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12330452 | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frantsishak%20Skaryna%20Belarusian%20Language%20Society | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society
Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society
The Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society (, TBM) is an association in Belarus. The association's main activity is promotion and development of the Belarusian language.
# History and profile.
The TBM was founded in 1989 on an initiative a group of Belarusian intellectuals by Belarusian Writers' Union, the Ministries of Education and of Culture, the Institutes of Linguistics and of Literature of the Belarus Academy of Sciences, the Belarusian Cultural Fund, the State Committee on the Press, the Belarusian Society of Friendship and Cultural Links with Foreign Countries, and the National State Television and Radio Company.
TBM has organized | 6,135,700 |
12330452 | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frantsishak%20Skaryna%20Belarusian%20Language%20Society | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society
numerous campaigns of promotion of the Belarusian language, such as demands of introduction of Belarusian notifications in the public transport, description of goods in Belarusian on labels, promotion of primary and higher education in Belarusian language.
Although the organization opposes the official russification policy of Alexander Lukashenko and many notable opposition leaders and activists are members of the TBM, it stays away from politics and stays firmly within its declared goals.
# Chairperson.
- from 2017: Alena Anisim, Member of Parliament
- 1999 - 2017: Aleh Trusau [also: Oleg Trusov], historian
- 1997 - 1999: Henadz Buraukin [also: Gennady Buravkin, Genadz Burawkin], poet
- | 6,135,701 |
12330452 | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frantsishak%20Skaryna%20Belarusian%20Language%20Society | Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society
t, description of goods in Belarusian on labels, promotion of primary and higher education in Belarusian language.
Although the organization opposes the official russification policy of Alexander Lukashenko and many notable opposition leaders and activists are members of the TBM, it stays away from politics and stays firmly within its declared goals.
# Chairperson.
- from 2017: Alena Anisim, Member of Parliament
- 1999 - 2017: Aleh Trusau [also: Oleg Trusov], historian
- 1997 - 1999: Henadz Buraukin [also: Gennady Buravkin, Genadz Burawkin], poet
- 1989 - 1996: Nil Hilevich, poet
# External links.
- Official Website
- Leaflet about the Frantsishak Skaryna Belarusian Language Society | 6,135,702 |
12330504 | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20tourist%20attractions%20in%20the%20City%20of%20Westminster | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster
List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster
The City of Westminster contains many of the most famous tourist sites in London.
# Covent Garden.
- London Transport Museum
- Royal Opera House
# Hyde Park.
- Serpentine Galleries
- Speakers' Corner
- Hyde Park Corner
- Apsley House
- Wellington Arch
# Marylebone.
- Madame Tussauds
- Oxford Street
- Selfridges
- Sherlock Holmes Museum
- Wallace Collection
- All Souls Church, Langham Place
# Mayfair.
- Handel & Hendrix in London
- Royal Academy of Arts
- Burlington Arcade
- Royal Institution
# Millbank.
- Tate Britain
# Regent’s Park.
- London Zoo
# St James’s.
- Buckingham Palace
- Queen's Gallery
- Royal Mews
- | 6,135,703 |
12330504 | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20tourist%20attractions%20in%20the%20City%20of%20Westminster | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster
Fortnum & Mason
- St James's Palace
# St John’s Wood.
- Abbey Road Studios
- Lord's Cricket Ground
# Soho.
- Benjamin Franklin House
- Carnaby Street
- Leicester Square
- Piccadilly Circus
- Ripley's Believe it or Not! (London Pavilion)
- Regent Street
- Hamleys
- Liberty's
- Trafalgar Square
- National Gallery
- National Portrait Gallery
- Nelson's Column
- St Martin-in-the-Fields
# South Kensington.
- Albert Memorial
- Royal Albert Hall
# Strand.
- Royal Courts of Justice
- Savoy Hotel
- Somerset House
- Courtauld Gallery
- St Mary le Strand
- St Clement Danes
# Victoria.
- Westminster Cathedral
# Victoria Embankment.
- Cleopatra's Needle
# Westminster.
- | 6,135,704 |
12330504 | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20tourist%20attractions%20in%20the%20City%20of%20Westminster | List of tourist attractions in the City of Westminster
Portrait Gallery
- Nelson's Column
- St Martin-in-the-Fields
# South Kensington.
- Albert Memorial
- Royal Albert Hall
# Strand.
- Royal Courts of Justice
- Savoy Hotel
- Somerset House
- Courtauld Gallery
- St Mary le Strand
- St Clement Danes
# Victoria.
- Westminster Cathedral
# Victoria Embankment.
- Cleopatra's Needle
# Westminster.
- Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament)
- Big Ben
- Jewel Tower
- Westminster Abbey
- Westminster Abbey Museum
- St Margaret's, Westminster
- Methodist Central Hall Westminster
# Whitehall.
- Banqueting House
- Churchill War Rooms
- The Cenotaph
- Clarence House
- Downing Street
- Horse Guards Parade
- The Guards Museum | 6,135,705 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
Global warming game
A global warming game, also known as a climate game or a climate change game, is a type of serious game. As a serious game, it attempts to simulate and explore real life issues to educate players through an interactive experience. The issues particular to a global warming video game are usually energy efficiency and the implementation of green technology as ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and thus counteract global warming. Global warming games also include more traditional board games, video games, as well as other varieties.
# Objectives.
The primary objectives of global warming games are twofold:
- 1. To develop the player's familiarity and knowledge of the | 6,135,706 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
issue of global warming and related issues
- 2. To make the player aware of the challenges and obstacles that are faced when addressing global warming
- 3. Occasionally, the games encourage players to develop ideas and solutions to global warming
The first objective is universal to global warming games. The issues surrounding global warming commonly included are emissions and the emission of other greenhouse gases, the melting of the polar ice caps, sea-level rise, natural disasters and massive changes to lifestyles caused by global warming. Games that do not go beyond the objective of knowledge and familiarity tend to be designed for younger audiences. Games designed for young children | 6,135,707 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
often only have the goal to engage the children enough to excite their attention to focus on these basic concepts.
The second objective is integrated into games in a variety of ways. Sometimes demonstrating the challenges of confronting global warming are put directly into the style of gameplay, e.g. to demonstrate the difficulty of international cooperation, players are made to represent different countries and are required to negotiate to fulfill game objectives. Other times, the game includes the challenges as a part of the mechanics, e.g. building 'green factories' is more expensive than building 'black factories.'
The final objective is shared by the most interactive and engaging global | 6,135,708 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
warming games. Developing solutions to global warming includes two major types of response: mitigation of emissions and global warming's effects, and adaptation to live sustainably in a new climate. Typically players are given a variety of different options so that they may come up with a number of different creative solutions. Sometimes players are even allowed freedom to create their own unique options to integrate into their strategy.
# Notable examples.
## LogiCity.
LogiCity is an interactive Flash-based virtual-reality based computer game, produced by Logicom and The National Energy Foundation, an English charity. The game is set in a 3D virtual city with five main activities where players | 6,135,709 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
are set the task of reducing the carbon footprint of an average resident. The activities comprise:
- a race against time around a virtual reality office switching off equipment left on by careless users;
- finding and selecting energy efficiency and renewable energy options in a home, but with a strictly limited budget;
- answering a quiz about features they have to find in a low energy building;
- taking part in a role playing game to select the best travel options for three generations of a family; and
- choosing a holiday from a virtual travel agents - but with the risk that climate change may have led to unexpected changes at the destination.
As players work their way through the game | 6,135,710 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
they attempt to cut their carbon footprint from a typical English figure of 5.5 tonnes to a level of 2.0 tonnes. At the end of the game they are taken forward to 2066 to see if they have done enough to save England from the worst problems associated with global climate change. The game's conclusion and focus on 2066 is designed to bring home to players the reality of the changes they may face in their lifetime.
The game is part of Defra’s (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs) Climate Challenge programme to increase public awareness of Climate Change across the country. The National Energy Foundation, Logicom and British Gas also provided support to the game's development. "LogiCity" | 6,135,711 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
is designed to be used both by individuals and in an educational context. It is stated to be suitable for most children from the ages of 10 or 11 upward (English KS3+), although the main target group is young adults aged 16–26.
The game can either be played online or distributed across a network from a CD-ROM. There are no licensing implications as it has been publicly funded, although all PCs being used for the game do need to meet certain technical requirements (notably being PCs not Macs, and using Internet Explorer as a browser), and may require additional software plug-ins to be downloaded (a VRML viewer and a recent version of Flash player).
There has been some criticism that the game | 6,135,712 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
is only really applicable to England, due to limitations imposed by its funders, so that it is unlikely to appeal widely in North America. The look and feel of the game concentrates on a near photo-realism for buildings, but the player is disembodied and lacks an avatar. Firefox users are unable to run the game unless they switch to Internet Explorer, and some users have commented that download times for each module can be up to a minute, although this may be overcome by using the CD-ROM implementation. Logicity was also made available via a cover disk on PC Gamer magazine.
## Stabilization Wedge Game.
The "Stabilization Wedge Game", or what is commonly referred to as simply the 'Wedge Game', | 6,135,713 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
is a serious game produced by Princeton University's Carbon Mitigation Initiative. The goal of the game creators, Stephen Pacala and Robert H. Socolow, is to demonstrate through this game that global warming is a problem which can be solved by implementing today's technologies to reduce emissions. The object of the game is to keep the next fifty years of emissions flat, using seven wedges from a variety of different strategies which fit into the stabilization triangle.
## Climate Challenge.
"Climate Challenge" is a Flash-based simulation game produced by the BBC and developed by Red Redemption Ltd. Players manage the economy and resources of the 'European Nations' as its president, while reducing | 6,135,714 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
emissions of to combat climate change and managing crises. Climate Challenge is an environmental serious game, designed to give players an understanding of the science behind climate change, as well as the options available to policy makers and the difficulties in their implementation.
## The Climate Change Game.
The Climate Change Game is played by one or two people (sharing the Mouse). Each player is the leader of his/her country, hoping to be re-elected while trying to cope with the effects of climate change and, hopefully, reverse it.
You'll make Decisions to change the energies you use or use them in a different way, researching topic in the Glossary. You'll also answer Questions on | 6,135,715 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
Climate Change and respond to Natural Events (such as volcanic eruptions) which affect Climate, People's Choices (unpredictable, popular human actions which impact Greenhouse Gas emissions and tax revenues), and economic or political decisions by other countries that affect the level of greenhouse gas emissions.
You win “The Climate Change Game” – and your delighted citizens re-elect you - if you can help reduce global Greenhouse Gas emissions to the level required by the Kyoto Protocol AND are not spending more money than people pay in taxes, AND maintain Voter Support of at least 51 percent AND Earth’s Temperature is “comfortable" for life.
## V GAS.
"V GAS" is a 3D serious game in which | 6,135,716 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
players explore and live in a house that is built to mirror their own. Players begin the game by building a profile including variables such as water use and transportation behaviors, heating and cooling practices, food purchases, and electrical appliance usage. Once the profile has been built, the player can begin the simulation which introduces different scenarios ranging from heat waves to mad cow disease. The player adjusts their lifestyle according to how they would react to these events in real life. All the while, the players' decisions are being measured and recorded, and their overall contribution to NO, , and CH to the atmosphere is measured.
## Keep Cool.
"Keep Cool" is a board | 6,135,717 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
game created by Klaus Eisenack and Gerhard Petschel-Held of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and published by the German company Spieltrieb in November 2004. The game can be classified as both a serious game and a global warming game. In Keep Cool, up to six players representing the world's countries compete to balance their own economic interests and the world's climate in a game of negotiation. The goal of the game as stated by the authors is to "promote the general knowledge on climate change and the understanding of difficulties and obstacles, and "to make it available for a board game and still retain the major elements and processes." A quantitative-empirical study with | 6,135,718 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
more than 200 students shows that Keep Cool facilitates experimental learning about climate change and helps "to develop individual beliefs about sustainable development by experiencing complex system dynamics that are not tangible in everyday life."
## Winds of Change.
The European Climate Forum and Munich Re have launched a climate game called Winds of Change, which is a board game for 2-4 persons. The game illustrates the climate challenge in a playful way and it can be used in team learning, schools, focus groups, etc. It includes several features, which are hotly debated in climate policy-making. These include among others: investments in R&D, technological learning and innovation, de-carbonizing | 6,135,719 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
the economy, ocean uptake of , the 2 degrees limit, and insurance against extreme weather events.
## Climate-Poker.
Berlin-based Andrea Meyer, game designer with an environmental background published this card game in her company BeWitched-Spiele in 2009. Playing the card game for 2-4 persons ages 12 and up takes 30–40 minutes. The game has players collect groups of like-minded countries in order to hold conferences. The bigger the conference the better. Country cards show indicators on -emissions per capita as well as figures on consequences of extreme weather events (deaths and damages). While no knowledge is needed to play the game, players will learn a bit about who is causing climate | 6,135,720 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
change and who is suffering from it. On the game side, Climate-Poker requires bluffing and closely watching what the other players are aiming at. the 2 degrees limit, and insurance against. The figures in the game stem from the World Resources Institutes' Climate Analysis Indicators Tool (CAIT) and from Munich Re.
## CEO2 - Climate Business Game.
The online climate game CEO2 from World Wide Fund for Nature and Allianz is a rather complex simulation that allows one player to run a company over a period of 20 years. Players can choose from four industries (automobile, chemicals, insurance, utility). They have a limited budget and can choose from a variety of business decision like investing | 6,135,721 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
in smart grids or carbon capture and storage (utility). Their target is to reduce CO2 emissions significantly until 2030 without going bankrupt. Advisors (environmentalist, investors, researcher) offer help but their suggestions can be one-sided. The game is based on the RECIPE study from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
## Fate of the World.
"Fate of the World" is a 2011 Microsoft Windows and Mac OS game developed and published by Red Redemption, the developers of "Climate Challenge". It focuses on global governance, with goals ranging from improving living conditions in Africa, to preventing catastrophic climate change, to exacerbating it. It is based around an intricate | 6,135,722 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
model of populations, economic production and greenhouse emissions based on real-world data.
## Plantville.
Plantville is "an innovative, educational and fun way for Siemens to engage customers, employees, prospects, students and the general public while driving awareness of Siemens technologies and brand." The game enables players to improve the health of their plants by learning about and applying industrial and infrastructure products and solutions from Siemens. Gamers will be measured on a number of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), including safety, on time delivery, quality, energy management and employee satisfaction.
# Xbox 360 Games for Change Challenge.
The Xbox 360 Games for | 6,135,723 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
Change Challenge is a collaborative effort between Microsoft and Games for Change (G4C), a subgroup of the Serious Games Initiative. The challenge is a worldwide competition to develop a global warming game with Microsoft's XNA Game Studio Express software. Winners will be awarded scholarships from Games for Change and Microsoft, and the winning games will have the possibility of being available for download on the Xbox LIVE Arcade service. The Xbox 360 Games for Change Challenge has been cast by Microsoft as a "socially-minded" initiative, joining the larger serious games movement. Suzanne Seggerman, a co-founder of Games for Change, shared these comments in a radio interview:
# External links.
- | 6,135,724 |
12330292 | Global warming game | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global%20warming%20game | Global warming game
t between Microsoft and Games for Change (G4C), a subgroup of the Serious Games Initiative. The challenge is a worldwide competition to develop a global warming game with Microsoft's XNA Game Studio Express software. Winners will be awarded scholarships from Games for Change and Microsoft, and the winning games will have the possibility of being available for download on the Xbox LIVE Arcade service. The Xbox 360 Games for Change Challenge has been cast by Microsoft as a "socially-minded" initiative, joining the larger serious games movement. Suzanne Seggerman, a co-founder of Games for Change, shared these comments in a radio interview:
# External links.
- Dynamic Climate Change Simulator | 6,135,725 |
12330516 | Pine Level, Alabama | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pine%20Level,%20Alabama | Pine Level, Alabama
Pine Level, Alabama
Pine Level, Alabama may refer to :
- Pine Level, Autauga County, Alabama
- Pine Level, Coffee County, Alabama
- Pine Level, Montgomery County, Alabama | 6,135,726 |
12330460 | Bryten Goss | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bryten%20Goss | Bryten Goss
Bryten Goss
Bryten Edward Goss (August 23, 1976 – October 26, 2006), a native Californian, was a self-taught contemporary American figurative painter. He began having exhibitions in Los Angeles at the age of 16.
His works include the "Triumph of Death" series, "Alex on Pig," "Two Women Riding Pigs," "The Little Pope," "The Blind Leading the Blind", and his burning building pieces such as "Tribecca". When asked about being an artist in Los Angeles instead of New York, Goss said, "If I was a shoemaker, would I go to a town where everybody had shoes or to a town where nobody was wearing them?."
According to Goss, his influences include Alfred Kubin, Pieter Bruegel, Caravaggio, Lucian Freud, Edgar | 6,135,727 |
12330460 | Bryten Goss | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bryten%20Goss | Bryten Goss
ng an artist in Los Angeles instead of New York, Goss said, "If I was a shoemaker, would I go to a town where everybody had shoes or to a town where nobody was wearing them?."
According to Goss, his influences include Alfred Kubin, Pieter Bruegel, Caravaggio, Lucian Freud, Edgar Degas, Egon Schiele, Alberto Giacometti, Balthus, Stanley Spencer, and his mother, Rose.
Some celebrities who have owned paintings by Goss include Nicolas Cage, Jason Lee, Nancy Cartwright. Also, Kevin Smith commissioned Goss to paint a portrait of Smith's wife, Jennifer.
The Bryten Goss Foundation for the Arts was established in order to organize, catalog, and promote his work.
# External links.
- Official site | 6,135,728 |
12330489 | Marine regression | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marine%20regression | Marine regression
Marine regression
Marine regression is a geological process occurring when areas of submerged seafloor are exposed above the sea level. The opposite event, marine transgression, occurs when flooding from the sea covers previously exposed land.
Evidence of marine regressions and transgressions occurs throughout the fossil record, and these fluctuations are thought to have caused or contributed to several mass extinctions, among them the Permian-Triassic extinction event (250 million years ago) and Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event (66 Ma). At the time of the Permian-Triassic extinction, the largest extinction event in the Earth's history, global sea level fell 250 m (820 ft).
A major regression | 6,135,729 |
12330489 | Marine regression | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marine%20regression | Marine regression
could itself cause marine organisms in shallow seas to go extinct, but mass extinctions tend to involve both terrestrial and aquatic species, and it is harder to see how a marine regression could cause widespread extinctions of land animals. Regressions are, therefore, seen as correlates or symptoms of major extinctions, rather than primary causes. The Permian regression might have been related to the formation of Pangaea: the accumulation of all the major landmasses into one body could have facilitated a regression, by providing "a slight enlargement of the ocean basins as the great continents coalesced." However, that cause could not have applied in all, or even many, other cases.
During | 6,135,730 |
12330489 | Marine regression | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marine%20regression | Marine regression
the ice ages of the Pleistocene, a clear correlation existed between marine regressions and episodes of glaciation; as the balance shifts between the global cryosphere and hydrosphere, more of the planet's water in ice sheets means less in the oceans. At the height of the last ice age, at around 18,000 years before the present, the global sea level was 120 to 130 m (390-425 ft) lower than today. A cold spell around 6 million years ago was linked to an advance in glaciation, a marine regression, and the start of the Messinian salinity crisis in the Mediterranean basin. Some major regressions of the past, however, seem unrelated to glaciation episodes — the regression that accompanied the mass | 6,135,731 |
12330489 | Marine regression | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marine%20regression | Marine regression
d the mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous Period being one example.
A clear and certain understanding of major marine regressions has not yet been achieved; according to one hypothesis, regressions may be linked to a "slowdown in sea-floor spreading, leading to a generalized drop in sea level (as the mid-ocean ridges would take up less space)..." In that view, major marine regressions are one aspect of a normal variation in rates of plate tectonic activity, which lead to major episodes of global volcanism like the Siberian Traps and the Deccan Traps, which in turn cause large extinction events.
# External links.
- Marine Transgression and Marine Regression: World of Earth Science | 6,135,732 |
12330514 | Petre Gruzinsky | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petre%20Gruzinsky | Petre Gruzinsky
Petre Gruzinsky
Prince Petre Petres dze Bagrationi Gruzinsky () (28 March 1920 – 13 August 1984) was a Georgian poet and Honored Artist of the Georgian SSR (1979). He was a son of Prince Petre Bagration-Gruzinsky and a scion of King George XII of Georgia.
# Biography.
Gruzinsky was a descendant of the Kakhetian branch (Gruzinsky) of the Bagrationi Dynasty, a former royal house of Georgia. His grandfather Alexander Bagration-Gruzinsky was son of Prince Bagrat of Georgia, the fourth son of King George XII of Georgia. Petre's literary career began in 1933, under the penname of Tamarashvili. Gruzinsky gained popularity as an author of lyrics for the songs by Revaz Lagidze, Giorgi Tsabadze, and | 6,135,733 |
12330514 | Petre Gruzinsky | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petre%20Gruzinsky | Petre Gruzinsky
Giya Kancheli, including for Lagidze's "Tbiliso" (Song of Tiblis), one of the best known Georgian songs, and for the cult Soviet comedy "Mimino" (1977).
Gruzinsky was arrested and tried on charges of anti-Soviet activities and monarchist plot in 1945 and confined in a mental facility until released in 1948. Many of his literary works afterwards were published under the names of Gruzinsky's wife Liya Mgeladze and the journalist Irakli Gotsiridze. His first collection of poetry was published posthumously, in 2001. Gruzinsky died in 1984. He is buried at the Svetitskhoveli Cathedral in Mtskheta.
# Family.
Petre Gruzinsky was married twice. He married in 1939 Ketevan Siradze (born 9 April 1915), | 6,135,734 |
12330514 | Petre Gruzinsky | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petre%20Gruzinsky | Petre Gruzinsky
daughter of Filimon Siradze, and had a daughter:
- Dali Bagration-Gruzinsky (born 1939). She married first at Tiflis, Bruno Babunoshvili (1938-1993). Secondly, she married Zurab Vakhtangovitch Kurashvili (born 1950).
In 1944, Gruzinsky married his second wife, Liya Mgeladze (born 19 August 1925, Manglisi), daughter of Dimitri Mgeladze (1889–1979), the literary scholar and former member of the government of the Democratic Republic of Georgia, and wife. They had two children:
- Mzia Bagration-Gruzinsky (born 1945).
- Nugzar Bagration-Gruzinsky (born 1950), a theatre director and claimant to the headship of the royal house of Georgia.
# Honours.
- Honoured Art Worker (1979).
# Further reading.
- | 6,135,735 |
12330514 | Petre Gruzinsky | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Petre%20Gruzinsky | Petre Gruzinsky
yal house of Georgia.
# Honours.
- Honoured Art Worker (1979).
# Further reading.
- 1. ბაგრატიონები.-თბ.,2003.-გვ.537.
- 2. ბაგრატოვანნი.-2004.-ტ.2.-გვ.76.
- 3. კიკნაძე ვ. საქართველოს სამეფო ტახტის მემკვიდრე ოჯახი.-თბ.,2006.-გვ.14.
- 4. პეტრე ბაგრატიონ-გრუზინსკი.-თბ.,2004.-გვ.73,82-83.
- 5. საქართველოს რესპუბლიკა.-2001.-4სექტ.-გვ.12.-2000.-14ოქტ.-გვ.8.
- 6. ჯაგოდნიშვილი თ. ერეკლეს ეპოსი.-თბ.,2005.-გვ.182.
- 7. ჯავახიშვილი ნ. ნარკვევები ქართველი და ადიღელი ხალხების ურთიერთობის ისტორიიდან.-თბ.,2005.-გვ.251.
- 8. Джавахишвили Н. Грузины под российским флагом.-Тб.,2003.-с.177,180.
- 9. საქართველოს თავადაზნაურობა.-თბ.,2010.-გვ.146.
- 10. Кеснер Д. Сцена.-Канада-г.Виктория,2011.-с.32. | 6,135,736 |
12330520 | F-class blimp | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=F-class%20blimp | F-class blimp
F-class blimp
The F class of US Navy blimps comprised a single airship, built during World War I by Goodyear as one of a group of three small blimps offered to the US government. Two were purchased for the US Navy and one for the US Army. The Navy blimps were designated E-1, F-1, and the Army airship A-1. Classified as an "Experimental Engine Testing Dirigible." F-1 had the same envelope size as the E-1, due to the use of a tractor mounted 125 hp Union engine, the performance was different. F-1 spent its entire career at Hampton Roads (Norfolk, Virginia). It was flown in both tractor and pusher configurations. It also may have been flown with a Curtiss OXX engine. F-1 was removed from inventory | 6,135,737 |
12330520 | F-class blimp | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=F-class%20blimp | F-class blimp
lass of US Navy blimps comprised a single airship, built during World War I by Goodyear as one of a group of three small blimps offered to the US government. Two were purchased for the US Navy and one for the US Army. The Navy blimps were designated E-1, F-1, and the Army airship A-1. Classified as an "Experimental Engine Testing Dirigible." F-1 had the same envelope size as the E-1, due to the use of a tractor mounted 125 hp Union engine, the performance was different. F-1 spent its entire career at Hampton Roads (Norfolk, Virginia). It was flown in both tractor and pusher configurations. It also may have been flown with a Curtiss OXX engine. F-1 was removed from inventory in November 1923. | 6,135,738 |
12330519 | Jack Coughlan | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jack%20Coughlan | Jack Coughlan
Jack Coughlan
John J. (Jack) Coughlan was an Irish sportsperson. He played hurling with his local club Tulla and with the Clare and the London inter-county teams in the early 1900s.
Jack Coughlan was born in Tulla, County Clare, Ireland, an area in the county that was famous for hurling even before the foundation of the Gaelic Athletic Association. Coughlan made his name as a hurler with Tulla, and was prominent in the club’s county title in 1896. He subsequently won a Croke Cup title with Clare later that year. Shortly after these victories Coughlan later left Tulla and emigrated to London. It was here that he played hurling with the great London team of the time. He played in the 1900 All-Ireland | 6,135,739 |
12330519 | Jack Coughlan | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jack%20Coughlan | Jack Coughlan
was born in Tulla, County Clare, Ireland, an area in the county that was famous for hurling even before the foundation of the Gaelic Athletic Association. Coughlan made his name as a hurler with Tulla, and was prominent in the club’s county title in 1896. He subsequently won a Croke Cup title with Clare later that year. Shortly after these victories Coughlan later left Tulla and emigrated to London. It was here that he played hurling with the great London team of the time. He played in the 1900 All-Ireland final but lost out to Tipperary on that occasion. In 1901 Coughlan was the captain of the London team that defeated Cork in the championship decider, giving Coughlan an All-Ireland title. | 6,135,740 |
12330518 | Paul V. Yoder | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20V.%20Yoder | Paul V. Yoder
Paul V. Yoder
Dr. Paul Van Buskirk Yoder (October 8, 1908 - April 4, 1990) was an American musician, composer, arranger, and band director.
# Life.
Paul Yoder was born on October 8, 1908 in Tacoma, Washington. He obtained an undergraduate degree from the University of North Dakota, which later conferred an honorary Doctorate upon him and, in 1941, a master's degree from Northwestern University in Illinois. He co-founded the Japanese Band Director's Association, served as President of the American Bandmasters Association,and served on the Board of Directors of the Midwest International Band and Orchestra Clinic. Following years of heart trouble, Paul Yoder died April 4, 1990 in Hendersonville, | 6,135,741 |
12330518 | Paul V. Yoder | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20V.%20Yoder | Paul V. Yoder
North Carolina.
# Involvement with Japan.
While investigating where in Japan his music was being played, and generating royalty checks, Yoder met many band directors interested in and performing western music. Thus began an involvement with music education and concert bands in Japan that would include coordinating performance at the MidWest Clinic by many Japanese bands and being dubbed by contemporary Alfred Reed "an unofficial ambassador of band music between the US and Japan".
# Composer and arranger.
Yoder's first band composition, "Our Family Band", was published in 1933. He wrote over 1,500 original compositions and arrangements during the course of his career. He composed and arranged | 6,135,742 |
12330518 | Paul V. Yoder | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20V.%20Yoder | Paul V. Yoder
with a focus on works for young bands and also produced several instrumental methods. Biographer Steven Kelly stated "his emphasis on ensemble class instruction changed the manner in which bands were taught" and also that a band student between the 30s and 70s in America would be unlikely to be able to go without experiencing a Yoder piece. Yoder published primarily through Niel Kjos publishing, but also nearly 100 other firms worldwide.
Paul Yoder was also the author of charts for over 30 marching band shows.
Paul Yoder also composed Texas State's Fight song "Go Bobcats!" in 1961.
# Awards and recognition.
Though recognized for his "warm, humorous personality" and "humble lifestyle", Dr. | 6,135,743 |
12330518 | Paul V. Yoder | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20V.%20Yoder | Paul V. Yoder
Yoder was an honorary life member of the National Band Association and was awarded, amongst other awards, the Academy of Wind and Percussion Arts, the Distinguished Service to Music Medal, and was inducted into the prestigious National Band Association Hall of Fame of Distinguished Band Conductors. The program notes for the 1969 awarding of the AWAPA award by the National Band Association listed Yoder as "one of the most influential band personalities of the mid 20th century, he was at one time the most popular composer/arranger of band music in America"
# External links.
- Paul V. Yoder Collection - Special Collections in Performing Arts at the University of Maryland
- Paul V. Yoder Papers | 6,135,744 |
12330518 | Paul V. Yoder | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20V.%20Yoder | Paul V. Yoder
r of the National Band Association and was awarded, amongst other awards, the Academy of Wind and Percussion Arts, the Distinguished Service to Music Medal, and was inducted into the prestigious National Band Association Hall of Fame of Distinguished Band Conductors. The program notes for the 1969 awarding of the AWAPA award by the National Band Association listed Yoder as "one of the most influential band personalities of the mid 20th century, he was at one time the most popular composer/arranger of band music in America"
# External links.
- Paul V. Yoder Collection - Special Collections in Performing Arts at the University of Maryland
- Paul V. Yoder Papers - VanderCook College of Music | 6,135,745 |
12330531 | McLaren Grand Prix results | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=McLaren%20Grand%20Prix%20results | McLaren Grand Prix results
McLaren Grand Prix results
The first table details World Championship Grand Prix results for the McLaren Formula One team. The second table includes results from privately owned McLaren cars in World Championship Grands Prix.
# Formula One results.
## Works team entries.
- Notes:
- * – Season still in progress.
- – The driver did not finish the Grand Prix, but was classified, as he completed over 90% of the race distance.
- – Half points awarded as less than 75% of the race distance was completed.
- – Up until , not all points scored by a constructor contributed to their final World Championship tally (see list of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses | 6,135,746 |
12330531 | McLaren Grand Prix results | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=McLaren%20Grand%20Prix%20results | McLaren Grand Prix results
- – Up until , not all points scored by a constructor contributed to their final World Championship tally (see list of points scoring systems for more information). Numbers without parentheses are Championship points; numbers in parentheses are total points scored.
- – Points total includes points scored by private entries.
- – McLaren did not receive points for the Constructors' Championship at the 2007 Hungarian Grand Prix.
- – Following the 2007 Italian Grand Prix, McLaren lost all their points in the 2007 Constructors' Championship as a result of a World Motorsport Council decision over the 2007 Formula One espionage controversy. They did not receive any points from subsequent races. | 6,135,747 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
List of encyclopedias by language
This is a list of encyclopedias by language
# Albanian.
Encyclopedias written in Albanian.
- "Albanian Encyclopedic Dictionary" (): published by Academy of Sciences of Albania
- First Edition (1985; "FESH")
- New Edition (2008/09; "Botimi i ri, FESH II")
- "Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia" (Albanian edition, 1984): the first encyclopedia published in Albanian
- Albanian Wikipedia ("Wikipedia shqip")
# Arabic.
Encyclopedias written in Arabic.
- "Global Arabic Encyclopedia"
- "King Abdullah Bin Abdulaziz Arabic Health Encyclopedia"
- "Marefa"
- "Mawdoo3"
- Arabic Wikipedia
# Armenian.
Encyclopedias written in Armenian.
- "Armenian Encyclopedia"
# | 6,135,748 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
Azerbaijani.
Encyclopedias written in Azerbaijan.
- "Azerbaijani Soviet Encyclopedia"
# Belarusian.
Encyclopedias written in Belarusian
- "Belarusian Encyclopedia" (1996–2004) (Беларуская энцыклапедыя)
- "Belarusian Soviet Encyclopedia" (1969–1976) (Беларуская савецкая энцыклапедыя)
# Bengali.
- Bishwakosh: 22 volumes, edited by Rangalal Mukhopadhyay, Troilokyanath Mukhopadhyay and Nagendranath Basu
- Banglapedia
- Bengali Wikipedia
# Bulgarian.
Encyclopedias written in Bulgarian.
- "Concise Bulgarian Encyclopedia" (Кратка българска енциклопедия; 1963-1969)
- "Danchovi Bros Bulgarian Encyclopedia" (Българска енциклопедия на Братя Данчови; 1936)
- "Encyclopedia Bulgaria (1981-1997)" | 6,135,749 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
(Енциклопедия България)
- Bulgarian Wikipedia (Уикипедия на български език)
# Catalan.
Encyclopedias written in Catalan.
- "Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana" ("Catalan Encyclopedia")
- Catalan Wikipedia
# Chinese.
Encyclopedias written in Chinese.
# Croatian.
Encyclopedias written in Croatian.
- "Enciklopedija hrvatske umjetnosti" (1995–1996) ("Encyclopedia of Croatian Art")
- "Filmska enciklopedija" (1986–1990) ("Film Encyclopedia")
- "General Encyclopedia of the Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute" ("Opća enciklopedija Jugoslavenskog leksikografskog zavoda")
- "Hrvatska enciklopedija" (1999–2007) ("Croatian Encyclopedia")
- "Istarska enciklopedija" (2005) ("Istrian Encyclopedia")
- | 6,135,750 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Krležijana" (1993–1999) ("Encyclopedia of Miroslav Krleža")
- "Medicinska enciklopedija" (1967–1986) ("Medical Encyclopedia")
- "Pomorska enciklopedija" (1972–1989) ("Naval Encyclopedia")
- "Proleksis Encyclopedia" ("Proleksis enciklopedija")
- "Tehnička enciklopedija" (1963–1997) ("Technical Encyclopedia")
- Croatian Wikipedia ("Wikipedija na hrvatskom jeziku")
# Czech.
Encyclopedias written in Czech.
- "Ilustrovaný encyklopedický slovník" (IES, 3 volumes, 1980–1982)
- "Komenského slovník naučný" (10 volumes, 1937–1938)
- "Malá československá encklopedie" (MČSE, 6 volumes, 1984–1987)
- "Malý encyklopedický slovník A-Ž" (1 volume, 1972)
- "Malý slovník naučný" (2 volumes, 1925–1929)
- | 6,135,751 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Masarykův slovník naučný" (7 volumes, 1925–1933)
- "Nový velký ilustrovaný Slovník naučný" (22 volumes, 1929–1934)
- "Otto's encyclopedia" ("Ottův slovník naučný", 28 vols., 1888–1909, 12 supplement vols., "Ottův slovník naučný nové doby" (incomplete), 1930–1943)
- "Příruční slovník naučný" (PSN, 4 volumes, 1962–1967)
- "Riegrův slovník naučný" (11 volumes, 1860–1874, supplement vol. 1890)
# Danish.
Encyclopedias written in Danish.
- "Den Store Danske Encyklopædi"
- "Salmonsens Konversationsleksikon"
- Danish Wikipedia
# Dutch.
Encyclopedias written in Dutch.
- "Eerste Nederlandse Systematisch Ingerichte Encyclopaedie" (abbr. E.N.S.I.E., "First Dutch Systematically Arranged Encyclopaedia")
- | 6,135,752 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Grote Nederlandse Larousse Encyclopedie" (1971–1979)
- "Grote Spectrum Encyclopedie" (1974–1980)
- "Oosthoek's Geïllustreerde Encyclopaedie" (1916–1923; 7th ed. 1976–1981)
- "Winkler Prins Geïllustreerde Encyclopaedie" (1870–1882; 2nd ed. 1884–1888)
- Dutch Wikipedia ("Nederlandstalige Wikipedia")
# Egyptian Arabic.
- Egyptian Arabic Wikipedia: a Wikipedia encyclopedia written in Egyptian Arabic language.
# English.
Encyclopedias written in English.
- "Academic American Encyclopedia"
- "American Heritage New Pictorial Encyclopedic Guide to the United States" (1965)
- "Asian Encyclopedia of Law": legal encyclopedia from Lawi
- "Banglapedia": national encyclopedia of Bangladesh, available | 6,135,753 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
in English and Bengali
- "Book of Knowledge"
- "Britannica Junior"
- "British Encyclopedia, or Dictionary of Arts and Sciences": 1809, 6 volumes
- "The British Encyclopedia": 1933, 10 volumes
- "Cambridge Encyclopedia": one-volume encyclopedia from Cambridge University Press
- "Canadian Encyclopedia": originally a multi-volume print encyclopedia from Hurtig Publishers focusing on Canadian topics (founded 1985); now a free, online-only publication of the Historica Dominion Institute
- "The Children's Encyclopedia"
- "Collier's Encyclopedia" (1951–1998)
- "Collins Encyclopedia of Scotland": one-volume encyclopedia
- "Columbia Encyclopedia": one-volume encyclopedia from Columbia University | 6,135,754 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
Press
- "Compton's Encyclopedia": 26-volume encyclopedia
- "Dictionary of the Middle Ages" (1982–1989)
- "The Domestic Encyclopedia (1802, Am. editions 1803, 1821)
- "Encarta", digital multimedia encyclopedia by Microsoft
- "Encyclopædia Biblica": published in 1899
- "Encyclopædia Britannica": in print 1768–2010, online since 1994; see also the "1911 Encyclopædia Britannica"
- "Encyclopædia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite": available on DVD
- "Encyclopædia Iranica": history and contemporary topics related to Iranian peoples
- "Encyclopedia Americana"
- "Encyclopedia Judaica": 26-volume English-language encyclopedia of the Jewish people and Judaism
- "Encyclopedia of Associations": | 6,135,755 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
also available online as Associations Unlimited
- "Encyclopedia of Distances": Springer-Verlag 2009
- "Encyclopedia of Law": 120.000-entry legal encyclopedia with a legal dictionary and legal thesaurus
- "Encyclopedia of Life": online collaborative encyclopedia intended to document all of the living species known to science
- "Encyclopedia of New Zealand": country-specific historical encyclopedia, with contemporary topics
- "Encyclopaedia of Wales": one volume, also available in Welsh
- "Funk & Wagnalls Standard Encyclopedia"
- "Global Encyclopedia": Grolier publication during the 1980s
- "Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia"
- "Kendal's Pocket Encyclopedia (1802, second edition 1811)
- | 6,135,756 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Low's Encyclopaedia" (1805–1811)
- "Merit Students Encyclopedia" (1967–1992)
- "The Minor Encyclopedia" (1803)
- "National Geographic Encyclopedia"
- "New American Cyclopedia" (1857–66)
- "New American Desk Encyclopedia": small paperback encyclopedia
- "New International Encyclopaedia" (1902–1927)
- "The Nuttall Encyclopaedia": 1900
- "Oracle Encyclopædia": five-volume encyclopedia published in 1895
- "Pears Cyclopaedia": one-volume encyclopaedia published annually in the United Kingdom (1897-2017)
- "The Penguin Encyclopedia": one-volume encyclopedia published by the Penguin Group
- "The Poets' Encyclopedia"
- "Random House Encyclopedia": one-volume encyclopedia from Random House
- | 6,135,757 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"The Volume Library" by Southwestern, 3-volume compendium with aspects of dictionary, almanac and encyclopedia
- "World Book Encyclopedia": world's best selling print encyclopedia
- English Wikipedia (2001)
- Simple English Wikipedia (2003)
# Esperanto.
Encyclopedias written in Esperanto.
- "Enciklopedio de Esperanto": two-volume encyclopedia about Esperanto issues (Budapest 1934); reprint in one volume, without the illustrations (1986)
- "Esperanto en perspektivo": encyclopedic handbook about Esperanto issues (Rotterdam and London 1974)
- Esperanto Wikipedia (2001)
# Estonian.
Encyclopedias written in Estonian.
- "Eesti Entsüklopeedia" (1932–1937)
- "Eesti nõukogude entsüklopeedia" | 6,135,758 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
(1968–1976)
- "Eesti nõukogude entsüklopeedia" (ENE) (1985–1990) / "Eesti entsüklopeedia" (EE) (1990–2006)
- "Eesti Üleüldise teaduse raamat ehk encyklopädia konversationi-lexikon": by Karl August Hermann (1900–1906)
- "ENEKE" (1982–1986)
- "Estonica"
- "TEA entsüklopeedia" (2008)
- Estonian Wikipedia (2002)
# Finnish.
Encyclopedias written in Finnish.
- "Facta" (1969–1974)
- "Facta 2001"
- "Factum" (2003–2005)
- "Iso tietosanakirja" (1931–1958)
- "Otavan iso tietosanakirja – Encyclopedia Fennica" (1960–1965)
- "Pieni tietosanakirja" (1925–1928)
- "Spectrum Tietokeskus" (1976–1987)
- "Tiedon Värikäs Maailma" (1972–1980)
- "Tietosanakirja" (1909–1922)
- "Uusi tietosanakirja" | 6,135,759 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
(1929)
- "Uusi Tietosanakirja" (1960–1972)
- Finnish Wikipedia ("Suomenkielinen Wikipedia")
# French.
Encyclopedias written in French.
- "Claude Augé Nouveau Petit Larousse Illustré"
- "Encyclopædia Britannica": translated into French
- "Encyclopædia Universalis" (1968–)
- "Encyclopédie" (1751–1772)
- "Encyclopédie berbère" (1984–)
- "Encyclopédie Méthodique": Panckoucke; 1782–1832
- "Encyclopédie nouvelle": Pierre Leroux and Jean Reynaud; 1839–1840
- "Grand Dictionnaire Encyclopédique Larousse"
- "Grand dictionnaire universel du XIXe siècle": by Pierre Larousse (17 volumes 1866–1877); really an encyclopedia despite its name
- "Grand Larousse encyclopédique" (1960–1964)
- "La | 6,135,760 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
Grande Encyclopédie": general secretaries of the editorial board Ferdinand-Camille Dreyfus and André Berthelot (31 volumes 1886–1902)
- "Nouveau Larousse illustré" (1897–1904)
- French Wikipedia ("Wikipédia francophone")
# Galician.
Encyclopedias written in Galician.
- "Enciclopedia Galega Universal": on paper and online
- "Gran Enciclopedia Galega Silverio Cañada": on paper and DVD
- Galician Wikipedia ("Wikipedia en galego")
# Georgian.
Encyclopedias written in Georgian.
- "Georgian Soviet Encyclopedia"
# German.
Encyclopedias written in German.
- "The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in Word and Picture" (1886–1902)
- "Bertelsmann Lexikothek" (1967)
- "Brockhaus" (eds. 1–14 by 1900)
- | 6,135,761 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Conversations-Lexikon mit vorzüglicher Rücksicht auf die gegenwärtigen Zeiten" (1796–1808; see Brockhaus)
- "Grosses vollständiges Universal-Lexicon" (1751–1754)
- "Herders Konversations-Lexikon" (1854–1857; 2nd ed. 1875–1879)
- "Meyers Konversations-Lexikon" (1839–1855; 5th ed. 1893–1897)
- "Oekonomische Encyklopädie (General System of State, City, Home and Agriculture)" Editor Johann Georg Krünitz (242 Volumes 1773–1858)
- "Pierers Universal-Lexikon" (1824–1836; 7th ed. 1888–1893)
- German Wikipedia ("Deutsche Wikipedia")
# Greek.
Encyclopedias written in Greek.
- "Encyclopedic lexicon": by P. Gerakakis, I–V volumes, 1861–1865 (Γερακάκης, Πέτρος. "Λεξικόν εγκυκλοπαίδειας: περιέχον | 6,135,762 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
τα κυριωτέρα των επιστημών και τεχνών")
- "Helios: Νεώτερον Εγκυκλοπαιδικόν Λεξικόν, Ήλιος (1945)
- "Papyrus Larousse Britannica": Πάπυρος - Λαρούς - Μπριτάννικα (1975–2004)
- "Suda": historical encyclopedia of the ancient Mediterranean world (10th century)
- Greek Wikipedia ("Ελληνική Βικιπαίδεια")
# Gujarati.
Encyclopedias written in Gujarati.
- "Bhagavadgomandal": completed around by Bhagvatsingh of Gondal with the help of his education minister Chandulal Patel
- "Gujarati Vishwakosh" (1985–2009)
# Hebrew.
Encyclopedias written in Hebrew.
- "Encyclopaedia Hebraica"
- "Encyclopedia of the Holocaust"
- Hebrew Wikipedia
# Hindi.
Encyclopedias written in Hindi.
- Agropedia
- | 6,135,763 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
Hindi Wikipedia
- "" (1969-1970)
# Hungarian.
Encyclopedias written in Hungarian.
- "Britannica Hungarica Világenciklopédia" (1994–2001)
- "A Napkelet Lexikona" (1927)
- "Magyar Nagylexikon" (1993–2004)
- "Egyetemes magyar encyclopaedia" (1859–1876) (→ )
- "A Pallas Nagy Lexikona" (1893–1900)
- "Pannon Enciklopédia"
- "Révai Nagy Lexikona" (1911–1935)
- "Tolnai Világlexikona" (1912–1918, 1926–1930)
- "Uj Idők Lexikona" (1936–1942)
- "Új Magyar Lexikon" (1961–1972)
- Hungarian Wikipedia (2003–)
# Icelandic.
Encyclopedias written in Icelandic.
- "Íslenska alfræðiorðabókin A-Ö"
# Ido.
Encyclopedias written in Ido.
- Ido Wikipedia
# Indonesian.
Encyclopedias written in Indonesian | 6,135,764 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
language.
- "Ensiklopedi Islam"
- "Ensiklopedi Nasional Indonesia"
- "Ensiklopedi umum dalam bahasa Indonesia"
- Indonesian Wikipedia ("Wikipedia in Indonesia")
# Italian.
Encyclopedias written in Italian.
- "Conoscere" (1958–1963)
- "Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani"
- "Dizionario enciclopedico italiano" (1955–)
- "Dizionario enciclopedico universale" (1995), two-volume "Corriere della Sera" encyclopedia
- "Dizionario storico della Svizzera "
- "Enciclopedia Biografica Universale", Treccani
- "Enciclopedia italiana di scienze, lettere ed arti" (1929–1960)
- "Federico II. Enciclopedia fridericiana", three-volume encyclopaedic work, entirely devoted to the emperor Frederick | 6,135,765 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
II and his time
- Italian Wikipedia ("Wikipedia in italiano")
# Japanese.
Encyclopedias written in Japanese.
- The Heibonsha World Encyclopedia (世界大百科事典 Sekai Dai-hyakka Jiten)
# Kazakh.
Encyclopedias translated into Kazakh.
- "Great Soviet Encyclopedia"
# Korean.
Encyclopedias written in Korean.
- "Doosan Encyclopedia"
- "Encyclopedia of Korean Culture"
- "Global World Encyclopedia"
- "Great Korean Encyclopedia"
- "Jibong yuseol"
- "Kwangmyong Encyclopedia"
- Korean Wikipedia
# Kurdish.
Encyclopedias written in Kurdish.
- "Kurdistanica" (1992)
# Kyrgyz.
Encyclopedias written in Kyrgyz.
- "Great Soviet Encyclopedia"
# Latin.
Encyclopedias written in Latin.
- "De proprietatibus | 6,135,766 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
rerum": of Bartholomeus Anglicus
- "Etymologiae": of Isidore of Seville
- "Fons memorabilium universi": of Domenico Bandini of Arezzo
- "Liber de natura rerum": of Thomas of Cantimpré
- "Naturalis Historia": of Pliny the Elder
- "Nine Books of Disciplines": by Marcus Terentius Varro
- "Speculum Maius": of Vincent of Beauvais
- Latin Wikipedia
# Latvian.
Encyclopedias written in Latvian.
- "Latviešu konversācijas vārdnīca", 1927–1940
- "Latvijas padomju enciklopēdija", 1981–1988
- Latvian Wikipedia (2003)
# Leonese.
Encyclopedias written in Leonese.
- "Llionpedia" (2009)
# Lithuanian.
Encyclopedias written in Lithuanian.
# Macedonian.
Encyclopedias written in Macedonian.
- | 6,135,767 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia": Macedonian edition; the first encyclopedia published in Macedonian
- Macedonian Wikipedia (Википедија)
# Malagasy.
Encyclopedias written in Malagasy.
- "Rakibolana Rakipahalalana"
- Malagasy Wikipedia
# Malayalam.
Encyclopedias written in Malayalam.
- "Malayalam Britannica"
- "Puranic Encyclopedia" "Vettom Mani": published By DC Books
- "Sarva Vijyana Kosham
- "Viswa Sahitya Vijnanakosam"
- Malayalam Wikipedia
# Moldavian.
Encyclopedias written in Moldavian.
- "Encyclopedia of Literature and Art of Moldavia": a two-volume encyclopedia published by the Redacţia Principală a Enciclopediei Sovietice Moldoveneşti in 1985-1986
- "Moldavian Soviet Encyclopedia": | 6,135,768 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
an eight-volume encyclopedia published by the Redacţia Principală a Enciclopediei Sovietice Moldoveneşti in 1970-1981
- "Popular Medical Encyclopedia": a one-volume encyclopedia published by the Redacţia Principală a Enciclopediei Sovietice Moldoveneşti in 1984
# Norwegian.
Encyclopedias written in Norwegian.
- "Caplex"
- "Store norske leksikon"
- Norwegian Wikipedia
# Persian.
Encyclopedias written in Persian.
- "Dehkhoda Dictionary" ("Loghatnameh Dehkhoda")
- "Encyclopaedia of Persian Language and Literature"
- "Encyclopedia of Iran and Islam"
- "The Encyclopedia of Iranian Old Music" (2000)
- "Encyclopedia of Islam World"
- "Encyclopedia Islamica"
- "The Persian Encyclopedia"
- | 6,135,769 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Encyclopedia of Sophistication" (2003)
- "Treasure Box of Knowledge" (1993)
- Persian Wikipedia (2004)
# Polish.
Encyclopedias written in Polish.
- "Britannica (Encyclopædia Britannica - Polish edition)": 49 vols (1997-2005)
- "Encyklopedia białych plam": 20 vols (2000-2006)
- "Encyklopedia nowej generacji E2.0" (2008)
- "Encyklopedia ogólna wiedzy ludzkiej": 12 vols (1872-1877)
- "Encyklopedia podręczna ilustrowana według 2 najnowszego wydania "Macierzy Polskiej" we Lwowie, uzupełniona i opracowana do użytku naszych czytelników: 4 vols (1906)
- "Encyklopedia Polski" ("Encyclopedia of Poland"; 1996)
- "Encyklopedia popularna ilustrowana treść wszystkich gałęzi wiedzy ludzkiej, podana | 6,135,770 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
przystępnie" 4 vols (1909-1912)
- "Encyklopedia Powszechna Kieszonkowa" (1888)
- "Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN": 4 vols (1973-1976)
- "Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN": 30 vols (2009-2010)
- "Encyklopedia Powszechna Ultima Thule": 10 vols (1927-1939)
- "Encyklopedia staropolska ilustrowana": 4 vols (1900-1903)
- "Great Encyclopedia of PWN (Wielka Encyklopedia PWN)": 31 vols (2001-2005)
- "Great Universal Encyclopedia of PWN (Wielka Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN)" : 12 vols (1962-1970)
- "Ilustrowana encyklopedia": 6 vols (1925-1938)
- "Internet PWN Encyclopedia (Internetowa encyklopedia PWN)": also referred to as "Nowa Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN"; a free Internet encyclopedia published by | 6,135,771 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
PWN
- "Nowa Encyklopedia Powszechna PWN": 8 vols (2004)
- "Nowe Ateny Albo Akademiia Wszelkiej Sciencyi Pełna, Na Różne Tytuły Jak Na Classes Podzielona, Mądrym Dla Memoryjału, Idiotom Dla Nauki, Politykom Dla Praktyki, Melankolikom Dla Rozrywki Erygowana" (1745-1746)
- "Popularna encyklopedia powszechna" 20 vols (1994-1998)
- "S.Orgelbranda Encyklopedia Powszechna": edition I (1859-1868), edition II (1872-1876), edition III (1898, "Orgelbranda Encyklopedia powszechna z ilustracjami i mapami"); 28 vols
- "Wielka encyklopedia Oxford": 20 vols (2008)
- "Wielka encyklopedia powszechna ilustrowana": 55 vols (1890-1914)
- "Wielka ilustrowana encyklopedia powszechna": 20 vols (1929-1938)
- | 6,135,772 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Zbiór potrzebniejszych wiadomości" (1781)
- Polish Wikipedia
# Portuguese.
Encyclopedias written in Portuguese.
- "Barsa" -
- "Biblioteca Universal": published by Texto Editora (paper, multimedia and online)
- "Diciopédia": published by Porto Editora (multimedia and online)
- "Enciclopédia Luso-Brasileira de Cultura": published by Editorial Verbo (1963–1995); 22 volumes
- "Enciclopédia Verbo Edição Século XXI": published by Editorial Verbo (since 1998); 29 volumes
- "Grande Enciclopédia Portuguesa e Brasileira": 40 volumes and later supplements (since 1936)
- "Infopédia": published by Porto Editora (online)
- Portuguese Wikipedia
# Romanian.
Encyclopedias written in Romanian.
- | 6,135,773 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Dicționar enciclopedic român" (1962–1966)
- "Enciclopedia Cugetarea" (1940, 1999)
- "Enciclopedia Română" (1899–1904)
- "Lexiconul Tehnic Român" (1948–1968)
- Romanian Wikipedia
# Russian.
Encyclopedias written in Russian.
- "Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary" (Энциклопедический словарь Брокгауза и Ефрона, 1890–1906)
- "Encyclopedia of Domestic Animation" (Энциклопедия отечественной мультипликации)
- "Encyclopedic lexicon" (Энциклопедический лексикон): not finished, letters А–Д (1834–1841)
- "Geographical-statistical dictionary of Russian Empire" (Географическо-статистический словарь Российской Империи) (1863–1885)
- "Great Russian Encyclopedia" (Большая Российская энциклопедия, | 6,135,774 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
БРЭ)
- "Great Soviet Encyclopedia" (Большая Советская энциклопедия, БСЭ)
- "Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary" (Советский Энциклопедический Словарь, СЭС)
- Russian Wikipedia ("Русская Википедия")
# Serbian.
Encyclopedias written in Serbian.
- "Encyclopædia Britannica" (concise edition, Serbian translation)
- "Encyclopedia of Yugoslavia" ("Енциклопедија Југославије"; 1955–1971)
- "General Encyclopedia of the Yugoslavian Lexicographical Institute" ("Opća enciklopedija Jugoslavenskog leksikografskog zavoda")
- "Mala Prosvetina Enciklopedija" (1985) ("Мала Просветина Енциклопедија - Prosveta's Small Encyclopedia")
- "Srpska Porodična Enciklopedija" ("Српска Породична Енциклопедија - Serbian | 6,135,775 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
Family Encyclopedia")
- "Vojna Enciklopedija" ("Војна Енциклопедија - Military Encyclopedia")
- Serbian Wikipedia (Википедија на српском језику)
# Sinhalese.
Encyclopedias written in Sinhala.
- "Sinhalese Encyclopaedia" (සිංහල විශ්වකෝෂය)
- Sinhalese Wikipedia (සිංහල විකිපීඩියා)
# Slovak.
Encyclopedias written in Slovak.
- "Encyclopaedia Beliana"
- "Encyklopédia Slovenska"
- "Ottova všeobecná encyklopédia v dvoch zväzkoch"
- "Pyramída"
- "Slovenský náučný slovník"
- "Univerzum"
- "Univerzum – všeobecná obrazová encyklopédia A - Ž"
- "Všeobecný encyklopedický slovník"
# Slovene.
Encyclopedias written in Slovene.
- "Enciklopedija Slovenije"
- "Slovenski veliki leksikon" (Mladinska | 6,135,776 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
knjiga, 2003-2005): set of 3 volumes: , ,
- Slovene Wikipedia ("Slovenska Wikipedija")
# Spanish.
Encyclopedias written in Spanish.
- "Barsa"
- "Diccionario Enciclopédico Espasa"
- "Diccionario Enciclopédico Hispano-Americano de Literatura, Ciencias y Artes": Barcelona, Montaner y Simón, 1887–1899, reprints and appendices up to 1910: very readable articles, many written by known Spanish scholars of the day.; reprinted by the London editor Walter M. Jackson (C. H. Simonds Company, Impresores, Boston, Estados Unidos de Norte América)
- "Enciclopedia Combi Visual"
- "Enciclopedia Cousteau Mundo Submarino"
- "Enciclopedia Estudiantil Editorial Codex"
- "La Enciclopedia del Estudiante"
- | 6,135,777 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Enciclopedia Encarta"
- "Enciclopedia Jurídica Online": from Lawi; for Latin America and Spain; available online; edited by lawyers and academics
- "Enciclopedia Labor"
- "Enciclopedia Libre Universal": also known as "Enciclopedia Libre"
- "Enciclopedia Salvat"
- "Enciclopedia Temática Guinness"
- "Enciclopedia universal ilustrada europeo-americana": the biggest encyclopedia of its time; also known as "Enciclopedia Espasa" or "Enciclopedia Espasa-Calpe"
- "Enciclopedia Universal Micronet"
- "Gran Enciclopedia Aragonesa"
- "Gran Enciclopedia Asturiana"
- "Gran Enciclopedia Extremeña"
- "Gran Enciclopedia de Andalucía"
- "Gran Enciclopedia Gallega"
- "Gran enciclopedia planeta": | 6,135,778 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
20 volumes, DVD and online encyclopedia, 2004
- "El Libro de los 1001 porqués"
- "": 13 volumes, 1965–70
- "Nueva enciclopedia cumbre": published by Grolier in 14 volumes and available online
- "Nueva enciclopedia Durvan"
- "El Nuevo Tesoro de la Juventud": published by Grolier in 20 volumes
- Spanish Wikipedia ("Wikipedia en español")
# Swedish.
Encyclopedias written in Swedish.
- "Bonniers familjelexikon" (20 volumes, 1983–1986)
- "Bra böckers lexikon" (4 editions of 25 volumes each, 1973–1995)
- "Focus" (5 volumes, 1958–1960, introducing a new era of smaller modular encyclopedias, several later editions)
- "Kunskapens bok" (6 editions, 8 or 9 volumes each, 1937–1959)
- "Lexikon | 6,135,779 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
2000" (25 volumes, 1995)
- "Nationalencyklopedin" (20 volumes, 1989–1996)
- "Nordisk familjebok" (1876–1899; 2nd ed. 1904–1926)
- "Nordisk familjebok" (editions 2-4 of 20+ volumes each, 1904–1957)
- Susning.nu: a Swedish online wiki started in 2001; anyone-can-edit encyclopedia until 2004; shut down in 2009
- "Svensk uppslagsbok" (2 editions, 31 and 32 volumes, 1929–1955)
- "Svenska uppslagsverk": a comprehensive bibliography maintained by collector Christofer Psilander
- Swedish Wikipedia (Svenskspråkiga Wikipedia)
# Tajik.
Encyclopedia translated into Tajik.
- "Great Soviet Encyclopedia"
# Tamil.
Encyclopedias written in Tamil.
- "Encyclopædia Britannica": 28,000 articles: a three-volume | 6,135,780 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
encyclopaedia of selected articles from the English version and special articles on Tamil culture and history (பிரிட்டானிக்கா தகவல் களஞ்சியம்)
- "Encyclopaedia of Herbs" (மூலிகைக் கலைக்களஞ்சியம்)
- "Islamic Encyclopaedia": written by Abdul Raheem (இஸ்லாமியக் கலைக்களஞ்சியம்)
- Tamil Wikipedia: currently has 48,000 articles on various fields; one of the main resources for articles in Tamil language
# Thai.
- "Thai Junior Encyclopedia" (สารานุกรมไทยฉบับเยาวชน)
- Thai Wikipedia
# Turkish.
Encyclopedias written in Turkish.
- "Anabritannica"
# Turkmen.
Encyclopedia translated into Turkmen.
- "Great Soviet Encyclopedia"
# Ukrainian.
Encyclopedias written in Ukrainian.
- "Encyclopedia | 6,135,781 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
of Cybernetics" ("Енциклопедія кібернетики")
- "Encyclopedia of Ecology" ("Екологічна енциклопедія")
- "Encyclopedia of Education" ("Енциклопедія освіти")
- "Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine" ("Енциклопедія історії України")
- "Encyclopedia of Literature Studies" ("Енциклопедія літературознавства")
- "Encyclopedia of Modern Ukraine" ("Енциклопедія сучасної України")
- "Encyclopedia of Psychology" ("Психологічна енциклопедія")
- "Encyclopedia of Sociology" ("Соціологічна енциклопедія")
- "Encyclopedia of the Ukrainian Language" ("Енциклопедія "Українська мова"")
- "Encyclopedia of Ukrainіan Studies" ("Енциклопедія українознавства")
- "Encyclopedia of Ukrainіan Diaspora" ("Енциклопедія | 6,135,782 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
української діаспори")
- "Encyclopedic Dictionary of Astronomy" ("Астрономічний енциклопедичний словник")
- "Encyclopedic Dictionary of Philosophy" ("Філософський енциклопедичний словник")
- "Encyclopedic Dictionary of Political Science" ("Політологічний енциклопедичний словник")
- "Encyclopedia Leopoliensis" ("Енциклопедія Львова")
- "Geographical Encyclopedia of Ukraine" ("Географічна енциклопедія України")
- "Legal Encyclopedia" ("Юридична енциклопедія")
- "Medical Encyclopedia" ("Медична енциклопедія")
- "Mining Encyclopedia" ("Гірнича енциклопедія")
- "Mining Encyclopediс Dictionary" ("Гірничий енциклопедичний словник")
- "Pharmaceutical Encyclopedia" ("Фармацевтична енциклопедія")
- | 6,135,783 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Shevchenko Encyclopedia" ("Шевченківська енциклопедія")
- "Ternopil Encyclopedic Dictionary" ("Тернопільський енциклопедичний словник")
- "Ukrainian Agricultural Encyclopedia" ("Українська сільськогосподарська енциклопедія")
- "Ukrainian Diplomatic Encyclopedia" ("Українська дипломатична енциклопедія")
- "Ukrainian Encyclopedia of Jazz" ("Українська енциклопедія джазу")
- "Ukrainian General Encyclopedia" ("Українська загальна енциклопедія")
- "Ukrainian Literary Encyclopedia" ("Українська літературна енциклопедія")
- "Ukrainian Pedagogical Encyclopedic Dictionary" ("Український педагогічний енциклопедичний словник")
- "Ukrainian Small Encyclopedia" ("Українська мала енциклопедія")
- | 6,135,784 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
"Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedia" ("Українська радянська енциклопедія")
- "Ukrainian Soviet Encyclopedic Dictionary" ("Український радянський енциклопедичний словник")
- "Universal Encyclopedic Dictionary" ("Універсальний словник-енциклопедія", 1999, last updated in 2006)
- Ukrainian Wikipedia ("Українська Вікіпедія")
# Urdu.
Encyclopedias written in Urdu.
- "Bahar-e-Shariat"
- "Minhaj ul Muslimeen"
- "Mohazzabul Lughat India"
- "Urdu Encyclopaedia of Islam"
- "Urdu Wikipedia"
# Uzbek.
- "Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia" (1971-80; 14 vol.)
- "Uzbek National Encyclopedia" (2000-06; 12 vol.)
# Vietnamese.
Encyclopedias written in Vietnamese.
- "Lịch triều hiến chương loại chí"
- "Từ điển | 6,135,785 |
12330398 | List of encyclopedias by language | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20encyclopedias%20by%20language | List of encyclopedias by language
енциклопедія", 1999, last updated in 2006)
- Ukrainian Wikipedia ("Українська Вікіпедія")
# Urdu.
Encyclopedias written in Urdu.
- "Bahar-e-Shariat"
- "Minhaj ul Muslimeen"
- "Mohazzabul Lughat India"
- "Urdu Encyclopaedia of Islam"
- "Urdu Wikipedia"
# Uzbek.
- "Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia" (1971-80; 14 vol.)
- "Uzbek National Encyclopedia" (2000-06; 12 vol.)
# Vietnamese.
Encyclopedias written in Vietnamese.
- "Lịch triều hiến chương loại chí"
- "Từ điển Bách khoa toàn thư Việt Nam"
# Welsh.
Encyclopedias written in Welsh.
- "Encyclopaedia Cambrensis" ("Gwyddoniadur Cymraeg")
- "Gwyddoniadur Cymru yr Academi Gymreig" (also in English)
# See also.
- Lists of encyclopedias | 6,135,786 |
12330538 | DART First State New Castle County bus routes | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=DART%20First%20State%20New%20Castle%20County%20bus%20routes | DART First State New Castle County bus routes
DART First State New Castle County bus routes
DART First State operates 36 fixed-route bus routes throughout New Castle County, serving the cities of Wilmington and Newark. Most of the routes operate Monday through Saturday with some Sunday service.
# External links.
- DART First State Bus Routes | 6,135,787 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
West Virginia Junior College
West Virginia Junior College is a group of privately owned colleges in Morgantown, Bridgeport, and Charleston in West Virginia.
# West Virginia Junior College at Morgantown.
West Virginia Junior College Morgantown was founded in 1922. The institution (originally called Morgantown Commercial College)
was located on High Street and if offered basic courses that emphasized business skills required at the time, such as
typing, bookkeeping and penmanship. The institution grew over the decades both in student body and course offerings.
In 1952, the institution received its initial institutional accreditation and it was renamed the Morgantown Business
College. As | 6,135,788 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
it grew, the institution began expanding its curriculum by adding medical and computer courses. In 1968,
the current campus was constructed and the institution moved from its original location on High Street to its current
location.
In the 1970s, the institution continued to expand both its computer and medical curriculums. In the early 1970s, it was
one of the first institutions in the state to develop a curriculum for the evolving career field that is known today as medical
assisting. Also, in the 1970s, the institution was granted the authority to offer associate degrees by what was then known
as the West Virginia Board of Regents. (Today, the institution is authorized to operate as | 6,135,789 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
a post-secondary institution by
the West Virginia Council for Community and Technical College Education.)
Growth in both student body and curriculum offerings continued in the 1980s as the institution established a branch
campus, Pennsylvania Institute of Health and Technology, in Uniontown, Pennsylvania. In the 1990s, the institution embarked on a program to upgrade and enhance both
the institution and its curriculum. As a result, in 1998 the Institution received a higher grant of accreditation and changed
its name to West Virginia Junior College. Recognizing the increasing need for medical personnel, the institution has
continued to increase its emphasis on health career education.
# | 6,135,790 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
West Virginia Junior College at Charleston.
West Virginia Junior College Charleston, originally Capitol City Commercial College, was established on
September 1, 1892. The College was originally established to train students in secretarial and business
office skills and has undergone changes in location and curriculum through the years to keep up-to-date
with the changing need of area employers. Current program offerings include information technology,
legal and allied health majors in addition to the traditional business-oriented programs. In 2001, the
College established an additional campus in Bridgeport to secure the career training needs of north central
West Virginia residents.
# | 6,135,791 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
West Virginia Junior College at Bridgeport.
West Virginia Junior College Bridgeport was established in 2001 to meet the growing needs for
technical, medical, and business training in north central West Virginia. It is an additional campus of the West
Virginia Junior College, Charleston, WV, which was named Capitol City Commercial College, when it was
established on September 1, 1892. The Institution was originally established to train students in secretarial and
business office skills and has undergone changes in location and curriculum through the years to keep up-to-date
with the changing need of area employers. Current program offerings include information technology and allied
health | 6,135,792 |
12330541 | West Virginia Junior College | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Virginia%20Junior%20College | West Virginia Junior College
lege Bridgeport was established in 2001 to meet the growing needs for
technical, medical, and business training in north central West Virginia. It is an additional campus of the West
Virginia Junior College, Charleston, WV, which was named Capitol City Commercial College, when it was
established on September 1, 1892. The Institution was originally established to train students in secretarial and
business office skills and has undergone changes in location and curriculum through the years to keep up-to-date
with the changing need of area employers. Current program offerings include information technology and allied
health majors in addition to the traditional business oriented programs. | 6,135,793 |
12330542 | Redemption Maddie | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Redemption%20Maddie | Redemption Maddie
Redemption Maddie
Redemption Maddie is a 2007 short film directed by Aaron King and stars Allison Scagliotti. The film was completed as part of the American Film Institute Conservatory's MFA Program.
The film began touring the festival circuit in 2007, premiering at the 22nd Annual Santa Barbara International Film Festival. It has won several awards including a Grand Jury Prize for Student Shorts at the AFI Dallas International Film Festival, Best Short Film and Best Actress at BendFilm Festival, and Best Screenplay at the Hollyshorts Film Festival. After completing its festival run, Maddie was distributed by Reframe and Amazon for DVD and digital purchase.
The film's official website provides | 6,135,794 |
12330542 | Redemption Maddie | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Redemption%20Maddie | Redemption Maddie
the following description"In the wake of tragedy, 14 year old Maddie Clifford employs sex, insulin syringes, and an ill-fated rabbit in her disquietingly poignant search for salvation."The synopsis highlights an aspect of the film's plot which revolves around the so-called rabbit test, a disturbing practice employed to detect pregnancy used in the early twentieth century.
# Cast.
- Allison Scagliotti as Maddie Clifford
- Kevin Montgomery as Tyler
- Michael Catlin as Mr. Clifford
- Peggy Goss as Mrs. Clifford
- Christopher Dobler as James
- Gisselle Castellanos as Classmate Girl #1
- Jay Collette as Neighbor boy
- Paige Cooper as Nurse Fisher
- Skyler Day as Classmate Girl #2
- Gabi | 6,135,795 |
12330542 | Redemption Maddie | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Redemption%20Maddie | Redemption Maddie
Peggy Goss as Mrs. Clifford
- Christopher Dobler as James
- Gisselle Castellanos as Classmate Girl #1
- Jay Collette as Neighbor boy
- Paige Cooper as Nurse Fisher
- Skyler Day as Classmate Girl #2
- Gabi DuBay as Maddie's Classmate
- Kennis Frommel as Baby
- Bella Frommell as Baby
- Chandler M. Guidroz as Doctor
- Steve Humphreys as Mr. Dacey
- Barry Alan Levine as Pet Store Pete
- Stephen Markarian as Henry
- Timothy Mittel as Carl
- Matthew Moseley as Chris
- Judi Rosen Sacks as Nurse
- Alexandria M. Salling as Young Maddie
- Dalton Smith as Winston
- Jennifer Winters as New Wife
# External links.
- AFI Dallas 2007 Award Reception
- Redemption Maddie Official Website | 6,135,796 |
12330557 | List of roads in the City of Westminster | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20roads%20in%20the%20City%20of%20Westminster | List of roads in the City of Westminster
List of roads in the City of Westminster
Roads in the City of Westminster, London, England include:
- Aldwych
- Baker Street
- Bayswater Road
- Belgrave Road
- Birdcage Walk
- Bond Street
- Brook Street
- Buckingham Palace Road
- Charing Cross Road
- Constitution Hill
- Coventry Street
- Downing Street
- Drury Lane
- Grosvenor Square
- Harley Street
- Haymarket
- Horse Guards Road
- Jermyn Street
- Leicester Square
- Long Acre
- The Mall
- Marylebone Road
- Millbank
- Northumberland Avenue
- Oxford Street
- Pall Mall
- Park Lane
- Piccadilly
- Piccadilly Circus
- Portland Place
- Prince Consort Road
- Regent Street
- Shaftesbury Avenue
- Smith Square
- Strand
- | 6,135,797 |
12330557 | List of roads in the City of Westminster | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20roads%20in%20the%20City%20of%20Westminster | List of roads in the City of Westminster
ndon, England include:
- Aldwych
- Baker Street
- Bayswater Road
- Belgrave Road
- Birdcage Walk
- Bond Street
- Brook Street
- Buckingham Palace Road
- Charing Cross Road
- Constitution Hill
- Coventry Street
- Downing Street
- Drury Lane
- Grosvenor Square
- Harley Street
- Haymarket
- Horse Guards Road
- Jermyn Street
- Leicester Square
- Long Acre
- The Mall
- Marylebone Road
- Millbank
- Northumberland Avenue
- Oxford Street
- Pall Mall
- Park Lane
- Piccadilly
- Piccadilly Circus
- Portland Place
- Prince Consort Road
- Regent Street
- Shaftesbury Avenue
- Smith Square
- Strand
- Trafalgar Square
- Victoria Embankment
- Victoria Street
- Whitehall | 6,135,798 |
12330524 | USS Knave (AM-256) | https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=USS%20Knave%20(AM-256) | USS Knave (AM-256)
USS Knave (AM-256)
USS "Knave" (AM-256) was an built for the United States Navy during World War II. She served in the Atlantic during World War II and was decommissioned in May 1946 and placed in reserve. While she remained in reserve, "Knave" was reclassified as MSF-256 in February 1955 but never reactivated. In October 1962, she was sold to the Mexican Navy and renamed ARM "DM-13". In 1994 she was renamed ARM "Cadete Juan Escutia" (C56). She was stricken in 2000, but her ultimate fate is not reported in secondary sources.
# U.S. Navy career.
"Knave" was launched 13 March 1943, by American Shipbuilding Co., Lorain, Ohio; sponsored by Mrs. Geraldine Donohue; and commissioned 14 October 1943, | 6,135,799 |
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