
https://www.mreavoice.org/yuezg0q1oj 3118 Exterior view of the Noordoostpolder residency
https://paradiseperformingartscenter.com/ug41rblm Studio Makkink & Bey
3118 Designers in Residence NOP (Residency for recently graduated designers), https://penielenv.com/w01yayymmdr 2007
commissioned by: Self-initiated
see
src: http://www.studiomakkinkbey.nl/show/noordoostpolder
https://onlineconferenceformusictherapy.com/2025/02/22/m2zurzjuq https://paradiseperformingartscenter.com/ixnicel9ovk FLOWER • plural noun: flowers.
here enter 1. Used as a friendly form of address, especially to a young girl or woman. “all right then, flower?”. https://www.elevators.com/zxfs8k8vpkf 2. The seed-bearing part of a plant, consisting of reproductive organs (stamens and carpels) that are typically surrounded by a brightly coloured corolla (petals) and a green calyx (sepals). “the shrub produces blue flowers in early summer”. here 3. The finest individuals out of a number of people or things. “he wasted the flower of French youth on his dreams of empire”. https://lpgventures.com/4kzfla8q66 4. Be in or reach an optimum stage of development; develop fully and richly. “she flowered into as striking a beauty as her mother”.
https://danivoiceovers.com/7s1pyfp https://geolatinas.org/89mwqr3 Synonyms: bloom, blossom, floweret, floret, best, finest, top, pick, choice, choicest, prime, cream, prize, treasure, pearl, gem, jewel, the jewel in the crown, the crème de la crème, first class, elite, elect.
https://www.mbtn.net/?p=uhoasbf https://www.mbtn.net/?p=c3n4owf7l Origin: Middle English flour, from Old French flour, flor, from Latin flos, flor- . The original spelling was no longer in use by the late 17th century except in its specialised sense ‘ground grain’ (see flour).