Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 8 of
8
with 100 triples per page.
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 accessdate "2009-08-13".
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 date "2002-02-09".
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 first "Isabel".
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 isCitedBy Culture_of_Yorkshire.
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 last "George".
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 newspaper The_Guardian.
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 page "F3".
- 51a20f19f231afe37e32391fdd813b4bd60ef83464e6fdaee68699d33b52e753 title "They've been companions to royalty and poachers, prized for their hunting skills and even used to lay underground cables. Now ferrets are being cast in a new role – as pets. And they're surprisingly good at that.".