary's Guildhall]], dating from the 14th century; one of the most notable surviving medieval buildings in Coventry
  • Swanswell Gate, one of the remaining fragments of Coventry's city walls
  • The Council House, Coventry]]
  • Warwick Arts Centre in Warwick University Campus in the 1990s
  • Exhibits in Coventry Police Museum
  • The "Whittle Arch" outside the Transport Museum, named after Sir [[Frank Whittle]]
CITY IN THE WEST MIDLANDS IN ENGLAND, UK
Coventry, England; City of Coventry; Coventry (city); Metropolitan Borough of Coventry; Coventry (borough); Coventry City council; Coventry, United Kingdom; Cofantre; County Borough of Coventry; COVENTRY; Coventry, Warwickshire; Coventry, UK; West Orchards Shopping Centre; Church End, Coventry; Football in Coventry; Universities in Coventry; Education in Coventry
If people send you to Coventry, they avoid speaking to you whenever they meet you, as a way of punishing you for something that you have done. (BRIT)
PHRASE: V inflects

Wikipedia

Kirsty Coventry

Kirsty Leigh Coventry Seward (born 16 September 1983) is a Zimbabwean swimmer and politician currently serving as the Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation in the Cabinet of Zimbabwe since September 2018. A former Olympic swimmer and world record holder, she is the most decorated Olympian from Africa. She is a member of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and was elected the Chairperson of the IOC Athletes' Commission, the body that represents all Olympic athletes worldwide in early 2018.

Born in Harare, Coventry attended and swam competitively for Auburn University in Alabama, in the United States. At the 2004 Summer Olympics, in Athens, Greece, Coventry won three Olympic medals: a gold, a silver, and a bronze, while in the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing she won four medals: a gold and three silver. She was subsequently described by Paul Chingoka, head of the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee, as "our national treasure".

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe called her "a golden girl," and personally awarded her US$100,000 in cash for her 2008 Olympic performance. In 2016, Coventry retired from swimming after her fifth Olympics, having won the joint-most individual medals in women's swimming in Olympic history.