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27339475_0_0 | 27339475 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumulus%20%28disambiguation%29 | Tumulus (disambiguation) | Tumulus (disambiguation).
A tumulus is a mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves. |
27339475_1_0 | 27339475 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tumulus%20%28disambiguation%29 | Tumulus (disambiguation) | Tumulus (disambiguation). Tumulus may also refer to:
Tumulus culture, culture that dominated Central Europe during the Middle Bronze Age (ca.1600 BC to 1200 BC)
Tumulus (band), a progressive folk metal band from Yaroslavl Russia
Pressure ridge (lava), in volcanology, sometimes referred to as a tumulus |
27339480_0_0 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman.
The Lost Bladesman is a 2011 Hong Kong-Chinese historical war and biopic action film loosely based on the story of Guan Yu crossing five passes and slaying six generals in the 14th-century historical novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms. Written and directed by Alan Mak and Felix Chong, the film starred Donnie Yen as Guan Yu, with Yen also serving as the film's action director. |
27339480_0_1 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. Plot
The film opens with a scene of Cao Cao attending Guan Yu's funeral – Guan's severed head is buried with a wooden statue in place of his body. The scene flashbacks to 20 years before: After Guan Yu had been separated from his sworn brother Liu Bei, he temporarily served Cao Cao while he waited for news of Liu's whereabouts. At the Battle of Baima between Cao Cao and his rival Yuan Shao, Guan Yu slew Yuan's general Yan Liang and lifted the siege on Baima. As a reward, Cao Cao suggested to Emperor Xian to grant Guan Yu a marquis title and promote him to a higher rank. |
27339480_0_2 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman.
Liu Bei's family, including his concubine Qilan, were staying in Cao Cao's base together with Guan Yu. Cao Cao showered Guan Yu with precious gifts, hoping that the general will be touched and will decide to remain by his side, but Guan refused to renounce his loyalty to Liu Bei. When Guan Yu received news that Liu Bei had taken shelter under Yuan Shao, he negotiated with Cao Cao to release Liu's family. Cao Cao agreed, but Qilan remained behind with Guan Yu. As Cao Cao was aware that Guan Yu was secretly in love with Qilan, he tricked Guan into consuming food spiked with aphrodisiac, in the hope that Guan would express his feelings to Qilan and rape her when she was immobilised. However, Guan Yu managed to maintain his composure and refrain from dishonouring his sworn brother's concubine. He and Qilan made preparations to leave Cao Cao after he knew Liu Bei's whereabouts from a messenger sent by Liu himself. |
27339480_0_3 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman.
Cao Cao's followers strongly opposed their lord's decision to allow Guan Yu to leave as they felt that Guan might become a threat to their lord in the future. Despite this, Cao Cao gave a strict order that no one was to stop Guan Yu. However, along the way, Guan Yu encountered resistance and had to fight his way through the passes. Guan Yu slew Kong Xiu, Han Fu, Meng Tan, Bian Xi, Wang Zhi and Qin Qi, consecutively after they attempted to stop him. It was eventually revealed that it was Emperor Xian, and not Cao Cao, who issued the order to kill Guan Yu. Before reuniting with Liu Bei, Guan Yu agreed to kill Yuan Shao but entered a dilemma on whether to stay or leave in favour of his relationship with Qilan. However, before Qilan left, she pretended that she loved Guan Yu and said that she would ask for Liu Bei's consent for them to marry. Her true intention, however, was actually to stop Guan Yu from helping Cao Cao. Guan Yu refused and was stabbed by Qilan before Emperor Xian sent assassins to kill him. After a final grim exchange of words, Guan Yu turned his back on Cao Cao and the emperor. He headed to reunite with Liu Bei, fighting against his lord's rivals for the next two decades until his death. |
27339480_0_4 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman.
The scene then turns back to Guan Yu's funeral. Cao Cao is sad and sheds tears for the loss of his friend. Before the film ends, Cao Cao makes some final remarks on how not he, but others such as Sun Quan, Liu Bei and Zhuge Liang, are responsible for Guan Yu's death. In a post credits scene, Guan Yu is seen wielding his Green Dragon Crescent Blade upright and stroking his long beard. |
27339480_0_5 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. Cast
Donnie Yen as Guan Yu, a general who serves Cao Cao briefly before leaving to reunite with Liu Bei.
Jiang Wen as Cao Cao, a warlord and chancellor of the Han Dynasty.
Alex Fong as Liu Bei, a warlord and Guan Yu's sworn brother.
Chin Siu-ho as Yan Liang, a general under Yuan Shao who is killed by Guan Yu at the beginning of the film.
Sun Li as Qilan, Liu Bei's concubine and the love interest of Guan Yu.
Andy On as Kong Xiu, the general defending Dongling Pass.
Shao Bing as Zhang Liao, a general under Cao Cao and a close friend of Guan Yu.
Calvin Li as Qin Qi, the archer who attempts to kill Guan Yu in the forest.
Wang Po-chieh as Emperor Xian of Han, the nominal ruler of the Han Dynasty.
Wang Xuebing as Wang Zhi, the official in charge of Xingyang.
Chen Hong as Lady Gan, Liu Bei's first wife.
Zhao Ke as Lady Mi, Liu Bei's second wife.
Dong Yong as Xun You, Cao Cao's advisor.
Nie Yuan as Han Fu, a blacksmith in Luoyang who is an old friend of Guan Yu.
Heizi as Meng Tan, Han Fu's sworn brother.
Yu Ailei as Bian Xi, the general defending Yishui Pass.
Sang Ping as Xu Chu, a general under Cao Cao.
Zhou Bo as Pujing, a monk who heals Guan Yu. |
27339480_0_6 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. Reception
The Lost Bladesman received mixed reviews. It holds a 57% "rotten" rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 7 reviews. |
27339480_0_7 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. Production
Shooting began in March 2010 and wrapped up on 30 June 2010. |
27339480_0_8 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman.
Directors Alan Mak and Felix Chong sought Donnie Yen as they felt that Guan Yu was one of the best martial artist of his time and that Yen fits the bill as top martial artist in current times. Yen rejected the role initially, as he felt that he was unable to play the role well. The directors then offered the role again to Yen, explaining to him that if he took up the offer he would have a chance to show that he is not just another martial arts actor, but also a good actor. |
27339480_0_9 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. Music
The song played in the end credits is Qianli Zou Danqi (千里走单骑; Riding Alone for a Thousand Li) performed by Tan Jing. |
27339480_0_10 | 27339480 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The%20Lost%20Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman | The Lost Bladesman. See also
List of media adaptations of Romance of the Three Kingdoms |
27339513_0_0 | 27339513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaunas%20Railway%20Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel.
Kaunas railway tunnel () is one of the two railway tunnels existing in Lithuania and the only railway tunnel operating in the Baltic states. Passenger trains are operating between Vilnius and Kaunas through this tunnel. The length of the tunnel is 1,285 metres (0,803 miles), height – 6,6 metres, width – 8,8 metres. Kaunas railway tunnel was included into the Registry of Immovable Cultural Heritage Sites of the Republic of Lithuania in 1996. |
27339513_0_1 | 27339513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaunas%20Railway%20Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel. Background
After the Russian Empire lost the Crimean War, the importance of use of tactical use of modern inventions, as well as railways. In February 1851 the Tsarist Government of Russia made a decision to build the Saint Petersburg – Warsaw railway line with a length of approximately 1,250 kilometres. It was built to Russian gauge. Starting from 1858 the Warsaw – Saint Petersburg Railway line connecting Saint Petersburg and Warsaw was being built quite intensively. The government of Prussia addressed Russia asking permission to start building a railway from Virbalis, which was situated near its border, towards Lentvaris through Kaunas. However, the terrain around Kaunas' centre is hilly and unfavorable for the direct rail passage. The main and most complicated objects were the tunnel and largest in Lithuania railway bridge over the Nemunas river. The construction of the tunnel started on 15 May 1859, whereas the construction of the bridge started a bit earlier – at the end of April, 1859. The railway from Virbalis to Kaunas was also being built. |
27339513_0_2 | 27339513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaunas%20Railway%20Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel. Construction
Kaunas railway tunnel was built from 1859 till 1861. The construction was surveyed by the French engineer G. F. Perrot, as well as Polish-Lithuanian engineer Stanisław Kierbedź. For construction works has been hired Ernest Goüin et Cie. company from Paris. The tunnel was dug from both sides in a 30-metre-high hill, under the residential area of Šančiai of Kaunas. The tunnel's diameter has the shape of a horseshoe. The upper part was made of bricks (stonework),the lower part, which is used as a basement, is made of granite stones. Seven pits were built at the time of construction of tunnel. Through them the steam machines could eliminate the excavated soil. Ernest Goüin et Cie also built two brickyards in Šančiai and Petrašiūnai areas, because especially good quality bricks were needed for the tunnel arches, water passes and other constructions. The summer of 1860 was rainy, therefore many produced bricks were found to be defective. In order to proceed with the construction, the bricks were bought and delivered from the Netherlands and Germany. The construction of the tunnel was finished on 15 November 1861. The exploitation of the railway bridge over the Nemunas river started on 4 February 1862. The tunnel started operating in spring, 1862. |
27339513_1_0 | 27339513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaunas%20Railway%20Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel. Operation history
The tunnel was opened for traffic in 1862. It was on the Lentvaris - Kaunas - Virbalis branch towards Prussia, of the Saint Petersburg-Warsaw railway. The tunnel's gauge was rebuilt to standard gauge by the Germans during World War I. The Kaunas tunnel was bombed by the retreating armed forces of Germany on 30 July 1944. The biggest explosion deformed a 100-metre-long section of the tunnel. The Soviet army rebuilt the tunnel in 1,5 months later in 1944.
The explosions changed the hydrological condition of the tunnel.
Water began to deform the tunnel in 1947-1948. Minor reconstruction was carried out in 1949. A train accident occurred in the tunnel in 1963. It was determined to leave one rail track, instead of two in 1964. Passenger locomotives were completely replaced by electric locomotives in 1975. As the last repairs on the tunnel had only been made in 1972, railway traffic was not safe due to the existing emergency state of the tunnel, thus, the speed of the traffic was limited to 40 km/h. In 2002−2003 the Danish company Niras made adjustments to the feasibility study, and an application for European Union assistance was made in accordance with the conclusions drawn by this company. The tunnel reconstruction project was launched in 2007. |
27339513_1_1 | 27339513 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaunas%20Railway%20Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel | Kaunas Railway Tunnel. Operation history
The tunnel was reconstructed between 2008 and 2009. It was closed to rail traffic on 1 February 2008 and passenger traffic from Vilnius direction through Kaunas was diverted from central Kaunas Railway Station to a small station in Petrašiūnai. Reinforced concrete was installed in its vaults and walls, its portals were rebuilt, and its drainage was improved. The reconstruction also included installing lighting in the tunnel, the provision of smoke and water sensors along with a fire alarm system connected to the central control unit. The powerful fire extinguishing system was installed during the reconstruction of the tunnel. The pipes built underneath the tunnel are immediately filled with 35 cubic metres of water which is then sprayed via special sprinklers that line the tunnel. It is complemented by an efficient hazard monitoring system. The new communication system makes it possible to call for help in case of an emergency. The tunnel was opened after major reconstruction on 17 November 2009. After the reconstruction, the speed limit of the traffic in Kaunas tunnel has been increased to 83 km/h. |
27339514_0_0 | 27339514 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve%20Barclay | Steve Barclay | Steve Barclay. Steve Barclay may refer to:
Steve Barclay (actor) (1918–1994), American actor in Italian films
Steve Barclay (racing driver) (born 1944), American competitor during 1980s and 1990s
Steve Barclay (politician) (born 1972), British Conservative Party MP |
27339540_0_0 | 27339540 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassinated%20Catholic%20priests%20in%20Guatemala | Assassinated Catholic priests in Guatemala | Assassinated Catholic priests in Guatemala.
List of assassinated and forcibly disappeared Roman Catholic priests working in Guatemala. |
27339557_0_0 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
There are several systems for transliteration of the Manchu alphabet which is used for writing the Manchu and Xibe languages. These include transliterations in Latin script and in Cyrillic script. |
27339557_0_1 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
Transliteration in Latin script (romanization)
The romanization used in most recent western publications on Manchu is the one employed by the American sinologist Jerry Norman in his Comprehensive Manchu-English Dictionary (2013), a central reference tool in modern Manchu studies. |
27339557_0_2 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
This system, which has become the de facto modern standard in English-language publications, is the most recent incarnation of a system originally designed by the German linguist Hans Conon von der Gabelentz for his 1864 edition of the Manchu translation of the Four Books and other Chinese classics. As he explains:"Because Manchu possesses an alphabetic script, it was acceptable, as being without any disadvantage whatsoever, to replace the indigenous Manchu script, the use of which would have made printing much more difficult and expensive, by our alphabet. I started out from the principle of substituting a single symbol for each Manchu letter, while avoiding the addition of diacritical marks as much as possible." |
27339557_0_3 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
With his new system, Gabelentz did away with cumbersome transliterations such as dch, tch, kh, replacing them with j, c, h. The result has been described as a "simple and convenient system". |
27339557_0_4 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
Gabelentz also used this transliteration in his Manchu-German dictionary (1864), and the system was adopted unchanged by other German manchurists such as Erich Hauer for his dictionary (1952–55), and Erich Haenisch for his grammar (1961). |
27339557_0_5 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
In the 19th century the system was adopted, with minor changes, by the French linguist Lucien Adam in his grammar (1873), by the Belgian linguist Charles de Harlez in his handbook (1884), and by the German diplomat and linguist Paul Georg von Möllendorff. In English-language publications, the latter is often incorrectly credited with being the inventor of the system, probably because his Manchu Grammar (1892) was the first book in English to use it. Thus Norman himself refers to "the Möllendorff system of romanization". Authors writing in French and German generally recognize Gabelentz as its creator. |
27339557_0_6 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The system as used by Gabelentz (1864), Möllendorff (1892) and Norman (2013) is set out below, with the older system used by Gabelentz in his grammar (1832) added for comparison. Also in the table are the Pinyin-based system designed by Hu (1994) which is the standard in Chinese-language publications, and the input system of BabelPad. The table follows the traditional order of the Manchu alphabet. |
27339557_0_7 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The standard transliteration system follows the following conventions: |
27339557_0_8 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The velar and uvular consonants are not differentiated: and are both transliterated as k, and are both g, and and are both h. |
27339557_0_9 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
In Manchu orthography, the use of either the velars or the uvulars is largely predictable: velars before e, i, u and uvulars before a, o, ū. The standard transliteration leaves some ambiguity, as the spelling is not entirely predictable in syllable-final position. For example teksin "straight" can be written as or as . |
27339557_0_10 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The spelling is transliterated as ng, for example inenggi "day", cangkai "only, just", gung "duke". |
27339557_0_11 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The spelling is transliterated as i, for example baita "thing", meihe "snake", duin "four". |
27339557_0_12 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
In the standard transliteration, the spellings sh and th each represent two separate consonants, as in eshen "uncle", butha "hunting, fishing". In Hu’s transliteration, separate s and h are written as s’h (es’hen) to avoid confusion with sh (Norman š). Gabelentz (1864) used the transcriptions sḥ and tḥ, with a dot under the h (esḥen, butḥa). |
27339557_0_13 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
Transliteration in Cyrillic script (cyrillization)
The following transliteration (paired in the table below with the Norman system) was designed by the Russian diplomat and linguist Ivan Zakharov and used in his important Manchu dictionary (1875) and grammar (1879). He applies the following rules: |
27339557_0_14 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The velar and uvular consonants are not differentiated: and are both transliterated as к, and are both г, and and are both х. |
27339557_0_15 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The velars are marked with a macron (к̄, г̄, х̄) when followed by а (a), о (o) and у (u); к̄ is also used for the velar when it occurs in syllable-final position. |
27339557_0_16 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The spelling is transliterated as н before velars and uvulars, for example инэнги "day", чанкай "only, just"; before other consonants, and in word-final position, is transliterated as нъ, for example синънамби "to listen", гунъ "duke". |
27339557_0_17 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The back vowel [ʊ] is transliterated у after the uvulars, and ӯ after other consonants (see Table below). |
27339557_0_18 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
Syllable-final consonants are written with the hard sign (бъ, мъ, etc.), with the exception of нь (n) which is written with the soft sign because нъ stands for . |
27339557_0_19 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu.
The spelling is transliterated as й, for example байта "thing", мэйхэ "snake", дуйнь "four". |
27339557_1_0 | 27339557 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliterations%20of%20Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu | Transliterations of Manchu. The is not transliterated in the spellings , , , and .
Combinations of plus vowel are transliterated with the Cyrillic iotified vowel letters я (ya), ѣ (ye), іō (yo), ю (yu), and ю̄ (yū). |
27339567_0_0 | 27339567 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annals%20of%20Indian%20Academy%20of%20Neurology | Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology | Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology.
Annals of Indian Academy of Neurology is a peer-reviewed open-access medical journal published on behalf of the Indian Academy of Neurology. The journal publishes articles on the subjects of neurology, neuropsychiatry, and neuroimaging. It is indexed with Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases, CAB Abstracts, Caspur, CINAHL, DOAJ, EBSCO, Excerpta Medica/EMBASE, Expanded Academic ASAP, JournalSeek, Global Health, Google Scholar, Health & Wellness Research Center, Health Reference Center Academic, Hinari, Index Copernicus, Indian Science Abstracts, IndMed, Journal Citation Reports, MANTIS, OpenJGate, PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded, Scimago Journal Ranking, SCOLOAR, Scopus, SIIC databases, Tropical Diseases Bulletin, and Ulrich's Periodicals Directory. |
27339583_0_0 | 27339583 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changes%20%28Christopher%20Williams%20album%29 | Changes (Christopher Williams album) | Changes (Christopher Williams album).
Changes is the second studio album from American R&B artist Christopher Williams, released on December 29, 1992 on Uptown Records. |
27339583_0_1 | 27339583 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changes%20%28Christopher%20Williams%20album%29 | Changes (Christopher Williams album) | Changes (Christopher Williams album).
The album peaked at sixty-three on the U.S. Billboard 200 and reached the twelfth spot on the R&B Albums chart. |
27339583_0_2 | 27339583 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changes%20%28Christopher%20Williams%20album%29 | Changes (Christopher Williams album) | Changes (Christopher Williams album).
Riding the waves of his #1 single, "I'm Dreamin', he would see another Top 10 single "Every Little Thing U Do" and a Top 20 R&B hit, "All I See". |
27339583_1_0 | 27339583 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changes%20%28Christopher%20Williams%20album%29 | Changes (Christopher Williams album) | Changes (Christopher Williams album). Personnel
Information taken from Allmusic.
arranging – DeVante Swing, Kenny "G-Love" Greene, Andre Wilson
assistant engineering – Charlie Allen, Gordon Davies, Kevin Davis, Jason DeCosta, Ben Garrison, Rich July, David Kingsley, Stephen McLaughlin, Chrystin Nevarez, Chris Olivas, Ken Quartarone, Thom Russo
assistant production – Andrew Cousins, Darryl Pearson, Darin Whittington, Christopher Williams, Andre Wilson, Brian Wilson
composing – DeVante Swing, Kenny "G-Love" Greene
creative director – Brett Wright
drum machine – Ike Lee III, Mark Morales
drums – Mark Morales
engineering – Paul Arnold, Eric "Ibo" Butler, Ross Donaldson, Mike Fonda, Ben Garrison, David Kennedy, Tony Maserati, Angela Piva, Tony Smalios, Dave Way, Mark Wilson, Gary Wright
executive production – Andre Harrell, Christopher Williams
guitar – Henry Grate
keyboards – Kevin Davis, Kevin Deane, Kiyamma Griffin, Avon Marshall, Mark C. Rooney
make-up – Melvone Farrell
mastering – Steve Hall, Dennis King, Jose Rodriguez
mixing – Charles "Prince Charles" Alexander, Stanley Brown, Sean "Puffy" Combs, David Dachinger, David Kennedy, Tony Maserati, Angela Piva, Dave Way
mixing assistants – Hal Belknap, Jason DeCosta, Carl Glanville, Rich July, Dana Vicek
performer – Mary J. Blige
production – Stanley Brown, Sean "Puffy" Combs, Greg Cuathen, Kevin Davis, DeVante Swing, Kiyamma Griffin, Kenny "K-Smoove" Kornegay, Ike Lee III, Mark Morales, Anthony Ransom, Mark C. Rooney, Three Boys from Newark, Christopher Williams, Andre Wilson, Brian Wilson
production coordination – Crystal Johnson
vocal arrangement – DeVante Swing, Kenny "G-Love" Greene, Christopher Williams, Andre Wilson
vocals – Mary J. Blige
vocals (background) – Horace Brown, Kiyamma Griffin, Crystal Johnson, Omega Lowther, Brian Palmer, Mark C. Rooney, Christopher Williams, Andre Wilson |
27339583_2_0 | 27339583 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Changes%20%28Christopher%20Williams%20album%29 | Changes (Christopher Williams album) | Changes (Christopher Williams album). 1992 albums
MCA Records albums
Uptown Records albums
Christopher Williams (singer) albums
Albums produced by Cory Rooney |
27339614_0_0 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Rainer Mahlamäki (born 12 June 1956) is a Finnish architect, president of the Finnish Association of Architects (SAFA) from 2007 to 2011, Professor of Contemporary Architecture at the University of Oulu, and joint partner with Ilmari Lahdelma of the Helsinki-based architecture firm Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects, one of the most prolific such firms in Finland. A significant part of their work started as entries in architectural competitions, in which they have received 35 first prizes (and 59 other prizes). |
27339614_0_1 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Mahlamäki studied architecture at the Tampere University of Technology, and was awarded the Master of Science in Architecture in 1987. He, along with Lahdelma and 6 others, was a partner in the architecture firm 8 Studio from 1986 to 1993. From 1992 he together with Lahdelma and architect Mikko Kaira founded Kaira-Lahdelma-Mahlamäki Architecture, and from 1997 Mahlamäki and Lahdelma have been in partnership in the firm Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects. |
27339614_0_2 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Mahlamäki was appointed Professor of Contemporary Architecture at the University of Oulu Department of Architecture in 1997, from 2000 to 2007 he was head of the department and since 2007 vice-head of the department. In 2007 to 2011 he was appointed President of the Finnish Association of Architects (SAFA). |
27339614_0_3 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Mahlamäki was the Chair of the Jury for the 2009 International Architecture Awards. |
27339614_0_4 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Selection of works by Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects
The work of the firm Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects is generally split between the two partners, though with each having some input in all the works. The style of the firm has been described as contextual, varying dramatically in character depending on the project, from minimalism to expressionism. The contextualism is typified by Lahdelma's design of the Jyväskylä University Teacher Training School (2002) built adjacent to several buildings on the university campus designed by Alvar Aalto. The form of the new building complex was generated by the "site lines" of the surrounding buildings, resulting in a "fortress-like" appearance. |
27339614_0_5 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Finnish Nature Centre Haltia, Espoo, Finland 2013
Derby Business Park, Espoo, Finland, 2013
Helsingin Studio, Residential Building, Helsinki, Finland, 2013
Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Warsaw, Poland, 2013
Helsingin Vanhalinna, Residential Building, Helsinki, Finland, 2012
Meilahti Hospital Area, New Entrance Lobby, Helsinki, Finland, 2010
Maritime Centre Vellamo, Kotka, Finland, 2008
Wooden Boat Centre, Kotka, Finland, 2008
Joensuu Primary School, Joensuu, Finland, 2006
Evira, Finnish Food Safety Authority, Helsinki, Finland, 2006
ICT-Building, Turku, 2006
Helsingin Pasaatituuli, Residential Building, Helsinki, Finland, 2006
Lusto Finnish Forest Museum, Extension Punkaharju, Finland, 2005
Lohja City Library, Finland, 2005
Exactum building, University of Helsinki, Finland, 2004
Iiris, Office Building and Service Centre for the Visually Impaired, Helsinki, Finland, 2004
Tapiola Church Yard, Urn Cemetery, Espoo, Finland, 2004
Rauma Main Library, Rauma, Finland, 2003
Office Building for Finland Post Corporation, Helsinki, Finland, 2003
Jyväskylä University Teacher Training School, Jyväskylä, Finland, 2002
Vaasa City Library, Vaasa, Finland, 2001
Skanska Ltd. Headquarters, Helsinki, Finland, 2000
Bulevardin Aaria, Residential Building, Helsinki, Finland, 2000
Physicum building, University of Helsinki, Finland, 2001
Folks Arts Centre, Kaustinen, Finland, 1997
Soininen Primary School, Helsinki, Finland, 1997
Festia building, Tampere University of Technology, Finland, 1995
Lusto Finnish Forest Museum, Punkaharju, Finland, 1994 |
27339614_0_6 | 27339614 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainer%20Mahlam%C3%A4ki | Rainer Mahlamäki | Rainer Mahlamäki.
Awards to Lahdelma & Mahlamäki Architects
Architectural Arts Suomi Award, 1997
Finland Prize, Ministry of Education Award, 2008 |
27339653_0_0 | 27339653 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81lvaro%20Meli%C3%A1n%20Lafinur | Álvaro Melián Lafinur | Álvaro Melián Lafinur.
Álvaro Octavio Melián Lafinur (16 May 1893 – 1958) was an Argentinian poet and critic. |
27339653_0_1 | 27339653 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%81lvaro%20Meli%C3%A1n%20Lafinur | Álvaro Melián Lafinur | Álvaro Melián Lafinur.
Born in Buenos Aires in 1893, he was the son of the Uruguayan lawyer and writer Luis Melián Lafinur and also the second cousin of writer Jorge Luis Borges. In 1910, while working at the Spanish newspaper El País, he published Borges' work, a translation of Oscar Wilde's The Happy Prince, for the first time. |
27339662_0_0 | 27339662 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coman%20mac%20Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon.
Coman mac Faelchon was an Irish saint, the founder, abbot and bishop of Roscommon, fl. 550. |
27339662_0_1 | 27339662 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coman%20mac%20Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon. Life
Coman was a member of the Cinel Domaingen, a branch of the Sogain of Connacht. He studied at the monastic school of Clonard in County Meath, where he became associated with Saint Finnian of Clonard. About 550, after completing his education, he founded a monastery on the east bank of the River Suck, at a wood (ros) which was called after him (Ros Comain). |
27339662_0_2 | 27339662 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coman%20mac%20Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon.
Ros Comain was situated on Magh nAi (later known as the plains of Roscommon/the plains of Boyle), homeland of the Ui Briuin Kings of Connacht. He successfully sought their patronage, ensuring his influence within their spheres of power. |
27339662_0_3 | 27339662 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coman%20mac%20Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon.
His successors are named in the Irish annals between the years 782 and 1135. |
27339662_0_4 | 27339662 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coman%20mac%20Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon | Coman mac Faelchon.
He has been linked with the foundation of Kilcommon in County Mayo and the early monastic church at Leithglin, County Carlow. He composed a rule for monks, which came to be observed by many religious bodies in Connacht. |
27339681_0_0 | 27339681 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arcola%2C%20Pennsylvania | Arcola, Pennsylvania | Arcola, Pennsylvania.
Arcola is an unincorporated community in Upper Providence Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. Arcola is located on Perkiomen Creek west-northwest of Norristown. |
27339686_0_0 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand.
NORML New Zealand is a cannabis law reform organisation in New Zealand. It is a National Chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). |
27339686_0_1 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand. Media and activism
NORML New Zealand publish the print and electronic quarterly magazine NORML News. Copies of the magazine were submitted to the Chief Censor in May 2010 by the Department of Internal Affairs for guidance on whether it should be censored. |
27339686_0_2 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand.
"Mary Jane the Cannabus" is a Bedford bus belonging to NORML New Zealand that serves as a mobile cannabis law reform activism centre. Mary Jane is driven by Dakta Green and resides at The Daktory when not on the road. Mary Jane participated in a nationwide tour of New Zealand promoting cannabis law reform from March to May 2008. |
27339686_0_3 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand.
In 2018, NORML New Zealand issued a submission supporting the Labour-led coalition government's Misuse of Drugs (Medicinal Cannabis) Amendment Act. They also advocated allowing a higher 5% tolerance for other cannaboids to improve production and affordability; making medical cannabis more accessible to patients with chronic or debilitating conditions where the doctor has prescribed the use of cannabis; legalizing the cultivation of cannabis; and adopting a herbal remedy approach towards non-pharmaceutical cannabis products. While supportive of the Government's proposed Medicinal Cannabis Access Scheme, it advocated a "patient-focused regime" as opposed to what it termed a "corporate pharmaceutical-style scheme." In response to the Government's upcoming cannabis referendum, NORML is one of the founding members of the Cannabis Referendum Coalition. |
27339686_0_4 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand. Branches
Otago NORML is the group's local branch at the University of Otago in Dunedin. |
27339686_0_5 | 27339686 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NORML%20New%20Zealand | NORML New Zealand | NORML New Zealand. Notable members
Abe Gray, founder of the Whakamana Cannabis Museum, high-profile cannabis activist and protester for almost two decades, served as Otago NORML president. |
27339690_0_0 | 27339690 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annals%20of%20Pediatric%20Cardiology | Annals of Pediatric Cardiology | Annals of Pediatric Cardiology.
Annals of Pediatric Cardiology is a peer-reviewed open-access medical journal published on behalf of the Pediatric Cardiology Society of India. The journal publishes articles on the subjects of pediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery, cardiac pathology, cardiac anesthesia, pediatric intensive care, and cardiac imaging. It is indexed with Caspur, CINAHL, DOAJ, EBSCO, Excerpta Medica/EMBASE, Expanded Academic ASAP, JournalSeek, Google Scholar, Health & Wellness Research Center, Health Reference Center Academic, Hinari, Index Copernicus, Indian Science Abstracts, OpenJGate, PubMed, SCOLOAR, SIIC databases, and Ulrich's Periodicals Directory. |
27339712_0_0 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro.
Doug Miro (born January 20, 1972) is an American screenwriter based in Los Angeles. Miro studied screenwriting at the USC School of Cinematic Arts and graduated with a degree in English from Stanford University. |
27339712_0_1 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro. Life and career
Miro's most recent screenplays include Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, and the Sorcerer's Apprentice, both which were written with his longtime collaborator, Carlo Bernard. |
27339712_0_2 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro.
Their credits also include The Uninvited for DreamWorks and producers Walter Parkes and Laurie MacDonald, and The Great Raid for Miramax. They are currently at work on National Treasure 3. |
27339712_0_3 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro.
Miro and Bernard first made their mark with Motor City, an adaptation of the novel Edsel, (Loren Estleman) a film noir set in 1950s Detroit. The team also adapted Dean King's Skeletons of the Zahara: A True Story of Survival, which chronicles the wreck of a Connecticut merchant ship and the crew's subsequent adventures in the Sahara Desert in 1815. After reading their adaptation, Steven Spielberg and Kathleen Kennedy hired the writing team to work on the script for the 2011 Tintin movie. |
27339712_0_4 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro.
Miro is a creator and executive producer of the Netflix series Narcos. |
27339712_0_5 | 27339712 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doug%20Miro | Doug Miro | Doug Miro. Filmography
(2005) The Great Raid
(2009) The Uninvited
(2010) Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time
(2010) The Sorcerer's Apprentice
(2015 - 2017) Narcos
(2016) The Great Wall
(2018 - 2021) Narcos: Mexico |
27339723_0_0 | 27339723 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visa%20requirements%20for%20Micronesian%20citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens.
Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of the Federated States of Micronesia. As of 2 July 2019, Micronesian citizens had visa-free or visa on arrival access to 119 countries and territories, ranking the Micronesian passport 49th in terms of travel freedom (tied with Moldova) according to the Henley Passport Index. |
27339723_0_1 | 27339723 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visa%20requirements%20for%20Micronesian%20citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens.
Micronesia signed a mutual visa waiver agreement with Schengen Area countries on 20 September 2016. |
27339723_1_0 | 27339723 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visa%20requirements%20for%20Micronesian%20citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens | Visa requirements for Micronesian citizens. Visa requirements
Dependent, Disputed, or Restricted territories
Unrecognized or partially recognized countries |
27339736_0_0 | 27339736 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh%20Ferguson%20%28footballer%29 | Hugh Ferguson (footballer) | Hugh Ferguson (footballer).
Hugh Ferguson (1926–1994) was a Northern Irish professional footballer who played as a full back. |
27339736_1_0 | 27339736 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh%20Ferguson%20%28footballer%29 | Hugh Ferguson (footballer) | Hugh Ferguson (footballer). Career
After playing in his native Northern Ireland for Ballymena United, Ferguson moved to England to play with Bradford City. After making 132 appearances in the Football League between 1948 and 1952, Ferguson then played non-league football with Frickley Colliery, but returned to league football in 1954 with Halifax Town. In total he made 227 appearances in the Football League. |
27339738_0_0 | 27339738 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%20Robb%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201927%29 | William Robb (footballer, born 1927) | William Robb (footballer, born 1927).
William Lawson "Willie" Robb (23 December 1927 – 2002) was a Scottish professional footballer who played as a wing half. Active between 1949 and 1958, Robb made over 200 appearances in the Scottish and English League systems. |
27339738_0_1 | 27339738 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William%20Robb%20%28footballer%2C%20born%201927%29 | William Robb (footballer, born 1927) | William Robb (footballer, born 1927). Career
Born in Cambuslang, Robb played junior football with local side Cambuslang Rangers, before turning professional in 1949 with Aberdeen. Robb later played for Leyton Orient, Albion Rovers and Bradford City, before returning to junior football with Rutherglen Glencairn. |
27339747_0_0 | 27339747 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric%20calibration | Radiometric calibration | Radiometric calibration.
Radiometric calibration is a general term used in science and technology for any set of calibration techniques in support of the measurement of electromagnetic radiation and atomic particle radiation. These can be for instance, in the field of Radiometry or the measurement of ionising radiation radiated from a source. |
27339747_0_1 | 27339747 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric%20calibration | Radiometric calibration | Radiometric calibration. Ionising radiation
Ionising radiation is non-visible and requires the use of ionisation detectors such as the Geiger Muller counter or ion chamber for its detection and measurement. Instruments are calibrated using standards traceable to national laboratory radiation standards, such as those at The National Physical Laboratory in the UK. |
27339747_0_2 | 27339747 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric%20calibration | Radiometric calibration | Radiometric calibration.
Count rate measurements are normally associated with the detection of particles, such as alpha particles and beta particles. However, for gamma ray and X-ray dose measurements a unit such as the gray or sievert is normally used. |
27339747_0_3 | 27339747 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric%20calibration | Radiometric calibration | Radiometric calibration.
The following table shows ionising radiation quantities in SI and non-SI units. |
27339747_0_4 | 27339747 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiometric%20calibration | Radiometric calibration | Radiometric calibration. Satellite sensor calibration
Spectral data acquired by satellite sensors are influenced by a number of factors, such as atmospheric absorption, scattering, sensor-target-illumination geometry, sensor calibration, and image data processing procedures, which tend to change through time. Targets in multi-date scenes are extremely variable and have been nearly impossible to compare in an automated mode. In order to detect genuine landscape changes as revealed by changes in surface reflectance from multi-date satellite images, it is necessary to carry out radiometric correction. Two approaches to radiometric correction are possible: absolute and relative. The absolute approach requires the use of ground measurements at the time of data acquisition for atmospheric correction and sensor calibration. This is not only costly but also impractical when archival satellite image data are used for change analysis. The relative approach to radiometric correction, known as relative radiometric normalization (RRN), is preferred because no in-situ atmospheric data at the time of satellite overpasses are required. This method involves normalizing or rectifying the intensities or digital numbers (DN) of multi-date images band-by-band to a reference image selected by the analyst. The normalized images would appear as if they were acquired with the same sensor under similar atmospheric and illumination conditions to those of the reference image. |
27339751_0_0 | 27339751 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juan%20Gabriel%20%28album%29 | Juan Gabriel (album) | Juan Gabriel (album).
Juan Gabriel is the self-titled and twenty-seventh studio album by singer-songwriter Juan Gabriel. It was released on May 4, 2010, his first studio album in seven years. On this album, there are 11 tracks, 5 of which had never been previously recorded, and the remaining 6 tracks are songs that Gabriel had written, but were recorded by other artists, and Gabriel himself having recorded them himself for the first time. |
27339761_0_0 | 27339761 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faith%20in%20the%20Earth | Faith in the Earth | Faith in the Earth.
"Faith in the Earth" is a concept referred to in the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche's mytho-poetic formulation of divinity, Thus Spoke Zarathustra. A complicated idea with many connotations within its central work, it is the process through which Nietzsche formalizes his idea of amor fati, and most broadly refers to treating the worldly with the same degree of spiritual worship and respect previously given to the divine. It is a related concept to the central idea of Eternal Recurrence that forms the main focus of the work. |
27339766_0_0 | 27339766 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto%20Divosta | Otto Divosta | Otto Divosta.
Otto Divosta (born June 11, 1934) was a principal partner of a major home development company based in South Florida. In the 1970s, he developed a process for building multi-family homes in an assembly line fashion. DiVosta and Clifford F. Burg formed Burg & DiVosta Corp. to combine Burg's construction experience with DiVosta's development company. Since the 1960s, DiVosta has built 40,000 homes in Florida. DiVosta sold his company to Pulte Homes in 1998. |
27339766_0_1 | 27339766 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto%20Divosta | Otto Divosta | Otto Divosta.
He developed a quick-setting cement used in 1981 to build a three-bedroom, two-bath home, with a two-car garage, in seven hours and 35 minutes. The house was auctioned off with proceeds to be donated to the City of Palm Beach Gardens for a municipal swimming pool. This was believed to be a world record-breaking construction, beating a previous record of 19 hours. |
27339766_0_2 | 27339766 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto%20Divosta | Otto Divosta | Otto Divosta.
DiVosta introduced a construction method in 1974, unique to South Florida. |
27339766_0_3 | 27339766 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Otto%20Divosta | Otto Divosta | Otto Divosta.
In 1996, Divosta bought the Jupiter Theatre from previous owner Burt Reynolds, with plans to reopen with new management. |
27339787_0_0 | 27339787 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian%20Journal%20of%20Transfusion%20Science | Asian Journal of Transfusion Science | Asian Journal of Transfusion Science.
The Asian Journal of Transfusion Science is a peer-reviewed open-access medical journal published on behalf of the Indian Society of Blood Transfusion and Immunohematology. The journal publishes articles on the subjects of blood transfusion and immunohematology. |
27339787_0_1 | 27339787 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian%20Journal%20of%20Transfusion%20Science | Asian Journal of Transfusion Science | Asian Journal of Transfusion Science. Abstracting and indexing
The journal is indexed with Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases, CAB Abstracts, Caspur, CINAHL, DOAJ, EBSCO, EMCARE, Expanded Academic ASAP, JournalSeek, Global Health, Google Scholar, Health & Wellness Research Center, Health Reference Center Academic, Hinari, Index Copernicus, OpenJGate, PubMed, SCOLOAR, SIIC databases, Tropical Diseases Bulletin, and Ulrich's Periodicals Directory. |
27339800_0_0 | 27339800 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carine%20%28given%20name%29 | Carine (given name) | Carine (given name).
Carine is a feminine given name. Notable people with the name include: |
27339800_0_1 | 27339800 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carine%20%28given%20name%29 | Carine (given name) | Carine (given name).
Carine Adler (born 1948), Brazilian film director
Carine Goren (born 1974), Israeli pastry chef, cookbook author, and television baking show host
Carine Quadros (born 1981), Brazilian actress
Carine Roitfeld (born 1954), French businesswoman, editor-in-chief of French Vogue (magazine)
Carine Russo (born 1962), Belgian politician and a member of Ecolo
Carine Mbuh Ndoum Yoh (born 1993), Cameroonian footballer
Cairine Wilson (1885–1962), Canadian senator |
27339820_0_0 | 27339820 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ka%C5%A1par | Kašpar | Kašpar. Kašpar is a Czech surname. It may refer to:
Adolf Kašpar (1877-1934), Czech painter and illustrator
Jan Kašpar (1883-1927), Czech aviator, designer and engineer
Jonáš Kašpar, Czech slalom canoeist who has competed since the late 2000s
Lukáš Kašpar (born 1985), Czech ice hockey player
Karel Kašpar (1870-1941), Czech Catholic cardinal
Petr Kašpar (born 1960), Czech retired footballer and current Director General of Slovak football club Slovan Bratislava
Kašpar Mašek, Czech-Slovenian composer |
27339831_0_0 | 27339831 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis%20Marie%20Quicherat | Louis Marie Quicherat | Louis Marie Quicherat.
Louis-Marie Quicherat (13 October 1799 – 17 November 1884) was a French Latinist best known for his Latin Dictionary. He is referenced in the short story "Funes the Memorious" by Jorge Luis Borges. |
27339841_0_0 | 27339841 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation%20and%20Society | Conservation and Society | Conservation and Society.
Conservation and Society is a quarterly, open-access, peer-reviewed, academic journal covering political ecology, human–wildlife conflicts, decentralised conservation, conservation policy, ecosystem structure and functioning, systematics, community and species ecology, behavioural ecology, landscape ecology, restoration ecology, and conservation biology. The editor-in-chief is Kamaljit Bawa (University of Massachusetts Amherst). The journal was established in 2003 and published biannually until 2005. Conservation and Society is published by Medknow Publications on behalf of the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment, headquartered in Bangalore, India. |
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