St Andrews, Gregory Place
Queens Gardens, St Andrews
5 Lamp Posts and the Bandstand, Dunoon
School Wynd, Paisley
Clydebank Town Hall
Colquhoun Square, Helensburgh
McMonagle's Floating Restaurant, Forth and Clyde C…
Man Working on a Lamp Post
Benches
River Leven
River Leven
River Leven in the Rain
Dumbarton Bridge over the River Leven
The Auld Tram
Underneath the Roadway
Elephant-themed Playpark
St Salvator's
Asian Connections Garden
Reflections of Dundee Garden
Reflections of Dundee Garden
Wellgate
Victoria 1838 Tartan
Leven Walkway
Upside Down Boat
Wee Cabin Cruiser
Clydeview
Silhouette of 'The Lookout Point"
River Leven and Dumbarton Bridge
Sandpoint Marina
'Sleeperz' Hotel and Entrance to Dundee Railway St…
Cycle Hub
Helensburgh Bus on Dumbarton Bridge
St Andrews Town Hall Old Entrance
Gregory Place
Dundee Tartan
Logies Lane, 2014
KFC
Bridge Control from under the Tay Road Bridge
'The Old Course Shop'
'The Open' Golf Shop
Side Gate, West Kirk
Hodge's Corner
Formerly the High Church
Bandstand
Dumbarton Quay
Dumbarton Bridge
Common Gull
Inner Basin and Lock 38, Forth and Clyde Canal, Bo…
Levengrove Park in the Snow
Writers' Museum, Edinburgh
The Glasgow coat of arms always shows the fish wit…
See also...
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Lampadaires et lanternes / Street lamps and lanterns.
Lampadaires et lanternes / Street lamps and lanterns.
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Scotland / Schottland / Écosse / Scotia / Caledonia
Scotland / Schottland / Écosse / Scotia / Caledonia
Keywords
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Pittenweem High Street
Pittenweem... is a fishing village and civil parish in Fife, on the east coast of Scotland. At the 2001 census, it had a population of 1,747. The name derives from Pictish and Scottish Gaelic. "Pit-" represents Pictish pett 'place, portion of land', and "-enweem" is Gaelic na h-Uaimh, 'of the Caves' in Gaelic, so "The Place of the Caves". The name is rendered Baile na h-Uaimh in modern Gaelic, with baile, 'town, settlement', substituted for the Pictish prefix. The cave in question is almost certainly St Fillan's cave, although there are many indentations along the rocky shores that could have influenced the name. Quoted from Wikipedia
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Bonne journée. Amitiés
Joe, Son of the Rock club has replied to Madeleine Defawes clubCheers, Rosa.
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