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The Cambridge Learner Corpus (CLC) is a collection of exam scripts written by students learning English, built in collaboration with Cambridge English Language Assessment. The CLC contains scripts from over 180,000 students, from around 200 countries, speaking 138 different first languages and is growing all the time. [ 3 ]
The guild of Corpus Christi was founded in Cambridge in 1349 by William Horwode, Henry de Tangmere, and John Hardy [8] in response to the Black Death. [9] They determined to found a new college in the University of Cambridge, the sixth in the University's history. [8]
The Corpus Clock at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. The Corpus Clock, also known as the Grasshopper clock, is a large sculptural clock at street level on the outside of the Taylor Library at Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge, in the United Kingdom, at the junction of Bene't Street and Trumpington Street, looking out over King's Parade.
The manuscript of the Corpus Glossary, Cambridge Corpus Christi College, 144, dates to the 8th century. [2] [3] The manuscript in fact contains two glossaries, the first of which is short, and the second of which (fols. 4–64v, to which the name 'Corpus Glossary' usually refers) is much longer.
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 178 (CCCC 178) is an English manuscript in the library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.The codex consists of two parts that may have been together since the thirteenth century.
The West Saxon Genealogical Regnal List on folio 1r of Cambridge Corpus Christi College MS 173 (also known as the Parker Chronicle). The West Saxon Genealogical Regnal List (also known as the West Saxon Regnal Table, West Saxon Regnal List, and Genealogical Preface to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) is the name given in modern scholarship to a list of West-Saxon kings (which has no title in its ...
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 139 is a northern English manuscript compiled in c. 1170. Apart from preliminary additions (i + ii), it contains two separate volumes, comprising 180 folios in total.
Cambridge, Corpus Christi College, MS 303 (CCCC 303) is a twelfth-century English manuscript in the library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. The codex consists mostly of homilies, most of which derive from Ælfric of Eynsham ' s Catholic Homilies. The manuscript is especially notable since it contains part of Ælfric's Judith.