Find the word definition

Crossword clues for animas

Gazetteer
Noxon, MT -- U.S. Census Designated Place in Montana
Population (2000): 230
Housing Units (2000): 121
Land area (2000): 1.255195 sq. miles (3.250941 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 1.255195 sq. miles (3.250941 sq. km)
FIPS code: 54925
Located within: Montana (MT), FIPS 30
Location: 47.992840 N, 115.773149 W
ZIP Codes (1990): 59853
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Noxon, MT
Noxon
Redmon, IL -- U.S. village in Illinois
Population (2000): 199
Housing Units (2000): 94
Land area (2000): 0.147756 sq. miles (0.382685 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.147756 sq. miles (0.382685 sq. km)
FIPS code: 63069
Located within: Illinois (IL), FIPS 17
Location: 39.645165 N, 87.862367 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Redmon, IL
Redmon
Animas, PR -- U.S. comunidad in Puerto Rico
Population (2000): 1450
Housing Units (2000): 575
Land area (2000): 0.234002 sq. miles (0.606062 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 0.234002 sq. miles (0.606062 sq. km)
FIPS code: 03024
Located within: Puerto Rico (PR), FIPS 72
Location: 18.443708 N, 66.636104 W
ZIP Codes (1990):
Note: some ZIP codes may be omitted esp. for suburbs.
Headwords:
Animas, PR
Animas
Wikipedia
Telefomin

Telefomin is a station town on the border of Sandaun and Western Provinces in Papua New Guinea. The town started during the Second World War after Mick Leahy was assigned to engineer an air-strip in 1944 for the United States for use against the Imperial Japanese Army forces based in New Guinea.

The Sepik River runs west-east south of the town. The Baptist Mission of Telefomin contains a notable museum and fossils that have been found in the area. The Telefomin peoples are noted for their use of huge conical masks in healing rituals and traditionally have carved designs onto tall boards for the entrances of their houses.

In 1953 four police were killed by tribesman in the Telefomin Incident.

Saltbush

Saltbush can refer to:

  • Atriplex, is distributed nearly worldwide from subtropical to temperate and to subarctic regions. Most species rich are Australia, North America, South America and Eurasia. Many species are halophytes and are adapted to dry environments with salty soils.
  • Certain members of genus Chenopodium, including:
    • Chenopodium hastatum, commonly called berry saltbush, found in open areas of eastern Australia.
    • Chenopodium nutans, commonly called climbing, or nodding saltbush, native to Australia. The small leaves are semi-succulent, and have a distinctive arrowhead shape. The plant has conspicuous, tiny, bright-red berries during early autumn.
  • Sarcobatus vermiculatus, native to North America, is a halophyte, usually found in sunny, flat areas around the margins of playas

Plants called saltbush

canescens habit.jpg| Four-winged saltbush (Atriplex canescens) hastata Brush Farm.JPG| Chenopodium hastatum berries nutans 1.jpg| Chenopodium nutans berries vermiculatus (4018712194).jpg|Cone-like structures containing the female flowers of Sarcobatus vermiculatus

Noxon

Noxon may refer to any one of the following:

Jönåker

Jönåker is a locality situated in Nyköping Municipality, Södermanland County, Sweden with 617 inhabitants in 2010.

Leptacline

Leptacline ( INN) (developmental code name SD 210-32) is a drug described as a respiratory stimulant that was never marketed. It has a similar chemical structure to various piperidine and piperazine psychostimulants.

Satyanweshi (film)

Satyanweshi is a 2013 Bengali mystery- thriller film directed by Rituparno Ghosh and produced by Shrikant Mohta and Mahendra Soni. This was Ghosh's last full length film as a director. Indian film director Sujoy Ghosh portrayed the character Byomkesh Bakshi in this film.

Satyanweshi (novel)

Satyanweshi also spelled Satyanveshi, (Lit: The Truth Seeker) is a detective story written by Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay featuring the Bengali detective Byomkesh Bakshi and his friend, assistant, and narrator Ajit Bandyopadhyay. It is the first Byomkesh adventure written by Sharadindu Bandyopadhyay.

Zali

Zali may refer to:

  • Zali, Kurdistan (زلي - Zalī)
  • Zali, North Khorasan (زالي - Zālī)
Oh! (TV channel)

Oh! was an Australian cable TV channel owned by Optus Television. It served as the services's premier general entertainment channel until it was replaced by FOX8 in 2002. Programming was mostly sourced from Warner Brothers Television. After the channels closure, the content was given to Foxtel and XYZnetworks channels, with most of the Warner Brothers shows moving to Arena.

Oh! (ScoLoHoFo album)

Oh! is an album by jazz super group ScoLoHoFo, released in 2003. It features tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano, guitarist John Scofield, bassist Dave Holland and drummer Al Foster.

Oh! (Pink Lady song)

"Oh!" was the 22nd single (and last official single before their break-up) of Pink Lady. The single was released on March 5, 1981.

It sold 200,000 copies.

A re-recorded version of the song was included on the 2-disc greatest hits release, Innovation, released in December 2010.

Oh! (Girls' Generation album)

Oh! is the second studio album by the South Korean girl group Girls' Generation. It was released on January 28, 2010 in Korea. It features the lead single " Oh!". A repackaged version, Run Devil Run was released in March 2010, with new track " Run Devil Run" as the lead track.

The album is listed by Gaon Albums Chart as the second best-selling album of 2010 in South Korea, with 197,934 copies sold, and the repackaged version at fourth with 136,851 copies.

Oh! (Girls' Generation song)

"Oh!" is the lead single from Oh!, the second studio album by South Korean girl group Girls' Generation. The single was digitally released on January 25, 2010 and came to be a huge hit song in South Korea. The group used a cheerleader concept for the song's promotional activities. The song hit #1 on various charts, and won several times on the Korean music chart shows Music Bank and The Music Trend. The song ranked #4 on Gaon Chart Top 10 Digital Songs of the Year and it was also the second best selling single in that year, selling over 3.3 million copies. Music site Monkey3 named "Oh!" the best song in 2010.

"Oh!" was remade as a Japanese song for the group's second single titled, "Oh!", from their second Japanese album Girls & Peace.. It was their fifth Japanese single. The music video for "Oh!" was released on September 14, 2012. Promotion for the single began on Hey! Hey! Hey! Music Champ. The single ranked highly among Japanese music charts, clinching the top spot on the Oricon Daily and Weekly single chart as well as the top spot on the Japanese Hot 100. The single was released with the song, "All My Love Is for You", on September 26, 2012, with an accompanying music video premiering on September 14, 2012.

Topojë

Topojë is a village and a former municipality in the Fier County, southwestern Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision of the municipality Fier. The population at the 2011 census was 4,246.

Halothiobacillus

Halothiobacillus is a genus of Proteobacteria. All species are obligate aerobic bacteria; they require oxygen to grow. They are also halophilic; they live in environments with high concentrations of salt, and are considered "extremophiles".

The members of this genus used to belong to Thiobacillus, before they were reclassified in 2000. They are now classified with the purple sulfur bacteria.

Cerastocytin

Cerastocytin is a thrombin-like serine protease in snake venom.

Post-production

Post-production, or postproduction, is part of the process of filmmaking, video production and photography. It occurs in the making of motion pictures, television programs, radio programs, advertising, audio recordings, photography, and digital art. It is a term for all stages of production occurring after shooting or recording individual program segments.

Traditional (analogue) post-production has been eroded away by video editing software that operates on a non-linear editing system (NLE).

Tetraplosphaeriaceae

The Tetraplosphaeriaceae are a family of fungi in the order Pleosporales.

Mycielski

Mycielski is a surname of Polish origin, and may refer to:

  • Dołęga-Mycielski, Polish noble family
    • Anna Luiza Mycielska, Polish noble lady
  • Jan Mycielski, Polish-American mathematician
    • The Mycielskian, a construction in graph theory
    • The Grötzsch graph, sometimes called the Mycielski graph or the Mycielski-Grötzsch graph
  • Ludwik Mycielski, Polish politician
  • Zygmunt Mycielski, Polish composer and music critic
Ceedo

Ceedo is a software virtualization platform developed by Israeli company Ceedo Technologies. The term "Ceedo" refers both to the company and to the virtual workspace client on which the company's products are based.

Based in Rosh HaAyin in Israel, Ceedo Technologies was founded in 2005 by Dror Wettenstein, and its first product, Ceedo Personal, was released shortly after. Ceedo has released additional products based on its virtualization technology, including Ceedo Enterprise and Ceedo Mobile.

Ceedo has several patents pending for its virtualization technology.

BRITE

Bright Target Explorer or BRITE, also known as Canadian Advanced Nanospace eXperiment 3 (CanX-3) is a constellation of six nanosatellites operated by a consortium of universities from Canada, Austria and Poland.

The BRITE satellites were designed by the Institute for Aerospace Studies at the University of Toronto under the Canadian Advanced Nanospace eXperiment Program. The satellites is built around the Generic Nanosatellite Bus, a cube-shaped spacecraft with sides of which was first used in current BRITE version for the satellite CanX-3. One satellite is called BRITE-Toronto while the other is called BRITE-Montreal.

BRITE Constellation was included in the #7 entry in the Top Ten Science Stories of 2013, as chosen by Bob McDonald, host of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) radio show Quirks&Quarks, and the main science journalist for CBC radio and television.

Sorekara (film)

is a 1985 Japanese film directed by Yoshimitsu Morita, based on the novel by Natsume Sōseki.

Sorekara

Sorekara (それから, Japanese for "And Then") is a novel written by Natsume Sōseki in 1909. It was first published in serial form in the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shinbun.

Altrix

Altrix is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Fissurellidae, the keyhole limpets.

Solt

Solt (Croatian: Šolta) is a town in Bács-Kiskun county, Hungary. Near Solt there is a high-power medium wave transmitter.

Taken Out

Taken Out is an Australian television dating game show that was originally broadcast on Network Ten between 1 September 2008 and 26 February 2009. The format was developed by FremantleMedia and was hosted by James Kerley, a Foxtel television presenter who has also hosted shows such as Cash Cab and The Dave & Kerley Show.

British, Irish and Philippine versions of the show have been developed under the name Take Me Out. Versions have also been made in Denmark, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Sweden, Germany, Finland, Spain, China, Italy, United States, Japan, Thailand, Taiwan and Canada ( Quebec).

Montan wax

Montan wax, also known as lignite wax or OP wax, is a hard wax obtained by solvent extraction of certain types of lignite or brown coal. Commercially viable deposits exist in only a few locations, including Amsdorf, Germany, and in the Ione Basin near Ione, California.

Malsfeld

Malsfeld is a community in the Schwalm-Eder district in Hesse, Germany, on the river Fulda.

The community consists of the centres of Beiseförth, Dagobertshausen, Elfershausen, Mosheim, Malsfeld, Ostheim and Sipperhausen.

The community was once a railway hub on the Kassel–Bebra and Treysa–Eschwege lines. It has an interchange on the Autobahn A 7.

TraXion

TraXion A/S (abbreviated TRX) was a Danish railway operating company that existed between 2001 and 2002. As an attempt to continue the activities of the bankrupt Privatbanen Sønderjylland (PBS/EuroRail), the company specialised in freight transport and operated on an independent commercial basis, as opposed to the approach of ownership of railway companies by the state or local authorities which is more prevalent in Denmark.

Based in Padborg, Southern Jutland, TraXion was formed in late March 2001 by former PBS manager Erik Panduro. Initially leasing motive power from the remains of PBS, the company later bought locomotives from DSB, the Danish national railway company. Their most prominent task was the transport of containers between Tinglev and Aarhus; other activities included hauling trains for track construction work.

As a result of the loss of the container transport task in 2002 and a sudden increase of insurance premiums, the company was declared bankrupt on November 1, 2002.

Traxion (video game)

Traxion was a rhythm game for the PlayStation Portable by British developer Kuju Entertainment. It was scheduled to be released in Q4 2006 by LucasArts, but was cancelled in January 2007. The game was to feature a number of minigames, and would support imported songs from the player's own library as well as the game's bundled collection. The game was received well at E3 2006, with Wired calling it "the best thing they had on the show floor".

Non-monogamy

Non-monogamy is a type of interpersonal relationship in which sexual exclusivity is not held as the primary fundamental premise of the relationship. Individuals may form multiple and simultaneous sexual or romantic bonds. This can be contrasted with its opposite, monogamy, and yet may arise from the same psychology. The term has been criticized as it may imply that monogamy is the norm and that other ways of relating are deviations.

WAXS

WAXS is a Classic Hits formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Oak Hill, West Virginia, serving Beckley/ Oak Hill/ Hinton area. WAXS is owned and operated by Southern Communications.

Danegeld

The Danegeld (; "Danish tax", literally "Dane tribute") was a tax raised to pay tribute to the Viking raiders to save a land from being ravaged. It was called the geld or gafol in eleventh-century sources. The term Danegeld did not appear until the early twelfth century. It was characteristic of royal policy in both England and Francia during the ninth through eleventh centuries, collected both as tributary, to buy off the attackers, and as stipendiary, to pay the defensive forces.

Montan wax

Montan wax, also known as lignite wax or OP wax, is a hard wax obtained by solvent extraction of certain types of lignite or brown coal. Commercially viable deposits exist in only a few locations, including Amsdorf, Germany, and in the Ione Basin near Ione, California.

JWalk

JWalk is a unit testing toolkit for the Java programming language. Created by Anthony Simons, JWalk supports a testing paradigm called Lazy Systematic Unit Testing. This is based on the two notions of lazy specification, the ability to infer the evolving specification of a class on the fly by dynamic analysis, and systematic testing, the ability to explore and test the class's state space exhaustively to bounded depths.

Zoombinis

Zoombinis are a series of educational puzzle computer games that were originally developed by TERC and published by Brøderbund Software until The Learning Company bought Brøderbund in 1998 and took over developing and publishing the series in 2001. The series consists of 3 games; "Logical Journey of the Zoombinis" (1996), "Zoombinis: Mountain Rescue" (2001), and "Zoombinis: Island Odyssey" (2002).A new version of the original Zoombinis game (Logical Journey), updated for tablets and modern operating systems, was released by TERC, FableVision, and Learning Games Network on August 6, 2015.

Baleč

Baleč was an Albanian medieval fortified town near Shkodër in what is now Albania. It was built on the hill whose name was Baleš (later known as it. Balezo or sq. Maja e Balecit). The settlement may have originated in Roman times. During Byzantine rule over the area, it was part of the Dyrrhachium theme. Later it was a seat of a župa of the Kingdom of Duklja, and later still of the Lordship of Zeta. Baleč suffered much damage during the Second Scutari War between the Serbian Despotate and the Republic of Venice. After the Republic of Venice gained control over it at the beginning of the 15th century, its size was reduced to a small pronoia with only 25 houses, and the fortress was abandoned and fell to ruin. Skanderbeg's forces rebuilt the fortress during his war with Venice in 1448 and established a strong garrison in it, but the Venetian forces soon drove them away and demolished the fortress. Ottoman plans to rebuild Baleč and populate it with Turkish settlers were never implemented and Baleč remained in ruins, which can still be seen today.

Mamuka

Mamuka is a Georgian given name. It may refer to

  • Mamuka of Imereti ( fl. 1719–1769), member of the Bagrationi dynasty of Imereti
  • Prince Mamuka of Imereti (died 1654), member of the Bagrationi dynasty of Imereti
  • Mamuka, Prince of Mukhrani (died 1751), Georgian prince
  • Mamuka Gorgodze (born 1984), Georgian rugby union player
  • Mamuka Japharidze (born 1962), Georgian artist
  • Mamuka Jugeli (born 1969), Georgian football player and manager
  • Mamuka Kikaleishvili (1960–2000), Georgian actor
  • Mamuka Kikalishvili (born 1971), Georgian fashion photographer
  • Mamuka Kobakhidze (born 1992), Georgian football player
  • Mamuka Kurashvili (born 1970), Georgian general
  • Mamuka Lomidze (born 1984), Georgian football player
  • Mamuka Machavariani (born 1970), Georgian football player
  • Mamuka Magrakvelidze (born 1977), a Georgian rugby union player
  • Mamuka Minashvili (born 1971), Georgian football player
  • Mamuka Tavakalashvili, Georgian poet, painter and calligrapher of the 17th century
  • Mamuka Tsereteli (born 1979), Georgian football player
RedMon

RedMon, Redirection Port Monitor, redirects a special printer port to a program on Microsoft Windows operating systems. It is commonly used with Ghostscript to generate PostScript (PS) and Portable Document Format (PDF) files from any application.

Animas

Animas may refer to:

Usage examples of "animas".

The rider of this horse essayed to walk, which gave Brazos the impression that Las Animas was not far distant.

Las Animas lay just ahead, beyond a bridge over a brook that brawled down to the Purgatory.

Las Animas could boast of, Brazos had a glimpse of Bodkin holding forth to a group of men.

It was about as much of a social gathering as Las Animas saw except at dances and school entertainments.

This valley was forty miles up in the foothills from Las Animas, a secluded spot once inhabited by Ute Indians.

Unreal City trap their spirits inside young flesh, you know, you know, and so their animas are very old when they make the journey to the other side of day.

The full name of this creek is El Rio de las Animas Arrepentidas en Limbo, or the River of the Compensating Souls in the Borderland of Limes.

Trinchera Peak in Las Animas County, and it ends in the John Martin Reservoir on the Arkansas River in Bent County.

The lower hundred and fifty miles of the creek, from Hoene to the town of Las Animas, does not touch on inhabited region at all.

Las Animas, is also found hundreds of miles distant, in Sierra County, New Mexico.

They take the animas and break their joints so they will look more like cabritos.