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5,200
Hunan_cuisine
Hunan cured ham with pickled cowpeas Hunan cuisine, sometimes called Xiang cuisine (), consists of the cuisines of the Xiang River region, Dongting Lake and western Hunan Province, in China. Hunan cuisine is consisted of three styles: Xiang River style which is represented by dishes of Changsha, Dongting Lake style whi...
Hunan_cuisine |@lemmatized hunan:13 cure:2 ham:1 pickled:1 cowpea:1 cuisine:18 sometimes:1 call:2 xiang:4 consist:2 river:2 region:2 dongting:2 lake:2 western:2 province:1 china:2 three:1 style:6 represent:3 dish:9 changsha:3 hengyang:1 xiangtan:1 one:1 eight:1 regional:1 well:1 know:5 hot:9 spicy:4 flavor:1 fresh:2 ar...
5,201
Earth
Earth (pronounced ) is the third planet from the Sun, and the largest of the terrestrial planets in the Solar System in terms of diameter, mass and density. It is also referred to as the World and Terra. Note that by International Astronomical Union convention, the term "Terra" is used for naming extensive land masse...
Earth |@lemmatized earth:171 pronounce:1 third:2 planet:49 sun:50 large:18 terrestrial:7 solar:29 system:13 term:7 diameter:11 mass:18 density:6 also:18 refer:1 world:11 terra:2 note:2 international:5 astronomical:4 union:1 convention:2 use:10 name:2 extensive:1 land:21 rather:4 cf:1 home:1 million:19 specie:4 include:...
5,202
Administrative_law
Administrative law in the United States often relates to, or arises from, so-called "independent agencies"- such as the Federal Trade Commission ("FTC"). Here is FTC's headquarters in Washington D.C. Administrative law is the body of law that governs the activities of administrative agencies of government. Government ...
Administrative_law |@lemmatized administrative:77 law:58 united:8 state:14 often:5 relate:1 arises:1 call:3 independent:6 agency:13 federal:10 trade:2 commission:2 ftc:2 headquarters:1 washington:1 c:1 body:11 govern:1 activity:1 government:14 action:6 include:1 rulemaking:3 adjudication:1 enforcement:2 specific:1 regu...
5,203
Economy_of_Botswana
Since independence, Botswana has had the highest average economic growth rate in the world, averaging about 9% per year from 1966 to 1999. Growth in private sector employment has averaged about 10% per annum over the first 30 years of independence. The relatively high quality of the country's statistics means that thes...
Economy_of_Botswana |@lemmatized since:4 independence:4 botswana:74 high:6 average:5 economic:12 growth:4 rate:6 world:16 per:2 year:3 private:4 sector:11 employment:1 annum:1 first:3 relatively:3 quality:1 country:18 statistic:1 mean:1 figure:1 likely:1 quite:1 accurate:1 government:13 consistently:1 maintain:2 budget...
5,204
Mississippi_John_Hurt
Mississippi John Hurt (July 3, 1893 National Park Service Encyclopedia Britannica or March 8, 1892 There is confusion about his date of birth, but the grave marker mentions this date. — November 2, 1966) was an influential blues singer and guitarist. He sang in a loud whisper, to a melodious finger-picked guitar a...
Mississippi_John_Hurt |@lemmatized mississippi:16 john:16 hurt:21 july:1 national:1 park:1 service:1 encyclopedia:1 britannica:1 march:1 confusion:1 date:2 birth:1 grave:1 marker:1 mention:1 november:2 influential:1 blue:42 singer:2 guitarist:1 sing:1 loud:1 whisper:1 melodious:1 finger:1 pick:1 guitar:4 accompaniment:...
5,205
JUnit
JUnit is a unit testing framework for the Java programming language. Created by Kent Beck and Erich Gamma, JUnit is one of the xUnit family of frameworks that originated with Kent Beck's SUnit. JUnit has spawned its own ecosystem of JUnit extensions. Experience gained with JUnit has been important in the development o...
JUnit |@lemmatized junit:33 unit:4 test:22 framework:7 java:2 programming:2 language:4 create:1 kent:2 beck:2 erich:1 gamma:1 one:1 xunit:2 family:2 originate:1 sunit:1 spawn:1 ecosystem:1 extension:1 experience:1 gain:1 important:1 development:3 driven:2 result:2 knowledge:1 often:1 presume:1 discussion:1 port:1 inclu...
5,206
Foreign_relations_of_China
The foreign relations of the People's Republic of China draw upon traditions extending back to imperial China in the Qing Dynasty and the Opium Wars, despite Chinese society having undergone many radical upheavals over the past two and a half centuries. The goal of Chinese foreign policy is to maintain a strong, indep...
Foreign_relations_of_China |@lemmatized foreign:33 relation:65 people:26 republic:37 china:223 draw:2 upon:2 tradition:1 extend:3 back:3 imperial:1 qing:1 dynasty:1 opium:1 war:17 despite:2 chinese:42 society:2 undergone:1 many:10 radical:1 upheaval:2 past:4 two:12 half:2 century:8 goal:2 policy:28 maintain:8 strong:4 ...
5,207
Alexandrists
The Alexandrists were a school of Renaissance philosophers who, in the great controversy on the subject of personal immortality, adopted the explanation of the De Anima given by Alexander of Aphrodisias. According to the orthodox Thomism of the Roman Catholic Church, Aristotle rightly regarded reason as a facility of ...
Alexandrists |@lemmatized alexandrists:3 school:1 renaissance:1 philosopher:1 great:1 controversy:1 subject:1 personal:1 immortality:3 adopt:1 explanation:1 de:1 anima:1 give:1 alexander:1 aphrodisia:1 accord:1 orthodox:1 thomism:1 roman:1 catholic:1 church:1 aristotle:3 rightly:2 regarded:1 reason:4 facility:1 individ...
5,208
Intel_80486SX
Intel i486 SX 25MHz Pin side of an Intel i486 SX The Intel's i486SX was a modified Intel 486DX microprocessor with its floating-point unit (FPU) disconnected. All early 486SX chips were actually i486DX chips with a defective FPU. If testing showed that the central processing unit was working but the FPU was defective,...
Intel_80486SX |@lemmatized intel:5 sx:3 pin:4 side:1 modified:1 microprocessor:1 float:2 point:2 unit:2 fpu:9 disconnect:1 early:2 chip:4 actually:1 defective:2 test:1 show:1 central:1 processing:2 work:3 power:2 bus:1 connection:1 destroy:1 laser:1 sell:2 cheaper:1 dx:1 computer:2 manufacturer:1 use:4 processor:1 incl...
5,209
Open_content
Open content, a neologism coined by analogy with "open source", describes any kind of creative work, or content, published in a format that explicitly allows copying and modifying of its information by anyone, not exclusively by a closed organization, firm or individual. The largest open content project is Wikipedia. ...
Open_content |@lemmatized open:57 content:38 neologism:1 coin:1 analogy:1 source:5 describe:3 kind:1 creative:6 work:5 publish:2 format:1 explicitly:1 allow:2 copying:1 modifying:1 information:4 anyone:1 exclusively:1 closed:1 organization:1 firm:1 individual:1 large:1 project:9 wikipedia:1 technical:2 definition:6 kno...
5,210
Military_of_Mauritius
Mauritius does not have a standing army. All military, police, and security functions are carried out by 10,000 active-duty personnel under the command of the Commissioner of Police. The 8,000-member National Police is responsible for domestic law enforcement. The 1,500-member Special Mobile Force (SMF) and the 500-mem...
Military_of_Mauritius |@lemmatized mauritius:3 standing:1 army:1 military:10 police:8 security:1 function:1 carry:1 active:1 duty:1 personnel:1 command:1 commissioner:1 member:5 national:4 responsible:1 domestic:1 law:2 enforcement:2 special:3 mobile:2 force:3 smf:4 coast:6 guard:6 two:2 paramilitary:3 unit:5 compose:1...
5,211
Cultural_movement
A cultural movement is a change in the way a number of different disciplines approach their work. This embodies all art forms, the sciences, and philosophies. Historically, different nations or regions of the world have gone through their own independent sequence of movements in culture, but as world communications hav...
Cultural_movement |@lemmatized cultural:7 movement:23 change:3 way:2 number:1 different:5 discipline:2 approach:2 work:2 embody:1 art:16 form:5 science:5 philosophy:6 historically:1 nation:1 region:1 world:6 go:2 independent:1 sequence:1 culture:5 communication:1 accelerate:1 geographical:1 distinction:1 become:1 less:...
5,212
Jerry_Pournelle
Jerry Eugene Pournelle (born August 7, 1933) is an American science fiction writer, essayist and journalist who contributed for many years to the computer magazine Byte and has since 1998 been maintaining his own website/blog. From the beginning, Pournelle's work has engaged strong military themes. Several books are c...
Jerry_Pournelle |@lemmatized jerry:9 eugene:1 pournelle:48 bear:2 august:2 american:3 science:5 fiction:8 writer:4 essayist:1 journalist:2 contribute:2 many:3 year:3 computer:5 magazine:4 byte:7 since:3 maintain:5 website:3 blog:7 beginning:1 work:14 engage:1 strong:4 military:5 theme:3 several:2 book:3 center:1 fictio...
5,213
Li_Bai
Li Bai or Li Po () (701 – 762) was a Chinese poet. He was part of the group of Chinese scholars called the "Eight Immortals of the Wine Cup" in a poem by fellow poet Du Fu. Li Bai is often regarded, along with Du Fu, as one of the two greatest poets in China's literary history. Approximately 1,100 of his poems remain t...
Li_Bai |@lemmatized li:61 bai:42 po:12 chinese:23 poet:9 part:1 group:1 scholar:1 call:3 eight:1 immortal:2 wine:4 cup:3 poem:33 fellow:1 du:9 fu:13 often:4 regarded:1 along:2 one:5 two:2 great:2 china:8 literary:3 history:3 approximately:1 remain:2 today:1 first:2 translation:18 western:1 language:3 publish:4 marquis:...
5,214
Laser
Experiment with a laser (U.S. Air Force). A laser is a device that emits light (electromagnetic radiation) through a process called stimulated emission. The term laser is an acronym for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. Laser light is usually spatially coherent, which means that the light eit...
Laser |@lemmatized experiment:4 laser:361 u:6 air:3 force:2 device:14 emit:24 light:78 electromagnetic:3 radiation:14 process:7 call:11 stimulate:3 emission:24 term:7 acronym:3 amplification:7 stimulated:14 usually:10 spatially:1 coherent:6 mean:8 either:2 narrow:4 low:10 divergence:2 beam:45 convert:2 one:13 help:2 op...
5,215
Loa
The Loa (also Lwa or L'wha) are the spirits of the Voodoo religion practiced in Haiti, and other parts of the world. They are also referred to as Mystères and the Invisibles. They are somewhat akin to saints or angels in Western religions in that they are intermediaries between Bondye (Bon Dieu, or good god)—the Crea...
Loa |@lemmatized loa:28 also:8 lwa:2 l:2 wha:1 spirit:6 voodoo:1 religion:3 practice:1 haiti:3 part:2 world:3 refer:1 mystères:1 invisibles:1 somewhat:1 akin:1 saint:5 angel:2 western:2 intermediary:2 bondye:2 bon:1 dieu:1 good:1 god:2 creator:1 distant:2 humanity:1 unlike:1 however:1 simply:1 pray:1 serve:2 distinct:2...
5,216
Foreign_relations_of_Burundi
Burundi's relations with its neighbours have often been affected by security concerns. Hundreds of thousands of Burundian refugees have at various times crossed to neighboring Rwanda, Tanzania, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Hundreds of thousands of Burundians are in neighboring countries as a result of the ...
Foreign_relations_of_Burundi |@lemmatized burundi:7 relation:4 neighbour:1 often:1 affect:1 security:1 concern:1 hundred:2 thousand:2 burundian:3 refugee:1 various:2 time:1 cross:1 neighbor:3 rwanda:1 tanzania:2 democratic:1 republic:1 congo:1 country:2 result:1 ongoing:1 civil:1 war:1 since:2 rebel:1 group:1 use:1 nei...
5,217
Corsican_language
Bilingual road-signs, with French names crossed out. Corsican (Corsu or Lingua Corsa) is a continuum of Romance languages spoken and written on the islands of Corsica (France) and northern Sardinia (Italy), alongside French and Italian, which are the official languages. Corsu is the traditional native language of the C...
Corsican_language |@lemmatized bilingual:1 road:1 sign:3 french:9 name:2 cross:2 corsican:64 corsu:11 lingua:1 corsa:1 continuum:1 romance:7 language:56 speak:14 write:10 island:5 corsica:17 france:5 northern:3 sardinia:6 italy:2 alongside:1 italian:21 official:5 traditional:1 native:4 people:2 long:2 sole:1 acquire:3 ...
5,218
Marino_Marini
Marino Marini may refer to Marino Marini (musician) Marino Marini (sculptor)
Marino_Marini |@lemmatized marino:3 marini:3 may:1 refer:1 musician:1 sculptor:1 |@bigram
5,219
Idaho
The State of Idaho () is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States of America. The state's largest city and capital is Boise. Residents are called "Idahoans." Idaho was admitted to the Union on 3 July 1890 as the 43rd state. According to the United States Census Bureau, in 2008 the population fo...
Idaho |@lemmatized state:129 idaho:154 pacific:6 northwest:5 region:3 united:13 america:3 large:14 city:14 capital:3 boise:27 resident:2 call:4 idahoan:4 admit:1 union:2 july:1 accord:3 census:4 bureau:2 population:10 estimate:4 postal:1 abbreviation:1 id:2 nickname:1 gem:5 nearly:3 every:2 know:2 find:3 everything:1 a...
5,220
Mile
milestatute nautical1.609344 km 1.852 km1,609.344 m 1,852 m1,760 yd 2,025.372 yd5,280 ft 6,076.115 ft63,360 in 72,913.4 in A mile is a unit of length, usually used to measure distance, in a number of different systems. In contemporary English contexts, mile most commonly refers to the statute mile of 5,280 feet (exac...
Mile |@lemmatized milestatute:1 km:2 yd:1 ft:2 mile:112 unit:24 length:9 usually:4 use:31 measure:12 distance:15 number:1 different:5 system:10 contemporary:1 english:17 context:1 commonly:3 refers:1 statute:14 foot:33 exactly:7 meter:19 nautical:13 many:3 historical:3 similar:2 translate:1 vary:4 one:13 fifteen:1 kilo...
5,221
Operand
An operand is one of the inputs (arguments) of an operator in mathematics. The following arithmetic expression shows an example of operators and operands: 3 + 6 = 9 Here '+' is the operator and '3' and '6' are the operands. Notation Expressions as operands Operands may be complex, and may consist of expressions also...
Operand |@lemmatized operand:24 one:2 input:1 argument:2 operator:15 mathematics:2 following:1 arithmetic:1 expression:6 show:1 example:2 notation:10 may:5 complex:1 consist:1 also:3 make:1 x:3 first:1 multiplication:3 second:1 contain:1 addition:4 order:1 operation:1 rule:1 precedence:2 affect:1 value:3 form:1 high:1 ...
5,222
Albert_Schweitzer
Albert Schweitzer (14 January 1875 – 4 September 1965) was a Germen-French theologian, musician, philosopher, and physician. He was born in Kaysersberg in the province of Elsass-Lothringen (Alsace-Lorraine), at the time in the German Empire. Schweitzer challenged both the secular view of Jesus as depicted by historical...
Albert_Schweitzer |@lemmatized albert:50 schweitzer:133 january:4 september:5 germen:1 french:16 theologian:1 musician:2 philosopher:2 physician:1 bear:5 kaysersberg:4 province:1 elsass:1 lothringen:1 alsace:7 lorraine:2 time:18 german:17 empire:1 challenge:1 secular:1 view:13 jesus:33 depict:2 historical:10 critical:3...
5,223
Chaparral
Chaparral is a shrubland or heathland plant community found primarily in the U.S. state of California and in the northern portion of the Baja California peninsula, Mexico. It is shaped by a Mediterranean climate (mild, wet winters and hot dry summers) and wildfire. Similar plant communities are found in the four other ...
Chaparral |@lemmatized chaparral:36 shrubland:2 heathland:1 plant:8 community:4 find:2 primarily:1 u:1 state:3 california:25 northern:2 portion:1 baja:4 peninsula:1 mexico:1 shape:1 mediterranean:3 climate:2 mild:2 wet:1 winter:2 hot:4 dry:4 summer:4 wildfire:6 similar:2 four:1 region:2 around:1 world:1 include:2 basin...
5,224
Book_of_Micah
The Book of Micah (Hebrew: ספר מיכה) is one of the books of the Hebrew Bible and the Christian Old Testament, traditionally attributed to Micah the Prophet. Authorship Micah of Moresheth (most likely the same city as Moresheth-Gath, mentioned in Micah) prophesied during the days of King Hezekiah of Judah. This paraphra...
Book_of_Micah |@lemmatized book:20 micah:47 hebrew:2 ספר:1 מיכה:1 one:4 bible:11 christian:3 old:4 testament:4 traditionally:1 attribute:2 prophet:19 authorship:2 moresheth:4 likely:3 city:7 gath:2 mention:2 prophesy:2 day:2 king:16 hezekiah:4 judah:11 paraphrase:2 jeremaiah:2 contains:1 practically:1 everything:1 know...
5,225
Irreducible_fraction
An irreducible fraction (or fraction in lowest terms or reduced form) is a vulgar fraction in which the numerator and denominator are smaller than those in any other equivalent vulgar fraction. It can be shown that a fraction a⁄b is irreducible if and only if a and b are coprime, that is, if a and b have a greatest com...
Irreducible_fraction |@lemmatized irreducible:6 fraction:12 low:2 term:3 reduce:4 form:1 vulgar:2 numerator:4 denominator:2 small:1 equivalent:2 show:1 b:6 coprime:1 great:4 common:8 divisor:5 formally:1 c:3 integer:1 note:1 mean:1 absolute:1 value:2 definition:1 rigorous:1 expandable:1 simpler:1 one:1 involve:1 often:...
5,226
Dead_Sea
For the Brian Keene book of the same name, see Dead Sea (novel). The Dead Sea (, , "Sea of Salt"; , , "Dead Sea";) is a salt lake between Israel and the West Bank to the west, and Jordan to the east. It is below sea level, Monitoring of the Dead Sea. Israel Marine Data Center (ISRAMAR). and its shores are the lowe...
Dead_Sea |@lemmatized brian:1 keene:1 book:3 name:6 see:8 dead:122 sea:158 novel:1 salt:27 lake:33 israel:7 west:6 bank:5 jordan:15 east:6 level:19 monitoring:1 marine:2 data:1 center:3 isramar:1 shore:12 low:20 point:4 surface:3 earth:5 dry:5 land:8 deep:3 hypersaline:2 world:9 also:7 one:6 salty:4 body:5 water:31 sal...
5,227
Transportation_in_Guam
Guam has no railways, nor does it have a merchant marine. The largest port is Apra Harbor, which serves almost all commercial traffic including cruise, cargo and fishing vessels. There are smaller harbors located on the island (most notably one in Hagatna and one in Agat) which serve recreational boaters. Roads are p...
Transportation_in_Guam |@lemmatized guam:4 railway:1 merchant:1 marine:1 large:1 port:1 apra:1 harbor:2 serve:2 almost:1 commercial:2 traffic:1 include:2 cruise:1 cargo:1 fishing:1 vessel:1 small:1 locate:2 island:2 notably:1 one:3 hagatna:1 agat:1 recreational:1 boater:1 road:6 primarily:1 pave:2 coral:1 oil:2 mixture...
5,228
Avionics
Avionics means "aviation electronics". It comprises electronic systems for use on aircraft, artificial satellites and spacecraft, comprising communications, navigation and the display and management of multiple systems. It also includes the hundreds of systems that are fitted to aircraft to meet individual roles, these...
Avionics |@lemmatized avionics:29 mean:5 aviation:3 electronics:3 comprise:2 electronic:4 system:42 use:27 aircraft:55 artificial:1 satellite:4 spacecraft:1 communication:12 navigation:8 display:10 management:6 multiple:2 also:8 include:8 hundred:1 fit:4 meet:1 individual:2 role:1 simple:2 search:2 light:2 police:6 hel...
5,229
Cannon
A cannon is any tubular piece of artillery that uses gunpowder or other usually explosive-based propellants to launch a projectile over a distance. Cannon vary in caliber, range, mobility, rate of fire, angle of fire, and firepower; different forms of cannon combine and balance these attributes in varying degrees, depe...
Cannon |@lemmatized cannon:166 tubular:1 piece:17 artillery:47 use:89 gunpowder:20 usually:9 explosive:4 base:2 propellant:1 launch:1 projectile:8 distance:3 vary:2 caliber:8 range:18 mobility:2 rate:11 fire:68 angle:8 firepower:7 different:1 form:4 combine:1 balance:1 attribute:1 degree:2 depend:2 intend:4 battlefield...
5,230
Deuterium
Deuterium, also called heavy hydrogen, is a stable isotope of hydrogen with a natural abundance in the oceans of Earth of approximately one atom in 6500 of hydrogen (~154 PPM). Deuterium thus accounts for approximately 0.015% (alternately, on a weight basis: 0.030%) of all naturally occurring hydrogen in the oceans on ...
Deuterium |@lemmatized deuterium:82 also:15 call:10 heavy:28 hydrogen:42 stable:8 isotope:21 natural:8 abundance:11 ocean:5 earth:4 approximately:4 one:13 atom:12 ppm:1 thus:7 account:1 alternately:1 weight:4 basis:2 naturally:4 occur:5 see:10 vsmow:2 change:2 slightly:2 kind:1 water:37 another:1 jupiter:2 terrestrial:...
5,231
Divergence
In vector calculus, the divergence is an operator that measures the magnitude of a vector field's source or sink at a given point; the divergence of a vector field is a (signed) scalar. For example, consider air as it is heated or cooled. The relevant vector field for this example is the velocity of the moving air at ...
Divergence |@lemmatized vector:22 calculus:2 divergence:28 operator:4 measure:4 magnitude:1 field:23 source:11 sink:6 give:5 point:7 sign:1 scalar:6 example:2 consider:2 air:4 heat:2 cool:2 relevant:1 velocity:4 move:1 region:12 expand:1 direction:1 outward:3 therefore:1 would:1 positive:1 value:5 contract:2 negative:1...
5,232
Bijection
A bijective function. In mathematics, a bijection, or a bijective function is a function f from a set X to a set Y with the property that, for every y in Y, there is exactly one x in X such that f(x) = y. Alternatively, f is bijective if it is a one-to-one correspondence between those sets; i.e., both one-to-one (inj...
Bijection |@lemmatized bijective:18 function:26 mathematics:2 bijection:10 f:26 set:21 x:38 property:2 every:1 exactly:2 one:11 alternatively:1 correspondence:2 e:2 injective:4 onto:1 surjective:4 mean:1 author:1 injection:3 others:2 example:4 consider:2 succ:2 define:3 integer:3 associate:2 another:3 sumdif:2 pair:2 r...
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Naomi_Wolf
Naomi Wolf at the 2008 Brooklyn Book Festival.Naomi Wolf (born November 12, 1962) is an American author and political consultant. With the publication of The Beauty Myth, she became a leading spokesperson of what was later described as the third-wave of the feminist movement. She remains an advocate of feminist causes ...
Naomi_Wolf |@lemmatized naomi:33 wolf:95 brooklyn:2 book:18 festival:2 born:1 november:3 american:7 author:5 political:6 consultant:4 publication:2 beauty:20 myth:15 become:7 lead:2 spokesperson:2 later:2 describe:3 third:4 wave:9 feminist:20 movement:2 remain:1 advocate:3 cause:1 progressive:1 politics:3 recent:1 emph...
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Abbess
An abbess (Latin abbatissa, fem. form of abbas, abbot) is the female superior, or Mother Superior, of an abbey of nuns. In Roman Catholic and Anglican abbeys, the mode of election, position, rights, and authority of an abbess correspond generally with those of an abbot. The office is elective, the choice being by the ...
Abbess |@lemmatized abbess:11 latin:1 abbatissa:1 fem:1 form:1 abbas:1 abbot:8 female:2 superior:4 mother:1 abbey:5 nun:2 roman:3 catholic:3 anglican:1 mode:1 election:1 position:1 right:1 authority:3 correspond:1 generally:2 office:4 elective:1 choice:1 secret:1 vote:1 sister:3 body:1 like:2 solemnly:1 admit:1 formal:...
5,235
Hemoglobin
Hemoglobin (also spelled haemoglobin and abbreviated Hb or Hgb) is the iron-containing oxygen-transport metalloprotein in the red blood cells of vertebrates, and the tissues of some invertebrates. In mammals, the protein makes up about 97% of the red blood cell’s dry content, and around 35% of the total content (inc...
Hemoglobin |@lemmatized hemoglobin:139 also:17 spell:1 haemoglobin:5 abbreviated:1 hb:26 hgb:1 iron:57 contain:16 oxygen:97 transport:11 metalloprotein:1 red:36 blood:59 cell:37 vertebrate:7 tissue:6 invertebrate:3 mammal:3 protein:39 make:4 dry:1 content:2 around:1 total:3 include:9 water:6 lung:4 gill:1 rest:1 body:4...
5,236
Harold_Kushner
Harold S. Kushner is a prominent American rabbi aligned with the progressive wing of Conservative Judaism. Education Born in Brooklyn, Kushner was educated at Columbia University and later obtained his rabbinical ordination from the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) in 1960. The same institution awarded him a doctora...
Harold_Kushner |@lemmatized harold:3 kushner:13 prominent:1 american:1 rabbi:7 align:1 progressive:1 wing:1 conservative:2 judaism:1 education:1 bear:1 brooklyn:1 educate:1 columbia:1 university:3 later:1 obtain:1 rabbinical:4 ordination:1 jewish:4 theological:2 seminary:1 jts:2 institution:1 award:2 doctoral:1 degree:...
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Cuba_Libre
For other meanings of 'Cuba Libre' see Cuba libre (disambiguation) The Cuba Libre (IPA /'kuβ̞a'liβ̞ɾe/ in Spanish, kjuːbʌ liːbɹeɪ/ in English, "Free Cuba") is a highball made of Cola, lime, and rum. This highball is often referred to as a Rum and Coke in the United States and Canada, where the lime juice is optional. ...
Cuba_Libre |@lemmatized meaning:1 cuba:40 libre:24 see:1 disambiguation:1 ipa:1 kuβ:1 liβ:1 ɾe:1 spanish:6 kjuːbʌ:1 liːbɹeɪ:1 english:1 free:3 highball:3 make:4 cola:20 lime:5 rum:26 often:2 refer:4 coke:8 united:4 state:4 canada:1 juice:1 optional:1 history:1 account:3 invention:1 vary:1 one:5 claim:1 drink:17 invent:...
5,238
Ariane_5
Ariane 5 is a European expendable launch system designed to deliver payloads into geostationary transfer orbit or low Earth orbit. It is manufactured under the authority of the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES), with EADS Astrium Space Transportation (Astrium) as prime contr...
Ariane_5 |@lemmatized ariane:71 european:3 expendable:1 launch:44 system:3 design:4 deliver:5 payload:25 geostationary:2 transfer:7 orbit:14 low:3 earth:3 manufacture:1 authority:1 space:9 agency:1 esa:8 centre:2 national:1 etude:1 spatiales:1 cnes:1 eads:1 astrium:4 transportation:1 prime:1 contractor:2 lead:3 consort...
5,239
Order_of_magnitude
An order of magnitude is the class of scale or magnitude of any amount, where each class contains values of a fixed ratio to the class preceding it. In its most common usage, the amount being scaled is 10 and the scale is the exponent being applied to this amount. Such differences in order of magnitude can be measured...
Order_of_magnitude |@lemmatized order:38 magnitude:39 class:3 scale:15 amount:4 contain:2 value:6 fixed:1 ratio:1 precede:1 common:2 usage:1 exponent:1 apply:2 difference:3 measure:2 logarithmic:8 factor:4 ten:9 decade:2 mean:7 power:6 year:1 entry:1 table:3 right:2 lead:1 list:1 item:1 various:1 unit:2 measurement:1 u...
5,240
Law_of_multiple_proportions
John Dalton The law of multiple proportions is one of the basic laws in chemistry, and is a major tool of chemical measurement (stoichiometry). This law states that when elements combine they do so in a ratio of small whole numbers. For example, carbon and oxygen react to form CO or CO2, but not CO1.3 for instance. ...
Law_of_multiple_proportions |@lemmatized john:3 dalton:4 law:21 multiple:7 proportion:14 one:19 basic:1 chemistry:1 major:1 tool:1 chemical:6 measurement:4 stoichiometry:1 state:5 element:37 combine:21 ratio:38 small:3 whole:7 number:10 example:15 carbon:13 oxygen:35 react:1 form:18 co:1 instance:1 furthermore:1 two:7 ...
5,241
Pot_odds
In poker, pot odds are the ratio of the current size of the pot to the cost of a contemplated call. In other words, if the pot contains $100, and a player must call $10 to stay in the hand, then the player has 100-to-10, or 10-to-1 (commonly expressed as 10:1), pot odds. Pot odds are often compared to the probability o...
Pot_odds |@lemmatized poker:6 pot:58 odds:45 ratio:3 current:4 size:4 cost:8 contemplated:1 call:36 word:1 contain:1 player:20 must:2 stay:1 hand:19 commonly:1 express:1 often:5 compare:3 probability:5 win:16 future:3 card:10 order:1 estimate:3 expect:12 value:9 indeed:1 common:2 usage:1 term:2 say:1 one:8 meaning:1 pr...
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Alan_Turing
Alan Mathison Turing, OBE, FRS () (23 June, 1912 – 7 June, 1954) was a British mathematician, logician, cryptanalyst and computer scientist. Turing is often considered to be the father of modern computer science. He provided an influential formalisation of the concept of the algorithm and computation with the Turing m...
Alan_Turing |@lemmatized alan:29 mathison:2 turing:139 obe:2 frs:1 june:12 british:6 mathematician:2 logician:1 cryptanalyst:3 computer:22 scientist:2 often:1 consider:3 father:3 modern:3 science:6 provide:1 influential:2 formalisation:1 concept:1 algorithm:2 computation:4 machine:30 role:2 time:18 magazine:2 name:11 o...
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Kista
Kista seen from above. Kista (Swedish: ) is a district of Stockholm Municipality in Sweden belonging to Rinkeby-Kista borough. Located northwest of central Stockholm, Kista is divided by the Stockholm Metro blue line into a western part which is primarily residential, and an eastern part occupied by commercial venture...
Kista |@lemmatized kista:16 see:2 swedish:2 district:1 stockholm:4 municipality:1 sweden:2 belonging:1 rinkeby:1 borough:1 locate:2 northwest:1 central:1 divide:1 metro:2 blue:1 line:1 western:1 part:4 primarily:1 residential:1 eastern:2 occupy:1 commercial:1 venture:2 mostly:1 telecommunication:1 computer:2 industry:3...
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Abatis
Abatisses are used in war to keep the approaching enemy under fire for as long as possible. Abatis, abattis, or abbattis (a French word meaning a heap of material thrown) is a term in field fortification for an obstacle formed of the branches of trees laid in a row, with the sharpened tops directed outwards, towards th...
Abatis |@lemmatized abatis:12 use:9 war:4 keep:1 approach:2 enemy:4 fire:3 long:1 possible:1 abattis:1 abbattis:1 french:1 word:1 mean:1 heap:1 material:1 thrown:1 term:2 field:1 fortification:1 obstacle:5 form:3 branch:2 tree:8 lay:1 row:2 sharpened:1 top:2 direct:1 outwards:1 towards:2 usually:1 interlace:1 tie:1 wir...
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Fundamental_theorem_of_arithmetic
In number theory and algebraic number theory, the Fundamental Theorem of Arithmetic (or Unique-Prime-Factorization Theorem) states that any integer greater than 1 can be written as a unique product (up to ordering of the terms) of prime numbers. For example, are two examples of numbers satisfying the hypothesis of...
Fundamental_theorem_of_arithmetic |@lemmatized number:42 theory:5 algebraic:4 fundamental:14 theorem:26 arithmetic:11 unique:11 prime:48 factorization:23 state:2 integer:20 great:6 write:10 product:19 order:3 term:1 example:7 two:13 satisfy:1 hypothesis:3 intuitively:1 characterize:1 uniquely:1 sense:2 core:1 proof:14 ...
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Craig_Charles
Craig Charles (born 11 July 1964, Liverpool) is an English actor, stand up comedian, author, poet, radio and television presenter and former professional footballer, best known for playing Dave Lister in the British cult-favourite sci-fi sitcom Red Dwarf. He is currently appearing as Lloyd Mullaney in the long-running ...
Craig_Charles |@lemmatized craig:14 charles:38 born:1 july:1 liverpool:3 english:3 actor:1 stand:1 comedian:1 author:1 poet:3 radio:4 television:10 presenter:4 former:1 professional:3 footballer:2 best:2 know:1 play:5 dave:3 lister:4 british:2 cult:2 favourite:1 sci:4 fi:3 sitcom:3 red:7 dwarf:9 currently:1 appear:7 ll...
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Amethyst
Amethyst is a violet variety of quartz often used in jewelry. The name comes from the Ancient Greek a- ("not") and methustos ("intoxicated"), a reference to the belief that the stone protected its owner from drunkenness; the ancient Greeks and Romans wore amethyst and made drinking vessels of it in the belief that it w...
Amethyst |@lemmatized amethyst:40 violet:3 variety:2 quartz:10 often:3 use:5 jewelry:3 name:2 come:2 ancient:3 greek:5 methustos:1 intoxicate:1 reference:2 belief:2 stone:4 protect:2 owner:1 drunkenness:2 roman:1 wear:2 make:2 drinking:1 vessel:1 would:1 prevent:2 intoxication:3 chemistry:1 chemical:2 formula:1 century...
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Naoko_Takeuchi
, born March 15, 1967, is a manga artist who lives in Tokyo, Japan. Takeuchi's works are widely admired by anime/manga fans. She is a well-known mangaka worldwide. Her most popular work, Sailor Moon, has been widely reprinted and marketed worldwide. Biography Early life Naoko Takeuchi was born to Kenji and Ikuko Takeu...
Naoko_Takeuchi |@lemmatized bear:4 march:1 manga:22 artist:3 live:5 tokyo:1 japan:1 takeuchi:27 work:29 widely:2 admire:1 anime:8 fan:1 well:5 know:2 mangaka:1 worldwide:2 popular:1 sailor:67 moon:36 reprint:4 market:1 biography:2 early:2 life:1 naoko:19 kenji:2 ikuko:1 young:3 brother:1 name:5 shingo:1 use:1 mention:3...
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Fritz_Lang
Friedrich Christian Anton "Fritz" Lang (December 5, 1890 – August 2, 1976) was an Austrian-German-American filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional film producer. One of the best known émigrés from Germany's school of Expressionism, he was dubbed the "Master of Darkness" by the BFI. His most famous films are the ground...
Fritz_Lang |@lemmatized friedrich:3 christian:1 anton:2 fritz:9 lang:44 december:2 august:2 austrian:3 german:7 american:6 filmmaker:3 screenwriter:1 occasional:1 film:29 producer:4 one:5 best:1 known:1 émigrés:1 germany:6 school:2 expressionism:1 dub:1 master:1 darkness:1 bfi:1 famous:4 groundbreaking:1 metropolis:2 w...
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Klaus_Fuchs
Klaus Emil Julius Fuchs (29 December 1911 – 28 January 1988), was a German-born British theoretical physicist and atomic spy who in 1950 was convicted of supplying information from the British and American atomic bomb research to the USSR during and shortly after World War II. Fuchs was an extremely competent scientist...
Klaus_Fuchs |@lemmatized klaus:16 emil:4 julius:4 fuchs:63 december:3 january:3 german:7 born:1 british:7 theoretical:5 physicist:6 atomic:8 spy:9 convict:2 supply:1 information:13 american:7 bomb:21 research:6 ussr:2 shortly:1 world:1 war:6 ii:1 extremely:1 competent:1 scientist:6 los:4 alamos:2 national:3 laboratory:...
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Battery_Park_City
The promenade of Battery Park City. Battery Park City is a 92 acre (0.4 km²) planned community at the southwestern tip of lower Manhattan in New York City, United States. The land upon which it stands was created on the Hudson River using 1.2 million cubic yards (917,000 m³) of dirt and rocks excavated during the cons...
Battery_Park_City |@lemmatized promenade:1 battery:36 park:36 city:46 acre:1 plan:6 community:6 southwestern:1 tip:2 low:5 manhattan:7 new:18 york:14 united:2 state:6 land:3 upon:2 stand:1 create:5 hudson:6 river:3 use:2 million:7 cubic:2 yard:2 dirt:1 rock:2 excavate:2 construction:16 world:17 trade:6 center:17 certai...
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Cytochrome
Cytochrome c with heme c. Cytochromes are, in general, membrane-bound hemoproteins that contain heme groups and carry out electron transport. They are found either as monomeric proteins (e.g., cytochrome c) or as subunits of bigger enzymatic complexes that catalyze redox reactions. They are found in the mitochondria...
Cytochrome |@lemmatized cytochrome:26 c:10 heme:11 general:1 membrane:6 bound:2 hemoproteins:1 contain:1 group:6 carry:2 electron:4 transport:4 find:2 either:1 monomeric:1 protein:2 e:5 g:3 subunit:1 big:1 enzymatic:1 complex:5 catalyze:1 redox:3 reaction:3 mitochondrial:2 inner:2 endoplasmic:1 reticulum:1 eukaryote:1 ...
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Dejima
View of Dejima island in Nagasaki Bay (from Siebold's Nippon, 1897) , was a fan-shaped artificial island in the bay of Nagasaki that was a Dutch trading post during Japan's self-imposed isolation (sakoku) of the Edo period, from 1641 until 1853. History Dutchmen with Courtesans in Nagasaki c.1800. The artificial isla...
Dejima |@lemmatized view:3 dejima:58 island:19 nagasaki:34 bay:3 siebold:6 nippon:2 fan:4 shape:2 artificial:3 dutch:58 trading:9 post:7 japan:43 self:1 impose:1 isolation:3 sakoku:4 edo:13 period:8 history:1 dutchman:2 courtesan:1 c:3 construct:2 order:3 shogun:7 iemitsu:1 originally:2 accommodate:1 portuguese:7 merch...
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India
India, officially the Republic of India ( ; see also other Indian languages), is a country in South Asia. It is the seventh-largest country by geographical area, the second-most populous country, and the most populous democracy in the world. Bounded by the Indian Ocean on the south, the Arabian Sea on the west, and the...
India |@lemmatized india:166 officially:2 republic:6 see:5 also:20 indian:73 language:19 country:14 south:13 asia:11 seventh:1 large:16 geographical:2 area:10 second:4 populous:4 democracy:3 world:32 bound:1 ocean:3 arabian:3 sea:4 west:7 bay:3 bengal:8 east:10 coastline:1 border:3 pakistan:10 footnote:1 government:18 ...
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John_Hancock
John Hancock (January 23, 1737 – October 8, 1793) was a merchant, statesman, and prominent Patriot of the American Revolution. He served as president of the Second Continental Congress and was the first governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He is remembered for his large and stylish signature on the United St...
John_Hancock |@lemmatized john:48 hancock:216 january:11 october:8 merchant:47 statesman:1 prominent:1 patriot:39 american:24 revolution:14 serve:6 president:19 second:5 continental:11 congress:38 first:15 governor:22 commonwealth:3 massachusetts:37 remember:2 large:2 stylish:1 signature:7 united:8 state:18 declaration...
5,256
Antarctica
Antarctica This map uses the Lambert azimuthal projection.The South Pole is at the centre. Area (Overall) (ice-free) (ice-covered) 14,000,000 km2 (5,000,000 sq mi) 280,000 km2 (100,000 sq mi) 13,720,000 km2 (5,300,000 sq mi) Population (permanent) (non-permanent) 7th nil ≈1,000 Dependencies Official Territorial...
Antarctica |@lemmatized antarctica:129 map:8 use:9 lambert:1 azimuthal:1 projection:1 south:31 pole:21 centre:1 area:14 overall:1 ice:94 free:3 cover:14 sq:6 mi:11 population:3 permanent:7 non:1 nil:1 dependency:2 official:3 territorial:4 claim:20 antarctic:88 treaty:21 system:6 unofficial:2 reserve:6 right:7 make:14 t...
5,257
Minimal_pair
In phonology, minimal pairs are pairs of words or phrases in a particular language, which differ in only one phonological element, such as a phone, phoneme, toneme or chroneme and have a distinct meaning. They are used to demonstrate that two phones constitute two separate phonemes in the language. As an example for E...
Minimal_pair |@lemmatized phonology:1 minimal:17 pair:22 word:18 phrase:1 particular:2 language:12 differ:5 one:8 phonological:2 element:1 phone:11 phoneme:17 toneme:1 chroneme:2 distinct:3 meaning:5 use:6 demonstrate:3 two:5 constitute:1 separate:3 example:7 english:12 vowel:10 let:3 light:1 lit:1 fact:1 represent:1 c...
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Wikipedia:Free_On-line_Dictionary_of_Computing%2FI_-_K
symbols - B -- C - D -- E - H -- I - K -- L - N -- O - Q -- R - S -- T - W -- X - Z -- FOLDOC Status Page i18n I2O i386 i486 i487 i860 IA IAB IAD IAL IAM IANA IANAL IAP I-APL IAR IAS IAW IBEX IBM IBM 1403 IBM 1620 NO IMPORT IBM 1710 NO IMPORT IBM 2741 IBM 3270 IBM 360 NO IMPORT IBM 3720 NO IMPORT IBM 650 NO IMPORT IBM...
Wikipedia:Free_On-line_Dictionary_of_Computing%2FI_-_K |@lemmatized symbol:1 b:1 c:4 e:2 h:2 k:4 l:1 n:1 q:1 r:4 w:1 x:5 z:1 foldoc:2 status:1 page:2 ia:2 iab:1 iad:1 ial:1 iam:1 iana:1 ianal:1 iap:1 apl:1 iar:1 iaw:1 ibex:1 ibm:24 import:5 compatible:1 customer:1 engineer:3 discount:1 pc:3 pcjr:1 xt:1 system:22 iburg:...
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Common_chimpanzee
The Common Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes), also known as the Robust Chimpanzee, is a great ape. The name troglodytes, Greek for 'cave-dweller', was coined by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach in his Handbuch der Naturgeschichte (Handbook of Natural History) published in 1779. Colloquially, it is often called the chimpanzee (or...
Common_chimpanzee |@lemmatized common:17 chimpanzee:44 pan:10 troglodyte:9 also:6 know:3 robust:1 great:3 ape:5 name:1 troglodytes:2 greek:1 cave:1 dweller:1 coin:1 johann:2 friedrich:2 blumenbach:2 handbuch:1 der:1 naturgeschichte:1 handbook:1 natural:3 history:1 publish:2 colloquially:1 often:2 call:1 simply:1 chimp:...
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Mitochondrion
Electron micrograph of a mitochondrion from mammalian lung tissue showing its matrix and membranes. Schematic of typical animal cell, showing subcellular components. Organelles: (1) Nucleolus (2) nucleus (3) Ribosomes (4) vesicle (5) Rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (6) Golgi apparatus (7) Cytoskeleton (8) Smooth ER (9...
Mitochondrion |@lemmatized electron:11 micrograph:1 mitochondrion:84 mammalian:2 lung:1 tissue:7 show:7 matrix:18 membrane:53 schematic:1 typical:3 animal:5 cell:48 subcellular:1 component:2 organelle:6 nucleolus:1 nucleus:11 ribosome:6 vesicle:1 rough:1 endoplasmic:2 reticulum:2 er:4 golgi:1 apparatus:1 cytoskeleton:5...
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Cecil_B._DeMille
Cecil Blount DeMille (August 12, 1881 – January 21, 1959) was an Academy Award-winning American film director. He was renowned for the flamboyance and showmanship of his movies. Early life DeMille was born in Ashfield, Massachusetts while his parents were vacationing there and grew up in Washington, North Carolina. Hi...
Cecil_B._DeMille |@lemmatized cecil:11 blount:1 demille:44 august:2 january:3 academy:4 award:3 win:3 american:2 film:18 director:6 renowned:1 flamboyance:1 showmanship:1 movie:5 early:5 life:3 bear:2 ashfield:1 massachusetts:1 parent:1 vacation:1 grow:1 washington:1 north:3 carolina:2 father:2 henry:3 churchill:1 born...
5,262
Abugida
An abugida (, from Ge‘ez አቡጊዳ ’äbugida or Amharic አቡጊዳ ’abugida) or alphasyllabary is a segmental writing system which is based on consonants but in which vowel notation is obligatory. About half the writing systems in the world are abugidas, including the extensive Brahmic family of scripts used in South and Southeast...
Abugida |@lemmatized abugida:15 ge:7 ez:7 አቡጊዳ:2 äbugida:1 amharic:1 alphasyllabary:2 segmental:4 writing:1 system:8 base:4 consonant:49 vowel:72 notation:1 obligatory:1 half:1 write:20 world:1 abugidas:19 include:5 extensive:1 brahmic:9 family:10 script:42 use:21 south:9 southeast:6 asia:8 general:1 full:9 letter:26 t...
5,263
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan (Pronounced ; ), formally the Republic of Azerbaijan (), is a country in the Caucasus region of Eurasia. Located at the crossroads of Western Asia and Eastern Europe, Azerbaijan may be considered to be in Asia and/or Europe. The UN classification of world regions places Azerbaijan in Western Asia; the CIA Wo...
Azerbaijan |@lemmatized azerbaijan:149 pronounce:1 formally:1 republic:26 country:26 caucasus:13 region:15 eurasia:2 locate:4 crossroad:1 western:4 asia:8 eastern:4 europe:7 may:6 consider:3 un:1 classification:1 world:18 place:6 cia:4 factbook:4 national:24 geographic:1 encyclopædia:1 britannica:2 also:10 georgia:6 co...
5,264
James_Bond
James Bond 007 is a fictional character created in 1953 by writer Ian Fleming, who featured him in twelve novels and two short story collections. Understanding 007. Retrieved 6 June 2007. The character has also been used in the longest running and most financially successful English language film franchise to date, st...
James_Bond |@lemmatized james:49 bond:137 fictional:2 character:15 create:3 writer:4 ian:15 fleming:45 feature:16 twelve:2 novel:23 two:8 short:7 story:12 collection:4 understand:1 retrieve:2 june:1 also:16 use:12 long:2 running:1 financially:1 successful:1 english:2 language:1 film:65 franchise:4 date:7 start:2 dr:7 a...
5,265
Ford_Motor_Company
The Ford Motor Company () is an American multinational corporation and the world's fourth largest automaker based on worldwide vehicle sales, following Toyota, General Motors, and Volkswagen. Based in Dearborn, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, the automaker was founded by Henry Ford and incorporated on June 16, 1903. In ...
Ford_Motor_Company |@lemmatized ford:409 motor:49 company:83 american:18 multinational:1 corporation:6 world:17 fourth:4 large:17 automaker:13 base:19 worldwide:4 vehicle:72 sale:18 follow:5 toyota:11 general:8 volkswagen:6 dearborn:4 michigan:9 suburb:1 detroit:7 found:2 henry:19 incorporate:1 june:5 addition:6 lincol...
5,266
Music
Music is an art form whose medium is sound organized in time. Common elements of music are pitch (which governs melody and harmony), rhythm (and its associated concepts tempo, meter, and articulation), dynamics, and the sonic qualities of timbre and texture. The word derives from Greek μουσική (mousike), "(art) of the ...
Music |@lemmatized music:333 art:34 form:18 whose:1 medium:6 sound:20 organize:3 time:11 common:9 element:10 pitch:5 govern:2 melody:13 harmony:6 rhythm:7 associated:1 concept:4 tempo:3 meter:1 articulation:1 dynamic:1 sonic:1 quality:4 timbre:1 texture:3 word:1 derive:2 greek:9 μουσική:1 mousike:2 mus:1 henry:2 george...
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Holocene
see also: Anthropocene The Holocene is a geological epoch which began approximately 11 700 years ago (10 000 14C years ago). According to traditional geological thinking, the Holocene continues to the present. The Holocene is part of the Neogene and Quaternary periods. Its name comes from the Greek words (holos, w...
Holocene |@lemmatized see:2 also:5 anthropocene:2 holocene:32 geological:2 epoch:3 begin:3 approximately:2 year:7 ago:5 accord:2 traditional:1 thinking:1 continue:2 present:4 part:3 neogene:1 quaternary:1 period:18 name:1 come:1 greek:1 word:1 holos:1 whole:1 entire:1 kainos:1 new:2 meaning:1 entirely:2 recent:2 identi...
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Merchant
"A merchant making up the account" by Katsushika Hokusai Merchants function as professionals who deal with trade, dealing in commodities that they do not produce themselves, in order to produce profit. Merchants can be of two types: A wholesale merchant operates in the chain between producer and retail merchant. S...
Merchant |@lemmatized merchant:17 make:1 account:2 katsushika:1 hokusai:1 function:1 professional:1 deal:3 trade:2 commodity:2 produce:3 order:1 profit:2 two:1 type:2 wholesale:2 operate:1 chain:1 producer:1 retail:3 organize:1 movement:1 good:4 rather:2 move:1 retailer:1 sell:4 consumer:1 include:1 business:2 shop:1 o...
5,269
George_Stephenson
George Stephenson (9 June 1781 – 12 August 1848) was an English civil engineer and mechanical engineer who built the first public railway line in the world to use steam locomotives and is known as the "Father of Railways". The Victorians considered him a great example of diligent application and thirst for improvement,...
George_Stephenson |@lemmatized george:26 stephenson:69 june:1 august:2 english:1 civil:2 engineer:7 mechanical:2 build:8 first:13 public:2 railway:32 line:13 world:5 use:14 steam:6 locomotive:19 know:1 father:2 victorian:1 consider:2 great:1 example:2 diligent:1 application:1 thirst:1 improvement:2 self:1 help:1 advoca...
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Mandelbrot_set
Initial image of a Mandelbrot set zoom sequence with continuously coloured environment In mathematics, the Mandelbrot set, named after Benoît Mandelbrot, is a set of points in the complex plane, the boundary of which forms a fractal. Mathematically, the Mandelbrot set can be defined as the set of complex values of c fo...
Mandelbrot_set |@lemmatized initial:1 image:20 mandelbrot:117 set:157 zoom:13 sequence:13 continuously:2 colour:11 environment:4 mathematics:5 name:2 benoît:4 point:53 complex:31 plane:12 boundary:12 form:3 fractal:14 mathematically:2 define:5 value:22 c:23 orbit:5 iteration:33 quadratic:7 polynomial:11 zn:4 remain:1 b...
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Lute
Lute can refer generally to any plucked string instrument with a neck (either fretted or unfretted) and a deep round back, or more specifically to an instrument from the family of European lutes. The European lute and the modern Near-Eastern oud both descend from a common ancestor via diverging evolutionary paths. Th...
Lute |@lemmatized lute:155 refer:2 generally:4 plucked:2 string:47 instrument:53 neck:9 either:3 fret:6 unfretted:1 deep:2 round:1 back:4 specifically:1 family:3 european:8 modern:8 near:2 eastern:2 oud:4 descend:1 common:5 ancestor:1 via:1 diverge:1 evolutionary:1 path:1 use:16 great:6 variety:7 instrumental:3 music:4...
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Leyden_jar
Drawing of Leyden jar from 1914 physics book The Leyden jar, or Leiden jar, is a device that "stores" static electricity between two electrodes on the inside and outside of a jar. It was invented in 1745 by Pieter van Musschenbroek (1692–1761), in Leiden, The Netherlands. It was the original form of the capacitor. The...
Leyden_jar |@lemmatized drawing:1 leyden:20 jar:37 physic:1 book:1 leiden:4 device:3 store:12 static:2 electricity:5 two:3 electrode:3 inside:5 outside:1 invent:2 pieter:2 van:2 musschenbroek:3 netherlands:1 original:2 form:4 capacitor:7 use:3 conduct:2 many:1 early:3 experiment:2 discovery:1 fundamental:1 importance:1...
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Chordate
Chordates (phylum Chordata) are a group of animals that includes the vertebrates, together with several closely related invertebrates. They are united by having, at some time in their life cycle, a notochord, a hollow dorsal nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, an endostyle, and a post-anal tail. The phylum Chordata consists ...
Chordate |@lemmatized chordate:40 phylum:9 chordata:4 group:15 animal:11 include:6 vertebrate:19 together:1 several:3 closely:3 related:1 invertebrate:2 unite:1 time:3 life:4 cycle:2 notochord:8 hollow:2 dorsal:4 nerve:6 cord:7 pharyngeal:2 slit:5 endostyle:2 post:1 anal:1 tail:8 consist:3 three:4 subphylum:5 urochorda...
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Danish_language
{{Infobox Language |name=Danish |nativename=dansk |pronunciation=[d̥ænsɡ̊] |states=,,,, (Schleswig-Holstein) |speakers=c. 6 million |rank=102 |familycolor=Indo-European |fam2=Germanic |fam3=North Germanic |fam4=East Scandinavian |nation= (until June 2009) Nordic Council Minority language: European Charter for Regional...
Danish_language |@lemmatized infobox:1 language:42 name:4 danish:83 nativename:1 dansk:2 pronunciation:3 ænsɡ:1 state:1 schleswig:3 holstein:2 speaker:7 c:1 million:2 rank:1 familycolor:1 indo:2 european:4 germanic:6 north:4 east:9 scandinavian:8 nation:1 june:1 nordic:10 council:4 minority:4 charter:1 regional:4 agenc...
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American_Football_Conference
American Football Conference logo. The American Football Conference (AFC) is one of the two conferences of the National Football League (NFL). The other is the National Football Conference (NFC). This conference, along with the NFC, contains 16 teams. These two conferences make up the 32 teams of the NFL. Current tea...
American_Football_Conference |@lemmatized american:4 football:7 conference:8 logo:7 afc:22 one:3 two:9 national:2 league:5 nfl:7 nfc:8 along:1 contain:1 team:23 make:3 current:4 north:3 pittsburgh:1 steelers:1 baltimore:2 raven:3 cleveland:2 brown:6 cincinnati:1 bengal:1 south:3 tennessee:2 titan:2 jacksonville:2 jagua...
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Loch_Ness_Monster
The Loch Ness Monster is a creature believed to inhabit Loch Ness in the Scottish Highlands. It is similar to other supposed lake monsters in Scotland and elsewhere, though its description varies from one account to the next. Popular interest and belief in the animal has fluctuated since it was brought to the world's a...
Loch_Ness_Monster |@lemmatized loch:145 ness:107 monster:89 creature:28 believe:7 inhabit:1 scottish:6 highland:1 similar:4 suppose:2 lake:25 scotland:4 elsewhere:2 though:4 description:5 varies:1 one:14 account:6 next:2 popular:4 interest:3 belief:2 animal:24 fluctuate:1 since:4 bring:1 world:2 attention:1 evidence:11...
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Non-steroidal_anti-inflammatory_drug
Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, usually abbreviated to NSAIDs or NAIDs, are drugs with analgesic, antipyretic (lowering an elevated body temperature and relieving pain without impairing consciousness) and, in higher doses, with anti-inflammatory effects (reducing inflammation). The term "non-steroidal" is used t...
Non-steroidal_anti-inflammatory_drug |@lemmatized non:7 steroidal:4 anti:9 inflammatory:11 drug:19 usually:3 abbreviate:1 nsaid:53 naids:1 analgesic:6 antipyretic:1 lower:1 elevate:1 body:2 temperature:1 relieve:1 pain:11 without:4 impair:1 consciousness:1 high:8 dos:6 effect:17 reduce:9 inflammation:6 term:3 use:18 di...
5,278
Hannibal_Hamlin
Hannibal Hamlin (August 27, 1809 July 4, 1891) was the 15th Vice President of the United States, serving under President Abraham Lincoln from 1861-1865. He was the first Vice President from the Republican Party. Prior to his election in 1860, Hamlin served in the United States Senate, the House of Representatives, and...
Hannibal_Hamlin |@lemmatized hannibal:12 hamlin:45 august:1 july:2 vice:7 president:11 united:8 state:12 serve:11 abraham:2 lincoln:7 first:4 republican:8 party:9 prior:1 election:4 senate:5 house:9 representative:5 briefly:2 governor:3 maine:17 early:2 life:4 bear:1 cyrus:5 anna:1 livermore:3 patten:1 descendant:1 jam...
5,279
Oliver_Heaviside
Oliver Heaviside (18 May 1850 – 3 February 1925) was a self-taught English electrical engineer, mathematician, and physicist who adapted complex numbers to the study of electrical circuits, invented mathematical techniques to the solution of differential equations (later found to be equivalent to Laplace transforms), r...
Oliver_Heaviside |@lemmatized oliver:30 heaviside:83 may:2 february:2 self:2 taught:1 english:1 electrical:8 engineer:3 mathematician:2 physicist:1 adapt:1 complex:1 number:1 study:5 circuit:4 invented:1 mathematical:8 technique:1 solution:1 differential:6 equation:16 later:8 find:2 equivalent:1 laplace:3 transforms:1 ...
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Igneous_rock
Igneous rock (etymology from Latin ignis, fire) is one of the three main rock types (the others being sedimentary and metamorphic rock). Igneous rock is formed by magma (molten rock) being cooled and becoming solid. They may form with or without crystallization, either below the surface as intrusive (plutonic) rocks ...
Igneous_rock |@lemmatized igneous:60 rock:142 etymology:2 latin:2 ignis:2 fire:4 one:6 three:3 main:2 type:14 others:1 sedimentary:3 metamorphic:3 form:21 magma:40 molten:1 cool:8 become:1 solid:4 may:12 without:2 crystallization:4 either:5 surface:10 intrusive:20 plutonic:7 extrusive:11 volcanic:14 derive:3 partial:4 ...
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Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view%2FExamples
This is a stab at creating an example section to help distinguish neutral vs non-neutral writing. I created it because the actual "Neutral Point of View" page now has an awful lot of commentary on it and it is getting difficult to get much guidance. I have tried to glean my examples on the basis of the majority opinion...
Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view%2FExamples |@lemmatized stab:1 create:2 example:6 section:2 help:1 distinguish:1 neutral:4 v:1 non:2 writing:1 actual:1 point:2 view:2 page:3 awful:1 lot:1 commentary:1 get:3 difficult:3 much:3 guidance:1 try:6 glean:1 basis:1 majority:1 opinion:8 feel:2 free:1 dissent:1 mb:1 cut:1 debat...
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Motorola_68030
Motorola 68030 microprocessor The Motorola 68030 is a 32-bit microprocessor in Motorola's 68000 family. Released in 1987, the 68030 was the successor to the Motorola 68020, and was followed by the Motorola 68040. In keeping with general Motorola naming, this CPU is often referred to as the 030 (pronounced oh-thirty). ...
Motorola_68030 |@lemmatized motorola:9 microprocessor:2 bit:1 family:1 release:2 successor:1 follow:1 keep:1 general:1 naming:1 cpu:2 often:1 refer:1 pronounce:1 oh:1 thirty:1 feature:1 chip:4 split:1 instruction:1 data:2 cache:2 byte:1 also:2 memory:1 management:1 unit:2 fast:1 fpu:1 float:1 point:1 could:1 use:3 low:...
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Godzilla_vs._Megalon
is a 1973 Japanese tokusatsu kaiju film directed and co-written by Jun Fukuda with special effects by Teruyoshi Nakano. It was the thirteenth film to be released in the Godzilla franchise. Plot In the film, the undersea civilization Seatopia has been heavily affected by nuclear testing conducted by the surface nations...
Godzilla_vs._Megalon |@lemmatized japanese:8 tokusatsu:4 kaiju:6 film:44 direct:3 co:1 write:1 jun:3 fukuda:3 special:6 effect:6 teruyoshi:2 nakano:2 thirteenth:2 release:16 godzilla:69 franchise:1 plot:1 undersea:1 civilization:2 seatopia:4 heavily:2 affect:1 nuclear:2 test:3 conduct:1 surface:2 nation:1 world:5 natur...
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Knowledge_management
Knowledge Management (KM) comprises a range of practices used in an organisation to identify, create, represent, distribute and enable adoption of insights and experiences. Such insights and experiences comprise knowledge, either embodied in individuals or embedded in organisational processes or practice. An establish...
Knowledge_management |@lemmatized knowledge:71 management:16 km:27 comprise:2 range:2 practice:9 use:5 organisation:11 identify:1 create:2 represent:6 distribute:1 enable:1 adoption:1 insight:5 experience:2 either:2 embody:2 individual:14 embed:3 organisational:7 process:3 establish:2 discipline:3 since:1 see:2 nonaka:...
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King_James_Version
The Authorized King James Version is an English translation of the Christian Bible conceived in 1604 and brought to fruition in 1611 by the Church of England. : "And now at last, ...it being brought unto such a conclusion, as that we have great hope that the Church of England (sic) shall reape good fruit thereby..." P...
King_James_Version |@lemmatized authorized:74 king:35 james:22 version:113 english:46 translation:58 christian:3 bible:116 conceive:2 bring:3 fruition:1 church:28 england:28 last:3 unto:5 conclusion:1 great:13 hope:2 sic:1 shall:3 reape:1 good:5 fruit:1 thereby:2 print:24 printer:22 robert:6 barker:8 first:27 edition:6...
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Dwight_L._Moody
Dwight Lyman Moody (February 5, 1837 - December 22, 1899), also known as D.L. Moody, was an American evangelist and publisher who founded the Moody Church, Northfield School and Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts (now the Northfield Mount Hermon School), the Moody Bible Institute and Moody Publishers. Early life Dw...
Dwight_L._Moody |@lemmatized dwight:9 lyman:1 moody:50 february:1 december:2 also:4 know:3 l:12 american:3 evangelist:6 publisher:2 found:2 church:16 northfield:8 school:9 mount:4 hermon:3 massachusetts:2 bible:6 institute:5 early:1 life:5 bear:2 large:3 family:6 father:2 small:1 farmer:1 stonemason:1 alcoholic:1 die:2...
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Free_software
Free software or software libre is software that can be used, studied, and modified without restriction, and which can be copied and redistributed in modified or unmodified form either without restriction, or with minimal restrictions only to ensure that further recipients can also do these things and that manufacturer...
Free_software |@lemmatized free:96 software:147 libre:8 use:21 study:6 modify:9 without:3 restriction:3 copy:4 redistribute:3 modified:3 unmodified:1 form:3 either:3 minimal:1 ensure:2 recipient:2 also:9 thing:2 manufacturer:3 consumer:1 facing:1 hardware:11 allow:6 user:19 modification:4 available:7 gratis:4 charge:5 ...
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Angus
Angus (Aonghas in Gaelic) is one of the 32 local government council areas of Scotland, and a lieutenancy area. The council area borders onto Aberdeenshire, Perth and Kinross and Dundee City. Main industries include agriculture and fishing. Angus was historically a county (known officially as Forfarshire until 1928) un...
Angus |@lemmatized angus:15 aonghas:1 gaelic:2 one:1 local:1 government:1 council:8 area:10 scotland:3 lieutenancy:1 border:3 onto:1 aberdeenshire:2 perth:1 kinross:1 dundee:2 city:2 main:2 industry:2 include:1 agriculture:1 fishing:1 historically:1 county:5 know:1 officially:1 forfarshire:1 become:1 district:1 tayside...
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GNU_nano
In computing, nano is a curses-based text editor for Unix and Unix-like systems. It is a clone of Pico, the editor of the Pine email client. nano aims to emulate the functionality and easy-to-use interface of Pico, but without the tight mailer integration of the Pine/Pico package. Released under the terms of the GNU G...
GNU_nano |@lemmatized compute:1 nano:14 curse:1 base:1 text:4 editor:5 unix:3 like:2 system:2 clone:1 pico:9 pine:3 email:1 client:1 aim:1 emulate:1 functionality:2 easy:1 use:2 interface:1 without:1 tight:1 mailer:1 integration:1 package:1 release:2 term:1 gnu:2 general:1 public:1 license:3 free:3 software:3 version:1...
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Mythology
The term "mythology" sometimes refers to the study of myths and sometimes refers to a body of myths. Kirk, p. 8 "myth", Encyclopædia Britannica For example, comparative mythology is the study of connections between myths from different cultures, Littleton, p. 32 whereas Greek mythology is the body of myths from anc...
Mythology |@lemmatized term:6 mythology:44 sometimes:2 refers:2 study:7 myth:133 body:2 kirk:7 p:57 encyclopædia:3 britannica:3 example:8 comparative:10 connection:1 different:8 culture:11 littleton:3 whereas:2 greek:5 ancient:7 greece:1 often:6 use:5 colloquially:1 refer:3 false:2 story:12 armstrong:1 eliade:11 realit...
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Abraham_Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809 – April 15, 1865) was the 16th President of the United States. He successfully led the country through its greatest internal crisis, the American Civil War, preserving the Union and ending slavery. As the war was drawing to a close, Lincoln became the first American president to be as...
Abraham_Lincoln |@lemmatized abraham:80 lincoln:396 february:13 april:12 president:46 united:21 state:81 successfully:4 lead:6 country:4 great:8 internal:1 crisis:2 american:29 civil:25 war:78 preserve:5 union:39 end:13 slavery:32 draw:1 close:3 become:13 first:30 assassinate:4 election:20 republican:37 lawyer:4 illino...
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Chris_Cunningham
Chris Cunningham is an acclaimed English music video film director and video artist. He was born in Reading, Berkshire in 1970 and grew up in Lakenheath, Suffolk. The video collection The Work of Director Chris Cunningham was released in November 2004 as part of the Directors Label set. This DVD includes selected high...
Chris_Cunningham |@lemmatized chris:16 cunningham:30 acclaimed:1 english:1 music:14 video:35 film:25 director:8 artist:2 bear:1 reading:1 berkshire:1 grow:1 lakenheath:1 suffolk:1 collection:1 work:14 release:3 november:3 part:1 label:1 set:2 dvd:2 include:6 select:1 highlight:1 close:1 tie:1 warp:5 record:3 since:2 fi...
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Johannes_Kepler
Johannes Kepler () (December 27, 1571 – November 15, 1630) was a German mathematician, astronomer and astrologer, and key figure in the 17th century scientific revolution. He is best known for his eponymous laws of planetary motion, codified by later astronomers based on his works Astronomia nova, Harmonices Mundi, and...
Johannes_Kepler |@lemmatized johannes:31 kepler:334 december:4 november:2 german:5 mathematician:11 astronomer:15 astrologer:9 key:2 figure:4 century:6 scientific:21 revolution:19 best:1 know:7 eponymous:1 law:24 planetary:19 motion:26 codify:1 late:7 base:12 work:48 astronomia:13 nova:18 harmonices:9 mundi:11 epitome:...
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Monoid
In abstract algebra, a branch of mathematics, a monoid is an algebraic structure with a single associative binary operation and an identity element. Monoids occur in a number of branches of mathematics and capture the idea of function composition; indeed, this notion is abstracted in category theory, where the monoid i...
Monoid |@lemmatized abstract:3 algebra:2 branch:2 mathematics:3 monoid:104 algebraic:4 structure:4 single:3 associative:2 binary:6 operation:22 identity:18 element:37 monoids:19 occur:2 number:6 capture:1 idea:1 function:9 composition:6 indeed:2 notion:2 category:14 theory:8 one:20 object:9 also:9 commonly:3 use:3 prov...
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Biotechnology
Insulin crystals. Biotechnology is technology based on biology, especially when used in agriculture, food science, and medicine. United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity defines biotechnology as: "The Convention on Biological Diversity (Article 2. Use of Terms)." United Nations. 1992. Retrieved on February 6, ...
Biotechnology |@lemmatized insulin:19 crystal:1 biotechnology:80 technology:10 base:10 biology:5 especially:5 use:71 agriculture:14 food:19 science:13 medicine:11 united:7 nation:2 convention:2 biological:16 diversity:2 defines:1 article:2 term:13 retrieve:3 february:4 often:7 refer:4 genetic:35 engineering:22 century:...
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God_Emperor_of_Dune
See God Emperor for the general concept, for the Warhammer 40,000 personality c.f. Emperor of Mankind (Warhammer 40,000). God Emperor of Dune is a science fiction novel by Frank Herbert published in 1981, the fourth in the Dune series. Plot introduction Thirty-five hundred years have passed since Paul Atreides had be...
God_Emperor_of_Dune |@lemmatized see:4 god:15 emperor:17 general:1 concept:1 warhammer:2 personality:1 c:1 f:1 mankind:2 dune:11 science:1 fiction:1 novel:5 frank:1 herbert:3 publish:1 fourth:1 series:5 plot:3 introduction:1 thirty:1 five:1 hundred:1 year:2 pass:1 since:1 paul:1 atreides:6 become:4 messiah:1 fremen:2 k...
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Military_of_Costa_Rica
On December 1, 1948, President José Figueres Ferrer of Costa Rica abolished the country's army after victory in the civil war in that year. (Spanish) In a ceremony in the Cuartel Bellavista, Figueres broke a wall with a mallet symbolizing the end of Costa Rica's military spirit. In 1949, the abolition of the military ...
Military_of_Costa_Rica |@lemmatized december:2 president:2 josé:2 figueres:3 ferrer:2 costa:6 rica:5 abolish:1 country:3 army:1 victory:1 civil:4 war:2 year:1 spanish:1 ceremony:1 cuartel:3 bellavista:3 break:2 wall:2 mallet:1 symbolize:2 end:1 military:7 spirit:1 abolition:4 introduce:1 article:1 rican:1 constitution:...
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Heapsort
Heapsort (method) is a comparison-based sorting algorithm, and is part of the selection sort family. Although somewhat slower in practice on most machines than a good implementation of quicksort, it has the advantage of a worst-case Θ(n log n) runtime. Heapsort is an in-place algorithm, but is not a stable sort. Over...
Heapsort |@lemmatized heapsort:38 method:1 comparison:7 base:5 sort:25 algorithm:12 part:2 selection:2 family:1 although:1 somewhat:2 slow:5 practice:3 machine:2 good:1 implementation:4 quicksort:8 advantage:4 bad:4 case:5 θ:1 n:17 log:7 runtime:1 place:8 stable:2 overview:1 heap:48 work:2 name:1 suggest:1 begin:1 buil...
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Llama
The llama (Lama glama) is a South American camelid, widely used as a pack animal by the Incas and other natives of the Andes mountains. In South America llamas are still used as beasts of burden, as well as for the production of fiber and meat. The height of a full-grown, full-size llama is between to tall at the ...
Llama |@lemmatized llama:102 lama:4 glama:2 south:9 american:4 camelid:2 widely:1 use:18 pack:2 animal:16 inca:2 native:1 andes:2 mountain:4 america:15 still:3 beast:2 burden:2 well:5 production:1 fiber:12 meat:1 height:1 full:2 grown:1 size:5 tall:1 top:1 head:3 weigh:2 approximately:3 birth:6 baby:3 call:2 cria:6 soc...