Wikipedia
Ubhayābhisārika is a Sanskrit single-player satirical play formatted as a monologue. It was written by Vararuchi, who is thought to have lived in the Gupta period The literal meaning of the title is "Both Go to Meet" or "The Two Have a Tryst". However, "abhisārika" usually refers to a courtesan or prostitute.
The only character in the play is Vita, which, loosely translated, means a lecher or a satyr. Vita knows all the courtesans of the city (Kusumapura, a part of Pataliputra or the modern Patna) by their name, ancestry and their partners in sexual congress. Besides the courtesans, a remarkable character is a eunuch who is portrayed as being as seductive as any courtesan.
The play is a good example of the social life of the upper class of medieval India. In particular, it reveals the epicurean lifestyles of the rich and powerful, the considerable sexual freedom enjoyed by courtesans, and the avaricious nature of their mothers who were once courtesans themselves.
Tembhli is a village in Nandurbar district of Maharashtra state in India, from where the ambitious Aadhar Scheme was launched on 29 September 2010. Ranjana Sonawane became the first person to be given an Aadhar identity number.
Primošten (; ) is a town in Croatia, and a part of the Šibenik-Knin County. It is situated in the south, between the cities of Šibenik and Trogir, on the Adriatic coast. 97.03% of the citizens are Croats.
Kartellen (English: The Cartel) is a Swedish gangstarap hip hop group founded in 2008 by Kinesen with Babyface, both serving life sentences in Finland for accessory to murder. Kinesen was also allegedly involved in an infamous airport multi-million robbery in 2002.
The band uses the materials sent by Kinesen with Babyface and others in prison and releases them for downloads. It is fronted by Sebbe Staxx (real name Sebastian Stakset), Kaka, Maskinisten. Other members joining later include Lil' Star and Lani Mo Cribbe. Established musicians and producers also contribute to the effort.
Kartellen has been a famous and provocative hip hop act portraying crime and social problems in the suburbs in their albums and mixtapes. It has coverage in mainstream media with some of their releases appearing in the Sverigetopplistan, the official Swedish Singles Chart.
Kartellen concerts are closely monitored by the Swedish police for their controversiality. Sebbe Staxx, with a 1-year prison record for charges related to robbery, receipt of stolen goods and weapon-related charges allegedly sent threatening messages on Twitter about the Swedish far-right politician Jimmie Åkesson who filed a complaint with the police. Sebbe Staxx later apologized to his mom and employer about his choice of words.
Vlaardingen is a city in South Holland in the Netherlands. It is located on the north bank of the Nieuwe Maas river at the confluence with the Oude Maas. The municipality administers an area of , of which is land, with residents in .
An alumni association is an association of graduates or, more broadly, of former students ( alumni). In the United Kingdom and the United States, alumni of universities, colleges, schools (especially independent schools), fraternities, and sororities often form groups with alumni from the same organization. These associations often organize social events, publish newsletters or magazines, and raise funds for the organization. Many provide a variety of benefits and services that help alumni maintain connections to their educational institution and fellow graduates. In the US, most associations do not require its members to be an alumnus of a university to enjoy membership and privileges.
Additionally, such groups often support new alumni, and provide a forum to form new friendships and business relationships with people of similar background.
Alumni associations are mainly organized around universities or departments of universities, but may also be organized among students that studied in a certain country. In the past, they were often considered to be the university's or school's old boy society (or old boys network). Today, alumni associations involve graduates of all age groups and demographics.
Alumni associations are often organized into chapters by city, region, or country.
Robbio is a city and comune (municipality) in the Province of Pavia in the Italian region Lombardy, located about 50 km southwest of Milan and about 45 km west of Pavia. It is part of Lomellina traditional region. Robbio borders the following municipalities: Borgolavezzaro, Castelnovetto, Confienza, Nicorvo, Palestro, Rosasco, Vespolate.
SQHC may refer to:
- Sporulenol synthase, an enzyme
- Syrian-Qatari Holding Company
Tureh (, also Romanized as Tūreh; also known as Tīleh and Tūleh) is a city in and the capital of Zalian District, in Shazand County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,167 in 571 families.
Touboro is a town and commune in North Region Cameroon.
An April 10, 2014 report says:
"Thousands of refugees, fleeing the violence of armed groups ( Séléka and Anti-balaka) are concentrated in the towns of Mbaimboum and Touboro, on the border between the two Countries. Neither the local authorities nor international organizations are providing care for these people, who are left on their own or, in the best cases, can count on the solidarity of relatives and friends from Cameroon."
Dobki may refer to the following places:
- Dobki, Masovian Voivodeship (east-central Poland)
- Dobki, Podlaskie Voivodeship (north-east Poland)
- Dobki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship (north Poland)
Recapture is a 1930 drama in three acts by Preston Sturges, his third play to appear on Broadway.
The Broadway production was directed by Don Mullally and produced by A. H. Woods. It opened on January 29, 1930 at the Eltinge 42nd Street Theatre, and ran for 24 performances, closing in February of that year. According to Sturges, the play received "the most violently destructive notices [he] had seen in years."
Appearing in the cast were Melvyn Douglas and Glenda Farrell.
Geusa is a village and a former municipality within the district Saalekreis, in the federal state of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since January 1, 2010, it is within the town limits of Merseburg.
Derrington is a village near the M6 motorway, lying west of the town of Stafford, in the Stafford District, in the English county of Staffordshire. For population details from the 2011 census see under Seighford. The village lies on the now disused Shropshire Union Railway running from Stafford to Shrewsbury. It has a pub, The Red Lion Inn and a parish church dedicated to St Matthew.
The village hall is the heart of the village: http://www.derringtonvillage.co.uk/ .
Derrington is also the name of a character in a book called "The Clique".
Nyssosternus duidaensis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, the only species in the genus Nyssosternus.
Clastidium (modern Casteggio), was a village of the Anamares, in Gallia Cispadana, on the Via Postumia, 5 miles east of Iria (modern Voghera) and 31 miles west of Placentia.
Here in 222 BC, Marcus Claudius Marcellus defeated the Gauls and won the spolia opima; in 218 BC, Hannibal took it and its stores of corn by treachery. It never had an independent government, and not later than 190 BC was made part of the colony of Placentia, founded in 219 BC.
In the Augustan division of Italy, however, Placentia belonged to the 8th region, Aemilia, whereas Iria certainly, and Clastidium possibly, belonged to the 9th region, Liguria (see Theodor Mommsen in Corp. Inscrip. Lat. vol. v. Berlin, 1877, p. 828).
The remains visible at Clastidium are scanty; there is a fountain (the Fontana d'Annibale), and a Roman bridge, which seems to have been constructed of tiles, not of stone, was discovered in 1857, but destroyed.
Smash and Grab is a 1937 British comedy crime film directed by Tim Whelan and starring Jack Buchanan, Elsie Randolph, Arthur Margetson and Anthony Holles. The film was released in the U.S. as Larceny Street.
Trachybasalt is a volcanic rock with a composition between trachyte and basalt. Minerals in trachybasalt include alkali feldspar, calcic plagioclase, olivine, clinopyroxene and likely very small amounts of leucite or analcime. Trachybasalt is a basalt with high alkali content (5 to 7% NaO + KO, see TAS diagram).
Rhetorius of Egypt was the last major classical astrologer from whom we have any excerpts. He lived in the sixth or early seventh century, in the early Byzantine era. He wrote an extensive compendium in Greek of the techniques of the Hellenistic astrologers who preceded him, and is one of our best sources for the work of Antiochus of Athens. Although no intact original manuscript survives of his work, we do have several late Byzantine versions of it.
Rhetorius provides important confirmation of the survival of the more obscure astrological techniques of Vettius Valens, the practicing astrologer whose tradition is somewhat at variance with the more well-known methods of Claudius Ptolemy; for example, in his treatment of the Lot of Fortune as a horoskopos, much as Valens treated Lots, and in his use of sect with lots. In addition, Rhetorius discusses the late-Roman systems of time lords, a topic which came to be heavily developed by the Persians, Arabs and medieval Europeans. Rhetorius provides an informative link between the earlier Hellenistic tradition and the Arab and medieval practices that followed him.
Haimre is a village in Märjamaa Parish, Rapla County in western Estonia.
Category:Villages in Rapla County Category:Kreis Wiek
The Green Wave is the name of numerous sports teams, most prominently those of Tulane University's Green Wave in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Other teams using the "Green Wave" name include:
- Abington High School, Abington, Massachusetts
- Ashbrook High School, Gastonia, North Carolina
- Audubon High School, Audubon, New Jersey
- Cathedral School, Natchez, Mississippi
- Churchill Co. High School, Fallon, Nevada
- Clintwood High School, Clintwood, Virginia
- Dover High School, Dover, New Hampshire
- Easley High School, Easley, South Carolina
- East Grand Forks Senior High School, East Grand Forks, Minnesota
- Father Lopez Catholic High School, Daytona Beach, Florida
- Fort Myers High School, Fort Myers, Florida
- Gallatin High School, Gallatin, Tennessee
- Greenville Senior High School, Greenville, Ohio
- Greenfield High School, Greenfield, MA
- Holy Name High School, Parma Heights, Ohio
- Hudson Catholic High School, Hudson, Massachusetts
- Isidore Newman School, New Orleans, Louisiana
- Leeds High School, Leeds, Alabama
- Long Branch High School, Long Branch, New Jersey
- Malden High School, Malden, Missouri
- Mattoon High School, Mattoon, Illinois
- Meade County High School, Brandenburg, Kentucky
- Midway High School, Kingston, Tennessee
- Mount Saint Joseph Academy, Rutland, Vermont
- Narrows High School, Narrows, Virginia
- Newark Catholic High School, Newark, Ohio
- New Milford High School, New Milford, Connecticut
- Oswayo Valley Jr. & Sr. High, Shinglehouse, Pennsylvania
- Ponchatoula High School, Ponchatoula, Louisiana
- Sehome High School Track team, Bellingham, Washington
- Spencer High School Columbus, Georgia
- St. Edward Central Catholic High School, Elgin, Illinois
- Summerville High School, Summerville, South Carolina
- Delbarton School, Morristown, NJ
- West Point High School, West Point, MS
Cathaya is a genus in family Pinaceae and has one known living species, Cathaya argyrophylla. Cathaya is a member of the subfamily Laricoideae, most closely related to Pseudotsuga and Larix. A second species, C. nanchuanensis, is now treated as a synonym, as it does not differ from C. argyrophylla in any characters.
Cathaya is confined to a limited area in southern China, in the provinces of Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan and southeast Sichuan. It is found on steep, narrow mountain slopes at 950-1800 m altitude, on limestone soils. A larger population has been reduced by over-cutting before its scientific discovery and protection in 1950.
The leaves are needle-like, 2.5-5 cm long, have ciliate (hairy) margins when young, and grow around the stems in a spiral pattern. The cones are 3-5 cm long, with about 15-20 scales, each scale bearing two winged seeds.
One or two botanists, unhappy with the idea of a new genus in such a familiar family, tried to shoehorn it into other existing genera, as Pseudotsuga argyrophylla and Tsuga argyrophylla. It is however very distinct from both of these genera, and these combinations are not now used.
Fossils of extinct species of Cathaya are abundant in European brown coal deposits dating from between 10-30 million years ago.
The Butchart Gardens in Victoria, British Columbia has a small living specimen.
A postscript (P.S.) is an afterthought, thought of occurring after the letter has been written and signed. The term comes from the Latin post scriptum, an expression meaning "written after" (which may be interpreted in the sense of "that which comes after the writing").
A postscript may be a sentence, a paragraph, or occasionally many paragraphs added to, often hastily and incidentally, after the signature of a letter or (sometimes) the main body of an essay or book. In a book or essay, a more carefully composed addition (e.g., for a second edition) is called an afterword. The word "postscript" has, poetically, been used to refer to any sort of addendum to some main work, even if it is not attached to a main work, as in Søren Kierkegaard's book titled Concluding Unscientific Postscript. Sometimes, when additional points are made after the first postscript, abbreviations such as PSS (post-super-scriptum), PPS (postquam-post-scriptum) and PPPS (post-post-post-scriptum, and so on, ad infinitum) are used, though only PPS has somewhat common usage.
A postscript is most often a sentence or paragraph added after the signature of a letter.
This may also refer to:
- PostScript, a page description and programming language for electronic publishing
- PostScript Magazine, a British student magazine
- Post Script, a song by Finch from their debut album, What It Is to Burn
- P.S. (film), 2004 English film
Pachola is a type of prepared meat in Mexican cuisine. It consists of a flattened and spiced ground beef patty made using a metate (grinding stone). The beef is mixed with ground ancho chili, cumin, garlic and bread, and fried in oil. Pacholas are sometimes grilled.
Boza, also bosa (from ), is a popular fermented beverage in Kazakhstan, Turkey, Kyrgyzstan, Albania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, parts of Romania, Serbia. It is a malt drink made from maize (corn) and wheat in Albania, fermented wheat in Turkey, and wheat or millet in Bulgaria and Romania. In Egypt where it is known as "būẓa" it is usually made from barley. It has a thick consistency, a low alcohol content (around 1%), and a slightly acidic sweet flavor.
Boza is a surname. Notable people with the name include:
- Benjamín Boza ( 1900–1901), Peruvian politician, mayor of Lima
- Francisco Boza (born 1964), Peruvian sports shooter
- Juan Boza (born 1941), Cuban artist
- Máximo Arrates Boza (1859-1936), Panamanian composer
McNabb is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Carl McNabb, baseball player
- Chet McNabb (1920–1990), American professional basketball player
- Donald McNabb, Canadian politician
- Donovan McNabb (born 1976), American football quarterback
- Duncan McNabb, US Air Force general
- Edgar McNabb, baseball player
- Ian McNabb (born 1962), British musician
- James McNabb (c. 1776–1820), Upper Canadian businessman and political figure
- James Alexander MacNabb, British rower
- Juan Conway McNabb, Catholic bishop
- Robert Francis Ross McNabb (1934–1972), New Zealand mycologist
- Sean McNabb, American musician (bassist)
- Vincent McNabb (1868–1943), Irish scholar and priest
Mimetodon is a small mammal from the Paleocene of North America and perhaps Europe. It was a member of the extinct order Multituberculata within the suborder Cimolodonta and family Neoplagiaulacidae.
The genus Mimetodon was named by Jepsen G.L. in 1940. It has also been known as Ectypodus (partly); Mesodma (partly); Neoplagiaulax (partly). McKenna and Bell (1997) lists possible material from the Upper Paleocene(?) of Europe.
Ibaji is a Local Government Area in Kogi State, Nigeria in the south of the state separated from Edo State to the west by the Niger River, and bordering Delta State in the south. Its headquarters are in the town of Onyedega on the Niger River in the northwest of the area at.
The northeasterly line of equal latitude and longitude passes through the LGA.
It has an area of 1,377 km² and a population of 128,129 at the 2006 census.
The postal code of the area is 271.
Agilulf ( 555 – April 616) called the Thuringian, was a duke of Turin and king of the Lombards from 591 until his death.
Agilulf, also called Aigulf (ca.537 – 601), was a Bishop of Metz between 590 or 591 and 601, and was the predecessor of Arnual or Arnoldus or Arnoald (601–609 or 611). He was a son of Ferreolus, Senator of Narbonne, and wife Dode, Abbess of Saint Pierre de Reims.
Tenpadit is a village in Banmauk Township, Katha District, in the Sagaing Region of northern-central Burma.
CRTP has several meanings in computer science.
- In the C++ programming language, the curiously recurring template pattern
- RFC 3545, Enhanced Compressed RTP (CRTP) for Links with High Delay, Packet Loss and Reordering
- RFC 2508, Compressing IP/UDP/RTP Headers for Low-Speed Serial Links
- Diapolycopene oxygenase, an enzyme
Baikampady is a place north of Panambur in Dakshina Kannada district. It is at 6 km from Surathkal.There is an industrial estate, where many small scale industries are located. The Baikampadi industrial estate has many electrical, engineering, leaf spring, hollow blocks and pharmaceutical industries. It serves nearby New Mangalore port ( NMPT ), Mangalore Fertilizers and Mangalore petroleum refinery ( MRPL).There is market yard for agriculture produce ( APMC ) built few years ago is lying unutilised. Very famous Sri Ram Mandir kodical is also located in baikampady.
This article is about Christopher Brookmyre's crime novel. For Geraldine McCaughrean's young adult novel, see Not the End of the World (young adult novel); for Kate Atkinson's book of short stories, see Not the End of the World (short story collection)
Not the End of the World is Christopher Brookmyre's third novel, and the first not to feature Jack Parlabane, Christopher Brookmyre's most used character. The novel is also the first book Brookmyre has written that is based solely outside of the United Kingdom. The story takes place in Los Angeles.
This article is about Geraldine McCaughrean's young adult novel. For Christopher Brookmyre's crime novel, see Not the End of the World (Brookmyre novel); for Kate Atkinson's book of short stories, see Not the End of the World (short story collection)
Not the End of the World is a young adult novel by Geraldine McCaughrean. It retells the Biblical story of Noah's Ark. The main character is Noah's thirteen-year-old daughter, Timna. The story is also relayed from the points of view of the animals. The novel was first published in 2004 and was the winner of the 2004 Whitbread Children's Book Award.
Not the End of the World may refer to:
- Not the End of the World (crime novel), by Christopher Brookmyre
- Not the End of the World (young adult novel), by Geraldine McCaughrean
- Not the End of the World (short story collection) by Kate Atkinson
This article is about Kate Atkinson's book of short stories. For Geraldine McCaughrean's young adult novel, see Not the End of the World (young adult novel); for Christopher Brookmyre's crime novel, see Not the End of the World (crime novel)
Not the End of the World is a short story collection by British writer Kate Atkinson. It is mostly set in Scotland, and is an experiment in magic realism. The collection was first published in 2002 by Doubleday.
It contains 12 loosely connected stories:
- "Charlene and Trudi Go Shopping": Two women obsessively make unreal and bizarre lists, managing to lead apparently normal lives, oblivious to the reality around them which is of the city being torn apart by an apocalyptic war.
- "Tunnel of Fish": A pregnant mother living in Edinburgh with her partner Hawk, worries about her fish-obsessed son Eddie and reminisces about the past including her first holiday abroad to Crete during which Eddie was conceived; she has a vivid memory of being dragged down to the Mediterranean sea-bed and ravaged by an undersea god. On his birthday Eddie is taken to Deep Sea World where in the undersea tunnel he receives a message from a giant carp.
- "Transparent Fiction": Meredith Zane (one of the Zane sisters) is working her way around Europe but has come to a halt in London where she finds herself living with Fletcher, a writer for a television soap Green Acres. The night before she plans to leave Fletcher and continue her tour they are invited to a dinner party by a television producer at which Meredith meets Merle Goldeman who appears to have been alive for millennia. Meredith determines to steal the secret of eternal life for herself.
- "Dissonance": Rebecca and Simon live with their divorced mother Pam. Simon spends most of his time in his room playing Tekken 3 on his PlayStation, listening to Korn and 'Boak' on his stereo and making occasional trips out to shoplift and skateboard. Rebecca in contrast is studying hard for her highers listening to classical music, and plans to study medicine at university.
- "Sheer Big Waste of Love": Addison Fox was orphaned at the age of eight. His mother, a prostitute is dying of cancer attempts to reunite Addison with his father, a successful local businessman. As a result of this meeting Addison, his mother and an innocent bystander end up in casualty.
- "Unseen Translation": Missy has just become nanny for Arthur, the eight-year-old son of glamour model Romney Wright and the lead singer of a rock band 'Boak'. Arthur's father is on tour in Germany and Missy is to take Arthur to visit him.
- "Evil Doppelgangers": Fielding, who is media correspondent for a newspaper, suspects he has a doppelganger who is having far more fun than himself and creating havoc in the process. Fielding resolves to track him down.
- "The Cat Lover": After breaking up with her boyfriend Fletcher (a television scriptwriter), Heidi is followed home by a dishevelled cat. She names the cat Gordon and it soon takes over her flat, eating more and more food and growing ever larger, until Heidi wonders when she will be eaten herself. Gordon also becomes more and more human and eventually begins sleeping in Heidi's bed.
- "The Bodies Vest": Vincent is well acquainted with death. He remembers his father falling from the fourth-floor window he was trying to clean. And then the death of his new wife (one of the Zane sisters) who died whilst having a wisdom tooth extracted. Her father (a dentist) then kills himself.
- "Temporal Anomaly": Marianne dies in a road accident on the M9. She wakes to find herself sitting on the hard shoulder and stumbles into the nearby Little Chef but cannot make herself noticed, then she walks the four miles home.
- "Wedding Favours": Pam's son Simon has now left home. Soon Pam finds herself in business with her friend Maggie producing wedding favours.
- "Pleasureland": Charlene and Trudi (from the first story in the collection) soon find themselves boarded up in Trudi's flat, the whole building being declared a plague area. With electricity failing and food running out they tell each other tales of the Greek gods. The narrative ends with Trudi telling Charlene "Don't worry, it's not the end of the world".
Lilpur is a village situated in Darbhanga district of Bihar where several communities live. Lilpur is an ideal village in Darbhanga, apart from the village having several issues. About 2670 Read more people live in this village.
Welcome to Lilpur Village
Country
Gaon ka Website www.lilpur.info
Government
Usage examples of "lilpur".
The great shipyards beyond the orbit of Uranus fashioned the comet-grown lumber into starships, space stations, habitats, intrasystem linerseverything except the small craft designed for atmospheric reentry.
Ask him for a story about extraterrestrials from Uranus who reproduce by binary fission and I imagine he would have three different sets of xeroxes in your hand the next day.
Imagine Uranus well aspected to Mars, to Mercury, to the Moon, to Jupiter, to Venus.
It's hard to imagine because Uranus functions best when it is badly aspected, when it is "afflicted", so to speak.
Yet that music which I gave off Sunday mornings, a music of well-being and of well-nourished desperation, was born of an illogically well-aspected Uranus firmly anchored in the 7th House.
Spirit and I accepted this with equanimity, because Helvetia, colonized by the historic Switzerland, was to be our host country during our stay at Uranus.
The Cray Cherubs, the Lost Teeshirts of Atlantis, Astro Laser and the Flying Starfish from Uranus, the Turbulent Priests, Sonic Energy Authority, Barisal Guns, Mike Petty sings Hank Wangford.
Since the patterns of winking on and off were the same before and after occultation, this finding (and much subsequent work) has led to the discovery of nine very thin, very dark circumplanetary rings, giving Uranus the appearance of a bull's-eye in the sky.
To take one simple example: the name of the Indian god Varuna has been identified etymologically with that of the Graeco-Roman god Uranus (Greek, Ouranos), also a common noun for 'heaven'.
For example, our Oort Cloud seems to have been populated by gravitational ejections of icy worldlets from the vicinity of Uranus and Neptune.
The gravitational fields of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune have flung them at such high speeds that they have broken the bonds that once tied them to the Sun.
Also the libations, as, a decoction of nightshade for Melancholia, or of Indian hemp for Uranus.
So the lovely comets that on occasion rouse us humans to wonder and to awe, that crater the surfaces of inner planets and outer moons, and that now and then endanger life on Earth would be unknown and unthreatening had Uranus and Neptune not grown to be giant worlds four and a half billion years ago.
On Uranus the magnetic axis and the axis of rotation are tilted away from each other by some 60 degrees.
No one yet understands why: Some have suggested that we are catching Uranus in a reversal of its north and south magnetic poles, as periodically happens on Earth.