Wikipedia
Coury is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Al Coury (1934–2013), vice-president of American record label Capitol Records
- Dick Coury, American football coach
- Fred Coury (born 1964), American musician
- Gabriel Coury (1896–1956), British Army officer and Victoria Cross recipient
- Steve Coury (born 1957), American football player and coach
- Tarek Coury, Fellow in Economics of University College, Oxford
- Tino Coury (born 1988), American singer, songwriter, producer
The '''Guadiana River ''' (, ), or Odiana, is an international river defining a long stretch of the Portugal-Spain border, separating Extremadura and Andalucia (Spain) from Alentejo and Algarve (Portugal). The river's basin extends from the eastern portion of Extremadura to the southern provinces of the Algarve; the river and its tributaries flow from east to west, then south through Portugal to the border towns of Vila Real de Santo António (Portugal) and Ayamonte (Spain), where it flows into the Gulf of Cádiz. With a course that covers a distance of , it is the fourth-longest in the Iberian peninsula, and its hydrological basin extends over an area of approximately (the majority of which lies within Spain).
Guadiana is one of the 8 country settlements of Naranjito, Puerto Rico.
Guadiana may refer to:
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Guadiana, a river in southern Spain and Portugal
- Ojos del Guadiana
- Guadiana Valley Natural Park, a natural park in southeastern Portugal
- Guadiana International Bridge
- Guadiana, a river in Puerto Rico
- Guadiana (Naranjito), one of the 8 country settlements of Naranjito, Puerto Rico
- Guadiana Bay, a bay in western Cuba
- Ribera del Guadiana, a Spanish protected designation of origin (Denominación de Origen - DO) for wines in Extremadura
- Guadiana Trophy, an annual football (soccer) tournament hosted by Portugal and played in the pre-season
Hackthorpe is a village in the Eden District, in the county of Cumbria, England. __TOC__
Usage examples of "hackthorpe".
All the machines still fully functional were lashing about them with death rays and other weapons, laboring methodically at their endless task of sterilizing the universe.
The HVMs carved incandescent tunnels of superheated air like some pre-space concept of death rays, and fireballs glared above the Bugs Varnaatha'shilaasahn had marked for death.
The HVMs carved incandescent tunnels of superheated air like some pre-space concept of death rays, and fireballs glared above the Bugs Varnaatha'shilaas-ahn had marked for death.
Do you recall all that yellow-peril nonsense a while back: death rays from the Rising Sun, soon our kids will be eating sushi for school lunch?
They lacked the necessary power to cover the entire Solarian fleet with their death rays, and their heat weapons were of little help.
Tesla cowered in his chair, deathly pale, eyes wide, hands half lifted as if to fend her off, and I suddenly remembered that this was a man who could pull balls of fire from his pockets and produce Death Rays on request.
The last few beholdersKhelben counted fourhovered along the line at even intervals, their eyestalks whipping this way and that as they sprayed the charging line with death rays of a dozen varieties.
Lord Duirsars mages launched a volley of lightning bolts and black death rays that streaked overhead andso far as Keya could tell from where she was cowering down behind the wallhad absolutely no effect on the enemy.
When the landing-grid failed to answer, it must have seemed likely that Hoddan's death rays had been at work.
In time even the Waldenian government would realize that death rays didn't exist, and a lawyer might be able to clear things for his return to Walden.
Not if the ship orbiting over their heads started firing death rays down on the city.
The dust began to thin out, and Snipe cringed at the notion that death rays might even now be warming up to fry him.