Wikipedia
Lithodryas is a prehistoric genus of butterfly in the family Lycaenidae . It was introduced as a replacement for Samuel Hubbard Scudder's genus Lithopsyche which is invalid as a homonym, as another fossil lepidopteran genus had been described under the same name shortly before Scudder established his genus.
The type species was found in Tertiary deposits at Florissant.
Wörterberg is a town in the district of Güssing in the Austrian state of Burgenland.
Magadan is a port town and the administrative center of Magadan Oblast, Russia, located on the Sea of Okhotsk in Nagayevo Bay in Taui Bay and serving as a gateway to the Kolyma region. Population:
Magadan is a city in Russia.
Magadan may also refer to:
- Magadan Oblast, a federal subject of Russia
- Magadan (icebreaker), a Russian icebreaker
- Dave Magadan, an American baseball player
- Magadan, name used in some old Greek manuscripts to refer to the place in Palestine usually known as Magdala
To "call a spade a spade" is a figurative expression which refers to calling something "as it is", that is, by its right or proper name, without "beating about the bush"—being outspoken about it, truthfully, frankly, and directly, even to the point of being blunt or rude, and even if the subject is considered coarse, impolite, or unpleasant. The idiom originates in the classical Greek of Plutarch's Apophthegmata Laconica, and was introduced into the English language in 1542 in Nicolas Udall's translation of the Apophthegmes, where Erasmus had seemingly replaced Plutarch's images of "trough" and "fig" with the more familiar "spade." The idiom has appeared in many literary and popular works, including those of Oscar Wilde, Charles Dickens, W. Somerset Maugham, and Jonathan Swift.
TUNS is a Canadian indie rock supergroup, consisting of Mike O'Neill of The Inbreds, Chris Murphy of Sloan and Matt Murphy of The Super Friendz. Formed in 2015, the group released its debut single "Throw It All Away" in 2015, shortly before their first major live performance at Hayden's Dream Serenade benefit concert at Massey Hall alongside Joel Plaskett, The Weather Station and Choir! Choir! Choir!.
The band's self-titled debut album is slated for release in August 2016 on Royal Mountain Records. The single "Mind Over Matter" reached #1 on CBC Radio 2's Radio 2 Top 20 chart the week of July 8, 2016.
The band's name is a reference to the Technical University of Nova Scotia.
Marejada is one of the most popular national Brazilian celebrations (fiestas) in Itajaí city , Santa Catarina state. This celebration commemorates the first disembarkation of European people from Portugal to the Brazilian coast. Marejada calling from word “mar” and can be translated as Portugalization. The festival also celebrates sea food—fishing is one of the main economic activities of Itajaí regions. The main food on this fiesta is sea food and the main drink is beer—it is why this fiesta looking like beer makers celebrate. Also this fiesta is folklore of Brazil. Symbols of Marejada—fish in cap and human face playing accordion, shrimps on the plate, one glass of beer, dancing group in national clothes—are painted on the souvenir plate from Marejada fiesta (see photo).
You can read on the souvenir plates the following:
- FESTA PORTUGUESA E DO PESCADO – Celebrate of Portugalization and Fishing.
- ITAJAI SC - Itajai Santa Catarina.
Marejada is celebrated every year in October. For example, this fiesta took place from 8 to 18 October, 2009. Due to anniversary of Portugalization it was from 8 to 24 October, 2010.
Phosphorus trioxide is the chemical compound with the molecular formula PO. Although it should properly be named tetraphosphorus hexoxide, the name phosphorus trioxide preceded the knowledge of the compound's molecular structure, and its usage continues today. This colorless solid is structurally related to adamantane. It is formally the anhydride of phosphorous acid, HPO, but cannot be obtained by the dehydration of the acid. It is a white, waxy, crystalline and highly toxic solid.
SoulFest is an annual Christian music festival held in New England, United States. It currently takes place at the Gunstock Mountain Resort in Gilford, New Hampshire and features three stages and over 80 artists and speakers. This year's festival dates are August 4-6, 2016.
Chaetostomella is a genus of tephritid or fruit flies in the family Tephritidae.
Gönyeli is a town in Cyprus, near the capital city Nicosia. De facto, it is under the control of Northern Cyprus. Over the years the town has merged with North Nicosia, making it connurbated with the city. Its population is 11,671.
Broomstick (1901–1931) was a Thoroughbred race horse born and bred at the famous McGrathiana Stud in Kentucky, but more importantly, he was one of the great sires of American racing. Out of another great sire, the Hall of Famer Ben Brush, Broomstick went on after his racing career to produce champion after champion for many years.
The important horseman, James R. Keene (who owned Domino, Kingston, Colin and Sysonby among so many other memorable horses), also owned Elf, Broomstick's dam. Believing she was barren, he sold her to Milton Young. One year later she foaled Broomstick. As a yearling Broomstick then went to a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania coal millionaire named Captain Samuel S. Brown who was a member of The Jockey Club and the owner of two racetracks.
Broomstick was small, but he won his first three stakes at two. Because of this, he was weighted down rather heavily for such a young horse and consequently won fewer races at that age. He placed in the Saratoga Special, the Walden Stakes, the Flatbush Stakes, the Great Trial Stakes and the Spring Stakes.
At three, and under another trainer, he won the Travers Stakes. In the Brighton Handicap he beat older horses and set a record that stood for nine years. In that race he was up against the truly game Irish Lad who broke down nearing the wire, but finished on three legs, only barely beaten.
Still heavily weighted, he placed in the Merchants and Citizens Handicap, the Hindoo Handicap, and his second Saratoga Special.
At four his only important effort was a place in the Century Handicap.
Tropicamide (Mydriacyl) is an anticholinergic used as a mydriatic.
Tunjščica Creek (also known locally as Tunjica Creek) is a left tributary of the Pšata River in Slovenia. It is about long and has its origin at above sea level on the south slope of Mount Krvavec in the Kamnik–Savinja Alps above the hamlet of Senožeti in Sveti Lenart. It flows past or through Sidraž, Laniše, Tunjice, Tunjiška Mlaka, and Gora pri Komendi before emptying into the Pšata at Moste. Tributaries of Tunjščica Creek include Praproščica Creek (a.k.a. Prapretčica Creek).
- Andrzej Kmicic - a fictional character created by Henryk Sienkiewicz featured in the novel The Deluge
- Mikołaj Kmicic (d. 1632) - a Polish poet writing in Latin, Jesuit.
- Samuel Kmicic - a nobleman (szlachcic) from Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
Sicklinghall is a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England that is situated between the town of Wetherby ( to the east) and the village of Kirkby Overblow.
In 2007 the population was recorded as 300, increasing to 336 at the 2011 Census.
Sicklinghall is a major travel hub of the UK, with excellent travel links.
The village is referred to in the Domesday Book as "Sidingale", in the hundred of Burghshire in the West Riding, and the lord and tenant in chief is noted as the king. In Kirkby's Inquest (1284-5) the village is referred to as Siclinghalle ; in the Knights' Fees of 1302 it is Sykelynghall, and in the Nomina Villarum (1315) it is written Sigglinghall.
The main amenities in the village are St Peter's Church, The Scott's Arms (a pub), a primary school and a village hall.
There has been a school in the village of Sicklinghall since at least 1850 when Mrs Fenton Scott of Woodhall built a single storey school house.
The village is surrounded by granges: on the eastern side lie Skerry Grange and Sicklinghall Grange and on the western Addlethorpe Grange. Sicklinghall Grange is set in a estate, it is the UK residence of racehorse owner, Sir Robert Ogden. However the 'big house' is Stockeld Park, formerly a hunting lodge of the nearby Harewood estate and now at the centre of a network of tenanted farms.
As with many Yorkshire villages, Sicklinghall has a wide range of equestrian-related centres in and around the village's centre, with the Sicklinghall Park livery located in the village centre, and Hill Croft Farm Riding Stables located about west of the village on the road towards Kirkby Overblow.
There is also a Roman Catholic monastery dating from 1852.
Sicklinghall has a cricket team playing in the local Wetherby Cricket League. The ground is situated at the top of the village, the club having moved from nearby Stockeld Park in 2002.
Mbagathi is a settlement in Kenya's Rift Valley Province.
In Ireland, a National school is a type of primary school that is financed directly by the State, but administered jointly by the State, a patron body, and local representatives. There are other forms of primary school, often private denominational schools attached to secondary schools – unlike their second level counterparts, these primary level private schools receive no support from the state.
In National schools, most major policies such as the curriculum and teacher salaries and conditions are managed by the State through the Department of Education and Skills. Minor policies of the school are managed by local people, often directed by a member of the clergy, as representative of the patron, through a local board of management. Most primary schools in Ireland fall into this category, which is a pre- independence concept.
It was formerly common for national-school teachers to use the post-nominal letters N.T.
National school may refer to:
- National school (Ireland), a state-funded primary school in the Republic of Ireland
- National school (England and Wales), a Church of England school founded by the National Society in England and Wales in the 19th century
- National school (Sri Lanka), a school funded and administered by the central government (rather than a province)
- in Education in Malaysia, a government-run Malay-medium primary school
A National school was a school founded in 19th century England and Wales by the National Society for Promoting Religious Education. These schools provided elementary education, in accordance with the teaching of the Church of England, to the children of the poor. Together with the less numerous British schools of the British and Foreign School Society, they provided the first near-universal system of elementary education in England and Wales.
The schools were eventually absorbed into the state system, either as fully state-run schools or as faith schools funded by the state.
A National school (, Jathika Pasala, ) in Sri Lanka is a school that is funded and administered by the Ministry of Education of the central government as opposed to Provincial schools run by the local provincial council. These schools provide secondary education (some including collegiate), with some providing primary education as well. The classification began in 1985, with 18 schools being designated as national schools. Today, there are 342 National Schools in country constituting 3 percent of total National and Provincial Schools.
Pietraporzio is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Cuneo in the Italian region Piedmont, located about southwest of Turin and about west of Cuneo, on the border with France. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 99 and an area of .
Pietraporzio borders the following municipalities: Argentera, Canosio, Saint-Etienne-de-Tinée (France), Sambuco, and Vinadio.
Based in Berlin and operating since 2008, eat-the-world is a tourism company offering culinary tours in Germany. Walking food tours are offered in various cities throughout Germany with each tour featuring culinary samples from restaurants and delicatessen (German: Feinkostläden), in addition to specialized insight into each city’s history, culture, architecture, and entertainment.
Input may refer to:
- Advice (opinion), an opinion or recommendation offered as a guide to action or conduct
-
Input (computer science), the act of entering data into a computer or data processing system
- Information, any data entered into a computer or data processing system
- Input/output
- Input method
- Input device, any peripheral (piece of computer hardware equipment) used to provide data and control signals to an information processing system (such as a computer)
- Stimulus (physiology), a detectable change in the environment that influences an activity of an organism
- Power consumption, an amount of power used by a system
- International Public Television Screening Conference (INPUT), an international public television organization
- In economics, a factor of production, a resource employed to produce goods and services
In computer science, the general meaning of input is to provide or give something to the computer, in other words the state/act of a computer, component of a computer or relevant device being accepting something from the user, from a device or from a piece of software either automatically or manually is called input.
We categorize computer devices as input devices because we use these devices to send instructions to the computer, we are sending our "Input" to the computer, some common examples of computer input devices are:
- Mouse
- Keyboard
- Touchscreen
- Microphone
- Webcam
We may also call some inner parts of the computer as input components to the other components, like the power-on button of a computer is an input component for the processor or the power supply, because it takes user input and sends it to other components for further processing.
In many computer languages the keyword "input" is used as a special keyword or function, such as in Visual Basic or Python, the word "input" is used to get text input from the user.
Input was a Sunday morning talk show that aired on Channel 10 in Philadelphia in the 1960s and 70s. Its focus was on social justice topics.
Goski may refer to:
- Kasper Goski 16th century Polish doctor, astrologer and the mayor of Poznań
- A number of villages in Poland, including:
- Boruty-Goski
- Goski-Pełki
- Tarnowo-Goski
- Goski Duże
Germanville may refer to:
- Germanville Township, Livingston County, Illinois
- Germanville, Nebraska, a ghost town
The Developmental, Individual-differences, Relationship-based (DIR) model is a developmental model for assessing and understanding any child's strengths and weaknesses. It has become particularly effective at identifying the unique developmental profiles and developing programs for children experiencing developmental delays due to autism, autism spectrum disorders, or other developmental disorders. This Model was developed by Dr. Stanley Greenspan and first outlined in 1979 in his book Intelligence and Adaptation. However, it has been listed by the National Autism Center in their National Standards Project Phase 2 as having an "unestablished level of evidence." "The Play Project" - a version of DIR which was developed by Richard Solomon, established evidence-based status for their approach through a 3-year study by NIMH which was published last year.
Gniechowice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kąty Wrocławskie, within Wrocław County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.
It lies approximately south-east of Kąty Wrocławskie, and south-west of the regional capital Wrocław.
The village has an approximate population of 1,400.
The British band Soulsec (formerly known as The Faithband or the 'Paul Roberts Band') is the solo project of the ex Stranglers frontman Paul Roberts.
In 1999 Paul Roberts releases his first solo album Faith?, the birth of the Faithband. They start touring in 2000 and release their second studio album Self Discovery in 2001. In 2002 they ask people to promote several gigs which initiates the Peoples' Acoustic Faith Tour. In autumn 2002 the band goes on the road again for the Set In Stone Tour. The third studio album The Pressure Sensitive is released in 2003. They start touring for the Wrong Connection Tour which has to be cancelled after three gigs. In 2004 the band decides to change their name to the Paul Roberts Band at first and finally to Soulsec. In 2005 they perform several gigs in the UK and in Belgium.
Guitarists who worked with the band since 1999 were John Ellis, Bob Elliott and Baz Warne. In 2005 Andy Ellis joined the band on guitar. Noel Watson joined the band on drums substituting Vinnie Lammie who is touring with Mel C.
As well as touring with the band and working on other projects they released five singles, many live albums and two DVDs. The latest of which is the DVD Tracks - Days of View which features highlights from the second night at the Kings Head, Fulham 2003, the acoustic MP3tv sessions with Paul & Baz and a huge selection of clips from various gigs since 2000.
In March 2006 Soulsec released the single CD Desert Soul as a promising first taster for a new album. The new album End Games was released in 2007.
Durushkhela is an administrative unit, known as Union council, of Swat District in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan. District Swat has 9 Tehsils i.e. Khwazakhela, Kabal, Madyan, Barikot, Mingora, and Kalam. Each Tehsill comprises certain numbers of union councils. There are 65 union councils in district Swat, 56 rural and 09 urban.
Tecotosh is an outdoor 2005–2006 stainless steel and glass sculpture by Ed Carpenter, installed at the Portland State University campus in Portland, Oregon, United States.
Proto.in is an Indian start-up event platform which had its first edition in January 2007. The platform was started by Chennai based not-for profit body The Knowledge Foundation with entrepreneur Vijay Anand as its curator and founder. The Knowledge Foundation is a not-for profit knowledge dissemination body which has had multiple events in Chennai including Blog Camp, Bar Camp, Wikicamp (inaugurated by Jimmy Wales) and Pod Works.
Since its first event in Jan 2007, Proto.in has had 8 editions across the cities of Chennai, New Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore and Pune. The sole focus and objective of the event is to showcase 15 of the most innovative start-ups in the country and provide them with a platform in front of an audience of investors, entrepreneurs and customers alike. Proto was a key event in the India Startup Ecosystem TimeLine, bringing a critical mass of media, investors, customers, and technologists together for the first time.
Conmy is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Ollie Conmy (1939–2014), Irish footballer
- Patrick Anthony Conmy (born 1934), American judge
Rshtunik was a region of the old Armenia, in Vaspurakan, East of Antzevasiq. It was ruled by the family Rshtuni.
Fraxinet or Fraxinetum ( or , from Latin fraxinus: " ash tree", fraxinetum: "ash forest") was the site of a 10th-century fortress established by Muslims at modern La Garde-Freinet, near Saint-Tropez, in Provence. The modern Massif des Maures (" plateau of Moors") takes its name from the Muslims of Fraxinet.
Hammaspeikko, Finnish for "tooth troll", is a metaphorical device for explaining tooth decay ( caries) to children. Eating candy lures tooth trolls, which drill holes into teeth and look scary. Brushing the teeth scares them away. It is not clear whether the tooth troll is a single entity, or if there are many.
The fictional character Hammaspeikko is an adaptation from the Norwegian book Karius og Baktus written by Thorbjørn Egner published in 1949. The book introduces two characters related to dental health, Karius (standing for caries) and Bactus (standing for bacteria). The book was translated in Finnish as Satu hammaspeikoista ("A Tale about Tooth Trolls") and published in 1961.
Similar spirits were believed to cause toothache in the old Finnish religion.
Ivats was a Bulgarian noble and military commander in the late 10th and early 11th century. He served three Bulgarian Emperors - Samuil (997-1014); Gavril Radomir (1014–1015) and Ivan Vladislav (1015–1018).
In 1015 he defeated a Byzantine army in the battle of Bitola and stopped the disastrous campaign of Basil II in the heart of the Bulgarian Empire. After the death of Ivan Vladislav and the surrender of the Empress, the Patriarch and many nobles to the Byzantines he chose to continue the struggle along the sons of the dead Emperor and several other nobles. His stronghold was the fortress Vrohot in Mount Tomor, modern south-eastern Albania. The fortress was soon besieged by Basil II but the 55-day siege was unsuccessful for the Byzantines. In August 1018 he was treacherously blinded by the Byzantine strategos Eustathios Daphnomeles.
"Out of the Chute" is the sixteenth episode of the seventh season of the American medical drama House. It aired on March 14, 2011.
Escou is a commune in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques department in south-western France.
Youngs can refer to:
People:
- Ben Youngs (b. 1989), English rugby union player
- Elaine Youngs (b. 1970), American beach volleyball player
- Jenny Owen Youngs (b. 1981), American singer-songwriter
- Jim Youngs (b. 1956), American actor who appeared in such films as The Wanderers and Footloose
- John Youngs (~1598 - 1672), Puritan minister who founded Southold, New York
- Nick Youngs (b. 1959), former English rugby union footballer
- Richard Youngs (b. 1966), British musician
- Ross Youngs (1897–1927), Major League Baseball outfielder
- Samuel Youngs (1760–1839), U.S. schoolteacher who served as inspiration for the character Ichabod Crane
Places:
- Youngs, California, a former town in El Dorado County
- Youngs Bay, Oregon
- Youngs River, tributary of the Columbia River in northwest Oregon
Moschiano is a town and comune in the province of Avellino, Campania, southern Italy.
Lancashire wrestling is a historic wrestling style from Lancashire in England. Many consider it to be partially the origin of catch wrestling, professional and amateur wrestling.
The style included groundwork and had the reputation of being an extremely fierce and violent sport. Sources show that there were some rules trying to safeguard the wrestlers from serious injury. For instance, there was a ban on breaking an opponent's bones.
In the counties to the north, Cumberland and Westmorland wrestling developed with rules designed to minimise injury to the participants.
Akaza is a Japanese surname. Notable people with the surname include:
- Akaza Naoyasu, Japanese samurai
- Miyoko Akaza, Japanese actress
- Akaza Shichirōemon, Japanese retainer of the medieval period
Elza may refer to:
- Elza (given name)
- Elza Jeffords (1826–1885), U.S. Representative from Mississippi
- Elza Kephart, film director, producer, writer
- Elza Kolodin, pianist from Poland
- Elza Kungayeva, 18-year-old Chechen woman abducted, beaten, raped and murdered by a Russian Army Colonel
- Elza Leimane, Latvian ballet dancer
- Elza Maalouf (born 1965), Arab-American futurist and cultural development specialist
- Elza Medeiros (1921–2009), Brazilian Army officer and World War II veteran
- Elza Soares (born 1937), Brazilian samba singer
- Japanese name of the Character known as Zael in the Western release of the video game The Last Story
- Elza, the codename of the Soviet spy Elizaveta Mukasei, active from the 1940s through the 1970s
- Elza, Tennessee, community that existed before 1942 and is now part of the city of Oak Ridge
Elza is a Slavik and English name of Hebrew and German origins. It is also a derivation of Elizabeth, and a close variant of the names Elsa, Eliza and Aliza.
Cacimbinhas is a municipality located in the western of the Brazilian state of Alagoas. Its population is 8,389 (2005) and its area is 273 km².
Donggureung, meaning "East Nine Royal Tombs", is a cluster of Joseon Dynasty royal tombs, the largest of its kind in South Korea. 17 Joseon kings and queens are buried here. The cluster houses a myo type tomb (of a royal family member), as well. The cluster is located in Guri, Gyeonggi-do.
The construction of the cluster was ordered by Taejong of Joseon in 1408 and the ninth tomb was placed there in 1855.
''' Woël ''' is a commune in the Meuse department in Lorraine in north-eastern France.
The Baengnyulsa or Baengnyul temple is a Korean Buddhist temple located on the slopes of Geumgang Mountain in the neighborhood of Dongcheon-dong, Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang province, South Korea. It is a branch temple of Bulguksa temple, the head temple of the 11th district of the Jogye Order. The foundation date is unknown but is speculated to be around the time when the Silla Kingdom united the Three Kingdoms of Korea in 692 according to both an oral story and a document on a Buddha statue. Baengnyulsa is also believed to be the Jachusa temple which is associated with Ichadon's martyrdom.
Greenware may refer to:
- Greenware (computing), software distributed under the condition that the user does something to help the environment
- Greenware or Celadon, Chinese pottery in a range of jade-like green colours
- Greenware, unfired clay pottery, as a stage of production
- Greenware, the brand name of a 100% corn based cup produced by Fabri-Kal
Greenware is software distributed under the condition that the user does something to help the environment. The term "greenware" is a variant on shareware and freeware. Greenware can be distributed free or for charge. In either case the author expects the user to do something "green". That can be a special action like replacing all standard light bulbs with CFLs or a more general application to live more ecologically.
A more general approach than greenware is careware, which distributes software in a way that benefits a charity.
Greenware can also refer to a combination of computer hardware, software and services, which enables user to minimize the environmental impact of using the computer and lower TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) at the same time.
Bowfin (Amia calva) are basal bony fishes related to gars in the infraclass Holostei. Common names include mudfish, mud pike, dogfish, griddle, grinnel, cypress trout and choupique. They are regarded as taxonomic relicts, being the sole surviving species of the order Amiiformes which dates from the Jurassic to the Eocene, persisting to the present. Although bowfin are highly evolved, they are often referred to as " primitive fishes" because they have retained some morphological characteristics of their early ancestors.
Bowfin are demersal freshwater piscivores native to North America, and commonly found throughout much of the eastern United States, and in southern Ontario and Quebec. Fossil deposits indicate Amiiformes were once widespread in both freshwater and marine environments with a range that spanned across North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Now their range is limited to much of the eastern United States and adjacent southern Canada, including the drainage basins of the Mississippi River, Great Lakes and various rivers exiting in the Eastern Seaboard or Gulf of Mexico. Their preferred habitat includes vegetated sloughs, lowland rivers and lakes, swamps and backwater areas; they are also occasionally found in brackish water. They are stalking, ambush predators known to move into the shallows at night to prey on fish and aquatic invertebrates such as crawfish, mollusks, and aquatic insects.
Like gars, bowfin are bimodal breathers which means they have the capacity to breathe both water and air. Their gills exchange gases in the water allowing them to exploit oxygen for breathing, but they also have a gas bladder that serves to maintain buoyancy, and also allows them to breathe air by means of a small pneumatic duct connected from the foregut to the gas bladder. They can break the surface to gulp air, which allows them to survive conditions of aquatic hypoxia that would be lethal to most other species.
[[ In Aquarium2.ogv|thumb|thumbtime=0:15|
Bowfin activity in an aquarium.
]]
Sągnity is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Górowo Iławeckie, within Bartoszyce County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately north-west of Górowo Iławeckie, west of Bartoszyce, and north of the regional capital Olsztyn.
Before 1945 the area was part of Germany ( East Prussia).
Prinzenstraße is a Berlin U-Bahn station located on the .
Pokkuveyil is a 1982 Indian Malayalam film, directed by G Aravindan and produced by General Pictures ,Raveendranathan Nair. The film stars Balachandran Chullikkad, Kalpana,S Satish Kumar ( In Pokkuveyil Aravindan recorded its audio first as a composition for the flute by Pandit Hariprasad Chaurasia and the sarod by Rajeev Taranath. The visuals were 'composed' according to musical notations, without any script.
Pokkuveyil won Aravindan the State Film award for best director.
Balachandran Chullikad ( Poet) , Kalpana ( Malayalam film actress ) , S Satish Kumar ( a national level basketball player) Kalabhavan Ansar and Chavara VP Nair were in lead roles. The film had musical score by Balachandran Chullikkad. The indefinability of the human mind is the theme of the film.
Pokkuveyil is a Malayalam Indian Soap Opera Malayalam serial started on March 1, 2016. Malayalam actress Sruthi Lakshmi, who made her debut as a child artist through the serial ''Nizhalukal, '' makes her comeback to Malayalam serial industry playing the female lead along with actor Krishna. Its story is adapted from the novel in Vanitha "Innalayo Inno" written by K. K. Sudhakaran. The series is directed by K. K. Rajeev. It is airing in FLOWERS TV from Mondays to Thursdays at 9:00pm IST. It replaced FLOWERS TV's popular crime thriller Eshwaran Sakshiyayi, which was also directed by K. K. Rajeev with Prem Prakash, Divya Prabha and Reena in the lead roles.
Pokkuveyil tells the story of Isha a pregnant girl who comes to Kochi and unexpectedly meets with an accident. She is helped by Ravi and Sabitha. She promises to give her child whom she was about to abort as it is a illegitimate child. Isha changes her identity as Shruthi with the help of her friend Jamuna. Shruthi comes to Ravi's house but was shocked to know that Ravi is Sudeep's brother. Ravi and Sabitha, along with Ravi's father and Sabitha's mother, leave. Shruthi tells several lies to them and becomes closer to everyone in the house.
Subha may refer to:
- Subha (writers), the Tamil detective novelists
- Misbaha, Muslim prayer beads, also known as subha
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Subha is the pen name used by the writing partnership of D. Suresh and A.N. Balakrishnan, who write Tamil detective novels.
Cephisodotus may refer to:
- Cephisodotus (general), the Athenian general and statesman
- Cephisodotus the Elder, sculptor, the father of the sculptor Praxiteles
- Cephisodotus the Younger, sculptor, the son of the sculptor Praxiteles
Cephisodotus (; lived 4th century BC) was an Athenian general and orator, who was sent with Callias, Autocles, and others in 371 BC to negotiate peace with Sparta. Again, in 369 BC, when the Spartan ambassadors had come to Athens to settle the terms of the desired alliance between the states, and the Athenian council had proposed that the land-forces of the confederacy should be under the command of Sparta, and the navy under that of Athens, Cephisodotus persuaded the assembly to reject the proposal, on the ground that, while Athenian citizens would have to serve under Spartan generals, few but Helots (who principally manned the ships) would be subject to Athenian control. Another arrangement was then adopted, by which the command of the entire force was to be held by each state alternately for five days. It seems to have been about 359 BC that he was sent out with a squadron to the Hellespont, where the Athenians hoped that the Euboean adventurer, Charidemus, the friend of Cephisodotus, would, according to his promise made through the latter, co-operate with him in re-annexing the Thracian Chersonese to their dominion. But Charidemus turned his arms against them, and marched in particular to the relief of Alopeconnesus, a town on the south-east of the Chersonese, of which Cephisodotus had been ordered to make himself master under the pretext of dislodging a band of pirates who had taken refuge there. Unable to cope with Charidemus, he entered into a compromise by which the place was indeed yielded to Athens, but on terms so disadvantageous that he was recalled from his command and brought to trial for his life. By a majority of only three votes he escaped sentence of death, but was condemned to a fine of five talents. This was perhaps the Cephisodotus who, in 355 BC, joined Aristophon the Azenian and others in defending the law of Leptines against Demosthenes, and who is mentioned in the speech of the latter as inferior to none in eloquence. Aristotle speaks of him as an opponent of Chares when the latter had to undergo his euthyne, or public scrutiny, after the Olynthian war, 347 BC.
NKN may refer to:
- National Knowledge Network
- North Korean Navy
- Philanthropedia, formerly known as the Nonprofit Knowledge Network
- Supreme National Committee (Polish, Naczelny Komitet Narodowy)
Usage examples of "nkn".
The way you Sisters strut around as if what you do is meaningful, as if you even knew what you were doing!
He said because if he had the gift, he would have to face the Sisters of the Light.
We have worked long and hard to become Sisters of the Light, and expect to be treated with due respect.
The Sisters said the collar will stop the headaches and help you learn to control the gift.
Zedd said you have the gift, Darken Rahl said you have the gift, the Sisters say you have the gift, even Scarlet says you have the gift.
Other than the Sisters of the Light, the witch woman was just about the last person Kahlan ever wanted to see again.
There were Sisters who spent their whole lives in the libraries, cataloging reports, pampering them, keeping records of every useless word they thought might someday be important.
Her Sisters would have to have a satisfactory explanation as to the cause of death.
A twig, as I have often warned the other Sisters, no matter how young and tender, will break if bent too far.
They say, well, they say three of the Sisters have been gone a long time now, and that could only mean they are bringing back one with the gift.
But I do know that the Sisters of the Light have the power to save him.
If he can get to this wizard before he turns the Sisters down for the third time, he can learn whether he can be helped without them .
Zedd before the Sisters come back for the third time, I will make him put on the collar, no matter what it takes.
Once the Sisters were satisfied he could control the gift, maybe they would free him.
The Sisters have some control of the life force, and the gift, but nothing like a wizard who knows how to control his Han.