Search references for ROTEL TOURS. Phrases containing ROTEL TOURS
See searches and references containing ROTEL TOURS!ROTEL TOURS
Companies based in Bavaria
Rotel Tours is a tour operator that specializes in overlanding via "rolling hotels", custom built buses in which guests also sleep. The buses can sleep
Rotel_Tours
Austrian long-distance travelling pioneer, researcher and orientalist
– 1981: Group-travels (as concept creator and occasional tour guide) for Rotel Tours, tours in South Africa, Scandinavia, Iceland, Indonesia and South
Max_Reisch
Polarvagnen Anderstorps Werkstads AB, BilAtlas, Jula Boats Sweden, Mitsubishi, Rotel Tours Harald Ertl Gold Warsteiner BBS Kraftfahrzeugtechnik, Creole, Gustav
Formula One sponsorship liveries
Formula_One_sponsorship_liveries
Israeli cantor and performer (born 1951)
first wife, Tova Fisher, and had a son from his second wife Rotel Elia in June 2016. Rotel is his promoter and his agent. Fisher began cantorial studies
Dudu_Fisher
Village in Shropshire, England
in Domesday Rotelingehope, means the hope or valley of the people of Rotel, Rotel being the Saxon name from which the County of Rutland's name was derived
Ratlinghope
American audio equipment company
Center, it showcases audio products from McIntosh, Sonus faber, Pro-Ject, Rotel, and Sumiko. In addition to past celebrities such as Howard Hughes George
McIntosh_Laboratory
City in Switzerland
in addition to the cherry and the cherry liqueur cake, include the Zug 'Rötel', a fine lake charfish, found on many menus. The IG Culture Zug society
Zug
Swedish racing driver and television reporter
In mid 80s, Elgh began touring and sports car career. He was works driver with Dome Motorsport and drove 1984 European Touring Car Championship races
Eje_Elgh
Swedish racing driver
Championship in the same seasons. Olofsson won three consecutive Japanese Touring Car titles as a works Nissan driver and triumphed in the 1991 Spa 24 Hours
Anders_Olofsson
Hickman, Roger Creager, Joe Ely, Frontiers – the Journey Tribute Band, Rotel and the Hot Tomatoes, and Night Fever – The Bee Gees Tribute 2010 The B-52s
Wildflower! Arts and Music Festival
Wildflower!_Arts_and_Music_Festival
Hotel catering to motorists
are excluded from these establishments. (The Portuguese-language term "rotel" had brief usage in 1970s Rio de Janeiro, Brazil for a similar concept,
Motel
Digital radio broadcast technology
(discontinued) Onkyo Polk Audio Radiosophy (discontinued) Radio Shack (discontinued) Rotel Sangean Sony (discontinued) TEAC Visteon Yamaha Initially, portable HD receivers
HD_Radio
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
Boy/Male
American, Australian, Dutch, French, Netherlands, Swedish
Rock; Famous Landowner
Surname or Lastname
English
English : nickname for a cheerful person, from Middle English rote ‘glad’ (Old English rÅt).English : metonymic occupational name for a player on the rote, an early medieval stringed instrument (Middle English, Old French rote, of uncertain origin but apparently ultimately akin to Welsh crwth).Dutch : topographic name for someone who lived by a retting place (Dutch root, a derivative of ro(o)ten ‘to ret’, akin to modern English rot), a place where flax is soaked in tubs of water until the stems rot to release the linen fibers.
Surname or Lastname
English (West Midlands)
English (West Midlands) : habitational name from any of the places called Harthill, named with Old English heorot ‘hart’ + hyll ‘hill’. There are several places of this name, for example in Cheshire, Derbyshire, and South Yorkshire, but apparently none in the West Midlands. It is also possible that the surname represents a truncated derivative of Hartlebury in Worcestershire. This place name derives from the Old English personal name Heortla + Old English burh ‘fort’.German : Americanized spelling of Hartel or Härtel.
Boy/Male
Muslim
Flower
Biblical
the fuller's fountain; the well of searching
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim
Flower
Boy/Male
French American
Rock.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from the Anglo-Norman French personal name Rocel, a pet form of Roce (see Ross 3).Catalan : nickname for someone with red hair, from a diminutive of ros ‘red’.
Male
Yiddish
Pet form of Yiddish Mordche, MOTEL means "devotee of Marduk."Â
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a player on the rote (see Root 2).English : nickname for an unscrupulous person, from Old French ro(u)tier ‘robber’, ‘highwayman’, ‘footpad’.Dutch : nickname from Middle Dutch rut(t)er ‘freebooter’, ‘footpad’, cognate with 2. Compare Reuter 2.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived by a grove or thicket, Middle English grove, Old English grÄf.English (Huguenot) : Americanized spelling of the French surname Le Grou(x) or Le Greux (see Groulx).North German form of Grob.North German : habitational name from any of several places named Grove or Groven in Schleswig-Holstein, which derive their name from Middle Low Germany grÅve ‘ditch’, ‘channel’. In some cases the name is a Dutch or Low German form of Grube.Altered form of German Graf.The surnames Grove and Groves are common mainly in the West Midlands. A Huguenot family who acquired the name Grove are descended from a certain Isaac Le Greux or Grou(x) or his brother. They fled from Tours in France in the late 17th century and settled in Spitalfields, London. Their children were known as Grou(x) or Grove; their grandchildren also used the form Grew; but their great-grandchildren, born at the end of the 18th century, were universally Grove.
Surname or Lastname
English, Scottish, Irish, French, Dutch, German, Czech, Slovak, Spanish (MartÃn), Italian (Venice), etc.
English, Scottish, Irish, French, Dutch, German, Czech, Slovak, Spanish (MartÃn), Italian (Venice), etc. : from a personal name (Latin Martinus, a derivative of Mars, genitive Martis, the Roman god of fertility and war, whose name may derive ultimately from a root mar ‘gleam’). This was borne by a famous 4th-century saint, Martin of Tours, and consequently became extremely popular throughout Europe in the Middle Ages. As a North American surname, this form has absorbed many cognates from other European forms.English : habitational name from any of several places so called, principally in Hampshire, Lincolnshire, and Worcestershire, named in Old English as ‘settlement by a lake’ (from mere or mær ‘pool’, ‘lake’ + tÅ«n ‘settlement’) or as ‘settlement by a boundary’ (from (ge)mære ‘boundary’ + tÅ«n ‘settlement’). The place name has been charged from Marton under the influence of the personal name Martin.
Boy/Male
Australian, French
Famous Ruler
Female
Egyptian
, the mother of Sa-horset.
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Flower
Female
Swiss
, rose.
Girl/Female
Biblical
The fuller's fountain, the well of searching.
Male
Dutch
, the country's glory.
Female
Hebrew
(רï‹×ªÖ¶×) Hebrew unisex name derived from the word rethem, found in the bible, ROTEM means "juniper" or "broom plant," a shrub growing in the deserts of Arabia with yellowish flowers, and a bitter root which the poor were accustomed to eat.Â
Girl/Female
Swedish
Rose.
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
Girl/Female
Arabic, Islamic, Muslim
Blossom; Flower; Happiness
Girl/Female
English
Diminutive of any name begining with Christ-, for example Christahel, Christian, or Christopher.....
Boy/Male
German, Polish
Brave Traveller; Bold Voyager; Peace Bravery; Prepared Journey
Female
English
Pet form of English Rebecka, BECKY means "ensnarer."
Boy/Male
Hindu
Surname or Lastname
English
English : perhaps a habitational name from an unidentified place, the last element of which could be Old English dūn ‘hill’. Without early forms, it is impossible even to speculate what the first element might be. The surname is extremely common in Lancashire, especially in the Manchester area, where it was first recorded in the 14th century.
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Light of Truth
Girl/Female
Tamil
Priyaranjeny | பà¯à®°à¯€à®¯à®¾à®°à®¨à¯à®œà¯‡à®¨à¯à®¯Â
Loving
Girl/Female
German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Polish, Swedish
Happy; Cheerful; Joyful
Boy/Male
American, British, English, Jamaican
From the Thicket
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
ROTEL TOURS
imp. & p. p.
of Rote
n.
In France, the mansion or town residence of a person of rank or wealth.
n.
A public house; an inn; a hotel.
n.
A frequent repetition of forms of speech without attention to the meaning; mere repetition; as, to learn rules by rote.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Rote
a.
Alt. of Sotil
a.
Relating to wheels or to rotary motion; rotary.
n.
The little wheel of a spur, with sharp points.
n.
A house for entertaining strangers or travelers; an inn or public house, of the better class.
v. t.
To learn or repeat by rote.
v. t.
To insert a rowel, or roll of hair or silk, into (as the flesh of a horse).
n.
A little flat ring or wheel on horses' bits.
n.
same as Rostellum.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Rowel
imp. & p. p.
of Rowel
n.
Roaring, as of waves breaking upon the shore; rote. See Rote.
n.
A roll of hair, silk, etc., passed through the flesh of horses, answering to a seton in human surgery.
v. t.
To repeat by rote, as a parrot.