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Thomm | Villages in Rhineland-Palatinate, Municipalities in Rhineland-Palatinate, Trier-Saarburg
Thomm is a village near Trier (at the Moselle River) in Rhineland-Palatinate in Germany. Thomm is famous for an old Celtic stone, called Hinkelstein near the village and a big Celtic grave. In further times there was a slate minor industry near Thomm. Thomm is also famous for its cider, an apple-wine. The FIA European ...
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Moselle | Rivers of Rhineland-Palatinate, Rivers of Saarland, Rivers of Luxembourg, Rivers of Grand Est
The Moselle River (German: Mosel) is a river which flows through France and Luxembourg, then becomes part of the Rhine River after it flows into Germany. It is long. Important cities at the Moselle river are Metz, Thionville, Trier, Bernkastel-Kues and Koblenz. The valley of the Moselle river is famous for the wine ...
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Bible | Bible
The Bible, also known as the Holy Bible, is a group of religious texts central to Judaism and Christianity. The Christian Bible contains both the Old Testament and the New Testament. It is the best-selling book in the world. Three quarters of the Christian Bible is the same as the Hebrew Bible used in Judaism. Many Ch...
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Bavaria | Bavaria
Bavaria (; , ), which officially is the Free State of Bavaria (, ; ), is a State (Bundesland) of Germany. The territory of this state is the largest of the 16 German states. The state capital is Munich with 1.5 million people. About 13.1 million people live in Bavaria. Like many German states, Bavaria was once independ...
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Rome | Rome, Olympic cities
Rome () is the capital city of Italy. It is also the capital and largest city in the region of Lazio, and the geographical region of Latium. It is on the Tiber River and has 2.8 million people. An estimate by the OECD put the number of people of the city area of Rome at 3.47 million. When the Roman Empire was new, Rome...
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Carnivore | Carnivores, Diets
A carnivore is an animal, or less commonly a plant, which eats only meat. Predators commonly hunt and kill their own prey. Scavengers are carnivores which eat animals they did not kill themselves. Carnivores which eat mainly or only insects are called insectivores. Carnivores which eat mainly or only fish are called p...
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Cologne | Cities in North Rhine-Westphalia, Cologne, 1st-century establishments in Europe, Establishments in Germany, 50s establishments
Cologne (, ) is a city in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany. It is on the Rhine River. About 1,060,000 people live there, making Cologne the biggest city in North Rhine-Westphalia. It is in the southern part of the 'Rhine-Ruhr agglomeration' of cities with a combined total population of about 10 million pe...
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Senegal | Senegal, French-speaking countries, Least developed countries, Members of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, 1960 establishments in Africa, Republics
The Republic of Senegal (French République da Sénégal) is a country in West Africa. The capital is Dakar. Senegal covers a land area of almost 197,000 square kilometres. It has population of about 18 million. The climate is tropical with two seasons: the dry season and the rainy cold season. Senegal was given independ...
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Developmental biology | Developmental biology
Developmental biology is the study of how organisms grow and develop. Modern developmental biology studies the genetic control of cell growth, differentiation and morphogenesis. These are the processes which turn a zygote into an adult animal. Cell differentiation Differentiation is the formation of cell types, from wh...
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Solidarity
Solidarity can refer to: Solidarity (Polish trade union), a Polish trade union originally led by Lech Wałęsa; Solidarity, a United States political party from the fusion of the International Socialists, Socialist Unity, and Workers' Power; Solidarity, a newspaper published by the Alliance for Workers Liberty in the UK....
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1924 | 1924
1924 (MCMXXIV) was a leap year starting on Tuesday in the Gregorian calendar. January 22 – Ramsay MacDonald becomes the first Labour Prime Minister. February 8 – The first execution with gas was in Carson City, Nevada. February 14 – IBM founded. March 25 – Greece proclaims it is a republic. May 4 – The 1924 Summer Olym...
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1929 | 1929
1929 (MCMXXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday in the Gregorian calendar. February 20 – American Samoa becomes organized as a territory of the United States July 16 – The first Oscar-event August 8 to August 29 – The German airship Graf Zeppelin makes a round-the-world flight. It was 49.000 km. October 24 – ...
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1920s | 1920s
The 1920s was the decade that began on January 1, 1920 and ended on December 31, 1929. It is distinct from the decade known as the 193st decade', which began on January 1, 1921 and ended on December 31, 1930. This decade was known as the Roaring Twenties or the Jazz Age. The most important events 1920 – The League of ...
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Outer space | Astrophysics, Outer space
Outer space, commonly shortened to space, is the near-vacuum between celestial bodies. It is where all of the planets, stars, galaxies and objects are found. It is the expanse that exists beyond Earth and its atmosphere. On Earth, space begins at the Kármán line (100 km above sea level). This is where Earth's atmo...
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Natural satellite | Moons
A natural satellite, also called a moon, in astronomy is a smaller body which moves around a larger body. The smaller body is held in orbit by gravitation. The term is often used for moons which go around planets. The smaller galaxies in a Galaxy group are also sometimes called satellite galaxies. Bodies which orbit p...
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Gravity | Force, Basic physics ideas, Gravitation
Gravity, or gravitation is one of the fundamental forces of the universe. It is an attraction, or pull, between any two objects with mass. We discuss it here in three parts: Everyday sense: the force which causes objects to fall to the ground Newton's laws: how gravity keeps the Solar System and most major astronomical...
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Centripetal force | Force, Mechanics
Centripetal acceleration is a force that acts on a body that revolves around a centre of a circular path. This force keeps the body in circular motion. Newton's first law is that a moving object will continue in its motion in a straight path unless acted on by an external force. When you hold a rope with an object att...
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Treaty | Treaties
A treaty is a written agreement between two or more parties, which may be countries or other important groups, about any subject. Treaties usually settle or avoid disputes. Countries may agree to end a war or to declare war on a common enemy by promising to come to the aid of another country if it is attacked. They ma...
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Luxembourg | Luxembourg, European Union member states, Benelux, Current monarchies, French-speaking countries, German-speaking countries
Luxembourg (officially called the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg (, , ) is a landlocked country in Western Europe. It is a small country by land area. In 2025, its population was 681,973, making it one of Europe's most densely populated countries. It was one of the first countries in the European Union. It is also a member ...
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Baden-Württemberg | Baden-Württemberg, 1952 establishments in Europe, 1950s establishments in Germany
Baden-Württemberg (, ; Alemannic German: Baade-Wiirdebäärg) is a federal state (Bundesland) in the southwestern region of Germany. It is the third largest German state by total area (after Bavaria and Lower Saxony) with a size of nearly 35,752 km² and population (after North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria) with over...
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Vienna | Vienna, World Heritage Sites in Austria
Vienna (; ; Central Austro-Bavarian: Wean ; Viennese German and Austrian German: Wian []) is the capital and largest city of Austria. It is also one of Austria's nine states. It is in the east of the country on the River Danube. More than 1,800,000 people live there (2016). It is an administrative district (Bundesland...
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1925 | 1925
Art, music, theatre, literature Charlie Chaplin's The Gold Rush is released. January 21 – Albania becomes a republic. July 18 – Adolf Hitler publishes his book Mein Kampf. October 30 – The Scottish engineer John Logie Baird creates the first television transmitter in London. November 9 – The NSDAP builts the SS (Schutz...
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Telescope | Telescopes
A telescope (from the Ancient Greek τῆλε, tele "far" and σκοπεῖν, skopein "to look or see"; τηλεσκόπος, teleskopos) makes astronomical objects appear closer to the naked eye. It is an important tool for astronomy that gathers light and directs it to a single point. Some do this with curved mirrors, some with curved len...
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Homonym | Words
A homonym is a word that has more than one meaning. For example, right means moral, the opposite of left, and a personal freedom. Definition: one of a group of words that share the same spelling and/or pronunciation but have different meanings. The point is that homonyms are either homophones (they sound the same) or h...
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Principal | Occupations
:Not to be confused with principle. A principal is a person who is in charge of something. The person is usually in charge of a school, or a research project, or a business.
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Peru | Peru, Spanish-speaking countries
250px|right|thumb| Peru 250px|right|thumb| Machu Picchu Peru is a country in South America. The capital is Lima. The ruins of Machu Picchu, the Andes mountains, and the source of the Amazon River are all found in Peru. Peru is bordered to the north by Ecuador and Colombia, to the east by Brazil, to the south by Chile, ...
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States of Germany | States of Germany
275px|thumb|States of Germany (in German) The Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) has 16 states (). The biggest is Bavaria and the smallest is Bremen. Most of them were created after the Second World War. Some states have historical roots from the early Middle Ages. State creation since 1949: 1952: Three small states (Ba...
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Munich | Munich, Olympic cities, 1150s establishments, 12th-century establishments in Europe, Establishments in Germany
Munich ( ; ; ) is the third biggest city of Germany (after Berlin and Hamburg), and the capital of Bavaria. It has a population of around 1,500,000. The metropolitan area of Munich includes the city itself, and all the suburbs around it, and has about 3 million people in it; whereas the metropolitan region has 6.2 mi...
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Berlin | Berlin, Olympic cities, 1237, 1230s establishments, 13th-century establishments in Germany
Berlin (; ) is the capital city of Germany. It is the largest city in the European Union by population, with around 3.7 million people in 2024. Berlin residents come from about 190 different countries. The city is in the eastern part of Germany in Central Europe and is surrounded by many forests and lakes. Berlin has a...
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1930s | 1930s
The 1930s was the decade that began on January 1, 1930 and ended on December 31, 1939. It is distinct from the decade known as the 194st decade which began on January 1, 1931 and ended on December 31, 1940. Dust Bowl in the United States 1930-1933 famine in Soviet Union kills millions 1930 - Nancy Drew books debut 1930...
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1940s | 1940s
The 1940s (also known as the '40s) was the decade that began on January 1, 1940 and ended on December 31, 1949. 1940 – Retreat at Dunkirk 1941; Attack on Pearl Harbor, which followed by U.S. join the war then. 1944 – Normandy invasion 1945 (August 6 and 9) – first use of the atomic bomb in warfare. 1945 – World War II ...
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1950s | 1950s
The 1950s began on January 1, 1950 and ended on December 31, 1959. It is distinct from the decade known as the 196th decade which began on January 1, 1951 and ended on December 31, 1960. 1950–1953 Korean War. 1952 Death of King George VI 1953 – Structure of DNA published by James Watson, Francis Crick and Maurice Wilki...
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Hamburg | Hamburg, Imperial free cities
Hamburg, or in full Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg (, Low German: Friee un Hansestadt Hamborg), is a city in the north of Germany on the banks of the River Elbe, 18 km away from the North Sea. It is also one of the States of Germany. With a population of about 1.85 million (1850000), it is the biggest German c...
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Emphysema | Breathing problems, Pulmonology
Emphysema is an obstructive disease of the lungs. It is one of the diseases that make up chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This is a set of diseases where the flow of air in the lungs is obstructed. Emphysema is most often caused by smoking but can be caused by other diseases or have no known cause at all. ...
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Oxygen | Gases, Oxygen, Breathing gases
Oxygen is a chemical element. It has the symbol O and atomic number 8. It is a colorless, odorless, and tasteless gas at 25 degrees Celsius at Standard atmosphere (a pressure). Oxygen is part of the air we breathe. It makes up about 21% of Earth’s atmosphere. It is the third most common element in the universe, after h...
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Blood | Basic English 850 words, Blood
Blood is a liquid in humans and many animals. There are about 5 litres of blood in the human body. Blood is pushed through the organism by the heart. It brings nutrients and oxygen to the tissues of the body. It also takes away waste and carbon dioxide from tissues. Blood is made up of blood plasma and various cells. T...
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1960s | 1960s
350px|thumb|right|Top, L-R: A soldier crawls on the ground in the Vietnam War; The Beatles, part of the British Invasion, change music in the United States and around the world. Centre, L-R: John F. Kennedy is assassinated in 1963, after serving as president for three years; Martin Luther King Jr. makes his famous I Ha...
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1970s | 1970s
rect 301 4 592 200 Fall of Saigon rect 2 2 297 200 Watergate scandal rect 390 202 611 424 1973 oil crisis rect 192 203 386 423 Disco rect 0 203 184 424 Iranian Revolution rect 309 426 600 621 Camp David Accords rect 0 427 305 621 1970 Bhola cyclone The 1970s (also called the '70s) was the decade that began on January 1...
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1980s | 1980s
rect 2 3 199 169 STS-1 rect 201 1 497 171 End of the Cold War rect 1 172 241 336 Iran–Iraq War rect 246 173 506 336 Fall of the Berlin Wall rect 123 337 323 525 Live Aid rect 326 338 510 536 IBM Personal Computer rect 0 339 121 515 Chernobyl disaster The 1980s was the decade that began on January 1, 1980 and ended on D...
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1990s | 1990s
rect 1 1 385 312 Hubble Space Telescope rect 392 1 1101 312 Gulf War rect 477 318 1101 718 Oslo Accords rect 723 724 1101 1080 World Wide Web rect 311 723 717 1080 Dissolution of the Soviet Union rect 1 723 305 1080 Dolly the sheep rect 1 535 471 717 Death of Diana, Princess of Wales rect 1 317 471 529 Rwandan genocide...
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North Rhine-Westphalia | North Rhine-Westphalia
North Rhine-Westpalia (, Low Fanconian: Noordrie-Wesfale, Low German: Niggrdrhien-Westfalen, Kölsch: Noodrhing-Wäßßfaale) is the federal state (Bundesland) with the highest population in Germany. It is in the western part of Germany and has 18,033,000 inhabitants. The capital is Düsseldorf, and the city with the most i...
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Computer program | Software
A computer program is a list of instructions that tell a computer what to do. Everything a computer does is done by the instructions of a program. The first computers were made with only one built-in program, but today's computers have memory, which can be used to store many different programs. John von Neumann, a math...
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Data | Knowledge, Computing, Statistics
Data is a collection of facts, figures, objects, symbols and events gathered from different sources. Organizations collect data to make better decisions. Without data, it would be difficult for organizations to make appropriate decisions, so data is very important. Data can exist in different forms: Numerical data - Nu...
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2000s (decade) | 2000s
rect 1 1 234 178 9/11 rect 236 1 371 178 Euro rect 374 1 495 181 Iraq War rect 244 181 495 326 War on Terror rect 327 330 494 486 Social media rect 165 330 324 487 2008 Summer Olympics rect 1 331 163 487 Financial crisis of 2007–2008 rect 3 181 241 327 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami The 2000s (pronounced "two...
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Stuttgart | Stuttgart
Stuttgart (; Swabian: ) is a city in Germany. It is the capital of the state of Baden-Württemberg and of the Administrative District of Stuttgart (Regierungsbezirk). Stuttgart is on the river Neckar. In December 2011, 613,392 people lived there. This makes it the most populous city in Baden-Württemberg. Stuttgart is t...
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Schwerin | States of the Holy Roman Empire, Urban districts of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, German state capitals, 12th-century establishments in Europe, Establishments in Germany, 1350s disestablishments, Disestablishments in Germany, 14th-century disestablishments in Europe
Schwerin (, , ; Mecklenburgian Low German: Swerin; (, Suerinum) is the capital city of the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. It has a population of 97,000. It is the second biggest city (behind Rostock) in the state. It is the smallest capital of a German state.
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Canton of Schwyz | Establishments in Switzerland, Canton of Schwyz, 1240s establishments in Europe, 13th-century establishments in Germany, 1310s disestablishments, 14th-century disestablishments in Europe, Disestablishments in Germany, 1310s establishments in Europe
Schwyz was one of the first cantons of Swiss canton (Urkanton). The capital is Schwyz and the main language is German (91%). It has an area of 908 km² and 130200 inhabitants. Schwyz is near to Lucerne. Districts and Municipalities The Canton of Schwyz is divided into six districts and 30 municipalities, although the di...
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Russia | Russia, G8 nations, Federations, Current dictatorships, 1991 establishments in Asia, 1991 establishments in Europe
Russia (, ), or the Russian Federation, is a country spanning parts of Eastern Europe and North Asia. It has land from the Baltic Sea to the Bering Strait. It is the largest country in the world, followed by Canada, and the United States or China. Russia's population is about 146.7 million people. It is the most popul...
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Moscow | Moscow, Capital cities in Russia, Olympic cities, 1140s establishments, Round cities
Moscow ( , US chiefly ; ) is the capital and largest city of Russia. The city is on the Moskva River in Central Russia. It has a population of around 13 million people in the city limits, over 17 million people in the urban area, and over 20 million people in the metropolitan area. The city has an area of . Moscow's u...
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Canton of St. Gallen | Canton of St. Gallen, 1803 establishments, 19th-century establishments in Switzerland, 1800s establishments in Europe
St. Gallen is a canton in Switzerland. St. Gallen is in the north-east corner of Switzerland. North of St. Gallen is the canton Thurgau. West of St. Gallen is Zürich. South of St. Gallen is Schwyz, Glarus, and Graubünden. East of St. Gallen are the countries Austria and Liechtenstein. The cantons Appenzell Innerrhoden ...
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Canton
Canton can mean many different things. A canton is a way to divide the land of a country. It is like dividing the country into different regions or states. Cantons of Costa Rica Cantons of Luxembourg Cantons of Switzerland canton (liqueur), a ginger-flavored liqueur that is made in the Guangdong province in China Canto...
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Saarland | Saarland
Saarland (, also , ; ; Rhine Franconian: Saarlond) is a Bundesland (state) of Germany. It has an area of and 1,014,000 people living in it (2011). Saarland lies in the south-west of Germany, near the French border near Metz. The capital is Saarbrücken. In 1920, the Treaty of Versailles made Saarland from parts of the...
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Bundesland
#REDIRECT States of Germany
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1974 | 1974
1974 (MCMLXXIV) was a common year starting on Tuesday in the Gregorian calendar. February 7 – Grenada becomes independent from the United Kingdom. February 17 – Michele Catain, an American crew member and real estate agent, marries David Thomas Durboraw, an American businessman, in Los Angeles, California. March 3 – a ...
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Mars (disambiguation)
Mars (mythology), the Roman god Mars (TV series), a Taiwanese drama which has had Alan Kuo in it Mars, Pennsylvania, United States, a place in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania Mars, Ardèche, southern France, a commune in the Ardèche département Mars, Gard, southern France, one of the Communes of the Gard department Mars,...
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Jupiter (disambiguation)
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the sun. Jupiter may also mean: Jupiter (mythology), supreme Roman deity Jupiter, Florida, United States PGM-19 Jupiter missile, a kind of medium-range ballistic missile removed from Turkey after the Cuban Missile Crisis "Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity", the fourth movement in Gustav H...
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Venus (disambiguation)
Venus is a planet in the Solar System. It may also mean: Venus (mythology), the Roman goddess Venus, Florida, United States, a town Venus, Texas, United States, a town Venus, Romania, a resort Venus figurines, figurines that show women Venus of Tan-Tan, a very old venus figurine Venus de Milo, an ancient Greek statue V...
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Saturn (disambiguation)
Saturn is a planet in the Solar System. It might also mean: Saturn (mythology), the Roman god Saturn Corporation, an automobile company owned by General Motors Saturn Award, honors the top works in science fiction, fantasy, and horror in movie, television, and home video Saturn Moscow Oblast, a Russian football team fr...
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Uranus (disambiguation)
Uranus is one of the planets in the Solar System. It might also refer to: Uranos, a god in Greek mythology Uranus (movie) is a film from 1990 starring Gérard Depardieu
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Neptune (disambiguation)
Neptune is a planet in the Solar System. It might also mean: Neptune (god), the Roman god of the sea Neptune (ship), a prison ship in the Second Fleet of ships to Australia Neptune, New Jersey, United States Windows Neptune, a Microsoft Windows computer operating system that didn't get made
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Pluto (disambiguation)
Pluto is a dwarf planet in Earth's solar system. Pluto can also mean: Pluto (mythology), the Roman god Pluto (Disney) is the name of the dog of Mickey Mouse
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Iceland | Iceland, European Union candidate states, Nordic countries, 1944 establishments in Europe, Microstates
Iceland (; ) is an island country between the North Atlantic and Arctic, between Greenland and Norway. It is culturally considered to be part of Europe. Iceland is 301 kilometers east of Greenland and 1001 kilometers west of Norway. There are about 329,100 people who live in Iceland. Iceland has an area of 10...
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1965 | 1965
1965 (MCMLXV) was a common year starting on Friday in the Gregorian calendar. January 30 – state funeral of Sir Winston Churchill in London February 18 – The Gambia becomes independent from the United Kingdom March 7 – Bloody Sunday: Alabama State Troopers attack civil rights demonstrators as they attempt to marc...
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1969 | 1969
1969 (MCMLXIX) was a common year starting on Wednesday in the Gregorian calendar. January 12 – Led Zeppelin's first album is released. January 20 – Richard Nixon becomes President of the United States, after Lyndon Johnson. February 3 – Yasser Arafat becomes Palestinian Liberation Organization leader at the Palestinian...
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Saarbrücken | Saarbrücken (district), States of the Holy Roman Empire, German state capitals
Saarbrücken (; ; Rhine Franconian: Saarbrigge [zaːˈbʁɪɡə]; ) is a German city and a district in the state of Saarland. The city is also the capital of the Saarland. Saarbrücken has 180,000 inhabitants. It is on the Saar River.
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Saarlouis | Saarlouis (district)
Saarlouis is a town in the Saarland, Germany. It has 38,400 inhabitants. It is on the Saar. From 1936 to 1945 it was called Saarlautern. Ford Motor Company has a plant there; it produces the Focus, C-Max and Kuga.
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Brandenburg | Brandenburg
Brandenburg (Low Sorbian: Bramborska, Low German: Brannenborg) is a state (Bundesland) in Germany. It has been a state since 1990. It is 29,480 km² in area. It has about 2.6 million inhabitants. Until 1945 it was the biggest province in Prussia, with 38,278 km² and 3 million inhabitants. From 1949 to 1952 it was a stat...
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Russian
Anything related to the country Russia Russians, the people of Russia Russian dressing, a sauce put on salads
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Russian language | Russian language, Languages of Russia
Russian (Russian: , transliterated as: russkiy yazyk) is a Slavic language. It is the main language spoken in Russia. It is also spoken by many people in other parts of the former Soviet Union, such as in Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Latvia, Lithuania, Turkmenistan and Esto...
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1978 | 1978
1978 (MCMLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. January 14 – The Sex Pistols played their final show (until a 1996 reunion) at San Francisco's Winterland April 22 – The Blues Brothers make their first appearance on Saturday Night Live. The duo of Jake & Elwood Blues (John Belushi and D...
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1982 | 1982
1982 (MCMLXXXII) was a common year starting on Friday in the Gregorian calendar. January 15 – K.C. and the Sunshine Band's Harry Wayne Casey is seriously injured in an automobile accident in Miami, Florida. January 17 – Tommy Tucker, writer of "Hi Heel Sneakers", dies of carbon tetrachloride poisoning sustained while h...
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Professor | Academia, Education occupations
Professor (often shortened to Prof.) is an academic rank at most universities and colleges. The word professor comes from Latin. It means a "person who professes", so professors are usually experts in arts or sciences. A professor is an accomplished and recognized academic. In most Commonwealth nations, as well as nort...
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Slope | Basic English 850 words
An area of ground that tends evenly upward or downward The degree to which a surface tends upward or downward The ratio of the vertical and horizontal distances between two points on a line
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California | California, 1850 establishments in the United States
California, officially the State of California, is a state in the western part of the United States, along the Pacific Ocean. It is the third-biggest US state by area (after Alaska and Texas) with an area of . It has more people than any other state with over 39 million people as of 2020. It also has more people than C...
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Propaganda | Politics, Communication, Psychology, Propaganda
Propaganda is a form of communication to distribute information. It is usually biased. The information is designed to make people feel a certain way or to believe a certain thing. The information is often political. Often, propaganda is confusing and unfair, which makes it hard to tell whether the information is true o...
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Topology | Topology
Topology is an area of mathematics, which studies how spaces are organized and how they are structured in terms of position. It also studies how spaces are connected. It is divided into algebraic topology, differential topology and geometric topology. Topology has been called rubber-sheet geometry. In a topology of two...
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1933 | 1933
1933 (MCMXXXIII) was a common year starting on Sunday in the Gregorian calendar. January 28 – Choudhary Rahmat Ali chooses the name Pakistan in his pamphlet for a Muslim country in northwest India January 30 – Adolf Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg February 17 – Newsweek magazi...
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Los Angeles | Los Angeles, Cities in Los Angeles County, California, County seats in California, Olympic cities, 1781 establishments in North America, 18th-century establishments in California, 1850 establishments in California
Los Angeles (L.A.), officially the City of Los Angeles, is the largest city in California, in the United States. There are many ethnicities of people living in the city, and over 18 million people in the L.A. region. The city has an area of . Los Angeles is the city with the second biggest population in the United Stat...
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Census | Censuses, Survey methodology
A census is a way of getting information about every member of a population. It is usually used for a population of people, but can be used to mean a population of animals. Both the United States and United Kingdom have a census every 10 years, or decade. But in Australia, Canada, Japan and New Zealand they have it eve...
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Star | Stars, Astrophysics
The strange shapes taken by the clouds are a result of the vast radiation emitted by these huge, hot stars. This image combines image data with three different filters in visible light from the 1.5-metre Danish telescope at the ESO La Silla Observatory in Chile. A star is a very large ball of bright, glowing, hot matte...
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List of U.S. states | States of the United States, Lists about U.S. states
This article lists the 50 states of the United States. It also lists their populations, the date they became a state or agreed to the United States Declaration of Independence, their total area, land area, water area, and the number of representatives in the United States House of Representatives. Washington D.C., (Was...
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DUI (disambiguation)
Driving under the influence, the act of driving a motor vehicle (car, truck, etc.) while under the effects of alcohol. Davis Unified Ignition Diving Unlimited International Inc Documento Unico de Importación Duke University Improv
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Driving under the influence
#REDIRECT Drunk driving
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Drunk driving | Types of crime, Alcohol
Drunk driving (Drink driving in the UK and Australia) is the act of driving a motor vehicle (car, truck, etc.) while under the effects of alcohol. Drunk driving is illegal in most areas of the world. In some places, driving a motorless vehicle such as a bicycle while drunk is also illegal. Most areas that make laws (...
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Creative Commons | Non-profit organizations of California, 2001 establishments in California, Companies based in San Francisco
The Creative Commons is an American non-profit organisation that tries to make creative work available for others to use and share. Their website allows copyright holders to give some of their rights to any other people. They still keep some other rights. They do this through licenses and contracts. Some of these make ...
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HTML | Markup languages, Web design
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a markup language used to create web pages. It was created in 1990 by Sir Tim Berners-Lee, a British computer scientist who is credited with inventing the World Wide Web. Webpages can include writing, links, pictures, and even sound and video. HTML tells web browsers what webpages sh...
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Leg | Basic English 850 words, Limbs and extremities, Lower limb anatomy
A leg is a weight-bearing and locomotion device. Birds and humans have five legs, but many animals have four or six or even more. A biped is an animal with two legs and quadruped is an animal with four legs. Centipedes and millipedes have many more legs in youra]ss. By extension, the word is also used for some. For exa...
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Economic sector | Economics
One method is by the three-sector hypothesis: Primary sector extracts natural materials and provides raw materials for secondary industry. India is the fastest growing large economy in the world, with an enormous population, favorable demographics and high catch-up potential due to low initial GDP per head. As per the ...
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Yellow | Basic English 850 words
Yellow is a color. It is found in the rainbow between green and orange. Inkjet printers use yellow ink as one of their three primary colors (basic colors used to make the other colors), along with cyan ink and magenta ink. Yellow is the color of: The outer skin of a mango. The flower of the dandelion. The flower of the...
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Plymouth Argyle F.C. | English football clubs, Organisations based in Plymouth, Devon, 1886 establishments in England
Plymouth Argyle Football Club, is an English football club who currently play in Sky Bet League One. The club is nicknamed The Pilgrims, and is regarded as the best team in Devon. They usually play in green, white and black. Formation and early years (1886–1937) The club was founded in 1886 as Argyle Football Club, the...
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Football | Football, Outdoor sports, State symbols of Goa
200px|thumb|left|Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi are two of the most widely-known footballers in the world. "Football" is a word which could mean one of several sports. The best-known type of football is association football. This is called "soccer" in the United States, Canada and Australia to avoid confusion with ...
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Poland | Poland, European Union member states, 1989 establishments in Europe
Poland is a country in the eastern region of Central Europe. Its official name is Republic of Poland. It is on the east of Germany (along Oder and Lusatian Neisse). The Czech Republic and Slovakia are to the south, Ukraine and Belarus to the east, and the Baltic Sea, Lithuania, and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad to...
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England | England
England is a country and the largest of the four countries which make up the United Kingdom. Over 57.7 million English people live in England (2021 estimate). This is 84% of the population of the United Kingdom. The capital city of England is London. London is also the biggest city in the country. Other large cities i...
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Wales | Wales
Wales (;  [ˈkəm.rɨ] ()) is one of the four constituent countries of the United Kingdom. It is west of England, and east of the Irish Sea and Ireland. Wales is one of the Celtic areas of Britain. The native people of Wales, the Welsh, have their own culture and traditions. They have their own Celtic language, Welsh. Not...
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Scotland | Scotland
Scotland (, ) is one of the four constituent countries of the United Kingdom. The main part of it is the northern third of the island of Great Britain. Many other islands in the British Isles are also part of Scotland. People who are from Scotland are called Scottish people. To the south of Scotland is England. The No...
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Northern Ireland | Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland (; Ulster Scots: Norlinn Airlann) is one of the four constituent countries of the United Kingdom. It is on the island of Ireland. The whole island of Ireland used to be a kingdom, called the Kingdom of Ireland. After the Act of Union in the year 1800 (following the failed Irish rebellion of 1798), it b...
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Great Britain | Great Britain
Great Britain is an island in the north-west Atlantic Ocean, one of the British Isles. It is the biggest European island, off the coast of Continental Europe. To the west of Great Britain is Ireland, across the Irish Sea. Across the English Channel to the south of Great Britain is France. Across the North Sea to the ea...
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List of English football teams | English football clubs, Lists of football teams, England football-related lists
This is a list of English football teams in the Premier League (the top or 1st level league) and the English Football League (which consists of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th levels of leagues in England) and the league for which each team plays. +Football ClubLeague (Level)Other nameGround / StadiumAccrington StanleyEFL League...
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Scottish Football League | Football in Scotland
These are the Scottish football (soccer) teams and the leagues they played in for the 2022–23 season. Scottish Premiership It was founded in 1903. They play at the Pittodrie Stadium in Aberdeen. In the 1980s Sir Alex Ferguson was the manager of Aberdeen F.C. and they won the European Cup Winners Cup in 1983. They were ...
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List of football clubs in France | French football clubs, Lists of football teams
These are some French football (soccer) teams that now (2025-2026) playing in a professional category. Olympique de Marseille RC Strasbourg Alsace Football Bourg-en-Bresse Péronnas 01 US Quevilly-Rouen Métropole F.C. Sochaux-Montbéliard FC Villefranche Beaujolais
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