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Stönkfitzchen

Stönkfitzchen is an EP released by Bethlehem in 2010.

The title is a vulgar play on words resulting from switching two letters of the German stinkfötzchen which roughly means vaginal odor.

Cursed (2005 film)

Cursed is a 2005 American horror-comedy film directed by Wes Craven and written by screenwriter Kevin Williamson, who both collaborated on Scream. The film stars Christina Ricci and Jesse Eisenberg as two estranged siblings attacked by a werewolf loose in Los Angeles.

Cursed

Cursed may refer to:

  • Curse, adversity thought to be inflicted by supernatural power
  • Cursed (TV series), a 2000–2001 sitcom
  • "Cursed" (House), a 2005 episode of the TV series House
  • Cursed (2004 film), by Yoshihiro Hoshino
  • Cursed (2005 film), by Wes Craven, starring Christina Ricci
  • Cursed (band), a hardcore punk band
  • Cursed (Morgoth album), 1991
  • Cursed (Ion Dissonance album), 2010
  • Cursed (Rotten Sound album)
  • Cursed (9xDead album), 2012
  • Cursed (Buffy/Angel novel), a 2003 original novel based on the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin-off Angel
  • Conomor the Cursed, sixth century ruler of Brittany
  • Cursed, the second novel in Benedict Jacka's Alex Verus series
Cursed (Buffy/Angel novel)

Cursed is an original novel based on the television series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin-off Angel.

Cursed (band)

Cursed was a band featuring former and current members of numerous other Canadian DIY bands spanning from the early 1990s to the present, such as Haymaker, Left for Dead, The Swarm aka Knee Deep in the Dead, Acrid, Ruination, The Black Hand, Countdown to Oblivion, At the Mercy of Inspiration, Shallow North Dakota, Crux of Aux, Quest for Fire, Burning Love and more.

Cursed (Morgoth album)

Cursed is the first full-length release by the German band Morgoth. It was released in 1991 by Century Media. The song "Body Count" was used in the shock documentary " Traces of Death" it's the first song that plays in the movie.

Cursed (2004 film)

is a 2004 Japanese horror film. Based on the written work of Yumeaki Hirayama, it is the directorial debut of Yoshihiro Hoshino.

The full Japanese title is Extremely Scary Story A: Dark Crow, and is the first theatrical release of the Cho Kowai Hanashi series.

Cursed (Ion Dissonance album)

Cursed is the fourth studio album by the Canadian mathcore/ deathcore band Ion Dissonance, released on August 24, 2010 through Century Media in North America, Doom Patrol Records in Japan, and Basick Records in Europe. This is the first Ion Dissonance album to feature 8-string guitars as well as clean vocals in songs such as "Pallor."

Cursed (TV series)

Cursed, later renamed The Weber Show, is an American sitcom that ran on NBC from 2000–2001. It starred Steven Weber, Amy Pietz, Wendell Pierce, and Chris Elliott.

The show is notable for having an abrupt title change in the middle of its first season. The initial premise was that its protagonist (Weber) had been cursed by an ex-girlfriend and thus constantly encountered bad luck. The show failed to find an audience, and so midway through the season the entire "bad luck" angle was abruptly dropped. The show was revamped as a more traditional sitcom and renamed The Weber Show. In spite of the change (or perhaps because of it), the show still struggled and was canceled at the end of the season, leaving a cliffhanger unresolved. The show's theme song was written and performed by Liz Phair.

Cursed (9xDead album)

Cursed is a 2012 album by Welsh dark rock band 9xdead, released on Casket Music. Production duties were handled by James Radford who also designed the album artwork.

Cursed (Rotten Sound album)

Cursed is the sixth studio album by Finnish grindcore band Rotten Sound. Music videos were made for "Hollow" and "Self".

Cursed (Scaramanga Six album)

Cursed is the sixth album by English rock band The Scaramanga Six.

Rowla

"Rowla" is the title of a promotional 1996 single release and a song by Underworld, from their album Second Toughest in the Infants. The song is the final version of " Cherry Pie" from the Pearl's Girl Single.

Grębień

Grębień is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pątnów, within Wieluń County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately south-west of Pątnów, south of Wieluń, and south-west of the regional capital Łódź.

Mateuți

Mateuţi is a commune in Rezina district, Moldova. It is composed of a single village, Mateuţi.

Shortbread

Shortbread is a type of biscuit ( American English: cookie) traditionally made from one part white sugar, two parts butter, and three parts flour (by weight). The use of plain white (wheat) flour is common today, and other ingredients like ground rice or cornflour are sometimes added to alter the texture. Also, modern recipes often deviate from the pure three ingredients by splitting the sugar portion into equal parts granulated sugar and icing sugar ( powdered sugar in American English) and many further add a portion of salt.

Shortbread is different from shortcake, though they are similar. The difference is that shortcake can be made using vegetable fat instead of butter and usually has a chemical leavening agent such as baking powder, which gives it a different texture. Shortbread biscuits are often associated with normal egg-based biscuits, but they hold their shape under pressure, making them ideal for packed meals.

Shortbread originated in Scotland, with the first printed recipe, in 1736, from a Scotswoman named Mrs McLintock. Shortbread is widely associated with Christmas and Hogmanay festivities in Scotland, and the Scottish brand Walkers Shortbread is exported around the world.

Holosteum

Holosteum is a genus of plants in the Pink family ( Caryophyllaceae) with 3 or 4 species native from southern Europe through central and south western Asia and in Africa. They are herbs with an annual life span, some growing as winter annuals. They have slender roots and thin stems that are upright or ascending. The genus name was given by Linnaeus, and named because of the sprawling nature of the plants: Greek holos, meaning whole or all, and osteon, meaning bone, because of the frailty of the plant.

Flowers are bisexual but sometimes also unisexual and pistillate. Flowers are hypogynous, have 5 sepals that are distinct and green in color and lanceolate to ovate in shape and 2.5-4.5 mm long. Typically with no stipules. The flowers have 5 petals that are white to soft pink in color and are clawed. Plants typically are found as small inconspicuous early spring blooming plants with short life spans.

Common names for the plants in this genus include jagged chickweeds and (in Chinese) ying gu cao.

One country, two systems

"One country, two systems" is a constitutional principle formulated by Deng Xiaoping, the Paramount Leader of the People's Republic of China (PRC), for the reunification of China during the early 1980s. He suggested that there would be only one China, but distinct Chinese regions such as Hong Kong and Macau could retain their own capitalist economic and political systems, while the rest of China uses the socialist system. Under the principle, each of the three regions could continue to have its own political system, legal, economic and financial affairs, including external relations with foreign countries. Taiwan could continue to maintain its own military force.

Trade agreement

A trade agreement (also known as trade pact) is a wide ranging tax, tariff and trade treaty that often includes investment guarantees. The most common trade agreements are of the preferential and free trade types are concluded in order to reduce (or eliminate) tariffs, quotas and other trade restrictions on items traded between the signatories.

Gourvieille

Gourvieille is a commune in the Aude department in southern France.

Puberty (Munch painting)

Puberty is a painting created by Edvard Munch. Munch is an artist native to Norway and is widely known for his role in expressionistic art. Puberty has also been done as a lithograph and an etching by Munch.

Puberty

Puberty is the process of physical changes through which a child's body matures into an adult body capable of sexual reproduction. It is initiated by hormonal signals from the brain to the gonads: the ovaries in a girl, the testes in a boy. In response to the signals, the gonads produce hormones that stimulate libido and the growth, function, and transformation of the brain, bones, muscle, blood, skin, hair, breasts, and sex organs. Physical growth—height and weight—accelerates in the first half of puberty and is completed when an adult body has been developed. Until the maturation of their reproductive capabilities, the pre-pubertal physical differences between boys and girls are the external sex organs.

On average, girls begin puberty around ages 10–11; boys around ages 11–12. Girls usually complete puberty around ages 15–17, while boys usually complete puberty around ages 16–17. The major landmark of puberty for females is menarche, the onset of menstruation, which occurs on average between ages 12–13; for males, it is the first ejaculation, which occurs on average at age 13. In the 21st century, the average age at which children, especially girls, reach puberty is lower compared to the 19th century, when it was 15 for girls and 16 for boys. This can be due to any number of factors, including improved nutrition resulting in rapid body growth, increased weight and fat deposition, or exposure to endocrine disruptors such as xenoestrogens, which can at times be due to food consumption or other environmental factors. Puberty which starts earlier than usual is known as precocious puberty. Puberty which starts later than usual is known as delayed puberty.

Notable among the morphologic changes in size, shape, composition, and functioning of the pubertal body, is the development of secondary sex characteristics, the "filling in" of the child's body; from girl to woman, from boy to man. Derived from the Latin puberatum (age of maturity), the word puberty describes the physical changes to sexual maturation, not the psychosocial and cultural maturation denoted by the term adolescent development in Western culture, wherein adolescence is the period of mental transition from childhood to adulthood, which overlaps much of the body's period of puberty.

Raat (film)

Raat (English:Night) is a 1992 Indian Hindi supernatural thriller film written and directed by Ram Gopal Varma starring Revathi in the role of protagonist Manisha Sharma. Upon release the film received positive reviews and remained a cult classic. The film was box office success, and its Telugu dubbed version Raatri was also a commercial success.

Raat

RAAT or Raat may refer to:

  • Raat (film), 1992 Indian film
  • R.A.A.T., a group from The Transformers (Marvel Comics)
Pholidoteuthis

Pholidoteuthis is a genus of squid in the monotypic family Pholidoteuthidae, comprising at least two species. The defunct genus Tetronychoteuthis was previously incorporated into Pholidoteuthidae based upon a singular taxon known as Tetronychoteuthis massyae. Following the discovery of Pholidoteuthis boschmai in 1950, T. massaye was placed into Pholidoteuthis, with Tetronoychoteuthis considered a nomen dubium. P. boschmai is now considered a junior synonym of P. massyae.

Khangestan

Khangestan (, also Romanized as Khangestān; also known as Khankestān and Khenkestārī) is a village in Mahan Rural District, Mahan District, Kerman County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its existence was noted, but its population was not reported.

Second grade

Second grade (called grade 2 in some countries) is a year of primary education in many nations. Second grade is the second grade of primary school. The school age is depending on which country, and depending if the students have repeated the first grade or not.

In mathematics, students are taught place value to tens, hundreds or thousands, and renaming with addition and subtraction. Measurement is extended to the meter, foot, yard, kilogram, pound, and pint. Measurement of time and temperature in Fahrenheit and Celsius is also emphasized as well. Usually multiplication and division is introduced towards the end of the school year but not emphasized. Another skill students practice is counting money and making change. Positive and negative numbers are introduced, but not added and subtracted. These values are generally introduced in temperature. Addition and subtraction facts are practiced throughout the year. Students also learn about plane and solid shapes in geometry and explore how they are apparent in our everyday lives. Some second grade topics in math can be explored at the following website.

In reading, students read to perform a task using fictional and non-fictional texts, and learn about story elements, text features, character traits, sequencing, and main idea/details. In many counties and districts, schools have reading benchmarks that students need to meet by the end of each quarter and/or school year. At the end of the year, students begin their first novels. Decoding strategies usually end in second grade and reading more for comprehension.

Students in second grade also learn the basics of grammar in writing, including subject, verbs, and adjectives. They also write to inform, to express personal ideas, and to persuade. In the United States it is also common for second graders to be introduced to cursive. Cursive writing is also focused in third grade.

Second grade science usually involves basic earth and space sciences. Students are introduced to the planets and the weather system. Dinosaurs and some health science are also covered such as nutrition.

In social studies, a general understanding of the government and current events are discussed. Students are expected to know the current president and vice president, and some important presidents such as Abraham Lincoln and George Washington. The concept of the law is taught in second grade. Second grade students may also get a basic understanding of history, and what life was like in times before they were born. Field trips to historical and science museums are common. Some basic sociological institutions are taught such as race and gender, and the exploration of different cultural groups such as Black, Latin, and Asian. International geography is introduced while students learn about the continents, oceans, and basic countries such as China, India, France, Mexico, Canada, Australia, and the UK.

Although the U.S. does not formally have national grade standards, there are groups selected by the Department of Education to develop standards which are generally used by each State to set their own standards. For mathematics, it is the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. There is an English guide to the second grade math standards and expectations. This description was built by using the major states as a norm.

Sarkozy (surname)

means "from (several) Sárköz, Hungary":

  • Nicolas Sarkozy, former French President
    • Cécilia Attias formerly known as Cécilia Sarkozy, ex-wife of Nicolas Sarkozy
    • Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, formerly known as Carla Bruni, third and current wife of Nicolas Sarkozy
    • Jean Sarkozy, French politician, second son of Nicolas Sarkozy and Marie-Dominique Culioli
    • Guillaume Sarkozy, the older brother of Nicolas Sarkozy
    • Olivier Sarkozy, French businessman, half-brother of Nicolas Sarkozy
  • András Sárközy, Hungarian mathematician
  • Gergely Sárközy, Hungarian musician
  • Rudolf Sarközi (born 1944), Austrian Porajmos survivor
  • György Sárközi (1899–1945), Hungarian translator and writer
  • István Sárközi (1947–1992), Hungarian footballer
  • Lajos Sárközi (born 1967), Hungarian hurdler

Category:Hungarian-language surnames Category:Hungarian nobility

Sarkozy (band)

Sarkozy is an American rock band from the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. It is mainly a cover band and boasts an impressive cult following at Holy Cross where it opened for Far East Movement and J. Cole in 2011 and Mac Miller and Walk the Moon in 2013.

The band members consist of Peter 'Texas' McStravick (vocals), Joseph Plantamura (bass), Michael Sullivan (guitar), Andy Biedlingmaier (percussion), and Chris 'Shred' Theobalt. Featuring artists associated include William Blanchett and Caitlyn Murphy

Meteuproctis

Meteuproctis is a genus of moths in the family Lymantriidae.

Lugsteuring

Lugsteuring (Air Disturbance) is the first full-length album from the South African alternative rock band Fokofpolisiekar (Fuck Off Police Car). It was released in 2004 by Rhythm Records in South Africa.

Jayadaman

Jayadaman was a Western Kshatrapa ruler, although possibly only a Kshatrapa, rather than a Mahakshatrapa. He was the son of Chastana, and the father of Rudradaman I, but he may have pre-deceased Chastana, and never ruled as supreme ruler of the Western Kshatrapas. This is suggested by the fact that Chastana and Rudraman I are known from contemporary Indian inscriptions to have ruled jointly.

His diminished title may also have been a consequence of the conquests of the Satavahana over Kshatrapa territory.

The coins of Jayadaman were rather crude, only made of copper and square in form.

'Nard

Nard is the debut album from American funk keyboardist Bernard Wright. Released in 1981 when Wright was only 18 years old, the album reached number 7 on the Jazz Albums chart in the US.

Teufelsstein (Haardt)

The Teufelsstein in the Haardt mountains, near the Palatine county town of Bad Dürkheim in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate, is a hill . On its domed summit is a monolith of the same name (which means "Devil's Rock"). Traces of human activity on the rock indicate that it acted as a cult object in former times.

Inter-racial
Netsam

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Ullevi

Ullevi, sometimes known as Nya Ullevi (, New Ullevi), is a multi-purpose stadium in Gothenburg, Sweden. It was built for the 1958 FIFA World Cup, but since then Ullevi has also hosted the World Allround Speed Skating Championships six times, the 1995 World Championships in Athletics and the 2006 European Athletics Championships, the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup finals in 1983 and 1990, the UEFA Euro 1992 final, the UEFA Cup final in 2004, and annually hosted the opening ceremony of the Gothia Cup—the world's largest football tournament in terms of the number of participants. IFK Göteborg has also played two UEFA Cup finals at the stadium, in 1982 and 1987, but then as home game in a home and away final. The stadium hosted several events, like football, ice hockey, boxing, racing, athletics and concerts.

The stadium is one of the biggest in the Nordic countries, with a seating capacity of 43,000 and a total capacity of 75,000 for concerts.

Usage examples of "ullevi".

Even then, among the debris with smuts all over his face, he still retained his poise.

He acted with remarkable swiftness: on the 27th he dispersed the commandos of Beyers and Kemp, and on 7 November General Smuts announced that there were but a few scattered bands of rebels in the Transvaal.

The burly Lucas Meyer, smart young Smuts fresh from the siege of Ookiep, Beyers from the north, Kemp the dashing cavalry leader, Muller the hero of many fights--all these with many others of their sun-blackened, gaunt, hard-featured comrades were grouped within the great tent of Vereeniging.

The chief leaders of separate commandos were Kritzinger, Scheepers, Malan, Myburgh, Fouche, Lotter, Smuts, Van Reenen, Lategan, Maritz, and Conroy, the two latter operating on the western side of the country.

The bloomery roaring with fire, the clank of iron bars, smoke smutting the air, flecks of bright dust blowing into the thatch of the furnace-house how these raised my spirits!

Their mouths were dry from biting into the cartridges, their lips were flecked with unburned powder, and sweat had carved clean rivulets down their faces which were blackened by the smoke and smuts from the powder exploding in their musket pans.

His hair was singed, his face was covered in mud and smut, and what she could see of it was scarlet.

It should be noted first that the smut fungus is living at the expense of its host plant, the wheat, and its effect on the host may be summarized as follows: The consumption of food, the destruction of food in the sporulating process, and the stimulating or retarding effect on normal physiological processes.

These goniffs have got some smut pictures of her, from before I bought her contract.

As to Istria, I feel that Alexander and Smuts, for several natural and very human reasons, are inclined to disregard two vital considerations: the grand strategy firmly believed by us to be necessary to the early conclusion of the war, and the time factor as involved in the probable duration of a campaign to debouch from the Ljubljana Gap into Slovenia and Hungary.

You were working a smut job for Ad Vice then, and smut and sadomasochist paraphernalia are in the same ballpark.

The attack, which lasted all day, was carried out by a commando of 2000 Boers under Smuts, who rushed the position upon the following morning.

For these mingled reasons of health and of strategy a considerable number of burghers united in this district under the command of the Bothas and of Smuts.

I was surrounded by the stale smut of clubmen, stories to disturb callow youth, ads for transparencies, truedup dice and bustpads, proprietary articles and why wear a truss with testimonial from ruptured gentleman.

The chief leaders of separate commandos were Kritzinger, Scheepers, Malan, Myburgh, Fouche, Lotter, Smuts, Van Reenen, Lategan, Maritz, and Conroy, the two latter operating on the western side of the country.