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The Meadowcroft Chinook is a two-seat mid-winged American homebuilt aircraft design first flown in 1958.
Development
The Chinook was designed for maximum stability on the ground and the air with a roomy cockpit.
Design
The wing was patterned from the Ace Baby Ace homebuilt. The aircraft is a tricycle geared side-by-s... |
Centerville is an unincorporated community in Douglas County, in the U.S. state of Nevada. The community is at the intersection of Nevada routes 88 and 756 approximately two miles south-southwest of Minden.
History
Centerville was named from its central location in the surrounding valley.
References
Unincorporated c... |
"Poland" is a song by American rapper Lil Yachty. It was released on October 11, 2022, through Quality Control Music and Motown Records.
Background and release
Lil Yachty had been working on a "non-rap album" intended to be a "psychedelic alternative project", which he announced in January 2022. The song was originall... |
Aretha Brown, or Aretha Stewart-Brown (born 11 November 2000), is an Indigenous Australian youth activist, comedian, artist, and the former Prime Minister of the National Indigenous Youth Parliament.
Brown has appeared doing talks, speeches and acknowledgement of country ceremonies for various organisations, including... |
The Sixth Clan is a women's network active in Somali politics founded by Asha Haji Elmi. The name stems from the fact that traditionally Somalia's society is said to consist of five major clans. The "sixth clan" is the pan-Somali women's movement.
The movement stems from the earlier organization founded by Asha Haji E... |
Havre may refer to:
Places
Canada
Havre-Aubert, Magdalen Islands, Quebec
Havre Boucher, Nova Scotia
Havre-Saint-Pierre, Quebec
USA
Havre de Grace, Maryland
Havre De Grace High School
Havre, Michigan
Havre, Montana
Havre Air Force Station
Havre City–County Airport
France
Havre–Caumartin (Paris Métro), Paris... |
Diploderma polygonatum, also known as Ryukyu japalure and Okinawa tree lizard, is a species of lizard found in the Ryukyu Islands and Taiwan. It is diurnal and arboreal. An adult male Diploderma polygonatum measures "61 mm. from snout to vent, and 152 mm. from vent to tip of tail; total length 213 mm." The splenial of ... |
Ferenc Szekeres (born 21 March 1947) is a retired long-distance runner from Hungary, who twice won the Amsterdam Marathon, in 1979 and 1981. He represented his native country in at two Summer Olympics: 1972 and 1980.
References
1979 Year Ranking
1947 births
Living people
People from Abony
Hungarian male long-distanc... |
This is a list of Nigerian films released in 1992.
Films
See also
List of Nigerian films
References
External links
1992 films at the Internet Movie Database
1992
Lists of 1992 films by country or language
Films
1990s in Nigerian cinema |
Too Gone may refer to:
"Too Gone", song by The Connells from One Simple Word, 1990
"Too Gone", song by Rich the Kid from The World Is Yours, 2018 |
Matthew Taylor (born 1968, Miami, Florida, United States) is an American musician and artist.
Taylor was a student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the late 1980s and early 1990s, there he studied music composition and improvisation under John Corbett.
He is a founding member of the Sicilian American ... |
CaptiveAire Systems is the largest privately held manufacturer of commercial kitchen ventilation systems in the US and a manufacturer of HVAC equipment. The company, founded by Robert L. Luddy in 1976, is headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina. Since its inception, the company has expanded from fire suppression to a ... |
Melissa Kretschmer (born 1962, Santa Monica, California) is an American contemporary artist known for her hybrid sculpture/painting works. She has exhibited extensively both nationally and internationally. She lives and works in New York City.
Education and work
Kretschmer received a MFA and BFA from the ArtCenter C... |
Apomyelois ehrendorferi is a species of snout moth in the genus Apomyelois. It was described by Hans Malicky and Rolf-Ulrich Roesler, in 1970. It is found on Sardinia.
References
Moths described in 1970
Phycitini
Endemic fauna of Italy
Moths of Europe |
is a tokusatsu children's comedy show from Japan. Produced by Toho Company Ltd., the show ran for 260 episodes and aired on Fuji TV from October 1, 1973 to September 27, 1974. Kure Kure Takora—the main character of the show—wants everything he sees and says "Kure! Kure!" ("I want it! I want it!"). Each episode ran exac... |
Birger Jarlsgatan is one of the longest streets in central Stockholm, Sweden. The street forms the border between Östermalm and the two neighbouring districts Norrmalm and Vasastaden.
It is named after Birger Jarl since 1885, then "Birger Jarls gata" (gata meaning "street"). The contemporary spelling has been used sin... |
Jean-Baptiste Lemire (8 June 1867 – 2 March 1945) was a French composer.
Biography
Lemire was born in Colmar, Haut-Rhin. He was the son of Jean-Baptiste (1844–1909), a mason, and Anne-Marie Sarter (1848–1924), a dressmaker. In 1871, France was defeated in the Franco-Prussian War, and his family was forced to flee thei... |
Krishnagar Women's College, established in 1958, is a women's college in Krishnagar, in Nadia district, West Bengal, India. It offers undergraduate courses in arts and sciences. It is affiliated to University of Kalyani. Manabi Bandopadhyay, India's first openly transgender college principal, began work as such as the... |
Underage Thinking is the debut album by singer-songwriter Teddy Geiger, released on March 21, 2006. Geiger wrote or co-wrote all the songs featured on the album herself, as well as a cover of Avion's "Seven Days Without You".
Album information
The album was produced by Billy Mann, Christopher Rojas and Paul Pimsler.
... |
Universidad de las Américas (University of the Americas) may refer to:
Universidad de las Américas, A.C., a bilingual university in Mexico City, Mexico.
Universidad de las Américas Puebla, a Mexican private university in San Andrés Cholula, near Puebla
Universidad de las Américas, Spanish name for University of the Am... |
Sukhavati (IAST: Sukhāvatī; "Blissful") is the pure land of Amitābha in Mahayana Buddhism. It is also called the Land of Bliss or Western Pure Land, and is the most well-known of Buddhist pure lands, due to the popularity of Pure Land Buddhism in East Asia.
Etymology and names
The word is the feminine form of the Sans... |
Verena Madner (born May 12, 1965, in Linz) is an Austrian legal scholar, university professor and constitutional judge. She has been Professor of Public Law at the Department of Socio-Economics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business since 2011. In 2020, she was appointed Vice President of the Austrian Const... |
The is a complex that includes a shopping mall, office, multiplex movie theaters, and museum, located in Chūō-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaidō, Japan. The building was formerly a brewery that belonged to the Kaitakushi, the old government of Hokkaidō prefecture, and later owned by the Sapporo Beer Company, the predecessor of the... |
Klaus Thunemann (born 19 April 1937) is a German bassoonist, considered "one of the finest bassoonists of his generation".
Biography
Klaus Thunemann was born in Magdeburg on 19 April 1937. He originally studied piano but from the age of 18 focused on the bassoon. He was a student at the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin... |
Nowy Nart is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jeżowe, within Nisko County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately west of Jeżowe, south-west of Nisko, and north of the regional capital Rzeszów.
References
Nowy Nart |
Odontocera apicalis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae.
References
Odontocera |
Grygori Nazarovych Dolenko (Gaevka, Kirovograd Oblast, February 2, 1917 - Lviv, December 16, 1990) was a Ukrainian petroleum geologist.
Graduated from Kharkiv University (1940). Worked for ChernomorNeft, KhadyzhenNeft, BuguruslanNeft, and UkrNefteRazvedka E&P companies and with Inst. of Geology and Geochemistry of C... |
Little people may refer to:
People with dwarfism, short stature resulting from a medical condition
Little People of America, organization representing some of the above
Little People of Canada, organization representing some of the above
Children
Dutch theologian Abraham Kuyper's concept of , a group of Dutch mid... |
This was the first edition of the tournament.
Emilio Nava won the title after defeating Titouan Droguet 6–7(5–7), 7–6(8–6), 6–4 in the final.
Seeds
Draw
Finals
Top half
Bottom half
References
External links
Main draw
Qualifying draw
Modena Challenger - 1 |
Brice Conrad (born 18 July 1985, in Pfulgriesheim, France) is a French singer-songwriter and musician of pop rock and folk music and is signed to Universal Music France.
He became most famous for his songs "Fleur de mal" and "Oh la", both pre-releases from his forthcoming debut album La Nuit Bleue due on 4 March 2013.... |
Nicolae: The Rise of Antichrist is the third book in the Left Behind series. It was written by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins in 1997 and was published on Wednesday, October 1, of that year. It takes place 18–21 months into the Great Tribulation.
Plot
The members of the Tribulation Force have discovered that their pa... |
BAG family molecular chaperone regulator 1 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the BAG1 gene.
Function
The oncogene BCL2 is a membrane protein that blocks a step in a pathway leading to apoptosis or programmed cell death. The protein encoded by this gene binds to BCL2 and is referred to as BCL2-associated atha... |
The Wellcome Photography Prize is an annual photography competition organised by the Wellcome Trust. It was established in 1997 as the Wellcome Image Awards, for science image making. It was renamed in a revamp and expansion in 2018.
Winners
Wellcome Image Awards 2016
20 winners
Wellcome Image Awards 2017
22 winners... |
Ernst Wilhelm Londicer or Londizer (1655, Reval - 9 November 1697, Reval) was a Baltic-German painter.
Life and work
His father, George Londicer, was a Scottish-born Lieutenant-Colonel and nobleman. His brother, Rabe Rudolf (?-1698), served as Mayor of Reval. He initially devoted himself to a study of classical liter... |
List of Boys' Doubles Junior Grand Slam tournaments tennis champions:
Champions by year
Statistics
Most Grand Slam doubles titles
Note: when a tie, the person to reach the mark first is listed first.
Career Grand Slam
Players who won all four Grand Slam titles over the course of their careers.
The event at which ... |
Kokot is a Slavic surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Franciszek Kokot (1929–2021), Polish nephrologist and endocrinologist
Manfred Kokot (born 1948), East German athlete
Aleš Kokot (born 1979), Slovenian footballer
See also
Kokotović
Polish-language surnames
Slovene-language surnames |
Hasanat is the sixth album released by Ahmed Bukhatir in 2007. It consists of ten nasheeds of which four are in English. Two video clips were released after this album: Ya'Bonayya (O My Son) and Atfalana (Our Children).
Track listing
Video clips
The video clip for Atfalana was released in 2008. It was shot in Salala... |
Jeong Yeong-hun (born 5 April 1973) is a South Korean cyclist. He competed in the men's team pursuit at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
References
1973 births
Living people
South Korean male cyclists
Olympic cyclists for South Korea
Cyclists at the 1996 Summer Olympics
Place of birth missing (living people)
Asian Games med... |
The 1976 New England Patriots season was the franchise's 7th season in the National Football League and 17th overall.
After a nine-year stretch in which they posted just one non-losing season amid eight losing years, the Patriots turned around their fortunes, going 11–3. It marked their first winning season as an NFL ... |
Tim Hart (1948–2009) was an English singer and multi-instrumentalist for British folk band Steeleye Span.
Tim Hart may also refer to:
Tim Hart (Australian musician), drummer and backing vocalist for folk rock band Boy & Bear
Tim Hart (drummer), drummer for Theory of a Deadman from 1999 to 2004 |
Mary Jane "M.J." Tumbridge (born 12 July 1964) is a Bermudian equestrian. She competed at the 1992 Summer Olympics and the 2000 Summer Olympics. She was the first sportsperson from Bermuda to win a gold medal at the Pan Am Games, and is considered to be the best equestrian from the country.
Biography
Tumbridge was bor... |
Can't Stop Dreaming is a 1996 solo album by Daryl Hall. It was originally released in Japan as a Limited Collector's Edition with 12 tracks and was subsequently released in the United States on June 10, 2003, albeit missing one of its original tracks ("Something About You"), which was featured on the 2002 Hall & Oates ... |
The Sula (; ) is a left tributary of the Dnieper with a total length of and a drainage basin of .
The river flows into the Dnieper through the Kremenchuk Reservoir, with which it forms a large delta with numerous islands, on which rare kinds of birds live. An important tributary is the Uday, smaller ones being Orzhyt... |
Abul Qasim Hasan Unsuri Balkhi (; died 1039/1040) was a 10–11th century Persian poet. ‘Unṣurī is said to have been born in Balkh, today located in Afghanistan, and he eventually became a poet of the royal court of Mahmud of Ghazni, and was given the title Malik-us Shu'ara (King of Poets) under Sultan Maḥmūd of Ghazna. ... |
```objective-c
/*
*
*
* path_to_url
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
*/
#import "ZXRSSDataCharacter.h"
@class ZXRSSFinderPattern;
@interface ZXRSSPair : ZXRSSDataCharacter
@property (nonatom... |
The Shanghai Bull, the Bund Financial Bull or the Bund Bull are monikers associated with a derivative of Arturo Di Modica's Charging Bull installed in late April 2010 and unveiled on The Bund in Shanghai on May 15, 2010. Although the work of art is said to have the same height, length and weight as the New York City ... |
The Seventh Sin is a 1917 American silent drama film directed by Theodore Marston and starring Shirley Mason, George Le Guere and Anna Murdock. It was the final entry into a seven film series based on the Seven Deadly Sins.
Cast
Shirley Mason as Eve Leslie
George Le Guere as Adam Moore
Anna Murdock as Betty Howard... |
Lin Yi-shih (; born 19 August 1968) is a Taiwanese politician. He was the Secretary-General of the Executive Yuan in 2012.
Education
Lin studied dentistry at Taipei Medical College and later graduated from National Sun Yat-sen University (NSYSU).
Political career
Lin served as a legislator from 1999 to 2012, and as v... |
Sea Ranch is an unincorporated community in Sonoma County, California, United States that was developed as planned community beginning in the 1960s. It is known for its distinctive timber-frame structures designed by several noted American architects. The first unit built at Sea Ranch, Condominium 1, was placed on the ... |
Duo (also referred to as Hank Jones-Red Mitchel Duo) is an album by pianist Hank Jones and bassist Red Mitchell recorded in 1987 for the Dutch Timeless label.
Reception
AllMusic awarded the album 4 stars and its review by Ken Dryden states: "These two musicians usually make any date that they're a part of a success a... |
Michael A. Slyziuk (September 18, 1918 – October 10, 2003) was the Skip on the Detroit CC curling team (from Detroit, Michigan, United States) during the 1963 World Curling Championships known as the Scotch Cup, where United States team finished with bronze medals.
After serving in the Canadian Army, he moved to Winds... |
Ek Ruka Hua Faisla (English: A Pending Decision) is a 1986 Indian Hindi-language legal drama film directed by Basu Chatterjee. It is a remake of the Golden Bear winning American motion picture 12 Angry Men (1957) directed by Sidney Lumet, which was an adaptation from a 1954 teleplay of the same name by Reginald Rose.
... |
Samatar is a Somali language surname.
People with the surname
Abdi Ismail Samatar (born 1950), Somali scholar, writer and professor
Ahmed Ismail Samatar (born 1950), Somali writer
Hasan Adan Samatar (born 1953), Somali singer and guitarist
Hawa Abdi Samatar (born 19??), Somali political figure
Hussein Samatar (1964–... |
Zebrzydowice may refer to the following places in southern Poland:
Zebrzydowice, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south-west Poland)
Zebrzydowice, Silesian Voivodeship (south Poland)
Zebrzydowice, Rybnik in Silesian Voivodeship (south Poland) |
Tsvetochnoye () is a rural locality (a selo) in Gmelinskoye Rural Settlement, Staropoltavsky District, Volgograd Oblast, Russia. The population was 89 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.
Geography
Tsvetochnoye is located in steppe, on Transvolga, on the left bank of the Kuba River, 35 km southeast of Staraya Poltavka (t... |
Habib Davanloo (born October 10, 1927) is a psychoanalyst and psychiatric researcher and working in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, who developed Intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy(ISTDP). He was Professor of Psychiatry (now Emeritus) at McGill University and founding editor of the International Journal of Intensiv... |
```c
/*
* Misc support functions
*/
#include "duk_internal.h"
DUK_INTERNAL duk_bool_t duk_hobject_prototype_chain_contains(duk_hthread *thr,
duk_hobject *h,
duk_hobject *p,
... |
```go
// package sar implements a syn-ack-rst health ping.
// It sends a TCP SYN, waits for an ACK, then immediately sends an RST to kill the connection.
// The primary purpose of this is as a health check, to verify the remote host is reachable, and able and willing to respond.
package sar
/*
* or more contributor l... |
Michael A. “Mike” Sylvester is an American politician who has served as a member of the Maine House of Representatives since 2016. He represents the 39th House District as a member of the Democratic Party. Sylvester is a member of Democratic Socialists of America.
Early life and education
Raised in Lewiston, Maine, S... |
Choi Han is a South Korean voice actor who joined the Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation's Voice Acting Division in 1999. He voices David Hodges in the Korea TV Edition of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation replacing Wallace Langham. He won Best TV Voice Actor at the 2009 MBC Drama Awards for CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
... |
Peter Stokes (died 1399) was an English Carmelite friar, known as an opponent of the teachings of John Wyclif.
Life
Stokes became a Carmelite at Hitchin, Hertfordshire. Later at the University of Oxford, he graduated there as doctor of divinity, by 1382.
During the religious troubles in that year of 1382, Stokes acte... |
Forward Operating Base (FOB) Sharana was a large forward operating base with many amenities, including a United Service Organizations installation. It is located in Paktika Province, Afghanistan.
FOB Sharana was initially established as Camp Kearney on 21 November 2004. This was followed by the construction of an airs... |
Kesao (written: or ) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include:
Japanese general
, Japanese astronomer
Japanese masculine given names
Masculine given names |
Rhaphipteroides apicalis is a species of beetle in the family Cerambycidae, and the only species in the genus Rhaphipteroides. It was described by Touroult and Tavakilian in 2007.
References
Pteropliini
Beetles described in 2007 |
Cecconi is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Eugenio Cecconi (1842–1903), Italian painter
Giancarlo Cecconi (1935–2012), Italian sport shooter
Luca Cecconi (born 1964), Italian footballer and manager
Luciano Re Cecconi (1948–1977), Italian footballer
Maurizia Cecconi (born 1975), Italian syn... |
The Urethra Chronicles is a 1999 documentary film about the American pop punk band Blink-182. The film, directed by former manager Rick DeVoe, is a behind-the-scenes look at the band's history featuring their usual toilet humor. The documentary includes exclusive live performance footage and music videos.
The film was... |
Abdi Nageeye (born 2 March 1989) is a Somali-Dutch long-distance runner from the Netherlands. He won the silver medal in the marathon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Nageeye placed third at the 2022 New York City Marathon.
He is the Dutch national record holder for the 10 km road race, half marathon and marathon.
Early l... |
Against the Current: Essays in the History of Ideas (1979) is a collection of essays by the 20th-century philosopher and historian Isaiah Berlin.
Summary
The collection was edited by Henry Hardy and featured an introduction by Roger Hausheer. The book collects previously published essays in which Berlin discusses the ... |
Dmitry German (; ; born 12 June 1988) is a Belarusian professional footballer who plays for Ostrovets.
Honours
Dinamo Brest
Belarusian Cup winner: 2016–17, 2017–18
References
External links
Profile at pressball.by
1988 births
Living people
People from Byaroza
Footballers from Brest Region
Belarusian men's foot... |
The 25th Airborne Division () was an airborne unit of the French Army. Constituted at the end of 1945, the division was created on February 1, 1946 and was dissolved during the Indochina War in June 1948; it did not serve in Indochina as an entire division.
History
Following the end of World War II, France planned to ... |
Pediacus subglaber is a species of flat bark beetle in the family Cucujidae. It is found in North America.
References
Further reading
Cucujidae
Articles created by Qbugbot
Beetles described in 1854 |
Hereford is a census-designated place that is located in Hereford Township, Berks County, Pennsylvania, United States.
History
A post office called Hereford was in operation from 1830 to 2019. The community took its name from Hereford Township. It was previously known as Treichlersville.
At the end of March 2019 the... |
Bonese is a village and a former municipality in the district Altmarkkreis Salzwedel, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2009, it is part of the municipality Dähre.
Former municipalities in Saxony-Anhalt
Altmarkkreis Salzwedel |
That Used to be Us: How America Fell Behind in the World It Invented and How We Can Come Back is a nonfiction book written by Thomas Friedman, a Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times columnist and author, with Michael Mandelbaum, a writer and foreign policy professor at Johns Hopkins University. They published the book... |
The 2001 USL Premier Development League season was the 7th PDL season. The season began in April 2001 and ended in August 2001.
Westchester Flames finished the season as national champions, beating Calgary Storm 3-1 in the PDL Championship game. Calgary Storm finished with the best regular season record in the league,... |
The 2002 Vuelta a Castilla y León was the 17th edition of the Vuelta a Castilla y León cycle race and was held on 2 May to 6 May 2002. The race started in Ávila and finished in Benavente. The race was won by Juan Miguel Mercado.
General classification
References
Vuelta a Castilla y León
Vuelta a Castilla y León by y... |
"Why I Write" (1946) is an essay by George Orwell detailing his personal journey to becoming a writer. It was first published in the Summer 1946 edition of Gangrel. The editors of this magazine, J.B.Pick and Charles Neil, had asked a selection of writers to explain why they write.
The essay offers a type of mini-autob... |
The Kelly Gang; or the Career of the Outlaw, Ned Kelly, the Iron-clad Bushranger of Australia is an 1899 Australian play about bushranger Ned Kelly. It is attributed to Arnold Denham but it is likely a number of other writers worked on it.
Contemporary reviews remarked on the similarities the play had with Robbery Und... |
Nowy Świat-Uniwersytet is a station on the central part of Line M2 of the Warsaw Metro.
The station fully opened for passenger use on 8 March 2015 as part of the inaugural stretch of Line M2 between Rondo Daszyńskiego and Dworzec Wileński. It was designed by Polish architect Andrzej M. Chołdzyński and constructed by M... |
Norman S. Radin was a neurochemist who, along with Jim Shayman, developed eliglustat, a drug for treating Gaucher's disease. Born in New York City, he received a B.S. in 1941 and Ph.D. in 1949 from Columbia University, later becoming an associate professor at Northwestern University before moving to the University of M... |
Demobotys pervulgalis is a moth in the family Crambidae. It was described by George Hampson in 1913. It is found in Japan and China.
Subspecies
Demobotys pervulgalis pervulgalis (Japan)
Demobotys pervulgalis exigua Munroe & Mutuura, 1969 (China: Nanjing)
Demobotys pervulgalis hunana Munroe & Mutuura, 1969 (China: Huna... |
Laxman Singh Gaur (11 July 1958 – 11 February 2008) was an Indian politician and the higher education minister of Madhya Pradesh. He upgraded the functionality of the education system in Madhya Pradesh. He died in a car accident near Dewas on 11 February 2008.
References
1958 births
2008 deaths
Bharatiya Janata Par... |
Thomas Broadbent may refer to:
Thomas Harold Broadbent Maufe (1898–1942), English recipient of the Victoria Cross
Thomas Biggin Broadbent (1793–1817), English preacher
Tom Broadbent (Australian footballer) (born 1936), Australian rules footballer for Fitzroy
Tom Broadbent (English footballer) (born 1992), association ... |
Mid-term parliamentary elections were held in Cuba on 28 February 1904 in order to fill half the seats in the House of Representatives. The Conservative Republican Party won the most seats.
Results
References
Cuba
Parliamentary elections in Cuba
1904 in Cuba
February 1904 events
Election and referendum articles with... |
Zeche Carl (Carl Mine) is a cultural centre set up by Essen Council in a former coal mine.
History
The mine was founded by the Hercules Company in Altenessen in 1855. It should not be confused with the Hercules mine in central Essen. They sank a shaft equipped with a large-sized Malakow tower with two wings. The mine ... |
"Losses" is a song by American Lil Tjay, released on October 30, 2020. It is the lead single and a bonus track from his second studio album Destined 2 Win (2020). The song was produced by Woodpecker. An accompanying music video of the song was directed by Shomi Patwary.
Composition and lyrics
In the song, Lil Tjay ref... |
William Andrew Cheyne (1912–1988), sometimes known as Andy Cheyne, was a Scottish footballer who played as a left back.
A native of the village of St Combs in Aberdeenshire, he played for Fraserburgh in the Highland Football League before being signed by reigning Scottish champions Rangers in 1933. His role was mainly... |
```css
Disabling default callouts using `webkit-touch-callout`
Prevent Text Enlargement on an iPhone
Flexbox `justify-content`
Using `flex-grow`
Using `flex-shrink`
``` |
Caprile is a comune in the Province of Biella in the Italian region Piedmont.
Caprile may also refer to:
Caprile (surname), an Italian surname
Villa Caprile, Pesaro, a seventeenth-century Baroque palace in Marche, Italy
See also
Capri (disambiguation)
Capriles (disambiguation) |
Tibet under Qing rule refers to the Qing dynasty's rule over Tibet from 1720 to 1912. The Qing rulers incorporated Tibet into the empire along with other Inner Asia territories, although the actual extent of the Qing dynasty's control over Tibet during this period has been the subject of political debate. The Qing call... |
The Report of the Company Law Amendment Committee (1926) Cmnd 2657, known as the Report of the Greene Committee was a UK company law report led by Wilfred Greene M.R. that led to the Companies Act 1929.
Overview and excerpts
‘Public attention was directed by the decision in the City Equitable Case to the common articl... |
This is a list of television programmes broadcast by TV3 either currently broadcast or formerly broadcast on TV3 in Malaysia.
Drama
The Rated Is 13 & 16 Only
Akasia
Azalea
Dahlia
Lestary
Samarinda
Sakura
News
TV3 news
Malay news:
Buletin 1.30 - airs daily except Friday at 1:30 pm; for a short period of time in 200... |
Ground Zero is the 1990 debut album of Indian band 13AD. The album was widely praised in the Indian press.
Track listing
All songs written by 13AD, except where noted. Arranged by 13AD.
Cassette side A:
Bad Taste 5:10
Ground Zero (George Thomas, Jr.) 5:07
Desolate Prisoner 4:19
Your Company 5:14
Down Deep 3:30
Casse... |
Rábacsécsény is a village in Győr-Moson-Sopron County, Hungary.
References
Populated places in Győr-Moson-Sopron County |
Ab initio ( ) is a Latin term meaning "from the beginning" and is derived from the Latin ab ("from") + initio, ablative singular of initium ("beginning").
Etymology
Circa 1600, from Latin, literally "from the beginning", from ablative case of initium "entrance", "beginning", related to verb inire "to go into", "enter ... |
Castelnuovo dei Sabbioni is a village () in the of Cavriglia in the province of Arezzo in Tuscany, Italy. As of 2011, it had a population of 1,242.
Starting from the mid-sixties, the town was gradually abandoned by the inhabitants due to excavation activity in favor of the nearby Camonti, a newly established hamlet.
... |
The 2020 United States Virgin Islands legislative election was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020, to elect members of the 34th Virgin Islands Legislature.
Results
References
United States Virgin Islands
2020
House |
Pipe snake may refer to:
Snakes:
Aniliidae, a.k.a. the false coral snakes, a family of harmless snakes found in South America.
Cylindrophiidae, a.k.a. Asian pipe snakes, a family of harmless snakes found in Asia.
Uropeltidae, a.k.a. shield-tailed snakes, a family of harmless snakes found in southern India and Sri L... |
Robert Rhodes may refer to:
Robert Heaton Rhodes (1815–1884), New Zealand politician
Sir Robert Heaton Rhodes (1861–1956), his son, New Zealand politician and lawyer
Robert L. Rhodes, provost at Abilene Christian University
See also
Robert Ben Rhoades (born 1945), serial killer
Robert Rodes, Confederate general |
On 22 January 2014, a strong French column of more than a hundred soldiers transported by armored vehicles out of the city of Timbuktu and turns towards the northwest, then turns east after traveling fifty kilometers.
On the night of January 22 to 23, the French attacked a group of jihadists in the desert about 130 ki... |
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