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Putzar

Putzar is a village and a former municipality in the Vorpommern-Greifswald district, in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany. On the first of January 2012, it became part of the municipality Boldekow.

Tolson

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

  • Aaron Tolson, American tap dancer
  • Chick Tolson (1898-1965), American baseball player
  • Clyde Tolson (1900-1975), American Associate Director of the FBI
  • Dean Tolson (born 1951), American basketball player
  • Dickon Tolson, British actor
  • Edgar Tolson (1904-1984), American woodcarver
  • Jim Tolson, Scottish politician
  • Joe P. Tolson, American politician
  • John Tolson (died 1644), English academic administrator at the University of Oxford
  • Max Tolson (born 1945), Australian football (soccer) forward
  • Melvin B. Tolson (1900-1966), American writer
  • Neil Tolson (born 1973), English footballer
  • Randall Tolson (1912-1954), American clockmaker
  • RJ Tolson (born 1993), Author and CEO
Storlus

Storlus is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Papowo Biskupie, within Chełmno County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.

The village has a population of 292.

Sturtevant

Sturtevant may refer to:

  • Aaron Paul Sturtevant (born 1979), better known as Aaron Paul, American actor
  • Albert D. Sturtevant (1894–1918), American naval officer
  • Alfred Sturtevant (1891–1970), American geneticist
  • Butler Sturtevant (1899–1971), American landscape architect
  • David Sturtevant Ruder (born 1929), American administrator and Professor of Law
  • Edgar H. Sturtevant (1875–1952), American linguist
  • Edward Lewis Sturtevant (1842–1898), American agronomist and botanist
  • Elaine Sturtevant (1930–2014), American artist
  • Grace Sturtevant, iris breeder
  • Harold Sturtevant (born c1918), United States Navy sailor, known for tearing down Nazi flag
  • John Cirby Sturtevant (1835–1912), American politician
  • Paul Allen Sturtevant (1898–1987), American inventor of the beam type torque wrench (1938)
  • William C. Sturtevant (1926–2007), American anthropologist
  • Benjamin F. Sturtevant (1833–1890), American inventor of hot blast heating system (1869)

Sturtevant may also refer to:

  • Sturtevant, Wisconsin, United States
  • USS Sturtevant (DD-240), Clemson-class destroyer, 1920–1942
  • USS Sturtevant (DE-239), Edsall-class destroyer escort, 1943–1960
Münsterdorf

Münsterdorf is a municipality in the district of Steinburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.

Pliometanastes

Pliometanastes is an extinct genus of giant ground sloths of the family Megalonychidae endemic to North America during the Miocene epoch through very early Pliocene epoch. Its fossils have been found across the southern U. S. from California to Florida.

Pliometanastes and Thinobadistes were the first of the giant sloths to appear in N. America. Both were in N. America before the Panamanian Land Bridge formed around 2.5 million years ago. It is then reasonable to presume that the ancestors of Pliometanastes island-hopped across the Central American Seaway from South America, where ground sloths arose.

Pliometanastes gave rise to Megalonyx. Their closest extant relatives are the two-toed arboreal sloths ( Choloepus).

Pangcha

Pangcha is a village development committee in Bhojpur District in the Kosi Zone of eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 2714 persons living in 471 individual households.

Rewlatch

Rewlatch is a suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa. It is located in Region F.

Thenar eminence

The thenar eminence (from the Greek "θέναρ" - thenar, "palm of the hand" and the Latin word "eminentia", meaning projection,) refers to the group of muscles on the palm of the human hand at the base of the thumb. The skin overlying this region is the area stimulated when trying to elicit a palmomental reflex.

Brojë

Brojë is a settlement in the former Kelmend municipality, Shkodër County, northern Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Malësi e Madhe.

01.JPG|Blockhouse in Broje 11.JPG|View from the village 03.JPG|Landscape in Broje 01.JPG|View from Broje

Harpesaurus

Harpesaurus is a genus of agamid lizards. The genus is endemic to Indonesia.

Toppåsen

' Toppåsen' is a mountain of Akershus, in southeastern Norway.

Category:Mountains of Akershus

Vannecourt

''' Vannecourt ''' is a commune in the Moselle department in Alsace-Champagne-Ardenne-Lorraine in north-eastern France.

Kyne

Kyne or kine is held by some to be a pre-modern English word which formed the plural of cow. Only in the 19th century (and in some parts later) did the vernacular contemporary plural cows replace Kyne/Kine.

As with many Irish and British surnames which were based on the career of the holder, some cowherds (the bovine equivalent of shepherds) came to have the surname Kyne.

However, the gaelic root of the name is O Cadhain, from the word cadhain, meaning wild goose. The " Wild Geese" were members of the Irish army led by Patrick Sarsfield, who, by the terms of the treaty of Limerick in 1691, were given the choice of death or exile with the Stuart King James II in France.

Bishop John Anthony Christopher Kyne (known as Jack) served as Roman Catholic Bishop of Meath in Ireland, from 1947 to 1966.

Category:Cattle

Bertelsen

Bertelsen and Berthelsen are Danish- Norwegian patronymic surnames meaning "son of Bertel" or cognate "Berthel" (both equivalent of the Biblical Βαρθολομαίος/Bartholomaios, cf. English Bartholomew). There are several people with this surname:

HaShamen

HaShamen ( - lit. The Fat Guy) is an Israeli restaurant chain, that sells Shawarma and other middle eastern food, at its 10 branches across Israel. HaShamen opened their first restaurant in 2006, with hopes of putting an emphasis on innovation, freshness, quality and customer service.

HaShamen offers both corporate owned locations and franchises.

ASHS

ASHS may refer to:

  • Albany Senior High School (disambiguation)
  • Alexandria Senior High School, Alexandria, Louisiana, United States
  • All Saints High School (disambiguation)
  • Archbishop Sancroft High School, Harleston, Norfolk, England
  • Armadale Senior High School, Armadale, Western Australia, Australia
  • Atherton State High School, Atherton, Queensland, Australia
BzODZ-EPyr

BzODZ-EPyr is an indole based synthetic cannabinoid that has been sold as a designer drug in Russia.

It acts as a CB receptor agonist with a pK value of 7.2 and demonstrates that replacing the ketone in 3-carbonylindoles with an oxadiazole spacer does generally not lead to activity loss.

Lavarkarchi

Lavarkarchi (, also Romanized as Lāvarkarchī) is a village in Mehran Rural District, in the Central District of Bandar Lengeh County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 56, in 12 families.

Worku

Worku ( Amharic: ወርቁ) is a male name of Ethiopian origin that may refer to:

  • Worku Tesfamichael, Eritrea Minister for Tourism
  • Worku Bikila (born 1968), Ethiopian former 5000 metres runner
  • Asnaketch Worku (1935–2011), Ethiopian female singer
  • Ayelech Worku (born 1979), Ethiopian long-distance runner and two-time world championships medallist
  • Bazu Worku (born 1990), Ethiopian marathon runner
  • Mengistu Worku (1940–2010), Ethiopian footballer and coach
  • Yismake Worku, Ethiopian author
Theodiscus

(the Latinised form of a Germanic word meaning "vernacular", "of the common people", or "native") is a Medieval Latin adjective referring to the Germanic vernaculars of the Early Middle Ages. It is the precursor to a number of terms in West Germanic languages, namely the English exonym Dutch, the German endonym Deutsch, and the Dutch exonym Duits and endonym Diets.

The word theodism, a neologism for a branch of Germanic neopaganism, is based on the Old English form of the word.

Turňa (river)

The Turňa ( Slovak, ; ) is a tributary of the Bodva river in Slovakia near the border with Hungary.

Category:Rivers of Slovakia 2Turna

Turna

Turna may refer to:

Turňa:
  • Turňa, a river in Slovakia
  • Turňa County, a historic county of the Kingdom of Hungary, now in Hungary and Slovakia
  • Turňa nad Bodvou, a village and municipality in Slovakia
    • Turňa Castle, in Turňa nad Bodvou
Turna:
  • Turna, Poland
  • Turna, Kardzhali Province, Bulgaria
  • Turna people of Punjab
Spikeball

Spikeball is a popular modified version of 2v2 volleyball created in 1989 by Ewan Sellars and abandoned in the 1990s. From 2008 - present Kankakee Inc. (USA) and Spikeball Europe Sport, Marketing & Entertainment GmbH (Europe) made Spikeball popular. There are multiple ways to play Spikeball. Most games consist of four players, but there are also two- and six-player variants. Differences include where the players line up, infraction penalties, among others. The materials used in Spikeball include a small trampoline-like object with string netting, a small bouncing ball (usually yellow) with a 12-inch circumference, and four players. In standard play, players line up next to each other around the trampoline; in other versions, they line up across from each other. In all versions, the game starts with a serve from one team to another, continues as long as the ball is being hit from players to trampoline, and ends when an infraction occurs between either the players or the ball.

Caulophyllum thalictroides

Caulophyllum thalictroides, blue cohosh a species of Caulophyllum (family Berberidaceae), also called squaw root or papoose root, is a flowering plant in the Berberidaceae ( barberry) family. It is a medium-tall perennial with blue berry-like fruits and bluish-green foliage.

Politów

Politów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Borkowice, within Przysucha County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately east of Borkowice, east of Przysucha, and south of Warsaw.

Sinesetosa

Sinesetosa acugena is a species of beetle in the family Carabidae, the only species in the genus Sinesetosa.

Klemensker

Klemensker is a village in the north-western part of the Danish island of Bornholm. With a population of 605 (1 January 2016), it is located on a crossroads 13 km north-east of Rønne, 7 km east of the coastal town Hasle and 12 km south of Allinge. It has gained worldwide recognition as a result of its award-winning cheese production.

Beginning at the village inn, Klemens Kro, the road (Danish vej) Simblegårdsvej begins with an extremely steep drop and later a long climb up the Klemensker Bakke (Klemensker Hill). The farm (Danish gård/google:gaard) Simblegård is to the north.

Wehingen

Wehingen is a town in the district of Tuttlingen in Baden-Württemberg in Germany.

KDUS

KDUS, also known as "NBC Sports Radio AM 1060," is a sports talk radio station broadcasting out of Tempe, Arizona and serving the Phoenix metropolitan radio market. It is owned by Hubbard Broadcasting, Inc. and licensed to Phoenix FCC License Sub, LLC. Its studios are located in Tempe and its transmitter is in Guadalupe.

Usage examples of "kdus".

Radescu relived a dual memory, himself in a crib looking at his Uncle Grigor-and the infant Molt squirming against him for sustenance and affection.

As he turned for the door, he heard the man dragging the feedbuckets away from the mulies and their grunts as they fought for their sustenance.

A hemispherical Dome of permalloy, artificially heated and air-controlled but otherwise not at all equipped for the sustenance of life.

Gunnar said that bold plunderers such as we needed sustenance to keep our wits keen and strength ready.

She had sustenance and air recirculation, so the emergency power supply had survived when ship systems were cut, and she retained her store of chemical compounds and enzymes.

It was odd that an Evocator should take such delight in the things common men must do to win their daily sustenance, but Cassini strutted after a kill as if he were the most manly of hunters.

Although stress had undone inclination and appetite, Arithon wrapped himself in the damp folds of his cloak and pursued the chore of addressing survival and sustenance.

Nearly all of it has some animal attributes and nearly all of it is carnivorous, the smaller plants devouring insects, the larger, in turn, depending upon the larger animals for sustenance on up to the maneaters such as I had encountered and those which Han Du said caught and devoured even the hugest animals that exist upon this strange planet.

Looked at in this way, I could be taken for a very large, motile colony of respiring bacteria, operating a complex system of nuclei, microtubules, and neurons for the pleasure and sustenance of their families, and running, at the moment, a typewriter.

Long, multihued fronds hesitantly unfolded from their hiding places, began to strain the water for microscopic sustenance.

All day it points to the sunshine and all night to the stars, and thus passionless, and yet full of life, it endures through the centuries, come storm, come shine, drawing its sustenance from the cool bosom of its mother earth, and as the slow years roll by, learning the great mysteries of growth and of decay.

Come to me, great Lord Priapus, and give me favor, sustenance, elegance, beauty, and delight.

In exactly the same way, Shabbat is a day when sustenance for the spirit is available to us absolutely free, and with no strings attached.

You, observing the old Svanetian custom of providing sustenance for the departed in the afterlife, left out a tumbler of County Fair bourbon, and Og raged at his inability to consume physical spirits.

Kalahari Desert used tsama melons as the basis of their food sustenance, the !