| John Tuke - 1794 - 130 pages
...division between the two, and so continues as long as it retains its name ; this it loses about six mites below Boroughbridge, at the influx of an insignificant...which at last, in its turn, is lost in that of the Hnmber. The Ouse continues to be the boundary of the North Riding, dividing it from the West Riding... | |
| Thomas Wedge, Board of Agriculture (Great Britain) - 1794 - 476 pages
...retains its name; this it loses about six miles lx.low Boroughbridge, at the influx of an insignifieant stream, that gives to the great river Ure its own...which at last, in its turn, is lost in that of the Humbcr. The Ouse continues to be the boundary of the North Riding, dividing it from the West Riding... | |
| William Humphrey Marshall - 1808 - 602 pages
...Boroughbridge, at the influx of an insignificant stream, that gives to the great river Ure its own name of Oose, •which at last, in its turn, is lost in that of the H umber. The Ouse continues to be the boundary of the North Riding, dividing it from the West Riding,... | |
| Daniel Defoe - 1815 - 602 pages
...below Boroughbridge, at the influx of an insignificant stream, that gives to tlie groat river Eure its own name of Ouse: which at last, in its turn, is lost in that of Ihe Ilumber. The Uuse continues to be the boundary of the North Riding, dividing it from the West Riding... | |
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