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Crossword clues for people

people
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
people
I.noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a crowd of people
▪ I pushed my way through the crowd of people.
boat people
bring people together
▪ He said that the main purpose of the Baha'i Faith was to bring people together.
decent citizens/people/folk etc
▪ The majority of residents here are decent citizens.
dozens of people/companies/cars etc (=but not hundreds or thousands)
▪ Dozens of people were killed.
frail elderly people
frail elderly people
good with people (=skilful at dealing with people)
▪ He’s very good with people.
hundreds of people/years/pounds etc
▪ Hundreds of people were reported killed or wounded.
like-minded people
▪ a chance to meet like-minded people
little people
▪ It’s the little people who bear the brunt of taxation.
old people's home
ordinary people
▪ The book is about ordinary people.
people carrier
people rise in rebellion (=start rebelling)
▪ The peasants rose in rebellion.
people rise in revolt (=start to take part in a revolt)
▪ At a word from Gandhi, India would have risen in revolt.
people skills
▪ A doctor needs people skills as well as technical knowledge.
people/interpersonal skills (=the ability to deal with people)
▪ He wasn’t a good communicator and had no people skills at all.
prejudice against women/black people etc
▪ There is still a lot of prejudice against women in positions of authority.
street people
subjugated people/nation/country
the many people/things etc
▪ We should like to thank the many people who have written to us offering their support.
those same people
▪ It is those same people who voted for the Democrats who now complain about their policies.
working man/people/folk
▪ the ordinary working man
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
black
▪ As usual Black people are on the margins, and seem to be animated props.
▪ An angry crowd of black people.
▪ It has backfired because those worst hit by the pandemic, black people, are paying the price.
▪ He hung out with black people when it could have been a career-killer for anybody else.
▪ Up to 500 black people are killed by the security forces.
▪ Arkansas joined Dixie in enslaving black people and suffering in Reconstruction.
▪ Relatively, more black people were held in secure prisons.
disabled
▪ Access to housing Most housing departments failed to integrate disabled people into their allocation policies.
▪ The approach to Disabled people of the arts community does not escape this conditioning.
▪ Our main goal is to bring a little sunshine in to the lives of all disabled people.
▪ All stand to gain from such legislation and comparative employment law can be used to empower disabled people.
▪ Need fewer poor people, black people, disabled people?
▪ But disabled people gathered in Duke Street during the ceremony to protest at the scheme.
▪ Other work included decorating and gardening for elderly people, single parents and disabled people.
elderly
▪ These factors indicate that the families of vulnerable elderly people are not easy to define.
▪ Hughes looks at comprehensive assessment of elderly people and their carers.
▪ Society is ambivalent about recognising that elderly people have a legitimate wish to continue to express their sexuality in physical ways.
▪ Voice over 300 elderly people were in the audience.
▪ Falling over toys that have been left lying around can be fatal for elderly people and very serious for children. 3.
▪ That means that more and more elderly people are being forced down to income support or poverty line levels.
▪ Standard of Living A significant number of elderly people have a low standard of living.
local
▪ Why may some local people dislike this?
▪ These clinics were run by the government to serve local people.
▪ It would, says Peter Allen, also signal a message of hope for local people.
▪ Outside the site offices local people queue for jobs that were promised to each family.
▪ Although local people must have known his hiding place, he was never betrayed.
▪ Most protestors were local but people from Belfast, Cork, Derry, Dublin and other areas attended.
▪ This boat now provides access to the forest for scientists and local people.
▪ The local people naturally defend their crops, usually with totally inadequate weapons such as ancient shotguns loaded with buckshot.
old
▪ I have heard therapists say matter-of-factly that in old people, withdrawal, depression, and apathy are normal.
▪ Oral historians had meanwhile begun to record the earlier memories of ordinary old people, working right across the country.
▪ It's not like the old days when people lived in villages and knew whose great-great-grandad was a horse thief or whatever.
▪ Perhaps that was how middle-aged or old people felt about love.
▪ Yet older people are either chopped or, worse, not given a chance.
▪ All those boarded-up shops and only old people about, dreaming on doorsteps or creeping along in the sun.
ordinary
▪ He has gone to meet ordinary people.
▪ They were just ordinary lower-class people, administrators, small bureaucrats, or Lumpenproletariat.
▪ By comparison with the religious orders, the secular church went much closer into the life of ordinary people.
▪ As a leader, Kim was cordial to and comfortable with ordinary people.
▪ Strangers, the poor, knights, soldiers, friars, and ordinary rural people are provided for.
▪ Factories closed, hundreds were thrown out of work, and, as winter approached, ordinary people began to shiver.
▪ But we must drive inflation down so low that it no longer affects the decisions made by ordinary people, businesses and government.
▪ When ordinary people are called upon to make sense of this hash the results can be truly nutty.
other
▪ But he wasn't stuck up about this, nor did he ignore Carrie and Nick when other people were there.
▪ I felt possessive about those bands, and felt jealous when other people wrote about them.
▪ Relationships - enjoying the support of other people.
▪ They look great on other people, but not on me.
▪ There are other people who have sun-tans that leave white patches on their arms.
▪ I was so sure I knew what was right, so critical of other people.
▪ A similar illness affected dozens of other people across the region.
▪ But other people wouldn't care about that.
young
▪ Those most likely to be caught in this new, downward flow are young people from the poorest homes.
▪ These young people have been raised in the glare of cease-less media violence and incitement to every depravity of act and spirit.
▪ There would be a test for all young people at the age of twenty-one.
▪ Since Partnerships have a responsibility to achieve equal opportunities for all young people, community organisations should participate at the planning stage.
▪ And many of these young people are well qualified and well paid.
▪ In turn, this can lead to an acceptance of physical ill-health that would not be tolerated by younger people.
▪ The effects of unemployment Furthermore, young people themselves do not respond uniformly to unemployment.
▪ The young people who returned illegally to the cities felt there was little left to lose.
■ VERB
help
▪ They are usually purpose-built, with facilities to help disabled people and are staffed by qualified people.
▪ There are two important elements in practicing law that I cherish: independence and helping other people.
▪ I have emphasized these aspects in order to help people protect themselves.
▪ Lower wage settlements, claimed the Treasury and the Department of Employment, would help to price people back into jobs.
▪ I am much more aware of oppression and racism now, more socially aware, more into doing things to help people.
▪ The effect would be worst on their small projects ... the kind which help poor people the most.
▪ The program helped talented people develop the rarefied skills of a Disney animator, and it became a fixture of the studio.
kill
▪ And sometimes we kill people, although hardly at all these days.
▪ You want to add more magazines to the assault weapons so they can spray and kill even more people.
▪ Rogue troops are even suspected of participating in the car bombing at the Jakarta stock exchange in September that killed 15 people.
▪ Strokes kill people and cancers kill people, but can a stroke kill a cancer?
▪ Looking at me, you'd never guess I'd killed three people.
▪ It came to Fakhru that he had tried to kill two people that morning and it was still not time for lunch.
▪ According to the International Herald Tribune of June 11 the tribal separatist movement there had killed an estimated 2,000 people since 1975.
▪ The immorality lies in the inherent wrongness of people deliberately killing other people.
live
▪ It is the responsibility of the regional ambulance officer to deliver that standard to all the people living in his district.
▪ No matter how people live, they are still human beings, and they deserve to be treated like human beings.
▪ It's the story of the people who live there.
▪ The people who lived under it hated it.
▪ We felt sorry for the people who lived in towns.
▪ And 25 percent of divorced people would also live the single life.
▪ The grants aim to help people live in the community as independently as possible.
▪ His book, Learned Optimism, is a must for really negative thinkers or the people who live with them.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
X number of people/things
a (whole) host of people/things
▪ I am extremely -; oh, a host of things, but not angry any more.
a man of the people
▪ Springsteen is still a man of the people.
▪ Supporters viewed him as a man of the people.
▪ He truly is a man of the people.
▪ Joey, a legend among motor-cycling fans in Ulster, has always been a man of the people.
▪ Just a man of the people, trying to make a dollar.
▪ The Conservatives want to demonstrate that the Prime Minister is a man of the people.
be all things to all men/people
▪ I finally realized I could not be all things to all people.
▪ Andrea felt tremendous pressure to succeed, to continue to be all things to all people.
▪ Anyway, these compendiums try to be all things to all people.
▪ For years, the stores had managed to be all things to all people.
▪ In this sense many of the international firms will try to be all things to all people.
▪ It is all things to all men ... and this is perhaps its number one axiom.
▪ No-one is all things to all people, and Anthea is no exception.
▪ Politicians have to be all things to all people.
▪ The single truck was all things to all men and women.
innocent victims/bystanders/people etc
of all people/things/places etc
▪ A kitten, of all things.
▪ He of all people picks his words carefully.
▪ She heard, of all things, a piano.
▪ She was a homeless wanderer until tiny Delos alone of all places on earth consented to receive her.
▪ So, in Missouri, of all places, my Koreanization began.
▪ The rest of my offences were committed in self-defence, when I found the hands of all People were against me.
▪ There I was admitted by the butler, of all people.
▪ William Forsyth began it before he sold out, with the help of John Brown, of all people.
people in glass houses shouldn't throw stones
people/women/students etc of color
serve two/three/four etc (people)
▪ After serving two years of her sentence, she was released on probation.
▪ As no man can serve two masters we had long been told no wise general tries to fight on two fronts.
▪ He gave Edberg no chance of breaking him, serving four stunning aces and a massive percentage of first services.
▪ Newton was released after serving two years in prison.
▪ Reagan became the first incumbent to serve two terms in the presidency since Dwight D.. Eisenhower in the 1950s.
▪ She served three consecutive terms from 1877 to 1885, and was noted for her fearlessness and power of debate.
▪ The new managers saw their administrative responsibilities as serving two purposes.
▪ This story serves two important purposes.
some 500 people/50%/£100 etc
some people have all the luck
▪ It costs a fortune to buy a Porsche - some people have all the luck.
the little people
the mass of people/the population/workers etc
▪ For the mass of the population, indeed, the shift of interest arguably went in the other direction.
▪ Such feelings developed very much within the context of the lived experience of the mass of the population.
travelling people/folk
▪ I get the impression the indigenous locals know the travelling people keep disappearing to have some blow, and resent it.
▪ In the past, pearl fishing was often carried out by travelling people who used a glass-bottomed bucket to locate them.
▪ There are areas that are perfectly acceptable to the travelling people who use York.
turn (people's) heads
▪ Wilkins has turned some heads by claiming to be the best football player ever.
▪ A kiss-and-tell look behind the scenes of a sport always turns heads with book publishers.
▪ Her tiny waist and substantial bosom turned heads right across the bar.
▪ My average customer wants to be seen, wants to turn heads.
▪ None of the Lavenders had ever turned heads.
▪ She would have turned heads anywhere in a navy blue backless dress which rose just above her knee.
▪ The blast must have hit solidly all at once and had given them the briefest chance to turn heads only.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
People are getting very worried about rising crime.
People sometimes make fun of my name.
▪ an earthquake that left thousands of people homeless
▪ How many people were at the concert?
▪ I don't want people to feel sorry for me.
▪ I like the people I work with.
▪ I never understand people who say they don't like vegetables.
▪ Most people hate writing essays, but I quite like it.
▪ The Statue of Liberty was a gift from the people of France.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Historical objects provide links with the people who made and used them.
▪ I think people thought in the beginning I was going to be a flash in the pan, like Tiny Tim.
▪ It means that people need or want a product.
▪ Later, her staff members became aware of the larger number of promotions and monetary rewards accorded to people in other groups.
▪ Mobility Allowance is paid to people who become unable to walk or virtually unable to walk before the age of 65.
▪ Protean-like kings, these people raise and they may likewise level.
▪ Thomas' own sales and publicity team consists of 12 people in the office, plus eight reps.
▪ Three people, whom I did not know, asked me about the outcome.
II.verb
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
X number of people/things
a (whole) host of people/things
▪ I am extremely -; oh, a host of things, but not angry any more.
a man of the people
▪ Springsteen is still a man of the people.
▪ Supporters viewed him as a man of the people.
▪ He truly is a man of the people.
▪ Joey, a legend among motor-cycling fans in Ulster, has always been a man of the people.
▪ Just a man of the people, trying to make a dollar.
▪ The Conservatives want to demonstrate that the Prime Minister is a man of the people.
be all things to all men/people
▪ I finally realized I could not be all things to all people.
▪ Andrea felt tremendous pressure to succeed, to continue to be all things to all people.
▪ Anyway, these compendiums try to be all things to all people.
▪ For years, the stores had managed to be all things to all people.
▪ In this sense many of the international firms will try to be all things to all people.
▪ It is all things to all men ... and this is perhaps its number one axiom.
▪ No-one is all things to all people, and Anthea is no exception.
▪ Politicians have to be all things to all people.
▪ The single truck was all things to all men and women.
innocent victims/bystanders/people etc
of all people/things/places etc
▪ A kitten, of all things.
▪ He of all people picks his words carefully.
▪ She heard, of all things, a piano.
▪ She was a homeless wanderer until tiny Delos alone of all places on earth consented to receive her.
▪ So, in Missouri, of all places, my Koreanization began.
▪ The rest of my offences were committed in self-defence, when I found the hands of all People were against me.
▪ There I was admitted by the butler, of all people.
▪ William Forsyth began it before he sold out, with the help of John Brown, of all people.
people in glass houses shouldn't throw stones
people/women/students etc of color
some 500 people/50%/£100 etc
some people have all the luck
▪ It costs a fortune to buy a Porsche - some people have all the luck.
the little people
the mass of people/the population/workers etc
▪ For the mass of the population, indeed, the shift of interest arguably went in the other direction.
▪ Such feelings developed very much within the context of the lived experience of the mass of the population.
travelling people/folk
▪ I get the impression the indigenous locals know the travelling people keep disappearing to have some blow, and resent it.
▪ In the past, pearl fishing was often carried out by travelling people who used a glass-bottomed bucket to locate them.
▪ There are areas that are perfectly acceptable to the travelling people who use York.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The region has traditionally been peopled by Armenians.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ It peoples itself in the sunbeams.
▪ The neighborhood is dominated by the Waterloo train station and peopled by derelicts late at night.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
People

People \Peo"ple\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Peopled p. pr. & vb. n. Peopling.] [Cf. OF. popler, puepler, F. puepler. Cf. Populate.] To stock with people or inhabitants; to fill as with people; to populate. ``Peopled heaven with angels.''
--Dryden.

As the gay motes that people the sunbeams.
--Milton.

People

People \Peo"ple\, n. [OE. peple, people, OF. pueple, F. peuple, fr. L. populus. Cf. Populage, Public, Pueblo.]

  1. The body of persons who compose a community, tribe, nation, or race; an aggregate of individuals forming a whole; a community; a nation.

    Unto him shall the gathering of the people be.
    --Gen. xlix. 10.

    The ants are a people not strong.
    --Prov. xxx. 25.

    Before many peoples, and nations, and tongues.
    --Rev. x. 11.

    Earth's monarchs are her peoples.
    --Whitter.

    A government of all the people, by all the people, for all the people.
    --T. Parker.

    Note: Peopleis a collective noun, generally construed with a plural verb, and only occasionally used in the plural form (peoples), in the sense of nations or races.

  2. Persons, generally; an indefinite number of men and women; folks; population, or part of population; as, country people; -- sometimes used as an indefinite subject or verb, like on in French, and man in German; as, people in adversity.

    People were tempted to lend by great premiums.
    --Swift.

    People have lived twenty-four days upon nothing but water.
    --Arbuthnot.

  3. The mass of comunity as distinguished from a special class; the commonalty; the populace; the vulgar; the common crowd; as, nobles and people.

    And strive to gain his pardon from the people.
    --Addison.

  4. With a possessive pronoun:

    1. One's ancestors or family; kindred; relations; as, my people were English.

    2. One's subjects; fellow citizens; companions; followers. ``You slew great number of his people.''
      --Shak.

      Syn: People, Nation.

      Usage: When speaking of a state, we use people for the mass of the community, as distinguished from their rulers, and nation for the entire political body, including the rulers. In another sense of the term, nation describes those who are descended from the same stock; and in this sense the Germans regard themselves as one nation, though politically subject to different forms of government.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
people

late 13c., "humans, persons in general," from Anglo-French people, Old French peupel "people, population, crowd; mankind, humanity," from Latin populus "a people, nation; body of citizens; a multitude, crowd, throng," of unknown origin, possibly from Etruscan. The Latin word also is the source of Spanish pueblo, Italian popolo. In English, it displaced native folk. \n

\nMeaning "body of persons comprising a community" first recorded late 13c. in Anglo-French; meaning "common people, masses" (as distinguished from the nobility) first recorded c.1300 in Anglo-French. Meaning "one's own tribe, group, etc." is from late 14c. The word was adopted after c.1920 by Communist totalitarian states to give a spurious sense of populism to their governments. Legal phrase The People vs., in U.S. cases of prosecution under certain laws, dates from 1801. People of the Book "those whose religion entails adherence to a book of divine revelation (1834) translates Arabic Ahl al-Kitab.

people

late 15c. (intransitive), c.1500 (transitive), from people (n.), or else from Middle French peupler, from Old French peuple. Related: Peopled; peopling.

Wiktionary
people

n. (non-gloss definition: Used as plural of '''''person'''''); a body of human beings considered generally or collectively; a group of two or more persons. vb. 1 (context transitive English) To stock with people or inhabitants; to fill as with people; to populate. 2 (context intransitive English) To become populous or populated. 3 (context transitive English) To inhabit; to occupy; to populate.

WordNet
people
  1. n. (plural) any group of human beings (men or women or children) collectively; "old people"; "there were at least 200 people in the audience"

  2. the body of citizens of a state or country; "the Spanish people" [syn: citizenry]

  3. the common people generally; "separate the warriors from the mass"; "power to the people" [syn: multitude, masses, mass, hoi polloi]

  4. members of a family line; "his people have been farmers for generations"; "are your people still alive?"

people
  1. v. fill with people or supply with inhabitants; "people a room"; "The government wanted to populate the remote area of the country" [syn: populate]

  2. make one's home or live in; "She resides officially in Iceland"; "I live in a 200-year old house"; "These people inhabited all the islands that are now deserted"; "The plains are sparsely populated" [syn: dwell, shack, reside, live, inhabit, populate, domicile, domiciliate]

Wikipedia
People (disambiguation)

People is the plural of " person" and may also refer to:

People (King Crimson song)

"People" is a promotional single by the band King Crimson, released in 1995 on the album THRAK (1995).

People (The Golden Republic EP)

People was the first commercial release by American rock band The Golden Republic. It was released as an EP in the US by Astralwerks on September 21, 2004 (see 2004 in music).

People

A people is a plurality of persons considered as a whole, as is the case with an ethnic group or nation. Collectively, for example, the contemporary Frisians and Danes are two related Germanic peoples, while various Middle Eastern ethnic groups are often linguistically categorized as Semitic peoples.

People (magazine)

People is an American weekly magazine of celebrity and human-interest stories, published by Time Inc. With a readership of 46.6 million adults, People has the largest audience of any American magazine. People had $997 million in advertising revenue in 2011, the highest advertising revenue of any American magazine. In 2006, it had a circulation of 3.75 million and revenue expected to top $1.5 billion. It was named "Magazine of the Year" by Advertising Age in October 2005, for excellence in editorial, circulation and advertising. People ranked #6 on Advertising Age's annual "A-list" and #3 on Adweek's "Brand Blazers" list in October 2006.

The magazine runs a roughly 50/50 mix of celebrity and human-interest articles. Peoples editors claim to refrain from printing pure celebrity gossip, enough to lead celebrity publicists to propose exclusives to the magazine, and evidence of what one staffer calls a "publicist-friendly strategy".

Peoples website, People.com, focuses on celebrity news and human interest stories. In February 2015, the website broke a new record: 72 million unique visitors.

People is perhaps best known for its yearly special issues naming the "World's Most Beautiful," "Best & Worst Dressed" and "Sexiest Man Alive". The magazine's headquarters are in New York and it maintains editorial bureaus in Los Angeles and in London. For economic reasons it closed bureaus in Austin, Miami, and Chicago in 2006.

People (1964 song)

"People" is a song composed by Jule Styne with lyrics by Bob Merrill for the 1964 Broadway musical Funny Girl starring Barbra Streisand, who introduced the song. In 1998, Streisand's version was inducted in Grammy Hall of Fame. In 2004, Streisand's version on the soundtrack of Funny Girl finished at #13 on AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs survey of top tunes in American cinema. It has been covered by Billy Eckstine, Dionne Warwick, Steve Lawrence, Jack Jones, Aretha Franklin, Nat King Cole, Wes Montgomery, Perry Como, The Supremes and others, but is considered Streisand's signature song. The song asserts that "people who need people" — that is, people who love others and are not emotionally cut off from them — are the "luckiest people in the world". It was released as a single with " I Am Woman", a solo version of "You Are Woman, I Am Man", also from Funny Girl.

Andy Williams released a version of the song on his 1964 album, The Great Songs from "My Fair Lady" and Other Broadway Hits. Ella Fitzgerald recorded the song live on her CBS release Ella Fitzgerald at the Newport Jazz Festival: Live at Carnegie Hall. The Tymes had a top 40 hit with the song in 1968. Rachel Berry ( Lea Michele) performed the song in the 2014 Glee episode " New New York".

People (Hothouse Flowers album)

People is the debut album by celtic rock group Hothouse Flowers, released in 1988. This album to date is the biggest selling debut album by an Irish artist in Ireland.

People (Barbra Streisand album)

People is the title of Barbra Streisand's fourth solo studio album which was released in September 1964. The title track was a newly recorded version of the hit song from the Broadway musical Funny Girl in which Streisand starred.

The album became the first of Streisand's albums to hit #1 on the Billboard album chart, spending five weeks in the top spot; it was also certified Platinum. It was re-released in the UK on the CBS Hallmark Series label in 1966 with different artwork.

People (Australian magazine)

People is a fortnightly Australian lad's mag published by Bauer Media Group. It has been published since 1950. It is not to be confused with the gossip magazine known by that name in the United States; that magazine is published under the name Who in Australia.

People focuses on celebrity interviews and scandal, glamour photography, sex stories sent in by readers, puzzles, crosswords, and a jokes page.

People was reportedly the first weekly magazine in Australia to feature topless models.

People (Animal Collective EP)

People is an EP by Animal Collective released in October 2006. The first three songs were recorded during the band's Feels sessions in 2005, while the live version of "People" was recorded on tour in March 2005 just prior to the sessions.

People (TV series)

People is a Canadian documentary television series which aired on CBC Television in 1955.

People (Johnny Mathis album)

People is a 1969 compilation album released by singer Johnny Mathis on Columbia Records.

People (play)

People is a play by the English playwright Alan Bennett. Dealing with the travails of a crumbling stately home and its ageing owner, the play premièred at the National Theatre in 2012. The production, directed by long-time Bennett collaborator Nicholas Hytner, featured Frances de la Tour, Nicholas le Prevost, Peter Egan and Linda Bassett. It received widespread acclaim from London's theatre critics. It toured the UK in 2013 with a cast including Siân Phillips, Brigit Forsyth and Selina Cadell.

People (Howard Jones album)

People is officially Howard Jones's seventh album, released in 1998. After the US release on Ark 21 Records, People was a global release via Jones' own record label dtox. The album is a reworked version of the 1997 Japanese-only release Angels & Lovers. The title track and "When Lovers Confess" were deleted and three new tracks added: "Tomorrow Is Now", "Everything", and "Let the People Have Their Say". The album did not chart in the UK. However, the single "Let the People Have Their Say" broke the top 100 barrier in the UK and received ample air play on BBC Radio 2. The tri-fold slip case version features the faces of 210 people, all friends, family and fans of Jones.

To promote the album, a tour was organised. Jones' band consisted of former Kajagoogoo bassist Nick Beggs, guitarist Robin Boult and on drums the late Kevin Wilkinson who has played with China Crisis. Howard also toured the US with Culture Club and The Human League playing a host of hits and songs from the album in large arenas.

People (The Burning Hell album)

People is the sixth full-length album by the Canadian indie rock band The Burning Hell, released in April 2013 in Canada, May 2013 in Europe and April 2014 in the UK. The album was recorded in Berlin by Norman Nitzsche and Ramin Bijan.

People (James Brown album)

People is the 52nd studio album by American musician James Brown. The album was released in March 1980, by Polydor Records.

People (Windows)

People is a contact manager that is included in Windows 8 and 10. It allows a user to organize and link contacts from different email accounts. People has a unique graphical interface, unlike Windows Contacts' File Explorer-based interface, based on the Metro design language that had already been used for Outlook.com and the integrated online People service. In addition to being an address book, it provides a list of recent mail conversations with a selected contact. It used to also be a social media hub, in which users could integrate their social networking accounts (e.g. Twitter), but API changes in both Windows and social media services caused this functionality to break.

People works with other Metro-style apps, but it has its own front-end interface and can be opened by end users. Unlike Windows Contacts, it does not currently allow users to import or export .pst files, vCard files, Windows Address Book files, or other files directly. Instead, it gathers contact information from email accounts the user has set up on other services in Windows, such as Mail and Calendar, Skype Preview, or the Xbox app. Changes, additions, and deletions made in the People app will be exported to the corresponding email accounts. Users can select which accounts should display contact info in People.

The People app supports Outlook.com People, Google Contacts, iCloud contacts, Yahoo! contacts, and other contact lists that can be imported by logging into an email account.

Usage examples of "people".

He may have thought I was just as involved in the plan to evacuate our people to the Abesse as Mother was.

We wondered for a long while why Kadra was so adamant about evacuating Tenua to the Abesse and sending her people straight into Volan hands.

People would always fight, argue, bicker and disagree, whether influenced by abiding Interlopers or not.

I began to wonder what it was like for Aboriginal people with really dark skin and broad features, how did Australians react to them?

I mean, our own government had terrible policies for Aboriginal people.

Bar area of Western Australia for the Aboriginal people of the Warburton Ranges area.

It was terrible in the nineteen thirties, the Depression was on and people were so poor, especially Aboriginal people.

I used to feel so sorry for these Aboriginal people, I wondered how they could come to be so poor.

Molly was very sympathetic to Aboriginal people and treated them kindly.

Looking back now, I suppose she knew more about how Aboriginal people were treated than I did.

Bill had spent a lot of his childhood in country towns, I think that moulded his attitudes to Aboriginal people.

It provides a complete array of services to young people who decide not to abort their babies and instead carry them to term.

Some people even called up and wanted to record the historic moment when they were aborted by Rush Limbaugh so they could play it for friends.

That the strange name, Abraxas, sprouting simultaneously in the minds of three people, belonged to a real person?

A State statute which forbids bodies of men to associate together as military organizations, or to drill or parade with arms in cities and towns unless authorized by law, does not abridge the right of the people to keep and bear arms.