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Oblique-swimming triplefin

The oblique-swimming triplefin, Forsterygion maryannae, is a triplefin, found along the north east coast of the North Island of New Zealand from depths of about 5 m to 50 m. They are the only triplefins not to spend most of their time resting on the bottom, instead swimming in loose schools of up to hundreds of individuals above rocky reefs. When swimming their head is higher than the tail, giving rise to their common name.

Its length is between 5 and 8 cm. The body is orange-brown with a red tinged head, a black eye, and a wide black lengthwise stripe on each flank. Oblique-swimming triplefins are planton feeders taking their tiny copepod and euphausid crustacean food in mid-water.

Roof tiles

Roof tiles are designed mainly to keep out rain, and are traditionally made from locally available materials such as terracotta or slate. Modern materials such as concrete and plastic are also used and some clay tiles have a waterproof glaze.

Roof tiles are 'hung' from the framework of a roof by fixing them with nails. The tiles are usually hung in parallel rows, with each row overlapping the row below it to exclude rainwater and to cover the nails that hold the row below. There are also roof tiles for special positions, particularly where the planes of the several pitches meet. They include ridge, hip and valley tiles. These can either be bedded and pointed in cement mortar or mechanically fixed.

Similarly to roof tiling, tiling has been used to provide a protective weather envelope to the sides of timber frame buildings. These are hung on laths nailed to wall timbers, with tiles specially molded to cover corners and jambs. Often these tiles are shaped at the exposed end to give a decorative effect. Another form of this is the so-called mathematical tile, which was hung on laths, nailed and then grouted. This form of tiling gives an imitation of brickwork and was developed to give the appearance of brick, but avoided the brick taxes of the 18th century.

Slate roof tiles were traditional in some areas near sources of supply, and gave thin and light tiles when the slate was split into its natural layers. It is no longer a cheap material, however, and is now less common.

Nalder

Nalder is a surname of English origin. People with the surname include:

  • Bill Nalder (born 1952), former Australian rules footballer
  • Cambell Nalder (1937–1987), Australian politician, son of Crawford Nalder
  • Crawford Nalder (1910–1994), Australian politician
  • Dean Nalder (born 1966), Australian politician, grandson of Crawford Nalder
  • Eric Nalder, American journalist
  • Leonard Fielding Nalder (1888–1958), British colonial administrator
  • Reggie Nalder (1907–1991), actor
  • Ron Nalder (born 1939), Australian rules footballer
Dataone

Dataone may refer to:

  • BSNL Broadband or Dataone, an Internet access service in India since 2005
  • DataONE, a cyberinfrastructure project supported by the National Science Foundation under the DataNet program
Sabinas

Sabinas is a city and seat of the municipality of Sabinas, in the north-eastern Mexican state of Coahuila.

NESI

NESI, or Net-centric Enterprised Solutions for Interoperability is a joint effort between the United States Navy’s Program Executive Office for C4I & Space and the United States Air Force’s Electronic Systems Center. It provides implementation guidance which facilitates the design, development, maintenance, evolution, and use of information systems for the Net-Centric Operations and Warfare ( NCOW) environment. NESI has also been provided to other Department of Defense (DoD) services and agencies for potential adoption.

NESI comprises six parts, each focusing on a specific area of guidance. NESI provides guidance, best practices, and examples for developing Net-Centric software. The overall goal is to provide common, cross-service guidance in basic terms for the program managers and developers of net-centric solutions. The objective is not to replace or repeat existing direction, but to help translate into concrete actions the plethora of mandated and sometimes contradictory guidance on the topic of net-centric compliance and standards.

Zawodne

Zawodne is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Prażmów, within Piaseczno County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately north of Prażmów, south of Piaseczno, and south of Warsaw.

Aristo

Aristo (from ) may refer to:

Aristo (play)

Aristo is a 2008 play by American born playwright Martin Sherman, based on material in the book Nemesis by Peter Evans about the life of Aristotle Onassis after he met Jackie Kennedy. It premiered at the Minerva Theatre, Chichester (11 September – 11 October 2008), was directed by Nancy Meckler and starred Robert Lindsay as Onassis.

Chondroteuthis

Chondroteuthis is a genus of belemnite, an extinct group of cephalopods.

Martinikerk (Groningen)

The Martinikerk ( Martin's church) is the oldest church in Groningen, Netherlands. The church and its associated tower (the Martinitoren) are named after Saint Martin of Tours (316–397), the patron saint of the Bishopric of Utrecht to which Groningen belonged.

The church was a cathedral for a short period during the first bishopric of Groningen (1559–1594).

The origins of the Martinikerk are a cruciform church built in the 13th century, which was extended in the 15th and 16th centuries. It contains several 16th-century tombs and Wessel Gansfort's 18th-century tomb. Much of the wall and roof paintwork has been preserved. Of particular note is a 16th-century depiction of the life of Jesus Christ.

The tower was built from 1469 till 1482, with later additions. Citizens of Groningen often refer to the tower as d'Olle Grieze (Old Grey One). The original 13th-century tower was destroyed by lightning, and a new tower was built in the 15th century, also destroyed by lightning.

Its organ contains stops dating back to 1450, and was rebuilt and enlarged by Arp Schnitger among others. The church and organ are filmed extensively in the documentary Martinikerk Rondeau.

Martinikerk (Doesburg)

The Martinikerk (also Sint Martinuskerk or Hervormde kerk) is a church in Doesburg, in the Netherlands. The church's tower is the eighth tallest in the Netherlands at .

Martinikerk

Martinikerk may refer to one of several churches in the Netherlands:

  • Martinikerk (Bolsward)
  • Martinikerk (Doesburg)
  • Martinikerk (Easterein), Easterein
  • Martinikerk (Franeker), Franeker
  • Martinikerk (Groningen)
  • Martinikerk (Sneek), Sneek
Shuanghe

Shuanghe or Qoshögüz ( Uyghur: Қошөгүз) is a county-level city in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, People's Republic of China. It is located east of Bole City and southwest of Alashankou and the border with Kazakhstan. Shuanghe governs an area of and has a population of 53,800.

Strathmoor

Strathmoor may refer to one of two sixth class cities in Jefferson County, Kentucky

  • Strathmoor Village, Kentucky
  • Strathmoor Manor, Kentucky
Krasienin-Kolonia

Krasienin-Kolonia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Niemce, within Lublin County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately west of Niemce and north-west of the regional capital Lublin.

Tsqaltubo

Tskaltubo is a spa resort in west-central Georgia. It is located at around . It is the main town of the Tsqaltubo Municipality of the Imereti province. It is famous for its radon- carbonate mineral springs, whose natural temperature of enables the water to be used without preliminary heating.

The resort's focus is on balneotherapy for circulatory, nervous, musculo-skeletal, gynaecological and skin diseases, but since the 1970s its repertoire has included " speleotherapy", in which the cool dust-free environment of local caves is said to benefit pulmonary diseases.

Tskaltubo was especially popular in the Soviet era, attracting around 125,000 visitors a year. Bathhouse 9 features a frieze of Stalin, and visitors can see the private pool where he bathed on his visits.

Currently the spa receives only some 700 visitors a year, and since 1993 many of the sanatorium complexes have been devoted to housing some 9000 refugees, primarily women and children, displaced from their homes by ethnic conflict in Abkhazia.

TeuxDeux

TeuxDeux is a Web and iPhone based task management application produced by a collaboration between Swissmiss and Fictive Kin. According to PC World the visual layout of the application facilitates the Getting Things Done system of task management. The application is considered notably useful by Lifehacker and Gizmodo.

According to the developer's website, the backend of the app is written in Ruby, with Sinatra serving pages and Grape delivering the API. The front end is built on Spine.js.

Thoma

Thoma is a version of Thomas, originating from Aramaic t’om’a, meaning ‘twin’, and may refer to:

  • Antonius von Thoma (1829–1897), German Roman Catholic archbishop
  • Busso Thoma (1899–1945), German army officer; hanged for his part in the July 20 assassination attempt on Hitler
  • Dieter Thoma (b. 1969), German Olympic ski jumper
  • Georg Thoma (b. 1937), German Olympic skier
  • Godfrey Thoma (born 1957), Nauruan politician
  • Hans Thoma (1839–1924), German artist
  • Hans Thoma (engineer), Germany engineer, inventor of the bent-axis axial piston pump/motor, the "Thoma-design", USPTO patent No. 2155455, 1935.
  • Heinrich Thoma (b. 1900, d. unknown), Swiss Olympic rower
  • Kurt Thoma (1901–1971) German naval captain
  • Ludwig Thoma (1867–1921), German author, editor, and publisher
  • Maralyn Thoma, American soap opera television writer
  • Thoma (scholar) (died 1127), Moorish Spaniard author and scholar
  • Thoma Avenir, one of the main characters in the manga Magical Record Lyrical Nanoha Force
  • Wilhelm Ritter von Thoma (1891–1948), German army officer
Other
  • 5492 Thoma, main-belt asteroid
Thoma (scholar)

Thoma (died 1127), also called Habiba of Valencia, was an Arab Andalusian scholar known for writing several authoritative books on grammar and jurisprudence. Very little is known about her life.

WJWJ

WJWJ may refer to:

  • WJWJ-FM, a radio station (89.9 FM) licensed to Beaufort, South Carolina, United States
  • WJWJ-TV, a television station (channel 16 analog/44 digital) licensed to Beaufort, South Carolina, United States
UrduPoint

UrduPoint is an Urdu-language web portal of Pakistan. It is the largest Urdu website in the world Urdupoint is 5th top visited site of Pakistan while its global rank is 419 UrduPoint facebook page is among 15 most popular pages of Pakistan.

UrduPoint.com was launched on 14 August 2000 as the first Urdu portal of the world.

In this modern era, English language enjoys the status of being the "lingua Franca" (universally accepted, widespread language) consequently resulting in almost 95% of the websites solely functioning in English, as a medium of communication. On the other hand, considering the local Pakistani lot, the majority of the individuals can neither read nor understand English. Keeping this in consideration, UrduPoint emerged, breaking the barrier for that 90% of the population, existent in Pakistan, who are now able to identify themselves with all that the website has to offer. They can enjoy being able to read, comprehend, and enlighten themselves with the wide variety of knowledge and entertainment sections offered by UrduPoint, which is entirely based on their own language, Urdu. Pakistanis are now able to savor the true essence of their identity and origin. Urdu Point, the only Urdu web site which has extended a major contributing hand in promoting the national language of Pakistan, with its numerous amounts of sections presented in Urdu language. Urdupoint.com has largest collection of Urdu poetry on Internet.

Kellamäe

Kellamäe mäy refer to several places in Estonia:

  • Kellamäe, Lääne-Viru County, village in Rakke Parish, Lääne-Viru County
  • Kellamäe, Saare County, village in Kaarma Parish, Saare County
  • Kellämäe, village in Rõuge Parish, Võru County
`Aqlar

' `Aqlar' is a village in west-central Yemen. It is located in the San‘a’ Governorate.

Hungaria

Hungaria or Hungária may refer to: Малко нова историческа информация отностно Будапеща тя е основана от българския Хан ОмуртаГ

  • Latin for Hungary, a European country
    • For historical entities (from 895) see: Hungary (disambiguation)
  • Hungaria (Liszt), a symphonic poem by Franz Liszt
  • Hungaria (train), an express train between Budapest and Berlin
  • Hungária körgyűrű, the longest boulevard in Budapest, Hungary
  • Hungária körút, part of Hungária körgyűrű
  • MTK Hungária, Hungarian football club
  • Hungaria, a former New Zealand association football team, now part of Wellington United
  • 434 Hungaria, an asteroid
  • Hungaria family, a group of asteroids named after 434 Hungaria
Hungaria (Liszt)

Franz Liszt wrote his symphonic poem Hungaria in 1854, basing it partly on the Heroic March in the Hungarian Style for piano which he wrote in 1840. It was premiered under Liszt's baton at the Hungarian National Theater in Budapest on September 8, 1856, where it achieved an enormous success. "There was better than applause," the composer later wrote. "All wept, both men and women!" He was reminded with that scene of the proverb that "tears are the joy of the Hungarians."

Hungaria (train)

Hungaria is a EuroCity train which runs between Budapest Keleti and Berlin Hauptbahnhof, currently running with coaches of MÁV. It is numbered as EC 170-171 and runs daily, mainly with MÁV owned rolling stocks.

Usage examples of "hungaria".

Palmaris, as was his love of the wineelvish boggle, some saidhis penchant for games of chanceamong friends onlyand his love of officiating a grand wedding where no expenses had been spared.

The zombies had shown a penchant for gouging the eyes from their victims.

Did Ilima have a penchant for putting really ugly tikis in the beds of women her hound of a man lusted after?

In the old days, before Ysanne Isard had summoned him to Imperial Center and pointed out his penchant for making unwarranted assumptions, he would have assumed he could not be fooled again.

Carlos, who had always had a penchant for German militaria, imported forty German bodyguards, complete with automatic weapons and Doberman pinschers.

Diva Rosaline, a dark-haired goddess with a bad temper and a penchant for too much rouge, entered the top of the greeting area stairs.

Given his penchant for gross overspending, his loyalty could all too easily be bought by an enemy, and Mara dared not leave such a threat unattended on her southern border.

Klinzhaii exception appears to have derived from interaction with alien races where such communication phrases are essential to avoiding conflict where it is actually unbeneficial to the nature of the situation, despite the Klingon penchant for either starting or finishing such conflicts!

Angels began in Berdoo with the dragster set, but he was never their public relations man -- only a noisy contact, a phone number and an unhired hustler with a penchant for bugging the press.

He was a happy, easygoing, reasonably athletic boy, with a serious penchant for 1 his studies which also pleased his mother.

Cursing the aged crone who had a penchant for laudanum and a tongue clove in twain like most mean old serpents, he staggered to the door to let her in for a morning teaspoon of pain relief.

I am afraid that the patrons you attract are not the sort to air their penchants in public.

His taste was for country life and country sports, and men like Queensberry with their penchant for evil offended him, when he bothered to notice.

Faerie, surely one of the most charming has to be Sneezlewort Rootmuster Rowanberry Boggs the Seventh, a hawthorn root faery with a heart as large as the sky and an unfortunate penchant for getting into trouble.

Of all the denizens of Faerie, surely one of the most charming has to be Sneezlewort Rootmuster Rowanberry Boggs the Seventh, a hawthorn root faery with a heart as large as the sky and an unfortunate penchant for getting into trouble.