Top 10 similar words or synonyms for wirian

illecebrosum    0.725212

sabahya    0.715831

fplnsptpa    0.715619

whayw    0.714480

opthalmica    0.711392

prowozekii    0.709788

ciono    0.709666

fplnsptpna    0.709294

escgreecej    0.709232

escspainj    0.709227

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for wirian

Article Example
Martin Sharp Sharp inherited the heritage-listed house "Wirian", in Victoria Road, Bellevue Hill, Sydney, in 1978. The house had been bought by Sharp's grandfather, Stuart Douglas Ritchie, a merchant, in 1937 for 20,000 pounds. Sharp lived there until he died from emphysema on 1 December 2013, at the age of 71.
HMAS AE1 In February 2007, a new effort to locate the submarine was mounted by the RAN, when the survey ships and attempted to locate the submarine off East New Britain. "Benalla" located an object on Wirian Reef of the appropriate dimensions using sonar on 1 March, but was unable to verify the nature of the object due to a damaged magnetometer. The minehunter was sent to investigate the object further in late 2007. Sonar and remotely-operated vehicle (ROV) imagery of the object revealed shape and dimensions similar to the submarine, but subsequent analysis by the Defence Science and Technology Organisation identified the object as a rock formation.
HMAS AE1 Foster had continued archive research into "AE1"s disappearance, supplemented with visits to Rabaul and nearby islands to see if references to the submarine appeared in any community's oral histories. By 2002, he was focused on the waters off Mioko Island in the Duke of York Islands group: a priest from a Catholic mission had claimed that members of the community had spotted a wrecked submarine on Wirian Reef while diving for shells. Attempts to dive the reported site of the wreck in 2002 and early 2003 were unsuccessful: the former called off due to high shark presence, the latter expedition also hampered by shark activity, but finding no wreck at the claimed location. A third expedition in November 2003, supported by the Maritime Museum of Western Australia and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, conducted searches off Mioko and nearby islands, again with no success. Further oral evidence supporting the wreck of "AE1" being off Mioko was learned during one of the 2003 expeditions: Foster discovered that the Tolai people had a legend of a "devil fish" appearing offshore on the day that "AE1" disappeared.