Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Boyle Robert
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 106    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Boyle Robert:     more books (100)
  1. Robert Boyle: Trailblazer of Science (Sowers) by John Tiner, 1989-08-01
  2. Robert Boyle Founder of Modern Chemistry by Harry Sootin, 1962
  3. The Philosophy of Robert Boyle (Routledge Studies in Seventeenth Century Philosophy) by Peter R. Anstey, 2000-08-28
  4. The Hudson River: A Natural and Unnatural History (The Norton Library ; N 844) by Robert H. Boyle, 1979-04
  5. Robert Boyle: Pioneer Of Experimental Chemistry (Great Minds of Science) by Mary Gow, 2005-02
  6. Selected Philosophical Papers of Robert Boyle (Philosophy Classics) by Robert Boyle, 1980-02
  7. Robert Boyle (1627-91): Scrupulosity and Science by Michael Hunter, 2000-10-05
  8. Electrons & ether waves: being the twenty-third Robert Boyle lecture, on May, 1921 by William Henry Bragg, 2010-08-01
  9. The Gradual revelation of the gospel, from the time of man's apostacy: set forth and explain'd in twenty four sermons, preached in the Parish Church of ... Robert Boyle, Esq, in the years 1730, 1731, by William Berriman, 2010-09-04
  10. The growth of a crystal: being the eighteenth Robert Boyle lecture delivered before the Oxford University Junior Scientific Club, on the 20th of May, 1911 by Henry Alexander Miers, 2010-08-01
  11. Robert Boyle: A Biography [ 1914 ] by Flora Masson, 2009-08-10
  12. Remarks on the religious sentiments of learned and eminent laymen; viz. Sir Isaac Newton, Hon. Robert Boyle, Locke, Sir Matthew Hale, Addison, ... with occasional reflections on incredulity. by See Notes Multiple Contributors, 2010-06-10
  13. The voyages and adventures of Captain Robert Boyle, in several parts of the world. Intermixed with the story of Mrs Villars, an English lady, with whom he made his surprising escape from Barbary. by W. R. Chetwood, 2010-08-06
  14. Robert Boyle: A Biography (1914) by Flora Masson, 2010-09-10

21. Engineering Database
Boyle, Robert (162791). He will be forever known for that scientific law namedafter View Link Network for Boyle, Robert Search for boyle robert on or
http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/source/b/o/boyle robert/source.html
Boyle, Robert (1627-91)
He will be forever known for that scientific law named after him, Boyle's Law, a principle which he published in 1662.

Boyle’s law states:
The volume of a given mass of gas, the temperature being constant, varies inversely as the pressure; or, that the pressure and volume of a gas are inversely proportional.
See also: Boyles Gas Law
View Link Network for: Boyle, Robert
Search for Boyle Robert on or
Web www.diracdelta.co.uk
google_ad_client = "pub-9605428275898003";google_ad_width = 728;google_ad_height = 15;google_ad_format = "728x15_0ads_al_s";google_ad_channel ="9821813911";google_color_border = "CCCCCC";google_color_bg = "FFFFFF";google_color_link = "000000";google_color_url = "666666";google_color_text = "333333";

My Links:

google_ad_client = "pub-9605428275898003";google_ad_width = 160;google_ad_height = 600;google_ad_format = "160x600_as";google_ad_channel ="";google_color_border = "CCCCCC";google_color_bg = "FFFFFF";google_color_link = "000000";google_color_url = "666666";google_color_text = "333333"; Dirac Delta Consultants Limited

22. Atomos - L'Univers De La Science
Translate this page boyle robert. 2001/11/24 - par Inconnu Réagir face à ce texte Après des étudesà Eton, Robert Boyle reçoit à Genève une éducation très libérale et y
http://atomos.cssmi.qc.ca/article.php?id=41&se=3

23. Robert_Boyle
Stephen Shapin and Simon Schaffer, Leviathan and the AirPump. LawrencePrincipe, The Aspiring Adept Robert Boyle and His Alchemical Quest
http://copernicus.subdomain.de/Robert_Boyle
Suche:
Main Page
The Honourable '''Robert Boyle''' ( January 25 December 30 ) was an Irish natural philosopher , noted for his work in physics and chemistry . Although his research and personal philosophy clearly has its roots in the alchemical tradition, he is largely regarded today as the first modern chemist and among his works ''The Sceptical Chemist'' is seen as a cornerstone book in the field of chemistry.
Early years
He was born at Lismore Castle , in the province of Munster Ireland , as the seventh son and fourteenth child of Richard Boyle , the "Great Earl of Cork ". While still a child he learned to speak Latin and French , and he was only eight years old when he was sent to Eton College , of which his father's friend, Sir Henry Wotton , was then provost. After spending over three years at the college, he went to travel abroad with a French tutor. Nearly two years were passed in Geneva ; visiting Italy in 1641, he remained during the winter of that year in Florence , studying the "paradoxes of the great star-gazer" Galileo Galilei , who died within a league (3 miles) of the city early in
Middle years
Returning to England in he found that his father was dead and had left him the manor of Stalbridge in Dorset , together with estates in Ireland . From that time he gave up his life to study and scientific research, and soon took a prominent place in the band of inquirers, known as the "

24. :: Dottor Ingegno ::
boyle robert Bayes Thomas Taylor Brook Kelvin William Thomson
http://www.universitor.it/leggiarticolo.php?a=1&sez=42&art=656

25. Boyle
Robert Boyle, an Irishborn English scientist, was an early proponent of thescientific method and a founder of modern chemistry.
http://www.newlisbon.k12.wi.us/physicists/boyle.html
Robert Boyle
Robert Boyle, an Irish-born English scientist, was an early proponent of the scientific method and a founder of modern chemistry. After his education in Geneva, Switzerland, Boyle settled in England and devoted himself to scientific research. He strongly beleived in "the necessitity of objective observation and verifiable laboratory experiments" in science, which is why he is known as a founder of the modern scientific method. Boyle was also the first chemist to isolate and collect a gas. Through his studies, he formulated a law of physics which states that if temperature is held constant, the pressure of a gas is inversely proportional to its volume (Boyle's Law). In the field of chemistry, Boyle observed that air is absorbed in the process of combustion and that metals gain weight when they oxidize. He also recognized the difference between a compound and a mixture and formulated his atomic theory of matter on the basis of his laboratory experiments. In The Sceptical Chemist (1661), Boyle attacked Aristotle's theory that four elements-earth, air, fire, and water-compose all matter. Boyle's theory was that tiny particles of primary matter combine in various ways to form what he called corpuscles, and that all observable reactions resulted from the motion and structure of the corpuscles.

26. Robert Boyle
Entry from the Stanford Encyclopedia by J. J. McIntosh, University of Calgary.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/boyle/
version history
HOW TO CITE

THIS ENTRY
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
A ... Z
This document uses XHTML/Unicode to format the display. If you think special symbols are not displaying correctly, see our guide Displaying Special Characters last substantive content change
JAN
The Encyclopedia Now Needs Your Support

Please Read How You Can Help Keep the Encyclopedia Free
Robert Boyle
exactly Boyle was a corpuscularian, a term he employed to paper over the differences between believers in a vacuum, and believers in a plenum, given that both of them agreed that the explanation of natural occurrences should be solely in terms of particles of matter, their motion and interaction. Boyle consistently refused to pronounce on the question of whether these minima naturalia should be considered atoms , in the strict sense of that term, or not. Even a metaphysical non-corpuscularian such as Leibniz agreed with Boyle in practical terms. "However much I agree with the Scholastics in this general and, so to speak, metaphysical explanation of the principles of bodies," he wrote to Arnauld in July 1686, "I am as corpuscular as one can be in the explanation of particular phenomena, and it is saying nothing to allege that they have forms or qualities" (Gerhardt 1875, 2:58, trans. Mason 1967). Boyle's scientific range was wide. Besides his well known work in mechanics, medicine, hydrodynamics and a wide variety of experiments with his vacuum pump, he was interested both theoretically and practically in alchemy (see Principe 1998), where his interest seems to have been fueled more by his constant desire to acquire knowledge of God and the world than by any desire for riches. He "cultivated Chymistry with a disinterested mind," seeking the improvement of his own knowledge, "

27. Matematicos
Matem¡tico irland©s (1627 1691).
http://www.mat.usach.cl/histmat/html/boyl.html
Galileo

Hooke

Se le denominó como el "Padre de la Química moderna". Fue el primero en emplear el término "Análisis Químico" en su actual significado. Es famosa su ley:
"A temperaturas iguales, los volúmenes de los gases están en razón inversa a la presión".
Newton

28. Robert Boyle's Account Of A Degredation Of Gold
Electronic version of robert boyle's alchemical work of 1678.
http://www.levity.com/alchemy/boyle.html
Robert Boyle's Account of a Degredation of Gold
This is an interesting piece by Robert Boyle in the form of allegorical discourse about the possibility of alchemical transmutation. It was first published under the title Of a Degradation of Gold made by an anti-elixir: a strange chymical narrative. London, 1678. This book is now extremely rare. The text below was transcribed for me by Justin von Bujdoss from the second edition, issued in London in 1739.
Back to transmutations
AN
HISTORICAL ACCOUNT
OF THE
DEGREDATION
OF
GOLD
BY AN
ANTI-ELIXIR.
The Novelty of this Preamble having much suprised the Auditory, at length, Simplicius, with a disdainful Smile, told Pyrophilus: "That the Company would have much thanked him if he could have assured them, That he had seen another Metal exalted into Gold; but, that to find a Way of spoiling Gold, was not only a useless Discovery, but a prejudicial Practice." Pyrophilus having at this part of his Discourse made a short pawse to take a breath, Crattippus took occasion from his silence to say to him, " I presume, Pyrophilus, I shall be disavowed by very few of these Gentlemen, if I tell you that the company is impatient to hear the Narrative of your Experiment, and that if it do so much as probably make out the particulars you have been mentioning, you will in likelyhood perswade most of them, and will certainly oblige them all. I shall therefore on their behalf as well as my own, sollicite you to hasten to the Historical part of a Discourse that is so like to gratifie our Curiosity."

29. Boyle
Biography of robert boyle (16271691) robert boyle was still living in Genevawhen his father died. In the summer of 1644 he sold some jewellery and
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Boyle.html
Robert Boyle
Born: 25 Jan 1627 in Lismore, County Waterford, Ireland
Died: 30 Dec 1691 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see eight larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Version for printing
Robert Boyle was born into a Protestant family. His father was Richard Boyle, Earl of Cork, who had left England in 1588 at the age of 22 and gone to Ireland. Appointed clerk of the council of Munster by Elizabeth I in 1600, he bought Sir Walter Raleigh's estates in the counties of Cork, Waterford, and Tipperary two years later. Robert's mother, Catherine Fenton, was Richard Boyle's second wife, his first having died within a year of the birth of their first child. Robert was the seventh son (and fourteenth child) of his parents fifteen children (twelve of the fifteen survived childhood). Richard Boyle was in his 60s and Catherine Boyle in her 40s when Robert was born. Of his father Robert would later write [12]:- He, by God's blessing on his prosperous industry, from very inconsiderable beginnings, built so plentiful and so eminent a fortune, that his prosperity has found many admirers, but few parallels.

30. Boyle
Biography from the MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive.
http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Boyle.html
Robert Boyle
Born: 25 Jan 1627 in Lismore, County Waterford, Ireland
Died: 30 Dec 1691 in London, England
Click the picture above
to see eight larger pictures Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
Version for printing
Robert Boyle was born into a Protestant family. His father was Richard Boyle, Earl of Cork, who had left England in 1588 at the age of 22 and gone to Ireland. Appointed clerk of the council of Munster by Elizabeth I in 1600, he bought Sir Walter Raleigh's estates in the counties of Cork, Waterford, and Tipperary two years later. Robert's mother, Catherine Fenton, was Richard Boyle's second wife, his first having died within a year of the birth of their first child. Robert was the seventh son (and fourteenth child) of his parents fifteen children (twelve of the fifteen survived childhood). Richard Boyle was in his 60s and Catherine Boyle in her 40s when Robert was born. Of his father Robert would later write [12]:- He, by God's blessing on his prosperous industry, from very inconsiderable beginnings, built so plentiful and so eminent a fortune, that his prosperity has found many admirers, but few parallels.

31. Boyle, Robert (1627-1691) -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Scientific Biography
boyle, robert (16271691) boyle also tried to purify chemicals to obtainreproducible reactions. He was a vocal proponent of the mechanical philosophy
http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/biography/Boyle.html
Branch of Science Chemists Nationality English
Boyle, Robert (1627-1691)

English chemist who, for his combination of iatrochemical and alchemical traditions, is usually considered the father of chemistry. He demonstrated that chemistry is worth studying in and of itself, used rigorous experimental and quantitative methods, and gave the first modern definition of a chemical element. Boyle also tried to purify chemicals to obtain reproducible reactions. He was a vocal proponent of the mechanical philosophy proposed by Descartes to explain and quantify the physical properties and interactions of material substances. Nevertheless, he did not believe in the physical reality of atoms. He also performed numerous investigations with an air pump, and noted that the mercury fell as air was pumped out. He also observed that pumping the air out of a container would extinguish a flame and kill small animals placed inside, and well as causing the level of a barometer to drop. He presented Boyle's law which states that pressure varies inversely as volume at constant temperature although he was not the original discoverer. His work

32. Robert Boyle
Thoemmes Continuum publishes primary sources and reference works in the Historyof Ideas for the academic community.
http://www.thoemmes.com/dictionaries/boyle.htm
Dictionary of Seventeenth-Century British Philosophers
BOYLE, Robert (1627–96)
Hooke as his assistant There he did most of his experimental work until 1668 when he went to live in London with his sister Lady Ranelagh. He was made an honorary Doctor of Medicine of Oxford in 1688. He was offered the provostship of Eton and the presidency of the Royal Society, both of which he refused, the first because he refused to take holy orders, the second because he would not take the required oath. In his autobiographical account ( Works , vol. 1, pp. xxi–xxvi) he reflects on his noble birth that ‘being born heir to a great family is but a glittering kind of slavery’ and ‘is ever an impediment to the knowledge of many retired truths, that cannot be attained without familiarity with meaner persons’. He indeed developed a keen interest in the work of artisans because they tend to know more than anyone else about the materials of their trades. He makes a general remark about religious beliefs that ‘though we cannot always give a reason for what we believe, we should ever be able to give a reason why we believe it’, which is surely a precept that guided his attitude to natural philosophy as well.

33. Boyle, Robert. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
boyle, robert. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 200105.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/bo/Boyle-Rob.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Boyle, Robert

34. Boyle Nova Scotia
Descendants of Dougald robert boyle (b.1847), married Mary Ann Tyrrell.
http://www.angelfire.com/folk/helenasfolks/
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
Search: Lycos Angelfire Dukes of Hazzard Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next Mabou and West Arichat Cape Breton, Nova Scotia
Dougald Robert Boyle
Mabou to West Arichat Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada PATIENTLY WAIT FOR THE 'SOUND BYTE' AND YOU WILL RECEIVE AN INVITATION TO THE SITE FROM D.R. BOYLE'S GRANDCHILD MARJORIE CELEBRATING HER 91ST BIRTHDAY ON THE 25TH OF JULY 2005. This is an early 1940's photo of Marjorie Doyle MacGillivray, grandchild of D.R. Boyle. Meet the daughters of Dougald Robert Boyle and his wife Mary (Tyrrell) Boyle of West Arichat: Upper Row: Frances, Catherine (my grandmother) and Lucy Front Row: Mary Belle and Cecilia Christina and her mother Debbie, are the great grandchild and grandchild, respectively, of Dougald's daughter Mary Belle and they too welcome you to the site in 2005. Christina and Debbie live in the United States. Dougald is Debbie's G Grandfather and Christina's GG Grandfather. From the United States Deryn and Donovan, two of the GGrandchildren of Dougald's daughter Lucy welcome you to the site in 2005.

35. ROBERT BOYLE
In 1680, robert boyle was elected president of the Royal Society, but declinedthe honor robert boyle has been deservedly called a Mighty Chemist .
http://www.woodrow.org/teachers/chemistry/institutes/1992/Boyle.html
ROBERT BOYLE: MIGHTY CHEMIST
Among the many contenders for the title of " Father of Modern Chemistry " is Robert Boyle (January 25, 1627 - December 30, 1691). Boyle was the first prominent scientist to perform controlled experiments and to publish his work with elaborate details concerning procedure, apparatus and observations. He assembled what we would today call a "research group", developed a key piece of apparatus - the vacuum pump, was instrumental in founding the Royal Society, and deserves at least partial credit for the famous gas law which bears his name. Boyle was born in Ireland. As the youngest of fourteen children of the wealthiest man in the British Isles, Boyle's opportunities were almost unlimited. However, while still in adolescence, he chose the pseudonym Philaretus (Lover of Truth) and a life of scientific inquiry seemed almost inevitable. He was educated in the finest possible manner of this day, first studying at Eton and later travelling the Continent with a tutor and his older brother Francis. He learned philosophy, religion, languages, mathematics, and - perhaps most significantly - the new physics of Bacon, Descartes, and Galileo. The physical scientists and their new theories concerning air and vacuum, the movement of planets, and the circulation of blood were to sway his thinking much more than the alchemists. Boyle published copiously on topics ranging across several fields of science, philosophy, and theology. His first major scientific report

36. Burlington.html
robert Viau outlines the influences on the NeoPalladian School dominated by boyle, and provides images of Chiswick House and gardens, including temple follies and a Palladian bridge.
http://www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu/~rviau/ids/Artworks/burlington.html
Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington
*See Chiswick Garden Links Below* Richard Boyle, Earl of Burlington, emerged as the leader of the second triumvirate to dominate English architecture in the eighteenth century. Walpole, in his Anecdotes of Painting, described Boyle as "the Apollo of Arts" and Kent as his "proper priest." He was a close friend of Alexander Pope, whose "Epistle to Burlington" acknowledges his great taste in both architecture and landscape design. The Neo-Palladian School dominated by Boyle was guided by three masters:
  • Vitruvius, the Roman architect and military engineer of Augustus' time, was the author of the only ancient treatise on architecture to have survived. Vitruvius laid down proportions and taught correct use of the classical orders.
  • Andrea Palladio (1518-70) of Vincenza studied Vitruvius and existing architecture in Italy and wrote the book which would dominate neoclassical architecture for centuries: I Quattro libri dell'architettura The Four Books of Architecture (1570). Palladio's detailed drawings were directly incorporated into the plans of the Neo-Palladians.

37. Welcome To The Homepage Of The Robert Boyle Project
Website on life and work, with online newsletter on boyle Studies, at Birkbeck College, University of London.
http://www.bbk.ac.uk/Boyle/
Welcome to the Homepage of the Robert Boyle Project based at Birkbeck College, University of London Director: Professor Michael Hunter William Faithorne's engraved portrait of Boyle, with his air-pump in the background, 1664 (Sutherland Collection, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford) Michael Hunter

38. Boyle, Robert
robert boyle, AngloIrish Scientists. boyle, robert. robert boyle was born to anaffluent English aristocratic family on January 25 1627,
http://library.thinkquest.org/12596/bio_boyles.html
[ Main ] [ Sections ]
Robert Boyle, Anglo-Irish Scientists Boyle, Robert Robert Boyle was born to an affluent English aristocratic family on January 25 1627, and died on December 30, 1691. Boyle attended school and received a conventional gentleman's education. Boyle was a founder and influential fellow of the Royal Society, was continuously active in scientific affairs, and wrote prolifically on science, philosophy, and theology. One of Boyle's first publications was on the physical properties of air, from which he derived his law that the volume of a given gas varies inversely as the pressure of that gas. Boyle proved this through experimentation. Because of this he was convinced that experimentation was an essential part of scientific proof. Team # 12596 [ Main ] [ Sections ]

39. SCETI: Science: Boyle's Sceptical Chymist (1661)
Digital facsimile of robert boyle's Sceptical Chymist (1661).
http://oldsite.library.upenn.edu/etext/collections/science/boyle/chymist/
Robert Boyle's Sceptical chymist
Physical description: Held by: Department of Special Collections, Van Pelt Library, University of Pennsylvania [call number: Van Pelt Library Special Collections E. F. Smith Collection Boyle 33] Facsimile note: The pages of the text appear at approximately twice the size of the original. Their exact size will vary with monitors. They have been adjusted for clarity and visibility. No other alterations or enhancements have been made. These adjustments may occasionally result in color and brightness variations which exaggerate those of the original. Note: there are several errors in pagination in the printed edition reproduced here. Mis-numbered and out-of-sequence pages have been rearranged in logical order for this facsimile. The reader should also note that some material was omitted between pages 187 and page 188; this material was placed by the printer at the end of the volume, beginning on page 437.
Table of Contents
[an error occurred while processing this directive] Last update: Thursday, 22-Apr-1999 09:48:16 EDT

40. Robert Boyle
boyle, robert (16271691), English natural philosopher and one of the foundersof modern chemistry. boyle is best remembered for boyle s law, a physical law
http://library.thinkquest.org/C005358/boyle.htm
INTRODUCTION Boyle, Robert (1627-1691), English natural philosopher and one of the founders of modern chemistry. Boyle is best remembered for Boyle's law, a physical law that explains how the pressure and volume of a gas are related. He was instrumental in the founding of the Royal Society, a British organization dedicated to the advancement of the sciences. Boyle was also a pioneer in the use of experiments and the scientific method to test his theories. BOYLE'S LIFE Boyle was born in Lismore Castle in Lismore, Ireland. His father was Richard Boyle, who was the first earl of Cork. Robert learned to speak French and Latin as a child and went to Eton College in England at the early age of eight. BOYLE'S WORK Boyle carried out his most active research while he lived in Oxford. Much of his research dealt with the behavior of gases, including the earth's atmosphere. By careful experiments, he established Boyle's law. Boyle's law states that the volume of a given amount of gas varies inversely with its pressure, if temperature is constant. This means that at a constant temperature, the pressure of a gas will increase as the volume of the gas is decreased, and vice versa. Boyle determined the density of air in the earth's atmosphere and pointed out that the weight of objects varies with changes in atmospheric pressure. He compared the lower layers of the earth's atmosphere to a number of sponges or small springs that the weight of the layers above compresses. In 1660 Boyle published these findings in a book entitled

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 106    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter