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1. King Arthur of Britain, the leader of the Knights of the Round Table in a European legend, is called "King Arthur: Prince on White Horse". Originally, King Arthur was an almost mythical figure that could not be verified, and the title "Prince Charming" may have been given to him by one of the countless literary works about him later.
However, the legendary King Arthur certainly had all the positive masculinity, but by no means the slightest characteristic of the feminine handsome guy that modern girls aspire to. Believe it or not, take a look at the Hollywood 2004 blockbuster "King Arthur", but it's just one of the processed legends.
2. King John of France from the Hundred Years' War between England and France. In 1337, King Philip VI of France tried to recover the territories of King Edward III of England in France, and the latter, in the name of the grandson of King Philip IV of France, claimed that he had more legitimate authority to inherit the French throne than the former. In 1356, the English captured King John II of France and forced France to sue for peace.
The first phase of the war came to an end. There is an account that the captive John rode a beautiful white horse, while King Edward III's son, the Black Prince, rode a small black horse (King John was mounted upon a beautiful white horse, and beside him rode the black prince on a little black pony).
3. From the love story of Prince Gear of Sweden in the Middle Ages in 1228 A.D., there is a book called "Her Prince Rode a White Horse!".: An Urban Feyerita)).
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It is not necessarily a prince who rides a white horse, and the following sentence reads as follows:
1. The one riding a white horse is not necessarily a prince, but it may also be a Tang monk.
2. The one who rides a white horse is not necessarily a prince, and the fleshy one with thorns is not necessarily a cactus.
3. The one who rides a white horse is not necessarily a prince, and the one who can fly is not necessarily an angel or a birdman.
4. It is not necessarily the prince who rides a white horse, and the groom who wears a suit.
5. It is not necessarily a prince who rides a white horse, and a broken love is not necessarily a painful state. 6. It is not necessarily a prince who rides a white horse, and it is not necessarily a star that twinkles in the sky.
7. It is not necessarily a prince who rides a white horse, and it is not necessarily a princess who wears a white wedding dress.
8. It is not necessarily a prince who rides a white horse, and it is not necessarily me who marries you and accompanies you for a lifetime.
9. The one riding a white horse is not necessarily a prince, it may be the emperor.
10. It is not necessarily the prince who rides a white horse, and the prince does not specify that he rides a white horse.
11. The one who rides a white horse is not necessarily a prince, but may also be a princess.
12. The one riding a white horse is not necessarily a prince, but it may also be **.
..There is no hard and fast requirement for this, it comes out according to the situation. Debang needs a point to erupt, seconds ADC use, and the prince is generally out of the meat suit. It depends on the situation of the game, the opposite camp, with the wind or against the wind, find out for yourself.
Because the United Kingdom is a constitutional monarchy, there is a king (or queen), and the son of the king (or queen) is a prince. The Prince of Wales is the Prince of Wales (a special title for the heir to the British throne), and the current Prince of Wales is Prince Charles, who has two sons, Prince William and Prince Harry.
The antonym of birth into death is: out of death into life. >>>More
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