Wikipedia
Safford may refer to :
- Safford, Arizona
- Safford, Alabama, an unincorporated community in Dallas County, Alabama
- Safford House, a historic home in Tarpon Springs, Florida
- Safford Cape (1906–1973), American composer and musicologist
- Andrew Safford House, 1819, designed in the Federal style by an unknown architect
- Anson P.K. Safford (1830–1891), 3rd Governor of Arizona Territory (1869–1877)
- Laurance Safford (1890–1973), a U.S. Navy cryptologist
- Truman Henry Safford (1836–1901), an American calculating prodigy
- William Edwin Safford (1859–1926), an American botanist and ethnologist
- Benton Safford, a fictional character in novels by R. B. Dominic
and also :
- Katherine Safford Harris, a noted psychologist and speech scientist
- George Safford Parker (1863–1937), an American inventor and industrialist
Tarnowola is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Józefów, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately north-west of Józefów, east of Biłgoraj, and south of the regional capital Lublin.
The village has a population of 134.
The stola was the traditional garment of Roman women, corresponding to the toga, or the pallium, that was worn by men. The stola was usually woolen.
Originally, women wore togas as well, but after the 2nd century BC, the toga was worn exclusively by men, and women were expected to wear the stola. At that point, it was considered disgraceful for a woman to wear a toga; wearing the male garment was associated with prostitution and adultery.
Štôla is a village and small municipality in Poprad District in the Prešov Region of northern Slovakia. It lies on the foothills of High Tatras.
Neonomius is a genus of beetles in the family Carabidae, containing the following species:
- Neonomius australis (Sloane, 1915)
- Neonomius laevicollis (Sloane, 1915)
- Neonomius laticollis (Sloane, 1900)
Typicity (French typicité, Italian tipicità) is a term in wine tasting used to describe the degree to which a wine reflects its varietal origins, and thus demonstrate the signature characteristics of the grape from which it was produced, i.e., how much a Merlot wine “tastes like a Merlot”. It is an important component in judging wine competition when wines of the same varietal are judged against each other.
In some countries, such as Austria, typicity is used as part of a qualitative hierarchy that takes into consideration soil, climate and vintage. A similar concept to the French terroir, though slightly less controversial, Austrian Qualitatswein (literally "quality wine") is tested for typicity with the classification printed on the wine label.
As a concept, typicity relies on both historical precedent and a sentiment of what the present day majority view how a certain variety should “taste”. This can be considered a subjective and unreliable way to measure wine, opening the door to elitism with what has been criticized by some, such as Sean Thackrey, as viticultural racism.
Orexin-A, also known as hypocretin-1, is a naturally occurring neuropeptide and orexin isoform. The orexinergic nucleus in the lateral hypothalamus is the primary orexin projection system in the brain.
Orrgo is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
The Cuniculitremaceae are a family of fungi in the order Tremellales. Cuniculitrema, the teleomorphic taxon, is known in southern Germany and Switzerland, while the anamorphic taxa ( Fellomyces, Kockovaella, and Sterigmatosporidium) have a wider distribution. The four genera of the Cuniculitremaceae family have a combined total of 25 species.
Freeseer is a cross-platform screencasting application suite released as free and open source software. Freeseer is a project of the Free and Open Source Software Learning Centre (FOSSLC), a not-for-profit organization.
Its primary purpose is conference recording and has been used at conferences like OSGeo's FOSS4G, FSOSS, and more.
The software renders videos in an Ogg format. Its video source options are USB (e.g. internal/external webcam) or desktop. Freeseer consists of three different dependent programs: a recording tool (which is the main tool), a configuration tool, and a talk-list editor.
Megalenhydris barbaricina is a Late Pleistocene giant otter from Sardinia. It is known from a single skeleton, discovered in the Grotta di Ispinigoli near Dorgali, and was described in 1987. The species is one of four extinct otter species from Sardinia. The others are Algarolutra majori, Cyrnolutra castiglionis and Sardolutra ichnusae. This otter was large, much larger than the other species. The structure of the teeth points to a diet of shellfish and/or crustaceans. A special characteristic of the species is the flattening of the first few caudal vertebrae (the rest of the caudal vertebrae are not known). This might point to a slightly flattened tail.
Fontgombault is a commune in the Indre department in central France. It is known for its traditionalist Benedictine abbey.
BHHS may refer to:
- Baulkham Hills High School
- Benton Harbor High School
- Beverly Hills High School
- Byram Hills High School
- Bishop Hendricken High School
- Bismarck-Henning High School
- Bloomfield Hills High School
- Box Hill High School
- Boyden–Hull High School
- Brighton and Hove High School
TurboCASH is a free software accounting software package, developed by a project team headed by Philip Copeman, a South African. It has been continuously developed since April 1985, and was released under the GNU General Public License in July 2003.
The biggest TurboCASH communities are found in South Africa, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Belgium, United States, Canada and Australia. It has been translated or partially translated into 23 languages including Afrikaans, Croatian, Dutch, Greek, Indonesian and Spanish. According to the company, TurboCASH has a 'community of over 100,000'.
It is aimed at the small to medium-sized business market, this places it between being a home finances package and being an ERP package. Its core function is a General ledger, posting transactions into accounts and producing financial reports. Plugin technology enables developers to extend the system.
It integrates directly with osCommerce, CRE Loaded and Zen Cart. Being originally developed in Delphi, it only runs natively on Windows, although the developers have released a version for Linux that runs under Wine. A version that runs under CrossOver, and will therefore run on Apple Mac OS, is also under development.
Oléac-Debat is a commune in the Hautes-Pyrénées department in south-western France.
In the Dungeons & Dragons fantasy role-playing game, illithids (commonly known as mind flayers) are monstrous humanoid aberrations with psionic powers. In a typical Dungeons & Dragons campaign setting, they live in the moist caverns and cities of the enormous Underdark. Illithids believe themselves to be the dominant species of the multiverse and use other intelligent creatures as thralls, slaves, and chattels.
Przybówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wojaszówka, within Krosno County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately west of Wojaszówka, north-west of Krosno, and south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 830.
Sáhkku is a board game invented by the Sami people. The game is particularly traditional among the Coast Sámi of northern Norway and Russia, but is also known to have been played in other parts of Sápmi.
HCM may refer to:
- Eyl Airport, in Puntland, Somalia
- Halifax Conservatory of Music, in Canada
- Harrow Central Mosque, in England
- Hausdorff Center for Mathematics, in Bonn, Germany
- Highway Capacity Manual
- Hitachi Construction Machinery
- Ho Chi Minh City, in Vietnam
- Ho Chi Minh, Prime Minister (1945-1955) and President (1945-1969) of North Vietnam
- Human Capital Management, an application in Oracle Corporation's PeopleTools ERP software
- Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a disease of the myocardium (the muscle of the heart)
- redirect Shaquille O'Neal
Category:Redirects from alternative names
Spring Up is the debut mini album by South Korean boy band Astro. The album was released digitally and physically on February 23, 2016 by Fantagio. The album contains five tracks with the lead single, "Hide & Seek" and second single "Cat's Eye".
The Buća (in Italian Bucchia) was a noble family that served the Republic of Ragusa, and one of the most important families to come out of Kotor. A cadet branch was admitted to the nobility of the Republic of Ragusa, another branch moved instead to Šibenik.
Fractured was an Industrial band created by Canadian Nick Gorman in 2003. Formed in Toronto, his self produced release CD-R demo titled Contami-Nation caught the attention of European label Dependent who signed them. After the release of the demo Gorman was joined by Famine and in 2006 released their debut CD, Only Human Remains. Fractured's third release, Beneath The Ashes, was released by Dependent (Europe) and Metropolis Records (North America) in 2011. According to the bands website, all things related to Fractured ended in 2013.
Fractured is the second full-length album by American technical death metal band Capharnaum.
Fractured is the second novel in the Atlanta series from bestselling author Karin Slaughter. The first book is Triptych. This book was published in 2008. These books star Will Trent, a dyslexic Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent. The books also feature Angie Polaski and Faith Mitchell. Slaughter also writes the Grant County series. The audiobook is narrated by Phil Gigante.
"Fractured (Everything I Said Was True)" is the lead single from Taproot's fifth studio album Plead the Fifth. It is the band's first single released through Victory Records.
This is the band's first song to chart within the top 20 of the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks since 2005's " Calling" from Blue-Sky Research.
Fractured may refer to:
- fracture
- Fractured (band), an industrial band
- Fractured (novel), a 2008 novel by Karin Slaughter
- Fractured (album), an album by Capharnaum
- "Fractured" (Bill Haley song), a song by Bill Haley & His Comets
- " Fractured (Everything I Said Was True)", a song by Taproot from the album Plead the Fifth
- Fractured (film), a 2013 horror film by Adam Gierasch
Fractured (originally known as Schism) is a 2013 horror thriller film that was directed by Adam Gierasch, based on a script by Gierasch and his writing partner Jace Anderson. The film had its world premiere on October 12, 2013 at the Screamfest Horror Film Festival. It stars Callum Blue as an amnesiac trying to discover what exactly happened to him.
"Fractured" was the title of an early rock and roll song written by Bill Haley and Marshall Lytle and first recorded by Bill Haley & His Comets under the name Bill Haley with Haley's Comets in 1953. The song was released as an Essex Records 78 single.
Madhuraswapnam is a 1977 Malayalam-language Indian feature film directed by M. Krishnan Nair, starring Kamal Haasan, Ravikumar and Jayaprabha in lead roles.
Charbonnières-les-Vieilles is a commune in the Puy-de-Dôme department in Auvergne in central France.
Ben-Zion, also spelled Ben Zion and Benzion (, "Son of Zion") is a Hebrew given name. It may refer to the following people:
Given name:
- Ben Zion Abba Shaul (1924–1998), rosh yeshiva, Porat Yosef Yeshiva
- Ben Zion Aryeh Leibish Halberstam (born 1955), fifth Bobover Rebbe
- Ben-Zion Dinur (1884–1973), Israeli politician
- Ben-Zion Gold (born 1923), American rabbi
- Ben Zion Halberstam (1874–1941), second Bobover Rebbe
- Ben-Zion Halfon (1930–1977), Israeli politician
- Ben-Zion Harel (1892–1972), Israeli doctor and politician
- Ben Zion Hyman (1891–1984), Canadian Jewish bookseller
- Ben-Zion Keshet (1914–1984), Israeli politician
- Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel (1880–1953), Sephardic chief rabbi of Mandatory Palestine and of Israel
- Benzion Netanyahu (1910–2012), Israeli historian, father of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
- Ben-Zion Orgad (1926–2006), Israeli composer
- Ben-Zion Rubin (born 1939), Israeli politician
- Ben-Zion Sternberg (1894–1962), Zionist leader
Surname:
- Yehoshua Ben-Zion (1924–2004), Israeli banker
Minhe may refer to the following locations in China:
- Minhe Hui and Tu Autonomous County, Qinghai
- Minhe Formation, geological formation
- Minhe, Jiangxi, town in Jinxian County
- Minhe Township, Bin County, Heilongjiang
Boak is a family name. Notable people with the name include:
- Chet Boak, American baseball player
- John Boak, Scottish cricketer
- Keith Boak, British television director
- Travis Boak, AFL footballer currently contracted to the Port Adelaide Power
Boleč ( Serbian Cyrillic: Болеч) is a suburban settlement of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in the municipality of Grocka.
Borovec may refer to:
In Bulgaria:
- Borovets, a mountain resort situated in the Province of Sofia
In Macedonia:
- Borovec (Struga), a village near Struga
In Slovenia:
- Borovec pri Kočevski Reki, a settlement in the Municipality of Kočevje
- Borovec pri Karlovici, a settlement in the Municipality of Velike Lašče
Asjen is a small town and rural commune in Ouezzane Province of the Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima region of Morocco. At the time of the 2004 census, the commune had a total population of 13,113 people living in 2,497 households. The town's postcode is 91024.
A strap is a ribbon used to fasten.
Strap or STRAP may also refer to:
- Shoulder strap, strap of a clothing over shoulder.
- Currency strap, straps used to bundle banknotes
- Aerial straps, a type of aerial apparatus on which various feats of strength and flexibility may be performed
- Lower third, the graphics at the bottom of telecasts, in the UK known as a strap or namestrap
- Strap, a colloquial word for a handgun
- The Straps, the band
- STRAP, human enzyme
- STRETCH Assembly Program (STRAP), an assembler for IBM 7030 Stretch
Attiches is a commune in the Nord department in northern France.
Brulion (meaning Rough Sketchbook in English) was a Polish language quarterly literary magazine published in Poland from 1986 to 1999.
Sircar is the surname of:
- Birendranath Sircar (1901–1980), Indian film producer and the founder of New Theatres, Calcutta
- Dineshchandra Sircar (1907–1985), Indian epigraphist, historian, numismatist and folklorist
- Joydeep Sircar (b. 1947), Indian mountaineer and mountaineering historian
- Nilratan Sircar (1861–1943), Indian doctor, educationist, philanthropist and swadeshi entrepreneur
- Shoojit Sircar, Indian film director and producer
Nearco (January 24, 1935 – June 27, 1957) was an Italian-bred Thoroughbred racehorse described by Thoroughbred Heritage as "one of the greatest racehorses of the Twentieth Century" and "one of the most important sires of the century." He was not only unbeaten, winning 14 races at distances from 5 furlongs (1,000m) to 1 mile 7 furlongs (3,000m), but also was the patriarch of the most dominant sire line in Thoroughbred history.
Budah is a village in eastern Yemen. It is located in the Hadhramaut Governorate.
Gadberry may refer to:
- A minor planet, see List of minor planets: 20001–21000
- Gadberry, Kentucky, a community in the United States
Koplik (also known as Koplik i Poshtëm) is a town and a former municipality in the northwestern tip of Albania. At the 2015 local government reform it became a subdivision and the seat of the municipality Malësi e Madhe. It was the seat of the former Malësi e Madhe District. The population at the 2011 census was 3,734. It is situated north of the city of Shkodër. AS of June 2016, Koplik has been registered and administrated as an international 'free economic trade zone' by the Albanian government.
Calvatia is a genus of puffball mushrooms that includes the spectacular giant puffball C. gigantea. It was formerly classified within the now-obsolete order Lycoperdales, which, following a restructuring of fungal taxonomy brought about by molecular phylogeny, has been split; the puffballs, Calvatia spp. are now placed in the family Agaricaceae of the order Agaricales.
Most species in the genus Calvatia are edible when young, though some are best avoided, such as Calvatia fumosa, which has a very pungent odor.
The name Calvatia derives from the Latin calvus meaning "bald" and calvaria, meaning "dome of the skull".
Niesiebędowice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Korfantów, within Nysa County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland.
Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).
Chadbourne, Chadbourn, Chadburn, Chadburne, or Chatburn may refer to:
Zaglavic is a village in the municipality of Drvar, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Strane is a small village below the eastern slopes of Mount Nanos in the Municipality of Postojna in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia.
The local church in the settlement is dedicated to the Holy Cross and belongs to the Parish of Ubeljsko.
Strane is a village in the municipality of Pale, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Pinatjaimi, also spelled as Pinatyaimi, is a Ndyuka Maroon village on the Cottica River in Suriname.
QupZilla is a free and open-source web browser, intended for general users. It allows seamless integration with users' desktop environments and has several distinguishing features. QupZilla is licensed under GPLv3.
Usage examples of "qupzilla".
Henry, laughing at the antics of a trio of jugglers, shared a cup of wine with a pretty young woman who looked a few years younger than Sanglant.
They were a sadly bedraggled trio, sodden with rain, smeared with mud, their armour in tatters.
Danielle knew without turning around that the snow-haired trio was again exchanging glances.
So I found another gig with a drummer, Manzy Harris, who formed a trio with me and Otto McQueen on bass.
A trio of marlets, their white rumps flashing, raced through a small wood and broke into the open.
She testified that she and her friends Mela Merwoman and Ida Human had been sent by the Simurgh to rescue the stranded trio, and had done so, with the help of a Seed of Thyme and some negotiation.
Hawker fired and the Molt sagged in on himself, spitted on a trio of amber tracks: smoke concealed the normal cyan flash of the power gun but shock waves from the superheated air made their own mark on the brush of high-frequency sound.
Thus the trio sped through the coming of autumn dusk, outflying the fallen leaves that tumbled upon the wind.
They heard the clicking of scissors and the humming of clippers, overlaid with the voices, supposedly, of the trio of men standing frozen behind each of the chairs.
The push rod was screwed into a miniature piston head which, in turn, actuated a trio of switches.
The most striking of the trio was a young Hutt, reclining with a bored expression and an impatient twitch in his thickly muscled tail.
However, the trio had scarcely arrived when Lord Sarp Redbeard accused Kelemvor of murdering a local merchant.
The trio of the scherzo is like a section of some Polynesian forest, with its tropic warmth, its monstrous growths, its swampy earth, its chattering monkeys and birds of paradise.
With his handcart laden with explosives, he and his trio of skinhead assistants vanished in the shadows of the long tunnel.
Kingston Trio sang in their choirboy voices, it abruptly occurred to me that the wallpaper man could turn out to be Jack Speight with a different name.