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Nuku-pewapewa

'''Nuku-pewapewa ''' ( fl. 1820–1834) was a New Zealand tribal leader. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Ngāti Kahungunu iwi. He was born in the Wairarapa, New Zealand, probably late in the eighteenth century.

Kyūjitai

Kyūjitai, literally "old character forms" (Kyūjitai: or ), are the traditional forms of kanji, Chinese written characters used in Japanese. Their simplified counterparts are shinjitai , "new character forms". Some of the simplified characters arose centuries ago and were in everyday use in both China and Japan, but they were considered inelegant, even uncouth. After World War II, simplified character forms were made official in both these countries. However, in Japan fewer and less drastic simplifications were made: e.g. "electric" is still written as 電 in Japan, as it is also written in Hong Kong, Macao, South Korea and Taiwan, which continue to use traditional Chinese characters, but has been simplified to 电 in mainland China. Prior to the promulgation of the Tōyō kanji list in 1946, kyūjitai were known as seiji (; meaning "proper/correct characters") or seijitai . Even after kyūjitai were officially marked for discontinuation with the promulgation of the Tōyō kanji list, they were used in print frequently into the 1950s due to logistical delays in changing over typesetting equipment. Kyūjitai continue in use to the present day because when the Japanese government adopted the simplified forms, it did not ban the traditional forms. Thus traditional forms are used when an author wishes to use traditional forms and the publisher agrees.

Unlike in the People's Republic of China, where all personal names were simplified as part of the character simplification reform carried out in the 1950s, the Japanese reform only applied to a subset of the characters in use (the Toyo Kanji) and excluded characters used in proper names. Therefore, kyūjitai are still used in personal names in Japan today (see Jinmeiyo kanji). In modern Japanese, kyūjitai that appear in the official spelling of proper names are sometimes replaced with the modern shinjitai form.

Platzl (Munich)

Platzl is a theatre in Munich, Bavaria, Germany.

Category:Theatres in Munich

Tautomer

Tautomers are constitutional isomers of organic compounds that readily interconvert. This reaction commonly results in the relocation of a proton. Although it is a complicated concept, tautomerism is relevant to the behavior of amino acids and nucleic acids, two of the fundamental building blocks of life.

The concept of tautomerizations is called tautomerism. The chemical reaction interconverting the two is called tautomerization.

Breg-Shkozë

Breg-Shkozë is a village in the former municipality of Prezë in Tirana County, Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became part of the municipality Vorë.

Jula

Jula refers to:

Places
  • Bareh Jula, a village in Iran
  • Jula Deh, a village in Iran
  • Jula Kamar, a village in Iran
Other
  • Jula (name)
  • Dioula language spoken in western Africa
  • Jula people of western Africa
Jula (singer)

Julita Fabiszewska (born Julita Ratowska 3 March 1991 in Lomza) known as Jula is a Polish singer and songwriter. Known for her hits "Za każdym razem", "Nie zatrzymasz mnie" and "Kiedyś odnajdziemy siebie". Her debut album, Na krawędzi was released August 14, 2012.

Jula (name)

Jula may refer to the following people

Given name
  • Jula (singer) (Julita Fabiszewska, born 1991), Polish singer and songwriter
  • Jula De Palma (born 1931), Italian singer
Surname
  • Emil Jula (born 1980), Romanian football player
  • Vasile Jula (born 1974), Romanian football player
Mirovia

Mirovia or Mirovoi (from Russian мировой, mirovoy, meaning "global") was a hypothesized superocean which may have been a global ocean surrounding the supercontinent Rodinia in the Neoproterozoic Era, about 1 billion to 750 million years ago. Mirovia may be essentially identical to, or the precursor of, the hypothesized Pan-African Ocean, which followed the rifting of Rodinia. The Panthalassa (proto- Pacific) Ocean developed in the Neoproterozoic Era by subduction at the expense of the global Mirovia ocean.

Geologic evidence suggests that the middle Neoproterozoic, the Cryogenian period, was an extreme ice age so intense that Mirovia may have been completely frozen to a depth of 2-km. This is part of the Snowball Earth hypothesis.

Tarbertia

Tarbertia is a genus of fungi within the Arthoniales order. The genus has not been placed into a family. This is a monotypic genus, containing the single species Tarbertia juncina.

GamerDNA

gamerDNA Inc. is a social media company for computer and video game players founded on September 21, 2006. The company is now part of Live Gamer(now Emergent Payments). The name is usually spelled with a lower case g: gamerDNA. Members may tag themselves with information on games they have played, server names and guild affiliations, and use this information to find people they have played with in the past, or find guilds or other gamers to play with based on play style. The company was originally funded by Flybridge Ventures (formerly known as IDG Ventures).

Vitez

Vitez is a town and municipality in central Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is administratively part of the Central Bosnia Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Vitez (disambiguation)

Vitez, the Serbo-Croatian word for "knight", may refer to:

  • Recipients of the Knighthood in the Independent State of Croatia
  • Recipients of the Hungarian Knightly Order of Vitéz
  • Vitez, a town in Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Michael Vitez, journalist for the Philadelphia Inquirer
  • Zlatko Vitez (born 1950), Croatian actor
Markgräflerhof

The Markgräflerhof is a baroque palace in Basel, Switzerland, built by the margraves of Baden-Durlach, who used it as an extraterritorial residence as their principality including its residences was often the victim of wars and armies. The margraves had several residences in Basel, but the construction of current palace started under margrave Frederick VII in 1698 when a fire destroyed the previous building. The palace was ready to moved in by 1705. The architect was an entrepreneur Augé who based himself on plans from a book by the French architect Charles Daviller. Frederick VII's successor Charles III William also often used the palace. But afterwards, the margraves predominantly resided in Karlsruhe. The city of Basel purchased the palace in 1807 and the University Hospital of Basel uses the building since 1842.

Luminophore

A luminophore is an atom or functional group in a chemical compound that is responsible for its luminescent properties. Luminophores can be either organic or inorganic.

Luminophores can be further classified as fluorophores or phosphors, depending on the nature of the excited state responsible for the emission of photons. However, some luminophores cannot be classified as being exclusively fluorophores or phosphors. Examples include transition metal complexes such as tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II) chloride, whose luminescence comes from an excited (nominally triplet) metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) state, which is not a true triplet-state in the strict sense of the definition; and colloidal quantum dots, whose emissive state does not have either a purely singlet or triplet spin.

Most luminophores consist of conjugated pi systems or transition metal complexes. There are also purely inorganic luminophores, such as zinc sulfide doped with rare earth metal ions, rare earth metal oxysulfides doped with other rare earth metal ions, yttrium oxide doped with rare earth metal ions, zinc orthosilicate doped with manganese ions, etc. Luminophores can be observed in action in fluorescent lights, television screens, computer monitor screens, organic light-emitting diodes and bioluminescence.

The correct, textbook terminology is luminophore, not lumophore, although the latter term has been frequently but erroneously used in the chemical literature.

Sendjas

Sendjas is a town and commune in Chlef Province, Algeria. According to the 1998 census it has a population of 26,228.

UOG

UOG may refer to:

  • University of Guam
  • University of Gujrat
  • Papua New Guinea University Of Goroka
Therion (band)

Therion (formerly Blitzkrieg, Megatherion) is a Swedish symphonic metal band founded by Christofer Johnsson in 1987. Its name was inspired by the Celtic Frost album To Mega Therion. "To Mega Therion" is Greek for "The Great Beast" and was a title used by occultist Aleister Crowley. Originally a death metal band, Therion adjusted its musical style by adding orchestral elements, including choirs, classical musicians, and even a full orchestra at their concert performances. As a result, it has popularized the symphonic metal genre. In their biography, they state they have been cited as "the most adventurous metal band at present".

Therion takes its themes from different mythologies and practices, including occultism, magic and ancient traditions and writings. Thomas Karlsson, the head and founder of the magical order Dragon Rouge, has provided lyrics for the band since 1996.

Therion

Therion, Greek for "wild animal" or "beast" (θηρίον), may refer to:

  • Therion, the name the Greeks gave to Lupus (constellation) ("wolf")
  • Therion (band), a Swedish metal band
  • Therion (Thelema), a god in Thelema, consort of Babalon
  • Therion (software), a cave cartography programme
  • Master Therion or To Mega Therion, a title assumed by Aleister Crowley
  • The Beast (Revelation), a monster from the Book of Revelation
Therion (Thelema)

Therion (, beast) is a deity found in the mystical system of Thelema, which was established in 1904 with Aleister Crowley's writing of The Book of the Law. Therion's female counterpart is Babalon, another Thelemic deity. Therion, as a Thelemic personage, evolved from that of " The Beast" from the Book of Revelation, whom Crowley identified himself with since childhood, because his mother called him that name. Indeed, throughout his life he occasionally referred to himself as “Master Therion” or sometimes “The Beast 666”. He wrote:

Before I touched my teens, I was already aware that I was THE BEAST whose number is 666. I did not understand in the least what that implied; it was a passionately ecstatic sense of identity.

The word "therion" is mentioned in several Thelemic rituals, such as The Star Ruby. In total, there are five mentions of The Beast in Liber AL vel Legis, the first being in 1:15, and the remaining four are all in the third chapter—verses 14, 22, 34, and 47, respectively—although the word “beast” can be found elsewhere therein. Aleister Crowley believed that the references to The Beast and the Scarlet Woman (Babalon) in the book “do not denote persons but are titles of office”. The first mention reads thus:

Now ye shall know that the chosen priest & apostle of infinite space is the prince-priest the Beast; and in his woman called the Scarlet Woman is all power given.

Therion (software)

Therion is an open source cave surveying software package which is designed to: process survey data; generate maps and 3D models of caves; and archive the data describing the cave and the history of exploration.

Therion was developed by Slovakian cavers Martin Budaj and Stacho Mudrak but is available in English. It runs on a wide variety of platforms including Linux, Windows and Mac OS X. Therion is available as part of standard distribution of Debian and Ubuntu (operating system) Linux distributions.

It is free software, released under the terms of GNU GPL, with source code available. It does not require any other commercial software to run. The format of all files is human readable plain text (excluding 3D models), which semantically describe the cave, and are compiled by the program into various output forms such as 2D PDF or SVG maps, or 3D models. Other files like map overlays, terrain models and pictures can be incorporated into the output. A graphical editor is provided to help with the drawing process, and a 3D viewer ('loch') for viewing the models. Survex is used for the centreline error distribution if installed.

The separation of drawing/semantic data entry and output rendering makes the program both complex to learn to use, but also capable of dealing with cave systems still being explored, where new finds and surveys need the drawing to morph to fit. It also allows a survey to be rendered with different national cave-symbol sets.

The (UK-based) Cave Surveying Group has been using Therion along with PocketTopo and DistoXs to train cavers and improve the quality of surveying by the use of real time measurement that is available in Paperless surveying.

Therion is used in several large projects for the documentation of cave systems. It is listed among 10 of the Best Free Linux Earth Science Software. It was used in a number of scientific projects.

Not everyone finds the results satisfying: "Beginning in 2003, the Mulu Caves Project attempted to use Therion on several cave surveys. After many attempts over several years by many different cave surveyors, one of whom was closely affiliated with the software itself, no aesthetically pleasing results were produced."

The unmatched feature of Therion software among other software tools for cave surveying is straightforward creating of 3D presentation for WEB pages. One may export 3D model from Therion to 3D format .lox, open it in Therion's 3D viewer Loch and export data as VTK. ParaView software is able to open such data and export them in WebGL format.

To draw the maps the Speleo-Vulcain group from France is using Visual Topo for simple systems. However, because of the difficulties to build a rigorous synthesis and to update the survey of the complex Jean-Bernard System, they passed to the open source software Therion.

Therion was analysed and used in thesis of Eliška Rákocy

Two articles in the Annual Report of Cave Administration of the Czech Republic 2010 describe how Therion was used to document the Javoříčko Caves show cave.

Described as "State of the Art Cave-Drawing software" Therion was reviewed in Compass, the Cave Surveying Journal of The British Cave Research Association. The review covered installation, use and development of the software. Since this article, written in 2004, Therion has continued to be developed and is now considered to be the most capable cave drawing software available.

Article about Therion software in Spelunking with Linux, Linux Journal, March 2014, p. 23-28

Jumpstyle

Jumpstyle is an electronic dance style and music genre popular in Eastern Europe, as well as certain parts of Australia and the United States.

Jumpstyling is often referred to as "Jumpen": a combination of the English word 'Jump' and the Dutch & German suffix '-en' (meaning "to jump" or "jumping").

It originated in 1997 in Belgium but gathered bigger popularity in their neighboring country the Netherlands in the 2000s.

Zanjilabad

Zanjilabad (, also Romanized as Zanjīlābād; also known as Zanjolābād) is a village in Ardalan Rural District, Mehraban District, Sarab County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 122, in 43 families.

Vibrion

Vibrion is an antiquated term for microorganisms, especially a pathogenic ones; see Germ theory of disease. The term may specifically refer to motile microorganisms.

Hiraishi

Hiraishi (written: 平石) is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • , Japanese footballer

  • Takenori Hiraishi, Japanese golfer
Ladan-Kara

Ladan-Kara is a village in Suzak District, Jalal-Abad Region, Kyrgyzstan.

Aubourn

Aubourn (" Stream where the Alders grow") is a small village just east of the A46, in between Lincoln and Newark, England, in the county of Lincolnshire, the district of North Kesteven and the civil parish of Aubourn and Haddington. It has a one way system that is unusual for a small countryside village, and a public house called "The Royal Oak".

Stevioside

Stevioside is a glycoside derived from the stevia plant, which can be used as a sweetener.

Lingulata

Lingulata is a class of brachiopod, among the oldest of all brachiopods having existed since the Cambrian period . They are also among the most morphologically conservative of the brachiopods, having lasted from their earliest appearance to the present with very little change in shape. Shells of living specimens found today in the waters around Japan are almost identical to ancient Cambrian fossils.

The Lingulata have tongue-shaped shells (hence the name Lingulata, from the Latin word for "tongue") with a long fleshy stalk, or pedicle, with which the animal burrows into sandy or muddy sediments. They inhabit vertical burrows in these soft sediments with the anterior end facing up and slightly exposed at the sediment surface. The cilia of the lophophore generate a feeding and respiratory current through the lophophore and mantle cavity. The gut is complete and J-shaped.

Lingulata shells are composed of a combination of calcium phosphate, protein and chitin. This is unlike most other shelled marine animals, whose shells are made of calcium carbonate. The Lingulata are inarticulate brachiopods, so named for the simplicity of their hinge mechanism. This mechanism lacks teeth and is held together only by a complex musculature. Both valves are roughly symmetrical.

The genus Lingula (Bruguiere, 1797) is the oldest known animal genus that still contains extant species. It is primarily an Indo- Pacific genus that is harvested for human consumption in Japan and Australia.

Kilvaxter

Kilvaxter is a crofting township on the Trotternish peninsula of the Isle of Skye in the Highlands of Scotland. It is in the council area of Highland. The A855 road passes through the area. Kilvaxter is north of Uig.

Category:Populated places in Skye

Seung-hee

Seung-hee, also spelled Seung-hui, Seung-hi, or Sung-hi, is a Korean unisex given name. The meaning differs based on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 15 hanja with the reading " seung" and 25 hanja with the reading " hee" on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be used in given names.

People with this name include:

Artists and writers
  • Choi Seung-hee (1911–1969), South Korean female modern dancer
  • Kim Seung-hee (born 1952), South Korean female poet
  • Lee Seung-hee (artist) (born 1963), South Korean male ceramic artist
  • Seung Hee Yang (born 1969), South Korean female violinist
  • Nikki Seung-hee Lee (born 1970), South Korean-born American female photographer and filmmaker
Athletes
  • Kim Seung-hee (footballer) (born 1968), South Korean male football manager
  • Lee Seung-hee (born 1988), South Korean male footballer
  • Park Seung-hi (born 1992), South Korean female short track skater
Entertainers
  • Sung-Hi Lee (born 1970), South Korean-born American female nude model and actress
  • C. S. Lee (born 1971 as Lee Seung-hee), South Korean-born American male actor
  • Cho Seung-hee (entertainer) (born 1991), South Korean female idol singer, member of F-ve Dolls and Dia
  • Oh Seunghee (born 1995), South Korean female idol singer, member of CLC
  • Hyun Seunghee (born 1996), South Korean female idol singer, member of Oh My Girl
Others
  • Seung-Hui Cho (1984–2007), South Korean-born immigrant to the U.S. who committed a spree killing
  • Kim Sung-hui, North Korean politician chosen for Sinpha (Constituency 642) in the North Korean parliamentary election, 2014

Fictional characters with this name include:

  • Choi Seung-hee, female character in 2009 South Korean television series Iris
  • Han Seung-hee, female character in 2014 South Korean television series Doctor Stranger
Discards

Discards are the portion of a catch of fish which is not retained on board during commercial fishing operations and is returned, often dead or dying, to the sea. The practice of discarding is driven by economic and political factors; fish which are discarded are often unmarketable species, individuals which are below minimum landing sizes and catches of species which fishermen are not allowed to land, for instance due to quota restrictions. Discards form part of the bycatch of a fishing operation, although bycatch includes marketable species caught unintentionally. Discarding can be highly variable in time and space as a consequence of changing economic, sociological, environmental and biological factors.

Discarding patterns are influenced by catch compositions, which in turn are determined by environmental factors, such as recruitment of small fish into the fishery, and social factors, such as quota regulation, choice of fishing gear and fishermen's behaviour. There have been numerous studies on the scale of discarding. In the North Sea the total annual quantity of discards has been estimated at 800,000–950,000 tonnes, or the equivalent of one-third of the total weight landed annually and one-tenth of the estimated total biomass of fish in the North Sea.

Spirovsky

Spirovsky (masculine), Spirovskaya (feminine), or Spirovskoye (neuter) may refer to:

  • Spirovsky District, a district of Tver Oblast, Russia
  • Spirovskaya, a rural locality (a village) in Vologda Oblast, Russia
Delém

Vladem Lázaro Ruiz Quevedo, "Delém" (April 15, 1935 in Sao Paulo, Brazil – March 28, 2007 in Buenos Aires, Argentina) was a former Brazilian footballer that played for clubs in Brazil, Argentina and Chile. He played seven games and scored five goals for the Brazil national football team, all in 1960.

Fly ash

Fly ash, also known as "pulverised fuel ash" in the United Kingdom, is one of the coal combustion products, composed of the fine particles that are driven out of the boiler with the flue gases. Ash that falls in the bottom of the boiler is called bottom ash. In modern coal-fired power plants, fly ash is generally captured by electrostatic precipitators or other particle filtration equipment before the flue gases reach the chimneys. Together with bottom ash removed from the bottom of the boiler, it is known as coal ash. Depending upon the source and makeup of the coal being burned, the components of fly ash vary considerably, but all fly ash includes substantial amounts of silicon dioxide (SiO) (both amorphous and crystalline), aluminium oxide (AlO) and calcium oxide (CaO), the main mineral compounds in coal-bearing rock strata.

Constituents depend upon the specific coal bed makeup but may include one or more of the following elements or substances found in trace concentrations (up to hundreds ppm): arsenic, beryllium, boron, cadmium, chromium, hexavalent chromium, cobalt, lead, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, selenium, strontium, thallium, and vanadium, along with very small concentrations of dioxins and PAH compounds.

In the past, fly ash was generally released into the atmosphere, but air pollution control standards now require that it be captured prior to release by fitting pollution control equipment. In the US, fly ash is generally stored at coal power plants or placed in landfills. About 43% is recycled, often used as a pozzolan to produce hydraulic cement or hydraulic plaster and a replacement or partial replacement for Portland cement in concrete production. Pozzolans ensure the setting of concrete and plaster and provide concrete with more protection from wet conditions and chemical attack.

After a long regulatory process, the EPA published a final ruling in December 2014, which establishes that coal fly ash is classified as a sub-category of hazardous waste under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Coal Combustion Residuals (CCD's) are listed in the subtitle D, “Special waste” (rather than the less stringent subtitle C, “Solid waste”, which was also considered).

In the case that fly or bottom ash is not produced from coal, for example when solid waste is used to produce electricity in an incinerator (see waste-to-energy facilities), this kind of ash may contain higher levels of contaminants than coal ash. In that case the ash produced is often classified as hazardous waste.

Huntingdon

Huntingdon is a market town in Cambridgeshire, England. The town was chartered by King John in 1205. It is the traditional county town of Huntingdonshire, and is the seat of the Huntingdonshire district council. It is known as the birthplace of Oliver Cromwell, who was born in 1599 and was the member of parliament (MP) for the town in the 17th century. The former Conservative prime minister John Major was the MP for the town from 1979 to 2001.

Huntingdon (disambiguation)

Huntingdon may refer to:

Huntingdon (electoral district)

Huntingdon was a federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada, that was represented in the Canadian House of Commons from 1867 to 1917.

It was created by the British North America Act, 1867. It was amalgamated into the Châteauguay—Huntingdon electoral district in 1914.

Huntingdon (UK Parliament constituency)

Huntingdon is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2001 by Jonathan Djanogly, a Conservative.

Huntingdon (provincial electoral district)

Huntingdon is a provincial electoral district in the Montérégie region of Quebec, Canada that elects members to the National Assembly of Quebec. It includes the cities or municipalities such as Huntingdon, Saint-Anicet, Hemmingford, Saint-Bernard-de-Lacolle, Napierville and Ormstown.

It was originally created for the 1867 election. Its final election was in 1989 and its successor electoral district was Beauharnois-Huntingdon.

It was re-created for the 2003 election from parts of Beauharnois-Huntingdon and Saint-Jean electoral districts.

In the change from the 2001 to the 2011 electoral map, it lost Saint-Rémi to the newly created Sanguinet electoral district.

Huntingdon (Boyce, Virginia)

Huntingdon, also known as The Meadow, is a historic plantation house located near Boyce, Clarke County, Virginia. The original section was built about 1830, and is a two-story, five bay, stone I-house dwelling with a gable roof. A rear ell was added around 1850, making a "T"-shaped house. Also on the property are a contributing pyramidal roofed mid-19th-century smokehouse and a stone-lined ice pit with a late 19th-century, square-notched log icehouse.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.

Huntingdon (Roanoke, Virginia)

Huntingdon is a historic plantation house located at Roanoke, Virginia. It was built about 1819, and is a 2 1/2-story, five bay, Federal style brick dwelling. It has a central-passage-plan and an integral two-story rear ell. The front and side elevations feature mid-19th century Greek Revival style porches. The house was restored and improved in 1988-1989. Also on the property is a contributing family cemetery and an outbuilding believed to have been a slave house.

It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1991.

Galler

Galler is a surname of German and Anglo-Norman French origin and a common name of Jewish families in Poland, Israel, and the United States. It is estimated that fewer than 4,000 individuals have this name worldwide. The name is also found as Galier, Gallier, Galor, Galer, and Gal-Or.

The Galler surname may refer to:

  • Bernard Galler (1928–2006), American mathematician and computer scientist
  • Bruno Galler (born 1946), Swiss football referee
  • Lev Galler (1883–1950), Russian military leader
CertiVox

CertiVox is a London-based web 2.0 security firm that develops information security infrastructure as a service ( IaaS) and encryption based software as a service ( SaaS) solutions for enterprises and individuals. The company provides on-demand encryption key management and multi-factor authentication both on and off the cloud, and specializes in elliptical curve cryptography. Red Herring selected CertiVox as a finalist for the 2012 Europe Top 100.

Fief

A fief was the central element of feudalism and consisted of heritable property or rights granted by an overlord to a vassal who held it in fealty (or "in fee") in return for a form of feudal allegiance and service, usually given by the personal ceremonies of homage and fealty. The fees were often lands or revenue-producing real property held in feudal land tenure: these are typically known as fiefs or fiefdoms. However, not only land but anything of value could be held in fee, including governmental office, rights of exploitation such as hunting or fishing, monopolies in trade, and tax farms.

Samuels

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

  • Andrew Samuels, Jungian psychologist
  • Arthur Warren Samuels, Irish politician
  • Chris Samuels, American football player
  • Dale Samuels, American football player
  • Dave Samuels, American musician
  • David Samuels (political scientist), political science professor
  • David Samuels (EastEnders), fictional character in BBC TV soap opera EastEnders
  • David Samuels (writer) (born 1967), American author
  • Dover Samuels, New Zealand politician
  • Ernest Samuels, American biographer
  • Giovonnie Samuels, American actress
  • Gordon Samuels, Australian politician
  • Howard J. Samuels, American politician
  • Joel Samuels, fictional character
  • John Samuels, American actor
  • Lawrence Samuels, arena football player
  • Lesser Samuels, screenwriter
  • Lynn Samuels, radio host
  • Marlon Samuels, cricketer
  • Maxwell Samuels, Belizean politician
  • Moss Turner-Samuels, UK politician
  • Robert Samuels, cricketer
  • Ron Samuels, film producer
  • Samardo Samuels (born 1989), Jamaican basketball player
  • Theo Samuels, South African rugby union player
  • Tony Samuels, American football player
  • Warren Samuels, economist and historian of economic thought
SAPCA

SAPCA (, acronym officially standing for Crowd Control Police Dogs, and Iran Detectives Police Dogs, ; Sâpcā also means "dog" in Old Persian) is the search and rescue and police dog unit of Law Enforcement Force of Islamic Republic of Iran and a subdivision of its Special Units Command. The unit was established in 2010.

Mitnick

Mitnick, Mitnik or Mytnik is a surname that may refer to

  • Craig Mitnick, American lawyer, broadcaster and businessman
  • Kevin Mitnick (born 1963), American computer security consultant, author and hacker
  • Tadeusz Mytnik (born 1949), Polish cyclist.
  • Vadzim Mytnik (born 1988), Belarusian association football player
Sapotskin

Sapotskin (, , ) is a small town in Belarus, north-east of Hrodna with circa 2,000 inhabitants.

Cereal leaf beetle

The Cereal Leaf Beetle (Oulema melanopus) is a significant crop pest, discovered by Carl Linnaeus in 1758.

Kehoe

Kehoe, usually pronounced , is the name of a clan that existed in southern Ireland. Some, though not all, descend from King Domnall Mór Ua Cellaigh of Uí Maine, who died in 1221.

Many of their descendants then emigrated to America and have spread throughout the country. The name is spelled in a variety of ways, however most common is "Kehoe," "Keogh" and "Keough." In Ireland the Kehoe version is used most often in and around County Wexford while Keogh is more common throughout the rest of the country. Kehoe is one of several versions of the Irish name "Mac Eochaidh" which translates as ‘son of Eochaidh’, a personal name based on each, ‘horse’.

Kehoe (disambiguation)

Kehoe is the Irish clan name.

Kehoe also may refer to:

  • Kehoe Cup, hurling competition in Ireland

Usage examples of "kehoe".

Madame Alp and, so as not to be ogled for free by the gathered gawks, went to wait in the tent wagon, where she could be company for Magpie Maggie Hag, still enfeebled by her premonitions or whatever was ailing her.

Sianadh had hired a carriage and driver, which contraption was ogled by the neighbors when it stopped at the door, carriages being a rarity in Bergamot Street.

In every snickert and ginnel, bone-grubbers, rufflers, shivering-jemmies, anglers, clapperdogeons, peterers, sneeze-lurkers and Whip Jacks with their morts, out of the picaroon, fox and flimp and ogle.

The door slammed shut, the van burned rubber and shot forward out of the drive, revealing something that had been hiding on the other side of it: Cyrus Rutherford Ogle, flanked by two dozen TV cameramen and still photographers, all of whom were busily recording the quickly changing facial expressions of Jeremiah Freel, and his vanishing penis.

The also enyoyed the time old habit of finding a comfortable perch in the center, near the mine office, where they guzzled beer and ogled the odd female.

That day they were bored in their usual ocupation namely sitting on the stoop of the general store, guzzling beer and ogling the odd female.

Some of the enthusiasts seeking to meet me were seeking to meet what they properly considered a Far Journeyer, but a great many wished to meet a man they mistakenly considered Un Grand Romancier, author of an imaginative and entertaining fiction, and others clearly wished only to ogle a Prodigious Liar, as they might have flocked to watch the frusta of some eminent criminal at the piazzetta pillars.

But he continued pointing in silence at the old man, who was leering and smirking and ogling, in evident delight at being the centre of attention.

Beside her sat a tall handsome woman with a hard mouth, dressed in white linen and a picture hat, who ogled him tentatively through a lorgnon during the moment of introduction before permitting her face to relax into a smile of welcome.

Angrier than I had ever been in my life, I attacked, leaping for his throat, infuriated that another male would lustfully ogle my mate in my face.

The dwarf acolytes, giggling, peeping, nudging, ogling, Easterkissing, zigzag behind him.

Cadwell: I was ogling a lady in the second balcony that I believe I know.

Now that I think about it, both he and Skip were probably ogling you the minute we stepped off the boat.

She did a quick peek over her shoulder and sure enough Remy was ogling her big behind in the short shorts.

The thought of sitting through four more nights of guys ogling Claire made the mineral water in his glass taste like horse piss.