title stringlengths 1 250 ⌀ | triples list | description stringlengths 1 695 ⌀ | text stringlengths 275 46.3k | alias list |
|---|---|---|---|---|
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"sport",
"Tennis"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | the night session, Jelena Dokić continued her fairytale comeback to Grand Slam tennis by upsetting 11th seeded Danish teenager Caroline Wozniacki, despite losing the first set she bounced back strongly to take the next two 6–1, 6–2, and will meet Kleybanova next. Elsewhere, earlier in the day, it was business as usual ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | Raymond/ Marcin Matkowski. Schedule of Play Day 7 (25 January) 4th round matches begin with 8th seed Juan Martín del Potro advancing into his first Australian Open quarterfinals after recovering from a one set deficit to beat 19th seeded Marin Čilić. Both players were tipped to be highly successful in the future, but i... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | in the 2004 Athens Olympic Games. Berdych looked sharper of the two, showing little nerves as he went two sets up, but Federer came out firing from the third set onwards, and eventually came through safely, winning 4–6, 6–7(4), 6–4, 6–4, 6–2. 7th seed Andy Roddick also moved on to the quarterfinals with a comprehensive... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"sport",
"Tennis"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | a much harder time, though giving up a one-break lead in the second set to lose a tiebreak and winning another third set tiebreak. However, the defending champion was too hot to handle and eventually by 2.30 am, Djokovic has sealed a 6–1, 7–6(1), 6–7(5), 6–2 victory in over three hours. In the women's draw, top seeded ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | number one crown could be in danger. 7th seeded Vera Zvonareva also made it to her first Australian Open semifinals, after coming through in two tough sets against compatriot and 10th seeded Nadia Petrova, 7–5, 6–4. 3rd seed Dinara Safina almost followed Janković's path out of the tournament, as she survived two match ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"country",
"Australia"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | of Play Day 8 (26 January) Day eight saw the remaining fourth round men's matches with a warm forecast to complement Australia Day. However it was quite a disappointing day with three seeded players from both men and women's draw retiring due to various reasons. In Rod Laver Arena, 6th seeded Gilles Simon battled again... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | set, Monfils retired citing a wrist injury, sending Simon to his first Grand Slam quarterfinals, where he will face top seed Rafael Nadal. Nadal appeared to be in complete control over Fernando González, easily winning the first two sets and coming through the third set with heavier resistance from the Chilean, but the... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"location",
"Melbourne Park"
],
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Melbourne"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | points and eventually taking the second set 6–4. Djokovic was clearly not himself from the beginning of the third set, and laboured for the final eleven games of the match battling cramps and heat stress before finally decided to give up after he was broken to love in the third game of the 4th set, handing Roddick a 4t... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | 7–5 despite failing to close the set while serving at 5–4 up. However, the momentum swung over to Williams' side, after the match was interrupted for closing the roof of the stadium due to the implementation of the EHP. Kuznetsova, visibly unhappy at the interruption, hang in tough to break Williams again and went 5–3 ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | set up an all-Spanish encounter with compatriot, 14th seed Fernando Verdasco. Nadal experienced momentum swings against 6th seeded Gilles Simon, winning the first set 6–2 with ease, but had to come from behind in the next two sets, including saving a set point in the second set, but eventually breaking Simon to win bot... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | Ram after the unseeded pair defeat Dominika Cibulková/Jürgen Melzer in straight sets. Last year's finalists Sania Mirza/Mahesh Bhupathi also won through against Aleksandra Wozniak/Daniel Nestor, and will play Czechs Iveta Benešová/Lukáš Dlouhý, who received a walkover from Alizé Cornet/Marcelo Melo. Seeded players out:... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"location",
"Melbourne Park"
],
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Melbourne"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | a set this year in Melbourne Park, however Verdasco had been on his peak form, upsetting favourites like Andy Murray and Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on his way to his maiden Grand Slam semifinal. With Roger Federer waiting in the final, both players carried their form into the match, holding on to their own serve as they entere... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | second double fault of the game — 4th overall — handed Nadal the match and a place in the finals. Nadal only managed to win one more point than Verdasco (193 to 192), who blasted 95 winners past Nadal, in a match that broke the Australian Open record as the longest men's singles match at 5 hours and 14 minutes (previou... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | seal the decisive break. Safina could do nothing more than fighting to hold her own serves, forcing Williams to serve out, but another dominant service game saw Williams clinched her 4th Australian Open title after wins in 2003, 2005 and 2007. Safina admitted later during the prize giving ceremony that she felt like a ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | Rod Laver Arena. Second seeds, American twins Bob and Mike Bryan overcame the third seeds Mahesh Bhupathi and Mark Knowles to take home their third Australian Open title together. Bhupathi and Knowles came out firing first, playing a near flawless first set to take the first set 6–2 after just 27 minutes, with a series... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
],
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"sport",
"Tennis"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | first on hard courts. Nadal is the first Spaniard in history to win the Australian Open and the fourth male tennis player — after Jimmy Connors, Mats Wilander and Andre Agassi — to win Grand Slam titles on three different surfaces. Later in 2009, Roger Federer would become the fifth player to accomplish this feat upon ... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | Nadal defeated Roger Federer, 7–5, 3–6, 7–6(7–3), 3–6, 6–2 It was Nadal's 1st title of the year, and his 32nd overall. It was his 6th Grand Slam title, and his 1st at the Australian Open. Women's Singles Serena Williams defeated Dinara Safina, 6–0, 6–3 It was Serena's 1st title of the year, and her 33rd overall. It was... | [] |
2009 Australian Open | [
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"instance of",
"Australian Open"
],
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Melbourne"
],
[
"2009 Australian Open",
"sport",
"Tennis"
]
] | 2009 Australian Open Tennis Championships | by Pablo Andújar Nicolas Kiefer → replaced by Frank Dancevic Nicolas Mahut → replaced by Amer Delić Women's Singles Timea Bacsinszky → replaced by Ekaterina Bychkova Lindsay Davenport → replaced by Stéphanie Cohen-Aloro Li Na → replaced by Julia Görges Bethanie Mattek-Sands → replaced by Melinda Czink Pauline Parmentie... | [] |
Sociological Perspectives | [
[
"Sociological Perspectives",
"instance of",
"Academic journal"
],
[
"Sociological Perspectives",
"inception",
"1957"
]
] | sociology journal | Sociological Perspectives is the official publication of the Pacific Sociological Association. It is a peer-reviewed quarterly academic journal published by University of California Press, in Berkeley, California. It was first published in 1957. Articles typically address social processes and are related to economic, p... | [] |
Qormi dialect | [
[
"Qormi dialect",
"instance of",
"Dialect"
],
[
"Qormi dialect",
"subclass of",
"Maltese language"
],
[
"Qormi dialect",
"part of",
"Maltese language"
],
[
"Qormi dialect",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Qormi"
]
] | dialect of Maltese | One of the dialects of the Maltese language is the Qormi Dialect. In standard Maltese it is termed Qormi and by its speakers, Qurmi, and is affectionately known as it-Tuf, or in standard Maltese, it-Taf. Literally translated, taf is the Maltese word for "you know". This dialect is used by many of the inhabitants of Qor... | [
"Qurmi",
"it-Tuf",
"it-Taf"
] |
Qormi dialect | [
[
"Qormi dialect",
"instance of",
"Dialect"
],
[
"Qormi dialect",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Qormi"
]
] | dialect of Maltese | first syllables are the ones most often affected, but sometimes medial vowels are changed as well. Final vowels, on the other hand, are usually identical to those of the standard language. The Vocal 'A' The vocal 'A' changes into the vocals 'U'. If at the end of a word, it becomes an 'O'. The Vocal 'O' The vocal 'O' in... | [
"Qurmi",
"it-Tuf",
"it-Taf"
] |
Operation Coronado | [
[
"Operation Coronado",
"country",
"Vietnam"
]
] | Series of operations during the Vietnam War | Operation Coronado was a series of 11 operations conducted by the American Mobile Riverine Force in conjunction with various units of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) in the waterways of the Mekong Delta in the south of the country in an attempt to dismantle guerrilla forces and infrastructure of the... | [] |
Success Dam | [
[
"Success Dam",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Success Dam",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Tulare County, California"
],
[
"Success Dam",
"located on terrain feature",
"Tule River"
]
] | dam in Porterville, California | Success Dam is a dam across the Tule River in Tulare County, California in the United States. Serving mainly for flood control and irrigation, the dam is an earthen embankment structure high and long. The dam lies about east of Porterville and impounds Lake Success, which has a capacity of . The dam was initially autho... | [
"Richard L. Schafer Dam",
"Schafer Dam"
] |
No Quarter Pounder | [
[
"No Quarter Pounder",
"performer",
"Dread Zeppelin"
],
[
"No Quarter Pounder",
"instance of",
"Album"
]
] | album by Dread Zeppelin | No Quarter Pounder is a studio album by Dread Zeppelin, released on September 12, 1995. Its title is wordplay on the Led Zeppelin song "No Quarter", and the name of a McDonald's hamburger, the Quarter Pounder (so named for its pre-cooked weight). Track listing "Un Leddd Ed (In 3d)" (Traditional) – 1:09 "Ramble On" (Jim... | [] |
Ásgrímur Jónsson | [
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"place of birth",
"Iceland"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"occupation",
"Painter"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"country of citizenship",
"Iceland"
]
] | Icelandic painter (1876-1958) | Ásgrímur Jónsson (March 4, 1876 – April 5, 1958) was an Icelandic painter, and one of the first in the country to make art a professional living. He studied at the Royal Academy in Copenhagen between 1900 and 1903 and traveled widely after graduation. The subjects of his pictures are mostly the landscapes of his home c... | [
"Asgrimur Jonsson",
"Asgrímur Jónsson"
] |
Ásgrímur Jónsson | [
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"place of birth",
"Iceland"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"place of death",
"Reykjavík"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"country of citizenship",
"Iceland"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"has works in the collection",
"National Gallery of Iceland"
]
... | Icelandic painter (1876-1958) | display in the National Gallery of Iceland. Jónsson influenced many artists in Iceland. A short time before he died he donated his house at No. 74, Bergstaðastræti, Reykjavík to the Icelandic Government along with all those paintings which were at that time in his possession. These consisted of 192 oil paintings and 27... | [
"Asgrimur Jonsson",
"Asgrímur Jónsson"
] |
Ásgrímur Jónsson | [
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"place of birth",
"Iceland"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"place of death",
"Reykjavík"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"country of citizenship",
"Iceland"
],
[
"Ásgrímur Jónsson",
"has works in the collection",
"National Gallery of Iceland"
]
... | Icelandic painter (1876-1958) | Icelandic Order of the Falcon. He was an honorary member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts and Knight of Dannebrog, first class. He died in 1958 and was buried in Gaulverjabær References Further reading Ólafur Kvaran and Karla Kristjánsdóttir (eds), Confronting Nature: Icelandic Art of the 20th Century, National Gal... | [
"Asgrimur Jonsson",
"Asgrímur Jónsson"
] |
Telečka | [
[
"Telečka",
"country",
"Serbia"
]
] | human settlement | Telečka (Serbian Cyrillic: Телечка, Hungarian: Bácsgyulafalva) is a village in Serbia. It is in the Sombor municipality, in the West Bačka District, Vojvodina province. The village has a Hungarian ethnic majority and its population is 2,084 people (2002 census). It is surrounded by a sandy region, also referred to as T... | [] |
Bumbobi–Bubulo–Lwakhakha Road | [
[
"Bumbobi–Bubulo–Lwakhakha Road",
"instance of",
"Road"
],
[
"Bumbobi–Bubulo–Lwakhakha Road",
"country",
"Uganda"
]
] | road in Uganda | Bumbobi–Bubulo–Lwakhakha Road is a road in the Eastern Region of Uganda, connecting the city of Mbale to the town of Lwakhakha at the International border with Kenya. Location The road starts at Bumbobi, a suburb of the city of Mbale (2014 population: 96,189), the most populous city in the eastern region. The road cont... | [] |
Sai Reddy | [
[
"Sai Reddy",
"occupation",
"Journalist"
]
] | Indian journalist | Sai Reddy (ca. 1962 – 6 December 2013) was an Indian journalist for the Hindi-language newspaper Deshandhu. He was murdered by the Maoists near a market in Basaguda, Bijapur district, Chhattisgarh. Both the Maoists and police were suspicious of Reddy's allegiance to the other side. Maoists believed he was assisting pol... | [] |
Sai Reddy | [
[
"Sai Reddy",
"occupation",
"Journalist"
]
] | Indian journalist | Reddy was born in 1962 and was from in Basuguda, an area hit hard by the insurgent Naxalites. Reddy was held by security in 1998 under the Essential Commodities Act and again in 2008 for suspected relationships with the Maoists. Many rural journalists supplement their incomes by selling agricultural products while also... | [] |
Sai Reddy | [
[
"Sai Reddy",
"occupation",
"Journalist"
]
] | Indian journalist | violence reached in 1997 when seven were killed. Nemi Chand Jain was also killed in Chhattisgarh in February 2013. According to news reports, Jain was killed by the Maoists and the group had confirmed it, which makes Reddy the second journalist killed by the Maoist in 2013. He was one of 70 journalists killed worldwide... | [] |
Erica canaliculata | [
[
"Erica canaliculata",
"taxon rank",
"Species"
],
[
"Erica canaliculata",
"parent taxon",
"Erica"
]
] | species of plant | Erica canaliculata, the channelled heath or hairy grey heather, is a species of flowering plant in the family Ericaceae. The species is native to the East and West Capes of South Africa and naturalised in South Australia. It is an erect evergreen shrub, sometimes described as a tree heath (a term also applied to E. arb... | [] |
John Hotham | [
[
"John Hotham",
"position held",
"Lord High Treasurer"
],
[
"John Hotham",
"position held",
"Bishop of Ely"
]
] | medieval Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord High Treasurer, Lord Chancellor and Bishop of Ely | John Hotham may refer to: Sir John Hotham, 1st Baronet (c. 1589–1645), English parliamentarian John Hotham (bishop) (died 1337), English medieval Chancellor of the Exchequer, Lord High Treasurer, Lord Chancellor and Bishop of Ely John Hotham, the younger (1610–1645), English Member of Parliament during the Civil War Jo... | [] |
Florindo Sassone | [
[
"Florindo Sassone",
"country of citizenship",
"Argentina"
],
[
"Florindo Sassone",
"occupation",
"Composer"
],
[
"Florindo Sassone",
"occupation",
"Violinist"
],
[
"Florindo Sassone",
"genre",
"Tango music"
],
[
"Florindo Sassone",
"place of ... | Argentine musician | Pedro Florindo Sassone (12 January 1912 – 31 January 1982) was an Argentinian violinist and composer, leader of his eponymous orchestra, which played tango music, from the 1940s up to the 1970s. Discography A Night in Buenos Aires, Capitol Records (stereophonic) (recorded in Argentina) Bien milonguero Vol. 1 Bien milon... | [] |
Kenji Kosaka | [
[
"Kenji Kosaka",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Kenji Kosaka",
"family name",
"Kosaka"
],
[
"Kenji Kosaka",
"country of citizenship",
"Japan"
],
[
"Kenji Kosaka",
"educated at",
"Keio University"
]
] | Japanese politician | was a Japanese politician. Biography Kosaka was born in the city of Nagano in Nagano Prefecture, on 12 March 1946. His father is Zentaro Kosaka, also a politician. Kenji Kosaka received a law degree from Keio University in 1968. He worked in London for Japan Airlines between 1968 and 1984. Returning to Japan, he became... | [] |
North Eastern Electricity Board | [
[
"North Eastern Electricity Board",
"foundational text",
"Electricity Act 1947"
]
] | UK regional electricity supplier (1947-1993) | North Eastern Electricity Board was an electricity distribution utility in England, serving the North East of England. History Formed as the North Eastern Electricity Board (NEEB) in 1948 as part of the nationalisation of the electricity industry by the Electricity Act 1947, it was privatised in 1990 and renamed as Nor... | [
"NEEB"
] |
North Eastern Electricity Board | [
[
"North Eastern Electricity Board",
"country",
"United Kingdom"
]
] | UK regional electricity supplier (1947-1993) | } } ], "axes": [ { "type": "x", "scale": "x" }, { "type": "y", "scale": "y" } ], "marks": [ { "type": "rect", "from": { "data": "table" }, "properties": { "enter": { "x": { "scale": "x", "field": "x" }, "y": { "scale": "y", "field": "y" }, "y2": { "scale": "y", "value": 0 }, "fill": { "value": "steelblue" }, "width": {... | [
"NEEB"
] |
Ixodes trianguliceps | [
[
"Ixodes trianguliceps",
"taxon rank",
"Species"
],
[
"Ixodes trianguliceps",
"parent taxon",
"Ixodes"
]
] | species of arachnid | Ixodes trianguliceps is a species of ticks from the family Ixodidae that feeds on such mammals as shrew, rats, mice, hedgehogs, foxes, squirrels, moles, rabbits and hares. It also frequently feeds on horses and humans. It is mostly found in European countries such as Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands, ... | [] |
Deemed status | [
[
"Deemed status",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Deemed status",
"instance of",
"Hospital"
]
] | hospital | Deemed status is a hospital accreditation for hospitals in the United States. Getting deemed status Meeting Conditions for Coverage and Conditions of Participation For any organization to receive funding from Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), that organization must meet either the "Conditions for Covera... | [] |
Deemed status | [
[
"Deemed status",
"instance of",
"Hospital"
]
] | hospital | Surgical Centers (ASCs) Community Mental Health Centers (CMHCs) Comprehensive Outpatient Rehabilitation Facilities (CORFs) Critical Access Hospitals (CAHs) End-Stage Renal Disease Facilities Federally Qualified Health Centers Home Health Agencies Hospices Hospitals Hospital Swing Beds Intermediate Care Facilities for I... | [] |
Stumble and Fall | [
[
"Stumble and Fall",
"performer",
"Razorlight"
],
[
"Stumble and Fall",
"genre",
"Indie rock"
]
] | 2004 single by Razorlight | "Stumble and Fall" is a song by English indie rock band Razorlight and is the ninth track on their 2004 debut album Up All Night. It was released as a single on 26 January, reaching number 27 in the UK singles chart. The song was also covered by Irish musician Duke Special on the downloadable EP When The Bear Bytes. Tr... | [] |
Patricio Margetic | [
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Detroit Express"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"country of citizenship",
"Arg... | Argentine footballer | Patricio Germán "Pato" Margetic (born May 17, 1960 in Avellaneda, Argentina) is a former Argentine footballer. He began his career in Argentina before playing five seasons in the North American Soccer League, as well as the Major Indoor Soccer League. Playing career Margetic's professional career began in 1978 for Club... | [] |
Patricio Margetic | [
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
]
] | Argentine footballer | first team all star in 1983, a second team selection in 1982 and 1984, and an honorable mention in 1981. While playing for the Sting he earned the nickname "Magic Man". Margetic played in 130 NASL games, scoring 42 goals and 59 assists for 143 points, which ranks him 34th all-time in the league. Margetic scored the las... | [] |
Patricio Margetic | [
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Cleveland Crunch"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Borussia Dortmund"
]
] | Argentine footballer | Comets, Cleveland Crunch and Tacoma Stars, and nine seasons in the National Professional Soccer League for the Chicago Power and Detroit Rockers. He also appeared briefly for Borussia Dortmund in 1988-89. Coaching He has spent the past several years running Pato's Magic Soccer, a Michigan non-profit promoting youth soc... | [] |
Patricio Margetic | [
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Cleveland Crunch"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Borussia Dortmund"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Patricio Margetic",
"member of sports team",
... | Argentine footballer | in Rochester, MI. RARA is the recreation department for Rochester and Rochester Hills, Michigan. References External links NASL/MISL stats Category:1960 births Category:Living people Category:American Indoor Soccer Association players Category:Argentine expatriate footballers Category:Argentine footballers Category:Arg... | [] |
40 år i folkparkens tjänst | [
[
"40 år i folkparkens tjänst",
"performer",
"Wizex"
],
[
"40 år i folkparkens tjänst",
"form of creative work",
"Compilation album"
],
[
"40 år i folkparkens tjänst",
"instance of",
"Album"
]
] | 2013 compilation album by Wizex | 40 år i folkparkens tjänst is a 2013 Wizex compilation album, consisting of rerecordings. The album was released during the band's 40th anniversary year. Track listing Miss Decibel (Lasse Holm, Gert Lengstrand) Djupa vatten (Lars Diedricson, Ulf Georgsson) Det vackraste som finns (Det vakreste som fins) (Rolf Løvland, ... | [] |
Jules Malfroy | [
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"country of citizenship",
"New Zealand"
],
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"given name",
"Jules"
]
] | New Zealand rugby union player | Jules Omer John Malfroy (4 December 1901 – 3 August 1973) was a prominent New Zealand lawyer, legal advisor to the British government during the Second World War, and an early twentieth century rugby union international. He is known as one of the "lost lions" due to his participation on the 1927 British Lions tour to A... | [] |
Jules Malfroy | [
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"country of citizenship",
"New Zealand"
],
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"given name",
"Jules"
],
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"place of birth",
"Hokitika"
]
] | New Zealand rugby union player | State Forest Department, Wellington. The Malfroy family in New Zealand was descended from Jean Baptiste Malfroy originally from Macornay, Lons-le-Saunier, Jura, France, a miller, and his wife, Josephine Pricarde. Jean Baptiste along with two of his sons, Jean Michel Camille Malfroy, usually known as Camille, and Jules ... | [] |
Jules Malfroy | [
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"country of citizenship",
"New Zealand"
],
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"educated at",
"Trinity Hall, Cambridge"
]
] | New Zealand rugby union player | 1924 for the Rhodes Scholarship. He was then awarded the Jacob Joseph Scholarship for law research in 1924 and again was nominated for the Rhodes scholarship in 1925. However, from Victoria University College he gained a law travelling scholarship that took him to Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Sport Malfroy was both a rugby... | [] |
Jules Malfroy | [
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"country of citizenship",
"New Zealand"
]
] | New Zealand rugby union player | Zealand University football team which went to Sydney. He again represented New Zealand University in 1924. He was described as "the nuggetty little chap, with an abnormally long stride" whilst playing for the New Zealand University and Wellington sides. and as a hurdler he gained distinction coming second to H. E. Wil... | [] |
Jules Malfroy | [
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"given name",
"Jules"
],
[
"Jules Malfroy",
"educated at",
"Trinity Hall, Cambridge"
]
] | New Zealand rugby union player | players not selected to play in any of the tests. Despite being selected for the Great Britain side, he never went on to play for his national side. Career He entered Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and from there was awarded a Harkness Fellowship, under which he continued to specialise in international law at Columbia Univer... | [] |
Tommy Comerford | [
[
"Tommy Comerford",
"place of death",
"Liverpool"
]
] | English organised crime figure | Thomas 'Tacker' Anthony Comerford (1932 in Liverpool – 2003 in Liverpool). Tacker Comerford was an English organised crime figure involved in narcotics and drug trafficking, one of the first criminals to establish an international drug trafficking network in England. A longtime figure in Liverpool's underworld, Comerfo... | [] |
Identity theorem | [
[
"Identity theorem",
"instance of",
"Theorem"
]
] | theorem | In complex analysis, a branch of mathematics, the identity theorem for holomorphic functions states: given functions f and g holomorphic on a domain D (open and connected subset), if f = g on some , having an accumulation point, then f = g on D. Thus a holomorphic function is completely determined by its values on a si... | [] |
Identity theorem | [
[
"Identity theorem",
"instance of",
"Theorem"
]
] | theorem | saying holomorphic functions are "hard" (as opposed to, say, continuous functions which are "soft"). The underpinning fact from which the theorem is established is the expandability of a holomorphic function into its Taylor series. The connectedness assumption on the domain D is necessary. For example, if D consists of... | [] |
Phoradendron nickrentianum | [
[
"Phoradendron nickrentianum",
"parent taxon",
"Phoradendron"
]
] | species of plant | Phoradendron nickrentianum is a hemiparasitic plant in the Santalaceae (previously Viscaceae) family, native to Peru. There are no synonyms. Description P. nickrentianum is a dioecious plant, with pinnately veined leaf-blades (14 cm by 4.5 cm) on a petiole which is about 1 cm long. The male inflorescence (on a 2 cm ped... | [] |
Juan Carlos Howard | [
[
"Juan Carlos Howard",
"occupation",
"Composer"
],
[
"Juan Carlos Howard",
"occupation",
"Pianist"
]
] | Argentine musician | Juan Carlos Howard (12 October 1912 - 2 November 1986) was an Argentine tango pianist, bandleader and composer. Juan Carlos was born in the San Isidro Partido of Buenos Aires to parents Juan and Lidia Cerradi. They encouraged him to play the piano and he made his radio debut at the age of 12. Juan Carlos Howard played ... | [] |
Higashi-Nagahara Station | [
[
"Higashi-Nagahara Station",
"country",
"Japan"
],
[
"Higashi-Nagahara Station",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Aizuwakamatsu"
],
[
"Higashi-Nagahara Station",
"connecting line",
"Ban'etsu West Line"
],
[
"Higashi-Nagahara Station",
"ope... | railway station in Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima prefecture, Japan | is a railway station on the Ban'etsu West Line in the city of Aizuwakamatsu, Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). Lines Higashi-Nagahara Station is served by the Ban'etsu West Line, and is located 57.2 rail kilometers from the official starting point of the line at . Station la... | [] |
Rick Foster | [
[
"Rick Foster",
"given name",
"Rick"
],
[
"Rick Foster",
"instrument",
"Guitar"
]
] | guitarist, arranger | Rick Foster is a guitarist and arranger who lives in the Days Creek, Oregon area, who plays classical and popular music, but who is most closely associated with Christian music. Biography Foster began playing Hawaiian guitar when he was 10 years old. By age 12, he was playing electric guitar in a surf-rock band. At eig... | [] |
Rick Foster | [
[
"Rick Foster",
"given name",
"Rick"
],
[
"Rick Foster",
"instrument",
"Guitar"
]
] | guitarist, arranger | Records, Chapel Records and Edensong Records. He has been nominated for a Dove Award by the Gospel Music Association., His arrangements have been featured by Chet Atkins and Christopher Parkening. His guitar arrangements of hymns are published by Rick Foster Edensong, Fingerstyle Guitar Magazine and Mel Bay Publication... | [] |
Rick Foster | [
[
"Rick Foster",
"given name",
"Rick"
],
[
"Rick Foster",
"instrument",
"Guitar"
]
] | guitarist, arranger | 609)(Also 2 in 1 "Inspirational Guitar at Its Best" and "Sacred Classic Guitar")(Edensong 616) Season of Joy (Edensong 600) (Moody Monthly Instrumental Album of the Year) Sacred Duos for Guitar and Violin (Edensong ESCD 605) "Eternal Guitar" (Edensong ESCD 612) "Best of Rick Foster—Close to Heaven" (Edensong ESCD 614) ... | [] |
Felia Doubrovska | [
[
"Felia Doubrovska",
"place of death",
"Manhattan"
],
[
"Felia Doubrovska",
"employer",
"Mariinsky Theatre"
]
] | Russian ballet dancer | Felia Doubrovska (; born as Felizata Dlouzhnevska in St Petersburg, February 13, 1896 – d. Manhattan, September 18, 1981) was a Russian dancer and teacher. Doubrovska graduated at the Imperial Ballet School in 1913, was member of the Mariinsky Theatre company, and emigrated with her later husband Pierre Vladimiroff to ... | [] |
Qiu Renzong | [
[
"Qiu Renzong",
"field of work",
"Bioethics"
],
[
"Qiu Renzong",
"country of citizenship",
"China"
]
] | Chinese bioethicist | Qiu Renzong (c. 1933) is a Chinese bioethicist. He is a senior research fellow emeritus at China's Institute of Philosophy, and chair of the Academic Committee at the Centre for Bioethics at Peking Union Medical College. China Daily writes that he is regarded as the scholar who 30 years ago introduced bioethics to Chin... | [] |
Peter Johnsen Rooming House | [
[
"Peter Johnsen Rooming House",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Illinois"
],
[
"Peter Johnsen Rooming House",
"instance of",
"Building"
]
] | building in Illinois, United States | The Peter Johnsen Rooming House is an historic building near downtown Sycamore, Illinois. The red brick structure stands in the 100 block of South Main Street and is considered a contributing structure to the overall historic integrity of the Sycamore Historic District. The district was added to the National Register o... | [] |
Howard Joseph Carroll | [
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"place of birth",
"Pittsburgh"
],
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"educated at",
"Duquesne University"
],
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"religion",
"Catholic Church"
]
] | Catholic bishop | Howard Joseph Carroll (August 5, 1902 – March 21, 1960) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Altoona, Pennsylvania from 1958 to 1960. Biography Carroll was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and attended Duquesne University from 1920 to 1921. He then stud... | [] |
Howard Joseph Carroll | [
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"place of birth",
"Pittsburgh"
],
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"consecrator",
"Amleto Giovanni Cicognani"
],
[
"Howard Joseph Carroll",
"consecrator",
"Coleman Carroll"
]
] | Catholic bishop | his return to Pennsylvania in 1928, he served as a curate at Sacred Heart Church in Pittsburgh until 1938, when he became assistant general-secretary of the National Catholic Welfare Council. He was named a Papal Chamberlain in 1942 and a Domestic Prelate in 1945. He served as general-secretary of NCWC from 1944 to 195... | [] |
Saltriovenator | [
[
"Saltriovenator",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | extinct genus of reptiles | Saltriovenator (meaning "Saltrio hunter") is a genus of ceratosaurian dinosaur that lived during the Sinemurian stage of the Early Jurassic in what is now Italy. The type and only species is Saltriovenator zanellai; in the past, the species had been known under the informal name "Saltriosauro". Although a full skeleton... | [
"Saltriosaurus"
] |
Saltriovenator | [
[
"Saltriovenator",
"taxon rank",
"Genus"
]
] | extinct genus of reptiles | a reference to Saltrio with Latin, venator, "hunter", a common suffix in the names of theropods. The authors pointed out that a venator is also a type of Roman gladiator. The specific name honours Zanella. Because the article was published in an electronic publication, Life Science Identifiers were necessary to make th... | [
"Saltriosaurus"
] |
CJYM | [
[
"CJYM",
"country",
"Canada"
],
[
"CJYM",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Saskatchewan"
],
[
"CJYM",
"instance of",
"Radio station"
],
[
"CJYM",
"inception",
"1966"
],
[
"CJYM",
"radio format",
"Classic hits"
]
] | Radio station in Rosetown, Saskatchewan | CJYM (1330 AM) is a radio station broadcasting a classic hits format. Licensed to Rosetown, Saskatchewan, Canada, it serves west central Saskatchewan. It first began broadcasting in 1966 under the call letters CKKR. CJYM is a Class B AM station which broadcasts with a power of 10,000 watts daytime and nighttime. CJYM i... | [] |
Afgekia mahidolae | [
[
"Afgekia mahidolae",
"parent taxon",
"Afgekia"
]
] | species of plant | Kan Phai Mahidol is a type of vine named Afgekia mahidoliae Burtt et Chermsir. in the family Leguminosae. It is found in Kanchanaburi province, Thailand. Its leaves are compound with 4-6 pairs of leaflets. The stem has several petiolules. The dorsal side of the leaf has brown colored hairs. The flower is an erect panic... | [] |
United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics | [
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"point in time",
"1964"
],
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"participant in",
"1964 Summer Olympics"
]
] | sporting event delegation | The United States competed at the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Japan. 346 competitors, 267 men and 79 women, took part in 159 events in 19 sports. Athletics Men's Competition Men's 100 meters Bob Hayes Mel Pender Trent Jackson Men's 200 meters Henry Carr Mike Larrabee Dick Stebbins Men's 400 meters Mike Larrabee Ulis... | [] |
United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics | [
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"point in time",
"1964"
]
] | sporting event delegation | Women's Long Jump Women's High Jump Women's Shot Put Women's Javelin Throw Women's Discus Throw Women's Pentathlon Basketball Boxing Bob Watkins, Fairmont, WV. Silver Medal Canoeing Cycling Sixteen cyclists represented the United States in 1964. Individual road race John Allis Michael Hiltner Raymond Castilloux Thomas ... | [] |
United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics | [
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"point in time",
"1964"
]
] | sporting event delegation | Axelrod Herbert Cohen Ed Richards Men's team foil Larry Anastasi, Eugene Glazer, Herbert Cohen, Albie Axelrod, Ed Richards Men's épée David Micahnik Paul Pesthy Frank Anger Men's team épée Paul Pesthy, Frank Anger, David Micahnik, Larry Anastasi Men's sabre Thomas Orley Gene Hámori Attila Keresztes Men's team sabre Alf... | [] |
United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics | [
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"United States at the 1964 Summer Olympics",
"point in time",
"1964"
]
] | sporting event delegation | Individual James Moore David Kirkwood Paul Pesthy Team James Moore Dave Kirkwood Paul Pesthy Rowing Sailing Shooting Ten shooters represented the United States in 1964. Between them they won two golds, a silver and three bronze medals. 25 m pistol Bill McMillan Edwin Teague 50 m pistol Frank Green Thomas Smith 300 m ri... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Dallas Stars"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Los Angeles Kings"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"New York Rangers"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Tampa Bay Lightning"... | American ice hockey player | Jeffrey Craig Halpern (born May 3, 1976) is an American former professional ice hockey player. He previously played for the Washington Capitals twice, Dallas Stars, Tampa Bay Lightning, Los Angeles Kings, New York Rangers, Montreal Canadiens and Phoenix Coyotes. He was also captain of the United States national team fo... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Washington Capitals"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"educated at",
"Princeton University"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"place of birth",
"Potomac, Maryland"
]
] | American ice hockey player | life Halpern was born in Potomac, Maryland, to Gloria (née Klein) and Melvin Halpern. As a youth, he played in the 1989 and 1990 Quebec International Pee-Wee Hockey Tournaments with the Washington Capitals minor ice hockey team. Halpern attended Winston Churchill High School in Potomac, which did not have a hockey team... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Washington Capitals"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
]
] | American ice hockey player | of varsity hockey for the Princeton Tigers men's ice hockey team, was named an ECAC second team All-Star in 1998 and 1999, and in 1999 he scored 22 goals to tie for the most goals in the ECAC and was co-winner of Princeton's Roper Trophy for athletic and academic achievement. Playing career Undrafted, Halpern began his... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Dallas Stars"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Washington Capitals"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"HC Ajoie"
]
] | American ice hockey player | was his highest-scoring season to date as he finished with 19 goals and 27 assists in 79 games. During the 2004–05 NHL lockout, Halpern played for the Kloten Flyers and for HC Ajoie in Switzerland, and returned to the Capitals when the lockout ended. On September 23, 2005, the Washington Capitals named Halpern the twel... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Tampa Bay Lightning"
]
] | American ice hockey player | Halpern was dealt to the Tampa Bay Lightning along with Mike Smith, Jussi Jokinen, and a 2009 4th-round draft pick in exchange for Brad Richards and Johan Holmqvist. Halpern scored a goal in his Lightning debut, and added an assist. After being acquired by the Lightning, Halpern went on a huge hot streak, scoring 10 go... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"country of citizenship",
"United States"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"country for sport",
"United States"
]
] | American ice hockey player | to Tampa Bay. The other was Brian Campbell. Playing in 52 games during the 2008-09 NHL Season, Halpern scored seven goals to go with nine assists. Halpern was named the captain of the United States national team for the 2008 World Championships in Canada. Playing in a 5–4 loss in the opening round against the Canadian ... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Los Angeles Kings"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"New York Rangers"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Washington Capitals"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Montreal Cana... | American ice hockey player | traded from the Lightning to the Los Angeles Kings March 3, 2010, in exchange for Teddy Purcell and a 3rd round draft pick in 2010. On September 7, 2010, Halpern signed a one-year contract with the Montreal Canadiens. He signed a one-year contract worth $825,000 to return to his original team the Washington Capitals on... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Montreal Canadiens"
]
] | American ice hockey player | season opener on the fourth line in a defeat against the Boston Bruins on January 19, 2013. In 30 games with the Rangers as a checking line forward, Halpern produced one assist before he was claimed off waivers to return to the Montreal Canadiens on March 23, 2013. For the season, he had a goal and two assists in 46 ga... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Tampa Bay Lightning"
]
] | American ice hockey player | On September 16, 2013, Halpern signed a one-year contract with Finnish Elite League team TPS, and was expected to make his SM-liiga debut in October. His contract included an NHL-clause. With the team, he scored four goals in eight games. On October 12, 2013. Halpern left the Finnish team and signed a one-year, two-way... | [] |
Jeff Halpern | [
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"member of sports team",
"Tampa Bay Lightning"
],
[
"Jeff Halpern",
"sport",
"Ice hockey"
]
] | American ice hockey player | On June 22, 2018, the Tampa Bay Lightning named Halpern as assistant coach after departing with Rick Bowness Personal life Halpern, who is Jewish, is a member of the Greater Washington (D.C.) Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Halpern sat out a game in 2005 to observe Yom Kippur. He has been married to former Redskins cheerle... | [] |
Shiloh Orphanage | [
[
"Shiloh Orphanage",
"country",
"United States"
],
[
"Shiloh Orphanage",
"instance of",
"Orphanage"
],
[
"Shiloh Orphanage",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Augusta, Georgia"
]
] | orphanage in Augusta, Georgia, United States | Shiloh Orphanage, now the Shiloh Comprehensive Community Center, was an orphanage for black children in Augusta, Georgia, United States. The site includes the Strong Academy building, a girls' dormitory, and a boys' dormitory. The orphanage closed in 1970 and reopened in 1977 as the Shiloh Comprehensive Community Cente... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Hamburger SV"
]
] | German footballer | Horst Blankenburg (born 10 July 1947) is a former German footballer, who played as a sweeper. He is best known for the early 1970s period, during which he played for Ajax Amsterdam and won the European Cup three times (1971, 1972, 1973), the European Super Cup twice (1972, 1973), the Intercontinental Cup once (1972) an... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"1. FC Nürnberg"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"league",
"Bundesliga"
]
] | German footballer | VfL Heidenheim; his professional career began at 1. FC Nürnberg under Max Merkel in the 1967–68 season. Nürnberg won the Bundesliga in that season, even though his contribution consisted of only 13 games, none of them league matches. He then transferred to Wiener Sportclub in Vienna for 45,000 German marks, where he ma... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Hamburger SV"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"country of citizenship",
"Germany"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"country for sport",
"Germany"
]
] | German footballer | with Johan Cruyff, Johan Neeskens, Ruud Krol, and Arie Haan. His coaches at Ajax were Stefan Kovács and Rinus Michels, who designed the famous Dutch offside trap around him and Velibor Vasović. Blankenburg was Ajax's team sweeper and was widely considered to be one of the best in Europe. In the five seasons at Ajax he ... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Hamburger SV"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
]
] | German footballer | to play for Hamburger SV. Under Kuno Klötzer, he won the German Cup in 1976 and the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1977, although he did not get to play in the final against RSC Anderlecht. In the end, he could not assert himself at the club – during his second season at the club he only played 13 league matches, so he was t... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"AFC Ajax"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"1. FC Nürnberg"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Lüneburger SK"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"league",
"Bundesliga"
]
] | German footballer | He retired from professional football in 1981 at Preußen Münster. However, in 1982 he moved to lower league teams Hummelsbütteler SV and Lüneburger SK, where he finally ended his career in 1985, aged 38. National team He was never selected for the German national team, one of the reasons being that the outstanding Fran... | [] |
Horst Blankenburg | [
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"AFC Ajax"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Chicago Sting"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"Hamburger SV"
],
[
"Horst Blankenburg",
"member of sports team",
"SC Preußen M... | German footballer | Winner: 1971–72, 1972–73 KNVB Cup Winner: 1970–71, 1971–72 European Cup Winner: 1970–71, 1971–72, 1972–73 European Super Cup Winner: 1972, 1973 Intercontinental Cup Winner: 1972 Hamburger SV DFB-Pokal Winner: 1975–76 European Cup Winners' Cup Winner: 1976–77 References External links NASL Stats Category:1947 births Cat... | [] |
Alegría-Dulantzi | [
[
"Alegría-Dulantzi",
"country",
"Spain"
],
[
"Alegría-Dulantzi",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Álava"
]
] | municipality of Spain | Alegría-Dulantzi (, ) is a town and municipality located in the province of Álava, in the Basque Country, northern Spain. The municipality is located some 14 km from the provincial capital, Vitoria. It has an area of 19.95 km², and a population (2004) of some 1,919 inhabitants. Alegría-Dulantzi municipality is divided ... | [
"Alegria-Dulantzi"
] |
Baborów | [
[
"Baborów",
"country",
"Poland"
],
[
"Baborów",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Gmina Baborów"
],
[
"Baborów",
"instance of",
"Gmina"
],
[
"Baborów",
"different from",
"Gmina Baborów"
],
[
"Baborów",
"capital of",
"Gmi... | city of Poland | Baborów () is a small town in southern Poland near Głubczyce, in the Opole Voivodeship, Głubczyce County, Gmina Baborów. History The first mention of the town comes from 1296 in which a wójt Jarosław is mentioned. The town was most likely founded by a Bohemian magnate, Bavor (Babor). Later it was part of an independent... | [
"Baborow"
] |
Top of the World Highway | [
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Yukon"
]
] | highway in Yukon Territory | The Top of the World Highway is a highway, beginning at a junction with the Taylor Highway near Jack Wade, Alaska traveling east to its terminus at the ferry terminal in West Dawson, Yukon, on the western banks of the Yukon River. The highway has been in existence since at least 1955 and is only open during the summer ... | [] |
Top of the World Highway | [
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"country",
"Canada"
]
] | highway in Yukon Territory | As of August 2016, the U.S. portion of the highway is paved from the Taylor Highway junction almost as far as Chicken, Alaska, and again for the final 10 kilometers from the Eagle turnoff to the Canada–United States border. Most of the Canadian portion is unpaved. The paved Canadian sections are from kilometer 0 (at Da... | [] |
Top of the World Highway | [
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Yukon"
]
] | highway in Yukon Territory | border. The highway is so named because, along much of its length, it skirts the crest of the hills, giving looks down on the valleys. It is also one of the most northerly highways in the world at those latitudes. Two nearby, farther north highways are the Dempster Highway (Yukon Route 5) and the Dalton Highway (Alaska... | [] |
Top of the World Highway | [
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"instance of",
"Road"
],
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Yukon"
]
] | highway in Yukon Territory | during the winter. A bridge is planned by the Yukon government, although there is significant division among Dawson area residents as to whether such a bridge should be built. The west-bank residents received improved phone service only in 2004 but do not have a public electricity supply. A branch road off the highway ... | [] |
Top of the World Highway | [
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"country",
"Canada"
],
[
"Top of the World Highway",
"located in the administrative territorial entity",
"Yukon"
]
] | highway in Yukon Territory | Canada–US border. There is a one-hour difference in standard time zones at this border, which is only open in summer during the 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. period (Alaska time). The Border Post has warnings as far south as Whitehorse, Yukon, alerting travelers that the Border is closed between 9pm and 9am (Yukon Time) and there's... | [] |
Stanislaus Francis Perry | [
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"occupation",
"Politician"
],
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"place of birth",
"Prince Edward Island"
]
] | Canadian farmer and politician in Prince Edward Island | Stanislaus Francis Perry (May 7, 1823 – February 24, 1898) was a Canadian farmer and politician in Prince Edward Island. Early life He was born Stanislas-François Poirier in Tignish, Prince Edward Island, the son of Pierre Poirier and Marie-Blanche Gaudet. Poirier was educated in Tignish and then was educated in Englis... | [
"Stanislas-François Poirier"
] |
Stanislaus Francis Perry | [
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"country of citizenship",
"Canada"
],
[
"Stanislaus Francis Perry",
"place of birth",
"Prince Edward Island"
]
] | Canadian farmer and politician in Prince Edward Island | was declared invalid. Perry was a proponent of a tunnel to link the island to the mainland. He represented 1st Prince in the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island from 1854 to 1875 and from 1879 to 1887 and, in the House of Commons of Canada, represented Prince County from 1874 to 1878 and from 1887 to 1896 and ... | [
"Stanislas-François Poirier"
] |
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