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Esperanto_grammar
Esperanto is a constructed auxiliary language. A highly regular grammar makes Esperanto much easier to learn than most other languages of the world, though particular features may be more or less advantageous or difficult depending on the language background of the speaker. Parts of speech are immediately obvious, for ...
Esperanto_grammar |@lemmatized esperanto:54 constructed:1 auxiliary:2 language:32 highly:1 regular:3 grammar:13 make:11 much:7 easy:1 learn:2 world:2 though:7 particular:2 feature:3 may:28 less:2 advantageous:1 difficult:2 depend:5 background:1 speaker:4 part:17 speech:16 immediately:1 obvious:1 example:16 τhe:1 suffix...
5,101
Henri_Chopin
Henri Chopin (June 18, 1922 – January 3, 2008) was an avant-garde poet and musician. Henri Chopin was a little-known but key figure of the French avant-garde during the second half of the 20th century. Known primarily as a concrete and sound poet, he created a large body of pioneering recordings using early tape recor...
Henri_Chopin |@lemmatized henri:3 chopin:5 june:1 january:1 avant:2 garde:2 poet:3 musician:1 little:1 know:2 key:1 figure:1 french:1 second:1 half:1 century:1 primarily:1 concrete:1 sound:5 create:1 large:1 body:1 pioneer:1 recording:2 use:1 early:2 tape:1 recorder:1 studio:1 technology:1 manipulated:1 human:1 voice:1...
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Horses_(album)
Horses is the debut album by American musician Patti Smith, released in 1975 on Arista Records. The record was a key factor and major influence on the New York punk rock scene. A member of the Mercer Arts Center crowd and a friend of Richard Hell, Patti Smith came to CBGB for the first time to see The Voidoids perform...
Horses_(album) |@lemmatized horse:11 debut:1 album:14 american:1 musician:3 patti:7 smith:23 release:8 arista:1 record:7 key:1 factor:1 major:1 influence:4 new:2 york:2 punk:4 rock:7 scene:2 member:2 mercer:1 art:1 center:1 crowd:1 friend:1 richard:5 hell:1 come:1 cbgb:1 first:3 time:7 see:1 voidoids:1 perform:1 vetera...
5,103
Database_normalization
In the field of relational database design, normalization is a systematic way of ensuring that a database structure is suitable for general-purpose querying and free of certain undesirable characteristics—insertion, update, and deletion anomalies—that could lead to a loss of data integrity. Codd, E.F. The Relational M...
Database_normalization |@lemmatized field:1 relational:22 database:38 design:17 normalization:20 systematic:1 way:4 ensure:1 structure:9 suitable:2 general:3 purpose:5 querying:2 free:3 certain:6 undesirable:1 characteristic:2 insertion:4 update:9 deletion:6 anomaly:12 could:6 lead:2 loss:1 data:47 integrity:1 codd:22 ...
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Fernando_Pessoa
Pessoa's statue in front of famous Lisbon café "A Brasileira". Fernando António Nogueira Pessoa (; b. June 13, 1888 in Lisbon, Portugal — d. November 30, 1935 in the same city) was a Portuguese poet and writer. He was also a literary critic and translator. The critic Harold Bloom referred to him in the book The Wester...
Fernando_Pessoa |@lemmatized pessoa:199 statue:2 front:2 famous:2 lisbon:20 café:1 brasileira:2 fernando:119 antónio:7 nogueira:1 b:4 june:3 portugal:7 november:1 city:5 portuguese:32 poet:25 writer:6 also:5 literary:9 critic:6 translator:4 harold:5 bloom:6 refer:4 book:23 western:2 canon:2 representative:1 twentieth:3...
5,105
Michael_Jordan
Michael Jeffrey Jordan (born February 17, 1963) is a retired American professional basketball player and active businessman. His biography on the National Basketball Association (NBA) website states, "By acclamation, Michael Jordan is the greatest basketball player of all time." Michael Jordan, nba.com/history, accesse...
Michael_Jordan |@lemmatized michael:48 jeffrey:3 jordan:304 born:1 february:39 retired:1 american:8 professional:7 basketball:44 player:52 active:1 businessman:1 biography:3 national:5 association:5 nba:111 website:1 state:11 acclamation:1 great:18 time:63 com:99 history:31 access:132 january:46 one:20 effectively:1 ma...
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Abbreviator
Abbreviator, plural Abbreviators in English or Abbreviatores in Latin, also called Breviators, were a body of writers in the papal chancery, whose business was to sketch out and prepare in due form the pope's bulls, briefs and consistorial decrees before these are written out in extenso by the scriptores. They are fir...
Abbreviator |@lemmatized abbreviator:27 plural:1 english:1 abbreviatores:4 latin:2 also:8 call:4 breviators:1 body:1 writer:3 papal:6 chancery:15 whose:1 business:2 sketch:1 prepare:2 due:1 form:6 pope:22 bull:7 brief:3 consistorial:1 decree:6 write:3 extenso:1 scriptores:1 first:2 mention:2 extravagantes:1 john:3 xxii...
5,107
George_Cukor
George Cukor (July 7, 1899 – January 24, 1983) was an Academy Award-winning American film director who mainly concentrated on comedies and literary adaptations. His career flourished at RKO and later MGM, where he directed a string of impressive films including What Price Hollywood? (1932), A Bill of Divorcement (1932)...
George_Cukor |@lemmatized george:6 cukor:68 july:2 january:2 academy:4 award:7 win:4 american:3 film:35 director:24 mainly:1 concentrate:2 comedy:3 literary:2 adaptation:2 career:8 flourish:1 rko:3 later:6 mgm:3 direct:17 string:1 impressive:1 include:7 price:3 hollywood:13 bill:5 divorcement:3 dinner:3 eight:2 little:...
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Natural_monopoly
In economics, a natural monopoly occurs when, due to the economies of scale of a particular industry, the maximum efficiency of production and distribution is realized through a single supplier. Natural monopolies arise where the largest supplier in an industry, often the first supplier in a market, has an overwhelmin...
Natural_monopoly |@lemmatized economics:2 natural:37 monopoly:54 occur:2 due:1 economy:15 scale:9 particular:4 industry:26 maximum:1 efficiency:3 production:7 distribution:3 realize:1 single:1 supplier:6 arise:4 large:19 often:13 first:2 market:36 overwhelming:2 cost:35 advantage:8 actual:2 potential:4 competitor:7 ten...
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January_1
The preceding day is December 31 of the previous year. __TOC__ The ancient Romans began their consular year on January 1, ever since 153 BC. During the Middle Ages under the influence of the Christian Church, many countries moved the start of the year to one of several important Christian festivals — December 25 (the ...
January_1 |@lemmatized preceding:1 day:18 december:3 previous:1 year:22 ancient:1 roman:6 begin:13 consular:1 january:11 ever:1 since:2 bc:3 middle:1 age:1 influence:1 christian:7 church:4 many:3 country:12 move:1 start:7 one:3 several:1 important:1 festival:2 nativity:1 jesus:2 march:6 annunciation:1 even:1 easter:1 e...
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Ottawa_Senators
The Ottawa Senators are a professional ice hockey team based in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. They are members of the Northeast Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The Senators play their home games at the 20,500 capacity Scotiabank Place (originally named the 'Palladium', and later the '...
Ottawa_Senators |@lemmatized ottawa:42 senator:71 professional:1 ice:6 hockey:10 team:70 base:1 ontario:6 canada:4 member:3 northeast:5 division:3 eastern:7 conference:8 national:1 league:9 nhl:40 play:28 home:13 game:43 capacity:1 scotiabank:3 place:10 originally:1 name:9 palladium:1 later:2 corel:2 centre:4 found:2 e...
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Imperial_Airways
BOAC Speedbird logo, adopted following the merger of UK airlines in 1939, it was commissioned by Imperial Airways who rarely used it on their own planes prior to 1939. According to Adenair who also used it under their BOAC ownership, it was designed by Theyre Lee-Elliot. Speedbird is now the callsign of British Airways...
Imperial_Airways |@lemmatized boac:3 speedbird:4 logo:2 adopt:2 follow:2 merger:1 uk:1 airline:5 commission:2 imperial:20 airway:22 rarely:1 use:5 plane:2 prior:1 accord:1 adenair:1 also:2 ownership:1 design:2 theyre:1 lee:1 elliot:1 callsign:1 british:11 early:1 commercial:2 long:2 range:2 air:16 transport:4 company:7...
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Jazz_guitar
Hollowbody electric guitars are quite common in jazz; the Gibson ES-175 is one of the most popular models. The term jazz guitar may refer to either a type of guitar or to the variety of playing styles used in the various genres which are commonly termed "jazz." The guitar has a long history in jazz music, as both an en...
Jazz_guitar |@lemmatized hollowbody:1 electric:13 guitar:79 quite:1 common:1 jazz:101 gibson:5 e:3 one:2 popular:5 model:1 term:2 may:4 refer:1 either:2 type:5 variety:3 play:18 style:34 use:29 various:1 genre:5 commonly:1 long:1 history:2 music:12 ensemble:2 solo:11 instrument:17 shape:1 influential:1 guitarist:43 aco...
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Beta_sheet
Diagram of β-pleated sheet with H-bonding between protein strands The β sheet (also β-pleated sheet) is the second form of regular secondary structure in proteins consisting of beta strands connected laterally by three or more hydrogen bonds, forming a generally twisted, pleated sheet (the most common form of regular ...
Beta_sheet |@lemmatized diagram:2 β:80 pleated:3 sheet:41 h:6 bonding:8 protein:20 strand:64 also:6 second:1 form:18 regular:2 secondary:5 structure:17 consist:4 beta:13 connect:3 laterally:1 three:5 hydrogen:28 bond:33 generally:1 twist:5 common:7 alpha:3 helix:12 stretch:2 amino:9 acid:9 typically:1 long:5 whose:2 pe...
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North_American_Free_Trade_Agreement
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA; , ) ( [TLCAN], [ALENA]) is a trilateral trade bloc in North America created by the governments of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The agreement creating the trade bloc came into force on January 1, 1994. It superseded the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement...
North_American_Free_Trade_Agreement |@lemmatized north:18 american:27 free:17 trade:51 agreement:40 nafta:106 tlcan:1 alena:1 trilateral:1 bloc:4 america:10 create:6 government:27 united:21 state:29 canada:46 mexico:33 come:4 force:2 january:4 supersede:1 u:53 term:2 combine:1 purchase:2 power:1 parity:1 gdp:2 member:5...
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Dispute_resolution
Dispute resolution is the process of resolving disputes between parties. Methods Methods of dispute resolution include: lawsuits (litigation) arbitration collaborative law mediation conciliation many types of negotiation facilitation One could theoretically include violence or even as part of this spectrum, but dispu...
Dispute_resolution |@lemmatized dispute:41 resolution:32 process:9 resolve:2 party:8 method:4 include:2 lawsuit:2 litigation:7 arbitration:6 collaborative:6 law:7 mediation:5 conciliation:2 many:4 type:2 negotiation:2 facilitation:1 one:2 could:2 theoretically:2 violence:3 even:2 part:1 spectrum:1 practitioner:2 usuall...
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The_Muppets
The Muppets are a group of puppet characters created by Jim Henson. Individually, a Muppet is one of the puppets made by Jim Henson or his company's workshop. Although the term is often used erroneously to refer to any puppet that resembles the distinctive style of The Muppet Show the term is both an informal name and ...
The_Muppets |@lemmatized muppets:54 group:1 puppet:13 character:22 create:4 jim:18 henson:24 individually:1 muppet:46 one:7 make:8 company:9 workshop:5 although:2 term:4 often:3 use:6 erroneously:1 refer:2 resemble:1 distinctive:1 style:1 show:20 informal:1 name:2 legal:2 trademark:2 link:2 word:2 say:1 combine:1 mario...
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Ink
Bottles of ink from Germany An ink is a liquid containing various pigments and/or dyes used for coloring a surface to produce an image, text, or design. Ink is used for drawing and/or writing with a pen, brush or quill. Thicker inks, in paste form, are used extensively in letterpress and lithographic printing. Ink is...
Ink |@lemmatized bottle:2 ink:138 germany:1 liquid:2 contain:3 various:3 pigment:10 dye:19 use:32 color:10 surface:7 produce:5 image:2 text:3 design:2 draw:3 write:12 pen:14 brush:2 quill:1 thicker:1 paste:1 form:4 extensively:1 letterpress:1 lithographic:1 printing:9 complex:2 medium:1 consisting:1 comprise:1 solvent:...
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Dyson_sphere
A cut-away diagram of an idealized Dyson shell, a variant on Dyson's original concept, with a radius of 1 AU. A Dyson sphere (or shell as it appeared in the original paper) is a hypothetical megastructure originally described by Freeman Dyson. Such a "sphere" would be a system of orbiting solar power satellites meant ...
Dyson_sphere |@lemmatized cut:1 away:2 diagram:4 idealized:1 dyson:69 shell:36 variant:13 original:7 concept:12 radius:10 au:13 sphere:45 appear:2 paper:5 hypothetical:2 megastructure:1 originally:1 describe:7 freeman:2 would:61 system:18 orbit:11 solar:13 power:9 satellite:8 mean:3 completely:3 encompass:2 star:51 cap...
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Batman_(1989_film)
Batman is a 1989 superhero film based on the DC Comics character of the same name. Tim Burton directed the film, which stars Michael Keaton, with Jack Nicholson, Kim Basinger, Robert Wuhl and Jack Palance. The film, in which Batman deals with the rise of a powerful villain known as "the Joker", is the first installment...
Batman_(1989_film) |@lemmatized batman:77 superhero:4 film:51 base:4 dc:4 comic:21 character:9 name:3 tim:13 burton:47 direct:4 star:4 michael:15 keaton:15 jack:16 nicholson:18 kim:4 basinger:5 robert:3 wuhl:5 palance:3 deal:3 rise:2 powerful:1 villain:3 know:4 joker:23 first:12 installment:1 warner:21 bros:12 series:1...
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Auger_effect
The Auger effect ( ) is a phenomenon in physics in which the transition of an electron in an atom filling in an inner-shell vacancy causes the emission of another electron. When an electron is removed from a core level of an atom, leaving a vacancy, an electron from a higher energy level may fall into the vacancy, re...
Auger_effect |@lemmatized auger:18 effect:9 phenomenon:1 physic:2 transition:6 electron:23 atom:6 filling:1 inner:1 shell:2 vacancy:3 cause:2 emission:3 another:2 remove:1 core:1 level:3 leave:1 high:2 energy:14 may:1 fall:1 result:2 release:2 although:1 sometimes:1 form:1 emitted:1 photon:2 also:2 transfer:1 eject:2 s...
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Invertebrate
Thelenota ananas, a sea cucumber (phylum: Echinodermata) An invertebrate is an animal without a vertebral column. The group includes 95% of all animal species Encarta Reference Library Home Premium 2005 DVD. Article - Invertebrate. — all animals except those in the Chordate subphylum Vertebrata (fish, reptiles, amphi...
Invertebrate |@lemmatized thelenota:1 ananas:1 sea:6 cucumber:2 phylum:5 echinodermata:2 invertebrate:13 animal:7 without:1 vertebral:1 column:1 group:4 include:1 specie:1 encarta:1 reference:2 library:1 home:1 premium:1 dvd:1 article:1 except:1 chordate:1 subphylum:2 vertebrata:1 fish:1 reptile:1 amphibian:1 bird:1 ma...
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Transport_in_Laos
This article concerns systems of transportation in Laos. Laos is a country in Asia, which possesses a number of modern transportation systems, including several highways and a number of airports. As a landlocked country, Laos possesses no ports or harbours on the sea, and the difficulty of navigation on the Mekong mea...
Transport_in_Laos |@lemmatized article:1 concern:1 system:2 transportation:2 lao:24 country:4 asia:1 possess:3 number:2 modern:1 include:2 several:1 highway:5 airport:6 landlocked:1 laos:4 port:1 harbour:1 sea:2 difficulty:1 navigation:1 mekong:4 mean:1 also:3 significant:1 transport:3 route:3 railway:5 map:2 one:1 sho...
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Interpreted_language
In computer programming an interpreted language is a programming language whose implementation often takes the form of an interpreter. Theoretically, any language may be compiled or interpreted, so this designation is applied purely because of common implementation practice and not some underlying property of a languag...
Interpreted_language |@lemmatized computer:1 program:5 interpreted:7 language:28 programming:4 whose:1 implementation:5 often:4 take:2 form:4 interpreter:5 theoretically:1 may:2 compile:16 interpret:13 designation:1 apply:1 purely:1 common:2 practice:1 underlie:1 property:1 many:4 implement:2 use:9 compiler:5 include:3...
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Foreign_relations_of_Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyzstan favors close relations with other members of the Commonwealth of Independent States, particularly Kazakhstan and Russia. While Kyrgyzstan was initially determined to stay in the ruble zone, the stringent conditions set forth by the Russian Government prompted Kyrgyzstan to introduce its own currency, the so...
Foreign_relations_of_Kyrgyzstan |@lemmatized kyrgyzstan:16 favor:1 close:1 relation:3 member:2 commonwealth:1 independent:1 state:2 particularly:1 kazakhstan:4 russia:3 initially:2 determine:1 stay:1 ruble:3 zone:2 stringent:1 condition:1 set:1 forth:1 russian:1 government:2 prompt:1 introduce:2 currency:1 som:1 may:1 ...
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Flugelhorn
The flugelhorn (also spelled fluegelhorn or flügelhorn) is a brass instrument resembling a trumpet but with a wider, conical bore. Some consider it to be a member of the saxhorn family developed by Adolphe Sax (who also developed the saxophone); however, other historians assert that it derives from the keyed bugle desi...
Flugelhorn |@lemmatized flugelhorn:24 also:3 spell:1 fluegelhorn:2 flügelhorn:2 brass:3 instrument:6 resemble:1 trumpet:12 wider:1 conical:3 bore:1 consider:1 member:2 saxhorn:1 family:1 develop:2 adolphe:2 sax:2 saxophone:1 however:3 historian:1 assert:1 derive:1 key:1 bugle:2 design:1 michael:2 saurle:1 father:1 muni...
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Burma
Burma, officially the Union of Myanmar, is the largest country by geographical area in mainland Southeast Asia, or Indochina. The country is bordered by the People's Republic of China on the northeast, Laos on the east, Thailand on the southeast, Bangladesh on the west, India on the northwest, and the Bay of Bengal to ...
Burma |@lemmatized burma:172 officially:3 union:21 myanmar:38 large:9 country:91 geographical:2 area:16 mainland:2 southeast:13 asia:12 indochina:1 border:10 people:21 republic:7 china:14 northeast:2 lao:4 east:8 thailand:7 bangladesh:3 west:3 india:29 northwest:4 bay:3 bengal:4 southwest:2 andaman:2 sea:2 define:2 sou...
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Foreign_relations_of_Jamaica
Jamaica has diplomatic relations with most nations and is a member of the United Nations and the Organization of American States. In the follow-on meetings to the December 1994 Summit of the Americas, Jamaica--together with Uruguay--was given the responsibility of coordinating discussions on invigorating society. Jamai...
Foreign_relations_of_Jamaica |@lemmatized jamaica:15 diplomatic:3 relation:4 nation:4 member:2 united:3 organization:1 american:1 state:4 follow:1 meeting:1 december:1 summit:1 america:3 together:1 uruguay:1 give:1 responsibility:1 coordinate:1 discussion:1 invigorate:1 society:1 also:2 chair:1 work:1 group:1 small:1 e...
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Liberia
Liberia , officially the Republic of Liberia, is a country on the west coast of Africa, bordered by Sierra Leone, Guinea, Côte d'Ivoire, and the Atlantic Ocean. As of 2008, the nation is estimated to be home to 3,489,072 people and cover . Liberia has a hot equatorial climate with most rainfall arriving in summer with ...
Liberia |@lemmatized liberia:98 officially:1 republic:4 country:17 west:10 coast:10 africa:18 border:5 sierra:8 leone:7 guinea:5 côte:2 ivoire:3 atlantic:4 ocean:3 nation:11 estimate:4 home:2 people:16 cover:2 hot:2 equatorial:2 climate:2 rainfall:2 arriving:1 summer:2 harsh:2 harmattan:2 wind:2 dry:3 season:1 populate...
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Commutator_subgroup
In mathematics, more specifically in abstract algebra, the commutator subgroup or derived subgroup of a group is the subgroup generated by all the commutators of the group. The commutator subgroup is important because it is the smallest normal subgroup such that the quotient group of the original group by this subgrou...
Commutator_subgroup |@lemmatized mathematics:1 specifically:1 abstract:1 algebra:1 commutator:27 subgroup:21 derive:9 group:48 generate:2 important:2 small:1 normal:3 quotient:2 original:1 abelian:14 sense:1 provide:1 measure:1 far:1 large:1 le:1 element:8 g:39 h:9 equal:3 identity:7 e:1 gh:1 hg:1 commute:2 general:1 f...
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Carl_Friedrich_Abel
Portrait of Carl Friedrich Abel by Thomas Gainsborough, 1777 Carl Friedrich Abel (December 22, 1723 – June 20 1787) was a German composer of the Classical era. (The Chambers Biographical Dictionary gives his year of birth as 1725.) Chambers Biographical Dictionary, ISBN 0-550-18022-2, page 3 He was a fine player on t...
Carl_Friedrich_Abel |@lemmatized portrait:1 carl:3 friedrich:3 abel:14 thomas:1 gainsborough:1 december:1 june:2 german:1 composer:1 classical:1 era:1 chamber:4 biographical:2 dictionary:2 give:2 year:3 birth:1 isbn:1 page:1 fine:1 player:3 viola:76 da:75 gamba:75 compose:1 important:1 music:1 instrument:3 bear:1 cöthe...
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Politics_of_Liberia
Politics of Liberia takes place in a framework of a presidential representative democratic republic modeled on the government of the United States, whereby the President is the head of state and head of government; unlike the United States, however, Liberia is a unitary state as opposed to a federation and has a plurif...
Politics_of_Liberia |@lemmatized politics:3 liberia:20 take:2 place:2 framework:1 presidential:1 representative:2 democratic:2 republic:3 model:2 government:20 united:5 state:8 whereby:1 president:13 head:2 unlike:1 however:3 unitary:1 oppose:1 federation:1 pluriform:1 multi:1 party:10 system:2 rather:1 two:4 character...
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Edward_VI_of_England
Edward VI (12 October 1537 – 6 July 1553) became King of England and Ireland on 28 January 1547 and was crowned on 20 February at the age of nine. Henry VIII had replaced the style "Lord of Ireland" with "King of Ireland" in 1541; Edward also maintained the English claim to the French throne but did not rule France. Se...
Edward_VI_of_England |@lemmatized edward:152 vi:16 october:6 july:10 become:19 king:55 england:20 ireland:3 january:8 crown:12 february:7 age:10 nine:8 henry:46 viii:24 replace:3 style:1 lord:13 also:20 maintain:3 english:19 claim:9 french:5 throne:10 rule:13 france:11 see:9 son:10 jane:27 seymour:30 third:4 monarch:1 ...
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Alexander_I_of_Serbia
Not to be confused with Alexander I of Yugoslavia. Alexander I or Aleksandar Obrenović (Serbian Cyrillic: Александар Обреновић) (August 14, 1876 - June 11, 1903) was king of Serbia from 1889 to 1903. Accession In 1889, his father, King Milan, unexpectedly abdicated and withdrew to private life, proclaiming Alexander ...
Alexander_I_of_Serbia |@lemmatized confuse:1 alexander:16 yugoslavia:1 aleksandar:1 obrenović:4 serbian:4 cyrillic:1 александар:1 обреновић:1 august:2 june:2 king:19 serbia:5 accession:1 father:3 milan:4 unexpectedly:1 abdicate:1 withdraw:1 private:1 life:1 proclaim:5 regency:1 attain:1 majority:2 eighteen:1 year:3 age...
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Godzilla_vs._Mothra
, released as Godzilla and Mothra: The Battle for Earth outside of Japan, is the 19th installment in the Godzilla series of films. The movie was released theatrically in Japan on December 12, 1992. It was directed by Takao Okawara from a screenplay by Kazuki Omori, produced by Tomoyuki Tanaka and Shogo Tomiyama, with ...
Godzilla_vs._Mothra |@lemmatized release:8 godzilla:42 mothra:39 battle:9 earth:8 outside:1 japan:9 installment:1 series:4 film:12 movie:5 theatrically:1 december:1 direct:2 takao:1 okawara:1 screenplay:1 kazuki:1 omori:1 produce:1 tomoyuki:1 tanaka:1 shogo:1 tomiyama:1 special:1 effect:2 provide:1 koichi:1 kawakita:1 ...
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Aquilegia
__NOTOC__ Aquilegia () Sunset Western Garden Book, 1995:606–607 is a genus of about 60-70 species of columbines, herbaceous perennial plants that are found in meadows, woodlands, and at higher altitudes throughout the Northern Hemisphere. They are known for their distinctive flowers, generally bell-shaped, with each ...
Aquilegia |@lemmatized aquilegia:89 sunset:1 western:3 garden:6 book:2 genus:2 specie:8 columbine:54 herbaceous:1 perennial:2 plant:11 find:2 meadow:1 woodland:1 high:2 altitude:1 throughout:1 northern:1 hemisphere:1 know:1 distinctive:1 flower:7 generally:1 bell:1 shape:1 petal:1 modify:1 elongated:1 nectar:1 spur:1 f...
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House
A ranch style house in Salinas, California Example of an early Victorian "Gingerbread House" in the United States, built in 1855 The noun house generally refers to a shelter or building or structure that is a dwelling or place for habitation by human beings. The term includes many kinds of dwellings ranging from rud...
House |@lemmatized ranch:1 style:3 house:124 salina:1 california:3 example:7 early:2 victorian:1 gingerbread:1 united:9 state:8 build:13 noun:1 generally:5 refer:1 shelter:6 building:17 structure:8 dwelling:8 place:2 habitation:1 human:8 term:1 include:14 many:8 kind:3 range:1 rudimentary:1 hut:3 nomadic:1 tribe:1 high...
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Karlheinz_Stockhausen
Karlheinz Stockhausen, 2005 Karlheinz Stockhausen (22 August 1928 – 5 December 2007) was a German composer, widely acknowledged by critics as one of the most important (Barrett 1988, 45; Harvey 1975b, 705; Hopkins 1972, 33; Klein 1968, 117) but also controversial (Power 1990, 30) composers of the twentieth and early t...
Karlheinz_Stockhausen |@lemmatized karlheinz:74 stockhausen:296 august:17 december:16 german:32 composer:38 widely:3 acknowledge:6 critic:5 one:21 important:6 barrett:4 harvey:3 hopkins:3 klein:2 also:20 controversial:1 power:2 twentieth:5 early:12 twenty:2 first:23 century:8 another:4 call:6 great:6 visionary:1 music:...
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Nitroglycerin
Nitroglycerin (NG), (United States spelling) also known as nitroglycerine, ( Spelling), trinitroglycerin, trinitroglycerine, 1,2,3-trinitroxypropane and glyceryl trinitrate, is a heavy, colorless, oily, explosive liquid obtained by nitrating glycerol. Since the 1860s, it has been used as an active ingredient in the man...
Nitroglycerin |@lemmatized nitroglycerin:43 ng:2 united:2 state:3 spell:2 also:10 know:9 nitroglycerine:4 trinitroglycerin:1 trinitroglycerine:1 trinitroxypropane:1 glyceryl:3 trinitrate:3 heavy:1 colorless:1 oily:1 explosive:22 liquid:6 obtain:1 nitrate:3 glycerol:1 since:2 use:29 active:4 ingredient:4 manufacture:5 s...
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Hamas
Hamas ( Ḥamās, an acronym of حركة المقاومة الاسلامية Ḥarakat al-Muqāwamat al-Islāmiyyah, meaning "Islamic Resistance Movement") is a Palestinian Islamic socio-political organization which includes a paramilitary force, the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades. Hamas is considered wholly, or in part, a terrorist organizati...
Hamas |@lemmatized hamas:399 ḥamās:1 acronym:3 حركة:2 المقاومة:2 الاسلامية:2 ḥarakat:1 al:52 muqāwamat:1 islāmiyyah:1 mean:4 islamic:30 resistance:10 movement:18 palestinian:123 socio:1 political:27 organization:30 include:20 paramilitary:7 force:18 izz:8 ad:8 din:8 qassam:13 brigade:8 consider:6 wholly:1 part:9 terror...
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Boston_Corbett
Thomas P. "Boston" Corbett (1832 – presumed dead 1894) was the Union Army soldier who shot and killed Abraham Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth. He disappeared after 1888, but circumstantial evidence suggests that he died in the Great Hinckley Fire in 1894, although this remains impossible to substantiate. Early ...
Boston_Corbett |@lemmatized thomas:2 p:4 boston:8 corbett:24 presume:1 dead:3 union:4 army:6 soldier:2 shoot:3 kill:2 abraham:2 lincoln:3 assassin:2 john:6 wilkes:5 booth:11 disappear:1 circumstantial:1 evidence:1 suggest:1 die:4 great:2 hinckley:3 fire:3 although:1 remain:2 impossible:1 substantiate:1 early:1 life:3 b...
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Isaac_Abendana
Isaac Abendana (c. 1640 - 1710) was the younger brother of Jacob Abendana, and became hakam of the Spanish Portuguese Synagogue in London after his brother died. Abendana moved to England before his brother, in 1662, and taught Hebrew at Cambridge University. He completed an unpublished Latin translation of the Mishna...
Isaac_Abendana |@lemmatized isaac:1 abendana:4 c:1 young:1 brother:4 jacob:1 become:1 hakam:1 spanish:1 portuguese:1 synagogue:1 london:1 die:1 move:1 england:1 teach:1 hebrew:2 cambridge:3 university:2 complete:1 unpublished:1 latin:1 translation:1 mishnah:1 sell:1 book:1 bodleian:1 library:1 oxford:2 take:1 teaching:...
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Politics_of_Oman
Politics of Oman takes place in a framework of an absolute monarchy whereby the Sultan of Oman is not only head of state, but also the head of government. Chief of state and government is the hereditary sultan, Qābūs ibn Saˤīd as-Saˤīd, who appoints a cabinet to assist him. In the early 1990s, the sultan instituted an ...
Politics_of_Oman |@lemmatized politics:1 oman:18 take:1 place:2 framework:1 absolute:1 monarchy:3 whereby:1 sultan:14 head:2 state:6 also:3 government:6 chief:1 hereditary:1 qābūs:1 ibn:1 saˤīd:2 appoint:2 cabinet:4 assist:1 early:1 institute:2 elected:1 advisory:1 council:4 majlis:4 ash:1 shura:2 though:2 omani:3 elig...
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Epimenides_paradox
The Epimenides paradox is a problem in logic. It is named after the Cretan philosopher Epimenides of Knossos (alive circa 600 BC), who stated (Kretes aei pseystai), "Cretans, always liars". There is no single statement of the problem; a typical variation is given in the book Gödel, Escher, Bach, by Douglas R. Hofstadt...
Epimenides_paradox |@lemmatized epimenides:42 paradox:27 problem:7 logic:6 name:1 cretan:34 philosopher:2 knossos:1 alive:1 circa:1 bc:1 state:3 kretes:1 aei:1 pseystai:1 always:12 liars:7 single:2 statement:19 typical:2 variation:3 give:2 book:1 gödel:2 escher:2 bach:2 douglas:2 r:3 hofstadter:2 make:5 one:10 immortal...
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Forcemeat
Forcemeat is a mixture of ground, lean meat emulsified with fat. The emulsification can be accomplished by either grinding, sieving, or pureeing the ingredients. The emulsification may either be smooth or coarse, depending on the desired consistency of the final product. Forcemeats are used in the production of num...
Forcemeat |@lemmatized forcemeat:13 mixture:1 ground:2 lean:2 meat:5 emulsify:1 fat:4 emulsification:2 accomplish:1 either:2 grinding:1 sieve:1 puree:2 ingredient:3 may:1 smooth:1 coarse:2 depend:1 desired:2 consistency:1 final:1 product:2 use:3 production:2 numerous:1 item:2 find:1 charcuterie:1 include:4 quenelles:1 ...
5,145
Eight-ball
A player about to take a shot. Eight-ball, sometimes called stripes and solids and, more rarely, bigs and littles or highs and lows, is a pocket billiards (pool) game popular in much of the world, and the subject of international amateur and professional competition. Played on a pool table with six pockets, the game is...
Eight-ball |@lemmatized player:41 take:6 shot:36 eight:28 ball:177 sometimes:2 call:9 stripe:10 solid:13 rarely:1 bigs:1 little:1 high:1 low:3 pocket:67 billiards:3 pool:38 game:37 popular:3 much:2 world:13 subject:1 international:14 amateur:11 professional:7 competition:2 play:19 table:26 six:1 universally:1 know:1 co...
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Astoria,_Oregon
The Astoria Column The city of Astoria is the county seat of Clatsop County, Oregon, United States. Situated near the mouth of the Columbia River, the city was named after the American investor (and first millionaire) John Jacob Astor. His fur trading company founded Fort Astoria at the site in 1810. Astoria was incor...
Astoria,_Oregon |@lemmatized astoria:57 column:3 city:18 county:2 seat:1 clatsop:4 oregon:7 united:5 state:7 situate:1 near:3 mouth:3 columbia:10 river:6 name:1 american:13 investor:1 first:8 millionaire:1 john:5 jacob:5 astor:9 fur:9 trading:3 company:6 found:2 fort:7 site:1 incorporate:2 locate:2 south:3 shore:3 serv...
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DirkJan
DirkJan is a comic, the creation of Dutch author and artist Mark Retera. It is also the name of its main character. DirkJan is a loser who stumbles through life in mostly three-panel comic strips. He started out in 1989 as a student at the current Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands, where he lived in a typ...
DirkJan |@lemmatized dirkjan:10 comic:6 creation:1 dutch:1 author:1 artist:1 mark:1 retera:1 also:1 name:2 main:1 character:1 loser:1 stumble:1 life:2 mostly:1 three:1 panel:1 strip:4 start:2 student:6 current:1 radboud:1 university:2 nijmegen:3 netherlands:3 live:1 typical:1 house:2 stereotypical:1 side:2 kick:2 fat:1...
5,148
Diaspora
The term diaspora (in Greek, διασπορά – "a scattering [of seeds]") refers to the movement of any population sharing common ethnic identity who were either forced to leave or voluntarily left their settled territory, and became residents in areas often far remote from the former. It is converse to the nomadic culture, a...
Diaspora |@lemmatized term:10 diaspora:75 greek:15 διασπορά:1 scatter:5 seed:1 refers:3 movement:4 population:21 share:1 common:2 ethnic:8 identity:1 either:1 force:2 leave:8 voluntarily:1 settled:2 territory:3 become:8 resident:1 area:3 often:3 far:3 remote:1 former:3 converse:1 nomadic:1 culture:6 appropriately:1 lin...
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Phonology
Phonology (from , phōnē, "voice, sound" and , lógos, "word, speech, subject of discussion") is the systematic use of sound to encode meaning in any spoken human language, or the field of linguistics studying this use. Just as a language has syntax and vocabulary, it also has a phonology in the sense of a sound system. ...
Phonology |@lemmatized phonology:62 phōnē:1 voice:1 sound:33 lógos:1 word:19 speech:14 subject:1 discussion:1 systematic:1 use:8 encode:2 meaning:4 spoken:1 human:3 language:41 field:2 linguistics:9 study:8 syntax:2 vocabulary:1 also:8 sense:1 system:7 describe:6 formal:1 area:2 term:4 typically:1 linguistic:6 analysis...
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European_Free_Alliance
The European Free Alliance (EFA) is a European political party. It consists of various European political parties which advocate either full political independence (statehood), or some form of devolution or self-government for their country or region. The alliance has generally limited its membership to progressive par...
European_Free_Alliance |@lemmatized european:36 free:10 alliance:16 efa:35 political:7 party:51 consist:2 various:1 advocate:1 either:1 full:2 independence:3 statehood:1 form:7 devolution:1 self:1 government:2 country:1 region:7 generally:2 limit:1 membership:2 progressive:4 therefore:1 regionalist:7 member:20 particip...
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Motorola_6800
Motorola 6800 Microprocessor The 6800 is an 8-bit microprocessor produced by Motorola and released shortly after the Intel 8080 in late 1974. "We introduced our M6800 microprocessor system late in 1974 and it gained broad industry acceptance in 1975." It had 78 instructions, including the (in)famous, undocumented Ha...
Motorola_6800 |@lemmatized motorola:11 microprocessor:8 bit:11 produce:3 release:1 shortly:1 intel:3 late:5 introduce:1 system:9 gain:1 broad:1 industry:1 acceptance:1 instruction:23 include:4 famous:1 undocumented:1 halt:2 catch:2 fire:2 hcf:1 bus:6 test:1 may:1 first:5 index:9 register:12 usually:1 package:2 pin:2 di...
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Newfoundland_and_Labrador
Newfoundland and Labrador (; ) is a province of Canada, on the country's Atlantic coast in northeastern North America. This easternmost Canadian province comprises two main parts: the island of Newfoundland off the country's eastern coast, and Labrador on the mainland to the northwest of the island. A former colony a...
Newfoundland_and_Labrador |@lemmatized newfoundland:68 labrador:45 province:22 canada:18 country:2 atlantic:7 coast:3 northeastern:2 north:3 america:2 easternmost:3 canadian:12 comprise:2 two:4 main:1 part:6 island:11 eastern:1 mainland:2 northwest:1 former:1 colony:1 dominion:3 united:5 kingdom:1 become:4 tenth:2 ente...
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Alabama
Alabama (formally, the State of Alabama; ) is a state located in the southern region of the United States of America. It is bordered by Tennessee to the north, Georgia to the east, Florida and the Gulf of Mexico to the south, and Mississippi to the west. Alabama ranks 30th in total land area and ranks second in the siz...
Alabama |@lemmatized alabama:208 formally:1 state:155 locate:5 southern:12 region:9 united:15 america:5 border:4 tennessee:7 north:13 georgia:8 east:9 florida:5 gulf:10 mexico:6 south:12 mississippi:9 west:6 rank:9 total:11 land:9 area:34 second:7 size:1 inland:4 waterway:6 population:21 almost:3 million:3 resident:3 a...
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Embouchure
The embouchure of a trumpeter. The embouchure is the use of facial muscles and the shaping of the lips to the mouthpiece of a wind instrument. The word is of French origin and is related to the root bouche (fr.), 'mouth'. The proper embouchure allows the instrumentalist to play the instrument at its full range with a...
Embouchure |@lemmatized embouchure:76 trumpeter:1 use:23 facial:1 muscle:5 shaping:1 lip:46 mouthpiece:31 wind:2 instrument:15 word:1 french:4 origin:2 relate:4 root:1 bouche:1 fr:1 mouth:15 proper:2 allow:6 instrumentalist:1 play:10 full:3 range:4 clear:1 tone:5 without:1 strain:1 damage:2 one:6 brass:27 perform:2 sou...
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Meat
Varieties of meat. Meat is animal flesh that is used as food. Lawrie, 1. Most often, this means the skeletal muscle and associated fat, but it may also describe other edible tissues such as organs, livers, skin, brains, bone marrow, kidneys or lungs. The word meat is also used by the meat packing industry in a more re...
Meat |@lemmatized variety:2 meat:148 animal:68 flesh:10 use:11 food:16 lawrie:54 often:5 mean:2 skeletal:1 muscle:25 associate:5 fat:30 may:16 also:27 describe:2 edible:3 tissue:9 organ:2 liver:2 skin:1 brain:1 bone:3 marrow:1 kidney:1 lung:2 word:4 pack:1 industry:3 restrictive:2 sense:1 mammalian:2 specie:6 pig:14 ca...
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Kohlrabi
Kohlrabi (German Turnip) (Brassica oleracea Gongylodes Group) is a low, stout cultivar of the cabbage that will grow almost anywhere. It has been selected for its swollen, nearly spherical, Sputnik-like shape. The name comes from the German Kohl ("cabbage") plus Rübe ~ Rabi (Swiss German variant) ("turnip"), because ...
Kohlrabi |@lemmatized kohlrabi:15 german:3 turnip:2 brassica:3 oleracea:3 gongylodes:1 group:1 low:1 stout:1 cultivar:3 cabbage:5 grow:2 almost:1 anywhere:1 select:1 swollen:2 nearly:1 spherical:1 sputnik:1 like:1 shape:1 name:2 come:1 kohl:1 plus:1 rübe:1 rabi:1 swiss:1 variant:1 stem:3 resemble:1 latter:1 however:1 a...
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Clarence_Thomas
Clarence Thomas (born June 23, 1948) is an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, having served since 1991. Justice Thomas is the second African American to serve on the nation's highest court, after Justice Thurgood Marshall whom he succeeded. Thomas grew up in Georgia, and graduated from colle...
Clarence_Thomas |@lemmatized clarence:32 thomas:211 bear:3 june:2 associate:3 justice:94 supreme:53 court:104 united:30 state:57 serve:8 since:5 second:3 african:5 american:8 nation:2 high:9 thurgood:3 marshall:7 succeed:1 grow:2 georgia:7 graduate:3 college:7 law:53 school:17 new:20 england:2 appoint:6 assistant:8 att...
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Educational_psychology
Educational psychology is the study of how humans learn in educational settings, the effectiveness of educational interventions, the psychology of teaching, and the social psychology of schools as organizations. Although the terms "educational psychology" and "school psychology" are often used interchangeably, In the...
Educational_psychology |@lemmatized educational:137 psychology:104 study:13 human:4 learn:26 setting:9 effectiveness:1 intervention:4 teaching:4 social:19 school:25 organization:2 although:5 term:6 often:11 use:26 interchangeably:1 u:3 researcher:7 theorist:2 likely:1 identify:5 psychologist:42 whereas:2 practitioner:2...
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Military_of_Ivory_Coast
The National Armed Forces of Côte d'Ivoire (; FANCI) is the armed forces of Côte d'Ivoire (Ivory Coast). It consists the chief of staff and commander of the FANCI. Military regions Côte d'Ivoire is divided into five military regions, each commanded by a colonel: Library of Congress, Cote d'Ivoire Country Study, circa ...
Military_of_Ivory_Coast |@lemmatized national:3 armed:2 force:5 côte:7 ivoire:8 fanci:2 ivory:1 coast:1 consist:1 chief:1 staff:1 commander:1 military:9 region:8 divide:1 five:1 command:3 colonel:2 library:1 congress:1 cote:1 country:1 study:1 circa:1 access:1 january:2 army:3 majority:1 first:1 concentrate:1 around:1 ...
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Mirror
A mirror, reflecting a vase. A mirror is an object with at least one polished and therefore specularly reflective surface. The most familiar type of mirror is the plane mirror, which has a flat surface. Curved mirrors are also used, to produce magnified or diminished images or focus light or simply distort the reflect...
Mirror |@lemmatized mirror:226 reflect:34 vase:1 object:5 least:1 one:21 polish:5 therefore:2 specularly:1 reflective:11 surface:21 familiar:1 type:11 plane:4 flat:5 curve:3 also:25 use:69 produce:6 magnified:1 diminish:1 image:13 focus:6 light:40 simply:2 distort:2 reflected:1 commonly:6 personal:2 grooming:1 case:3 o...
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Musique_concrète
Musique concrète (French for "concrete music" or "real music"), is a form of electroacoustic music that utilises acousmatic sound as a compositional resource. The compositional material is not restricted to the inclusion of sonorities derived from musical instruments or voices, nor to elements traditionally thought o...
Musique_concrète |@lemmatized musique:21 concrète:9 french:4 concrete:13 music:28 real:1 form:3 electroacoustic:7 utilise:1 acousmatic:5 sound:66 compositional:5 resource:3 material:3 restrict:1 inclusion:1 sonority:1 derive:1 musical:6 instrument:3 voice:1 element:1 traditionally:1 think:1 melody:1 harmony:1 rhythm:1 ...
5,162
Emperor_Seinei
, or rather Shiraka no okimi was the 22nd emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. Titsingh, Isaac. (1834). Annales des empereurs du japon, pp. 28-29; Varley, Paul. (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki, pp. 115-116. No firm dates can be assigned to this emperor's life or reign, but Seinei is thought to...
Emperor_Seinei |@lemmatized rather:1 shiraka:3 okimi:1 emperor:7 japan:6 accord:2 traditional:2 order:1 succession:1 titsingh:2 isaac:2 annales:2 des:1 empereurs:2 du:2 japon:2 pp:3 varley:3 paul:4 jinnō:3 shōtōki:3 firm:1 date:2 assign:1 life:1 reign:2 seinei:3 think:1 rule:1 country:1 late:1 century:1 overall:1 pauci...
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Costa_Rica
Costa Rica, officially the Republic of Costa Rica ( or República de Costa Rica, ) is a country in Central America, bordered by Nicaragua to the north, Panama to the east and south, the Pacific Ocean to the west and south and the Caribbean Sea to the east. Costa Rica, which translates literally as "Rich Coast", was the...
Costa_Rica |@lemmatized costa:129 rica:97 officially:1 republic:8 república:1 de:12 country:49 central:25 america:15 border:8 nicaragua:4 north:4 panama:4 east:6 south:6 pacific:5 ocean:3 west:3 caribbean:7 sea:2 translate:3 literally:1 rich:3 coast:6 first:5 world:17 constitutionally:1 abolish:2 army:1 spanish:14 amon...
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Donegal_fiddle_tradition
The Donegal fiddle tradition is a type of Irish traditional music, based on a two-hundred year-old tradition (or possibly set of coexisting traditions) of playing the fiddle in County Donegal, Ireland. Donegal is a partly Irish-speaking highland-county in northwestern Ireland and one of the three counties of the northe...
Donegal_fiddle_tradition |@lemmatized donegal:37 fiddle:17 tradition:14 type:6 irish:16 traditional:7 music:22 base:1 two:1 hundred:1 year:1 old:5 possibly:1 set:1 coexist:1 play:10 county:8 ireland:6 partly:1 speaking:1 highland:2 northwestern:1 one:8 three:2 northern:2 province:1 ulster:1 part:1 republic:1 several:3 ...
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Greenland
Greenland (, meaning "Land of the Greenlanders"; ) is a member country of the Kingdom of Denmark located between the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans, east of the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Though physiographically and ethnically an Arctic island country historically and geographically a part of the continent of North Ame...
Greenland |@lemmatized greenland:122 meaning:1 land:10 greenlanders:6 member:3 country:12 kingdom:6 denmark:21 locate:1 arctic:8 atlantic:4 ocean:5 east:7 canadian:1 archipelago:2 though:1 physiographically:1 ethnically:1 island:27 historically:1 geographically:1 part:14 continent:2 north:6 america:3 since:7 century:7 ...
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Bisexuality
Bisexuality refers to sexual behavior with A study of the married bisexual male: paradox and resolution or physical attraction to people of both genders (male and female), or a bisexual orientation. People who have a bisexual orientation "can experience sexual, emotional, and affectional attraction to both their own ...
Bisexuality |@lemmatized bisexuality:43 refers:1 sexual:54 behavior:20 study:27 married:4 bisexual:131 male:28 paradox:1 resolution:1 physical:1 attraction:18 people:32 gender:3 female:24 orientation:29 experience:9 emotional:2 affectional:1 sex:49 opposite:3 also:18 refer:1 individual:9 sense:1 personal:2 social:13 id...
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Barcelona
Barcelona (Catalan , Spanish ) is the capital and most populous city of the Autonomous Community of Catalonia and the second largest city in Spain, with a population of 1,615,908 in 2008. It is the eleventh-most populous municipality in the European Union and sixth-most populous urban area in the European Union after ...
Barcelona |@lemmatized barcelona:150 catalan:21 spanish:15 capital:5 populous:3 city:112 autonomous:3 community:1 catalonia:18 second:7 large:13 spain:10 population:12 eleventh:1 municipality:3 european:4 union:6 sixth:1 urban:8 area:22 paris:1 london:4 ruhr:1 madrid:5 milan:1 demographia:1 world:16 million:3 united:4 ...
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Extinction_event
An extinction event (also known as: mass extinction; extinction-level event, ELE) is a sharp decrease in the number of species in a relatively short period of time. Mass extinctions affect most major taxonomic groups present at the time — birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, invertebrates and other simpler life ...
Extinction_event |@lemmatized extinction:155 event:69 also:12 know:4 mass:52 level:18 ele:1 sharp:2 decrease:4 number:7 specie:25 relatively:1 short:5 period:22 time:11 affect:2 major:10 taxonomic:3 group:8 present:2 bird:2 mammal:6 reptile:2 amphibian:2 fish:1 invertebrate:2 simpler:1 life:14 form:4 may:11 cause:42 on...
5,169
Anne_Brontë
Anne Brontë () (17 January 1820 – 28 May 1849) was a British novelist and poet, the youngest member of the Brontë literary family. The daughter of a poor Irish clergyman in the Church of England, Anne Brontë lived most of her life with her family at the remote village of Haworth on the Yorkshire moors. For a couple of...
Anne_Brontë |@lemmatized anne:134 brontë:40 january:6 may:15 british:1 novelist:2 poet:1 young:8 member:2 literary:6 family:23 daughter:9 poor:5 irish:2 clergyman:3 church:4 england:4 live:5 life:14 remote:2 village:3 haworth:12 yorkshire:5 moor:2 couple:2 year:21 go:5 boarding:1 school:12 age:14 nineteen:3 leave:12 wo...
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Plague_(disease)
Plague is a deadly infectious disease caused by the enterobacteria Yersinia pestis (Pasteurella pestis). Plague is a zoonotic, primarily carried by rodents (most notably rats) and spread to humans via fleas. Plague is notorious throughout history, due to the unprecedented scale of death and devastation it brought. Plag...
Plague_(disease) |@lemmatized plague:185 deadly:3 infectious:4 disease:45 cause:20 enterobacteria:1 yersinia:11 pestis:11 pasteurella:2 zoonotic:1 primarily:5 carry:5 rodent:8 notably:1 rat:22 spread:21 human:12 via:3 flea:18 notorious:1 throughout:4 history:10 due:8 unprecedented:1 scale:1 death:49 devastation:1 bring...
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Al_Capone
Alphonse Gabriel "Al" Capone (January 17, 1899 – January 25, 1947), was an Italian-American gangster who led a crime syndicate dedicated to smuggling and bootlegging of liquor and other illegal activities during the Prohibition Era of the 1920s and 1930s. Born in 1899 Brooklyn to Southeastern Italian immigrants Gabri...
Al_Capone |@lemmatized alphonse:4 gabriel:4 al:26 capone:128 january:14 italian:2 american:4 gangster:13 lead:4 crime:9 syndicate:1 dedicate:1 smuggle:2 bootlegging:2 liquor:4 illegal:3 activity:3 prohibition:5 era:3 bear:3 brooklyn:8 southeastern:1 immigrant:1 gabriele:4 teresina:4 begin:4 career:2 move:4 chicago:20 b...
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American_(word)
The meaning of the word American in the English language varies, according to the historic, geographic, and political context in which it is used. It derives from America, a term originally denoting all of the New World (also called "the Americas"). It retains this Pan-American sense, but its usage evolved over time, a...
American_(word) |@lemmatized meaning:5 word:19 american:91 english:22 language:6 varies:2 accord:1 historic:1 geographic:5 political:4 context:8 use:36 derive:6 america:55 term:27 originally:2 denote:15 new:11 world:7 also:12 call:3 retain:1 pan:1 sense:4 usage:24 evolve:1 time:2 due:1 various:1 historical:2 reason:1 c...
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Krakatoa
Krakatoa (), also spelled Krakatao, is a volcanic island in the Sunda Strait between the islands of Java and Sumatra in Indonesia. The name is used for the island group, the main island (also called Rakata), and the volcano as a whole. Historical significance The best-known eruption of Krakatoa culminated in a series...
Krakatoa |@lemmatized krakatoa:37 also:9 spell:3 krakatao:2 volcanic:10 island:53 sunda:8 strait:9 java:5 sumatra:6 indonesia:6 name:10 use:4 group:2 main:5 call:4 rakata:11 volcano:17 whole:1 historical:3 significance:1 best:1 know:5 eruption:43 culminate:1 series:3 massive:2 explosion:9 august:5 among:1 violent:3 eve...
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List_of_FIPS_country_codes
This is a list of FIPS 10-4 country codes for Countries, Dependencies, Areas of Special Sovereignty, and Their Principal Administrative Divisions. The two-letter country codes are used by the U.S. Government for geographical data processing in many publications, such as the CIA World Factbook. The standard is also kno...
List_of_FIPS_country_codes |@lemmatized list:2 fips:4 country:7 code:10 dependency:3 area:3 special:3 sovereignty:3 principal:2 administrative:2 division:2 two:1 letter:1 use:2 u:5 government:2 geographical:1 data:3 processing:1 many:1 publication:1 cia:1 world:2 factbook:1 standard:6 also:3 know:1 dafif:2 ed:1 amdt:1 ...
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Book_of_Ruth
This article is about the ancient Hebrew religious text. For the 20th-century English-language novel, see The Book of Ruth (novel) The Book of Ruth (; Sephardic, Israeli Hebrew: [məgi'lat rut]; Ashkenazi Hebrew: [mə'gɪləs rus]; "the Scroll of Ruth") is one of the books of the Ketuvim ("Writings") of the Tanakh (the He...
Book_of_Ruth |@lemmatized article:1 ancient:1 hebrew:10 religious:2 text:4 century:1 english:2 language:3 novel:2 see:3 book:43 ruth:80 sephardic:1 israeli:1 məgi:1 lat:1 rut:1 ashkenazi:1 mə:1 gɪləs:1 ru:1 scroll:2 one:8 ketuvim:1 write:10 tanakh:1 bible:20 historical:4 old:5 testament:5 rather:2 short:1 jewish:8 chri...
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Gospel_of_Matthew
The Gospel of Matthew (Gk. , Kata Matthaion Euangelion or , To Euangelion kata Matthaion) is one of the four canonical gospels in the New Testament and is a synoptic gospel. It narrates an account of the life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth. It describes his genealogy, his miraculous birth and childhood, his baptism ...
Gospel_of_Matthew |@lemmatized gospel:112 matthew:159 gk:1 kata:2 matthaion:2 euangelion:2 one:12 four:9 canonical:3 new:22 testament:19 synoptic:9 narrate:1 account:11 life:6 ministry:6 jesus:109 nazareth:3 describe:4 genealogy:17 miraculous:1 birth:10 childhood:1 baptism:4 temptation:4 heal:2 preach:3 galilee:4 trip:...
5,177
Transport_in_Indonesia
Indonesia's transport system has been shaped over time by the economic resource base of an archipelago with thousands of islands, and the distribution of its more than 200 million people highly concentrated on a single island which is Java Indonesia's Diversity Revisited http://cip.cornell.edu/Dienst/UI/1.0/Summarize/s...
Transport_in_Indonesia |@lemmatized indonesia:24 transport:9 system:5 shape:1 time:1 economic:2 resource:1 base:2 archipelago:4 thousand:2 island:15 distribution:1 million:1 people:1 highly:3 concentrate:1 single:1 java:8 diversity:1 revisit:1 http:16 cip:1 cornell:1 edu:1 dienst:1 ui:1 summarize:1 seap:1 indo:1 mode:4...
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Arizona_State_University
Arizona State University (also referred to as ASU, or Arizona State) is the largest public research university in the United States under a single administration, with total student enrollment of 67,082 as of fall 2008. ASU is spread across four campuses in the Phoenix Metropolitan Area, and is governed by the Arizon...
Arizona_State_University |@lemmatized arizona:53 state:50 university:84 also:8 refer:2 asu:78 large:7 public:12 research:8 united:4 single:5 administration:4 total:5 student:47 enrollment:4 fall:6 spread:1 across:3 four:10 campus:114 phoenix:22 metropolitan:3 area:5 govern:1 board:2 regent:10 found:4 tempe:32 normal:6 ...
5,179
Hydrogen
Hydrogen ( Hydrogen, entry in the Oxford English Dictionary, prepared by J. A. Simpson and E. S. C. Weiner, vol. 7, second edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. ISBN 0-19-861219-2 (vol. 7), ISBN 0-19-861186-2 (set.) ) is the chemical element with atomic number 1. It is represented by the symbol H. At standard tempera...
Hydrogen |@lemmatized hydrogen:171 entry:1 oxford:2 english:1 dictionary:1 prepare:4 j:1 simpson:1 e:4 c:4 weiner:1 vol:2 second:2 edition:1 clarendon:1 press:1 isbn:2 set:1 chemical:14 element:18 atomic:7 number:7 represent:2 symbol:3 h:10 standard:3 temperature:18 pressure:7 colorless:1 odorless:1 nonmetallic:1 taste...
5,180
Formalist_film_theory
Formalist film theory is a theory of film study that is focused on the formal, or technical, elements of a film: i.e., the lighting, scoring, sound and set design, use of color, shot composition, and editing. It is a major theory of film study today. Basic Theory Formalism, at its most general, considers the synthesi...
Formalist_film_theory |@lemmatized formalist:5 film:18 theory:9 study:4 focus:2 formal:1 technical:1 element:7 e:1 lighting:3 score:1 sound:1 set:1 design:2 use:1 color:1 shot:5 composition:2 edit:3 major:1 today:2 basic:1 formalism:8 general:2 consider:2 synthesis:4 lack:1 multiple:1 production:2 effect:5 emotional:1 ...
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International_Phonetic_Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) "The acronym 'IPA' strictly refers [...] to the 'International Phonetic Association'. But it is now such a common practice to use the acronym also to refer to the alphabet itself (from the phrase 'International Phonetic Alphabet') that resistance seems pedantic. Context usually...
International_Phonetic_Alphabet |@lemmatized international:44 phonetic:59 alphabet:28 ipa:127 acronym:2 strictly:3 refers:1 association:33 common:7 practice:2 use:59 also:16 refer:1 phrase:3 resistance:1 seem:1 pedantic:1 context:3 usually:6 serve:1 disambiguate:1 two:18 usage:5 laver:2 system:8 notation:4 base:11 lati...
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History_of_the_Cook_Islands
The Cook Islands are named from a Russian naval chart of the early 1880s, after Captain James Cook, who visited the islands in 1773 and 1777 Cook : the Extraordinary voyages of Captain James Cook, 2003, by Nicholas Thomas, pages 310-311. . The Cook Islands became a British protectorate in 1888. By 1900, administrative...
History_of_the_Cook_Islands |@lemmatized cook:49 island:45 name:4 russian:3 naval:2 chart:1 early:1 captain:5 james:4 visit:6 extraordinary:1 voyage:4 nicholas:1 thomas:2 page:1 islands:18 become:6 british:6 protectorate:4 administrative:1 control:3 transfer:2 new:18 zealand:16 resident:1 choose:1 self:4 government:11 ...
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James_P._Hogan_(writer)
At the 63rd World Science Fiction Convention in Glasgow, August 2005. James Patrick Hogan (born 27 June 1941) is a British science fiction author. Biography Hogan was born in London, England. He was raised in the Portobello Road area on the west side of London. After leaving school at the age of sixteen, he worked var...
James_P._Hogan_(writer) |@lemmatized world:2 science:7 fiction:6 convention:2 glasgow:1 august:2 james:1 patrick:1 hogan:8 born:1 june:6 british:1 author:1 biography:1 bear:1 london:2 england:1 raise:1 portobello:1 road:1 area:1 west:1 side:2 leave:1 school:1 age:2 sixteen:1 work:4 various:1 odd:1 job:1 receive:1 schol...
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Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom
The Presidential Medal of Freedom is a decoration bestowed by the President of the United States and is, along with the equivalent Congressional Gold Medal bestowed by an act of Congress, the highest civilian award in the United States. It is designed to recognize individuals who have made "an especially meritorious co...
Presidential_Medal_of_Freedom |@lemmatized presidential:9 medal:24 freedom:10 decoration:4 bestow:2 president:7 united:8 state:8 along:1 equivalent:1 congressional:1 gold:2 act:1 congress:1 high:2 civilian:5 award:11 design:1 recognize:1 individual:2 make:1 especially:1 meritorious:1 contribution:1 security:1 national:...
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Economy_of_Jordan
Jordan is a small country with limited natural resources, but has improved much since its inception as a country. Its current GDP per capita soared by 351% in the Seventies. But this growth proved unsustainable and consequently shrank by 30% in the Eighties. But it rebounded with growth of 36% in the Nineties. Just ove...
Economy_of_Jordan |@lemmatized jordan:52 small:4 country:15 limited:3 natural:7 resource:5 improve:3 much:3 since:7 inception:1 current:1 gdp:4 per:8 caput:1 soar:1 seventy:1 growth:8 prove:1 unsustainable:1 consequently:1 shrink:1 eighty:1 rebound:1 ninety:1 land:1 arable:1 even:3 subject:1 vagary:1 water:2 supply:6 r...
5,186
Lascaux
Cave painting of a dun horse (equine) at Lascaux Lascaux is the setting of a complex of caves in southwestern France famous for its Paleolithic cave paintings. The original caves are located near the village of Montignac, in the Dordogne département. They contain some of the most well-known Upper Paleolithic art. Thes...
Lascaux |@lemmatized cave:31 painting:9 dun:1 horse:1 equine:3 lascaux:15 setting:2 complex:1 southwestern:1 france:2 famous:3 paleolithic:3 original:3 locate:1 near:1 village:1 montignac:1 dordogne:1 département:1 contain:3 well:2 know:2 upper:1 art:10 estimate:1 year:2 old:1 primarily:1 consist:1 realistic:1 image:8 ...
5,187
Fra_Bartolomeo
Fra Bartolomeo or Fra Bartolommeo (di Pagholo) (March 28, 1472 – October 6, 1517), also known as Baccio della Porta, was an Italian Renaissance painter of religious subjects. Biography The Vision of St. Bernard ca 1504 (Uffizi). He was born in Savignano di Prato, Tuscany. He received the nickname of Baccio della Port...
Fra_Bartolomeo |@lemmatized fra:5 bartolomeo:6 bartolommeo:1 di:7 pagholo:1 march:1 october:2 also:3 know:1 baccio:4 della:2 porta:3 italian:1 renaissance:1 painter:2 religious:1 subject:1 biography:3 vision:3 st:7 bernard:2 ca:1 uffizi:1 bear:1 savignano:1 prato:1 tuscany:1 receive:1 nickname:1 house:1 near:1 gate:1 s...
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List_of_Olympic_medalists_in_basketball
Basketball is a sport contested at the Summer Olympic Games. A men's basketball tournament was first held at the 1904 Olympics as a demonstration; it has been held at every Summer Olympics since 1936. In the 1972 Olympics, the Basketball at the 1972 Summer Olympics#Gold Medal Match controversy final game between the Un...
List_of_Olympic_medalists_in_basketball |@lemmatized basketball:14 sport:3 contest:1 summer:7 olympic:5 game:6 men:6 tournament:3 first:3 hold:4 olympics:11 demonstration:1 every:3 since:3 gold:8 medal:13 match:1 controversy:1 final:1 united:7 state:7 soviet:5 union:4 controversial:1 one:5 end:1 replayed:2 twice:1 win:...
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Endocarditis
Endocarditis is an inflammation of the inner layer of the heart, the endocardium. It usually involves the heart valves (native or prosthetic valves). Other structures which may be involved include the interventricular septum, the chordae tendinae, the mural endocardium, or even on intracardiac devices. Endocarditis is ...
Endocarditis |@lemmatized endocarditis:19 inflammation:4 inner:1 layer:1 heart:5 endocardium:3 usually:2 involve:3 valves:1 native:1 prosthetic:1 valve:10 structure:1 may:7 include:2 interventricular:1 septum:1 chordae:1 tendinae:1 mural:1 even:2 intracardiac:1 device:1 characterize:1 prototypic:1 lesion:1 vegetation:7...
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Elizabeth_Garrett_Anderson
Dr. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, LSA, MD (June 9 1836 – December 17 1917), was an English physician and feminist, the first woman to gain a medical qualification in Britain. Biography Garrett was the daughter of Newson Garrett, of Aldeburgh, Suffolk, where she was born in 1836, and the sister of Millicent Fawcett. She ...
Elizabeth_Garrett_Anderson |@lemmatized dr:4 elizabeth:16 garrett:17 anderson:14 lsa:1 md:2 june:1 december:1 english:1 physician:6 feminist:1 first:6 woman:24 gain:3 medical:12 qualification:2 britain:2 biography:3 daughter:1 newson:1 aldeburgh:3 suffolk:1 bear:1 sister:2 millicent:2 fawcett:1 also:5 cousin:1 dunnell:...
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Mars_Direct
Mars Direct is a proposal for a relatively low-cost manned mission to Mars with current rocket technology. The plan was originally detailed in a research paper by Robert Zubrin and David Baker in 1990. The mission was expanded upon in Zubrin's 1996 book The Case for Mars. The plan is now a staple of Zubrin's speaking e...
Mars_Direct |@lemmatized mar:78 direct:21 proposal:4 relatively:2 low:4 cost:7 man:3 mission:19 current:1 rocket:4 technology:1 plan:5 originally:2 detail:1 research:5 paper:1 robert:2 zubrin:9 david:1 baker:2 expand:1 upon:1 book:1 case:3 staple:1 speaking:1 engagement:1 general:1 advocacy:1 head:1 society:9 organizat...
5,192
Learning_theory_(education)
In psychology and education, a common definition of learning is a process that brings together cognitive, emotional, and environmental influences and experiences for acquiring, enhancing, or making changes in one's knowledge, skills, values, and world views (Illeris,2000; Ormorod, 1995). Learning as a process focuses o...
Learning_theory_(education) |@lemmatized psychology:4 education:5 common:1 definition:1 learning:32 process:14 bring:1 together:1 cognitive:9 emotional:1 environmental:1 influence:1 experience:3 acquire:1 enhance:2 make:2 change:3 one:6 knowledge:8 skill:1 value:2 world:6 view:4 illeris:1 ormorod:1 learn:47 focus:4 hap...
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Central_Plaza_(Hong_Kong)
Central Plaza is the second tallest skyscraper in Hong Kong. With a height of 374 m (1,227 ft), Central Plaza is only surpassed by 2 IFC (415 m / 1,362 ft) in Central. The building is located at 18 Harbour Road, in Wan Chai on Hong Kong Island. It was the tallest building in Asia from 1992 to 1996, until the Shun Hing ...
Central_Plaza_(Hong_Kong) |@lemmatized central:9 plaza:9 second:1 tall:9 skyscraper:3 hong:11 kong:11 height:10 ft:18 surpass:3 ifc:1 building:30 locate:1 harbour:2 road:1 wan:1 chai:1 island:1 asia:1 shun:1 hing:1 square:2 shenzhen:1 people:1 republic:1 china:3 build:3 storey:2 complete:1 august:1 bank:1 tower:11 comp...
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Centimetre
1 centimetre A carpenters' ruler with centimetre divisions A centimetre (American spelling: centimeter, symbol cm) is a unit of length in the metric system, equal to one hundredth of a metre, which is the current SI base unit of length. Centi is the SI prefix for a factor of . BIPM - SI prefixes Hence a centimetre can...
Centimetre |@lemmatized centimetre:18 carpenter:1 ruler:1 division:1 american:1 spelling:1 centimeter:1 symbol:2 cm:2 unit:8 length:7 metric:2 system:5 equal:6 one:2 hundredth:1 metre:3 current:2 si:5 base:1 centi:1 prefix:4 factor:2 bipm:1 hence:1 write:1 engineering:1 notation:2 scientific:1 e:3 mean:1 respectively:1...
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Mychal_Judge
Mychal F. Judge, OFM (born Robert Emmet Judge on May 11, 1933; died September 11, 2001) was a Roman Catholic priest of the Franciscan Order of Friars Minor, Chaplain of the Fire Department of New York, and the first recorded victim of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Early years Judge was the son of Irish Catholic imm...
Mychal_Judge |@lemmatized mychal:21 f:3 judge:59 ofm:1 born:1 robert:1 emmet:1 may:1 die:5 september:7 roman:2 catholic:11 priest:5 franciscan:6 order:4 friar:6 minor:3 chaplain:6 fire:8 department:4 new:12 york:9 first:3 record:1 victim:4 attack:4 early:2 year:4 son:1 irish:1 immigrant:2 county:1 leitrim:1 firstborn:1...
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J._Philippe_Rushton
John Philippe Rushton (born December 3, 1943) is a psychology professor at the University of Western Ontario, Canada, most widely known for his work on intelligence and racial differences, particularly his book Race, Evolution and Behavior. His work in this area is highly controversial, and many have criticized it as b...
J._Philippe_Rushton |@lemmatized john:3 philippe:3 rushton:70 born:1 december:2 psychology:9 professor:6 university:14 western:9 ontario:4 canada:4 widely:2 know:2 work:15 intelligence:10 racial:9 difference:3 particularly:2 book:7 race:16 evolution:6 behavior:7 area:2 highly:3 controversial:1 many:4 criticize:1 poorly...
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Judgement_of_Paris
The Judgement of Paris, Peter Paul Rubens, ca 1636 (National Gallery, London) The Judgement of Paris is a story from Greek mythology, which was one of the events that led up to the Trojan War and (in slightly later versions of the story) to the foundation of Rome. Sources of the episode As with many mythological tales...
Judgement_of_Paris |@lemmatized judgement:16 paris:30 peter:1 paul:1 rubens:3 ca:2 national:1 gallery:1 london:2 story:7 greek:13 mythology:4 one:5 event:3 lead:1 trojan:5 war:7 slightly:1 late:6 version:4 foundation:1 rome:2 source:5 episode:3 many:2 mythological:2 tale:2 detail:1 vary:1 depend:1 iliad:1 alludes:1 fam...
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Light-emitting_diode
A light-emitting diode (LED) ( , or just ), is an electronic light source. The LED was first invented in Russia in the 1920s, and introduced in America as a practical electronic component in 1962. Oleg Vladimirovich Losev was a radio technician who noticed that diodes used in radio receivers emitted light when curren...
Light-emitting_diode |@lemmatized light:156 emit:31 diode:24 lead:101 electronic:5 source:30 first:13 invent:3 russia:1 introduce:2 america:2 practical:8 component:3 oleg:2 vladimirovich:2 losev:2 radio:4 technician:1 notice:1 use:100 receiver:1 current:30 pass:1 publish:1 detail:2 russian:3 journal:2 ever:2 early:6 de...
5,199
Grok
To grok () is to share the same reality or line of thinking with another physical or conceptual entity. Author Robert A. Heinlein coined the term in his best-selling 1961 book Stranger in a Strange Land. In Heinlein's view of quantum theory, grokking is the intermingling of intelligence that necessarily affects both th...
Grok |@lemmatized grok:30 share:1 reality:4 line:1 think:1 another:1 physical:1 conceptual:1 entity:2 author:2 robert:4 heinlein:5 coin:2 term:8 best:2 selling:1 book:7 stranger:7 strange:4 land:4 view:3 quantum:1 theory:2 grokking:4 intermingling:1 intelligence:1 necessarily:1 affect:1 observer:1 observe:1 novel:2 oxf...