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Tajai

Tajai Massey, known by the stage name, Tajai (born April 21, 1975), is an American rapper and producer. He is one of the four founding members of Oakland, California-based underground hip hop group Souls of Mischief, and, with the Souls of Mischief, a part of the eight-person, alternative hip hop collective, the Hieroglyphics. He is a vegetarian.

Grubetiće

Grubetiće is a village situated in Novi Pazar municipality in Serbia.

Kheyrat

Kheyrat (, also Romanized as Kheyrāt) is a village in Estarabad-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Gorgan County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 348, in 84 families.

Hyphochytrium

Hyphochytrium is a genus of Hyphochytriomycetes.

An example is Hyphochytrium catenoides.

Adjona

Adjona, also written Adxoña or Atxoña was the Guanche mencey (king) of the Menceyato de Abona at the time of the conquest of Tenerife in the fifteenth century.

Adjona normally lived in Vilaflor, in the territory of Abona, although the historian Juan Bethencourt Alfonso indicates that mencey residence was located near the modern town of El Rio, Arico.

Adjona signed peace in 1490 with the governor of Gran Canaria, Pedro de Vera, ratifying the agreement with Alonso Fernández de Lugo in 1494 shortly after his first landing, attaching his menceyato to the bando de paces (peace party) during the conquest. After this, Adjona was brought to Spain by Lugo to be presented to the Catholic Monarchs along with the rest of menceyes. As a mencey of the bando de paces, he returned to Tenerife and integrated into the new society. He died before 1507.

Desmidiaceae

The Desmidiaceae are one of four families of Charophyte green algae in the order Desmidiales (desmids).

Session

Session may refer to:

Session (Presbyterianism)

A session (sometimes called consistory or church board) is a body of elected elders governing each local church within presbyterian polity.

Session (web analytics)

Sessions, or visits, is a unit of measurement in web analytics, capturing either a user's actions within a particular time period, or a user's actions in completing a particular task. As well as being directly useful as a metric within web analytics, sessions are also used in operational analytics and to provide personalised features, such as user-specific recommendations for other pages or items to view. These uses are dependent on session reconstruction - taking a series of user events and splitting the series into a set of sessions - which tends to use one of two classes of methodologies: time-oriented approaches, which use user inactivity as a signal to end a session and begin a new one, and navigation-based approaches, which divide requests into sessions based on an unbroken chain of hyperlinks between the requested pages.

Session (computer science)

In computer science, in particular networking, a session is a semi-permanent interactive information interchange, also known as a dialogue, a conversation or a meeting, between two or more communicating devices, or between a computer and user (see Login session). A session is set up or established at a certain point in time, and then torn down at some later point. An established communication session may involve more than one message in each direction. A session is typically, but not always, stateful, meaning that at least one of the communicating parts needs to save information about the session history in order to be able to communicate, as opposed to stateless communication, where the communication consists of independent requests with responses.

An established session is the basic requirement to perform a connection-oriented communication. A session also is the basic step to transmit in connectionless communication modes. However any unidirectional transmission does not define a session.

Communication Transport may be implemented as part of protocols and services at the application layer, at the session layer or at the transport layer in the OSI model.

  • Application layer examples:
    • HTTP sessions, which allow associating information with individual visitors
    • A telnet remote login session
  • Session layer example:
    • A Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) based Internet phone call
  • Transport layer example:
    • A TCP session, which is synonymous to a TCP virtual circuit, a TCP connection, or an established TCP socket.

In the case of transport protocols that do not implement a formal session layer (e.g., UDP) or where sessions at the application layer are generally very short-lived (e.g., HTTP), sessions are maintained by a higher level program using a method defined in the data being exchanged. For example, an HTTP exchange between a browser and a remote host may include an HTTP cookie which identifies state, such as a unique session ID, information about the user's preferences or authorization level.

HTTP/1.0 was thought to only allow a single request and response during one Web/HTTP Session. Protocol version HTTP/1.1 improved this by completing the Common Gateway Interface (CGI), making it easier to maintain the Web Session and supporting HTTP cookies and file uploads.

Most client-server sessions are maintained by the transport layer - a single connection for a single session. However each transaction phase of a Web/HTTP session creates a separate connection. Maintaining session continuity between phases required a session ID. The session ID is embedded within the or

links of dynamic web pages so that it is passed back to the CGI. CGI then uses the session ID to ensure session continuity between transaction phases. One advantage of one connection-per-phase is that it works well over low bandwidth (modem) connections.

  1. Sessionless-oriented protocol and session-oriented protocol↩
JTG

Jayson Anthony Paul (born December 10, 1984), better known by the ring name JTG, is an American professional wrestler and author who is best known for his time in WWE.

JTG (disambiguation)

JTG may refer to:

  • JTG (born 1984), American professional wrestler
  • Jet Time, a Danish airline
  • John Thomas Griffith (born 1960), American singer-songwriter
  • Jordan Telecom Group
Szydłów

Szydłów is a village in Staszów County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, Lesser Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Szydłów. It lies approximately west of Staszów and south-east of the regional capital Kielce. The village has a population of 1,093.

Szydłów's history dates to the 12th century. It gained its city rights in 1329 and lost them in 1869. The village several tourist attractions, including the 16th-century Szydłów Synagogue, several buildings and churches dating to the 14th century and the ruins of a castle from the same period. The first official inventory of important buildings in Poland, A General View of the Nature of Ancient Monuments in the Kingdom of Poland, led by Kazimierz Stronczyński from 1844–55, describes the Szydłów Synagogue as one of Poland's architecturally notable buildings.

Szydłów (disambiguation)

Szydłów is a village (formerly a town) in Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, south-central Poland.

Szydłów may also refer to:

  • Polish name for Šiluva in Lithuania
  • Szydłów, Pabianice County in Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland)
  • Szydłów, Piotrków County in Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland)
  • Szydłów, Lubusz Voivodeship (west Poland)
  • Szydłów, Opole Voivodeship (south-west Poland)
Gigg

Gigg may refer to:

  • Gigg, Greater Manchester a suburb of Bury, Greater Manchester
    • Gigg Lane an all-seater football stadium in Bury, Greater Manchester
  • Ross Gigg, Australian rugby league footballer
Nannochloris

Nannochloris is a genus of green algae, in the family Coccomyxaceae.

Philedone

Philedone is a genus of moths belonging to the subfamily Tortricinae of the family Tortricidae. It contains only one species, Philedone gerningana, the cinquefoil tortrix or cinquefoil twist, which is found in most of Europe (except Portugal and the southern part of the Balkan Peninsula) and the Near East, east to eastern Russia. The habitat consists of heathlands.

The wingspan is 12–17 mm. Adults are on wing late June to August or September.

The larvae feed on Lotus, Plantago, Scabiosa, Peucedanum, Potentilla and Vaccinium species, as well as Populus tremula and Abies alba. They feed from within spun leaves or flowers.

Pteron

Pteron ( Gr. πτερονpteron wing) is an architectural term used by Pliny the Elder for the peristyle of the tomb of Mausolus, which was raised on a lofty podium, and so differed from an ordinary peristyle raised only on a stylobate, as in Greek temples, or on a low podium, as in Roman temples.

Hruby

Hruby or Hrubý is derived from the Czech/ Slovak word hrubý meaning crude, rough, gross or (in the old Czech) big. People with this name include:

  • Anna Hruby, Australian actress
  • Jan Hrubý, Czech rock violinist
  • Robert Hrubý, Czech footballer
  • Vincenz Hruby, Czech chess master
  • Vlastimil Hrubý, Czech footballer

The word and its derivatives are also contained in many names of places in the Czech Republic and Slovakia

  • Hrubá Skála, village in Semily district
  • Hrubá Vrbka, village in Hodonín district
  • Hrubčice, village in Prostějov district
  • Hrubý Jeseník (Nymburk District), village in Nymburk district
  • Hrubý Jeseník, mountains on the border between Moravia and Silesia
  • Hrubý Rohozec, castle
  • Hrubý Šúr, village in Senec district
Simhadhwani

Simhadhwani is a 1992 Indian Malayalam film, directed by K. G. Rajasekharan. The film stars Thilakan, Urvashi, Suresh Gopi and Mala Aravindan in lead roles. The film had musical score by Kannur Rajan.

Hylopaussus

Hylopaussus gracilis is a species of beetle in the family Carabidae, the only species in the genus Hylopaussus.

Sejm

The Sejm'' of the Republic of Poland (; ) is the lower house of the Polish parliament. It consists of 460 deputies ( posłowie'', literally "envoys", in Polish) elected by universal ballot and is presided over by a speaker called the "Marshal of the Sejm of the Republic of Poland" (Marszałek Sejmu Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej). In the Kingdom of Poland, "Sejm" referred to the entire three- chamber parliament of Poland, comprising the lower house (the Chamber of Envoys; ), the upper house (the Senate; Polish: Senat) and the King. It was thus a three-estate parliament. Since the Second Polish Republic (1918–1939), "Sejm" has referred only to the lower house of the parliament; the upper house is called the Senat Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej ("Senate of the Republic of Poland").

Sejm (disambiguation)

Sejm is a generic Polish word meaning "a gathering or diet (assembly)". More specifically, it may refer to:

  • Sejm of the Republic of Poland (Sejm Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej), the lower chamber of the parliament of Poland
  • Sejm of the Kingdom of Poland, the parliament of Kingdom of Poland
  • Sejm of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, common parliament of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
  • Confederated sejm (sejm skonfederowany)
  • Convocation sejm (sejm konwokacyjny)
  • Coronation sejm (sejm koronacyjny)
  • Election sejm (sejm elekcyjny)
  • Contract Sejm (sejm kontraktowy), 1989–1991
  • Convocation Sejm (1764) (sejm konwokacyjny 1764 r.)
  • Election Sejm of 1632 (sejm elekcyjny 1632 r.)
  • Great Sejm (Sejm Wielki), 1788–1792
  • Grodno Sejm (Sejm Grodzieński), 1793
  • Pacification Sejm (Sejm Pacyfikacyjny), 1736
  • Partition Sejm (Sejm Rozbiorowy), 1773–1776
  • Repnin Sejm (Sejm Repninowski), 1767–1768
  • Silent Sejm (Sejm Niemy), 1717
  • Galician Sejm (Sejm Galicyjski), legislature of the Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria, 1861–1918
  • Saeima, the parliament of Latvia
  • Seimas, the parliament of Lithuania
    • For historical Lithuanian parliamentary assemblies, see: Template: Seimas of Lithuania
  • Sejm of Four Lands, or Council of Four Lands (Sejm Czterech Ziem, Va'ad Arba' Aratzot), central Jewish authority in Poland, 1580–1764
  • Sejm of the Republic of Central Lithuania (Sejm Litwy Środkowej), see: Republic of Central Lithuania general election, 1922
  • Sejmik (diminutive of sejm), a regional or local legislature in Poland
    • Voivodeship sejmik (sejmik województwa)
  • Silesian Sejm or Silesian Parliament (Sejm Śląski), legislature of the Autonomous Silesian Voivodeship, 1920–1939
  • Sojm, the parliament of the historical unrecognized state of Carpatho-Ukraine
Antiqua (typeface class)

Antiqua is a style of text used to mimic the hand.

Antiqua

Antiqua, antique in Latin, may refer to :

  • Antiqua (typeface class), a typeface family designed between about 1470 and 1600
  • a Yersinia pestis biovar thought to correspond to the Plague of Justinian
Euonymeia

Euonymeia (, Evonímia), also known by its medieval name Trachones , and by its modern colloquial Ano Kalamaki (, Upper Kalamaki), is a historic settlement in Attica and currently a residential neighborhood within the municipality of Alimos on the southern suburbs of Athens, Greece. The area is an inland part of the south Athenian plain, situated between the foothills of Mount Hymettus and the southern coastal zone of Athens on the Saronic Gulf. The land is characterized by limestone hills and streams running from Hymettus toward the coast. Situated south of the center of Athens, Euonymeia has been developed and incorporated into the urban sprawl of the Greek capital.

The area displays some of the earliest urban settlements in Europe, with archeological sites showing continuous development from the Neolithic and Bronze Age periods. Major archeological finds include Early Helladic fortifications, Mycenaean era workshops and necropolis, a classical era amphitheater, and Paleochristian and Byzantine temples. Some of the earliest and best preserved specimens of Athenian Geometric pottery have been attributed to the Trachones workshop and are featured in museum collections, including two kraters on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.

At its peak during the 5th and 4th centuries BCE, the area was the center of the Deme of Euonymos, one of the most populous communities of Ancient Athens. Euonymos had its own acropolis, theater, industrial installations, and religious festivals. Several Euonymeians played a major role in Athenian politics and civic life, most notably in the trial of Socrates and in the expeditions of the Peloponnesian War.

Valuwa

Valuwa is sometimes used as an alternative name for:

  • Aplow, a village and associated district of Vanuatu
  • Volow, an extinct communalect previously spoken in the same area.
  • the small airstrip of Motalava island, also known as Valua or Valuwa airport, located close to the village of Aplow.

Usage examples of "valuwa".

Ne suffreth nat that men yow doon offense, And sklendre wyves, fieble as in bataille, Beth egre as is a tygre yond in Ynde, Ay clappeth as a mille, I yow consaille.