A young and innocent martyr sacrrficed on the altar of political intrigue.
Charles Grey - British Army officer - died in 1870.
Charles Grey - British Army officer - was born in 1804.
<font color =grey>the british flag has 17 stripes on it</font color=grey> the British flag
definitely...grey in British English, although the preferred American spelling is gray
Edward Grey, 1st Viscount Grey of Fallodon, was the British Foreign Secretary in 1914. He was succeeded by Arthur Balfour in 1916.
Depends on what colors you like. It is an opinion. I like grey waaay better then green myself.
Elston Grey-Turner has written: 'History of the British Medical Association' -- subject(s): History, Medicine, British Medical Association
The colours of German and British uniform were grey and khaki respectively
gray is american, grey is the "english" (or british, whatever you want to call it)
Either gray or grey are correct spellings. Grey with an e is the spelling preferred by the British, where gray with the letter a is the preferred spelling by Americans.
Its all in a matter of your own opinion but after tasting Grey Goose to Svedka side by side. Grey Goose still carries more of that rubbing alcohol taste in it, and Svedka seems to not carry so much of that aftertaste... So in my opinion, Svedka is the better choice.
Earl Grey