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Cinecittà

Cinecittà (; ) is a large film studio in Rome that is considered the hub of Italian cinema. The studios were constructed during the Fascist era as part of a scheme to revive the Italian film industry. In the 1950s, the number of international productions being made there led to Rome's being dubbed Hollywood on the Tiber.

Cinecitta
  1. redirect Cinecittà
Cinecittà (Rome Metro)

Cinecittà is a station on the Rome Metro. It is on Line A and is located at the intersection of Via Tuscolana,Via di Torre Split and Via Capannelle.

Mellen

Mellen may refer to the following places in the United States:

  • Mellen Township, Michigan
  • Mellen, Wisconsin
Celebration

Celebration or Celebrations may refer to:

  • Party, a social gathering or celebration
  • Festival, a community gathering to celebrate something in particular
  • The observance of a feast day or holiday
  • The celebration of the Eucharist
  • Celebration (Alaska festival)
Celebration (musical)

Celebration is a musical with a book and lyrics by Tom Jones and music by Harvey Schmidt. The musical fable, employing a nearly bare stage, explores the contrasts between youth and old age, innocence and corruption, love and ambition, and poverty and wealth.

It was presented on Broadway in 1969 and was not a financial success. Although the critics found the show interesting, it did not develop a broad following among audiences.

Celebration (Tyeb Mehta)

Celebration is a triptych painting by Tyeb Mehta. It sold at Christie's for 15 million Indian rupees (US$300,000) in 2002, the highest price a contemporary Indian piece of art has ever sold for in a public auction.

Celebration (Kool & the Gang song)

"Celebration" is a song released in 1980 by Kool & the Gang from their album Celebrate!.

Celebration (Simple Minds album)

Celebration is a compilation album by Simple Minds, released in 1982. The compilation features tracks from the band's tenure on the Arista Records label prior to their move to Virgin Records in 1981.

Celebration (2000s band)

Celebration is a psychedelic soul band based out of Baltimore, Maryland.

Celebration (Julian Lloyd Webber album)

Celebration is a two CD set album released by the cellist Julian Lloyd Webber in 2001.

Celebration (play)

Celebration is a play by British playwright Harold Pinter. It was first presented as a double-bill, with Pinter's first play The Room on Thursday 16 March 2000 at the Almeida Theatre in London.

Celebration (Celebration album)

Celebration is the debut album from Baltimore's Celebration. It was released on February 27, 2006. The album was released on 4AD.

Celebration (Alaska festival)

Celebration is a biennial Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultural event held in Juneau, Alaska, United States. It is sponsored and organized by the Sealaska Heritage Institute, the non-profit cultural arm of Sealaska Corporation.

The event consists of a three-day program of staged and parade dancing, soap berries and seaweed traditional food contests, a juried visual arts presentation, a Native crafts market, and lectures or workshops.

Celebration was first held in 1982. It is now the largest cultural event in Alaska.

Celebration (TV series)

Celebration is a Canadian music television series which aired on CBC Television from 1975 to 1976.

Celebration (DJ BoBo album)

Celebration is a compilation album by Swiss singer DJ BoBo, released in 2002.

Celebration (Bheki Mseleku album)

Celebration was the debut album of jazz musician Bheki Mseleku. The album was on the short list of nominees for the 1992 Mercury Prize.

Celebration (Glory album)

Celebration is the debut album by rapper Glory and was released in 2012.

Celebration (1979 Celebration album)

'Celebration ' is the second album release by the Mike Love fronted band Celebration. The album was released in February 1979 and mainly features song writing from Mike Love and Ron Altbach. The album also contains a Brian Wilson co-write called "How’s About A Little Bit". "Starbaby" and "Gettin' Hungry" were released as the lead singles for album. The album has long been difficult to find as it is estimated only 5,000 copies were pressed and released.

Celebration (Madonna song)

Celebration is a song recorded by American singer and songwriter Madonna for her third greatest hits album of the same name (2009). It was written and produced by Madonna, Paul Oakenfold and Ian Green, with additional writing from Ciaran Gribbin. The song was released digitally on July 31, 2009 by Warner Bros. Records. Madonna collaborated with Oakenfold to develop a number of songs. Amongst all the songs developed by them, two were chosen for the greatest hits album with "Celebration" being released as the first single from it. It is a dance-oriented song with influences of Madonna's singles from the 1980s and 1990s, and consisting of a speak-sing format bridge. The lyrics of the song invites one to come and join a party.

"Celebration" received mixed reviews from contemporary critics. It peaked at number one in Bulgaria, Finland, Israel, Italy, Slovakia and Sweden, while reaching the top five in other nations, including Canada, France, Germany, Japan and the United Kingdom where it debuted at number three on the UK Singles Chart. It became Madonna's 55th entry on the US Billboard Hot 100, where it debuted and peaked at number 71, and her 40th number-one song on the dance chart.

The music video used the Benny Benassi remix of the song. It portrayed Madonna and her tour dancers solo dancing to the song. Cameo appearances were made by model Jesus Luz and in an alternative video by her daughter Lourdes. At the 2010 Grammy Awards, the song received a nomination in the Best Dance Recording category. The song was used as a closing for The MDNA Tour in which Madonna energetically danced in a glittery outfit, and at one point put on a pair of headphones and pantomimed scratching records with colored cubes falling in the backdrop. Live performance of "Celebration" on The MDNA Tour:

Celebration (Madonna album)

Celebration is the third greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Madonna, and the final release under her contract with Warner Bros. Records, her record company since 1982. The release follows her two previous greatest hits albums, The Immaculate Collection (1990) and GHV2 (2001). The compilation was released in many different formats including a one-disc edition and a deluxe double disc. A compilation DVD, entitled Celebration: The Video Collection, was released to accompany the audio versions. The album includes three new tracks, the title track which is included on all versions, " Revolver" which is included on the deluxe editions and "It's So Cool" which is included as a bonus track on some of the iTunes Store deluxe digital versions. A fourth track, "Broken", was recorded for the album but not used; eventually it was released in 2012 as a limited edition promotional vinyl single for fanclub members.

Celebration was appreciated by contemporary critics who noted the vastness of Madonna's back-catalogue. The album debuted at the top of the charts in Belgium, Canada, Ireland, Italy, Mexico and the United Kingdom. Madonna became tied with Elvis Presley as the solo artist with the most number-one albums in the United Kingdom. In the United States, it debuted at number seven in the Billboard 200; in other nations, it also debuted within the top ten, peaking in the top three in most of them. The title track was released as the first single of the album. It became Madonna's 40th number-one song on Billboards Hot Dance Club Songs chart. "Revolver" was released as the second single from the album in some territories, but did not achieve significant commercial success.

Celebration (Uriah Heep album)

Celebration is the 22nd album by the British rock band Uriah Heep. It features re-recorded classic songs from the band, as well as two tracks written specifically for this release. A double Deluxe Special Edition on digipak format features an extra live DVD recorded at the Sweden Rock Festival. A Collector's Edition features a 2-song (vinyl) single in addition to the regular Celebration CD (the songs on the single were also recorded at the Sweden Rock Festival, and were not included on the DVD).

Celebration was released in most European territories on 6 October 2009 in the U.K., on 26 October 2009, and approximately one month later in the United States.

In 2015, keyboardist Phil Lanzon released a music video for "Corridors of Madness" featuring footage taken while on tour in Israel and the United States.

Celebration (The Game song)

"Celebration" is a song by American rapper The Game, released as the first single from his fifth studio album Jesus Piece. The song features additional vocals from fellow rappers Tyga, Wiz Khalifa, Lil Wayne and American singer/rapper Chris Brown. "Celebration" premiered on Los Angeles' Power 106 on August 22, 2012. The song samples Bone Thugs-n-Harmony's hit single " 1st of tha Month".

Celebration (AnnaGrace song)

"Celebration" is the fourth single released by the Belgian duo AnnaGrace, formerly known as Ian Van Dahl. The track is the group's fourth single following their 2008 debut single " You Make Me Feel", 2009 second single " Let the Feelings Go" and 2009 third single " Love Keeps Calling".

Celebration (1970s band)

Celebration was a short lived 1970s American rock band, fronted by Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love as well as members of the band King Harvest.

Celebration (Dareysteel song)

"Celebration" is the eighth single by the Spanish hip-hop rapper singer-songwriter Dareysteel. The song was released as a single on the 1 January 2014 on the album Unstoppable by Little Seconds Entertainment Spain. Before the release of the song, Dareysteel confirmed that 50 percent of the revenue of the album sales will be giving to charity organizations.

Celebration (Eric Kloss album)

Celebration is an album by saxophonist Eric Kloss recorded in 1979 and released on the Muse label.

Celebration (Deuter album)

Celebration is the third studio album by new age composer Deuter. It was released in 1976 on Kuckuck Schallplatten.

Bergetiger

The Bergetiger was the name the Allied forces gave to a German World War II armored tracked vehicle based on the Tiger I chassis. The vehicle was found abandoned on a roadside in Italy with terminal engine problems. The main gun had been removed, and a boom & winch assembly had been fitted to the turret. No other Tiger tanks modified in this manner were ever recovered.

Goicea

Goicea is a commune in Dolj County, Oltenia, Romania. Its existence was first attested in 1575. It is composed of two villages, Dunăreni and Goicea. It also included Cârna village until 2004, when it was split off to form a separate commune.

Panto

Panto may refer to:

  • Pantomime, a musical comedy stage production, developed in England and mostly performed during Christmas and New Year season
  • American pantomime, a theatre entertainment, derived from the distinctly English entertainment genre
  • Panto (surname)
  • Pantograph (rail), an overhead current collector for a tram or electric train
  • Pantoprazole, a proton pump inhibitor
  • Panto!, a 2012 ITV Christmas special
Panto (surname)

Panto is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Giorgio Panto (1941–2006), Italian entrepreneur and politician
  • Miguel Ángel Pantó (born 1912), Argentine footballer
  • Pete Panto (1911–1939), American longshoreman and union activist
  • Sal Panto Jr. (born 1951), American businessman and politician
Helfenstein

Helfenstein can refer to:

  • the comet 8067 Helfenstein
  • the House of Helfenstein
Helfenstein (Habichtswald)

Helfenstein is a hill of Hesse, Germany.

Category:Hills of Hesse

Bard-lès-Époisses

Bard-lès-Époisses is a French commune in the Côte-d'Or department in the Burgundy region of eastern France.

The inhabitants of the commune are known as Barrois or Barroises.

Vavoom!

Vavoom! is the fourth studio album by The Brian Setzer Orchestra.

BBU

BBU may refer to:

  • Backup battery unit
  • BBU (band), American hip hop group
  • BBU, IATA airport code for Aurel Vlaicu International Airport near Bucharest, Romania
  • Build Bright University (disambiguation), several institutions
  • Big Bend University, also known as St. Louis Community College–Meramec
  • Barclays Bank (Uganda), a commercial bank in Uganda
BBU (band)

BBU is an American hip hop group from Chicago, Illinois, consisting of Jasson Perez, Richard "Epic" Wallace, and Michael "Illekt" Milam. The group's name is an acronym for "Bin Laden Blowin' Up" and "Black, Brown and Ugly".

Krautscheid

Krautscheid is a municipality in the district of Bitburg-Prüm, in Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany.

KSU

KSU may refer to:

KSU (band)

KSU is one of the oldest Polish punk rock bands, founded in 1977 in the southeastern town of Ustrzyki Dolne (in the Bieszczady Mountains). According to its creator, Eugeniusz Olejarczyk, creation of the band was the fruit of listening of radio stations from Western Europe, in which several punk rock songs were played. Young listeners from Ustrzyki decided to play covers of Black Sabbath, Deep Purple and Led Zeppelin, and in 1978 they came up with the name KSU, which comes from car licence plates, issued by the Krosno Voivodeship authorities for vehicles from Ustrzyki Dolne. With new name came new music - KSU began playing songs inspired by Sex Pistols, Damned, and UK Subs.

In 1980, due to friendship with Kazimierz Staszewski, KSU travelled across Poland to Kolobrzeg, to participate in the New Wave Festival. The band was dubbed a sensation, but soon afterwards its members were one after one called up to the Polish Army and KSU ceased to exist. In 1988 KSU recorded a LP "Pod prąd" ("Against the flow"), which was warmly welcomed by its fans.

Currently KSU consists of four members, including Olejarczyk. Its lyrics are in most cases written by Maciej Augustyn, the brother of former singer Bogdan "Bohun" Augustyn.

Špiljani

Špiljani ( Serbian Cyrillic: Шпиљани) is a village in the municipality of Tutin, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 223 people.

Hydropolis

The Hydropolis Underwater Hotel and Resort is a proposed underwater hotel in Dubai. Hydropolis should be the first multi-room underwater hotel in the world. It was planned in the Persian Gulf of Dubai following plans of Siemens IBC (Prof. Roland Dieterle) in cooperation with the German Designer Joachim Hauser and with the approval of the DDIA. The hotel's original plan was to be located underwater off the coast of Jumeriah beach. The hotel's plan is to cover an area of , which is equivalent in area to Hyde Park in London. The construction cost for Hydropolis is approximately €600 million Euro, which will make Hydropolis one of the most expensive hotels ever created. The hotel design was created by Joachim Hauser and Professor Roland Dieterle, and is planned to be composed of three segments: a land station, a connecting train, and the underwater hotel. Joachim Hauser's and Prof. Roland Dieterle's architecture idea is to represent the connection between humans and water. The initial planned opening year was 2006, but due to financial reasons and disagreements with the DDIA (Dubai Development & Investment Authority), the project was canceled by the DDIA already in October 2004. Hydropolis Holdings LLC Dubai was holding the original intellectual property rights of Hydropolis.

Whelan

The family surname Whelan is an anglicisation of the Irish surname, Ó Faoláin. The surname originates from the Middle Irish 'Úa Faeláin' (plural, 'Uí Faeláin') the name of the 10th to 11th century ruling dynasty of the Déisi, a population group inhabiting the area of the modern county of Waterford and south County Tipperary in the early medieval period.

The word "faolán" is derived from the Old Irish word "faelán" meaning a small wolf; '-án' being of the diminutive suffix in Irish. "Ó" (anglicised as "O'") derives from the Old Irish "úa", meaning "grandson", or more figuratively "patrilineal descendent". The patronym that follows is always in the genetive case, in accordance with Irish grammatical rules, and is normally marked by an "i" following the final vowel. Therefore, the name Faelán, becomes "Úa Faeláin" as a patronym in Middle Irish, from which is derived "Ó Faoláin" in Modern Irish, of which in turn "Whelan", "Phelan", "O'Phelan" etc. are anglicisations.

According to the legendary history of Ireland, about 300 A.D., the Déisi settled on the site of Dungarvan, County Waterford. In the 12th and 13th centuries, during the early Anglo-Norman period, records of a political nature relating to the Déisi and the descendants of the Uí Faeláin dynastic group decline.

The Faelán referred to is Faelán mac Cormac, who is recorded in the Annals of Inishfallen as having succeeded his father as king of the Déisi in 966. The first person referred to as "úa Faeláin" is his grandson Mothla mac Domnall, or Mothla úa Faeláin, who was king of the Déisi until his death at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014, and whose head is recorded in the Annals of Ulster as having been interred with Brian Ború in Armagh. During this period however, Irish patronyms had not yet petrified into surnames proper.

According to the Annals of the Four Masters:

The Age of Christ, 1170.

M1170.11

Robert Fitz Stephen and Richard, son of Gilbert, i.e. Earl Strongbow, came from England into Ireland with a numerous force, and many knights and archers, in the army of Mac Murchadha [Dermot MacMurrough], to contest Leinster for him, and to disturb the Irish of Ireland in general; and Mac Murchadha gave his daughter to the Earl Strongbow for coming into his army. They took Loch Garman [Wexford town; a stone walled Norse settlement], and entered Port-Lairge [Waterford town; a Norse settlement] by force; and they took Gillemaire, the officer of the fortress, and Ua Faelain, lord of the Deisi, and his son, and they killed seven hundred persons there.

By the beginning of the thirteenth century, most of the territory of the Déisi was adsorbed into the Anglo-Norman colony. The surname 'Whelan' remains common in Co. Waterford and in the adjoining part of Co. Kilkenny, particularly in the barony of Iverk.

The earliest anglicised forms of the Ó Faoláin name were Felan, Faelan, Hyland, with many other similar variants, including Whelan and Phelan in Cos Waterford and Kilkenny. Whelan and Whalen are the most prevalent forms in modern times, and combined are placed seventy-ninth in the list of the hundred most common surnames in Ireland. With Phelan added, the name takes forty-fourth place.

Matarani

Matarani is a port city in Arequipa Region, Peru. It is a major port on the southern coast of Peru. The port is operated by Tisur.

Woden (disambiguation)

Woden is the god in Anglo-Saxon paganism corresponding to Norse Odin.

toponyms
  • List of places named after Woden
  • Woden is a district of the city of Canberra, Australia:
    • Woden Valley
    • Woden Town Centre
  • Woden, Iowa, a small town in the United States
  • 2155 Wodan, an asteroid
Woden (album)

Woden is a 2012 album by Julian Cope. It consists of a 72-minute single movement, described by Cope as "one enormous meteorological cloud of music originally conceived as a vast and atmospheric 72-minute-long follow-up to his Ur-vocal masterpiece ODIN, then temporarily shelved in favour of the LAMF release". He has said that the atmospherics include field music from Avebury and Silbury. It has been compared to the early, eerie ambient works of Brian Eno and Aphex Twin.

Woden is perhaps Cope's best 72 minute psychedelic druidistic album. A "single-track-synth-drone-meditation", it is highly regarded by fans of the genre. Cope intended the recording as a "useful meditative aid, but it’s even better for gaining access to the Underworld, the vast weather formations of sound guaranteeing that Hell’s doorway remains open for 72 minutes at a time."

Woden was not a commercial success.

Metaceratodus

Metaceratodus is an extinct genus of prehistoric sarcopterygians or lobe-finned fish, from the Early Cretaceous of Queensland, Australia.

Yotvingia

Yotvingia (, , , old ) was a region where the Baltic tribe known as Yotvingians lived. It was located in the area of Sudovia and Dainava; south west from the upper Neman, between Marijampolė, Merkinė ( Lithuania), Slonim, Kobryn ( Belarus), Białystok, and Ełk ( Poland).

Today this area corresponds mostly to the Podlaskie Voivodeship of Poland, part of Lithuania and a part of Hrodna Province and Brest Province of Belarus.

Ulcer (dermatology)

An ulcer is a sore on the skin or a mucous membrane, accompanied by the disintegration of tissue. Ulcers can result in complete loss of the epidermis and often portions of the dermis and even subcutaneous fat. Ulcers are most common on the skin of the lower extremities and in the gastrointestinal tract. An ulcer that appears on the skin is often visible as an inflamed tissue with an area of reddened skin. A skin ulcer is often visible in the event of exposure to heat or cold, irritation, or a problem with blood circulation. They can also be caused due to a lack of mobility, which causes prolonged pressure on the tissues. This stress in the blood circulation is transformed to a skin ulcer, commonly known as bedsores or decubitus ulcers. Ulcers often become infected, and pus forms.

Ulcer

An ulcer is a discontinuity or break in a bodily membrane that impedes the organ of which that membrane is a part from continuing its normal functions. Common forms of ulcers recognized in medicine include:

  • Ulcer (dermatology), a discontinuity of the skin or a break in the skin.
    • Pressure ulcers, also known as bedsores
    • Genital ulcer, an ulcer located on the genital area
    • Ulcerative dermatitis, a skin disorder associated with bacterial growth often initiated by self-trauma
    • Anal fissure, A.K.A an ulcer or tear near the anus or within the rectum
    • Diabetic foot ulcer, a major complication of the diabetic foot
  • Corneal ulcer, an inflammatory or infective condition of the cornea
  • Mouth ulcer, an open sore inside the mouth.
    • Aphthous ulcer, a specific type of oral ulcer also known as a canker sore
  • Peptic ulcer, a discontinuity of the gastrointestinal mucosa (stomach ulcer)
  • Venous ulcer, a wound thought to occur due to improper functioning of valves in the veins
  • Stress ulcer, located anywhere within the stomach and proximal duodenum
  • Ulcerative sarcoidosis, a cutaneous condition affecting people with sarcoidosis
  • Ulcerative lichen planus, a rare variant of lichen planus
  • Ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
  • Ulcerative disposition, a disorder or discomfort that causes severe abdominal distress, often associated with chronic gastritis

nl:Zweer

Category:Surgery

Ulcer (disambiguation)

An ulcer is a medical condition caused by a break in a bodily membrane. Ulcer or ulceration may also refer to:

  • Fear Factory, an American industrial metal band formerly known as "Ulceration"
  • Ulcer index, a stock market risk measure or technical analysis indicator devised by Peter Martin in 1987
CECM

CECM may refer to:

  • Centre for Experimental and Constructive Mathematics at the Simon Fraser University,
  • Montreal Catholic School Commission (Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal),
  • .
  • Certified in Ethics and Compliance Management at the John Cook School of Business (St. Louis University),
Chirocephalus

Chirocephalus is a genus of fairy shrimp in the family Chirocephalidae. It contains the following species:

  • Chirocephalus algidus Cottarelli et al., 2010
  • Chirocephalus anatolicus Cottarelli, Mura & Özkütük, 2007
  • Chirocephalus appendicularis Vavra, 1905
  • Chirocephalus baikalensis (Naganawa & Orgiljanova, 2000)
  • Chirocephalus bairdi (Brauer, 1877)
  • Chirocephalus bobrinskii (Alcock, 1898)
  • Chirocephalus brevipalpis (Orghidan, 1953)
  • Chirocephalus brteki Cottarelli et al., 2010
  • Chirocephalus carnuntanus (Brauer, 1877)
  • Chirocephalus chyzeri Daday, 1890
  • Chirocephalus croaticus Steuer, 1899
  • Chirocephalus cupreus Cottarelli, Mura & Özkütük, 2007
  • Chirocephalus diaphanus Prévost, 1803
  • Chirocephalus festae Colosi, 1922
  • Chirocephalus hardingi Brtek, 1965
  • Chirocephalus horribilis Smirnov, 1948
  • Chirocephalus jaxartensis (Smirnov, 1948)
  • Chirocephalus josephinae ( Grube, 1853)
  • Chirocephalus kerkyrensis Pesta, 1936
  • Chirocephalus longicornis (Smirnov, 1930)
  • Chirocephalus ludmilae Vekhoff, 1992
  • Chirocephalus marchesonii Ruffo & Vesentini, 1957
  • Chirocephalus mongolianus Uéno, 1940
  • Chirocephalus murai Brtek & Cottarelli, 2006
  • Chirocephalus nankinensis (Shen, 1933)
  • Chirocephalus neumanni Hartland-Rowe, 1967
  • Chirocephalus orghidani Brtek, 1966
  • Chirocephalus paphlagonicus Cottarelli, 1971
  • Chirocephalus pelagonicus Petkovski, 1986
  • Chirocephalus ponticus Beladjal & Mertens, 1997
  • Chirocephalus povolnyi Brtek, 1967
  • Chirocephalus priscus (Daday, 1910)
  • Chirocephalus recticornis (Brauer, 1877)
  • Chirocephalus reiseri Marcus, 1913
  • Chirocephalus ripophilus (Lepeschkin, 1921)
  • Chirocephalus robustus G. I. Müller, 1966
  • Chirocephalus ruffoi Cottarelli & Mura, 1984
  • Chirocephalus salinus Daday, 1910
  • Chirocephalus shadini (Smirnov, 1928)
  • Chirocephalus sibyllae Cottarelli & Mura, 1975
  • Chirocephalus sinensis Thiele, 1907
  • Chirocephalus skorikowi Daday, 1912
  • Chirocephalus slovacicus Brtek, 1971
  • Chirocephalus soulukliensis Rogers & Soufi, 2013
  • Chirocephalus spinicaudatus Simon, 1886
  • Chirocephalus tauricus Pesta, 1921
  • Chirocephalus tereki Brtek, 1984
  • Chirocephalus turkestanicus Daday, 1910
  • Chirocephalus vornatscheri Brtek, 1968
  • Chirocephalus wangi Hsü, 1933
  • Chirocephalus weisigi Smirnov, 1933
Osor

Osor may refer to these places and jurisdictions :

  • Osor, Croatia, town, former bishopric and present Latin Catholic titular see
  • Osor, Girona, village in Catalonia
Petacciato

Petacciato is a town and comune in the province of Campobasso ( Molise), in southern Italy.

Leptonoma

Leptonoma is a genus of insect, belonging to the family Tineidae. It contains only one species, Leptonoma citrozona, which is found in Malawi.

Oceloduri

Oceloduri was an ancient Vaccean settlement in Spain near the modern town of Zamora.

Category:Ancient history of the Iberian Peninsula

Wealden

Wealden is a local government district in East Sussex, England: its name comes from the Weald, the remnant Sussex and Surrey forest which was once unbroken and occupies much of the centre and north of this area. The term is cognate with Wald, forest or wood in German.

Wealden (UK Parliament constituency)

Wealden is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2015 by Nus Ghani, a Conservative.

Boire

Boire may refer to:

  • The French verb to drink
  • Alain Boire (1971 - ), a Quebec politician
  • Nashua Airport, also known as Boire Field
  • First album of the singer Miossec
  • Boire, an alternate name for Detarium senegalense, also called Sweet Detar or Tallow Tree
Dalhousie

Dalhousie may refer to:

Dalhousie (CTrain)

Dalhousie is a station along the Northwest Line (Route 201) of the CTrain light rail system in Calgary, Alberta. It opened on December 15, 2003 as part of a 2.8 km (1.73 miles) extension of the Northwest line and was the terminal station of the Northwest line until June 14, 2009.

The station is located in the median of Crowchild Trail, just East of 53 Street Northwest and is 9 km Northwest of the 7 Avenue & 9 Street SW interlocking. The station opened on December 15, 2003, and was the first CTrain station to open with a four-car platform. Since then, all new extension stations have opened with four-car platforms.

The station has 760 parking spaces. From the stations opening in 2003, the park and ride lot was very crowded and would fill up very early in the morning. Since Crowfoot station opened in 2009 with almost double the spaces as Dalhousie, the situation has eased somewhat.

Pedestrian overpasses connect to the station from both the North and South sides of Crowchild Trail. Two escalators, a set of stairs, and an elevator provide access down to the platform. The station serves the adjacent communities of Dalhousie and Varsity, as well as Dalhousie Station, a regional shopping centre.

In 2008, the station registered an average of 18,300 boardings per weekday.

Dalhousie (electoral district)

Dalhousie was a provincial electoral district in New Brunswick. It was created from the multi-member riding of Restigouche in the 1973 electoral redistribution, and abolished in the 1994 electoral redistribution.

Siljevica

Siljevica ( Serbian Cyrillic: Сиљевица) is a village in Šumadija and Western Serbia ( Šumadija), in the municipality of Rekovac (Region of Levač), lying at , at the elevation of 470 m. According to the 2002 census, the village had 165 citizens.

Pernaska

Pernaska is an Albanian surname that may refer to

  • Ilir Përnaska (born 1951), Albanian football player
  • Lajla Pernaska (born 1961), Albanian politician

Category:Albanian-language surnames

Nondualism

Nondualism, also called non-duality, means "not two" or "one undivided without a second". It is a term and concept used to define various strands of religious and spiritual thought. It is found in a variety of Asian religious traditions and modern western spirituality, but with a variety of meanings and uses. The term may refer to:

  • Advaya, the nonduality of conventional and ultimate truth in Madhyamaka Buddhism. In Buddhist Madhyamaka it means that there is no absolute, transcendent reality beyond our everyday reality, and while things exist, they are ultimately "empty" of any existence on their own. In Yogacara, it refers to the idea of nondualism of cognition and that which is cognized;
  • Advaita, which states that all of the universe is one essential reality, and that all facets and aspects of the universe are ultimately an expression or appearance of that one reality. This is an ontological approach to nondualism, and asserts non-difference between Ātman (soul) and Brahman (the Absolute). This idea is best known from Advaita Vedanta, but also found in other Hindu traditions such as the Kashmir Shaivism, popular teachers like Ramana Maharshi and Nisargadatta Maharaj;
  • "Nondual consciousness", the non-duality of subject and object; this can be found in modern spirituality.

The nondualism idea developed in the Vedic, post-Vedic Hindu and the Buddhist traditions. The oldest traces of nondualism in Indian thought is found as Advaita in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, as well as other pre-Buddhist Upanishads such as the Chandogya Upanishad. The Buddhist tradition added the teachings of śūnyatā; the two truths doctrine, the nonduality of the absolute and the relative truth, and the Yogachara notion of "mind/thought only" (citta-matra) or "representation-only" ( vijñaptimātra). Vijñapti-mātra and the two truths doctrine, coupled with the concept of Buddha-nature, have also been influential concepts in the subsequent development of Mahayana Buddhism, not only in India, but also in China and Tibet, most notably the Chán (Zen) and Dzogchen traditions. In Hinduism, nondualism has more commonly become associated with the Advaita Vedanta tradition of Adi Shankara.

The western origins are situated within Western esotericism, especially Swedenborgianism, Unitarianism, Transcendentalism and the idea of religious experience as a valid means of knowledge of a transcendental reality. Universalism and Perennialism are another important strand of thought, as reflected in various strands of modern spirituality, New Age and Neo-Advaita.

Runaway Bay

Runaway Bay may refer to:

  • Runaway Bay, Jamaica
  • Runaway Bay, Queensland, Australia
  • Runaway Bay, Texas, United States
  • Runaway Bay (TV series), children's television series
Runaway Bay (TV series)

Runaway Bay is a children's adventure television series, which originally aired from 1992 to 1993. The series followed a group of friends having adventures while living on the island of Martinique in the Caribbean. The show was principally produced by Lifetime Productions International Ltd with Ellipse Productions for the television networks Antenne 2, CBS Television, and Yorkshire Television. In the UK, the show was screened on ITV. The character of Shuku was one of Naomie Harris's first television roles.

Speedtest.net

Speedtest.net is a web service that provides free analysis of Internet access performance metrics, such as connection data rate and latency. It was founded by Ookla in 2006, and is based in Seattle, Washington.

The service measures the bandwidth (speed) and latency of a visitor's Internet connection against one of 4,759 geographically dispersed servers (as of August 2016) located around the world. Each test measures the data rate for the download direction, i.e. from the server to the user computer, and the upload data rate, i.e. from the user's computer to the server. The tests are performed within the user's web browser or within apps. , over 8.7 billion speed tests have been completed.

Tests were previously performed using the HTTP protocol at Layer 7 of the OSI model. To further improve accuracy, Speedtest.net now performs tests via direct TCP sockets and uses a custom protocol for communication between servers and clients.

The site also offers detailed statistics based on test results. This data has been used by numerous publications in the analysis of Internet access data rates around the world.

Salles-sur-Garonne

Salles-sur-Garonne is a commune in the Haute-Garonne department in southwestern France.

Protoavis

Protoavis (meaning "first bird") is a problematic taxon of archosaurian known from fragmentary remains from Late Triassic Norian stage deposits near Post, Texas. Much controversy remains over the animal, and there are many different interpretations of what Protoavis actually is. When it was first described, the fossils were described as being from a primitive bird which, if the identification is valid, would push back avian origins some 60-75 million years. The original describer of Protoavis texensis, Sankar Chatterjee of Texas Tech University, interpreted the type specimen to have come from a single animal, specifically a 35 cm tall bird that lived in what is now Texas, USA, around 210 million years ago. Though it existed far earlier than Archaeopteryx, its skeletal structure is allegedly more bird-like. Protoavis has been reconstructed as a carnivorous bird that had teeth on the tip of its jaws and eyes located at the front of the skull, suggesting a nocturnal or crepuscular lifestyle. Reconstructions usually depict it with feathers, as Chatterjee originally interpreted structures on the arm to be quill knobs, the attachment point for flight feathers found in some modern birds and non-avian dinosaurs. However, re-evaluation of the fossil material by subsequent authors such as Lawrence Witmer have been inconclusive regarding whether or not these structures are actual quill knobs.

However, this description of Protoavis assumes that Protoavis has been correctly interpreted as a bird. Almost all palaeontologists doubt that Protoavis is a bird, or that all remains assigned to it even come from a single species, because of the circumstances of its discovery and unconvincing avian synapomorphies in its fragmentary material. When they were found at the Tecovas and Bull Canyon Formations in the Texas panhandle in 1984, in a sedimentary strata of a Triassic river delta, the fossils were a jumbled cache of disarticulated bones that may reflect an incident of mass mortality following a flash flood.

TrueMajority

TrueMajority was a progressive advocacy group in the United States. In September 2007, TrueMajority and its related organization TrueMajorityACTION merged with USAction. By 2008, the combined groups had over 700,000 members, making it, together with MoveOn, one of the two largest liberal advocacy groups in the United States.

TrueMajority was founded by Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry's.

TrueMajorityACTION was a separate but closely related organization, which had a different status under U.S. law so that it could campaign for specific parties and politicians. TrueMajority merged with USAction in 2007.

TrueMajority was mentioned on The Colbert Report on March 5, 2007, when Ben and Jerry made a guest appearance. In the episode, they offered free frisbees to Colbert viewers who visited the web site, and then they signed up each viewer who visited as a member of the advocacy group.

Marathahalli

Marathahalli is a suburb of Bangalore city in Karnataka state of India.

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Supertrios

Supertrios is a 1977 album by jazz pianist McCoy Tyner, his eleventh to be released on the Milestone label. It was recorded in April 1977 and features performances by Tyner with two rhythm sections; Ron Carter and Tony Williams or Eddie Gómez and Jack DeJohnette.

Betacism

In historical linguistics, betacism is a sound change in which (the voiced bilabial plosive, like in bane) shifts to (the voiced labiodental fricative, like in English vane). It is an example of lenition. Betacism is a fairly common phenomenon; it has taken place in Greek, Hebrew, Portuguese and Spanish, among others. In Classical Greek, the letter beta denoted . As a result of betacism, it has come to denote in Modern Greek, a process which probably began during the Koine Greek period, approximately in the 1st century AD, along with the spirantization of the other . Modern (and earlier Medieval) Greek uses the digraph to represent . Indeed, this is the origin of the word betacism.

Perhaps the best known example of betacism is in the Romance languages. The first traces of betacism in Latin can be found in the third century C.E. The results of the shift are most widespread in the Western Romance languages, especially in Spanish, where the letters and are now both pronounced (the voiced bilabial fricative, which is similar to ) except phrase-initially and after when they are pronounced ; the two sounds ( and ) are now allophones. A similar phenomenon takes place in Persian in casual speech. Another example is in Neapolitan, or in Maceratese (dialect of Macerata) which uses to denote betacism-produced , such that Latin bucca corresponds to Neapolitan vocca and to Maceratese "vocca", Latin arborem to arvero or arvulo, and barba to Neapolitan varva and Maceratese "varba".

Betacism occurred in Ancient Hebrew; the sound (denoted ) changed to and eventually to except when geminated or when following a consonant or pause. As a result, the two sounds became allophones; but, due to later sound changes, including the loss of gemination, the distinction became phonemic in Modern Hebrew.

Fantômas

Fantômas is a fictional character created by French writers Marcel Allain (1885–1969) and Pierre Souvestre (1874–1914).

One of the most popular characters in the history of French crime fiction, Fantômas was created in 1911 and appeared in a total of 32 volumes written by the two collaborators, then a subsequent 11 volumes written by Allain alone after Souvestre's death. The character was also the basis of various film, television, and comic book adaptations. In the history of crime fiction, he represents a transition from Gothic novel villains of the 19th century to modern-day serial killers.

The books and movies that came out in quick succession anticipate current production methods of Hollywood, in two respects: First, the authors distributed the writing among themselves; their "working method was to draw up the general plot between them and then go off and write alternate chapters independently of each other, meeting up to tie the two-halves of the story together in the final chapter." This approach allowed the authors to produce almost one novel per month. Second, the movie rights to the books were immediately snapped up. Such a system ensured that the film studio could produce sequels reliably.

Fantomas
  1. redirect Fantômas
Fantômas (band)

Fantômas is an American experimental metal supergroup, formed in 1998 in California. It features vocalist Mike Patton ( Faith No More, Mr. Bungle), drummer Dave Lombardo (ex- Slayer), guitarist Buzz Osborne ( Melvins) and bassist Trevor Dunn (Mr. Bungle, Tomahawk). The band is named after Fantômas, a supervillain featured in a series of crime novels popular in France before World War I and in film, most notably in the 60s French movie series.

Fantômas (album)

Fantômas is the self-titled debut studio album by American experimental metal supergroup Fantômas. It was released on April 26, 1999, and was the first album released on Ipecac Recordings.

Fantômas (1964 film)

Fantômas is a 1964 French film starring Jean Marais as the arch villain with the same name opposite Louis de Funès as the earnest but outclassed commissaire Paul Juve. In the film Juve teams up with journalist Fandor, also played by Marais, trying to catch Fantômas but never quite succeeding. It was France's answer, in 1964, to the James Bond phenomenon that swept the world at around the same time. It is the first ever of a trilogy film, and Fantômas became extremely successful in Europe, the Soviet Union and Japan. It found success even in the United States, where fan websites exist to this day. Mylène Demongeot plays "Hélène Gurn", the girlfriend of "Jérôme Fandor", Fantômas' arch enemy. The general tone of the films is more light-hearted than the original Fantômas novels. Commissaire Juve, as played by Louis de Funès, becomes a comedic character, much different from his literary counterpart.

Fantômas (1920 serial)

Fantômas is a 1920 American crime film serial directed by Edward Sedgwick. The film is considered to be lost.

Fantômas (1913 serial)

Fantômas is a French silent crime film serial directed by Louis Feuillade, based on the novel of the same name. The five episodes, initially released throughout 1913-14, were restored under the direction of Jacques Champreaux and released in this new form in 2006.

The series consists of five episodes, each an hour to an hour and a half in length, which end in cliffhangers, i.e., episodes one and three end with Fantômas making a last-minute escape, the end of the second entry has Fantômas blowing up Lady Beltham's manor house with Juve and Fandor, the two heroes, still inside. The subsequent episodes begin with a recap of the story that has gone before. Each film is further divided into three or more chapters that do not end in cliffhangers.

Fantômas (disambiguation)

Fantômas is a fictional character created by French writers Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre.

Fantômas may also refer to:

  • Fantômas (1913 serial), directed by Louis Feuillade
  • Fantômas (1920 serial), directed by Edward Sedgwick
  • Fantômas (1932 film), directed by Pál Fejös
  • Fantômas (1964 film), a French film
  • Fantômas (band), avant-garde metal supergroup
    • Fantômas (album)
Fantômas (1946 film)

Fantômas is a 1946 French crime film directed by Jean Sacha and starring Marcel Herrand, Simone Signoret and Alexandre Rignault.

Fantômas (1932 film)

Fantômas is a 1932 French crime film directed by Pál Fejös and starring Jean Galland, Tania Fédor and Thomy Bourdelle. It features the popular pulp chraracter Fantômas, a supercriminal, and his nemesis Inspector Juve. It was loosely based on the original Fantômas novel by Marcel Allain and Pierre Souvestre. The film was one of a number of Fantômas adaptations made during the 20th century.

Horismenus

Horismenus is a genus of hymenopteran insects of the family Eulophidae.

Rigid body

]] In physics, a rigid body is an idealization of a solid body in which deformation is neglected. In other words, the distance between any two given points of a rigid body remains constant in time regardless of external forces exerted on it. Even though such an object cannot physically exist due to relativity, objects can normally be assumed to be perfectly rigid if they are not moving near the speed of light.

In classical mechanics a rigid body is usually considered as a continuous mass distribution, while in quantum mechanics a rigid body is usually thought of as a collection of point masses. For instance, in quantum mechanics molecules (consisting of the point masses: electrons and nuclei) are often seen as rigid bodies (see classification of molecules as rigid rotors).

Bienservida

Bienservida is a municipality in Albacete, Castile-La Mancha, Spain. It has a population of 858.

Category:Municipalities of the Province of Albacete Category:Populated places in the Province of Albacete

Quicksand

Quicksand is a colloid hydrogel consisting of fine granular material (such as sand, silt or clay), and water.

Quicksand forms in saturated loose sand when the sand is suddenly agitated. When water in the sand cannot escape, it creates a liquefied soil that loses strength and cannot support weight. Quicksand can form in standing water or in upwards flowing water (as from an artesian spring). In the case of upwards flowing water, seepage forces oppose the force of gravity and suspend the soil particles.

The saturated sediment may appear quite solid until a sudden change in pressure or shock initiates liquefaction. This causes the sand to form a suspension and lose strength. The cushioning of water gives quicksand, and other liquefied sediments, a spongy, fluidlike texture. Objects in liquefied sand sink to the level at which the weight of the object is equal to the weight of the displaced soil/water mix and the submerged object floats due to its buoyancy.

Liquefaction is a special case of quicksand. In this case, sudden earthquake forces immediately increase the pore pressure of shallow groundwater. The saturated liquefied soil loses strength, causing buildings or other objects on that surface to sink or fall.

Quicksand (disambiguation)

Quicksand is loose, water-logged sand which yields easily to weight or pressure

  • Dry quicksand, loose sand which yields easily to weight or pressure
Quicksand (American band)

Quicksand is an American post-hardcore band from New York City, founded in 1990. Their debut self-titled EP was followed by two major label albums, Slip and Manic Compression. Quicksand's sound has been compared to that of post-hardcore bands Fugazi and Helmet. The band supported their releases with extensive touring but fell short of the mainstream success anticipated by their labels. These factors and internal stress led them to separate first in 1995 and again in 1999 following a failed year-and-a-half reunion. In June 2012, Quicksand reunited for a special one-night performance and since has been playing additional live shows. The band has reportedly been working on new material.

Quicksand (1950 film)

Quicksand is a 1950 American film noir crime film starring Mickey Rooney and Peter Lorre in a story about a garage mechanic's descent into crime. Directed by Irving Pichel shortly before he was blacklisted for suspected Communist activities, the film has been described as "film noir in a teacup... a pretty nifty little picture" in which Rooney "cast himself against his Andy Hardy goody goody image."

Quicksand (novel)

is a novel by the Japanese author Jun'ichirō Tanizaki. It was written in serial format between 1928 and 1930 for the magazine Kaizō. The last of Tanizaki's major novels translated into English, it concerns a four-way bisexual love affair between upper-crust denizens of Osaka.

Quicksand (comics)

Quicksand is a fictional character, a supervillainess appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.

Quicksand (2003 film)

Quicksand is a 2003 direct-to-video British- French- German co-produced crime thriller film starring Michael Keaton and Michael Caine. The film was released in Germany, Finland, Sweden and Norway in 2003, in United States on 16 March 2004 and in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2004. Quicksand was filmed in South France between December 2000 and January 2001, originally set for a 2002 release.

Quicksand (2002 film)

Quicksand is a 2002 action film that was released direct-to-video in March 2003 after a short initial run in theatres in Los Angeles in March 2002. The film stars Michael Dudikoff, Brooke Theiss, Richard Kind and Dan Hedaya. In United Kingdom the film was released on DVD in August 2003. The film is directed by Sam Firstenberg.

Quicksand (La Roux song)

"Quicksand" is a song by English synthpop duo La Roux from their self-titled debut album, La Roux. Written and produced by Elly Jackson and Ben Langmaid, the song was released as the album's lead single on 15 December 2008 by Kitsuné Music. It peaked at number 153 on the UK Singles Chart upon limited release. When re-released on 23 November 2009, the single re-entered the chart at number 129.

Quicksand (David Bowie song)

"Quicksand" is a song written by David Bowie in 1971 for the album Hunky Dory; it was recorded on 14 July 1971. This ballad features multi-tracked acoustic guitars and a string arrangement by Mick Ronson. Producer Ken Scott, having recently engineered George Harrison's album All Things Must Pass, attempted to create a similarly powerful acoustic sound with this track.

Lyrically the song, like much of Bowie's work at this time, was influenced by Buddhism, occultism, and Friedrich Nietzsche's concept of the Superman. It refers to the magical society Golden Dawn and name-checks one of its most famous members, Aleister Crowley, as well as Heinrich Himmler, Winston Churchill and Juan Pujol (codename: Garbo).

Quicksand (Martha and the Vandellas song)

"Quicksand" is a 1963 soul-dance single by Motown girl group Martha and the Vandellas. It was built around a similar gospel-inspired delivery of their previous release, their break-out hit, " (Love Is Like a) Heat Wave", but was slightly slower with a harder edge. This time, lead singer Martha Reeves explains how her loved one brings her "closer" to him explaining that his love was like "quicksand". Released in October 1963 on the Gordy label, the song became another Top Ten hit for Martha & the Vandellas, eventually reaching number eight on the Billboard Hot 100. It was the third hit on which the group collaborated with the famed Holland–Dozier–Holland team, who would go on to record hits with the likes of Vandellas' contemporaries, The Supremes and the Four Tops.

Quicksand (board game)

Quicksand is a board game published in 1989 by Parker Brothers.

Each player controls one of four explorers racing to discover an ancient temple. The object of the game is to be the first player to get your adventurer around the board from START to the finish line back at CAMP.

The player pawns represent a mustachioed archetypical British explorer, and they're in parts. To represent your sinking into the quicksand, you remove his feet, then his waist, and so on until only the pith helmet remains.

You actually start already partially mired (by an initial die roll); every turn you move forward a number of spaces given by your height, plus an optional movement die. You can never sink more than hat-deep (so you cannot be eliminated).

Quicksand (Noah23 album)

Quicksand is a 2002 album by Canadian- American alternative hip hop artist Noah23. Most of the album's production was handled by Orphan, the Plague Language collective's most prolific producer at the time.

The track "Crypto Sporidian" was released as a split single with the track "Deadly Rays" from fellow Plague Language member Baracuda's debut album Tetragammoth. Both tracks were produced by Orphan.

Quicksand (1981 board game)

Quicksand is a board game (currently out of print) produced in 1981 by the Whitman Publishing Company. The game is played on an hourglass-shaped board made of plastic with numerous round indentations designed to hold the game's playing pieces, which are small egg timer-like minute glasses (referred to as "sand timers") inside of plastic sleeves closed at either end by red or yellow caps. Each set of sand timers are labeled with decals marked A through D. The object of the game is for a player to get his/her sand timers from the back row of the board closest to him to his opponent's back row, without letting any of his sand timers run out.

Quicksand (Welsh band)

Quicksand were a band from Port Talbot in Wales who were active from 1969 until 1975.

Quicksand (1918 film)

Quicksand is a 1918 American silent drama film directed by Victor Schertzinger and written by John Lynch and R. Cecil Smith. The film stars Henry A. Barrows, Edward Coxen, Dorothy Dalton, Frankie Lee, and Philo McCullough. The film was released on December 22, 1918, by Paramount Pictures.

Quicksand (Ted Curson album)

Quicksand is an album by American trumpeter Ted Curson which was recorded in 1974 and released on the Atlantic label.

Quicksand (Caro Emerald song)

"Quicksand" is the thirteenth single by Dutch singer Caro Emerald. It was released as a Digital download on April 24, 2015, in the Netherlands as the lead single from her third studio album. It was added to the 'B' list on BBC Radio Two.

Quicksand (Larsen novel)

Quicksand is a novel by American author Nella Larsen, first published in 1928. This is her first novel and the first draft was completed in a short period of time. The novel was out of print from the 1930s to the 1970s. Quicksand is a work that explores both cross-cultural and interracial themes. Larson dedicated the novel to her husband.

Açorda

Açorda is a typical Portuguese dish composed of thinly sliced bread with garlic, finely chopped coriander, olive oil, vinegar, water, salt and poached eggs. It is mostly known in the Alentejo region and nationwide too. There are many types of açorda, like those made with shrimp (Açorda de Marisco or ...de camarão) or codfish (Açorda de Bacalhau).

The eggs are poached in salted water. Garlic, coriander and salt are "mashed" into a coarse paste, olive oil and vinegar are added in and then the mixture is poured over the bread. The eggs are then placed over the bread and the water used to poach them is poured over. The Açorda is then left to steam for a few minutes.

Writ (disambiguation)

Writ may refer to:

  • a Writ, a legal document
  • Writ of election, a writ issued by a state ordering that an election be held
  • Writ (website), an online legal commentary
  • Ogg Writ, a text-phrase codec
  • "The Writ" (also appears as "The Writ/Blow on a Jug"), a song from Black Sabbath's 1975 album Sabotage
  • Holy Writ, an old-fashioned term for the Bible and other religious texts
  • WRIT-FM, an oldies-formatted radio station in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Writ

In English common law, a writ is a formal written order issued by a body with administrative or judicial jurisdiction; in modern usage, this body is generally a court. Warrants, prerogative writs and subpoenas are common types of writ but innumerable forms exist, as listed in Palgrave's Parliamentary Writs (1827, 1834). In its earliest form a writ was simply a written order made by the English monarch to a specified person to undertake a specified action; for example, in the feudal era a military summons by the king to one of his tenants-in-chief to appear dressed for battle with retinue at a certain place and time. An early usage survives in the United Kingdom and Canada in a writ of election, which is a written order issued on behalf of the monarch (in Canada, the Governor General) to local officials ( High Sheriffs of every county in the historical UK) to hold a general election. Writs were used by the medieval English kings to summon persons to Parliament (then consisting of the House of Lords alone) whose advice was considered valuable or who were particularly influential, who were thereby deemed to have been created " barons by writ".

Writ (website)

Writ is a legal commentary website on the topic of the law of the United States hosted by FindLaw. The website is no longer adding content, having published its last entry in August 2011. Before then, Writ published at least one new column by one of its regular columnists every business day, and frequently posted a second column by a guest columnist. The regular columnists were all notable attorneys. Almost all contributors are law professors; some are former law clerks from the U.S. Supreme Court; some are past or present federal prosecutors; one is a former Counsel to the President; one is a novelist, and one is the current director of the Terrorism and Counterterrorism Program of Human Rights Watch. The guest columnists also tend to be law professors or seasoned attorneys. When the website was still producing new content, columnists commented both on notable ongoing court cases and recent court decisions, as well as on current events.

Writ also published occasional book reviews, on books of both legal and more general interest; the book reviewers were likewise academically inclined attorneys.

Writ is free, and maintains all of its material from its inception in a free archive.

Although Writ is known mainly among legal circles, its columnists tend to be prolific authors who reach a broad audience. Many have published books as well as frequent articles and op-eds in newspapers and magazines such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, U.S. News & World Report, The Los Angeles Times, The Chicago Tribune, and Slate. One Writ columnist, Marci Hamilton, was the first guest on The Daily Show in its new studio in 2005; columnist Edward Lazarus also appeared on The Daily Show in 2006.

Writ is available online, but has published just two columns since December 30, 2010.

Slivna

Slivna is a settlement west of Vače the Municipality of Litija in central Slovenia. The area was traditionally part of Styria and is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region. The settlement is the Geometric Centre of the Republic of Slovenia.

The local church, built in the hamlet of Zgornja Slivna, is dedicated to Saint Agnes and belongs to the Parish of Vače. It is a late 14th-century church that was restyled in the Baroque in the late 17th to early 18th centuries.

Numbi

Numbi may refer to:

  • Denis Kalume Numbi, Interior Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • John Numbi, Inspector General of the Democratic Republic of the Congo police
  • Numbi numbi, a sinkhole in Northern Territory, Australia
Alaquàs

Alaquàs (; ) is a municipality in the comarca of Horta Oest in the Valencian Community, Spain.

Edaiyiruppu

Edaiyiruppu is a village in the Papanasam taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India.

Polesella

Polesella is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Rovigo in the Italian region Veneto, located about southwest of Venice and about south of Rovigo.

Polesella borders the following municipalities: Arquà Polesine, Bosaro, Canaro, Frassinelle Polesine, Guarda Veneta, Ro.

In 1509 it was the location of the homonymous battle between the Venetian fleet and the troops of Ferrara. The town is home to the Palazzo Grimani, a 16th-century patrician residence attributed to Vincenzo Scamozzi and the Villa Morosini (16th–17th centuries).

Obscure (video game)

ObsCure is a survival horror video game developed by Hydravision Entertainment and published by DreamCatcher Interactive in North America, Ubisoft in China and MC2-Microïds in other territories for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2 and Xbox. It was released on October 1, 2004 in Europe and North America on April 6, 2005.

Obscure

Obscure may refer to:

  • ObsCure, a survival horror video game released in 2004
    • Obscure II, a sequel to the 2004 game, released in 2007
  • "Obscure" (song), by Japanese rock band Dir en grey, from Vulgar
  • Obscure Records, started by Brian Eno in 1975 to release works by lesser-known composers
  • Obscure vowel, a type of weak or reduced vowel sound
Serrigny-en-Bresse

Serrigny-en-Bresse is a commune in the Saône-et-Loire department in the region of Bourgogne in eastern France.

Chondrite

Chondrites are stony (non-metallic) meteorites that have not been modified due to melting or differentiation of the parent body. They are formed when various types of dust and small grains that were present in the early solar system accreted to form primitive asteroids. They are the most common type of meteorite that falls to Earth with estimates for the proportion of the total fall that they represent varying between 85.7% and 86.2%. Their study provides important clues for understanding the origin and age of the Solar System, the synthesis of organic compounds, the origin of life or the presence of water on Earth. One of their characteristics is the presence of chondrules, which are round grains formed by distinct minerals, that normally constitute between 20% and 80% of a chondrite by volume.

Chondrites can be differentiated from iron meteorites due to their low iron and nickel content. Other non-metallic meteorites, achondrites, which lack chondrules, were formed more recently.

There are currently over 27,000 chondrites in the world's collections. The largest individual stone ever recovered, weighing 1770 kg, was part of the Jilin meteorite shower of 1976. Chondrite falls range from single stones to extraordinary showers consisting of thousands of individual stones, as occurred in the Holbrook fall of 1912, where an estimated 14,000 stones rained down on northern Arizona.

Khansar

Khansar may refer to:

  • Khānsar
    • Khansar, Pakistan
    • Bahadarwala, Khansar, Punjab

Khānsār

    • Khvansar, Iran
    • Khvansar, Yazd, Iran
    • Khvansar County, Iran

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Velm

Velm is a village in the Belgian province of Limburg and one of the communities constituting the municipality of Sint-Truiden. The village has a surface of 10,45 km² and comprised 2175 inhabitants in 2001.

Velm is a residential village in Haspengouw, 6 km southeast of Sint-Truiden. It is bounded in the east by the N80 motorway, leading to Namur, and in the west by the railroad Sint-Truiden to Landen. On that line, Velm had a railway station until 1957.

Chahuis

Chahuis or xamoes are the common names given in Mexico to a variety of edible beetles within the insect order Coleoptera. The insects' common names in English are often "sticks worms", "rhinoceros beetle," or "grub".

The chahuis insects feed on species of the Mesquite tree.

Particularly appreciated are the larvae of the following families: Cerambycidae, Scarabaeidae, Melolonthidae, and Passalidae.

Metacrambus

Metacrambus is a genus of moths of the Crambidae family.

Tupuxuara

Tupuxuara is a genus of large, crested, toothless pterodactyloid pterosaur.

Urra

Urra may refer to:

  • Urra Moor, a moor in North Yorkshire, England
  • Urra (antiquity), a city in ancient Babylonia
  • Urra, a parish (freguesia) in the district of Portalegre in Portugal
  • Urra, a town in the state of Uttar Pradesh in India
  • Urras, a fictional world in The Dispossessed by Ursula K. Le Guin
  • Urra Dam in Colombia
  • Urra, a Russian war cry.
Sokolovići

Sokolovići may refer to:

  • Sokolovići, Sokolac, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Sokolovići, Rudo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Sokolovići, Ilidža, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Sokolovići, Topusko, Croatia
Selenogyrus

Selenogyrus is a genus of spider, or more specifically, selenogyrine theraphosid. The type species is Selenogyrus caeruleus.

Laimes

Laimes also known as "Lehms", "Lehmhus", "Leimes" is a clay daub faced granaries particular to Upper Silesia. Origin of name is thought to be from Lehm (clay), but with the local dialect corrupted to Laimes. Once they were common left of the River Odra (Oder) but are thought to be no longer found there. In the district of Głubczyce (Leobschütz) this vernacular building form was primarily only found in the two villages of Rozumice (Rösnitz) and Pilszcz (Piltsch). Originally all farmhouses and even some small-holdings in the village would have had its own Laimes but, by the end of World War I in Rozumice there were only 22 remaining and today there is only one standing example., now the subject of a restoration proposal.

Clay grain stores were found in many parts of Europe but not in the south or east. The Laimes were distinctive for a number of reasons. They were uniquely positioned (with some exceptions), outside of a walled farmhouse courtyard, on the public road front. In Rozumice they were formed with split logs that were daubed with clay and straw only on the outside, no openings other than metal grille protected vent slots at high level. Some six to eight metres high, originally roofed in wood shingle but due to fire hazard were replaced later with fixed stone slates. The lower floor was raised off the ground on stone pillars. Bins were positioned to hold the animal feed grain and grain for the family flour. Hams and Speck were hung from the roof.

A single framed oak beam door gave access and had a complicated locking mechanisms. There were up to three separate key locks on the outer face with a racket topped locking beam on the inner wall side, manoeuvred into position with a 2 cm diameter dowel and metal 'key'. The Laimes were considered as secure. Perhaps their position on the road frontage was to keep them under constant review or perhaps just reflected an entrenched tradition. The size of the Laimes reflected the wealth of the farm.

The original settlers of Rozumice were thought to come from Franconia but Laimes as a building form were unknown there. Westphalia is known to previously have had Laimes, no examples are thought to survive, they were of a very similar construction, except they were formed with squared oak beam framing with wattle and daub to both inside and outside, wood shingle roofed and were four to nine metres in width and length and four to six metres high.

Fallagate

Fallagate was a political scandal in Guernsey in 2007, over the desire by Deputies of the States of Deliberation to appear corruption free. The desire to appear corruption free cost the island's 40000 tax payers £60 each, and the resulting scandal led to the resignation of Laurie Morgan, the then Chief Minister of Guernsey, and the Policy Council, a committee of the States.

Teytaq

Teytaq (, also Romanized as Ţeyţāq; also known as Teyţakh) is a village in Kowleh Rural District, Saral District, Divandarreh County, Kurdistan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 148, in 31 families.

Küssnacht

Küssnacht am Rigi (official name since 2004: Küssnacht) is a village and a district and a municipality in the canton of Schwyz in Switzerland. The municipality consists of three villages Küssnacht, Immensee, and Merlischachen, the hamlet Haltikon, the industrial aea Fänn, and the alp Seeboden. It is situated at the north shore of Lake Lucerne and at the south shore of Lake Zug below mount Rigi .

Kahva

Kahva (, also Romanized as Kahvā) is a village in Sarrud-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Boyer-Ahmad County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.

Landsmeer

Landsmeer is a municipality and a town in the Netherlands, in the province of North Holland.

Madden

Madden may refer to:

FHP

FHP is an initialism which could mean any of the following:

Mhangura

Mhangura (formerly Mangula) is a small town in Mashonaland West province, Zimbabwe. The name was probably derived from the Shona word mhangura meaning "red metal" in reference to copper. According to the 1992 census Mhangura had a population of 11,175. Mhangura is also the name of a copper mine which closed in the late 1990s.

Zimbabwean cricketer Natsai Mushangwe comes from Mhangura.

Category:Populated places in Zimbabwe Category:Copper mining Category:Populated places in Mashonaland West Province

Menteith

Menteith or Monteith , a district of south Perthshire, Scotland, roughly comprises the territory between the Teith and the Forth. The region is named for the river Teith, but the exact sense is unclear, early forms including Meneted, Maneteth and Meneteth. The area between Callander and Dunblane was historically known as the Vale of Menteith.

In medieval Scotland, Menteith formed an earldom, ruled by the Earls of Menteith. Gilchrist is the first known earl. The lands and the earldom passed to Walter Comyn (d. 1258) in right of his wife Isabella, and then through Isabella's sister Mary to Stewarts, and finally to the Grahams, becoming extinct in 1694.

The Lake of Menteith, situated 24 miles south of Loch Venachar, measures 14 miles long by 1 mile broad, and contains three islands. On Inchmahome (Innis MoCholmaig, island of St Colmaig) stand the ruins of Inchmahome Priory, an Augustinian priory founded in 1238 by Walter Comyn, and built in the Early English style, with an ornate western doorway. Mary, Queen of Scots, when a child of four, lived on the island for a few weeks before her departure to Dumbarton Castle, and on to France in 1548. On Inch Talla stands the ruined tower of the earls of Menteith, dating from 1428.

The village of Port of Menteith stands on the north shore of the lake.

In Shakespeare's Macbeth, Menteth (sic) is one of the "noblemen of Scotland", appearing in Act V, allied with Malcolm and others to oppose Macbeth's usurpation.

Ankush

Ankush is a 1986 Hindi movie starring Nana Patekar, which was written, directed, edited and co-produced by N. Chandra. Made at a modest budget of Rs 12 lakh, the film grossed Rs 95 lacs to become surprise hit of 1986, the year when many blockbusters failed. It was remade in Kannada as Ravana Rajya.

Ankush (actor)

Ankush Hazra is an India film actor who appears in Bengali films. He made his acting debut in the film Kellafate, which was released in 2010. His next film was Idiot, opposite Srabanti. Ankush made his fourth film, Khiladi, with Nusrat Jahan under the banner of Eskay Movies. After that, he worked two joint production projects with Eskay Movies and Jaaz Multimedia of (Bangladesh).

Dimetotiazine

Dimetotiazine ( INN) is a phenothiazine drug used for the treatment of migraine. It is a serotonin antagonist and histamine antagonist.

Owdui

Owdui (, also Romanized as Owdūī and Owdoee) is a village in Bondar Rural District, Senderk District, Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 335, in 65 families.

Gamer.tv

Gamer.tv was a weekly television show produced by the company of the same name, that ran from 2002 to 2008. Each half-hour episode mixed topical video game news, reviews, previews and features. The series aired on a number of networks around the world including Bravo in the United Kingdom and Starz in North America. It was also shown in Canada, South America, Spain, India, and New Zealand, and video segments appeared on a number of websites, as well, including MSN. The show was banned in China. While airing, it regularly ranked as Bravo's highest rated show.

Gamer TV is owned by IMG.

Kobali
''For the fictional alien race, see Ashes to Ashes (Star Trek: Voyager).

Kobali is a town in Koinadugu District in the Northern Province of Sierra Leone.

Category:Populated places in Sierra Leone Category:Northern Province, Sierra Leone

Trafic

Trafic (Traffic) is a 1971 Italian-French comedy film directed by Jacques Tati. Trafic was the last film to feature Tati's famous character of Monsieur Hulot, and followed the vein of earlier Tati films that lampooned modern society.

Tati's use of the word "trafic" instead of the usual French word for car traffic (la circulation) may derive from a desire to use the same franglais he used when he called his previous film Play Time, and the primary meaning of trafic is "exchange of goods", rather than "traffic" per se.

Trafic (2004 film)

Trafic is a 2004 Romanian short film directed by Cătălin Mitulescu. It depicts a brief moment in the mundanities of urban life and family life, and a man's quick decision to escape them, if only just for a moment. It won the Short Film Palme d'Or at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. It is said to have been the "instigating" film of the Romanian New Wave.

Mucuq

Mucuq (also, Mudzhuk and Mudzhukh) is a village and municipality in the Qusar Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 1,243.

Muggensturm

Muggensturm is a municipality in the district of Rastatt in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

LPF

LPF may refer to:

  • IATA code for Liupanshui Yuezhao Airport, China
  • Pim Fortuyn List
  • Liga Profesionistă de Fotbal, a professional football league in Romania.
  • Liga Panameña de Fútbol a professional football league in Panama.
  • League for Programming Freedom
  • Linux packet filter
  • Low-pass filter
  • Liters per flush, as shown on American urinals "1 gpf/3.7 lpf"
  • LISA Pathfinder
  • Light press fit
  • Lietuvos plaukimo federacija (Lithuanian Swimming Federation)
  • Nissan Stadium (formerly LP Field), a stadium in Nashville, Tennessee and the home of the Tennessee Titans
KILT

KILT may refer to:

  • KILT-FM, a radio station (100.3 FM) licensed to Houston, Texas, United States
  • KILT (AM), a radio station (610 AM) licensed to Houston, Texas, United States
KILT (AM)

KILT (610 AM, "Sports Radio 610") is a Sports/ Talk formatted radio station in the Houston, Texas, metropolitan area. The station is currently owned by CBS Radio. KILT shares its call letters with its sister station 100.3 FM, which airs a country music format. Its studios are located in the Greenway Plaza district, and its transmitter is located near the Greenspoint district of northwest Houston.

KILT is the flagship station of the NFL's Houston Texans and the Texans Radio Network. It has aired every Texans game since the team's inception into the league in 2002.

Karinga

Karinga is a settlement in Kenya's Central Province.

Neerlandia

Neerlandia is a hamlet in central Alberta, Canada within the County of Barrhead No. 11. Neerlandia is situated at the intersection of Highway 769 and Township Road 615A between Mellowdale and Vega, approximately 20 kilometers north of Barrhead and northwest of Westlock.

Neerlandia was founded by Dutch immigrants beginning in 1911. The name "Neerlandia" refers to the first settlers' country of origin, the Netherlands. The surrounding area is largely agricultural based with many people in the out-lying area also being involved in construction and other trades as well.

Budenheim

Budenheim is a municipality in the Mainz-Bingen district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. Unlike other municipalities in Mainz-Bingen, it does not belong to any Verbandsgemeinde.

Mooste

Mooste is a small borough in Mooste Parish, Põlva County, Estonia.

AFSOUTH

AFSOUTH can refer to:

  • Air Forces Southern, the air force component of United States Southern Command
  • Joint Force Command Naples, previously Allied Forces Southern Europe, where southern European NATO operations are directed from
Easthampstead

Easthampstead is today a southern suburb of the town of Bracknell in the English county of Berkshire, although the old village can still be easily identified around the Church of St Michael and St Mary Magdalene. This beautiful building houses some of the finest stained glass works of Sir Edward Burne-Jones.

Czmoniec

Czmoniec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kórnik, within Poznań County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately south-west of Kórnik and south of the regional capital Poznań.

The village has a population of 220.

FractMus

FractMus is a freeware algorithmic music generator program developed and maintained by Spanish pianist and composer Gustavo Díaz-Jerez. It has been primarily used by composers, performers, software designers, researchers and artists for creating music.

Menhaden

Menhaden, also known as mossbunker, and bunker, are forage fish of the genera Brevoortia and Ethmidium, two genera of marine fish in the family Clupeidae. Menhaden is a blend of poghaden (pogy for short) and an Algonquian word akin to Narragansett munnawhatteaûg, derived from munnohquohteau ‘he fertilizes’, referring to their use of the fish use as fertilizer. It is generally thought that Pilgrims were advised by Tisquantum (also known as Squanto) to plant menhaden with their crops.

Soleichthys

Soleichthys is a genus of small soles native to coastal waters in the Indo-Pacific.

Geomechanics

Geomechanics (from the Greek prefix geo- meaning " earth"; and " mechanics") involves the geologic study of the behavior of soil and rock.

GEMMIS
  1. redirect EMM386#GEMMIS

Category:DOS memory management

Callumbonella

Callumbonella is a genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Trochidae, the top snails (unassigned to a subfamily).

Nephelescope

A nephelescope is a device invented by James Pollard Espy to measure the drop in temperature of a gas from a reduction in pressure; originally used to explore the formation of clouds.

Asal (film)

Asal (Original) is a 2010 Indian action film directed by Saran. The film stars Ajith Kumar in the lead role, who is also credited for the story, dialogues, screenplay and co-direction of the film, while Sameera Reddy and Bhavana play the lead female roles. The film features an extensive cast, with Prabhu, Suresh, Sampath Raj and Rajiv Krishna playing prominent roles, among others. The film, produced by Prabhu Ganesan of Sivaji Productions, features music primarily composed by Bharathwaj, cinematography by Prashanth D. Misale and editing by Anthony Gonsalves.

The film revolves around the feud between the three brothers over property; two brothers, from their father's first wife on one side with their avarice for all the wealth with the righteous third, from his father's second marriage, trying to stop the family from breaking down. The feud that exists as an undercurrent in the presence of their father and turns ugly and personal after he passes away. It grows bigger with the two brothers joining in to elbow out the third but he graciously steps aside, only wanting to keep cordial relations. But, the two brothers are just not able to handle the huge wealth and the responsibility that it brings. Their wealth attracts trouble and it is up to the third to come back and save his brothers, against others who strive for the wealth while the crux of the plot revolves around if wealth does disintegrate the family.

Pre-production for the project began in December 2007 when Sivaji Productions signed up Ajith for a film; however, because of a bevy of changes in the technical crew, shooting only began in April 2009. The filming took place in various locations: notably locally in Chennai, and abroad in Paris, Dubai and Kuala Lumpur. The film opened worldwide on 550 screens (including 350 screens in India) following its release on 5 February 2010. The film received generally mixed to negative reviews.

Asal

Asal may refer to:

  • Algerian Space Agency
  • Asal Hazel Los Angeles based musician.
  • Asal (film), a 2010 Tamil film starring Ajith Kumar
  • Aasal (soundtrack), the soundtrack album from that film
  • Asal, Yemen, a village in western central Yemen
  • Asal, King of the Golden Pillars, a figure in Irish Celtic mythology
  • Asal (grape), a Portuguese wine grape
Stoneholm

Stoneholm is a historic house at 188 Ames Street in Sharon, Massachusetts. The 2-1/2 story stone house was built c. 1848, and is a distinctive Victorian house, exhibiting Second Empire and Italianate details executed in granite from the local Moyles Quarry near Borderland State Park. Built for Horace Augustus Lothrop. The house has a mansard roof with flared eaves, with a rooftop deck and cupola. The main facade is divided into three bays, with the entry in the central bay, sheltered by a wraparound single-story porch. The center bay on the second level has a pair of round-arch windows, a feature echoed in the roof dormer directly above.

The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

Breitenfelde

Breitenfelde is a village in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is situated near the Elbe-Lübeck Canal, approx. 5 km southwest of Mölln, and 30 km south of Lübeck.

Breitenfelde is part of the Amt ("collective municipality") Breitenfelde.

Breitenfelde (Amt)

Breitenfelde is an Amt ("collective municipality") in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Its seat is in Mölln.

The Amt Breitenfelde consists of the following municipalities (population in 2005 between brackets):

  1. Alt Mölln (864)
  2. Bälau (239)
  3. Borstorf (307)
  4. Breitenfelde (1,812)
  5. Grambek (393)
  6. Hornbek (176)
  7. Lehmrade (463)
  8. Niendorf an der Stecknitz (628)
  9. Schretstaken (518)
  10. Talkau (527)
  11. Woltersdorf (280)
Vetco

Vetco was established in July 2004 and operated through its subsidiaries Vetco Gray and Vetco Aibel AS. Vetco was the result of a consortium consisting of the private equity firms Candover, 3i and JP Morgan Partners taking over ABB's oil and gas division; ABB Offshore Systems. Vetco was made out of companies that have serviced the upstream oil and gas industry since 1903. These companies are suppliers of products, systems and services for onshore and offshore drilling and production, project management, engineering, procurement and construction services, process systems and equipment, maintenance, modification and operations. Vetco was headquartered in London UK, and employed over 10000 people in more than 30 countries worldwide.

Hippoidea

Hippoidea is a superfamily of decapod crustaceans known as sand crabs, mole crabs, or sand fleas.

Snipe eel

Snipe eels are a family, Nemichthyidae, of eels that consists of nine species in three genera. They are pelagic fishes, found in every ocean, mostly at depths of 300–600 m but sometimes as deep as 4000 m. Depending on the species, adults may reach in length, yet they weigh only 80-400 g (a few ounces to a pound). They are distinguished by their very slender jaws that separate toward the tips as the upper jaw curves upward. The jaws appear similar to the beak of the bird called the snipe. Snipe eels are oviparous, and the juveniles, called Leptocephali (meaning small head), do not resemble the adults but have oval, leaf-shaped and transparent bodies. Different species of snipe eel have different shapes, sizes and colors. The similarly named bobtail snipe eel is actually in a different family and represented by two species, the black Cyema atrum and the bright red Neocyema erythrosoma.

Unset

Unset may refer to:

  • Unset (Unix), a Unix command
  • Unset, Norway, a town in Hedmark, Norway
Cimon

Cimon (; , Kimōn; c. 510 – 450 BC) was an Athenian statesman and strategos in mid-5th century BC Greece, the son of Miltiades, the victor of the Battle of Marathon. Cimon played a key role in creating the powerful Athenian maritime empire following the failure of the Persian invasion of Greece by Xerxes I in 480-479 BC. Cimon became a celebrated military hero and was elevated to the rank of admiral after fighting in the Battle of Salamis.

One of Cimon’s greatest exploits was his destruction of a Persian fleet and army at the Battle of the Eurymedon river in 466 BC. In 462 BC, he led an unsuccessful expedition to support the Spartans during the helot uprisings. As a result, he was dismissed and ostracized from Athens in 461 BC; however, he was recalled from his exile before the end of his ten-year ostracism to broker a five-year peace treaty in 451 BC between Sparta and Athens. For this participation in pro-Spartan policy, he has often been called a laconist. Cimon also led the Athenian aristocratic party against Pericles and opposed the democratic revolution of Ephialtes seeking to retain aristocratic party control over Athenian institutions.

Cimon (disambiguation)

Cimon may refer to:

  • Cimon (510–450 BCE), an Athenian statesmen and general
  • Cimon Coalemos (6th century BCE), ancient Olympic chariot-racer and father or Miltiades
  • Cimon, in Roman mythology, father of Pero – see Roman Charity.
  • Cimon of Cleonae, an early painter of ancient Greece
  • Cimone, Italy
  • kimon, a Japanese demon gate direction, see Oni
  • Kimon, a music video compilation by Dir en grey
  • '' Greek destroyer Kimon
Kharkhiraa

Kharkhiraa (, Harhirá; literally common crane) is a mountain of the Altai Mountains and is located in the Uvs Province in Mongolia. It has an elevation of .

Hirpini

The Hirpini ( Latin: ; Greek: ;) were an ancient Samnite people of Southern Italy. While general regarded as having been Samnites, sometimes they are treated as a distinct and independent nation. They inhabited the southern portion of Samnium, in the more extensive sense of that name, roughly the area now known as Irpinia from their name—a mountainous region bordering on Basilicata towards the south, on Apulia to the east, and on Campania towards the west. No marked natural boundary separated them from these neighboring nations, but they occupied the lofty masses and groups of the central Apennines, while the plains on each side, and the lower ranges that bounded them, belonged to their more fortunate neighbors. The mountain basin formed by the three tributaries of the Vulturnus (modern Volturno)—the Tamarus (modern Tammaro), Calor (modern Calore), and Sabatus (modern Sabato), which, with their valleys, unite near Beneventum, surrounded on all sides by lofty and rugged ranges of mountains—is the center and heart of their territory. Its more southern portion comprised the upper valley of the Aufidus (modern Ofanto) and the lofty group of mountains where that river takes its rise.

Mandria

Mandria is the name of the following settlements :

  • Mandria, Limassol, a village in Cyprus
  • Mandria, Paphos, a village in Cyprus
Chowrangi

Chowrangi or chowk is an Urdu word meaning crossroads. It is where two major roads cross each other. This may be facilitated by a roundabout or an overpass/underpass. In Pakistan, this term is frequently used in Karachi, city of Sindh province in Pakistan.

In other parts of country like Punjab province of Pakistan other terms are used. For example "Chowk" (also an Urdu word) is another word used in other cities of Pakistan like Multan, Lahore and rest of Pakistani Punjab province. Chowk also means a variety of things, for example a town square, an intersection, a roundabout, a crossing.

Taillebois

Taillebois is a commune in the Orne department in north-western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Athis-Val-de-Rouvre.

Waltheria

Waltheria is a genus of flowering plants in the mallow family, Malvaceae. It is sometimes placed in Sterculiaceae. The name honours German botanist Augustin Friedrich Walther (1688-1746).

Motorvagar
  1. redirect List of motorways in Sweden
Šárka (Janáček)

Šárka is an opera in three acts by Leoš Janáček to a Czech libretto by Julius Zeyer, based on Bohemian legends of Šárka in Dalimil's Chronicle. Written in 1887, the opera lay unproduced for many years and was first performed at the Divadlo na Hradbách (today's Mahen Theatre) in Brno on 11 November 1925 in honour of Janáček’s 71st birthday.

Sarka (Janacek)
  1. redirect Šárka (Janáček)
Šárka

Šárka may refer to one of the following:

  • Šárka (name), Czech female given name (includes people bearing the name)
  • Šárka, the mythical warrior-maiden of Bohemia, a character in The Maidens' War
  • Šárka (Fibich), an opera by Zdeněk Fibich
  • Šárka (Janáček), the first opera by Leoš Janáček
  • Šárka, the third symphonic poem of Bedřich Smetana's Má vlast
  • Divoká Šárka, nature reserve in the Czech Republic
Sarka

Sarka (, also Romanized as Sarkā; also known as Sarkā’) is a village in Birun Bashm Rural District, Kelardasht District, Chalus County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 119, in 35 families.

Šárka (name)

Šárka is an old female given name with Bohemian origin. In Czech Republic it is still the seventy second most common name. The name means rocky hillock. Šárka is also name of the cliff in northwest outskirts of Prague. The mythological Šárka jumped from this cliff because of her remorse that she hepled lure Ctirad into a trap. The Š is pronounced as an sh sound.

People bearing the name include:

  • Šárka Kašpárková, Czech athlete
  • Šárka Nováková, Czech high jumper
  • Šárka Pančochová, Czech snowboarder
  • Šárka Ullrichová, Czech actress
  • Šárka Vaňková, Czech singer
  • Šárka Záhrobská, Czech alpine skierˇ
  • Šárka Korbelová, Czech businesswoman
Mythical characters
  • Šárka, the mythical warrior-maiden of Bohemia, a character in The Maidens' War

Category:Czech given names

Shorgul

Shorgul is a 2016 bollywood, political thriller film directed by Pranav Kumar Singh (P.Singh) and Jitendra Tiwari The film is produced by 24 FPS film Pvt Ltd. Earlier it was titled as Zainab but later it became SHORGUL. The film stars Jimmy Shergill, Suha Gezen, Ashutosh Rana, Narendra Jha, Anirudh Dave and Sanjay Suri in lead roles.

The trailer of the film was released on 26 May 2016. The film was released on 1 July 2016. Upon release, the film received mixed to negative reviews from critics.

Krishna

Krishna (; Sanskrit: , in IAST, pronounced ) is a major Hindu deity worshiped in a variety of different perspectives. Krishna is recognised as the Svayam Bhagavan in his own right or as the complete/absolute incarnation of Lord Vishnu. Krishna is one of the most widely revered and popular of all Hindu deities. Krishna's birthday is celebrated every year by Hindus on the eighth day ( Ashtami) of the Krishna Paksha (dark fortnight) of the month of Bhadrapad

in the Hindu calendar.

Krishna is also known as Govinda, Mukunda, Madhusudhana and Vasudeva. Krishna is often described and portrayed as an infant eating butter, a young boy playing a flute as in the Bhagavata Purana, a young man along with Radha, a young man surrounded by women or as an elder giving direction and guidance as in the Bhagavad Gita. The stories of Krishna appear across a broad spectrum of Hindu philosophical and theological traditions. They portray him in various perspectives: a god-child, a prankster, a model lover, a divine hero, and the Supreme Being. The principal scriptures discussing Krishna's story are the Srimad Bhagavatam, the Mahabharata, the Harivamsa, the Bhagavata Purana, and the Vishnu Purana. The anecdotes and narratives of Krishna, in topic, are generally titled as Krishna Leela.

Worship of the deity Krishna, either in the form of deity Krishna or in the form of Vasudeva, Bala Krishna or Gopala can be traced to as early as the 4th century BC. Worship of Krishna as Svayam Bhagavan, or the supreme being, known as Krishnaism, arose in the Middle Ages in the context of the Bhakti movement. From the 10th century AD, Krishna became a favourite subject in performing arts and regional traditions of devotion developed for forms of Krishna such as Jagannatha in Odisha, Vithoba in Maharashtra and Shrinathji in Rajasthan. Since the 1960s the worship of Krishna has also spread in the Western world and in Africa largely due to the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON). Gaudia Math is also a leading proponent of Krishna worship.

Some religiously oriented scholars have tried to calculate dates for the birth of Krishna, some believing that Krishna, under the name of 'Vasudeva Govinda Krishna Shauri', flourished as the ruler of Shuraseni and Vrishni tribes on the now-submerged island of Dwaraka (off the coast of Gujarat, India) sometime between 3200 and 3100 BC.

Krishna (disambiguation)

Krishna is a Hindu deity. Krishna may refer to:

Krishna (director)

Krishnan K.T. Nagarajan commonly known as director Krishna. He is an Indian film director and screenwriter of the Tamil film industry. Krishna is known for his atmospheric, highly concentrated visual style, which has influenced many other newcomers. He made his directorial debut with the romantic film Sillunu Oru Kaadhal in 2006.

Krishna (Telugu actor)

Krishna (born Siva Rama Krishna Ghattamaneni) is an Indian film actor, director and producer known for his works exclusively in Telugu Cinema. In a film career spanning five decades, Krishna was starred in more than 350 films in a variety of roles. In 2008, he was awarded the honorary doctorate from Andhra University. In 2009, the Government of India honoured him with the Padma Bhushan for his contributions to Indian Cinema. He was elected as a Member of Parliament for the Congress party in 1989. In 1997, he received the Filmfare Lifetime Achievement Award – South.

In the early years of his film career, he was starred in films like saakshi which won critical acclaim at the Tashkent film festival in 1968. In 1972, He was starred in Pandanti Kapuram, which garnered the National Film Award for Best Feature Film in Telugu for that year. He has essayed roles across different genres includes mythological, drama, social, cowboy, western classic, folklore, action and historical.

He is credited with producing many technological firsts in Telugu film Industry like the first eastman color film Eenadu (1982), the first cinemascope film; Alluri Seetharama Raju (1974), first 70mm film; Simhasanam (1986), first DTS film; Telugu Veera Levara (1988) and introducing cowboy genre to the Telugu screen. He was starred in Telugu spy film sequels; Gudachari 116 (1966), James Bond 777 (1971), Agent Gopi (1978), Rahasya Gudachari (1981), and Gudachari 117 (1989). Krishna directed Shankharavam (1987), Mugguru Kodukulu (1988), Koduku Diddina Kapuram (1989), Bala Chandrudu (1990), and Anna Thammudu (1990) casting his son Mahesh Babu in pivotal roles. Krishna directed 17 feature films, he produced various films under Padmalaya Film Studio, a production house owned by him.

Krishna collaborated with several directors of the time like Adurthi Subba Rao, V. Madhusudhana Rao, K. Viswanath, Bapu, Dasari Narayana Rao and K. Raghavendra Rao. He also has the record of pairing up with same actress for more than 48 films with Vijayanirmala and 47 films with Jayaprada. In December 2012, at the age of 69, Krishna announced his retirement from politics.

Krishna (2008 film)

Krishna is a 2008 Telugu romantic action comedy film starring Ravi Teja and Trisha Krishnan. The film is directed by V. V. Vinayak and produced by B. Kasi Vishwanatham. The film released on 11 January 2008, during the Sankranthi festival. It was dubbed into Hindi with same name and in Tamil as Madhura Thmiru. It was remade in Bengali as Awara, starring Jeet and Sayantika Banerjee and in Kannada as Rajni with Upendra. In 2013 movie was dubbed in Hindi under the title Krishna: The Power of Earth. This film has brought some fame to the noted Tamil actor Kadhal Dhandapani in Telugu.

Krishna (1996 film)

Krishna is a 1996 Indian action movie directed by Deepak Shivdasani starring Sunil Shetty, Karishma Kapoor, Om Puri, Shakti Kapoor, Tinu Anand.The film was a moderate success at the box office.

Krishna (2006 film)

Krishna is a 2006 computer-animated Indian feature film. It is the first Hindi computer-animated film and was theatrically released in India on 29 September 2006. The film is based on the legends of the deity Krishna.

Krishna (2007 film)

Krishna is an 2007 Indian Kannada-language film starring Ganesh, Pooja Gandhi and Sharmila Mandre. It is directed by M.D. Sridhar, and produced by Ramesh Yadav. The major storyline of the movie was based on the Tamil film Unnai Ninaithu directed by Vikraman. The movie was remade in Odia in 2015 as Tate Bhala Pae 100 ru 100 starring Babushan.

Krishna (Tamil actor)

Krishna Kulasekaran, credited as Krishna, is an Indian film actor.

Krishna (1996 Tamil film)

Krishna is a 1996 Tamil language film written and directed by Raja Krishnamoorthy. The film stars Prashanth, Kasthuri and Heera in the lead roles, while S. A. Rajkumar composed the film's music.

Krishna (film series)

Krishna:The Animated Movie series consists of 4 films and is created by Greengold Animations India. The story is based on Indian Mythology, involving the early life of Krishna. It airs on Cartoon Network India & Pogo

Krishna (Malayalam actor)

Krishna is an Indian film actor in Malayalam cinema. He has acted more than 50 films. He is the cousin of South Indian actress Shobana and grand son of actress Lalitha. Yesteryear actress Ambika Sukumaran is his aunt.

Krishna (Kannada actor)

Sunil Nagappa, popularly known with stage name Krishna, is an actor who primarily acts in Kannada films and television series. He started his career as an artist in Kannada serial dramas where his talent was recognized for his role of protagonist Krishna in popular serial Krishna Rukmini. He immediately was offered roles of supporting actor in various films including multistarrer blockbuster, Hudugaru. Sunil's major breakthrough as an actor came with superhit filmMadarangi. He hails from Sakleshpur, holds an MBA and is the son of Nagappa, a retired Police officer.

Krishna (TV series)

Krishna (also called Shri Krishna) is an Indian television series created, written, and directed by Ramanand Sagar. The series originally aired weekly on Doordarshan. It is an adaptation of the stories of the life of Krishna, based on Bhagavat Puran, Brahma Vaivart Puran, Hari Vamsa, Vishnu Puran, Padma Puran, Garga Samhita, Bhagavad Gita & Mahabharat. The TV series was first broadcast on Doordarshan's Metro Channel (DD 2) from 1993. In 1996, the show was broadcast from the beginning on DD National. In 1999, the show moved to Zee where the remaining episodes were broadcast.

The entire series was re-telecast on Sony starting 2001 and later on Star.

This series is now being re-telecasted on ShivaShakthiSai TV, a Telugu Devotional channel, from January 15, 2016.

This serial was also telecast in Mauritius by Mauritius Broadcasting Corporation, in Toronto on Channel 57, in Nepal on Nepal TV, in South Africa on M.Net, in Indonesia on P.T. Cipta Television, in Jakarta on Pendidikan, and in London on T.V.Asia (Satellite).

Krishna (TV actor)

Krishna (Tamil: கிருஷ்ணா) is a film actor and leading most top Tamil television actor. He is best known for playing the lead role Prakash in mega hit Tamil drama serial Deivamagal telecasted on Sun TV.

Qiulou

Qiulou is a town situated in Kaifeng County, Kaifeng in the province of Henan, China.

Waterside

Waterside may refer to:

Waterside (Norfolk, Virginia)

The Waterside, is a festival marketplace on the Elizabeth River in downtown Norfolk, Virginia, opened June 1, 1983. While the Waterside Annex was demolished May 16, 2016, the main portion of the structure is undergoing renovation to reopen in spring, 2017. A critical component of Norfolk's ongoing post-WWII revitalization, the complex connects via a cross-street pedestrian bridge to a parking garage, sits at the foot of the Portsmouth Ferry terminal, and connects via a waterfront promenade to the downtown, the nearby baseball stadium ( Harbor Park), naval museum ( Nauticus) and waterfront neighborhood of Freemason Harbor.

Beginning in the late 1970s, mall-developer James W. Rouse and the Rouse Company had conceived the festival marketplace (e.g., Norfolk's Waterside) as an important component to redeveloping a declining downtown, a seminal catalyst to further development. The concept combined to varying degrees major restaurants, specialty retail shops, food courts and nightlife activities.

Like other shopping centers, malls and marketplaces, the Waterside has evolved through numerous business cycles. Originally, Waterside featured mostly restaurants like The Baitshack on the first floor. There were small nautically themed stores as well as an arcade. The balconied second floor featured more niche stores and kiosks. A second phase was added to the complex in the 1980s, while the mid-1990s saw a decline in business, mitigated by the opening of nearby MacArthur Center. In the early-2000s, the upstairs stores were replaced by nightclubs, such as Jillian's.

The Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority purchased the Waterside from its private owner, Enterprise Real Estate Services, in 1999, at the time considered a temporary arrangement. The Waterside delivered approximately $2.2 million in tax revenue in 2007, down $300,000 since 2004. Norfolk will subsidize the facility with $1 million in 2008 and currently is studying the next phase of the marketplace's repositioning.

The City of Norfolk and The Cordish Companies broke ground on the new Waterside District in August 2015. The new venue will be in the footprint of the old Waterside and consist of dining and entertainment venues. It is planned to open in the Spring of 2017.

Waterside (building)

The Waterside building in Harmondsworth, London, is the international head office of British Airways. The building, which cost £200 million, is located on Harmondsworth Moor, northwest of Heathrow Airport, between the M4 and the M25 motorways. Waterside is on the western edge of London, near West Drayton and Uxbridge, in the Borough of Hillingdon

Openlaw

Openlaw is a project at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School aimed at releasing case arguments under a copyleft license, in order to encourage public suggestions for improvement.

Berkman lawyers specialise in cyberlaw— hacking, copyright, encryption and so on—and the centre has strong ties with the EFF and the open source software community. In 1998 faculty member Lawrence Lessig, now at Stanford Law School, was asked by online publisher Eldritch Press to mount a legal challenge to US copyright law. Eldritch takes books whose copyright has expired and publishes them on the Web, but legislation called the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act extended copyright from 50 to 70 years after the author's death, cutting off its supply of new material. Lessig invited law students at Harvard and elsewhere to help craft legal arguments challenging the new law on an online forum, which evolved into Open Law.

Normal law firms write arguments the way commercial software companies write code. Lawyers discuss a case behind closed doors, and although their final product is released in court, the discussions or "source code" that produced it remain secret. In contrast, Open Law crafts its arguments in public and releases them under a copyleft. "We deliberately used free software as a model," said Wendy Seltzer, who took over Open Law when Lessig moved to Stanford. Around 50 legal scholars worked on Eldritch's case, and Open Law has taken other cases, too.

"The gains are much the same as for software," Seltzer says. "Hundreds of people scrutinise the 'code' for bugs, and make suggestions how to fix it. And people will take underdeveloped parts of the argument, work on them, then patch them in." Armed with arguments crafted in this way, OpenLaw took Eldritch's case—deemed unwinnable at the outset—right through the system to the Supreme Court. The case, Eldred v. Ashcroft, lost in 2003.

Among the drawbacks to this approach: the arguments are made in public from the start, so OpenLaw can't spring a surprise in court. Nor can it take on cases where confidentiality is important. But where there's a strong public interest element, open sourcing has big advantages. Citizens' rights groups, for example, have taken parts of Open Law's legal arguments and used them elsewhere. "People use them on letters to Congress, or put them on flyers," Seltzer says.

ASEP

ASEP may mean:

  • Aboriginal Skills and Employment Partnership, a program aiming at sustainable employment for Aboriginal people in major economic industries of Canada
  • American Society of Exercise Physiologists
  • American Sport Education Program
  • U.S. Army Spouse Employment Partnership
  • Associate Systems Engineering Professional (Certification given by the INCOSE)
  • Association of Structural Engineers of the Philippines, Inc.
  • Association suisse pour les enfants précoces, English: Swiss Association for Precocious Children
  • Asymmetric simple exclusion process, in statistical physics.
  • Automated Supplementary Enroute weather Predictions, in aerial navigation
  • Automotive Service Educational Program, a Canadian accelerated apprenticeship program
  • Autostart extensibility point, the generic name of the various mechanisms used to extend an operating system's startup process
  • Ανώτατο Συμβούλιο Επιλογής Προσωπικού, Α.Σ.Ε.Π.: Anótato Symvoúlio Epilogís Prosopikoú (ASEP), English: Supreme Council for Personnel Selection
Blokker

Blokker may refer to:

  • Blokker, Netherlands, a town in the Netherlands
  • Blokker (store), a Dutch chain store
  • Blokker Holding, a Dutch company
KTFL

KTFL was a religious television station in Flagstaff, Arizona, broadcasting locally on channel 4 as an affiliate of FamilyNet. The station was owned by WTVA, Inc. (the Spain family). The station signed off June 1, 2006, with its broadcasting license cancelled by the FCC.

CBRH

CBRH may refer to:

  • CBRH (AM), a radio rebroadcaster (1170 AM) licensed to New Hazelton, British Columbia, Canada
  • Corner Brook Regional High
KZHD

KZHD may refer to:

  • KZHD-LD, a low-power television station (channel 49) licensed to serve Santa Rosa, California, United States
  • KWNZ, a radio station (106.3 FM) licensed to serve Lovelock, Nevada, United States, which held the call sign KZHD from 2008 to 2012
Siata

Siata (Società Italiana Auto Trasformazioni Accessori in English Italian Car Transformation Accessories Company) was an Italian car tuning shop and manufacturer founded in 1926 by amateur race car driver Giorgio Ambrosini.

Siata initially sold performance parts to modify and tune cars manufactured by Fiat. After World War II, the company began making its own sports cars under the Siata brand until its eventual bankruptcy following the first Arab oil embargo in the mid-1970s.

Larcom

Larcom may refer to:

  • Thomas Larcom
  • Lucy Larcom
  • Larcom Baronets
Oriol-en-Royans

Oriol-en-Royans is a commune in the Drôme department in southeastern France.

Breachway

A breachway is defined as the shore along a channel. Today the term is used to describe the whole area around where a channel meets the ocean. The Rhode Island coastline has many breachways on its map. Today's permanent breachways have rock jetties that line the sides of the channel to protect against erosion or closing of the waterway. The water channels usually lead to salt water ponds.

Category:Coastal construction

Kindergarden (demo party)

Kindergarden (KG) is an annual demo party first organized in 1994 in Fjellfoten, Norway. During the first few years it was held irregularly, eventually settling into being an annual event. Since 2001 it has been held in Haga, Norway, the location also used for Kindergarden 4 and 5.

Kindergarden is currently the oldest, still running demoparty which purely focuses on the demoscene, only beaten by the three big computer-parties Assembly, The Gathering and Euskal Encounter.

Galomecalpa

Galomecalpa is a genus of moths belonging to the Tortricidae family.

Freawaru

Freawaru, introduced in l. 2020 of the poem Beowulf, is the daughter of King Hroðgar and Queen Wealhþeow.

Freawaru is a freoðuwebbe or peace-weaver (an important concept in the poem) who is married to Ingeld, King of the Heaðobards and son of Froda . This marriage was created as a means of ending a feud between the two kingdoms (due to the murder of Froda by the Danes). It was an unsuccessful attempt to end the feud. An old warrior urged the Heaðobards to revenge, and Beowulf predicts to Hygelac that Ingeld will turn against his father-in-law Hroðgar. In a version given in the Danish chronicle Gesta Danorum (see below), the old warrior appears as Starkad, and he succeeded in making Ingeld divorce his bride and in turning him against her family.

Boletacarus

Boletacarus is a genus of mites in the family Acaridae.

Khrueng

Khrueng is a tambon (subdistrict) of Chiang Khong District, in Chiang Rai Province, Thailand. In 2005 it had a total population of 7,024 people. The tambon contains 11 villages.

Naloxol

Naloxol is an opioid antagonist closely related to naloxone. It exists in two isomeric forms, α-naloxol and β-naloxol.

α-naloxol is a human metabolite of naloxone. Synthetically, α-naloxol can be prepared from naloxone by reduction of the ketone group, and β-naloxol can be prepared from α-naloxol by a Mitsunobu reaction.

Naloxol can be said to be the oxymorphol analogue of naloxone.

Nambinzo

Nambinzo is an administrative ward in the Mbozi District of the Mbeya Region of Tanzania. According to the 2002 census, the ward has a total population of 18,769.

Hoplocentra

Hoplocentra is a genus of moths belonging to the family Tineidae. It contains only one species, Hoplocentra mucronata, which is found in Uganda.

Allanton

Allanton is the name of several towns and villages.

In Scotland:

  • Allanton, Scottish Borders, a small village between Duns and Berwick-upon-Tweed
  • Allanton, Dumfries and Galloway, a small village between Dumfries and Thornhill
  • Allanton, North Lanarkshire, a village between Wishaw and Shotts
  • Allanton, South Lanarkshire, a small village on the outskirts of Hamilton

In New Zealand:

  • Allanton, New Zealand, a small township south of Dunedin in the South Island
Noordpolderzijl

Noordpolderzijl is a hamlet in the Dutch province of Groningen. It is located in the municipality of Eemsmond, about 4 km northwest of Usquert.

Noordpolderzijl is named after the zijl (sluice) in the dyke of the Noordpolder. The original sluice was built in 1811, when the Noordpolder was made dry. The hamlet is located on the land side of the sluice. At the other side of the dyke is the harbour of Noordpolderzijl, which is the smallest seaport in the Netherlands. It usually houses two fishing boats.

Pemba

Pemba may refer to:

Pemba (panda)

Pemba (which means "Saturday" in Nepalese) was the name that was given to a rare 8-year-old Asian male red panda who resided at the Turtle Back Zoo located in West Orange, New Jersey from 2007 to 2008. He was easily recognized during his stay at the zoo by all his fans due to his white face, black legs and red body.

Samthar

Samthar is a city and a municipal board in Jhansi district in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

Shandi

Shandi may refer to:

Shandi (song)

"Shandi" is a hit single by American hard rock band Kiss. Released on their 1980 album, Unmasked, the song was popular in Australia, where it reached number five on the Australian charts. The song would prove to be a hit in other countries as well, making the top ten in three other countries. Shandi peaked at number 47 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Chart.

Written by vocalist/guitarist Paul Stanley and producer Vini Poncia, the song was inspired by the Hollies cover of the Bruce Springsteen song " 4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)".

A promotional video was made for the song, which proved to be the final appearance of Peter Criss with the band before he left to pursue a solo career in 1980. Although all four original band members appear in the video, only Paul Stanley was involved in the recording of the track. Session drummer Anton Fig plays drums, Kiss roadie Tom Harper plays bass and professional songwriter Holly Knight plays keyboards, while Stanley sings lead and plays all guitars. Vini Poncia provided backing vocals to the track.

The song is performed solo by Paul Stanley on guitar when the band is touring in Australia and New Zealand. The song was also played by Kiss with the Melbourne Symphony Ensemble for the Kiss Symphony: Alive IV performance and subsequent album in 2003.

Sign language

A sign language (also signed language) is a language which chiefly uses manual communication to convey meaning, as opposed to acoustically conveyed sound patterns. This can involve simultaneously combining hand shapes, orientation and movement of the hands, arms or body, and facial expressions to express a speaker's thoughts. Sign languages share many similarities with spoken languages (sometimes called "oral languages", which depend primarily on sound), which is why linguists consider both to be natural languages. Although there are also some significant differences between signed and spoken languages, such as how they use space grammatically, sign languages show the same linguistic properties and use the same language faculty as do spoken languages. They should not be confused with body language, which is a kind of non-linguistic communication.

Wherever communities of deaf people exist, sign languages have developed, and are at the cores of local deaf cultures. Although signing is used primarily by the deaf, it is also used by others, such as people who can hear, but cannot physically speak.

It is not clear how many sign languages there are. A common misconception is that all sign languages are the same worldwide or that sign language is international. Aside from the pidgin International Sign, each country generally has its own, native sign language, and some have more than one (although there are also substantial similarities among all sign languages). The 2013 edition of Ethnologue lists 137 sign languages. Some sign languages have obtained some form of legal recognition, while others have no status at all.

Linguists distinguish natural sign languages from other systems that are precursors to them or derived from them, such as invented manual codes for spoken languages, home sign, "baby sign", and signs learned by non-human primates.

Payment schedule

The payment schedule of financial instruments defines the dates at which payments are made by one party to another on for example a bond or derivative. It can be either customised or parameterised.

Factcheck

Factcheck or Fact check can refer to:

  • FactCheck.org, a website funded by the Annenberg Foundation
  • Fact checker, a job in journalism
Decachaeta

Decachaeta is a genus of Mesoamerican flowering plants in the sunflower family.

Species
  1. Decachaeta haenkeana DC. - Chihuahua, Sonora, Sinaloa, Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán, Nayarit, Oaxaca, Jalisco
  2. Decachaeta incompta (DC.) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Chiapas, Oaxaca, Colima, Guerrero, Michoacán, México State, Jalisco, Puebla
  3. Decachaeta ovandensis (Grashoff & Beaman) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Chiapas
  4. Decachaeta ovatifolia (DC.) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Guerrero, Michoacán, México State, Jalisco, Nayarit
  5. Decachaeta perornata (Klatt) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Chiapas, Oaxaca, Michoacán, México State, Jalisco, Puebla, Veracruz, Hidalgo
  6. Decachaeta scabrella (B.L.Rob.) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Colima, Michoacán, Nayarit, Jalisco, Durango, Sonora, Guerrero
  7. Decachaeta thieleana (Klatt ex Klatt) R.M.King & H.Rob. - Costa Rica, Panama, Honduras
Nápoles

Nápoles ( Portuguese for Naples) is the name of a Portuguese family whose roots lie in the Kingdom of Naples. A claimed secondary branch of the royal Capetian House of Anjou, of the kings of Naples, the Nápoles descend from Stephen of Durazzo (a claimed younger son of John, Duke of Durazzo, ruler of the Kingdom of Albania, and grandson of Charles II of Naples) who moved to Portugal during the first half of the 14th century to join the ranks of King Afonso IV at the battle of Salado. It has been noted that this might be a posterior fabrication, for there is no notice of any such legitimate or bastard son of a Prince of Naples.

The main branch of the family in Portugal is that of the Lords of the Honour of Molelos, created Viscounts of Molelos by king John VI of Portugal and later raised to Counts of Molelos by king Miguel I, in recognition of their support for the traditionalist faction during the Liberal Wars. Among its members are Leonardo Estêvão de Nápoles, Henrique Esteves da Veiga de Nápoles and Francisco de Paula de Tovar e Nápoles, 1st Viscount of Molelos.

Nápoles (disambiguation)

Nápoles is an ancient Portuguese family. Nápoles or Napoles may also refer to

  • Nápoles (surname)
  • Colonia Nápoles in Mexico City
  • Hacienda Nápoles in Colombia
Jonbaz

Jonbaz (, also Romanized as Jonbaz̄) is a village in Beyhaq Rural District, Sheshtomad District, Sabzevar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 372, in 98 families.

OxiClean

OxiClean (founded September 20, 1999) is the brand name for a line of household cleaners, including 'OxiClean Versatile Stain Remover', which is a laundry additive, spot stain remover, and household cleaner marketed by Church & Dwight. It was owned by Orange Glo International until 2006.

C\C (Cinderella\Complex)

is the debut (and to date only) single by Hello! Project group High-King. It was released on June 11, 2008 on the Zetima label in two editions - a normal edition (EPCE-5561), containing only the normal CD, and a limited edition (EPCE-5559 - 60), containing a bonus DVD with an alternate version of the PV on it. The limited edition and first press of the normal edition also included a bonus serial number card, used in a promotional draw. The single peaked at #6 on the weekly Oricon chart, charting for five weeks, selling 26,805 copies in its first week. The song, like the unit itself, was created specially for Morning Musume's second collaboration with the Takarazuka Revue, Cinderella The Musical, for which it served as the theme song. The Single V (EPBE-5294) was released on June 25, 2008.

The PV for the single was released on Dohhh Up!, a video streaming site, a week prior to the single's release. Due to guidelines drawn up by NHK and the NAB to reduce negative health effects (including photosensitive seizures) from animation and other video, the cut initially shown on the site has been replaced with a re-edited version. The video on the single V is the re-edited cut.

Skallelv

Skallelv (; ) is a village in Vadsø Municipality in Finnmark county, Norway. It is located on the southeastern coast of the Varanger Peninsula, along the Varangerfjorden. The European route E75 highway runs through the village, about halfway between the villages of Komagvær and Krampenes. Skallelv Church is located in the village.

Historically, Skallelv has been inhabited by the Sami and the Kven populations, and more recently by newcomers from the more southern parts of Norway and Finland. Skallelv is one of the very few villages in Finnmark county that wasn't burned to the ground by the German troops at the end of World War II. Some of the wooden buildings there date back to 1860 or older.

Czyżemin

Czyżemin is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dłutów, within Pabianice County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately north-east of Dłutów, south-east of Pabianice, and south of the regional capital Łódź.

Zoet

Zoet is a Dutch surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Bart Zoet (1942–1992), Dutch cyclist
  • Jeroen Zoet (born 1991), Dutch footballer
  • Jim Zoet (born 1953), Canadian basketball player who played in the National Basketball Association
  • Johannes Zoet (1908–1992), Dutch fencer
KABU

KABU (90.7 FM) is a radio station licensed to serve Fort Totten, North Dakota. The station is owned by Dakota Circle Tipi, Inc. It airs a Variety format. KABU serves the Spirit Lake Nation of the Dakota tribe in northern North Dakota.

The station was assigned the KABU call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on June 21, 1996.

Crevant

Crevant is a commune in the Indre department in central France.

Claregate

Claregate is a suburb of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, England. It is north west of Wolverhampton city centre, within the Tettenhall Regis ward.

Usage examples of "claregate".

I will introduce you to all my wise men and my statesmen, bah, and certainly to Casta and the Princess Hirga.

Cynthia Rhee stayed behind at the Bah Hai, and when Timothy Bell flew in to Canaveral for some hours on the simulators, she quietly moved in with him, for she needed some specific quotes on how it felt to be the only civilian amidst a group of gung-ho military pilots.

They cheered him then, but there was fear in their eyes when he sent them back to trim the sails and coax every inch of speed out of the ship in her flight towards the Bah El Mandeb.

Bah, is poileno - Jura said you scorn love, refiriendo itself to you to another tribe lanconiana.

He saw a couple of the menEstrada, Anselm, Overholserwith their bahs hugged to their chests.

He plotted his course to round the tip of the Great Horn and sail down the Gulf of Aden, through the narrows of the Bah El Mandeb and into the southern reaches of the Red Sea.

Easter season, the pagan crossed the narrows of the Bah El Mandeb with a mighty army, then drove northwards up the coast seizing all the ports and forts.

The Buh Bahs and the Ma Chos knew well that a woman's place was in a man's bed.

At the same time, over his childish countenance which was, at once so impudent and so serious, so giddy and so profound, so gay and so heart-breaking, passed all those grimaces of an old man which signify: Ah bah!