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Examples
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Easter–Oct and Christmas/New Year; from £12 per pitch per night (1 adult), £4 per extra adult per night, £3 per child (under 16) per night, pre-erected tents from £20 per night, Gypsy caravans (sleeps up to 5) £80 per night; 01621 894112It's pretty hard to miss the Blorenge.
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And as poetic luck would have it, there's a Blorenge Bowl, virgin ground apparently about the size of a college football stadium.
Stop the presses ... Frank Wilson 2006
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With the discovery of Blorenge, the poetic ramifications seem endless and revolutionary at this point, and this may soon become mind boggling if there are any girls there who wear orange.
Stop the presses ... Frank Wilson 2006
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A little checking, and I found some pictures of Blorenge, a beautiful place: The Blorenge Mountain Photo Gallery.
Stop the presses ... Frank Wilson 2006
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To the north, the bold and diversified forms of the Craig, the Sugar Loaf, Skyrids, and Blorenge mountains, with the outlines of the Hatterals, perfect the scene in this direction; whilst the ever-varying and amphitheatrical boundary of this natural basin, may be traced over the Blaenavons,
Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845 Various
ry commented on the word Blorenge
Blorenge or sometimes The Blorenge (/ˈblɒrɨndʒ/; Welsh: Blorens) is a prominent hill which overlooks the valley of the River Usk in Monmouthshire, southeast Wales. It is situated in the southeastern corner of the Brecon Beacons National Park. The summit plateau reaches a height of 1,841 feet (561 m)
April 2, 2014
ruzuzu commented on the word Blorenge
Your comments amuse me, ry, but I have to be quick to catch them--wasn't this a mountain a minute ago?
April 2, 2014
ry commented on the word Blorenge
ce n’est pas une montagne
April 2, 2014
fbharjo commented on the word Blorenge
There is something about a mountain and a molehill herein contained! It is naranjo!
April 3, 2014