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In what country is Riethnordhausen?
[ "Germany", "FRG", "BRD", "Bundesrepublik Deutschland", "Federal Republic of Germany", "de", "Deutschland", "GER", "BR Deutschland", "DE" ]
country
Riethnordhausen, Thuringia
4,185,439
61
[ { "id": "29550142", "title": "Riethnordhausen, Thuringia", "text": " Riethnordhausen is a municipality in the Sömmerda district of Thuringia, Germany.", "score": "1.692596" }, { "id": "29550150", "title": "Riethnordhausen, Saxony-Anhalt", "text": " Riethnordhausen is situated in the Rieth in the lower Helme valley, north-east of the Kyffhäuser and south-west of Sangerhausen, the capital of the Mansfeld-Südharz, from which the connecting road leads to the place, which crosses here with the road between Kelbra and Artern.", "score": "1.6067148" }, { "id": "29550149", "title": "Riethnordhausen, Saxony-Anhalt", "text": " Riethnordhausen is a village and a former municipality in the Mansfeld-Südharz district, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 July 2009, it is part of the municipality Wallhausen.", "score": "1.4938213" }, { "id": "12876062", "title": "Rieth (Erfurt)", "text": " The Rieth is a district in the north of the Thuringian state capital Erfurt, Germany. Rieth is a prefabricated housing estate with 5650 inhabitants (as of 31 December 2012) on an area of 0.72 km², built in 1969. Before the fall of communism, however, considerably more people lived in this district. Neighbouring districts are Hohenwinden-Sulza (industrial area) in the east, Ilversgehofen (Gründerzeit district) in the south, Berliner Platz (prefabricated housing area) in the west, Moskauer Platz (prefabricated housing area) in the northwest, Gispersleben (village) in the north and Roter Berg (prefabricated housing area) in the northeast. The district is situated on the river Gera, its centre is the Platz der Völkerfreundschaft with the shopping centre Vilnius-Passagen. The adjoining district Berliner Platz is ", "score": "1.4688947" }, { "id": "12497569", "title": "Riedenburg", "text": " Riedenburg is a town in the district of Kelheim, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated on the river Altmühl, 16 km northwest of Kelheim and 29 km northeast of Ingolstadt. Prunn Castle (de) is located in Riedenburg. The town is on the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal. On the evening of 5 June 2019, a Viking ship, initially said to be the Viking Var, damaged the lock of Riedenburg, on the canal. After the impact, the lock could not be properly closed. No one was injured in the accident. The repair was expected to take two to three weeks to complete. Later reports indicated the vessel involved in that incident was actually the Viking Tir. The site Vessel Tracker stated that this ship returned to Regensburg a few hours later and remained there; its records indicate that the Tir did not continue on to Budapest until 13 June.", "score": "1.4632614" }, { "id": "6486391", "title": "Riva del Garda", "text": "🇩🇪 Bensheim, Germany ", "score": "1.4626708" }, { "id": "12313294", "title": "Riesen", "text": " The Riesen brand successfully expanded internationally and was introduced to the United States in 1991. Today, Riesen is well established in many important European and North American markets, such as Germany, Scandinavia, the UK, the United States and Canada.", "score": "1.4553257" }, { "id": "543312", "title": "Rieseby", "text": " Rieseby (Risby) is a municipality in the district of Rendsburg-Eckernförde, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "score": "1.4537091" }, { "id": "10646552", "title": "Rittmarshausen", "text": " Rittmarshausen is a nucleated village in the municipality (Gemeinde) Gleichen in the district Göttingen, Germany. The village of 776 residents (as of December 31, 2005) is primarily agricultural and home of people working in Göttingen. \"Ökozentrum Rittmarshausen\" is an association dedicated to the development and marketing of regionally produced natural foods, which are marketed under the Leinehöfe label. The community also sports an athletic association, a volunteer fire department, a chorus, a gun club, and an equestrian association. The village mayor is Volker Heinemann. The village's coat of arms is a red shield with a bird sitting on the upper of two yellow horizontal bars, each with three short vertical bars (crenellations).", "score": "1.4345884" }, { "id": "1561191", "title": "Ērgļi", "text": "🇩🇪 Kölln-Reisiek, Germany ", "score": "1.4334826" }, { "id": "1770971", "title": "Rietburg Chairlift", "text": " The Rietburg chairlift (Rietburgbahn) is a chair lift that runs from the village of Rhodt in the Palatinate region of Germany to the ruins of the medieval castle of Rietburg. The chairlift is the county of Südliche Weinstraße in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.", "score": "1.4094028" }, { "id": "4009602", "title": "Radivoje Ristanović", "text": " During his journeyman career, Ristanović played in Serbia (Partizan and Vojvodina), Montenegro (Lovćen), Spain (Teucro, Ademar León, and San Antonio), Qatar (Al Ahli Doha), Germany (HBW Balingen-Weilstetten), France (Chambéry), Hungary (Balatonfüredi KSE), Israel (Maccabi Rishon LeZion), and Croatia (Zagreb).", "score": "1.4023004" }, { "id": "15959418", "title": "Rieselfeld", "text": "Bahar Kızıl, member of the former pop girl group Monrose, lives in Rieselfeld. ; Käthe Vordtriede, journalist, author and Jewish émigré, was honoured in Germany for the first time when a street was named after her in this district. ", "score": "1.3925701" }, { "id": "26139930", "title": "Riesa-Großenhain", "text": " Riesa-Großenhain was a district in the Free State of Saxony, Germany. It was bounded by (from the north and clockwise) the districts of Elbe-Elster and Oberspreewald-Lausitz in Brandenburg, Kamenz, Meißen, Döbeln and Torgau-Oschatz.", "score": "1.3891006" }, { "id": "26120426", "title": "Rieden am Forggensee", "text": " Rieden am Forggensee is a municipality in the district of Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.", "score": "1.385524" }, { "id": "13081821", "title": "Wollmatinger Ried", "text": " The nature reserve of Wollmatinger Ried – Untersee – Gnadensee is a protected area on the shores of Lake Constance in Germany. It has an area of 767 hectares and is the largest and most important nature reserve on the German side of Lake Constance. It is rich in plant and animal species and extends from the banks of the Seerhein river west of Constance via the causeway to the Island of Reichenau in the Untersee to the eastern Gnadensee near Allensbach-Hegne. The nearby offshore islands of Triboldingerbohl (Langenrain) and Mittler or Langbohl (Kopf) are part of the reserve.", "score": "1.38199" }, { "id": "26647836", "title": "Ries Railway", "text": " The Ries Railway (Riesbahn) is the current name of the line between Aalen and Donauwörth via Nördlingen. The name is derived from the Nördlinger Ries depression, and the line is operated by Deutsche Bahn (DB). The line consists of a section of the Aalen–Nördlingen railway built by the Kingdom of Württemberg as the Rems Railway and a section of the Nördlingen–Donauwörth railway built as part of the Ludwig South-North Railway by the Kingdom of Bavaria, two of the oldest lines in Germany.", "score": "1.3807445" }, { "id": "26748755", "title": "Ried im Innkreis", "text": " Ried im Innkreis (Central Bavarian: Riad) is a town in the Austrian state of Upper Austria, approximately 70 km west of Linz and 60 km north of Salzburg. It is the capital of the district of Ried im Innkreis, and it serves as the administrative centre for the Innviertel region.", "score": "1.3710783" }, { "id": "2837960", "title": "Linux Bier Wanderung", "text": "1999: Pottenstein, Bavaria, Germany ; 2000: Coniston, Cumbria, England ; 2001: Bouillon, Belgium ; 2002: Doolin, Ireland ; 2003: Tajov, Slovakia ; 2004: Schin op Geul, Netherlands ; 2005: Killin, Scotland ; 2006: Palūšė, Lithuania ; 2007: Hersonissos, in Heraklion Prefecture, Crete, Greece. LBW was organised by Hellenic Linux User Group, and was held on 2–9 September 2007. ; 2008: Samnaun, Switzerland (9–17 August) ; 2009: Helmbrechts, Upper Franconia, Bavaria ; 2010: Alfriston, Sussex, England ; 2011: Lanersbach (near Tux), Austria ; 2012: Diksmuide, Belgium. ; 2013: Castleton, Derbyshire in the Peak District, England. ; 2014: Talybont-on-Usk in the Brecon Beacons, Wales. ; 2015: Wiltz, Luxembourg. ; 2016: Laxey, Isle of Man ; 2017: St. Martin in Passeier, South ", "score": "1.3695472" }, { "id": "13467748", "title": "Turid Rugaas", "text": " Rugaas has conducted workshops in 12 countries and seminars in several more. She has students that span 24 countries. Trainers who follow her methodology can be found in some of these countries: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Russia, Poland, Czech republic, Croatia, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Spain (incl. Mallorca and canary Islands), Greece, Italy, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, England, Scotland, Korea, Japan, Taiwan", "score": "1.3676186" } ]
[ "Riethnordhausen, Thuringia\n Riethnordhausen is a municipality in the Sömmerda district of Thuringia, Germany.", "Riethnordhausen, Saxony-Anhalt\n Riethnordhausen is situated in the Rieth in the lower Helme valley, north-east of the Kyffhäuser and south-west of Sangerhausen, the capital of the Mansfeld-Südharz, from which the connecting road leads to the place, which crosses here with the road between Kelbra and Artern.", "Riethnordhausen, Saxony-Anhalt\n Riethnordhausen is a village and a former municipality in the Mansfeld-Südharz district, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 July 2009, it is part of the municipality Wallhausen.", "Rieth (Erfurt)\n The Rieth is a district in the north of the Thuringian state capital Erfurt, Germany. Rieth is a prefabricated housing estate with 5650 inhabitants (as of 31 December 2012) on an area of 0.72 km², built in 1969. Before the fall of communism, however, considerably more people lived in this district. Neighbouring districts are Hohenwinden-Sulza (industrial area) in the east, Ilversgehofen (Gründerzeit district) in the south, Berliner Platz (prefabricated housing area) in the west, Moskauer Platz (prefabricated housing area) in the northwest, Gispersleben (village) in the north and Roter Berg (prefabricated housing area) in the northeast. The district is situated on the river Gera, its centre is the Platz der Völkerfreundschaft with the shopping centre Vilnius-Passagen. The adjoining district Berliner Platz is ", "Riedenburg\n Riedenburg is a town in the district of Kelheim, in Bavaria, Germany. It is situated on the river Altmühl, 16 km northwest of Kelheim and 29 km northeast of Ingolstadt. Prunn Castle (de) is located in Riedenburg. The town is on the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal. On the evening of 5 June 2019, a Viking ship, initially said to be the Viking Var, damaged the lock of Riedenburg, on the canal. After the impact, the lock could not be properly closed. No one was injured in the accident. The repair was expected to take two to three weeks to complete. Later reports indicated the vessel involved in that incident was actually the Viking Tir. The site Vessel Tracker stated that this ship returned to Regensburg a few hours later and remained there; its records indicate that the Tir did not continue on to Budapest until 13 June.", "Riva del Garda\n🇩🇪 Bensheim, Germany ", "Riesen\n The Riesen brand successfully expanded internationally and was introduced to the United States in 1991. Today, Riesen is well established in many important European and North American markets, such as Germany, Scandinavia, the UK, the United States and Canada.", "Rieseby\n Rieseby (Risby) is a municipality in the district of Rendsburg-Eckernförde, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany.", "Rittmarshausen\n Rittmarshausen is a nucleated village in the municipality (Gemeinde) Gleichen in the district Göttingen, Germany. The village of 776 residents (as of December 31, 2005) is primarily agricultural and home of people working in Göttingen. \"Ökozentrum Rittmarshausen\" is an association dedicated to the development and marketing of regionally produced natural foods, which are marketed under the Leinehöfe label. The community also sports an athletic association, a volunteer fire department, a chorus, a gun club, and an equestrian association. The village mayor is Volker Heinemann. The village's coat of arms is a red shield with a bird sitting on the upper of two yellow horizontal bars, each with three short vertical bars (crenellations).", "Ērgļi\n🇩🇪 Kölln-Reisiek, Germany ", "Rietburg Chairlift\n The Rietburg chairlift (Rietburgbahn) is a chair lift that runs from the village of Rhodt in the Palatinate region of Germany to the ruins of the medieval castle of Rietburg. The chairlift is the county of Südliche Weinstraße in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.", "Radivoje Ristanović\n During his journeyman career, Ristanović played in Serbia (Partizan and Vojvodina), Montenegro (Lovćen), Spain (Teucro, Ademar León, and San Antonio), Qatar (Al Ahli Doha), Germany (HBW Balingen-Weilstetten), France (Chambéry), Hungary (Balatonfüredi KSE), Israel (Maccabi Rishon LeZion), and Croatia (Zagreb).", "Rieselfeld\nBahar Kızıl, member of the former pop girl group Monrose, lives in Rieselfeld. ; Käthe Vordtriede, journalist, author and Jewish émigré, was honoured in Germany for the first time when a street was named after her in this district. ", "Riesa-Großenhain\n Riesa-Großenhain was a district in the Free State of Saxony, Germany. It was bounded by (from the north and clockwise) the districts of Elbe-Elster and Oberspreewald-Lausitz in Brandenburg, Kamenz, Meißen, Döbeln and Torgau-Oschatz.", "Rieden am Forggensee\n Rieden am Forggensee is a municipality in the district of Ostallgäu in Bavaria in Germany.", "Wollmatinger Ried\n The nature reserve of Wollmatinger Ried – Untersee – Gnadensee is a protected area on the shores of Lake Constance in Germany. It has an area of 767 hectares and is the largest and most important nature reserve on the German side of Lake Constance. It is rich in plant and animal species and extends from the banks of the Seerhein river west of Constance via the causeway to the Island of Reichenau in the Untersee to the eastern Gnadensee near Allensbach-Hegne. The nearby offshore islands of Triboldingerbohl (Langenrain) and Mittler or Langbohl (Kopf) are part of the reserve.", "Ries Railway\n The Ries Railway (Riesbahn) is the current name of the line between Aalen and Donauwörth via Nördlingen. The name is derived from the Nördlinger Ries depression, and the line is operated by Deutsche Bahn (DB). The line consists of a section of the Aalen–Nördlingen railway built by the Kingdom of Württemberg as the Rems Railway and a section of the Nördlingen–Donauwörth railway built as part of the Ludwig South-North Railway by the Kingdom of Bavaria, two of the oldest lines in Germany.", "Ried im Innkreis\n Ried im Innkreis (Central Bavarian: Riad) is a town in the Austrian state of Upper Austria, approximately 70 km west of Linz and 60 km north of Salzburg. It is the capital of the district of Ried im Innkreis, and it serves as the administrative centre for the Innviertel region.", "Linux Bier Wanderung\n1999: Pottenstein, Bavaria, Germany ; 2000: Coniston, Cumbria, England ; 2001: Bouillon, Belgium ; 2002: Doolin, Ireland ; 2003: Tajov, Slovakia ; 2004: Schin op Geul, Netherlands ; 2005: Killin, Scotland ; 2006: Palūšė, Lithuania ; 2007: Hersonissos, in Heraklion Prefecture, Crete, Greece. LBW was organised by Hellenic Linux User Group, and was held on 2–9 September 2007. ; 2008: Samnaun, Switzerland (9–17 August) ; 2009: Helmbrechts, Upper Franconia, Bavaria ; 2010: Alfriston, Sussex, England ; 2011: Lanersbach (near Tux), Austria ; 2012: Diksmuide, Belgium. ; 2013: Castleton, Derbyshire in the Peak District, England. ; 2014: Talybont-on-Usk in the Brecon Beacons, Wales. ; 2015: Wiltz, Luxembourg. ; 2016: Laxey, Isle of Man ; 2017: St. Martin in Passeier, South ", "Turid Rugaas\n Rugaas has conducted workshops in 12 countries and seminars in several more. She has students that span 24 countries. Trainers who follow her methodology can be found in some of these countries: Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Russia, Poland, Czech republic, Croatia, Austria, Switzerland, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Spain (incl. Mallorca and canary Islands), Greece, Italy, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, England, Scotland, Korea, Japan, Taiwan" ]
In what country is Tervola Radio and TV-Mast?
[ "Finland", "Republic of Finland", "Finnia", "Land of Thousand Lakes", "fi", "Suomi", "Suomen tasavalta", "Republiken Finland", "🇫🇮", "FIN" ]
country
Tervola Radio and TV-Mast
5,901,293
28
[ { "id": "28555208", "title": "Tervola Radio and TV-Mast", "text": " Tervola Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Tervola, Finland. It has a height of 302 metres (991 feet).", "score": "2.1108398" }, { "id": "28555171", "title": "Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast", "text": " Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Kouvola, Finland. It has a height of 318 m.", "score": "1.6430173" }, { "id": "13683490", "title": "Tervola railway station", "text": " The Tervola railway station is located in the municipality of Tervola in Lapland, Finland. The distance to the Helsinki Central railway station is 900.5 kilometres, measured via the Haapamäki and Seinäjoki railway station. The station was taken into use when the track between Kemi and Rovaniemi was completed in 1909. All passenger trains between Kemi and Rovaniemi stop at Tervola. The station does not serve cargo traffic. The traffic control is handled remotely from the Oulu railway station. The trackyard has one drive-through side track and one loading track.", "score": "1.5883783" }, { "id": "9265227", "title": "Csávoly", "text": "165 metres tall guyed mast used for FM-/TV-broadcasting ", "score": "1.5672085" }, { "id": "8238865", "title": "Radio and TV Museum (Lahti, Finland)", "text": " Radio and TV Museum, also known as Mastola, is a museum located in Lahti, Finland. The museum is near the city centre on the Radiomäki hill (literally translated to Radio Hill). Next to the museum building are two 150-meter-high radio masts built in 1927. The masts are a well-known landmark and a symbol of the city. The museum operates in a radio station building designed by a Finnish architect Kaarlo Könönen and built in 1935. The Radio and TV Museum was opened in 1993. The museum went through an extensive renovation between the years 2014–2016 and reopened in 2017. The museum operates under the Lahti City Museum. The Radio and TV Museum collects, researches and exhibits objects related to radio and television especially in Finland. It is a national specialist museum in its field. Visitors can experience old radio and television programmes and see equipment of different eras. The museum also hosts temporary exhibitions, seminars and events.", "score": "1.5381482" }, { "id": "30743704", "title": "Portofino transmitter", "text": " Portofino transmitter is a facility for FM-/AM-/TV-broadcasting near Portofino in Italy. Portofino transmitter uses for the mediumwave transmitter, which works on 1575 kHz with 50 kWa very unusual antenna, which consists of a wire which is fixed on a rope that is spun over a distance of 590 metres between a rock anchor and a 130 metres tall lattice tower, which carries the FM-/TV-broadcasting antennas. This may be the only broadcasting transmitter in Europe, which uses a wire span over a valley as part of the antenna system. Close to the main tower, there is a second lattice tower with triangular cross section.", "score": "1.5208738" }, { "id": "318135", "title": "Kojál radio transmitter", "text": " The Transmitter Kojál (also known as Morava transmitter) is a facility for FM- and TV-transmission at Kojál Hill near Brno in the Czech Republic. Its aerial mast is a 340-metre-high guyed mast. Mast is third tallest structure in the Czech Republic. Mast was built as replacement of 324 metre tall guyed mast, built of lattice steel in 1959/60. This mast, which had a triangular cross section, was anchored in 4 levels, which were situated 63.75 metres, 135 metres, 213.75 metres and 292.5 metres above ground. In a height of 300 metres, it had a cabin with rooms for measurements. On this there was the antenna mast with antennas for FM (lower part) and TV (upper part) broadcasting.", "score": "1.515364" }, { "id": "15883693", "title": "FM- and TV-mast Kosztowy", "text": " The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy (RTCN Katowice / Kosztowy) is a 358,7 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Mysłowice - near Kosztowy, Poland. It replaced the TVP Katowice Mast which was dismantled in the 1970s. The TVP Katowice Mast which it replaced was a 225-metre-high guyed steel framework mast with a triangular cross-section near Katowice, Poland. It was not the transmission site for the medium-wave frequency 1080 kHz. This frequency is transmitted by the transmitter Koszęcin. The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland. It was inaugurated on June 23, 1976. Originally its height was 269 metres. In 1987 it was converted to its actual value.", "score": "1.5108368" }, { "id": "3995630", "title": "Dobrochov", "text": " There is a mediumwave broadcasting site in the east at the Předina hill (313 m) of a rich history. Established in the thirties for Český rozhlas Brno (Czech state broadcasting comp.) and covering most of the Moravia, seized by Nazis in 1939 and rebuilt to 100 kW for their propaganda station Donausender (due to good coverage towards south and south-east) and extended to 2x 200 kW by the communist regime in the seventies. It was mainly used for the second programme on 954 kHz (and jamming of R.F.E. mediumwave Munich transmitter),the tower is still used for Český rozhlas Dvojka (954 kHz at 200KW) and a private radio station Rádio Dechovka (1233 kHz at 5KW).", "score": "1.502897" }, { "id": "11978858", "title": "FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo", "text": " The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo (also known as Maszt RTCN Olsztyn-Pieczewo) is a 365 m tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Olsztyn-Pieczewo in Poland (Geographical Coordinates: 53.75332°N, 20.51815°W) The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo, which was built in 1969, is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast, the second tallest structure in Poland. It is called in honor of Stefan Kamiński, the initiator of TV in Olsztyn \"Stefan\".", "score": "1.4938262" }, { "id": "32894101", "title": "Tervola", "text": " Tervola is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the province of Lapland, Finland. The municipality has a population of 0 and covers an area of undefined km2 ofwhich undefined km2 is water. The population density isundefined PD/km2. Neighbour municipalities are Keminmaa, Ranua, Rovaniemi, Simo, Tornio and Ylitornio. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.", "score": "1.4938165" }, { "id": "30141842", "title": "RTL 102.5", "text": " RTL 102.5 originated in Bergamo in 1975 as Radio Trasmissioni Lombarde (\"Lombardy Radio Broadcasting\"). Lorenzo Suraci, the current president, took it over in 1988 to advertise his Capriccio discothèque in Arcene, near Bergamo. Rapidly RTL's signal was extended in the whole North of Italy. Then, Suraci tested the national isofrequency to make RTL receivable in the whole of Italy on the same frequency, 102.5 MHz. In 1990 it became one of the 14 Italian national networks. It has been the first private Italian radio station creating its own editorial structure, now directed by Luigi Tornari. The headquarters are in Cologno Monzese, in the first building in Europe created especially for radio. RTL 102.5 also has an office in Rome, in via Virginio Orsini, near the Piazza del Popolo, which houses part of the editorial staff, recording rooms and the studio from which programs like Onorevole DJ and Chi c'è c'è, chi non c'è non parla are broadcast.", "score": "1.4834466" }, { "id": "4622310", "title": "Pietrărie Transmitter", "text": " Pietrăria transmitter (Releul Pietrărie) is a 180-metre guyed mast for FM and TV broadcasting at Pietrăria, a village near Iaşi, Romania. It has a square cross section and is much thicker than most guyed masts of similar height. The dendrological park of Repedea is in the transmitter's vicinity.", "score": "1.4833953" }, { "id": "5737894", "title": "Siziano", "text": " At Siziano, there is a large mediumwave transmitter, which broadcasts Rai Radio 1 on 900 kHz with 600 kW. It is one of the most powerful transmitters in Italy and can be received in whole Europe at night time. As antenna two guyed mast radiators insulated against ground are used. They are 148 and 145 metres tall and situated at 45°19'54\"N 9°11'59\"E respectively 45°19'41\"N 9°11'50\"E.", "score": "1.4808197" }, { "id": "27897524", "title": "Veselovka TV Mast", "text": " Veselovka TV Mast ( Russian: РТПЦ Веселовка) is a 151 m tall guyed tubular steel mast for FM- and TV-transmission near Veselovka in Kaliningrad Oblast at Russia. Veselovka TV Mast was built in 1965 and is from the somewhat unusual structural type 30107 KM. It is equipped with six crossbars equipped with gangways, which run in two levels from the mast structure to the guys.", "score": "1.4765888" }, { "id": "3937717", "title": "Fm and TV Mast Chwaszczyno", "text": " The FM and TV Mast Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno (RTCN Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno) is a 317 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Chwaszczyno, Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland.", "score": "1.4750693" }, { "id": "4491803", "title": "Jemiołów Transmitter", "text": " Radio and Television Broadcasting Centre Jemiołów (RTCN Jemiołów) - is a 314 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV, and concrete tower about height 99 meters, situated at Jemiołów, Lubusz Voivodeship in Poland. This FM and TV centre which was built in years 1960-1962 from funds assembled socially. There is main broadcast station of Lubusz Voivodeship.", "score": "1.4711869" }, { "id": "28555104", "title": "Hollola TV Mast", "text": " Hollola TV Mast is a television mast in Hollola, Finland built in 1967. It has a height of 327 metres (1073 feet). It is also the tallest structure in Finland.", "score": "1.4700785" }, { "id": "347956", "title": "Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta", "text": " The radio transmitter system of Caltanissetta or Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta is a plant, now idle, for broadcast on long wave, medium and short; tipe guyed mast. The transmitter is insulated against ground. Its main element is an omnidirectional antenna 286 meters high, which holds the record for the tallest structure in Italy; it stands on a hill 689 meters above sea level; The top antenna is placed at 975 meters above sea level.", "score": "1.4682167" }, { "id": "4293982", "title": "Rai Radio 3", "text": " Rai Radio 3 (radio tre) is an Italian radio channel operated by the state-owned public-broadcasting organization RAI and specializing in culture and classical music. It is currently directed by Andrea Montanari.. Founded on 1 October 1950 as the Terzo programma, it was loosely based on its British namesake, the BBC Third Programme, which had been established in 1946. It adopted its current name in 1976.", "score": "1.4631891" } ]
[ "Tervola Radio and TV-Mast\n Tervola Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Tervola, Finland. It has a height of 302 metres (991 feet).", "Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast\n Anjalankoski Radio and TV-Mast is a mast in Kouvola, Finland. It has a height of 318 m.", "Tervola railway station\n The Tervola railway station is located in the municipality of Tervola in Lapland, Finland. The distance to the Helsinki Central railway station is 900.5 kilometres, measured via the Haapamäki and Seinäjoki railway station. The station was taken into use when the track between Kemi and Rovaniemi was completed in 1909. All passenger trains between Kemi and Rovaniemi stop at Tervola. The station does not serve cargo traffic. The traffic control is handled remotely from the Oulu railway station. The trackyard has one drive-through side track and one loading track.", "Csávoly\n165 metres tall guyed mast used for FM-/TV-broadcasting ", "Radio and TV Museum (Lahti, Finland)\n Radio and TV Museum, also known as Mastola, is a museum located in Lahti, Finland. The museum is near the city centre on the Radiomäki hill (literally translated to Radio Hill). Next to the museum building are two 150-meter-high radio masts built in 1927. The masts are a well-known landmark and a symbol of the city. The museum operates in a radio station building designed by a Finnish architect Kaarlo Könönen and built in 1935. The Radio and TV Museum was opened in 1993. The museum went through an extensive renovation between the years 2014–2016 and reopened in 2017. The museum operates under the Lahti City Museum. The Radio and TV Museum collects, researches and exhibits objects related to radio and television especially in Finland. It is a national specialist museum in its field. Visitors can experience old radio and television programmes and see equipment of different eras. The museum also hosts temporary exhibitions, seminars and events.", "Portofino transmitter\n Portofino transmitter is a facility for FM-/AM-/TV-broadcasting near Portofino in Italy. Portofino transmitter uses for the mediumwave transmitter, which works on 1575 kHz with 50 kWa very unusual antenna, which consists of a wire which is fixed on a rope that is spun over a distance of 590 metres between a rock anchor and a 130 metres tall lattice tower, which carries the FM-/TV-broadcasting antennas. This may be the only broadcasting transmitter in Europe, which uses a wire span over a valley as part of the antenna system. Close to the main tower, there is a second lattice tower with triangular cross section.", "Kojál radio transmitter\n The Transmitter Kojál (also known as Morava transmitter) is a facility for FM- and TV-transmission at Kojál Hill near Brno in the Czech Republic. Its aerial mast is a 340-metre-high guyed mast. Mast is third tallest structure in the Czech Republic. Mast was built as replacement of 324 metre tall guyed mast, built of lattice steel in 1959/60. This mast, which had a triangular cross section, was anchored in 4 levels, which were situated 63.75 metres, 135 metres, 213.75 metres and 292.5 metres above ground. In a height of 300 metres, it had a cabin with rooms for measurements. On this there was the antenna mast with antennas for FM (lower part) and TV (upper part) broadcasting.", "FM- and TV-mast Kosztowy\n The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy (RTCN Katowice / Kosztowy) is a 358,7 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Mysłowice - near Kosztowy, Poland. It replaced the TVP Katowice Mast which was dismantled in the 1970s. The TVP Katowice Mast which it replaced was a 225-metre-high guyed steel framework mast with a triangular cross-section near Katowice, Poland. It was not the transmission site for the medium-wave frequency 1080 kHz. This frequency is transmitted by the transmitter Koszęcin. The FM and TV mast Katowice / Kosztowy is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast the tallest structure in Poland. It was inaugurated on June 23, 1976. Originally its height was 269 metres. In 1987 it was converted to its actual value.", "Dobrochov\n There is a mediumwave broadcasting site in the east at the Předina hill (313 m) of a rich history. Established in the thirties for Český rozhlas Brno (Czech state broadcasting comp.) and covering most of the Moravia, seized by Nazis in 1939 and rebuilt to 100 kW for their propaganda station Donausender (due to good coverage towards south and south-east) and extended to 2x 200 kW by the communist regime in the seventies. It was mainly used for the second programme on 954 kHz (and jamming of R.F.E. mediumwave Munich transmitter),the tower is still used for Český rozhlas Dvojka (954 kHz at 200KW) and a private radio station Rádio Dechovka (1233 kHz at 5KW).", "FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo\n The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo (also known as Maszt RTCN Olsztyn-Pieczewo) is a 365 m tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Olsztyn-Pieczewo in Poland (Geographical Coordinates: 53.75332°N, 20.51815°W) The FM- and TV-mast Olsztyn-Pieczewo, which was built in 1969, is since the collapse of the Warsaw radio mast, the second tallest structure in Poland. It is called in honor of Stefan Kamiński, the initiator of TV in Olsztyn \"Stefan\".", "Tervola\n Tervola is a municipality of Finland. It is located in the province of Lapland, Finland. The municipality has a population of 0 and covers an area of undefined km2 ofwhich undefined km2 is water. The population density isundefined PD/km2. Neighbour municipalities are Keminmaa, Ranua, Rovaniemi, Simo, Tornio and Ylitornio. The municipality is unilingually Finnish.", "RTL 102.5\n RTL 102.5 originated in Bergamo in 1975 as Radio Trasmissioni Lombarde (\"Lombardy Radio Broadcasting\"). Lorenzo Suraci, the current president, took it over in 1988 to advertise his Capriccio discothèque in Arcene, near Bergamo. Rapidly RTL's signal was extended in the whole North of Italy. Then, Suraci tested the national isofrequency to make RTL receivable in the whole of Italy on the same frequency, 102.5 MHz. In 1990 it became one of the 14 Italian national networks. It has been the first private Italian radio station creating its own editorial structure, now directed by Luigi Tornari. The headquarters are in Cologno Monzese, in the first building in Europe created especially for radio. RTL 102.5 also has an office in Rome, in via Virginio Orsini, near the Piazza del Popolo, which houses part of the editorial staff, recording rooms and the studio from which programs like Onorevole DJ and Chi c'è c'è, chi non c'è non parla are broadcast.", "Pietrărie Transmitter\n Pietrăria transmitter (Releul Pietrărie) is a 180-metre guyed mast for FM and TV broadcasting at Pietrăria, a village near Iaşi, Romania. It has a square cross section and is much thicker than most guyed masts of similar height. The dendrological park of Repedea is in the transmitter's vicinity.", "Siziano\n At Siziano, there is a large mediumwave transmitter, which broadcasts Rai Radio 1 on 900 kHz with 600 kW. It is one of the most powerful transmitters in Italy and can be received in whole Europe at night time. As antenna two guyed mast radiators insulated against ground are used. They are 148 and 145 metres tall and situated at 45°19'54\"N 9°11'59\"E respectively 45°19'41\"N 9°11'50\"E.", "Veselovka TV Mast\n Veselovka TV Mast ( Russian: РТПЦ Веселовка) is a 151 m tall guyed tubular steel mast for FM- and TV-transmission near Veselovka in Kaliningrad Oblast at Russia. Veselovka TV Mast was built in 1965 and is from the somewhat unusual structural type 30107 KM. It is equipped with six crossbars equipped with gangways, which run in two levels from the mast structure to the guys.", "Fm and TV Mast Chwaszczyno\n The FM and TV Mast Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno (RTCN Gdańsk/Chwaszczyno) is a 317 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV situated at Chwaszczyno, Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland.", "Jemiołów Transmitter\n Radio and Television Broadcasting Centre Jemiołów (RTCN Jemiołów) - is a 314 metre tall guyed mast for FM and TV, and concrete tower about height 99 meters, situated at Jemiołów, Lubusz Voivodeship in Poland. This FM and TV centre which was built in years 1960-1962 from funds assembled socially. There is main broadcast station of Lubusz Voivodeship.", "Hollola TV Mast\n Hollola TV Mast is a television mast in Hollola, Finland built in 1967. It has a height of 327 metres (1073 feet). It is also the tallest structure in Finland.", "Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta\n The radio transmitter system of Caltanissetta or Antenna RAI of Caltanissetta is a plant, now idle, for broadcast on long wave, medium and short; tipe guyed mast. The transmitter is insulated against ground. Its main element is an omnidirectional antenna 286 meters high, which holds the record for the tallest structure in Italy; it stands on a hill 689 meters above sea level; The top antenna is placed at 975 meters above sea level.", "Rai Radio 3\n Rai Radio 3 (radio tre) is an Italian radio channel operated by the state-owned public-broadcasting organization RAI and specializing in culture and classical music. It is currently directed by Andrea Montanari.. Founded on 1 October 1950 as the Terzo programma, it was loosely based on its British namesake, the BBC Third Programme, which had been established in 1946. It adopted its current name in 1976." ]
In what country is Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium?
[ "Bangladesh", "bd", "🇧🇩", "BAN", "People's Republic of Bangladesh" ]
country
Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium
693,758
58
[ { "id": "13363478", "title": "Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium", "text": " Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium is located by the Narsingdi Circuit House and NKM High School & Homes in Narsingdi, Bangladesh. It is one of the biggest stadiums in the district. Now its name has changed. Its name is Saheed Musleh Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium", "score": "2.206133" }, { "id": "5740081", "title": "Mymensingh Stadium", "text": " Mymensingh stadium (also called Mymensingh Zilla Stadium), officially Rafiq Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium, is located by the side of Tangail Bus Terminal in the district of Mymensingh, Bangladesh. It is a multipurpose stadium. Cricket, football and cultural programs take place here.", "score": "1.7113025" }, { "id": "16549119", "title": "BSS Sporting Club", "text": " Sailen Manna Stadium (also known as Howrah Municipal Corporation Stadium) is a multi-use stadium in Howrah, West Bengal, India. It is mainly used for football matches and hosted some matches during the AFC Youth Championship 2006. The capacity of the stadium is 15,000 people. Howrah Rugby Crows and several football clubs use the venue for home games.", "score": "1.6588106" }, { "id": "13002977", "title": "Saif Sporting Club", "text": " Rafiq Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium, Mymensingh is the new home venue of the club from 2018–19 season. The club used Banganbandhu National Stadium as their home venue in first two seasons of their football journey.", "score": "1.637711" }, { "id": "32724705", "title": "Bangabandhu National Stadium", "text": " Bangabandhu National Stadium (বঙ্গবন্ধু জাতীয় স্টেডিয়াম), also known as Dhaka Stadium, and formerly known as Dacca Stadium, is the national stadium and a multipurpose sports arena in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is located in the Motijheel area in the heart of the city. The stadium has been renovated several times, most recently for the opening ceremony of the 2011 Cricket World Cup. It had a capacity close to 55,000 before the most recent renovation, but with a new capacity of 36,000 it is still the largest stadium in Bangladesh. Its current name was given to honour Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the father of the nation, also known as \"Bangabandhu\" or \"Friend of Bengal\". The Bangabandhu National Stadium is one of the main football venues in Dhaka, together with the 25,000 capacity Bir Shreshtha Mustafa Kamal Stadium.", "score": "1.6375097" }, { "id": "7567882", "title": "Gelora Bung Karno Stadium", "text": " GBK Stadium hosted the 2007 Asian Cup final between Iraq and Saudi Arabia and is projected to host the final match of the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup. Other competitions held there are several Tiger Cup finals and domestic cup finals.", "score": "1.623344" }, { "id": "6700170", "title": "Sailen Manna Stadium", "text": " Sailen Manna Stadium (also known as Howrah Municipal Corporation Stadium) is a multi-use stadium in Howrah, West Bengal, India. It is mainly used for football matches and hosted some matches during the AFC Youth Championship 2006. The capacity of the stadium is 15,000 people. Howrah Rugby Crows and several football clubs use the venue for home games. ", "score": "1.6150746" }, { "id": "13190012", "title": "Bir Shrestha Hamidur Rahman Stadium", "text": " The venue was the zonal host of 3rd National Football Championship from June 18- July 1 in 2003.", "score": "1.5953292" }, { "id": "15144933", "title": "Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium", "text": " The Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium commonly known by its former name, National Stadium is a field hockey stadium in New Delhi, India. The stadium is named after former Indian field hockey player, Dhyan Chand. It served as the venue for the 1st Asian Games in 1951.", "score": "1.5844662" }, { "id": "28566760", "title": "Jalan Besar Stadium", "text": " held in Singapore, the stadium was the designated venue for both the boys' and girls' football tournament. As part of the LionsXII's sponsorship by Kingsmen, a local fan club, the King George's Stand was built in 2012 using a removable stand, increasing the stadium's capacity to 8,000. On 30 October 2012, an LED scoreboard was implemented at the Gallery stand to provide better quality video to the spectators, allowing replay video highlights of the action on the field during matchdays. Two new screens were also placed at the two ends of the Grandstand, North and South, to enable better match experience for the Gallery fans. On 22 May 2013, Atlético Madrid played against a Singapore Selection side in the Peter Lim Charity Cup held at the stadium. The game ended 0–2 to the away team.", "score": "1.568011" }, { "id": "979713", "title": "Hang Jebat Stadium", "text": " The Hang Jebat Stadium (Stadium Hang Jebat) is a multi-purpose stadium with a capacity of 40,000 people in Krubong/Paya Rumput, Malacca, Malaysia. It was completed in September 2004 and named after a Malacca Sultanate Laksamana, Hang Jebat. The stadium is the home for Melaka United and is currently used mostly for football matches. In 2010, it became the main venue for the Sukma Games. Due to a war in Syria during qualification for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, the Syria national football team played many of its home matches there.", "score": "1.5530989" }, { "id": "30535938", "title": "Loftus Road", "text": " Loftus Road, known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium since 2019, is an all-seater football stadium in White City, London, England, which is home to Queens Park Rangers. In 1981, it became the first stadium in British professional football to have an artificial pitch of Omniturf installed. This remained in use until 1988, after which a natural grass pitch was reintroduced. Rugby union team London Wasps shared the ground with QPR between 1996 and 2002 and Premier League football club Fulham shared it from 2002 to 2004 while Craven Cottage was closed for reconstruction. AFC Wimbledon started the 2020–2021 season sharing the ground while they waited for their new stadium in Merton to be finished. Other users of the stadium have included the Jamaican and Australian national football teams. In 1985, Barry McGuigan defeated Eusebio Pedroza for the World Boxing Association featherweight championship at the stadium. On 7 June 2019, the club gifted the naming rights to the stadium to The Kiyan Prince Foundation, a charity set up in honour of former QPR youth player Kiyan Prince, resulting in the stadium becoming known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium.", "score": "1.544237" }, { "id": "12391091", "title": "Pakansari Stadium", "text": " Stadion Pakansari is an All-seater stadium located in Bogor Regency in the West Java province of Indonesia. It was opened in 2015. Indonesia played their 2016 AFF Championship semifinal and final matches here in Pakansari because of the renovations at GBK. It hosted the 2017 President's Cup final. It is also hosted the 2018 Asian Games men's football gold medal match and 2018 AFC U-19 Championship final. And now it is the home of Liga 1 club TIRA-Persikabo. PSM Makassar played their 2019 AFC Cup matches here in Stadion Pakansari as their permanent home.", "score": "1.5382962" }, { "id": "14089889", "title": "Saifur Rahman Stadium", "text": " Moulvibazar District Stadium, also known as Saifur Rahman Stadium (সাইফুর রহমান স্টেডিয়াম), is a multi-use stadium in Moulvibazar, Bangladesh. It is currently used mostly for cricket and association football matches and is named after former Finance Minister Saifur Rahman. Horse racing is also a common sport held in the stadium as well. The stadium has a capacity of 20,000 people. It was built in 2001 and it opened in 2005. The complex also contains an indoor stadium, gallery, VIP gallery, dressing room, bathroom and a collapsible gate. The indoor stadium, known as Sheikh Russel Indoor Stadium was funded by Olila Group, opened on 21 September 2018 and is predominantly used for kabaddi and badminton.", "score": "1.5376853" }, { "id": "27242447", "title": "List of stadiums in Asia", "text": " • Abu Bakrin Stadium, Magelang • Ahmad Yani Stadium, Sumenep • Aji Imbut Stadium, Kutai Kartanegara • Andi Mattalatta Stadium, Makassar • Batakan Stadium, Balikpapan • Bhumi Pala Stadium, Temanggung • Brawijaya Stadium, Kediri • Bumi Sriwijaya Stadium, Palembang • Deli Stadium, Deli Serdang • Diponegoro University Stadium, Semarang • Gelora Delta Stadium, Sidoarjo • Gajayana Stadium, Malang • Gelora 10 November Stadium, Surabaya • Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta • Gelora Bung Karno Madya Stadium, Jakarta • Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium, Surabaya • Gelora Bandung Lautan Api Stadium, Bandung • Gelora Samudra Stadium, Badung • Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium, Palembang • Gelora Tangerang Ayo Stadium, Tangerang • Gelora Bumi Kartini Stadium, Jepara • Hoegeng Stadium, Pekalongan • Indomilk Arena, Tangerang • Jakabaring Athletic Stadium, Palembang • Jakarta International Stadium, Jakarta ", "score": "1.5359445" }, { "id": "30285925", "title": "People's Football Stadium", "text": " The stadium was built in 1988, and opened on 9 December 1995. It covers an area of 10 acre. In 1999, when Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto came into power, new floodlights imported from France worth PKR 30.7 million were installed, to enable evening matches to take place. The Pakistan national football team moved to the Peoples Football Stadium from the Railway Stadium in Lahore.", "score": "1.5351305" }, { "id": "27242450", "title": "List of stadiums in Asia", "text": " • Batu Kawan Stadium, Penang • Bukit Jalil Stadium, Kuala Lumpur • City Stadium, Penang • Darulaman Stadium, Alor Star • Darulmakmur Stadium, Kuantan • DBI Sports Complex, Ipoh • Hang Jebat Stadium, Melaka • Hang Tuah Stadium, Melaka • Langkawi Stadium, Langkawi • Likas Stadium, Kota Kinabalu • Merdeka Stadium, Kuala Lumpur • Perak Stadium, Perak • Sarawak Stadium, Kuching • Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam • Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin Stadium, Kuala Terengganu • Sultan Mohammad IV Stadium, Kota Bharu • Tan Sri Hassan Yunus Stadium, Johor Bahru • Tuanku Abdul Rahman Stadium, Seremban • Utama Stadium, Kangar • Sultan Ibrahim Stadium, Iskandar Puteri", "score": "1.5311708" }, { "id": "30083989", "title": "Kelantan F.C.", "text": " Sultan Muhammad IV Stadium is the oldest football field in Malaysia and probably the oldest in Asia continent based on the use of field. The stadium was built in 1967 and initially aims to provide a venue for sports activities from Kelantan, especially as a football pitch. The stadium was built in an area of 13 acres at a cost of RM 1.5 million, was built in stages. It was built on the site of a football field of Kelantan Football Association and located in the heart of Kota Bharu town center. The stadium initially managed by the Association of Kelantan Stadium, which is chaired by the Menteri Besar of the state of Kelantan and comprises a total of 30 members made up of government employees as well as representatives of sports associations. The stadium is usually full by 30,000 spectators especially during the Malaysia FA Cup and the Malaysia Cup matches.", "score": "1.528792" }, { "id": "32724711", "title": "Bangabandhu National Stadium", "text": " Currently, the stadium is used by the Bangladesh national football team and also for athletics. The total seating capacity is about 36,000. The stadium is currently going through a renovation process, as BFF plans to organize both Bangladesh Football League and future football related events on the ground. The stadium is located next to National Hockey Stadium. The stadium was used for competitions of the 2010 South Asian Games, including football and athletics.", "score": "1.5276217" }, { "id": "27809798", "title": "Milliy Stadium", "text": " March 26, 2013 in the match between the national teams of Uzbekistan and Lebanon as part of the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification, in which the national team of Uzbekistan won with a score of 1:0. Subsequently, the Bunyodkor Stadium became the main home stadium for the Uzbekistan national team. Prior to this, the main home stadium of the national team of the country was another Tashkent stadium — Pakhtakor Stadium. On June 11, 2018 by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Uzbekistan Football Association, the name was changed to \"Milliy Stadium\" (National Stadium). The stadium is located in the Chilanzar District of the city of Tashkent, ", "score": "1.5255578" } ]
[ "Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium\n Abdul Mannan Bhuiyan Stadium is located by the Narsingdi Circuit House and NKM High School & Homes in Narsingdi, Bangladesh. It is one of the biggest stadiums in the district. Now its name has changed. Its name is Saheed Musleh Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium", "Mymensingh Stadium\n Mymensingh stadium (also called Mymensingh Zilla Stadium), officially Rafiq Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium, is located by the side of Tangail Bus Terminal in the district of Mymensingh, Bangladesh. It is a multipurpose stadium. Cricket, football and cultural programs take place here.", "BSS Sporting Club\n Sailen Manna Stadium (also known as Howrah Municipal Corporation Stadium) is a multi-use stadium in Howrah, West Bengal, India. It is mainly used for football matches and hosted some matches during the AFC Youth Championship 2006. The capacity of the stadium is 15,000 people. Howrah Rugby Crows and several football clubs use the venue for home games.", "Saif Sporting Club\n Rafiq Uddin Bhuiyan Stadium, Mymensingh is the new home venue of the club from 2018–19 season. The club used Banganbandhu National Stadium as their home venue in first two seasons of their football journey.", "Bangabandhu National Stadium\n Bangabandhu National Stadium (বঙ্গবন্ধু জাতীয় স্টেডিয়াম), also known as Dhaka Stadium, and formerly known as Dacca Stadium, is the national stadium and a multipurpose sports arena in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is located in the Motijheel area in the heart of the city. The stadium has been renovated several times, most recently for the opening ceremony of the 2011 Cricket World Cup. It had a capacity close to 55,000 before the most recent renovation, but with a new capacity of 36,000 it is still the largest stadium in Bangladesh. Its current name was given to honour Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the father of the nation, also known as \"Bangabandhu\" or \"Friend of Bengal\". The Bangabandhu National Stadium is one of the main football venues in Dhaka, together with the 25,000 capacity Bir Shreshtha Mustafa Kamal Stadium.", "Gelora Bung Karno Stadium\n GBK Stadium hosted the 2007 Asian Cup final between Iraq and Saudi Arabia and is projected to host the final match of the 2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup. Other competitions held there are several Tiger Cup finals and domestic cup finals.", "Sailen Manna Stadium\n Sailen Manna Stadium (also known as Howrah Municipal Corporation Stadium) is a multi-use stadium in Howrah, West Bengal, India. It is mainly used for football matches and hosted some matches during the AFC Youth Championship 2006. The capacity of the stadium is 15,000 people. Howrah Rugby Crows and several football clubs use the venue for home games. ", "Bir Shrestha Hamidur Rahman Stadium\n The venue was the zonal host of 3rd National Football Championship from June 18- July 1 in 2003.", "Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium\n The Major Dhyan Chand National Stadium commonly known by its former name, National Stadium is a field hockey stadium in New Delhi, India. The stadium is named after former Indian field hockey player, Dhyan Chand. It served as the venue for the 1st Asian Games in 1951.", "Jalan Besar Stadium\n held in Singapore, the stadium was the designated venue for both the boys' and girls' football tournament. As part of the LionsXII's sponsorship by Kingsmen, a local fan club, the King George's Stand was built in 2012 using a removable stand, increasing the stadium's capacity to 8,000. On 30 October 2012, an LED scoreboard was implemented at the Gallery stand to provide better quality video to the spectators, allowing replay video highlights of the action on the field during matchdays. Two new screens were also placed at the two ends of the Grandstand, North and South, to enable better match experience for the Gallery fans. On 22 May 2013, Atlético Madrid played against a Singapore Selection side in the Peter Lim Charity Cup held at the stadium. The game ended 0–2 to the away team.", "Hang Jebat Stadium\n The Hang Jebat Stadium (Stadium Hang Jebat) is a multi-purpose stadium with a capacity of 40,000 people in Krubong/Paya Rumput, Malacca, Malaysia. It was completed in September 2004 and named after a Malacca Sultanate Laksamana, Hang Jebat. The stadium is the home for Melaka United and is currently used mostly for football matches. In 2010, it became the main venue for the Sukma Games. Due to a war in Syria during qualification for the 2018 FIFA World Cup, the Syria national football team played many of its home matches there.", "Loftus Road\n Loftus Road, known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium since 2019, is an all-seater football stadium in White City, London, England, which is home to Queens Park Rangers. In 1981, it became the first stadium in British professional football to have an artificial pitch of Omniturf installed. This remained in use until 1988, after which a natural grass pitch was reintroduced. Rugby union team London Wasps shared the ground with QPR between 1996 and 2002 and Premier League football club Fulham shared it from 2002 to 2004 while Craven Cottage was closed for reconstruction. AFC Wimbledon started the 2020–2021 season sharing the ground while they waited for their new stadium in Merton to be finished. Other users of the stadium have included the Jamaican and Australian national football teams. In 1985, Barry McGuigan defeated Eusebio Pedroza for the World Boxing Association featherweight championship at the stadium. On 7 June 2019, the club gifted the naming rights to the stadium to The Kiyan Prince Foundation, a charity set up in honour of former QPR youth player Kiyan Prince, resulting in the stadium becoming known as the Kiyan Prince Foundation Stadium.", "Pakansari Stadium\n Stadion Pakansari is an All-seater stadium located in Bogor Regency in the West Java province of Indonesia. It was opened in 2015. Indonesia played their 2016 AFF Championship semifinal and final matches here in Pakansari because of the renovations at GBK. It hosted the 2017 President's Cup final. It is also hosted the 2018 Asian Games men's football gold medal match and 2018 AFC U-19 Championship final. And now it is the home of Liga 1 club TIRA-Persikabo. PSM Makassar played their 2019 AFC Cup matches here in Stadion Pakansari as their permanent home.", "Saifur Rahman Stadium\n Moulvibazar District Stadium, also known as Saifur Rahman Stadium (সাইফুর রহমান স্টেডিয়াম), is a multi-use stadium in Moulvibazar, Bangladesh. It is currently used mostly for cricket and association football matches and is named after former Finance Minister Saifur Rahman. Horse racing is also a common sport held in the stadium as well. The stadium has a capacity of 20,000 people. It was built in 2001 and it opened in 2005. The complex also contains an indoor stadium, gallery, VIP gallery, dressing room, bathroom and a collapsible gate. The indoor stadium, known as Sheikh Russel Indoor Stadium was funded by Olila Group, opened on 21 September 2018 and is predominantly used for kabaddi and badminton.", "List of stadiums in Asia\n • Abu Bakrin Stadium, Magelang • Ahmad Yani Stadium, Sumenep • Aji Imbut Stadium, Kutai Kartanegara • Andi Mattalatta Stadium, Makassar • Batakan Stadium, Balikpapan • Bhumi Pala Stadium, Temanggung • Brawijaya Stadium, Kediri • Bumi Sriwijaya Stadium, Palembang • Deli Stadium, Deli Serdang • Diponegoro University Stadium, Semarang • Gelora Delta Stadium, Sidoarjo • Gajayana Stadium, Malang • Gelora 10 November Stadium, Surabaya • Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta • Gelora Bung Karno Madya Stadium, Jakarta • Gelora Bung Tomo Stadium, Surabaya • Gelora Bandung Lautan Api Stadium, Bandung • Gelora Samudra Stadium, Badung • Gelora Sriwijaya Stadium, Palembang • Gelora Tangerang Ayo Stadium, Tangerang • Gelora Bumi Kartini Stadium, Jepara • Hoegeng Stadium, Pekalongan • Indomilk Arena, Tangerang • Jakabaring Athletic Stadium, Palembang • Jakarta International Stadium, Jakarta ", "People's Football Stadium\n The stadium was built in 1988, and opened on 9 December 1995. It covers an area of 10 acre. In 1999, when Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto came into power, new floodlights imported from France worth PKR 30.7 million were installed, to enable evening matches to take place. The Pakistan national football team moved to the Peoples Football Stadium from the Railway Stadium in Lahore.", "List of stadiums in Asia\n • Batu Kawan Stadium, Penang • Bukit Jalil Stadium, Kuala Lumpur • City Stadium, Penang • Darulaman Stadium, Alor Star • Darulmakmur Stadium, Kuantan • DBI Sports Complex, Ipoh • Hang Jebat Stadium, Melaka • Hang Tuah Stadium, Melaka • Langkawi Stadium, Langkawi • Likas Stadium, Kota Kinabalu • Merdeka Stadium, Kuala Lumpur • Perak Stadium, Perak • Sarawak Stadium, Kuching • Shah Alam Stadium, Shah Alam • Sultan Mizan Zainal Abidin Stadium, Kuala Terengganu • Sultan Mohammad IV Stadium, Kota Bharu • Tan Sri Hassan Yunus Stadium, Johor Bahru • Tuanku Abdul Rahman Stadium, Seremban • Utama Stadium, Kangar • Sultan Ibrahim Stadium, Iskandar Puteri", "Kelantan F.C.\n Sultan Muhammad IV Stadium is the oldest football field in Malaysia and probably the oldest in Asia continent based on the use of field. The stadium was built in 1967 and initially aims to provide a venue for sports activities from Kelantan, especially as a football pitch. The stadium was built in an area of 13 acres at a cost of RM 1.5 million, was built in stages. It was built on the site of a football field of Kelantan Football Association and located in the heart of Kota Bharu town center. The stadium initially managed by the Association of Kelantan Stadium, which is chaired by the Menteri Besar of the state of Kelantan and comprises a total of 30 members made up of government employees as well as representatives of sports associations. The stadium is usually full by 30,000 spectators especially during the Malaysia FA Cup and the Malaysia Cup matches.", "Bangabandhu National Stadium\n Currently, the stadium is used by the Bangladesh national football team and also for athletics. The total seating capacity is about 36,000. The stadium is currently going through a renovation process, as BFF plans to organize both Bangladesh Football League and future football related events on the ground. The stadium is located next to National Hockey Stadium. The stadium was used for competitions of the 2010 South Asian Games, including football and athletics.", "Milliy Stadium\n March 26, 2013 in the match between the national teams of Uzbekistan and Lebanon as part of the 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification, in which the national team of Uzbekistan won with a score of 1:0. Subsequently, the Bunyodkor Stadium became the main home stadium for the Uzbekistan national team. Prior to this, the main home stadium of the national team of the country was another Tashkent stadium — Pakhtakor Stadium. On June 11, 2018 by the decision of the Executive Committee of the Uzbekistan Football Association, the name was changed to \"Milliy Stadium\" (National Stadium). The stadium is located in the Chilanzar District of the city of Tashkent, " ]
In what country is Alu?
[ "Estonia", "Republic of Estonia", "Estland", "Eesti", "ee", "EST", "🇪🇪" ]
country
Alu, Pärnu County
1,596,354
44
[ { "id": "10277343", "title": "Abraham Lincoln University", "text": " Abraham Lincoln University (ALU) is a private, for-profit online university based in Glendale, California.", "score": "1.4602879" }, { "id": "29506124", "title": "Alu, Estonia", "text": " Alu is a small borough (alevik) in Rapla Parish, Rapla County, Estonia. It's located about 3 km northwest of the town of Rapla. Alu has a population of c. 950. Alu was first mentioned in 1241 as Alafæ village in the Danish Census Book.", "score": "1.4553866" }, { "id": "6033875", "title": "Aluva", "text": " Many educational institutions are located in Aluva.", "score": "1.4185661" }, { "id": "213207", "title": "Al-Ahliyya Amman University", "text": " Al-Ahliyya Amman University (AAU) (or Amman University, or Amman Private University) is located in Amman, Jordan. Founded in 1990, it was the first private university in Jordan. The university is accredited by the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Jordan, and is a member of four university associations. AAU have students from across 30 plus countries across the world.", "score": "1.4087104" }, { "id": "29346400", "title": "Alu, Pärnu County", "text": " Alu is a village in Tõstamaa Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia. It has a population of 18 (as of 1 January 2011).", "score": "1.4060314" }, { "id": "5674086", "title": "Al-Falah University", "text": " Al-Falah University (AFU) is a private university located in Faridabad, Haryana, India. The university was established in 2014 by the Al-Falah Charitable Trust through The Haryana Private Universities (Amendment) Act, 2014 which also established Ashoka University and BML Munjal University. Like all universities in India, AFU is recognised by the University Grants Commission (UGC).", "score": "1.40325" }, { "id": "2162108", "title": "American University of Bahrain", "text": " The American University of Bahrain (الجامعة الأمريكية بالبحرين, abbreviated AUBH) is a private university situated in Riffa, Bahrain. Opened in September 2019 and licensed by the Higher Education Council of Bahrain, it is the first purpose-built American-style university in the country. The university is governed by a board of trustees.", "score": "1.4025232" }, { "id": "3498830", "title": "Alu (Ethiopia)", "text": " Alu is a system of volcanic fissures, located in Ethiopia. The fissures have produced silicic lava flows, and other fissures south of the volcano have been the source of huge youthful basaltic lava flows, which enlarge to the north as far as Lake Bakili. There is major fumarolic activity, located on parallel faults, some with 100-m uplifts. Alu, Erta Ale, Tat Ali and other Ethiopian Highlands are together known as the Danakil Alps.", "score": "1.3958558" }, { "id": "14505519", "title": "Alu, Mazandaran", "text": " Alu (, also Romanized as Alū, Allū, and ‘Alū) is a village in Dabuy-ye Jonubi Rural District, Dabudasht District, Amol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 420, in 99 families.", "score": "1.3910539" }, { "id": "2314832", "title": "African Leadership University", "text": " African Leadership University or ALU is a network of tertiary institutions with operations in both Mauritius and Rwanda with a bachelor's degree. ALU aims to develop 3 million ethical and entrepreneurial leaders for Africa and the world by 2035. It uses a personalized, student-driven, project-based, and mission-oriented approach to create agile, lifelong learners who can adapt to a changing world. Its mission is to build 25 campuses across the continent and produce 3 million young African leaders over the next 50 years, by equipping students with relevant skills that match the evolving world. ALU's first campus was launched in September 2015 in Mauritius and is known as the African Leadership College. Its second campus was launched in September 2017 in Kigali, Rwanda.", "score": "1.3902035" }, { "id": "32692859", "title": "Al-Hussein Bin Talal University", "text": " Al-Hussein Bin Talal University (AHU) (Arabic جامعة الحسين بن طلال) is a public coeducational university located in the heart of the southern region, 210 km from the Capital Amman.about 9 km to the northwest of Ma'an city in the southern region of Jordan. It was established by a Royal Decree on April 28, 1999. AHU is a comprehensive public university in a self-contained campus, and has student population representing nearly every Governorate in Jordan. over the past years, AHU has grown to eight colleges offering bachelor's degree programs in natural and environmental sciences, business, nursing, education, humanities, IT and engineering; and two Deanships, the Deanship of Student Affairs and the Deanship of Scientific Research. AHU has nine scientific centers that are heavily engaged in research and development projects to serve local and national communities.", "score": "1.383178" }, { "id": "5968973", "title": "Anglo-American University", "text": " Anglo-American University (AAU) is a private university in Prague, Czech Republic, providing courses in English. Founded in 1990, it was the first private university in the country to use English as the language of instruction.", "score": "1.3594664" }, { "id": "780645", "title": "Washington Nationals minor league players", "text": " Jake Alu (born April 6, 1997) is an American professional baseball Infielder in the Washington Nationals organization. Alu was born and raised in Hamilton Square, New Jersey, a community located within Hamilton Township, Mercer County, New Jersey. Alu attended Princeton Day School in Princeton, New Jersey. In 2015, Alu enrolled as a business major in the Carroll School of Management at Boston College. He graduated in 2019 with a degree in Business Management. While still a senior at Princeton Day School in 2015, Alu registered .523 batting average with 3 home runs and 18 RBIs. He recorded recording his 100th hit on April 28, 2015. In 2016, as a freshman at Boston College, Alu appeared in 10 games with .500 batting average, entering as a pinch runner eight times and a pinch hitter twice. As a sophomore in 2017, ", "score": "1.3593123" }, { "id": "7818224", "title": "ALHOSN University", "text": " ALHOSN University is an educational institution founded in 2005 and located in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates. It is a segregated University with separate campuses for Male and Female Students. The Abu Dhabi-based university is accredited by the UAE Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. ALHOSN University offers 18 undergraduate and 11 postgraduate degrees under three faculties, Business, Engineering and Arts and Social Science. The University offers programs in the fields of Engineering (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, (ABET) accredited) Business (Association of Certified Chartered Accountants (ACCA) accredited) and Education. Undergraduate academic degrees are offered as four-year programs and taught in English, all except for the Arabic education component. ALHOSN University is a member of the Arab Association of Universities. The University’s City Campus is located in Abu Dhabi and has students from 41 different nationalities and Faculty and Staff hailing from 33 different countries.", "score": "1.3588486" }, { "id": "9941532", "title": "American Liberty University", "text": " American Liberty University (A.L.U.) was founded in 1999 in Orange County, California By Dr. Liu PhD, CCTV, AV, STD. It was founded with its main mission to give a PhD for everyone. American Liberty University is an educational institution in California. American Liberty University (ALU) is approved by the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education (BPPE; not an accrediting agency) since 2004. Previously ALU was accredited by the BPPVE, which restructured in 2009-2010 as the BPPE. ALU is also accredited in the United Kingdom by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools (ACICS). ACICS is a national accrediting agency recognized by the US Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA), but whose recognition by the United States Department of Education was revoked in 2016. ALU runs courses in Business Administration (BBA, MBA, Ph.D.) and Oriental Medicine (Traditional Chinese Medicine).", "score": "1.3555651" }, { "id": "7574932", "title": "Al-Zahra University", "text": " Alzahra University is a member of the International Association of Universities (IAU) and the Federation of Universities of the Islamic World (FUIW), and has established close ties and signed more than 45 Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) for academic-research collaborations with accredited universities and research centers worldwide from a variety of countries, such as Pakistan, Iraq, Germany, Uganda, France, Russia, India, Kyrgyzstan, China, the Philippines, Indonesia, Syria, Libya, Belarus, among others.", "score": "1.351026" }, { "id": "29506125", "title": "Alu, Estonia", "text": " Alu Manor was first mentioned in 1409 as Alven (later known as Allo). The present main building, designed by, is one of the best examples of Neo-Gothic style in Estonia. The building is surrounded by an 11 ha park with seven ponds. After the dispossession from 1923 to 1955 a local grammar school operated in the main building. Since 1999 it houses a training centre for the Estonian Defence League.", "score": "1.349607" }, { "id": "11673012", "title": "Applied Science University (Bahrain)", "text": " The Applied Science University (ASU, جامعة العلوم التطبيقية) is a university in Al Ekir, south of Manama within the Kingdom of Bahrain. Founded by Bahraini academic Waheeb Al-Khaja, ASU was licensed by the Ministry of Education in 2004. Gulf Education Project W.L.L. Company, based in Bahrain, owns the university. It was one of the first private universities in Bahrain to teach in both the Arabic and the English languages. ASU publishes an open access, peer reviewed journal on risk management called Applied Science Journal under the auspices of the Institute of Risk Management.", "score": "1.3475616" }, { "id": "13200194", "title": "Ajloun National Private University", "text": " Ajloun National University (ANU) is located in Ajloun, Jordan. Founded in 2008.", "score": "1.347021" }, { "id": "9540517", "title": "Arab Open University", "text": " The Arab Open University (AOU) is a non-profit university. The inception of AOU is a personal initiative by Prince Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the Chairman of the AOU Board of Trustees. In December 2000, Kuwait was designated to host the Headquarters of AOU. The AOU first phase was launched in October 2002 in three branches: Kuwait, Lebanon and Jordan. Branches in Bahrain, Egypt and Saudi Arabia were opened in 2003. Branches were opened in Oman in February 2008 and in Sudan in September 2013. In May 2015, AOU signed an agreement of opening a new branch in Palestine with the Palestinian Ministry of Higher Education. However, in the state of Qatar the ministry of foreign affairs and the ministry of education and higher education refuse attesting the degree of AOU and the university is not accredited.", "score": "1.3370128" } ]
[ "Abraham Lincoln University\n Abraham Lincoln University (ALU) is a private, for-profit online university based in Glendale, California.", "Alu, Estonia\n Alu is a small borough (alevik) in Rapla Parish, Rapla County, Estonia. It's located about 3 km northwest of the town of Rapla. Alu has a population of c. 950. Alu was first mentioned in 1241 as Alafæ village in the Danish Census Book.", "Aluva\n Many educational institutions are located in Aluva.", "Al-Ahliyya Amman University\n Al-Ahliyya Amman University (AAU) (or Amman University, or Amman Private University) is located in Amman, Jordan. Founded in 1990, it was the first private university in Jordan. The university is accredited by the Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Jordan, and is a member of four university associations. AAU have students from across 30 plus countries across the world.", "Alu, Pärnu County\n Alu is a village in Tõstamaa Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia. It has a population of 18 (as of 1 January 2011).", "Al-Falah University\n Al-Falah University (AFU) is a private university located in Faridabad, Haryana, India. The university was established in 2014 by the Al-Falah Charitable Trust through The Haryana Private Universities (Amendment) Act, 2014 which also established Ashoka University and BML Munjal University. Like all universities in India, AFU is recognised by the University Grants Commission (UGC).", "American University of Bahrain\n The American University of Bahrain (الجامعة الأمريكية بالبحرين, abbreviated AUBH) is a private university situated in Riffa, Bahrain. Opened in September 2019 and licensed by the Higher Education Council of Bahrain, it is the first purpose-built American-style university in the country. The university is governed by a board of trustees.", "Alu (Ethiopia)\n Alu is a system of volcanic fissures, located in Ethiopia. The fissures have produced silicic lava flows, and other fissures south of the volcano have been the source of huge youthful basaltic lava flows, which enlarge to the north as far as Lake Bakili. There is major fumarolic activity, located on parallel faults, some with 100-m uplifts. Alu, Erta Ale, Tat Ali and other Ethiopian Highlands are together known as the Danakil Alps.", "Alu, Mazandaran\n Alu (, also Romanized as Alū, Allū, and ‘Alū) is a village in Dabuy-ye Jonubi Rural District, Dabudasht District, Amol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 420, in 99 families.", "African Leadership University\n African Leadership University or ALU is a network of tertiary institutions with operations in both Mauritius and Rwanda with a bachelor's degree. ALU aims to develop 3 million ethical and entrepreneurial leaders for Africa and the world by 2035. It uses a personalized, student-driven, project-based, and mission-oriented approach to create agile, lifelong learners who can adapt to a changing world. Its mission is to build 25 campuses across the continent and produce 3 million young African leaders over the next 50 years, by equipping students with relevant skills that match the evolving world. ALU's first campus was launched in September 2015 in Mauritius and is known as the African Leadership College. Its second campus was launched in September 2017 in Kigali, Rwanda.", "Al-Hussein Bin Talal University\n Al-Hussein Bin Talal University (AHU) (Arabic جامعة الحسين بن طلال) is a public coeducational university located in the heart of the southern region, 210 km from the Capital Amman.about 9 km to the northwest of Ma'an city in the southern region of Jordan. It was established by a Royal Decree on April 28, 1999. AHU is a comprehensive public university in a self-contained campus, and has student population representing nearly every Governorate in Jordan. over the past years, AHU has grown to eight colleges offering bachelor's degree programs in natural and environmental sciences, business, nursing, education, humanities, IT and engineering; and two Deanships, the Deanship of Student Affairs and the Deanship of Scientific Research. AHU has nine scientific centers that are heavily engaged in research and development projects to serve local and national communities.", "Anglo-American University\n Anglo-American University (AAU) is a private university in Prague, Czech Republic, providing courses in English. Founded in 1990, it was the first private university in the country to use English as the language of instruction.", "Washington Nationals minor league players\n Jake Alu (born April 6, 1997) is an American professional baseball Infielder in the Washington Nationals organization. Alu was born and raised in Hamilton Square, New Jersey, a community located within Hamilton Township, Mercer County, New Jersey. Alu attended Princeton Day School in Princeton, New Jersey. In 2015, Alu enrolled as a business major in the Carroll School of Management at Boston College. He graduated in 2019 with a degree in Business Management. While still a senior at Princeton Day School in 2015, Alu registered .523 batting average with 3 home runs and 18 RBIs. He recorded recording his 100th hit on April 28, 2015. In 2016, as a freshman at Boston College, Alu appeared in 10 games with .500 batting average, entering as a pinch runner eight times and a pinch hitter twice. As a sophomore in 2017, ", "ALHOSN University\n ALHOSN University is an educational institution founded in 2005 and located in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of the United Arab Emirates. It is a segregated University with separate campuses for Male and Female Students. The Abu Dhabi-based university is accredited by the UAE Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. ALHOSN University offers 18 undergraduate and 11 postgraduate degrees under three faculties, Business, Engineering and Arts and Social Science. The University offers programs in the fields of Engineering (Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology, (ABET) accredited) Business (Association of Certified Chartered Accountants (ACCA) accredited) and Education. Undergraduate academic degrees are offered as four-year programs and taught in English, all except for the Arabic education component. ALHOSN University is a member of the Arab Association of Universities. The University’s City Campus is located in Abu Dhabi and has students from 41 different nationalities and Faculty and Staff hailing from 33 different countries.", "American Liberty University\n American Liberty University (A.L.U.) was founded in 1999 in Orange County, California By Dr. Liu PhD, CCTV, AV, STD. It was founded with its main mission to give a PhD for everyone. American Liberty University is an educational institution in California. American Liberty University (ALU) is approved by the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education (BPPE; not an accrediting agency) since 2004. Previously ALU was accredited by the BPPVE, which restructured in 2009-2010 as the BPPE. ALU is also accredited in the United Kingdom by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools (ACICS). ACICS is a national accrediting agency recognized by the US Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA), but whose recognition by the United States Department of Education was revoked in 2016. ALU runs courses in Business Administration (BBA, MBA, Ph.D.) and Oriental Medicine (Traditional Chinese Medicine).", "Al-Zahra University\n Alzahra University is a member of the International Association of Universities (IAU) and the Federation of Universities of the Islamic World (FUIW), and has established close ties and signed more than 45 Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) for academic-research collaborations with accredited universities and research centers worldwide from a variety of countries, such as Pakistan, Iraq, Germany, Uganda, France, Russia, India, Kyrgyzstan, China, the Philippines, Indonesia, Syria, Libya, Belarus, among others.", "Alu, Estonia\n Alu Manor was first mentioned in 1409 as Alven (later known as Allo). The present main building, designed by, is one of the best examples of Neo-Gothic style in Estonia. The building is surrounded by an 11 ha park with seven ponds. After the dispossession from 1923 to 1955 a local grammar school operated in the main building. Since 1999 it houses a training centre for the Estonian Defence League.", "Applied Science University (Bahrain)\n The Applied Science University (ASU, جامعة العلوم التطبيقية) is a university in Al Ekir, south of Manama within the Kingdom of Bahrain. Founded by Bahraini academic Waheeb Al-Khaja, ASU was licensed by the Ministry of Education in 2004. Gulf Education Project W.L.L. Company, based in Bahrain, owns the university. It was one of the first private universities in Bahrain to teach in both the Arabic and the English languages. ASU publishes an open access, peer reviewed journal on risk management called Applied Science Journal under the auspices of the Institute of Risk Management.", "Ajloun National Private University\n Ajloun National University (ANU) is located in Ajloun, Jordan. Founded in 2008.", "Arab Open University\n The Arab Open University (AOU) is a non-profit university. The inception of AOU is a personal initiative by Prince Talal bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the Chairman of the AOU Board of Trustees. In December 2000, Kuwait was designated to host the Headquarters of AOU. The AOU first phase was launched in October 2002 in three branches: Kuwait, Lebanon and Jordan. Branches in Bahrain, Egypt and Saudi Arabia were opened in 2003. Branches were opened in Oman in February 2008 and in Sudan in September 2013. In May 2015, AOU signed an agreement of opening a new branch in Palestine with the Palestinian Ministry of Higher Education. However, in the state of Qatar the ministry of foreign affairs and the ministry of education and higher education refuse attesting the degree of AOU and the university is not accredited." ]
In what country is Chotýčany?
[ "Czech Republic", "CZR", "cz", "Česko", "Česká republika", "ČR", "cze", "CZE", "Czechia" ]
country
Chotýčany
5,962,937
44
[ { "id": "15160370", "title": "Chotýčany", "text": " Chotýčany (Schmiedgraben) is a village and municipality (obec) in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 5.19 km2, and has a population of 207 (as at 31 December 2007). Chotýčany lies approximately 11 km north of České Budějovice and 114 km south of Prague.", "score": "1.7336912" }, { "id": "29165650", "title": "Chotýšany", "text": " Chotýšany is a municipality and village in Benešov District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 600 inhabitants.", "score": "1.5521691" }, { "id": "32794787", "title": "Choča", "text": " The population is roughly 99% Slovak.", "score": "1.4485018" }, { "id": "13313544", "title": "Chotylub", "text": " Chotylub (Хотилюб, Khotyliub) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Cieszanów, within Lubaczów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km east of Cieszanów, 14 km north-east of Lubaczów, and 93 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 530.", "score": "1.4359124" }, { "id": "14290074", "title": "Chomle", "text": " Chomle is a village and municipality (obec) in Rokycany District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 2.24 km2, and has a population of 70 (as at 28 August 2006). Chomle lies approximately 14 km north of Rokycany, 23 km north-east of Plzeň, and 62 km south-west of Prague.", "score": "1.427983" }, { "id": "3229108", "title": "Chotěboř", "text": " Chotěboř (Chotieborsch) is a town in Havlíčkův Brod District in the Vysočina Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 9,100 inhabitants. The historic town centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument zone.", "score": "1.4138825" }, { "id": "26125345", "title": "Chotěbuz", "text": " Chotěbuz lies on the border with Poland, on the left bank of the Olza River, in the historical region of Cieszyn Silesia. There is a border crossing with Poland in the municipality, one of the largest in the country and the largest between the Czech Republic and Poland. It is connected with the Polish one by the long bridge built in 1991 running along the Olza River.", "score": "1.4011488" }, { "id": "29928381", "title": "Chlumčany (Louny District)", "text": " Chlumčany (Klumtschan) is a village in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has around 480 inhabitants. Village Vlčí is administrative part of Chlumčany.", "score": "1.40032" }, { "id": "1025936", "title": "Rokycany", "text": "🇩🇪 Greiz, Germany ; 🇩🇪 Pfinztal, Germany Rokycany is twinned with:", "score": "1.4000111" }, { "id": "13693028", "title": "Chomiąża, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " The present-day Polish village Chomiąża and the present-day Czech village Chomyž, directly across the Czech side of the border, were once a single village. After the Silesian Wars, the newly-drawn border divided the village in two. The division continued through the Communist era of 1945–1990, and the border was not easily crossed until the two countries joined the Schengen Area in 2007.", "score": "1.3921432" }, { "id": "29165651", "title": "Chotýšany", "text": " Villages of Křemení, Městečko and Pařezí are administrative parts of Chotýšany.", "score": "1.3816738" }, { "id": "3229113", "title": "Chotěboř", "text": "🇺🇦 Tiachiv, Ukraine ; 🇭🇺 Tiszafüred, Hungary Chotěboř is twinned with:", "score": "1.3799182" }, { "id": "14573500", "title": "Chornohuzy", "text": " Chornohuzy (Чорногузи; Ciornohuzi) is a village located in Vyzhnytsia Raion, Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine. It belongs to Vyzhnytsia urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.", "score": "1.3739475" }, { "id": "26125343", "title": "Chotěbuz", "text": " (, Kotzobendz) is a municipality and village in the Karviná District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,400 inhabitants. Polish minority makes up 15.9% of the population.", "score": "1.3712208" }, { "id": "31682925", "title": "Czechy Orlańskie", "text": " Czechy Orlańskie (Чохи, Chokhy) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubicze Cerkiewne, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "1.3705997" }, { "id": "27350716", "title": "Chotyłów", "text": " Chotyłów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Piszczac, within Biała Podlaska County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north of Piszczac, 18 km east of Biała Podlaska, and 100 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. The village has an approximate population of 900.", "score": "1.3686037" }, { "id": "1025923", "title": "Rokycany", "text": " Rokycany (Rokitzan) is a town in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 14,000 inhabitants. The town centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument zone.", "score": "1.3661385" }, { "id": "27951784", "title": "List of twin towns and sister cities in Slovakia", "text": "🇨🇿 Košťany, Czech Republic ; 🇸🇰 Košťany nad Turcom, Slovakia 🇨🇿 Chlumec nad Cidlinou, Czech Republic 🇨🇿 Lomnice, Czech Republic 🇭🇺 Vásárosnamény, Hungary 🇷🇺 Aleksin, Russia ; 🇨🇿 Písek, Czech Republic 🇭🇺 Bácsalmás, Hungary ; 🇨🇿 Dobruška, Czech Republic ; 🇭🇺 Tápiógyörgye, Hungary 🇵🇱 Grybów, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Nyírtelek, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Rakoshino, Ukraine 🇫🇷 Andouillé, France ; 🇭🇺 Csurgó, Hungary ; 🇷🇸 Nova Varoš, Serbia 🇵🇱 Boguchwała, Poland ; 🇨🇿 Bystřice nad Pernštejnem, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Dynów, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Mád, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Vynohradiv, Ukraine 🇸🇰 Spišské Podhradie, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Vítkov, Czech Republic 🇩🇪 Bebra, Germany ; 🇨🇿 Fulnek, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Łaziska Górne, Poland ; 🇨🇿 Nymburk, Czech Republic 🇨🇿 Karolinka, Czech Republic 🇵🇱 Bukowina Tatrzańska, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Košice, Slovakia 🇯🇵 Nosegawa, Japan ; 🇨🇿 Pardubice, Czech Republic ; 🇸🇰 Poprad, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Prostějov, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Zakopane, Poland Valaliky Valaská Veľká Lomnica Veľké Kapušany Veľký Krtíš Veľký Meder Veľký Šariš Vráble Vranov nad Topľou Vrbové Vrútky Vysoká nad Kysucou Vysoké Tatry ", "score": "1.3601217" }, { "id": "31683198", "title": "Chomińszczyzna", "text": " Chomińszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "score": "1.3560269" }, { "id": "9565948", "title": "Chojnice", "text": " Chojniczanka Chojnice is based in the town.", "score": "1.3554821" } ]
[ "Chotýčany\n Chotýčany (Schmiedgraben) is a village and municipality (obec) in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 5.19 km2, and has a population of 207 (as at 31 December 2007). Chotýčany lies approximately 11 km north of České Budějovice and 114 km south of Prague.", "Chotýšany\n Chotýšany is a municipality and village in Benešov District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 600 inhabitants.", "Choča\n The population is roughly 99% Slovak.", "Chotylub\n Chotylub (Хотилюб, Khotyliub) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Cieszanów, within Lubaczów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km east of Cieszanów, 14 km north-east of Lubaczów, and 93 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 530.", "Chomle\n Chomle is a village and municipality (obec) in Rokycany District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 2.24 km2, and has a population of 70 (as at 28 August 2006). Chomle lies approximately 14 km north of Rokycany, 23 km north-east of Plzeň, and 62 km south-west of Prague.", "Chotěboř\n Chotěboř (Chotieborsch) is a town in Havlíčkův Brod District in the Vysočina Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 9,100 inhabitants. The historic town centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument zone.", "Chotěbuz\n Chotěbuz lies on the border with Poland, on the left bank of the Olza River, in the historical region of Cieszyn Silesia. There is a border crossing with Poland in the municipality, one of the largest in the country and the largest between the Czech Republic and Poland. It is connected with the Polish one by the long bridge built in 1991 running along the Olza River.", "Chlumčany (Louny District)\n Chlumčany (Klumtschan) is a village in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has around 480 inhabitants. Village Vlčí is administrative part of Chlumčany.", "Rokycany\n🇩🇪 Greiz, Germany ; 🇩🇪 Pfinztal, Germany Rokycany is twinned with:", "Chomiąża, Opole Voivodeship\n The present-day Polish village Chomiąża and the present-day Czech village Chomyž, directly across the Czech side of the border, were once a single village. After the Silesian Wars, the newly-drawn border divided the village in two. The division continued through the Communist era of 1945–1990, and the border was not easily crossed until the two countries joined the Schengen Area in 2007.", "Chotýšany\n Villages of Křemení, Městečko and Pařezí are administrative parts of Chotýšany.", "Chotěboř\n🇺🇦 Tiachiv, Ukraine ; 🇭🇺 Tiszafüred, Hungary Chotěboř is twinned with:", "Chornohuzy\n Chornohuzy (Чорногузи; Ciornohuzi) is a village located in Vyzhnytsia Raion, Chernivtsi Oblast, Ukraine. It belongs to Vyzhnytsia urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine.", "Chotěbuz\n (, Kotzobendz) is a municipality and village in the Karviná District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,400 inhabitants. Polish minority makes up 15.9% of the population.", "Czechy Orlańskie\n Czechy Orlańskie (Чохи, Chokhy) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubicze Cerkiewne, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Chotyłów\n Chotyłów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Piszczac, within Biała Podlaska County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north of Piszczac, 18 km east of Biała Podlaska, and 100 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. The village has an approximate population of 900.", "Rokycany\n Rokycany (Rokitzan) is a town in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 14,000 inhabitants. The town centre is well preserved and is protected by law as an urban monument zone.", "List of twin towns and sister cities in Slovakia\n🇨🇿 Košťany, Czech Republic ; 🇸🇰 Košťany nad Turcom, Slovakia 🇨🇿 Chlumec nad Cidlinou, Czech Republic 🇨🇿 Lomnice, Czech Republic 🇭🇺 Vásárosnamény, Hungary 🇷🇺 Aleksin, Russia ; 🇨🇿 Písek, Czech Republic 🇭🇺 Bácsalmás, Hungary ; 🇨🇿 Dobruška, Czech Republic ; 🇭🇺 Tápiógyörgye, Hungary 🇵🇱 Grybów, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Nyírtelek, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Rakoshino, Ukraine 🇫🇷 Andouillé, France ; 🇭🇺 Csurgó, Hungary ; 🇷🇸 Nova Varoš, Serbia 🇵🇱 Boguchwała, Poland ; 🇨🇿 Bystřice nad Pernštejnem, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Dynów, Poland ; 🇭🇺 Mád, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Vynohradiv, Ukraine 🇸🇰 Spišské Podhradie, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Vítkov, Czech Republic 🇩🇪 Bebra, Germany ; 🇨🇿 Fulnek, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Łaziska Górne, Poland ; 🇨🇿 Nymburk, Czech Republic 🇨🇿 Karolinka, Czech Republic 🇵🇱 Bukowina Tatrzańska, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Košice, Slovakia 🇯🇵 Nosegawa, Japan ; 🇨🇿 Pardubice, Czech Republic ; 🇸🇰 Poprad, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Prostějov, Czech Republic ; 🇵🇱 Zakopane, Poland Valaliky Valaská Veľká Lomnica Veľké Kapušany Veľký Krtíš Veľký Meder Veľký Šariš Vráble Vranov nad Topľou Vrbové Vrútky Vysoká nad Kysucou Vysoké Tatry ", "Chomińszczyzna\n Chomińszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "Chojnice\n Chojniczanka Chojnice is based in the town." ]
In what country is Asseek River?
[ "Canada", "Dominion of Canada", "British North America", "CAN", "CA", "ca", "can", "Can." ]
country
Asseek River
1,060,877
37
[ { "id": "1011890", "title": "Asseek River", "text": " The Asseek River is a river in the Central Coast region of British Columbia, Canada, flowing north out of the Pacific Ranges to enter saltwater at the head of South Bentinck Arm. The name has been used since 1930, but an earlier map from 1913 shows it as the Talolail River. Also entering South Bentinck Arm a few miles north on the east side of the inlet is the Taleomey River, whose estuary forms Taleomey Narrows, a constriction of the inlet, and also where is the location of Taleomy Indian Reserve No. 3 of the Nuxalk Nation. Another constriction south of the Taleomey estuary, and immediately north of the Asseek's mouth is Bentinck Narrows, which is formed by the alluvial fan of Ickna Creek. There was a Nuxalk village named Aseik in the area of the Asseek's mouth, as was also Koapk.", "score": "1.7498677" }, { "id": "879889", "title": "Tongelreep", "text": " The spring of the Tongelreep is southwest of Erpekom in Belgium, where the name is Jongemansbeek or Vrenenbeek. It then flows north by Brogel and Kaulille, where the local name is Kleine Broekbeek. The stream is joined by the Dorperloop just south of Sint-Huibrechts-Lille; this is where the stream starts being called Warmbeek. The Warmbeek is then led under the Bocholt-Herentals Canal and flows into a water-meadow. In this area the river is joined by a parallel canal, which was built to power the Grevenbroek mill. Continuing on to the Achel Abbey, the river is then joined by the Haagbroekerloop. Upon crossing the Dutch border, the river becomes the Tongelreep. The river was canaled at this point, but this was undone by Staatsbosbeheer after they bought the land from the Abbey monks. The current river runs west of the Leenderbos and past Valkenswaard. Water from the Tongelreep feeds several fishing ponds along the way to Aalst, where the Tongelreep enters the Genneper Parken area. Finally, the river reaches the Eindhoven Stadswandelpark and runs into the Dommel.", "score": "1.466203" }, { "id": "16408122", "title": "Schipbeek", "text": " The Schipbeek is a tributary of the IJssel in the Netherlands and a continuation of the Buurserbeek. It flows into the IJssel near Deventer. The real source of the Schipbeek is in Germany - in western Northrhine-Westphalia - in the Ahauser Aa, to which the Alstätter Aa, the Buurserbeek and finally the Schipbeek are connected.", "score": "1.4585804" }, { "id": "30678997", "title": "Namaqualand", "text": " river further upstream are a reintroduced pontoon at Sendelingsdrift in the Richtersveld National Park, and road bridges at Vioolsdrif (the main border crossing between the two countries) and at the remote border crossing of Onseepkans. A vibrant fishing industry is found along this stretch of the South African west coast, especially in Port Nolloth, the major resort town of Namaqualand, and Hondeklipbaai, or Dogstonebay, called such because of a large boulder outside the town, which when viewed correctly, looks vaguely like a dog sitting down. Since the 19th century, copper has been mined at Springbok and its surrounding towns, while a large mine extracting copper, lead, zinc, and silver is located at Aggeneys, 110 km further inland.", "score": "1.4466655" }, { "id": "11119958", "title": "Coesewijne River", "text": " The northern part of the river flows through an agricultural area. Further south, the Coesewijne flows through marshes, seasonally flooded grassland, and swamp forests. The Coesewijne is a meandering river which twists and turns through the landscape. The Coesewijne is a popular fishing river. During the dry season the creeks and swamps in the area start to dry up, resulting in an abundance of fish in the river. The river is home to a large population of caimans, giant otters and manatees. The upper course of the river has been protected as the Boven Coesewijne Nature Reserve since 1986.", "score": "1.4376929" }, { "id": "25042061", "title": "Eerste River, Western Cape", "text": " Eerste River (Eersterivier in Afrikaans, meaning \"first river\") is a town in the Western Cape, South Africa and a suburb of the City of Cape Town. It forms part of the Oostenberg subregion of the city situated behind the Stellenbosch/Vlaeberg Hills on the eastern outskirts of the city. . It lies on the R102 (Van Riebeek Road) about 40 km from Cape Town CBD and 8 km from Cape Town International Airport on the N2 route. Eerste River started off as many different farms and expanded vastly after the 1980s. It is a diverse town; many of its almost 40,000 residents originally immigrated here from elsewhere. Among its beauty is the area called Penhill, hidden from the town and filled with nature. Schools in Eerste ", "score": "1.4324534" }, { "id": "32306582", "title": "Eyserbeek", "text": " The Eyserbeek (Limburgish: Ezerbaek) is a river in the province of Limburg, Netherlands. The Eyserbeek is a right-bank tributary to the river Geul, which later joins the Meuse. Rising in Bocholtz and flowing through Simpelveld and Eys, the Eyserbeek eventually drains in the river Geul in Gulpen. The Eyserbeek lies on the north of the plateau of Bocholtz and south of the plateau of Ubachsberg. Sources of the Eyserbeek can be found in Bocholtz near Hoeve Overhuizen, from where it passes the N281 provincial road, before flowing through the town square of Simpelveld. In 2012 Simpelveld reorganised its town square, which used to cover the river, opening the river to view and creating a new riverbank with bluestone. The Eyserbeek then passes the monumental Oude Molen and Bulkemsmolen watermills, build in 1774 and 1753 respectively, before passing into the village of Eys, which was named after the river. The Eyserbeek eventually drains in the river Geul near the former Motte-and-bailey castle Gracht Burggraaf in Gulpen, where also the Gulp River joins the Geul from the opposite bank.", "score": "1.4307685" }, { "id": "879887", "title": "Tongelreep", "text": " The Tongelreep is a small tributary of the Dommel that flows through Belgium and the Netherlands. It begins in Belgium near Neerpelt (where the stream is called the Warmbeek) and runs into the Dommel in Eindhoven by way of Valkenswaard and Aalst. The stream runs near the Achel Abbey, the Leenderbos, the Valkenhorst estates and the Genneper Parken park area. The Tongelreep has always remained a relatively naturally flowing, clear river with natural interaction between water and landscape; this despite the fact that man has tried to alter the river bed since the Middle Ages, the stretch to the west of the current Leenderbos was canaled in 1890 in order to create a series of fishing ponds and the stretch to the south of that was canaled by the Achel Abbey monks before that. The natural character of the southern Tongelreep has been returning since 1989, when the Achel Abbey agricultural activities were ceased and the lands were sold to environmental groups, who are restoring the natural flow of the river. The grassy lands of the Warmbeek valleys are also being restored.", "score": "1.4208398" }, { "id": "6058359", "title": "Glanerbeek", "text": " Glanerbeek is a river of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany and Overijssel, Netherlands. It flows into the Dinkel near Losser. As part of the Rhine basin, specifically the Deltarhine region it is managed under the Deltarhine regime; it has been found to be the only river that the regime has contributed to problem solving for, in regards to the issue of river restoration.", "score": "1.4104048" }, { "id": "7385234", "title": "Ieperlee", "text": " The Ieperlee (or Ypres-Ijzer Canal) is a canalized river that rises in Heuvelland in the Belgian province of West Flanders and flows via the city of Ypres (Ieper) into the Yser at Fort Knokke. The river is 17 km long. Its name is derived from iep, the Dutch word for elm. It gave its name to the city of Ypres. In the 11th century the river was canalized to link the city, which had a thriving cloth industry, to the sea. Even in 1842, some 2,034 boats still passed the lock at Boezinge. Today, the canal is only used for recreational purposes. During the First World War, the river was part of the frontline. It linked the Ypres Salient, held by the French and English, to the Yser Front, held by the Belgian Army (see Dodengang).", "score": "1.3962561" }, { "id": "28281768", "title": "Rooigembeek", "text": " The Rooigembeek is a small stream in East Flanders, Belgium. It is a right tributary of the Wallebeek, which is a left tributary of the Scheldt. In its upper course, it is called Leedsebeek. In British texts about the 1708 Battle of Oudenaarde, the stream is called Norken River, possibly after the Flemish village Nokere (Kruishoutem municipality), some 9 km away. Its source is in Wortegem (Wortegem-Petegem municipality), west of Oudenaarde. It flows in northwestern direction, and flows into the Wallebeek in Asper (Gavere municipality), north of Oudenaarde. The Rooigembeek is about 12 km long.", "score": "1.3909528" }, { "id": "26319457", "title": "Liesbeek River", "text": " The Liesbeek River (also spelt Liesbeeck) is a river in Cape Town in South Africa. It is named after a small river in the Netherlands. The first \"free burghers\" of the Dutch East India Company were granted land to farm along the river in 1657, shortly after the first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape. The river was originally called the Amstel or Versse Rivier. It is the first river that Jan van Riebeeck named. The Liesbeek, which is less than 9 km long, is situated in the oldest urbanised river valley in South Africa. The headwaters flow from the eastern slopes of Table Mountain above Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens ", "score": "1.3899951" }, { "id": "879890", "title": "Tongelreep", "text": "Warmbeekvallei, ; Warande, ; Achelse Kluis, ; Leenderbos, ; Valkenhorst estates ; Genneper Parken The Warmbeek/Tongelreep is one of the clearest rivers of Flanders and North Brabant. It flows through natural landscape areas across its entire length, including the following: ", "score": "1.3872926" }, { "id": "31728853", "title": "Geleenbeek", "text": " The Geleenbeek is a river in Limburg, the Netherlands. Its source is near the village Benzenrade, part of the city of Heerlen. It flows generally northwest, along Nuth, Schinnen, Spaubeek, turns north at Geleen, flows through the centre of Sittard, and further north through Nieuwstadt until it flows into a branch of the Meuse at Stevensweert. Its Latin name is \"Glana\", which means \"bright brook\".", "score": "1.3867834" }, { "id": "27682554", "title": "Upper Orange Water Management Area", "text": "Armenia Dam Leeu River ; Egmont Dam Witspruit ; Gariep Dam Orange River ; Groothoek Dam Kgabanyane River ; Kalkfontein Dam Riet River ; Katse Dam Malibamatso River ; Knellpoort Dam Rietspruit ; Krugersdrift Dam Modder River ; Mohale Dam Senqunyane River ; Rustfontein Dam Modder River ; Tierpoort Dam Tierpoort River ; Vanderkloof Dam Orange River ; Welbedacht Dam Caledon River Upper Orange WMA, or Upper Orange Water Management Area (coded: 13), Includes the following major rivers: the Modder River, Riet River, Caledon River and Orange River, and covers the following Dams: ", "score": "1.3849258" }, { "id": "27278233", "title": "Assunpink Trail", "text": " The Assunpink Trail was a Native American trail in what later became Middlesex, Somerset, and Mercer counties in the central and western part of New Jersey. Like Assunpink Creek, the trail takes its name from the Algonquian language Ahsën'pink, meaning \"stony, watery place\". One of many Pre-Columbian era trails across the territory, the Assunpink travelled between the Raritan River in the north and the Delaware River in the south crossing relatively flat floodplain of the Millstone River. Over the years the approximate route of the trail has been developed and known as the Old Dutch Trail, The Kings Highway, Lincoln Highway, and Route 27. At the time of ", "score": "1.3848269" }, { "id": "11431481", "title": "List of rivers of Belgium", "text": "Grevelingen, Krammer, Volkerak (branches in the Netherlands) ; Dintel (in Dintelsas, Netherlands) ; Mark (near Oudenbosch, Netherlands) ; Aa of Weerijs (in Breda, Netherlands) ; Meuse (Dutch: Maas) (main branch at Stellendam, Netherlands) ; Dieze (in 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands) ; Dommel (in 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands) ; Rur (Dutch: Roer) (in Roermond, Netherlands) ; Inde (in Jülich, Germany) ; Geul (French: Gueule, German: Göhl) (near Meerssen, Netherlands) ; Gulp (French: Galoppe) (near Gulpen, Netherlands) ; Jeker (French: Geer) (in Maastricht, Netherlands) ; Voer (French: Fouron) (in Eijsden, Netherlands) ; Berwinne (Dutch: Berwijn) (near Visé) ; Ourthe (in Liège) ; Vesdre (German: Weser) (near Liège) ; Hoëgne (in Pepinster) ; Gileppe (in Limbourg) ; Amblève (German: Amel) (in Comblain-au-Pont) ; Salm (in Trois-Ponts) ; Eau Rouge (near Stavelot) ; Warche (near Malmedy) ; Hoyoux (in Huy) ; Mehaigne (in Huy) ; Sambre (in Namur) ; Bocq (in Yvoir) ; Molignée (in Anhée) ; Lesse (in Dinant-Anseremme) ; Viroin (in Vireux-Molhain, France) ; Semois (in Monthermé, France) ; Rulles (near Tintigny) ; Mellier (near Marbehan) ; Mandebras (near Rulles) ; Chiers (in Bazeilles, France) ", "score": "1.381842" }, { "id": "26636915", "title": "Amstel", "text": " The Amstel passes the hamlet Vrouwenakker and is then joined by the tributary river Kromme Mijdrecht. On the northern bank is the town Uithoorn and on the southern bank is the village Amstelhoek. Here the river forms the border between the provinces of Utrecht and North Holland. Further on, the river is joined by the tributary river Oude Waver. From here onwards, the river flows northward through the province of North Holland. The Amstel passes the village Nes aan de Amstel. On the western bank is the town Amstelveen, where there is a small island in the river named Amsteleiland, and on the eastern bank the town of Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, where the river is joined by the tributary river Bullewijk. After this the Amstel flows into the city of Amsterdam.", "score": "1.3790798" }, { "id": "14851770", "title": "Northern Cape", "text": " in turn fed by the Ongers River, rising in the vicinities of Hanover and Richmond respectively. Along the Orange River near the town of Kakamas, the Hartebeest River drains the central Karoo. Above Kenhardt the Hartebeest is known as the Sak River, which has its source on the northern side of the escarpment, southeast of Williston. Further downstream from Kakamas, below the Augrabies Falls, and seldom actually flowing into the Orange River, is the Molopo River, which comes down from the Kalahari in the north. With its tributary, the Nossob River, it defines part of the international boundary between South Africa and Botswana. Further tributaries of the Molopo River include the Kuruman River, fed by the Moshaweng River and Kgokgole River, and the Matlhwaring River. Flowing west into the Atlantic, in Namaqualand, is the Buffels River and, further south, the Groen River.", "score": "1.3784406" }, { "id": "14535832", "title": "Noor (Meuse)", "text": " Noor river), which was named after the river. Passing Noorbeek the Noor continues southward through the Noor valley, south of the plateau of Margraten, and is one of only few Dutch rivers to flow southward into Belgium. The Dutch part of the Noor valley (Dutch: Noordal) contains a nature reserve, with the same name, managed by the Dutch Society for preservation of Nature Monuments. After crossing the border into Belgium the Noor flows past Castle Altenbroek and the Watermill at Altenbroek in Voeren. This 18th century castle is a Flemish heritage site. The Belgian part of the Noor valley is a Flemish protected landscape as part of the larger Voer valley protected landscape. The Noor eventually drains in the river Voer near the village of 's-Gravenvoeren in the municipality of Voeren.", "score": "1.3774171" } ]
[ "Asseek River\n The Asseek River is a river in the Central Coast region of British Columbia, Canada, flowing north out of the Pacific Ranges to enter saltwater at the head of South Bentinck Arm. The name has been used since 1930, but an earlier map from 1913 shows it as the Talolail River. Also entering South Bentinck Arm a few miles north on the east side of the inlet is the Taleomey River, whose estuary forms Taleomey Narrows, a constriction of the inlet, and also where is the location of Taleomy Indian Reserve No. 3 of the Nuxalk Nation. Another constriction south of the Taleomey estuary, and immediately north of the Asseek's mouth is Bentinck Narrows, which is formed by the alluvial fan of Ickna Creek. There was a Nuxalk village named Aseik in the area of the Asseek's mouth, as was also Koapk.", "Tongelreep\n The spring of the Tongelreep is southwest of Erpekom in Belgium, where the name is Jongemansbeek or Vrenenbeek. It then flows north by Brogel and Kaulille, where the local name is Kleine Broekbeek. The stream is joined by the Dorperloop just south of Sint-Huibrechts-Lille; this is where the stream starts being called Warmbeek. The Warmbeek is then led under the Bocholt-Herentals Canal and flows into a water-meadow. In this area the river is joined by a parallel canal, which was built to power the Grevenbroek mill. Continuing on to the Achel Abbey, the river is then joined by the Haagbroekerloop. Upon crossing the Dutch border, the river becomes the Tongelreep. The river was canaled at this point, but this was undone by Staatsbosbeheer after they bought the land from the Abbey monks. The current river runs west of the Leenderbos and past Valkenswaard. Water from the Tongelreep feeds several fishing ponds along the way to Aalst, where the Tongelreep enters the Genneper Parken area. Finally, the river reaches the Eindhoven Stadswandelpark and runs into the Dommel.", "Schipbeek\n The Schipbeek is a tributary of the IJssel in the Netherlands and a continuation of the Buurserbeek. It flows into the IJssel near Deventer. The real source of the Schipbeek is in Germany - in western Northrhine-Westphalia - in the Ahauser Aa, to which the Alstätter Aa, the Buurserbeek and finally the Schipbeek are connected.", "Namaqualand\n river further upstream are a reintroduced pontoon at Sendelingsdrift in the Richtersveld National Park, and road bridges at Vioolsdrif (the main border crossing between the two countries) and at the remote border crossing of Onseepkans. A vibrant fishing industry is found along this stretch of the South African west coast, especially in Port Nolloth, the major resort town of Namaqualand, and Hondeklipbaai, or Dogstonebay, called such because of a large boulder outside the town, which when viewed correctly, looks vaguely like a dog sitting down. Since the 19th century, copper has been mined at Springbok and its surrounding towns, while a large mine extracting copper, lead, zinc, and silver is located at Aggeneys, 110 km further inland.", "Coesewijne River\n The northern part of the river flows through an agricultural area. Further south, the Coesewijne flows through marshes, seasonally flooded grassland, and swamp forests. The Coesewijne is a meandering river which twists and turns through the landscape. The Coesewijne is a popular fishing river. During the dry season the creeks and swamps in the area start to dry up, resulting in an abundance of fish in the river. The river is home to a large population of caimans, giant otters and manatees. The upper course of the river has been protected as the Boven Coesewijne Nature Reserve since 1986.", "Eerste River, Western Cape\n Eerste River (Eersterivier in Afrikaans, meaning \"first river\") is a town in the Western Cape, South Africa and a suburb of the City of Cape Town. It forms part of the Oostenberg subregion of the city situated behind the Stellenbosch/Vlaeberg Hills on the eastern outskirts of the city. . It lies on the R102 (Van Riebeek Road) about 40 km from Cape Town CBD and 8 km from Cape Town International Airport on the N2 route. Eerste River started off as many different farms and expanded vastly after the 1980s. It is a diverse town; many of its almost 40,000 residents originally immigrated here from elsewhere. Among its beauty is the area called Penhill, hidden from the town and filled with nature. Schools in Eerste ", "Eyserbeek\n The Eyserbeek (Limburgish: Ezerbaek) is a river in the province of Limburg, Netherlands. The Eyserbeek is a right-bank tributary to the river Geul, which later joins the Meuse. Rising in Bocholtz and flowing through Simpelveld and Eys, the Eyserbeek eventually drains in the river Geul in Gulpen. The Eyserbeek lies on the north of the plateau of Bocholtz and south of the plateau of Ubachsberg. Sources of the Eyserbeek can be found in Bocholtz near Hoeve Overhuizen, from where it passes the N281 provincial road, before flowing through the town square of Simpelveld. In 2012 Simpelveld reorganised its town square, which used to cover the river, opening the river to view and creating a new riverbank with bluestone. The Eyserbeek then passes the monumental Oude Molen and Bulkemsmolen watermills, build in 1774 and 1753 respectively, before passing into the village of Eys, which was named after the river. The Eyserbeek eventually drains in the river Geul near the former Motte-and-bailey castle Gracht Burggraaf in Gulpen, where also the Gulp River joins the Geul from the opposite bank.", "Tongelreep\n The Tongelreep is a small tributary of the Dommel that flows through Belgium and the Netherlands. It begins in Belgium near Neerpelt (where the stream is called the Warmbeek) and runs into the Dommel in Eindhoven by way of Valkenswaard and Aalst. The stream runs near the Achel Abbey, the Leenderbos, the Valkenhorst estates and the Genneper Parken park area. The Tongelreep has always remained a relatively naturally flowing, clear river with natural interaction between water and landscape; this despite the fact that man has tried to alter the river bed since the Middle Ages, the stretch to the west of the current Leenderbos was canaled in 1890 in order to create a series of fishing ponds and the stretch to the south of that was canaled by the Achel Abbey monks before that. The natural character of the southern Tongelreep has been returning since 1989, when the Achel Abbey agricultural activities were ceased and the lands were sold to environmental groups, who are restoring the natural flow of the river. The grassy lands of the Warmbeek valleys are also being restored.", "Glanerbeek\n Glanerbeek is a river of North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany and Overijssel, Netherlands. It flows into the Dinkel near Losser. As part of the Rhine basin, specifically the Deltarhine region it is managed under the Deltarhine regime; it has been found to be the only river that the regime has contributed to problem solving for, in regards to the issue of river restoration.", "Ieperlee\n The Ieperlee (or Ypres-Ijzer Canal) is a canalized river that rises in Heuvelland in the Belgian province of West Flanders and flows via the city of Ypres (Ieper) into the Yser at Fort Knokke. The river is 17 km long. Its name is derived from iep, the Dutch word for elm. It gave its name to the city of Ypres. In the 11th century the river was canalized to link the city, which had a thriving cloth industry, to the sea. Even in 1842, some 2,034 boats still passed the lock at Boezinge. Today, the canal is only used for recreational purposes. During the First World War, the river was part of the frontline. It linked the Ypres Salient, held by the French and English, to the Yser Front, held by the Belgian Army (see Dodengang).", "Rooigembeek\n The Rooigembeek is a small stream in East Flanders, Belgium. It is a right tributary of the Wallebeek, which is a left tributary of the Scheldt. In its upper course, it is called Leedsebeek. In British texts about the 1708 Battle of Oudenaarde, the stream is called Norken River, possibly after the Flemish village Nokere (Kruishoutem municipality), some 9 km away. Its source is in Wortegem (Wortegem-Petegem municipality), west of Oudenaarde. It flows in northwestern direction, and flows into the Wallebeek in Asper (Gavere municipality), north of Oudenaarde. The Rooigembeek is about 12 km long.", "Liesbeek River\n The Liesbeek River (also spelt Liesbeeck) is a river in Cape Town in South Africa. It is named after a small river in the Netherlands. The first \"free burghers\" of the Dutch East India Company were granted land to farm along the river in 1657, shortly after the first Dutch settlers arrived in the Cape. The river was originally called the Amstel or Versse Rivier. It is the first river that Jan van Riebeeck named. The Liesbeek, which is less than 9 km long, is situated in the oldest urbanised river valley in South Africa. The headwaters flow from the eastern slopes of Table Mountain above Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens ", "Tongelreep\nWarmbeekvallei, ; Warande, ; Achelse Kluis, ; Leenderbos, ; Valkenhorst estates ; Genneper Parken The Warmbeek/Tongelreep is one of the clearest rivers of Flanders and North Brabant. It flows through natural landscape areas across its entire length, including the following: ", "Geleenbeek\n The Geleenbeek is a river in Limburg, the Netherlands. Its source is near the village Benzenrade, part of the city of Heerlen. It flows generally northwest, along Nuth, Schinnen, Spaubeek, turns north at Geleen, flows through the centre of Sittard, and further north through Nieuwstadt until it flows into a branch of the Meuse at Stevensweert. Its Latin name is \"Glana\", which means \"bright brook\".", "Upper Orange Water Management Area\nArmenia Dam Leeu River ; Egmont Dam Witspruit ; Gariep Dam Orange River ; Groothoek Dam Kgabanyane River ; Kalkfontein Dam Riet River ; Katse Dam Malibamatso River ; Knellpoort Dam Rietspruit ; Krugersdrift Dam Modder River ; Mohale Dam Senqunyane River ; Rustfontein Dam Modder River ; Tierpoort Dam Tierpoort River ; Vanderkloof Dam Orange River ; Welbedacht Dam Caledon River Upper Orange WMA, or Upper Orange Water Management Area (coded: 13), Includes the following major rivers: the Modder River, Riet River, Caledon River and Orange River, and covers the following Dams: ", "Assunpink Trail\n The Assunpink Trail was a Native American trail in what later became Middlesex, Somerset, and Mercer counties in the central and western part of New Jersey. Like Assunpink Creek, the trail takes its name from the Algonquian language Ahsën'pink, meaning \"stony, watery place\". One of many Pre-Columbian era trails across the territory, the Assunpink travelled between the Raritan River in the north and the Delaware River in the south crossing relatively flat floodplain of the Millstone River. Over the years the approximate route of the trail has been developed and known as the Old Dutch Trail, The Kings Highway, Lincoln Highway, and Route 27. At the time of ", "List of rivers of Belgium\nGrevelingen, Krammer, Volkerak (branches in the Netherlands) ; Dintel (in Dintelsas, Netherlands) ; Mark (near Oudenbosch, Netherlands) ; Aa of Weerijs (in Breda, Netherlands) ; Meuse (Dutch: Maas) (main branch at Stellendam, Netherlands) ; Dieze (in 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands) ; Dommel (in 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands) ; Rur (Dutch: Roer) (in Roermond, Netherlands) ; Inde (in Jülich, Germany) ; Geul (French: Gueule, German: Göhl) (near Meerssen, Netherlands) ; Gulp (French: Galoppe) (near Gulpen, Netherlands) ; Jeker (French: Geer) (in Maastricht, Netherlands) ; Voer (French: Fouron) (in Eijsden, Netherlands) ; Berwinne (Dutch: Berwijn) (near Visé) ; Ourthe (in Liège) ; Vesdre (German: Weser) (near Liège) ; Hoëgne (in Pepinster) ; Gileppe (in Limbourg) ; Amblève (German: Amel) (in Comblain-au-Pont) ; Salm (in Trois-Ponts) ; Eau Rouge (near Stavelot) ; Warche (near Malmedy) ; Hoyoux (in Huy) ; Mehaigne (in Huy) ; Sambre (in Namur) ; Bocq (in Yvoir) ; Molignée (in Anhée) ; Lesse (in Dinant-Anseremme) ; Viroin (in Vireux-Molhain, France) ; Semois (in Monthermé, France) ; Rulles (near Tintigny) ; Mellier (near Marbehan) ; Mandebras (near Rulles) ; Chiers (in Bazeilles, France) ", "Amstel\n The Amstel passes the hamlet Vrouwenakker and is then joined by the tributary river Kromme Mijdrecht. On the northern bank is the town Uithoorn and on the southern bank is the village Amstelhoek. Here the river forms the border between the provinces of Utrecht and North Holland. Further on, the river is joined by the tributary river Oude Waver. From here onwards, the river flows northward through the province of North Holland. The Amstel passes the village Nes aan de Amstel. On the western bank is the town Amstelveen, where there is a small island in the river named Amsteleiland, and on the eastern bank the town of Ouderkerk aan de Amstel, where the river is joined by the tributary river Bullewijk. After this the Amstel flows into the city of Amsterdam.", "Northern Cape\n in turn fed by the Ongers River, rising in the vicinities of Hanover and Richmond respectively. Along the Orange River near the town of Kakamas, the Hartebeest River drains the central Karoo. Above Kenhardt the Hartebeest is known as the Sak River, which has its source on the northern side of the escarpment, southeast of Williston. Further downstream from Kakamas, below the Augrabies Falls, and seldom actually flowing into the Orange River, is the Molopo River, which comes down from the Kalahari in the north. With its tributary, the Nossob River, it defines part of the international boundary between South Africa and Botswana. Further tributaries of the Molopo River include the Kuruman River, fed by the Moshaweng River and Kgokgole River, and the Matlhwaring River. Flowing west into the Atlantic, in Namaqualand, is the Buffels River and, further south, the Groen River.", "Noor (Meuse)\n Noor river), which was named after the river. Passing Noorbeek the Noor continues southward through the Noor valley, south of the plateau of Margraten, and is one of only few Dutch rivers to flow southward into Belgium. The Dutch part of the Noor valley (Dutch: Noordal) contains a nature reserve, with the same name, managed by the Dutch Society for preservation of Nature Monuments. After crossing the border into Belgium the Noor flows past Castle Altenbroek and the Watermill at Altenbroek in Voeren. This 18th century castle is a Flemish heritage site. The Belgian part of the Noor valley is a Flemish protected landscape as part of the larger Voer valley protected landscape. The Noor eventually drains in the river Voer near the village of 's-Gravenvoeren in the municipality of Voeren." ]
In what country is Gąsiorowo, Legionowo County?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Gąsiorowo, Legionowo County
4,307,251
89
[ { "id": "2630594", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Legionowo County", "text": " Gąsiorowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Serock, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "2.1504703" }, { "id": "32862024", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Działdowo County", "text": " Gąsiorowo (Ganshorn bei Gilgenburg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Działdowo, within Działdowo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 17 km north of Działdowo and 50 km south-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 263. Until 1945 it was part of Germany, in the province of East Prussia.", "score": "2.0531192" }, { "id": "1328979", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Olecko County", "text": " Gąsiorowo (Groß Gonschorowen, historical variants Gonziorowen, Gonsoroffen; from 1938-45 Klinken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wieliczki, within Olecko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "score": "1.9410663" }, { "id": "3375444", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Ostrów Mazowiecka County", "text": " Gąsiorowo is a village within the administrative district of Gmina Zaręby Kościelne, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.8791721" }, { "id": "2630551", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " This is a historic brick villa from the early 20th century, located at 78 Modlińska Street. It initially belonged to Stanislaw Bzury, the municipal physician and expert viticulturist (who produced wine for Count Potocki). A German commandant, in charge of troops guarding the river crossing to Warsaw, used it as his headquarters during World War II.", "score": "1.8747256" }, { "id": "710748", "title": "Legionowo", "text": " Legionowo is a town in Masovia (Mazowsze), east-central Poland. According to the 2004 Census estimate the town has a total population of 50,759. Legionowo is located 23 km to the north-east of the center of Warsaw and only 7 km to the south of Zegrze Reservoir (Jezioro Zegrzyńskie or Zalew Zegrzyński), near the Warsaw-Gdańsk railroad and Warsaw-Suwałki road. Situated in the Masovian Voivodeship (województwo mazowieckie, created in 1999 as a result of Local Government Reorganization Act), previously in Warsaw Voivodeship (województwo warszawskie or województwo stołeczne warszawskie, 1975–1998) and old Masovian Voivodeship (before 1975). Currently this is the capital of Legionowo County (powiat legionowski), which is one of 38 land counties (powiat ziemski) in Masovian Voivodeship. Adjoining counties (from north, clockwise): Pułtusk County, Wyszków County, Wołomin County, Warsaw, Warsaw West County, Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki County.", "score": "1.8494682" }, { "id": "7839787", "title": "Gąsiorów, Koło County", "text": " Gąsiorów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kościelec, within Koło County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-west of Kościelec, 7 km west of Koło, and 113 km east of the regional capital Poznań.", "score": "1.8137932" }, { "id": "1329397", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Olsztyn County", "text": " Gąsiorowo (Lichtenstein; before 1938: Gonschorowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Purda, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the village was German-settled and part of the German state of Prussia. During the Nazi campaign of changing placenames to remove traces of Slavic origin, it was renamed Lichtenstein. The village was renamed to the reconstructed historic name Gąsiorowo in post-war Poland in 1945.", "score": "1.7991328" }, { "id": "7241077", "title": "Gąsiorów, Jarocin County", "text": " Gąsiorów (Gänseweide) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Żerków, within Jarocin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north of Żerków, 19 km north of Jarocin, and 54 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań.", "score": "1.7896472" }, { "id": "2630547", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " In the centre of Jablonna is the Mother of God Queen of Poland Church. It was built by project architect Joseph Sendyński on land donated by Count Maurycy Potocki from 1921 to 1925. In 1944, retreating German troops blew up the church, but it was rebuilt by architects Zbigniew Chwalibog and Boleslaw Gierych from 1945 to 1954.", "score": "1.7885951" }, { "id": "2630550", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " The Potocki family leased land in 1837 for use by mail riders and a post office and outbuildings were built. Today, the building is still operated by the Polish post office.", "score": "1.788208" }, { "id": "1329330", "title": "Gąsiorowo Olsztyneckie", "text": " Gąsiorowo Olsztyneckie (Ganshorn bei Hohenstein) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Olsztynek, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "score": "1.7490511" }, { "id": "2630549", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " German fortifications (three concrete machine gun posts) were built during World War II at a bend in the Vistula River, about 1 km west of the palace's park. Their task was to guard a crossing of the Vistula. In September 1944, German soldiers from 6 SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment \"Theodor Eicke\" and the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf were based there. On October 28, the area was recaptured by the Polish 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division. To this day, the positions (in ruins close to the Vistula River) and clear traces of the trenches remain.", "score": "1.7354343" }, { "id": "4516409", "title": "Gąsiorowo, Pułtusk County", "text": " Gąsiorowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Świercze, within Pułtusk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.7288866" }, { "id": "2630545", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " Jabłonna is a village in Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It is the seat of the Gmina Jabłonna (administrative district). It lies approximately 4 km south of Legionowo and 18 km north of Warsaw. The village has a population of 7,365. The town has two major landmarks: the Jabłonna Palace (Pałac w Jabłonnie) and the Mother of God Queen of Poland Church (Kościele Matki Bożej Królowej Polski) which are in the center of the village.", "score": "1.7240005" }, { "id": "2630546", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " During World War II, from 1941 to 1943, Soviet POWs were held captive in nearby Bukowie (now within Warsaw) and Poniatow. On October 28, 1944, German troops were driven out by units of the Polish 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division after five days of fighting in the area of the village. During the 1960s, 70s and 80s, the town became famous for the production of vegetables, fruit and flowers in greenhouse facilities, the largest in Poland at that time. It was also considered to be the richest town in Poland during that time. From 1975 to 1998, the town was administratively part of Warsaw.", "score": "1.7227144" }, { "id": "2630642", "title": "Kałuszyn, Legionowo County", "text": " Kałuszyn is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wieliszew, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Wieliszew, 7 km north-west of Legionowo, and 28 km north of Warsaw.", "score": "1.6886332" }, { "id": "2630570", "title": "Józefów, Legionowo County", "text": " Józefów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nieporęt, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south-west of Nieporęt, 6 km east of Legionowo, and 19 km north of Warsaw. The village has a parish church, Parafia pw. Najświętszej Maryi Panny Królowej w Józefowie k. Legionowa, built in 1997–2004.", "score": "1.675873" }, { "id": "2630552", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " The first elementary school in Jabłonna was located close to the present day Miła Street. Classes were held from the 1860s. The school was small and taught by a single teacher. A few years after Poland regained its independence there was school in the highest category with a full curriculum taught by 8 teachers and classes were also conducted in private homes. In the early 1930s, a wooden school building was erected in Szkolnej (School) Street with 5 classrooms. The building was partially destroyed at the end of World War II but was rebuilt and teaching resumed. The continuous increase in the number of students meant that a new building was constructed from 1949 to 1955. The school had 11 classrooms, 14 auxiliary chambers, central heating, running water and sewerage. On 9 November 1996, the school was named in honour of the Armia Krajowa.", "score": "1.6496706" }, { "id": "2630553", "title": "Jabłonna, Legionowo County", "text": " The White Eagle Gymnasium has 15 classrooms available and 2 language labs. In the computer lab, students have access to 14 computer stations with Internet access. It also has its own full-size sports hall.", "score": "1.6492712" } ]
[ "Gąsiorowo, Legionowo County\n Gąsiorowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Serock, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Gąsiorowo, Działdowo County\n Gąsiorowo (Ganshorn bei Gilgenburg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Działdowo, within Działdowo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 17 km north of Działdowo and 50 km south-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 263. Until 1945 it was part of Germany, in the province of East Prussia.", "Gąsiorowo, Olecko County\n Gąsiorowo (Groß Gonschorowen, historical variants Gonziorowen, Gonsoroffen; from 1938-45 Klinken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wieliczki, within Olecko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "Gąsiorowo, Ostrów Mazowiecka County\n Gąsiorowo is a village within the administrative district of Gmina Zaręby Kościelne, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n This is a historic brick villa from the early 20th century, located at 78 Modlińska Street. It initially belonged to Stanislaw Bzury, the municipal physician and expert viticulturist (who produced wine for Count Potocki). A German commandant, in charge of troops guarding the river crossing to Warsaw, used it as his headquarters during World War II.", "Legionowo\n Legionowo is a town in Masovia (Mazowsze), east-central Poland. According to the 2004 Census estimate the town has a total population of 50,759. Legionowo is located 23 km to the north-east of the center of Warsaw and only 7 km to the south of Zegrze Reservoir (Jezioro Zegrzyńskie or Zalew Zegrzyński), near the Warsaw-Gdańsk railroad and Warsaw-Suwałki road. Situated in the Masovian Voivodeship (województwo mazowieckie, created in 1999 as a result of Local Government Reorganization Act), previously in Warsaw Voivodeship (województwo warszawskie or województwo stołeczne warszawskie, 1975–1998) and old Masovian Voivodeship (before 1975). Currently this is the capital of Legionowo County (powiat legionowski), which is one of 38 land counties (powiat ziemski) in Masovian Voivodeship. Adjoining counties (from north, clockwise): Pułtusk County, Wyszków County, Wołomin County, Warsaw, Warsaw West County, Nowy Dwór Mazowiecki County.", "Gąsiorów, Koło County\n Gąsiorów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kościelec, within Koło County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-west of Kościelec, 7 km west of Koło, and 113 km east of the regional capital Poznań.", "Gąsiorowo, Olsztyn County\n Gąsiorowo (Lichtenstein; before 1938: Gonschorowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Purda, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the village was German-settled and part of the German state of Prussia. During the Nazi campaign of changing placenames to remove traces of Slavic origin, it was renamed Lichtenstein. The village was renamed to the reconstructed historic name Gąsiorowo in post-war Poland in 1945.", "Gąsiorów, Jarocin County\n Gąsiorów (Gänseweide) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Żerków, within Jarocin County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north of Żerków, 19 km north of Jarocin, and 54 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n In the centre of Jablonna is the Mother of God Queen of Poland Church. It was built by project architect Joseph Sendyński on land donated by Count Maurycy Potocki from 1921 to 1925. In 1944, retreating German troops blew up the church, but it was rebuilt by architects Zbigniew Chwalibog and Boleslaw Gierych from 1945 to 1954.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n The Potocki family leased land in 1837 for use by mail riders and a post office and outbuildings were built. Today, the building is still operated by the Polish post office.", "Gąsiorowo Olsztyneckie\n Gąsiorowo Olsztyneckie (Ganshorn bei Hohenstein) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Olsztynek, within Olsztyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n German fortifications (three concrete machine gun posts) were built during World War II at a bend in the Vistula River, about 1 km west of the palace's park. Their task was to guard a crossing of the Vistula. In September 1944, German soldiers from 6 SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment \"Theodor Eicke\" and the 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf were based there. On October 28, the area was recaptured by the Polish 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division. To this day, the positions (in ruins close to the Vistula River) and clear traces of the trenches remain.", "Gąsiorowo, Pułtusk County\n Gąsiorowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Świercze, within Pułtusk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n Jabłonna is a village in Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It is the seat of the Gmina Jabłonna (administrative district). It lies approximately 4 km south of Legionowo and 18 km north of Warsaw. The village has a population of 7,365. The town has two major landmarks: the Jabłonna Palace (Pałac w Jabłonnie) and the Mother of God Queen of Poland Church (Kościele Matki Bożej Królowej Polski) which are in the center of the village.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n During World War II, from 1941 to 1943, Soviet POWs were held captive in nearby Bukowie (now within Warsaw) and Poniatow. On October 28, 1944, German troops were driven out by units of the Polish 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division after five days of fighting in the area of the village. During the 1960s, 70s and 80s, the town became famous for the production of vegetables, fruit and flowers in greenhouse facilities, the largest in Poland at that time. It was also considered to be the richest town in Poland during that time. From 1975 to 1998, the town was administratively part of Warsaw.", "Kałuszyn, Legionowo County\n Kałuszyn is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wieliszew, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Wieliszew, 7 km north-west of Legionowo, and 28 km north of Warsaw.", "Józefów, Legionowo County\n Józefów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nieporęt, within Legionowo County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south-west of Nieporęt, 6 km east of Legionowo, and 19 km north of Warsaw. The village has a parish church, Parafia pw. Najświętszej Maryi Panny Królowej w Józefowie k. Legionowa, built in 1997–2004.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n The first elementary school in Jabłonna was located close to the present day Miła Street. Classes were held from the 1860s. The school was small and taught by a single teacher. A few years after Poland regained its independence there was school in the highest category with a full curriculum taught by 8 teachers and classes were also conducted in private homes. In the early 1930s, a wooden school building was erected in Szkolnej (School) Street with 5 classrooms. The building was partially destroyed at the end of World War II but was rebuilt and teaching resumed. The continuous increase in the number of students meant that a new building was constructed from 1949 to 1955. The school had 11 classrooms, 14 auxiliary chambers, central heating, running water and sewerage. On 9 November 1996, the school was named in honour of the Armia Krajowa.", "Jabłonna, Legionowo County\n The White Eagle Gymnasium has 15 classrooms available and 2 language labs. In the computer lab, students have access to 14 computer stations with Internet access. It also has its own full-size sports hall." ]
In what country is Jeqjeq-e Pain?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Jeqjeq-e Pain
4,664,979
27
[ { "id": "4701848", "title": "Qeshlaq-e Pain", "text": " Qeshlaq-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā'īn and Qeshlāq Pā’īn; also known as Kishlaa-Ashagi, Qeshlāq Ashāqī, Qeshlāq Soflá, and Qishlāq Ashāghi) is a village in Mavazekhan-e Shomali Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 132, in 32 families.", "score": "1.4924064" }, { "id": "28721716", "title": "Nehjaz-e Pain", "text": " Nehjaz-e Pain (, also Romanized as Nehjaz-e Pā’īn) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 4 families.", "score": "1.4408407" }, { "id": "14908610", "title": "Qik-e Pain", "text": " Qik-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qīḵ-e Pā’īn , Qehk-e Pā’īn, Qahak-e Pā’īn, and Qehak Pā’īn; also known as Qīḵ-e Soflá) is a village in Darmian Rural District, in the Central District of Darmian County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 164, in 46 families.", "score": "1.4024088" }, { "id": "47442", "title": "Pirjad-e Pain", "text": " Pirjad-e Pain (, also Romanized as Pīrjad-e Pā’īn; also known as Pīrjed, Pīrjerd, and Pīr Jad) is a village in Koregah-e Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 107, in 24 families.", "score": "1.3970705" }, { "id": "15652797", "title": "Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey", "text": " Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāleh Pey; also known as Anjelibei, Pā’īn Aḩmad, Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāl Pey, and Pā’īn Chāl) is a village in Lalehabad Rural District, Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,684, in 445 families.", "score": "1.3854297" }, { "id": "31294172", "title": "Qebleh Ei Pain", "text": " Qebleh Ei Pain (, also Romanized as Qebleh Eī Pā’īn, Qebleh’ī-ye Pā’īn, and Qeblehī-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Jahangiri Rural District, in the Central District of Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 93, in 13 families.", "score": "1.3829769" }, { "id": "15652945", "title": "Pain Ganj Afruz", "text": " Pain Ganj Afruz (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Ganj Afrūz) is a village in Ganjafruz Rural District, in the Central District of Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,821, in 1,380 families.", "score": "1.3738306" }, { "id": "15652551", "title": "Pain Marzbal", "text": " Pain Marzbal (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Marzbāl) is a village in Gatab-e Jonubi Rural District, Gatab District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,110, in 246 families.", "score": "1.3723367" }, { "id": "30084695", "title": "Jazimaq", "text": " Jazimaq (, also Romanized as Jazīmaq; also known as Jazīman (Persian: جزيمن), Gizmeh, Kharīmaq, and Kiz’ma) is a village in Qareh Poshtelu-e Pain Rural District, Qareh Poshtelu District, Zanjan County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 250, in 51 families.", "score": "1.3699472" }, { "id": "27484462", "title": "Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar", "text": " Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā’īn Ḩeşār; also known as Qeshlāq-e Āqāyī) is a village in Miankuh Rural District, Chapeshlu District, Dargaz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 20 families.", "score": "1.3697841" }, { "id": "27874787", "title": "Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain", "text": " Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain (, also Romanized as ʿEīdī Mordeh-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Ahmadfedaleh Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 88, in 14 families.", "score": "1.3684993" }, { "id": "30984740", "title": "Hajj Qeshlaq", "text": " Hajj Qeshlaq (, also Romanized as Ḩājj Qeshlāq; also known as Hāj, Ḩājī Qeshlāq, Ḩājjī Qeshlāq, and Hāz Qishlāq) is a village in Ijrud-e Pain Rural District, Halab District, Ijrud County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 166, in 35 families.", "score": "1.3630117" }, { "id": "25631170", "title": "Ezzat-e Pain", "text": " Ezzat-e Pain (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzat-e Pā’īn; also known as Kalāteh-ye Cheshmeh Kabūd) is a village in Jazin Rural District, in the Central District of Bajestan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23, in 11 families.", "score": "1.3613043" }, { "id": "131351", "title": "Zeyarat-e Pain", "text": " Zeyarat-e Pain (, also Romanized as Zeyārat-e Pā’īn) is a village in Jamabrud Rural District, in the Central District of Damavand County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 20, in 8 families.", "score": "1.3549898" }, { "id": "12204490", "title": "Sar Asiab-e Pain, Fars", "text": " Sar Asiab-e Pain (, also Romanized as Sar Āsīāb-e Pā’īn; also known as Sar Āsīāb-e Soflá) is a village in Javid-e Mahuri Rural District, in the Central District of Mamasani County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 6 families.", "score": "1.351156" }, { "id": "4701457", "title": "Jiqeh", "text": " Jiqeh (, also Romanized as Jīqeh; also known as Dzhiga, Jegheh, Jeqeh, Jeqqeh, Jiga, and Jīgheh) is a village in Bedevostan-e Gharbi Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,156, in 244 families.", "score": "1.3485146" }, { "id": "29120104", "title": "Jam-Abad", "text": " Jeam Abad is a town near Mashad in the east of Iran near its border with Afghanistan.", "score": "1.3440671" }, { "id": "27305378", "title": "Jow-e Pain", "text": " Jow-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jow-e Pā’īn, Jowpā’īn, and Jūpa’īn) is a village in Bizaki Rural District, Golbajar District, Chenaran County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 30 families.", "score": "1.3419757" }, { "id": "11023138", "title": "Jaghdar-e Pain", "text": " Jaghdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jaghdar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Siyahu Rural District, Fin District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 19 families.", "score": "1.3393092" }, { "id": "28721912", "title": "Pain Jovin Rural District", "text": " Pain Jovin Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Helali District, Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12,536, in 3,051 families. The rural district includes 16 villages.", "score": "1.3350961" } ]
[ "Qeshlaq-e Pain\n Qeshlaq-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā'īn and Qeshlāq Pā’īn; also known as Kishlaa-Ashagi, Qeshlāq Ashāqī, Qeshlāq Soflá, and Qishlāq Ashāghi) is a village in Mavazekhan-e Shomali Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 132, in 32 families.", "Nehjaz-e Pain\n Nehjaz-e Pain (, also Romanized as Nehjaz-e Pā’īn) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 4 families.", "Qik-e Pain\n Qik-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qīḵ-e Pā’īn , Qehk-e Pā’īn, Qahak-e Pā’īn, and Qehak Pā’īn; also known as Qīḵ-e Soflá) is a village in Darmian Rural District, in the Central District of Darmian County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 164, in 46 families.", "Pirjad-e Pain\n Pirjad-e Pain (, also Romanized as Pīrjad-e Pā’īn; also known as Pīrjed, Pīrjerd, and Pīr Jad) is a village in Koregah-e Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 107, in 24 families.", "Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey\n Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāleh Pey; also known as Anjelibei, Pā’īn Aḩmad, Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāl Pey, and Pā’īn Chāl) is a village in Lalehabad Rural District, Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,684, in 445 families.", "Qebleh Ei Pain\n Qebleh Ei Pain (, also Romanized as Qebleh Eī Pā’īn, Qebleh’ī-ye Pā’īn, and Qeblehī-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Jahangiri Rural District, in the Central District of Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 93, in 13 families.", "Pain Ganj Afruz\n Pain Ganj Afruz (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Ganj Afrūz) is a village in Ganjafruz Rural District, in the Central District of Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,821, in 1,380 families.", "Pain Marzbal\n Pain Marzbal (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Marzbāl) is a village in Gatab-e Jonubi Rural District, Gatab District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,110, in 246 families.", "Jazimaq\n Jazimaq (, also Romanized as Jazīmaq; also known as Jazīman (Persian: جزيمن), Gizmeh, Kharīmaq, and Kiz’ma) is a village in Qareh Poshtelu-e Pain Rural District, Qareh Poshtelu District, Zanjan County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 250, in 51 families.", "Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar\n Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā’īn Ḩeşār; also known as Qeshlāq-e Āqāyī) is a village in Miankuh Rural District, Chapeshlu District, Dargaz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 20 families.", "Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain\n Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain (, also Romanized as ʿEīdī Mordeh-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Ahmadfedaleh Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 88, in 14 families.", "Hajj Qeshlaq\n Hajj Qeshlaq (, also Romanized as Ḩājj Qeshlāq; also known as Hāj, Ḩājī Qeshlāq, Ḩājjī Qeshlāq, and Hāz Qishlāq) is a village in Ijrud-e Pain Rural District, Halab District, Ijrud County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 166, in 35 families.", "Ezzat-e Pain\n Ezzat-e Pain (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzat-e Pā’īn; also known as Kalāteh-ye Cheshmeh Kabūd) is a village in Jazin Rural District, in the Central District of Bajestan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23, in 11 families.", "Zeyarat-e Pain\n Zeyarat-e Pain (, also Romanized as Zeyārat-e Pā’īn) is a village in Jamabrud Rural District, in the Central District of Damavand County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 20, in 8 families.", "Sar Asiab-e Pain, Fars\n Sar Asiab-e Pain (, also Romanized as Sar Āsīāb-e Pā’īn; also known as Sar Āsīāb-e Soflá) is a village in Javid-e Mahuri Rural District, in the Central District of Mamasani County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 6 families.", "Jiqeh\n Jiqeh (, also Romanized as Jīqeh; also known as Dzhiga, Jegheh, Jeqeh, Jeqqeh, Jiga, and Jīgheh) is a village in Bedevostan-e Gharbi Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,156, in 244 families.", "Jam-Abad\n Jeam Abad is a town near Mashad in the east of Iran near its border with Afghanistan.", "Jow-e Pain\n Jow-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jow-e Pā’īn, Jowpā’īn, and Jūpa’īn) is a village in Bizaki Rural District, Golbajar District, Chenaran County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 30 families.", "Jaghdar-e Pain\n Jaghdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jaghdar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Siyahu Rural District, Fin District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 19 families.", "Pain Jovin Rural District\n Pain Jovin Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Helali District, Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12,536, in 3,051 families. The rural district includes 16 villages." ]
In what country is Dragomirna River?
[ "Romania", "Roumania", "Rumania", "România", "ro", "🇷🇴" ]
country
Dragomirna (Suceava)
3,952,467
48
[ { "id": "31729943", "title": "Dragomirna (Suceava)", "text": " The Dragomirna is a left tributary of the river Suceava in Romania. It flows into the Suceava in the city Suceava. Its length is 16 km and its basin size is 34 km2. Its lowermost course is shared with the river Mitoc, another left tributary of the Suceava.", "score": "1.6433184" }, { "id": "15259798", "title": "Dragor (river)", "text": " The Dragor (Драгор) is a small river situated in the south of North Macedonia. It flows mainly through the city of Bitola. Its spring is located near Sapunčica, on the Baba Mountain. The Dragor is a right tributary of the Crna river.", "score": "1.4676276" }, { "id": "31997801", "title": "Dragonja", "text": " The Dragonja (Dragogna) is a 30 km long river in the northern part of the Istrian peninsula. It is a meandering river with a very branched basin and a small quantity of water. It has a pluvial regime and often dries up in summer. It features very diverse living environments and is home to a number of animal and plant species. The Dragonja has been a matter of a territorial dispute between Croatia and Slovenia, with its lowest portion de facto the border of the two countries.", "score": "1.4331565" }, { "id": "7472774", "title": "Briceni District", "text": " The main rivers that cross the district are: Vilia, Larga, Lopatnic (57 km), but rivers Racovăț (68 km) and Draghiște (67 km) crossing in the upper. Briceni District is in the Prut river basin. Most lakes are of artificial origin.", "score": "1.4280326" }, { "id": "30504418", "title": "List of rivers of Slovakia", "text": "Danube/Dunaj ; Tisa (mouth at Novi Sad, Serbia) ; Slaná (at Tiszagyulaháza, H) ; Hornád (at Ónod, H) ; Torysa (at Nižná Hutka) ; Hnilec (at Margecany) ; Bodva (at Boldva, H) ; Turňa (near Turňa nad Bodvou) ; Ida (near Turňa nad Bodvou) ; Rimava (at Vlkyňa) ; Turiec (near Tornaľa) ; Muráň (at Bretka) ; Bodrog* (at Tokaj, H) [* the Bodrog arises through the confluence of the rivers Ondava and Latorica] ; Roňava (at Sátoraljaújhely, H) ; Ondava* (at Zemplín (village)) ; Topľa (at Tušice) ; Latorica* (at Zemplín) ; Laborec (at Zatín) ; Uzh/Uh (at Drahňov) ; Cirocha (at Humenné) ; Ipeľ (at Szob, H) ; Štiavnica (at Hrkovce) ; Krupinica (at Šahy) ; Krtíš (at Slovenské Ďarmoty) ; Tisovník (at Muľa) ; Hron (at Kamenica nad ", "score": "1.4054109" }, { "id": "27997426", "title": "Dragomirovo, Veliko Tarnovo Province", "text": " Dragomirovo (Драгомирово) is a village in central northern Bulgaria, part of Svishtov Municipality, Veliko Tarnovo Province. As of January 2006, it has a population of 864 and the mayor is Hristo Yordanov of the National Movement Simeon II. Dragomirovo was founded following the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878 as part of the earliest wave of Roman Catholic Banat Bulgarian return from the Banat (in Austria-Hungary) to Bulgaria, and was settled by 141 households from Stár Bišnov and one from Brešća, as well as by another, culturally different group of Roman Catholic Bulgarians: \"Bucharesters\" from Popești-Leordeni and Cioplea in Wallachia, Romania. Besides the Catholics, Dragomirovo also has a large and varied Bulgarian Orthodox population, which consists of former emigrants who had returned from Romania, as well as Bulgarian settlers from the Balkan Mountains and other inland regions, and Bulgarian refugees from Vardar Macedonia who arrived in 1922. As a result, Dragomirovo has three neighbourhoods: the \"Banatian\", the \"Bucharestian\" (both Catholic) and the \"Vlach\" (of all Eastern Orthodox residents) neighbourhood. To further complicate the confessional structure of the village, a number of Protestant denominations also found supporters in Dragomirovo. In 1934, the village had 1,754 Eastern Orthodox residents and 1,204 Catholics.", "score": "1.397511" }, { "id": "12366180", "title": "List of rivers of Bulgaria", "text": " A country rich in water resources, Bulgaria has a large number of rivers that are divided into several regions based on their mouth's location. Rivers of northern Bulgaria, with the exception of the very east of the region, are typically tributaries of the Danube. Notable rivers in the area are the Iskar, Vit, Ogosta, Osam and Yantra. The rivers in the eastern part of the country are typically short (except for Kamchiya) and flow into the Black Sea. Notable rivers in the region include the Kamchiya, Batova, Provadiyska, Devnenska, Ropotamo, Veleka and Rezovska. Most of the rivers that rise in southern Bulgaria have their mouths in the Aegean Sea outside Bulgarian territory. A notable exception is the Iskar that takes its source from Rila and runs through Stara Planina forming a gorge to reach the Danube. Depending on their location, they are divided into two regions, a Western Aegean and Eastern Aegean one. The former embraces the Struma and Mesta, while rivers in the latter include the Arda, Maritsa and Tundzha.", "score": "1.3860941" }, { "id": "8980274", "title": "Temštica", "text": " The Temštica, known as the Topli Do river (Toplodolska reka, Топлодолска река) in the northern part, originates from five streams from the Stara Planina mountain on the Serbian–Bulgarian border. Three major streams spring out from several peaks of Stara Planina: Midžor/Midzhur (Миџор/Миджур), Vražija Glava/Vrazha glava (Вражија Глава/Вража глава), Bratkova Strana (Браткова Страна) and Gola Glava (Гола Глава). They all join together near the village of Topli Dol, which gives the alternative name to the river. Temštica carved a canyon, popularly nicknamed \"Little Colorado\". The river continues to the northwest and receives the Visočica from the left. In 1990, a tunnel was built to conduct 90% of the Visočica's water ", "score": "1.3857623" }, { "id": "26344772", "title": "Dragomir Karić", "text": " Malawi, Micronesia, Namibia, Nepal, Oman, the Philippines, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In addition to this, he was a member of Serbia's parliamentary friendship groups with Albania, Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cape Verde, China, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, the Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Palestine, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, Spain, the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, the United Arab ", "score": "1.385154" }, { "id": "9521464", "title": "Blederija", "text": " the southeast direction and receives rivers of Sokolovica (downstream from the Grad locality) and Suvaja. Rivers carved a small, picturesque limestone gorge, with several pronounced narrows and waterfalls. Its total length is only 4.3 km. After receiving the Ravna reka, it continues into the Danube under the name of Račka Reka or simply the Reka. The average discharge varies greatly and during the catastrophic 2014 Southeast Europe floods, the river heavily flooded its lower valley causing damage. However, during normal water levels, the river can be crossed on foot in some sections, though there are several small bridges across it.", "score": "1.3790454" }, { "id": "32373546", "title": "Croatia–Slovenia border disputes", "text": " disputed areas. In one location where the cadasters did not coincide, the Slovenian cadaster prevailed over an 1898 Croatian cadastral map. The settlement of Drage lies in Slovenia. The Tribunal declared that in the Trdinov Vrh/Sveta Gera area, the border follows the cadastral limits. The barracks are on Croatian territory; however, the Tribunal \"observes that it has no jurisdiction to address Croatia's request for a declaration as to the presence of Slovenian civilian and military personnel in that area\". Along the Kamenica River, the border follows Croatia's claim. Along Čabranka River, the border follows the cadastral limits. The same ", "score": "1.3757415" }, { "id": "30504419", "title": "List of rivers of Slovakia", "text": " ; Slatina (at Zvolen) ; Bystrica (at Banská Bystrica) ; Váh (at Komárno) ; Nitra (at Komárno) ; Žitava (at Martovce) ; Radosinka (at Lužianky) ; Bebrava (at Práznovce) ; Little Danube/Malý Dunaj (at Kolárovo) ; Čierna Voda (at Veľký Ostrov near Komárno) ; Dudváh (at Čierna Voda) ; Dudváh (at Siladice) ; Kysuca (at Žilina) ; Bystrica (at Krásno nad Kysucou) ; Rajčanka (at Žilina) ; Turiec (at Martin) ; Orava (at Kraľovany) ; Revúca (at Ružomberok) ; Belá (at Liptovský Hrádok) ; Čierny Váh (at Kráľova Lehota) ; Biely Váh (at Kráľova Lehota) ; Morava (in Bratislava (city part Devín)) ; Myjava (at Kúty) ; Chvojnica (near Holíč) ; Dunajec ; Poprad (at Nowy Sącz, Poland) ordered against the direction of the river flow; H stands for Hungary", "score": "1.3742509" }, { "id": "4236412", "title": "Sofia Province", "text": " status, but the 1932 military expedition measured both Vihren and Musala with a margin of error of only 15 centimetres and thus put an end to the rivalry. Rila is also the source of the Iskar, the longest river that runs entirely within Bulgarian territory. It is a tributary to the Danube and forms part of the Black Sea river basin. The 23 km long Cherni (black) Iskar is considered the main stem of the river, taking its source from the Chamovsko Lake (2,500 m) to the north-east of Damga Peak (2,669 m) and from there the river flows in ", "score": "1.3660376" }, { "id": "2692929", "title": "Vsetínská Bečva", "text": " Vsetínská Bečva (formerly: Horní Bečva; German: Obere Betschwa) is a river in the Czech Republic, the left tributary of the Bečva. It originates in the Javorníky mountain range at the elevation of 896 m and flows to Valašské Meziříčí, where it joins with Rožnovská Bečva to form the river Bečva. It is 59.4 km long, and its basin area is about 735 km2, of which 727.5 km2 in the Czech Republic. It flows through numerous towns and villages, including Velké Karlovice, Karolinka, Nový Hrozenkov, Halenkov, Huslenky, Hovězí, Janová, Ústí, Vsetín, Jablůnka, Pržno, Bystřička, Jarcová and Valašské Meziříčí. Its longest tributary is the Senice.", "score": "1.3654563" }, { "id": "31055420", "title": "Stone run", "text": " The Vitosha stone rivers (каменна река / kamenna reka, pl. каменни реки / kamenni reki), located in Bulgaria, are situated in the middle and upper mountain belts at elevation over 1,000 m above sea level. Among the largest ones are those on the Subalpine plateaus surrounding the summit Cherni Vrah (2290 m), and in the upper courses of the mountain's rivers, extending over 2 km at the Zlatnite Mostove (‘Golden Bridges’) site in the upper course of Vladayska River, and over 1 km in the case of Boyanska, Bistritsa, and Struma Rivers. Golyamata Gramada (Big Pile) Stone River in Vitoshka Bistritsa River valley is ", "score": "1.3646221" }, { "id": "10964825", "title": "List of rivers of Europe", "text": " 163 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 40) - Vrbas - 132 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 41) - Drina - 124 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 42) - Arda - 77 m3/s (tributary of Maritsa) ; 43) Struma - 76 m3/s ; 44) - Iskar - 54 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 45) - Yantra - 47 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 46) Mesta - 45 m3/s ; 47) - Tundzha - 32 m3/s (tributary of Maritsa) ; 48) Kamchiya - 26 m3/s This is an incomplete list of the largest rivers of Europe by discharge:", "score": "1.364006" }, { "id": "2265071", "title": "Ogosta", "text": " The Ogosta (Огоста, Latin: Augusta), is the largest river in Northwestern Bulgaria, a right tributary of the Danube. It originates at Chiprovska Mountain, 2,168 meters high section of the Western Balkan Mountains, at about an altitude of 1,760 meters, on the border with Serbia. The towns of Chiprovtsi, Montana, and Miziya are situated on the river's banks. The Ogosta river is 147.4 km in length and is fed by 40 tributaries (including the Skat River) in a watershed of 3,157 square kilometers. The average water discharge in the lower course of the river is 18 cubic meters per second. Along the river's length there are 14 irrigation systems, 8 hydropower plants, and 13 dams. Although the river is used ", "score": "1.362483" }, { "id": "10964824", "title": "List of rivers of Europe", "text": " m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 25) Glomma - 709 m3/s (Norway's longest and most voluminous river) ; 26) Göta älv - 575 m3/s ; 27) Lule älv - 505 m3/s ; 28) Ångermanälven - 500 m3/s ; 29) Indalsälven - 445 m3/s ; 30) Umeälven - 443 m3/s ; 31) Kuban River - 430 m3/s ; 32) Maritsa - 383 m3/s ; 33) Meuse - 357 m3/s ; 34) Dniester - 313 m3/s ; 35) - Neretva - 240 m3/s ; 36) - Una - 240 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 37) - Great Morava - 232 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 38) Vardar - 170 m3/s ; 39) - Bosna ", "score": "1.3617684" }, { "id": "28320390", "title": "Hron", "text": " The Hron (Hron; Gran; Garam; Granus) is a 271 km long left tributary of the Danube and the second-longest river in Slovakia. It flows from its source in the Low Tatra Mountains (below Kráľova hoľa) through central and southern Slovakia, emptying into the Danube near Štúrovo and Esztergom. Major cities and towns on the Hron are Brezno, Banská Bystrica, Sliač, Zvolen, Žiar nad Hronom, Žarnovica, Nová Baňa, Tlmače, Levice, Želiezovce, and Štúrovo. The river's basin covers 5465 km2, which is approximately 11 percent of Slovakia's territory. Hron is a popular destination of water tourism.", "score": "1.3581929" }, { "id": "15514366", "title": "Drăgoteni", "text": " The Drăgoteni is a right tributary of the river Valea Roșie in Romania. It flows into the Valea Roșie near Pocola. Its length is 11 km and its basin size is 41 km2.", "score": "1.3568592" } ]
[ "Dragomirna (Suceava)\n The Dragomirna is a left tributary of the river Suceava in Romania. It flows into the Suceava in the city Suceava. Its length is 16 km and its basin size is 34 km2. Its lowermost course is shared with the river Mitoc, another left tributary of the Suceava.", "Dragor (river)\n The Dragor (Драгор) is a small river situated in the south of North Macedonia. It flows mainly through the city of Bitola. Its spring is located near Sapunčica, on the Baba Mountain. The Dragor is a right tributary of the Crna river.", "Dragonja\n The Dragonja (Dragogna) is a 30 km long river in the northern part of the Istrian peninsula. It is a meandering river with a very branched basin and a small quantity of water. It has a pluvial regime and often dries up in summer. It features very diverse living environments and is home to a number of animal and plant species. The Dragonja has been a matter of a territorial dispute between Croatia and Slovenia, with its lowest portion de facto the border of the two countries.", "Briceni District\n The main rivers that cross the district are: Vilia, Larga, Lopatnic (57 km), but rivers Racovăț (68 km) and Draghiște (67 km) crossing in the upper. Briceni District is in the Prut river basin. Most lakes are of artificial origin.", "List of rivers of Slovakia\nDanube/Dunaj ; Tisa (mouth at Novi Sad, Serbia) ; Slaná (at Tiszagyulaháza, H) ; Hornád (at Ónod, H) ; Torysa (at Nižná Hutka) ; Hnilec (at Margecany) ; Bodva (at Boldva, H) ; Turňa (near Turňa nad Bodvou) ; Ida (near Turňa nad Bodvou) ; Rimava (at Vlkyňa) ; Turiec (near Tornaľa) ; Muráň (at Bretka) ; Bodrog* (at Tokaj, H) [* the Bodrog arises through the confluence of the rivers Ondava and Latorica] ; Roňava (at Sátoraljaújhely, H) ; Ondava* (at Zemplín (village)) ; Topľa (at Tušice) ; Latorica* (at Zemplín) ; Laborec (at Zatín) ; Uzh/Uh (at Drahňov) ; Cirocha (at Humenné) ; Ipeľ (at Szob, H) ; Štiavnica (at Hrkovce) ; Krupinica (at Šahy) ; Krtíš (at Slovenské Ďarmoty) ; Tisovník (at Muľa) ; Hron (at Kamenica nad ", "Dragomirovo, Veliko Tarnovo Province\n Dragomirovo (Драгомирово) is a village in central northern Bulgaria, part of Svishtov Municipality, Veliko Tarnovo Province. As of January 2006, it has a population of 864 and the mayor is Hristo Yordanov of the National Movement Simeon II. Dragomirovo was founded following the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878 as part of the earliest wave of Roman Catholic Banat Bulgarian return from the Banat (in Austria-Hungary) to Bulgaria, and was settled by 141 households from Stár Bišnov and one from Brešća, as well as by another, culturally different group of Roman Catholic Bulgarians: \"Bucharesters\" from Popești-Leordeni and Cioplea in Wallachia, Romania. Besides the Catholics, Dragomirovo also has a large and varied Bulgarian Orthodox population, which consists of former emigrants who had returned from Romania, as well as Bulgarian settlers from the Balkan Mountains and other inland regions, and Bulgarian refugees from Vardar Macedonia who arrived in 1922. As a result, Dragomirovo has three neighbourhoods: the \"Banatian\", the \"Bucharestian\" (both Catholic) and the \"Vlach\" (of all Eastern Orthodox residents) neighbourhood. To further complicate the confessional structure of the village, a number of Protestant denominations also found supporters in Dragomirovo. In 1934, the village had 1,754 Eastern Orthodox residents and 1,204 Catholics.", "List of rivers of Bulgaria\n A country rich in water resources, Bulgaria has a large number of rivers that are divided into several regions based on their mouth's location. Rivers of northern Bulgaria, with the exception of the very east of the region, are typically tributaries of the Danube. Notable rivers in the area are the Iskar, Vit, Ogosta, Osam and Yantra. The rivers in the eastern part of the country are typically short (except for Kamchiya) and flow into the Black Sea. Notable rivers in the region include the Kamchiya, Batova, Provadiyska, Devnenska, Ropotamo, Veleka and Rezovska. Most of the rivers that rise in southern Bulgaria have their mouths in the Aegean Sea outside Bulgarian territory. A notable exception is the Iskar that takes its source from Rila and runs through Stara Planina forming a gorge to reach the Danube. Depending on their location, they are divided into two regions, a Western Aegean and Eastern Aegean one. The former embraces the Struma and Mesta, while rivers in the latter include the Arda, Maritsa and Tundzha.", "Temštica\n The Temštica, known as the Topli Do river (Toplodolska reka, Топлодолска река) in the northern part, originates from five streams from the Stara Planina mountain on the Serbian–Bulgarian border. Three major streams spring out from several peaks of Stara Planina: Midžor/Midzhur (Миџор/Миджур), Vražija Glava/Vrazha glava (Вражија Глава/Вража глава), Bratkova Strana (Браткова Страна) and Gola Glava (Гола Глава). They all join together near the village of Topli Dol, which gives the alternative name to the river. Temštica carved a canyon, popularly nicknamed \"Little Colorado\". The river continues to the northwest and receives the Visočica from the left. In 1990, a tunnel was built to conduct 90% of the Visočica's water ", "Dragomir Karić\n Malawi, Micronesia, Namibia, Nepal, Oman, the Philippines, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Uganda, Vietnam, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. In addition to this, he was a member of Serbia's parliamentary friendship groups with Albania, Algeria, Argentina, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Cape Verde, China, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Egypt, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, the Netherlands, North Macedonia, Norway, Palestine, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Korea, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, Spain, the countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, the United Arab ", "Blederija\n the southeast direction and receives rivers of Sokolovica (downstream from the Grad locality) and Suvaja. Rivers carved a small, picturesque limestone gorge, with several pronounced narrows and waterfalls. Its total length is only 4.3 km. After receiving the Ravna reka, it continues into the Danube under the name of Račka Reka or simply the Reka. The average discharge varies greatly and during the catastrophic 2014 Southeast Europe floods, the river heavily flooded its lower valley causing damage. However, during normal water levels, the river can be crossed on foot in some sections, though there are several small bridges across it.", "Croatia–Slovenia border disputes\n disputed areas. In one location where the cadasters did not coincide, the Slovenian cadaster prevailed over an 1898 Croatian cadastral map. The settlement of Drage lies in Slovenia. The Tribunal declared that in the Trdinov Vrh/Sveta Gera area, the border follows the cadastral limits. The barracks are on Croatian territory; however, the Tribunal \"observes that it has no jurisdiction to address Croatia's request for a declaration as to the presence of Slovenian civilian and military personnel in that area\". Along the Kamenica River, the border follows Croatia's claim. Along Čabranka River, the border follows the cadastral limits. The same ", "List of rivers of Slovakia\n ; Slatina (at Zvolen) ; Bystrica (at Banská Bystrica) ; Váh (at Komárno) ; Nitra (at Komárno) ; Žitava (at Martovce) ; Radosinka (at Lužianky) ; Bebrava (at Práznovce) ; Little Danube/Malý Dunaj (at Kolárovo) ; Čierna Voda (at Veľký Ostrov near Komárno) ; Dudváh (at Čierna Voda) ; Dudváh (at Siladice) ; Kysuca (at Žilina) ; Bystrica (at Krásno nad Kysucou) ; Rajčanka (at Žilina) ; Turiec (at Martin) ; Orava (at Kraľovany) ; Revúca (at Ružomberok) ; Belá (at Liptovský Hrádok) ; Čierny Váh (at Kráľova Lehota) ; Biely Váh (at Kráľova Lehota) ; Morava (in Bratislava (city part Devín)) ; Myjava (at Kúty) ; Chvojnica (near Holíč) ; Dunajec ; Poprad (at Nowy Sącz, Poland) ordered against the direction of the river flow; H stands for Hungary", "Sofia Province\n status, but the 1932 military expedition measured both Vihren and Musala with a margin of error of only 15 centimetres and thus put an end to the rivalry. Rila is also the source of the Iskar, the longest river that runs entirely within Bulgarian territory. It is a tributary to the Danube and forms part of the Black Sea river basin. The 23 km long Cherni (black) Iskar is considered the main stem of the river, taking its source from the Chamovsko Lake (2,500 m) to the north-east of Damga Peak (2,669 m) and from there the river flows in ", "Vsetínská Bečva\n Vsetínská Bečva (formerly: Horní Bečva; German: Obere Betschwa) is a river in the Czech Republic, the left tributary of the Bečva. It originates in the Javorníky mountain range at the elevation of 896 m and flows to Valašské Meziříčí, where it joins with Rožnovská Bečva to form the river Bečva. It is 59.4 km long, and its basin area is about 735 km2, of which 727.5 km2 in the Czech Republic. It flows through numerous towns and villages, including Velké Karlovice, Karolinka, Nový Hrozenkov, Halenkov, Huslenky, Hovězí, Janová, Ústí, Vsetín, Jablůnka, Pržno, Bystřička, Jarcová and Valašské Meziříčí. Its longest tributary is the Senice.", "Stone run\n The Vitosha stone rivers (каменна река / kamenna reka, pl. каменни реки / kamenni reki), located in Bulgaria, are situated in the middle and upper mountain belts at elevation over 1,000 m above sea level. Among the largest ones are those on the Subalpine plateaus surrounding the summit Cherni Vrah (2290 m), and in the upper courses of the mountain's rivers, extending over 2 km at the Zlatnite Mostove (‘Golden Bridges’) site in the upper course of Vladayska River, and over 1 km in the case of Boyanska, Bistritsa, and Struma Rivers. Golyamata Gramada (Big Pile) Stone River in Vitoshka Bistritsa River valley is ", "List of rivers of Europe\n 163 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 40) - Vrbas - 132 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 41) - Drina - 124 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 42) - Arda - 77 m3/s (tributary of Maritsa) ; 43) Struma - 76 m3/s ; 44) - Iskar - 54 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 45) - Yantra - 47 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 46) Mesta - 45 m3/s ; 47) - Tundzha - 32 m3/s (tributary of Maritsa) ; 48) Kamchiya - 26 m3/s This is an incomplete list of the largest rivers of Europe by discharge:", "Ogosta\n The Ogosta (Огоста, Latin: Augusta), is the largest river in Northwestern Bulgaria, a right tributary of the Danube. It originates at Chiprovska Mountain, 2,168 meters high section of the Western Balkan Mountains, at about an altitude of 1,760 meters, on the border with Serbia. The towns of Chiprovtsi, Montana, and Miziya are situated on the river's banks. The Ogosta river is 147.4 km in length and is fed by 40 tributaries (including the Skat River) in a watershed of 3,157 square kilometers. The average water discharge in the lower course of the river is 18 cubic meters per second. Along the river's length there are 14 irrigation systems, 8 hydropower plants, and 13 dams. Although the river is used ", "List of rivers of Europe\n m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 25) Glomma - 709 m3/s (Norway's longest and most voluminous river) ; 26) Göta älv - 575 m3/s ; 27) Lule älv - 505 m3/s ; 28) Ångermanälven - 500 m3/s ; 29) Indalsälven - 445 m3/s ; 30) Umeälven - 443 m3/s ; 31) Kuban River - 430 m3/s ; 32) Maritsa - 383 m3/s ; 33) Meuse - 357 m3/s ; 34) Dniester - 313 m3/s ; 35) - Neretva - 240 m3/s ; 36) - Una - 240 m3/s (tributary of Sava, which is a tributary of the Danube) ; 37) - Great Morava - 232 m3/s (tributary of the Danube) ; 38) Vardar - 170 m3/s ; 39) - Bosna ", "Hron\n The Hron (Hron; Gran; Garam; Granus) is a 271 km long left tributary of the Danube and the second-longest river in Slovakia. It flows from its source in the Low Tatra Mountains (below Kráľova hoľa) through central and southern Slovakia, emptying into the Danube near Štúrovo and Esztergom. Major cities and towns on the Hron are Brezno, Banská Bystrica, Sliač, Zvolen, Žiar nad Hronom, Žarnovica, Nová Baňa, Tlmače, Levice, Želiezovce, and Štúrovo. The river's basin covers 5465 km2, which is approximately 11 percent of Slovakia's territory. Hron is a popular destination of water tourism.", "Drăgoteni\n The Drăgoteni is a right tributary of the river Valea Roșie in Romania. It flows into the Valea Roșie near Pocola. Its length is 11 km and its basin size is 41 km2." ]
In what country is Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh
5,199,344
19
[ { "id": "16587580", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Razzāqzādeh and Moḩammadābād Razzāqzādeh; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Shusef Rural District, Shusef District, Nehbandan County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 127, in 44 families.", "score": "1.8143268" }, { "id": "4125454", "title": "Mohammadabad (34°06′ N 51°23′ E), Sefiddasht", "text": " محمد آباد (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād and Mohammadābād) is a village in Sefiddasht, in the Central District of Aran va Bidgol County, Isfahan, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,903, in 462 families.", "score": "1.7414575" }, { "id": "8868568", "title": "Mohammadabad, Roshtkhar", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Astaneh Rural District, in the Central District of Roshtkhar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,943, in 856 families.", "score": "1.7103815" }, { "id": "4534430", "title": "Mohammadabad (32°40′ N 51°57′ E), Qahab-e Jonubi", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād; also known as Muhammadābād) is a village in Qahab-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,169, in 451 families.", "score": "1.6859549" }, { "id": "4534429", "title": "Mohammadabad (32°40′ N 51°47′ E), Qahab-e Jonubi", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Qahab-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 796, in 225 families.", "score": "1.6812111" }, { "id": "276492", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Sofla, Razavi Khorasan", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Sofla (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Soflá; also known as Moḩammadābād, Muhammadābād, and Nownamadābād) is a village in Quchan Atiq Rural District, in the Central District of Quchan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 184, in 43 families.", "score": "1.6801025" }, { "id": "4570076", "title": "Mohammadabad, Alborz", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād and Muhammadābād; also known as Moḩammadābād-e Arba‘eh) is a village in Najmabad Rural District, in the Central District of Nazarabad County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 448, in 115 families.", "score": "1.6645013" }, { "id": "8868527", "title": "Mohammadabad, Nishapur", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Rivand Rural District, in the Central District of Nishapur County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 144, in 37 families.", "score": "1.6525083" }, { "id": "276490", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Olya, Razavi Khorasan", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Olya (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e ‘Olyā; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Quchan Atiq Rural District, in the Central District of Quchan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 157, in 36 families.", "score": "1.6512282" }, { "id": "5723445", "title": "Mahmudabad-e Sofla, Razavi Khorasan", "text": " Mahmudabad-e Sofla (, also Romanized as Maḩmūdābād-e Soflá; also known as Moḩammadābād, Muhammadābād, Mahmūdābād, Maḩmūdābād-e Pā’īn, and Maḩmūdābād Pā’īn) is a village in Mian Jam Rural District, in the Central District of Torbat-e Jam County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,953, in 455 families.", "score": "1.6462166" }, { "id": "13352764", "title": "Rejaabad", "text": " Rejaabad (, also Romanized as Rejāābād; also known as Rijāābād) is a village in Mohammadabad Rural District, in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,502, in 359 families.", "score": "1.636989" }, { "id": "29017786", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Alizadeh", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Alizadeh (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e ‘Alīzādeh) is a village in Bahadoran Rural District, in the Central District of Mehriz County, Yazd Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16, in 4 families.", "score": "1.6342013" }, { "id": "9592419", "title": "Mohammadabad, Rabor", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Javaran Rural District, Hanza District, Rabor County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 122, in 26 families.", "score": "1.6307278" }, { "id": "13501317", "title": "Mohammadabad, Neyriz", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Rizab Rural District, Qatruyeh District, Neyriz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 14 families.", "score": "1.629461" }, { "id": "31352472", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Ilkhani", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Ilkhani (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Īlkhānī; also known as Moḩammadābād-e Qods (Persian: محمداباد قدس) and Moḩammadābād) is a village in Tus Rural District, in the Central District of Mashhad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 595, in 143 families.", "score": "1.6275539" }, { "id": "8868585", "title": "Mohammadabad, Khalilabad", "text": " Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Khalilabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 612, in 167 families.", "score": "1.627061" }, { "id": "13352776", "title": "Ezzabad, Marvdasht", "text": " Ezzabad (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzābād; also known as 'Ez Abad Marvdasht and ‘Ezzābād-e Marvdasht) is a village in Mohammadabad Rural District, in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 678, in 168 families.", "score": "1.6220679" }, { "id": "3902025", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Ayala", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Ayala (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Āyʿalā; also known as Moḩammadābād and Moḩammadābād-e Pāzūkī) is a village in Valiabad Rural District, in the Central District of Qarchak County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,044, in 1,213 families.", "score": "1.6189706" }, { "id": "5586251", "title": "Mohammadabad-e Garavand", "text": " Mohammadabad-e Garavand (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Garāvand; also known as Garāvand) is a village in Rumeshkhan Rural District, Central District, Rumeshkhan County, Lorestan Province, Iran. It lies 1.3 km by road south of Rashnudeh. At the 2006 census, its population was 212, in 52 families.", "score": "1.6152146" }, { "id": "5724267", "title": "Qazqaveh", "text": " Qazqaveh (, also Romanized as Qazqāveh; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Bala Jam Rural District, Nasrabad District, Torbat-e Jam County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 143, in 37 families.", "score": "1.6148119" } ]
[ "Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh\n Mohammadabad-e Razzaqzadeh (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Razzāqzādeh and Moḩammadābād Razzāqzādeh; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Shusef Rural District, Shusef District, Nehbandan County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 127, in 44 families.", "Mohammadabad (34°06′ N 51°23′ E), Sefiddasht\n محمد آباد (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād and Mohammadābād) is a village in Sefiddasht, in the Central District of Aran va Bidgol County, Isfahan, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,903, in 462 families.", "Mohammadabad, Roshtkhar\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Astaneh Rural District, in the Central District of Roshtkhar County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,943, in 856 families.", "Mohammadabad (32°40′ N 51°57′ E), Qahab-e Jonubi\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād; also known as Muhammadābād) is a village in Qahab-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,169, in 451 families.", "Mohammadabad (32°40′ N 51°47′ E), Qahab-e Jonubi\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Qahab-e Jonubi Rural District, in the Central District of Isfahan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 796, in 225 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Sofla, Razavi Khorasan\n Mohammadabad-e Sofla (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Soflá; also known as Moḩammadābād, Muhammadābād, and Nownamadābād) is a village in Quchan Atiq Rural District, in the Central District of Quchan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 184, in 43 families.", "Mohammadabad, Alborz\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād and Muhammadābād; also known as Moḩammadābād-e Arba‘eh) is a village in Najmabad Rural District, in the Central District of Nazarabad County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 448, in 115 families.", "Mohammadabad, Nishapur\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Rivand Rural District, in the Central District of Nishapur County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 144, in 37 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Olya, Razavi Khorasan\n Mohammadabad-e Olya (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e ‘Olyā; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Quchan Atiq Rural District, in the Central District of Quchan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 157, in 36 families.", "Mahmudabad-e Sofla, Razavi Khorasan\n Mahmudabad-e Sofla (, also Romanized as Maḩmūdābād-e Soflá; also known as Moḩammadābād, Muhammadābād, Mahmūdābād, Maḩmūdābād-e Pā’īn, and Maḩmūdābād Pā’īn) is a village in Mian Jam Rural District, in the Central District of Torbat-e Jam County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,953, in 455 families.", "Rejaabad\n Rejaabad (, also Romanized as Rejāābād; also known as Rijāābād) is a village in Mohammadabad Rural District, in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,502, in 359 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Alizadeh\n Mohammadabad-e Alizadeh (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e ‘Alīzādeh) is a village in Bahadoran Rural District, in the Central District of Mehriz County, Yazd Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 16, in 4 families.", "Mohammadabad, Rabor\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Javaran Rural District, Hanza District, Rabor County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 122, in 26 families.", "Mohammadabad, Neyriz\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Rizab Rural District, Qatruyeh District, Neyriz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 14 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Ilkhani\n Mohammadabad-e Ilkhani (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Īlkhānī; also known as Moḩammadābād-e Qods (Persian: محمداباد قدس) and Moḩammadābād) is a village in Tus Rural District, in the Central District of Mashhad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 595, in 143 families.", "Mohammadabad, Khalilabad\n Mohammadabad (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Khalilabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 612, in 167 families.", "Ezzabad, Marvdasht\n Ezzabad (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzābād; also known as 'Ez Abad Marvdasht and ‘Ezzābād-e Marvdasht) is a village in Mohammadabad Rural District, in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 678, in 168 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Ayala\n Mohammadabad-e Ayala (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Āyʿalā; also known as Moḩammadābād and Moḩammadābād-e Pāzūkī) is a village in Valiabad Rural District, in the Central District of Qarchak County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,044, in 1,213 families.", "Mohammadabad-e Garavand\n Mohammadabad-e Garavand (, also Romanized as Moḩammadābād-e Garāvand; also known as Garāvand) is a village in Rumeshkhan Rural District, Central District, Rumeshkhan County, Lorestan Province, Iran. It lies 1.3 km by road south of Rashnudeh. At the 2006 census, its population was 212, in 52 families.", "Qazqaveh\n Qazqaveh (, also Romanized as Qazqāveh; also known as Moḩammadābād) is a village in Bala Jam Rural District, Nasrabad District, Torbat-e Jam County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 143, in 37 families." ]
In what country is Grant?
[ "Slovenia", "Slovenija", "Republika Slovenija", "si", "🇸🇮", "svn", "slo", "Republic of Slovenia", "SLO" ]
country
Grant, Tolmin
1,741,307
56
[ { "id": "10202157", "title": "Grant, Queensland", "text": " Grant is a former rural locality in the Barcaldine Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Grant had a population of 11 people. On 22 November 2019 the Queensland Government decided to amalgamate the localities in the Barcaldine Region, resulting in five expanded localities based on the larger towns: Alpha, Aramac, Barcaldine, Jericho and Muttaburra. Grant was mostly incorporated into Barcaldine, except for the eastern corner which was incorporated into Jericho.", "score": "1.5785687" }, { "id": "9738659", "title": "Lada Granta", "text": " The Lada Granta is marketed in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Egypt. Within the European Union, it has been made available in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, France and Germany.", "score": "1.5645895" }, { "id": "29858403", "title": "Lindsay Grant", "text": " Grant is a senior partner of the Basseterre law firm Grant Powell & Co., where his areas of practice include immigration law, citizenship law, trust law, and insurance law. He graduated from the Norman Manley Law School in Jamaica and Harvard Law School in the United States. He renounced United States citizenship in 2009 during the debate on the National Assembly Elections (Amendment) Bill, which barred dual citizens from standing for election.", "score": "1.5626202" }, { "id": "15552980", "title": "The Grant", "text": " The Grant (formerly One Museum Park West) is the companion structure to One Museum Park in the Near South Side community area (neighborhood) in Chicago, Illinois, USA. It is located at the north end of the Central Station development.", "score": "1.5593085" }, { "id": "11286439", "title": "Grant, Ontario", "text": " Grant is an unincorporated place, former railway point and now a ghost town in the Unorganized North Part of Cochrane District in northeastern Ontario, Canada, located 25.5 km east of Nakina, Ontario.", "score": "1.5487146" }, { "id": "28569584", "title": "Grant Broadcasters", "text": " Grant Broadcasters is an Australian regional radio network that also includes a small number of metropolitan radio stations. It is a subsidiary of Here, There & Everywhere.", "score": "1.5360961" }, { "id": "4551116", "title": "Grant Thornton International", "text": " Grant Thornton member firms service international work through their local International Business Centres — located in 40 major commercial centres throughout the world. Grant Thornton International Ltd. carries out an annual global research project: the International Business Report, which surveys the views and expectations of over 11,500 privately held businesses across 40 economies.", "score": "1.5244603" }, { "id": "83365", "title": "Kate Grant", "text": " Mission in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and as Vice President of Nonprofit Programs at Network for Good. In 2004, Grant joined the board of Fistula Foundation, and in 2005 was appointed as its first CEO. She's led the Foundation from a focus on one hospital in one country, the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital in Ethiopia, to a global operation, having supported programs in 32 countries. The Foundation has offices in San Jose, California, Nairobi, Kenya and Mansa, Zambia. She's formed key partnerships with corporate leaders Johnson & Johnson and Astellas Pharma EMEA. She's the architect of a pathbreaking program in Kenya, Action on Fistula, ", "score": "1.5230098" }, { "id": "4773607", "title": "Grant Land", "text": " Grant Land is the northern lobe of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. Situated on the north coast, Cape Columbia, is the northernmost point of Canada, only 770 km from the North Pole, and was used as the final point on land for Peary's North Pole expedition in 1909. At its highest point, it is 3353 m above sea level.", "score": "1.5209932" }, { "id": "13908325", "title": "Grant (money)", "text": " Grants are made available in the United Kingdom for a variety of business, charitable and research purposes. The biggest grant distributors are government departments and agencies which offer grants to third party organisations (often a charitable organisation) to carry out statutory work on their behalf. Other major grant distributors in the United Kingdom are the National Lottery, charitable trusts and corporate foundations (through Corporate Social Responsibility policies). For example, Google contributes to the grants process through its Google Grants programme, where any charitable organization can benefit financially from free Google Ads advertising if they share Google's social responsibility outcomes. Grants are time limited (usually between one and three years) and are offered to implement ", "score": "1.5209067" }, { "id": "25838143", "title": "Igor Grant", "text": " Grant was born in Shanghai China, spending the early years of his life in what was formerly known as the French Concession, attending primary school at the Ecole Ste Jeanne D'Arc. The Grants (Alexander. Antonina, and Igor) emigrated to Vancouver, Canada in 1951. Alexander, who became blind due to an accident in his teens, worked for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, while Antonina worked in mail order sales at Sears, Roebuck. Grant attended Kitsilano High School Kitsilano Secondary School where he was active in student government and the United Nations club. In 1958 he became one of a group of students who travelled across Canada and the USA to visit the UN after winning public speaking competitions (Grant's speech was \"Canada's Role in the UN\").", "score": "1.5043916" }, { "id": "6327797", "title": "Dave Grant", "text": " Grant was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2009. 'Doin it for Dave' benefit gigs, supported by many comedians and comedy promoters were held various cities in Australia to raise funds to support Grant and his family. Despite alternative treatment in Tijuana and conventional treatment in Australia, Grant's health deteriorated. He died on 24 January 2010. A compilation of Grant's comedy was made after his death, entitled Is it just me?. A grant is presented in his name to emerging comedians who are participating in their first Adelaide fringe comedy show.", "score": "1.498568" }, { "id": "32975600", "title": "Grants of Croydon", "text": " Grants of Croydon is an entertainment complex at 14–32 High Street, Croydon, London. Originally built in 1894, Grants became a Grade II listed building in 1990. In 2000 Grants was re-developed into an entertainment centre. It was bought by Scottish Widows in early 2010.", "score": "1.4970957" }, { "id": "4664391", "title": "Ben Grant (rugby union)", "text": " Benjamin William Grant (born 18 May 1998 in Australia) is an Australian rugby union player who plays for the in Global Rapid Rugby and the Super Rugby AU competition. His original playing position is lock. He was named in the Force squad for the Global Rapid Rugby competition in 2020.", "score": "1.496135" }, { "id": "31248877", "title": "John Grant (rugby league)", "text": " John Grant (born 19 March 1950) is an Australian businessman, rugby league football administrator and former chairman of the Australian Rugby League Commission which controls rugby league in Australia. A former player of the 1970s, he was a Queensland interstate representative three-quarter back and a member of the Australian team which lost the 1972 World Cup to Great Britain in France. Grant had been playing his club football for the Brisbane Rugby League's Souths club under Wayne Bennett. Following the World Cup, Grant joined English club Warrington, playing for them during their table-topping 1972–73 season. Grant had completed an engineering degree at the University of Queensland before taking up a scholarship with Brisbane City Council. He went on to head the information technology company Data3 and become chairman of the Australian Information Industry Association. In 2011 Grant was named as the inaugural chairman of the Australian Rugby League Commission. The 2012 NRL season was the Commission's first in control of the League.", "score": "1.4951608" }, { "id": "15357982", "title": "Grant (given name)", "text": "Grant Tambling (born 1943), Australian politician ; Grant Tanner (born 1970), Australian rules footballer ; Grant Taylor (disambiguation), multiple people ; Grant Thatcher (1877–1936), American baseball player ; Grant Thomas (disambiguation), multiple people ; Grant Thomson (born 1988), South African cricketer ; Grant Thornton (cricketer) (born 1992), English cricketer ; Grant Thorogood, Australian rugby league footballer ; Grant Tierney (born 1961), Scottish footballer ; Grant Tilly (1937–2012), New Zealand actor ; Grant F. Timmerman (1919–1944), American marine ; Grant Tinker (1926–2016), American television executive ; Grant Tullar (1869–1950), American minister ; Grant Turner (disambiguation), multiple people ", "score": "1.4948797" }, { "id": "32848790", "title": "U.S. Grant Hotel", "text": " The U.S. Grant Hotel is a historic hotel in downtown San Diego, California operating under a franchise of Marriott International. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is 11 stories high and has 270 guest rooms in addition to meeting rooms and a ballroom.", "score": "1.4935896" }, { "id": "15967465", "title": "Foreign relations of the Netherlands", "text": " \"Developing countries aspiring to purchase foreign goods and services to invest in, inter alia, port facilities, roads, public transport, health care, or drinking water facilities may be eligible for a special Dutch grant facility. The grant facility, known as ORET (a Dutch acronym for Ontwikkelingsrelevante Exporttransacties, or Development-Related Export) serves to award grants to governments of developing countries for making payments to foreign suppliers.\"", "score": "1.4928848" }, { "id": "29328575", "title": "Grant, Iowa", "text": " Grant is a city in Montgomery County, Iowa, United States. The population was 86 at the time of the 2020 census.", "score": "1.4924068" }, { "id": "30374529", "title": "Tim Grant (rugby league)", "text": " Grant was born in Penrith, New South Wales, Australia.", "score": "1.491909" } ]
[ "Grant, Queensland\n Grant is a former rural locality in the Barcaldine Region, Queensland, Australia. In the, Grant had a population of 11 people. On 22 November 2019 the Queensland Government decided to amalgamate the localities in the Barcaldine Region, resulting in five expanded localities based on the larger towns: Alpha, Aramac, Barcaldine, Jericho and Muttaburra. Grant was mostly incorporated into Barcaldine, except for the eastern corner which was incorporated into Jericho.", "Lada Granta\n The Lada Granta is marketed in Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Egypt. Within the European Union, it has been made available in the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Austria, Hungary, France and Germany.", "Lindsay Grant\n Grant is a senior partner of the Basseterre law firm Grant Powell & Co., where his areas of practice include immigration law, citizenship law, trust law, and insurance law. He graduated from the Norman Manley Law School in Jamaica and Harvard Law School in the United States. He renounced United States citizenship in 2009 during the debate on the National Assembly Elections (Amendment) Bill, which barred dual citizens from standing for election.", "The Grant\n The Grant (formerly One Museum Park West) is the companion structure to One Museum Park in the Near South Side community area (neighborhood) in Chicago, Illinois, USA. It is located at the north end of the Central Station development.", "Grant, Ontario\n Grant is an unincorporated place, former railway point and now a ghost town in the Unorganized North Part of Cochrane District in northeastern Ontario, Canada, located 25.5 km east of Nakina, Ontario.", "Grant Broadcasters\n Grant Broadcasters is an Australian regional radio network that also includes a small number of metropolitan radio stations. It is a subsidiary of Here, There & Everywhere.", "Grant Thornton International\n Grant Thornton member firms service international work through their local International Business Centres — located in 40 major commercial centres throughout the world. Grant Thornton International Ltd. carries out an annual global research project: the International Business Report, which surveys the views and expectations of over 11,500 privately held businesses across 40 economies.", "Kate Grant\n Mission in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and as Vice President of Nonprofit Programs at Network for Good. In 2004, Grant joined the board of Fistula Foundation, and in 2005 was appointed as its first CEO. She's led the Foundation from a focus on one hospital in one country, the Addis Ababa Fistula Hospital in Ethiopia, to a global operation, having supported programs in 32 countries. The Foundation has offices in San Jose, California, Nairobi, Kenya and Mansa, Zambia. She's formed key partnerships with corporate leaders Johnson & Johnson and Astellas Pharma EMEA. She's the architect of a pathbreaking program in Kenya, Action on Fistula, ", "Grant Land\n Grant Land is the northern lobe of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. Situated on the north coast, Cape Columbia, is the northernmost point of Canada, only 770 km from the North Pole, and was used as the final point on land for Peary's North Pole expedition in 1909. At its highest point, it is 3353 m above sea level.", "Grant (money)\n Grants are made available in the United Kingdom for a variety of business, charitable and research purposes. The biggest grant distributors are government departments and agencies which offer grants to third party organisations (often a charitable organisation) to carry out statutory work on their behalf. Other major grant distributors in the United Kingdom are the National Lottery, charitable trusts and corporate foundations (through Corporate Social Responsibility policies). For example, Google contributes to the grants process through its Google Grants programme, where any charitable organization can benefit financially from free Google Ads advertising if they share Google's social responsibility outcomes. Grants are time limited (usually between one and three years) and are offered to implement ", "Igor Grant\n Grant was born in Shanghai China, spending the early years of his life in what was formerly known as the French Concession, attending primary school at the Ecole Ste Jeanne D'Arc. The Grants (Alexander. Antonina, and Igor) emigrated to Vancouver, Canada in 1951. Alexander, who became blind due to an accident in his teens, worked for the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, while Antonina worked in mail order sales at Sears, Roebuck. Grant attended Kitsilano High School Kitsilano Secondary School where he was active in student government and the United Nations club. In 1958 he became one of a group of students who travelled across Canada and the USA to visit the UN after winning public speaking competitions (Grant's speech was \"Canada's Role in the UN\").", "Dave Grant\n Grant was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2009. 'Doin it for Dave' benefit gigs, supported by many comedians and comedy promoters were held various cities in Australia to raise funds to support Grant and his family. Despite alternative treatment in Tijuana and conventional treatment in Australia, Grant's health deteriorated. He died on 24 January 2010. A compilation of Grant's comedy was made after his death, entitled Is it just me?. A grant is presented in his name to emerging comedians who are participating in their first Adelaide fringe comedy show.", "Grants of Croydon\n Grants of Croydon is an entertainment complex at 14–32 High Street, Croydon, London. Originally built in 1894, Grants became a Grade II listed building in 1990. In 2000 Grants was re-developed into an entertainment centre. It was bought by Scottish Widows in early 2010.", "Ben Grant (rugby union)\n Benjamin William Grant (born 18 May 1998 in Australia) is an Australian rugby union player who plays for the in Global Rapid Rugby and the Super Rugby AU competition. His original playing position is lock. He was named in the Force squad for the Global Rapid Rugby competition in 2020.", "John Grant (rugby league)\n John Grant (born 19 March 1950) is an Australian businessman, rugby league football administrator and former chairman of the Australian Rugby League Commission which controls rugby league in Australia. A former player of the 1970s, he was a Queensland interstate representative three-quarter back and a member of the Australian team which lost the 1972 World Cup to Great Britain in France. Grant had been playing his club football for the Brisbane Rugby League's Souths club under Wayne Bennett. Following the World Cup, Grant joined English club Warrington, playing for them during their table-topping 1972–73 season. Grant had completed an engineering degree at the University of Queensland before taking up a scholarship with Brisbane City Council. He went on to head the information technology company Data3 and become chairman of the Australian Information Industry Association. In 2011 Grant was named as the inaugural chairman of the Australian Rugby League Commission. The 2012 NRL season was the Commission's first in control of the League.", "Grant (given name)\nGrant Tambling (born 1943), Australian politician ; Grant Tanner (born 1970), Australian rules footballer ; Grant Taylor (disambiguation), multiple people ; Grant Thatcher (1877–1936), American baseball player ; Grant Thomas (disambiguation), multiple people ; Grant Thomson (born 1988), South African cricketer ; Grant Thornton (cricketer) (born 1992), English cricketer ; Grant Thorogood, Australian rugby league footballer ; Grant Tierney (born 1961), Scottish footballer ; Grant Tilly (1937–2012), New Zealand actor ; Grant F. Timmerman (1919–1944), American marine ; Grant Tinker (1926–2016), American television executive ; Grant Tullar (1869–1950), American minister ; Grant Turner (disambiguation), multiple people ", "U.S. Grant Hotel\n The U.S. Grant Hotel is a historic hotel in downtown San Diego, California operating under a franchise of Marriott International. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It is 11 stories high and has 270 guest rooms in addition to meeting rooms and a ballroom.", "Foreign relations of the Netherlands\n \"Developing countries aspiring to purchase foreign goods and services to invest in, inter alia, port facilities, roads, public transport, health care, or drinking water facilities may be eligible for a special Dutch grant facility. The grant facility, known as ORET (a Dutch acronym for Ontwikkelingsrelevante Exporttransacties, or Development-Related Export) serves to award grants to governments of developing countries for making payments to foreign suppliers.\"", "Grant, Iowa\n Grant is a city in Montgomery County, Iowa, United States. The population was 86 at the time of the 2020 census.", "Tim Grant (rugby league)\n Grant was born in Penrith, New South Wales, Australia." ]
In what country is Rubim do Norte River?
[ "Brazil", "Federative Republic of Brazil", "BR", "BRA", "br", "🇧🇷" ]
country
Rubim do Norte River
5,643,924
40
[ { "id": "3568735", "title": "Rubim do Norte River", "text": " The Rubim do Norte River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.7553697" }, { "id": "8849978", "title": "Capim River", "text": " The Capim River (Rio Capim) is a river in the state of Pará, Brazil. It is a tributary of the Guamá River. The Gurupí, Capim and Guamá rivers flow into the mouth of the Amazon and are affected by the daily tides, which force water from the Amazon upstream. They are in the Tocantins-Araguaia-Maranhão moist forests ecoregion.", "score": "1.53537" }, { "id": "308249", "title": "Pitimbu River", "text": " The Pitimbu River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. In 2007 the river was tested for potential cytotoxic and genotoxic surface water.", "score": "1.5197505" }, { "id": "29997142", "title": "Rio Grande do Norte", "text": " Rio Grande do Norte (,, ; \"Great Northern River\", in reference to the mouth of the Potengi River) is one of the states of Brazil, located in the northeastern region of the country, occupying the northeasternmost tip of the South American continent. Because of its geographic position, Rio Grande do Norte has a strategic importance. The capital and largest city is Natal. It is the land of the folklorist Luís da Câmara Cascudo. Its 410 km (254 mi) of sand, much sun, coconut palms and lagoons are responsible for the fame of beaches. Rocas Atoll, the only such feature in the Atlantic Ocean, is part of the state. The main economic activity is tourism, followed by the extraction of petroleum (the second largest producer in the country), agriculture, fruit growing and extraction of minerals, including considerable production ", "score": "1.5187573" }, { "id": "3568736", "title": "Rubim do Sul River", "text": " The Rubim do Sul River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.5097456" }, { "id": "3955907", "title": "Peruípe River (Braço Norte)", "text": " The Peruípe River (Braço Norte) is a river in Bahia state in eastern Brazil. It is one of two branches which form parts of the boundaries of Ibirapuã municipality before merging to form the Peruípe River.", "score": "1.5074763" }, { "id": "26982204", "title": "Ceará-Mirim River", "text": " The Ceará-Mirim River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4920702" }, { "id": "3328391", "title": "Braço Norte Direito River", "text": " The Braço Norte Direito River, or Santa Clara River, is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Itapemirim River. The Itapemirim River is formed by the Castelo River and the Braço Norte Direito and Braço Norte Esquerdo rivers, whose sources are in the Caparaó National Park. The 140 m Cachoeira da Fumaça waterfall on the Braço Norte Direito River attracts thousands of visitors annually due to its great scenic beauty.", "score": "1.4841795" }, { "id": "3805963", "title": "List of municipalities in Rio Grande do Norte", "text": " Rio Grande do Norte (Great River of the North) is a state located in the Northeast Region of Brazil. According to the 2010 Census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), Rio Grande do Norte has a population of 3,168,133 inhabitants over 52797 km2, which makes it the 16th largest state by population and the 22nd largest by area, out of 26 states. It is home to cities such as Natal, Mossoró, and São Gonçalo do Amarante. The land that became Rio Grande do Norte was a donatário to João de Barros, the factor of the House of India and Mina, from John III of Portugal in 1535; prior to that, the Portuguese Crown owned the land. The French, who trafficked Brazil wood in the area, had a foothold on the ", "score": "1.4614245" }, { "id": "27455462", "title": "Paraíba do Norte River", "text": " The Paraíba do Norte River, mostly known as Paraíba River, is the most important watercourse of the state of Paraíba in northeastern Brazil. The river originates in the Borborema Plateau, and flows northeast to empty into the Atlantic Ocean, north of João Pessoa, the state capital. Its constantly menaced estuary has a handful of little islands—among them Restinga and Stuart—and is the habitat of a range of animal species, as well as a number of ecosystems such as mangroves, the Atlantic Forest and salt marshes.", "score": "1.4614235" }, { "id": "14558438", "title": "Madeira River", "text": " to north-eastward direction, inland of Rondônia state of Brazil. The section of the river from the border to Porto Velho has notable drop of bed and was not navigable. Before 2012 the falls of Teotônio and of San Antonio existed here, they had higher flow rate and bigger level drop than more famous Boyoma Falls in Africa. Currently these rapids are submerged by the reservoir of Santo Antônio Dam. Below Porto Velho the Madeira meanders north-eastward through the Rondônia and Amazonas states of north west Brazil to its junction with the Amazon. The 283117 ha Rio Madeira Sustainable Development Reserve, created in 2006, extends along the north bank of the river opposite the town of Novo Aripuanã. At its mouth is Ilha Tupinambaranas, an extensive marshy region formed by the Madeira's distributaries.", "score": "1.45961" }, { "id": "3328399", "title": "Do Norte River (Espírito Santo)", "text": " The Do Norte River is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4581835" }, { "id": "29997055", "title": "Pernambuco", "text": " The rivers of the state include a number of small plateau streams flowing southward to the São Francisco River, and several large streams in the eastern part flowing eastward to the Atlantic. The former are the Moxotó, Ema, Pajeú, Terra Nova, Brigida, Boa Vista and Pontai, and are dry channels the greater part of the year. The largest of the coastal rivers are the Goiana River, which is formed by the confluence of the Tracunhaem and Capibaribe-mirim, and drains a rich agricultural region in the north-east part of the state; the Capibaribe, which has its source in the Serra de Jacarara and flows eastward to the Atlantic at Recife with a course of nearly 300 mi; the Ipojuca, which rises in the Serra de Aldeia Velha and reaches the coast south of Recife; the Serinhaen; and the Uná. A large tributary of the Uná, the Rio Jacuhipe, forms part of the boundary line with Alagoas.", "score": "1.4580013" }, { "id": "308245", "title": "Trairi River (Rio Grande do Norte)", "text": " The Trairi River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. The river basin contains the Nísia Floresta National Forest, a 169 ha sustainable use conservation unit created in 2001.", "score": "1.4560986" }, { "id": "9051030", "title": "Braço do Norte River", "text": " The Braço do Norte River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4557374" }, { "id": "26815632", "title": "Jamanxim River", "text": " The river flows through the Tapajós-Xingu moist forests ecoregion. It flows through the Itaituba I National Forest, a 220639 ha sustainable use conservation area established in 1998. The river basin also contains part of the 538151 ha Rio Novo National Park, a conservation unit created in 2006.", "score": "1.45566" }, { "id": "26982208", "title": "Doce River (Rio Grande do Norte)", "text": " The Doce River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.4461226" }, { "id": "1905574", "title": "Guajará-Mirim State Park", "text": " section of BR-421 were built from castanheira wood, and a report from the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources showed that wood had been stolen along the route. The two cities of Guajará-Mirim and Nova Mamoré were isolated in February 2014 because the BR-425 highway had been flooded by the Igarapé das Araras, a tributary of the Madeira River. President Dilma Rousseff visited the state and supported work to open the road through the park. The road was opened in April 2014 after receiving authorisation from the federal court. The road connecting the municipalities of Buritis and Campo Novo ", "score": "1.4393752" }, { "id": "26780480", "title": "Piraí do Norte", "text": " The term \"Piraí\" comes from the Tupi language, meaning \"fish river\", through the junction of pirá (fish) and 'y (river)  . The expression \"from the North\" was added to differentiate the municipality of the municipality of Piraí, in the state of Rio de Janeiro.", "score": "1.43806" }, { "id": "27788730", "title": "Buranhém River", "text": " The Buranhém River - also known as Rio do Peixe - is a watercourse flowing through the states of Minas Gerais (20km) and Bahia (128km), in Brazil. It ends its course at the Atlantic Ocean just by the city of Porto Seguro. The city holds a distinctive place in Brazilian history as in 1500 it was the first landing point of Portuguese navigators commanded by Pedro Álvares Cabral, who discovered Brazil.", "score": "1.4367692" } ]
[ "Rubim do Norte River\n The Rubim do Norte River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "Capim River\n The Capim River (Rio Capim) is a river in the state of Pará, Brazil. It is a tributary of the Guamá River. The Gurupí, Capim and Guamá rivers flow into the mouth of the Amazon and are affected by the daily tides, which force water from the Amazon upstream. They are in the Tocantins-Araguaia-Maranhão moist forests ecoregion.", "Pitimbu River\n The Pitimbu River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. In 2007 the river was tested for potential cytotoxic and genotoxic surface water.", "Rio Grande do Norte\n Rio Grande do Norte (,, ; \"Great Northern River\", in reference to the mouth of the Potengi River) is one of the states of Brazil, located in the northeastern region of the country, occupying the northeasternmost tip of the South American continent. Because of its geographic position, Rio Grande do Norte has a strategic importance. The capital and largest city is Natal. It is the land of the folklorist Luís da Câmara Cascudo. Its 410 km (254 mi) of sand, much sun, coconut palms and lagoons are responsible for the fame of beaches. Rocas Atoll, the only such feature in the Atlantic Ocean, is part of the state. The main economic activity is tourism, followed by the extraction of petroleum (the second largest producer in the country), agriculture, fruit growing and extraction of minerals, including considerable production ", "Rubim do Sul River\n The Rubim do Sul River is a river of Minas Gerais state in southeastern Brazil.", "Peruípe River (Braço Norte)\n The Peruípe River (Braço Norte) is a river in Bahia state in eastern Brazil. It is one of two branches which form parts of the boundaries of Ibirapuã municipality before merging to form the Peruípe River.", "Ceará-Mirim River\n The Ceará-Mirim River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "Braço Norte Direito River\n The Braço Norte Direito River, or Santa Clara River, is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil. It is a tributary of the Itapemirim River. The Itapemirim River is formed by the Castelo River and the Braço Norte Direito and Braço Norte Esquerdo rivers, whose sources are in the Caparaó National Park. The 140 m Cachoeira da Fumaça waterfall on the Braço Norte Direito River attracts thousands of visitors annually due to its great scenic beauty.", "List of municipalities in Rio Grande do Norte\n Rio Grande do Norte (Great River of the North) is a state located in the Northeast Region of Brazil. According to the 2010 Census conducted by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), Rio Grande do Norte has a population of 3,168,133 inhabitants over 52797 km2, which makes it the 16th largest state by population and the 22nd largest by area, out of 26 states. It is home to cities such as Natal, Mossoró, and São Gonçalo do Amarante. The land that became Rio Grande do Norte was a donatário to João de Barros, the factor of the House of India and Mina, from John III of Portugal in 1535; prior to that, the Portuguese Crown owned the land. The French, who trafficked Brazil wood in the area, had a foothold on the ", "Paraíba do Norte River\n The Paraíba do Norte River, mostly known as Paraíba River, is the most important watercourse of the state of Paraíba in northeastern Brazil. The river originates in the Borborema Plateau, and flows northeast to empty into the Atlantic Ocean, north of João Pessoa, the state capital. Its constantly menaced estuary has a handful of little islands—among them Restinga and Stuart—and is the habitat of a range of animal species, as well as a number of ecosystems such as mangroves, the Atlantic Forest and salt marshes.", "Madeira River\n to north-eastward direction, inland of Rondônia state of Brazil. The section of the river from the border to Porto Velho has notable drop of bed and was not navigable. Before 2012 the falls of Teotônio and of San Antonio existed here, they had higher flow rate and bigger level drop than more famous Boyoma Falls in Africa. Currently these rapids are submerged by the reservoir of Santo Antônio Dam. Below Porto Velho the Madeira meanders north-eastward through the Rondônia and Amazonas states of north west Brazil to its junction with the Amazon. The 283117 ha Rio Madeira Sustainable Development Reserve, created in 2006, extends along the north bank of the river opposite the town of Novo Aripuanã. At its mouth is Ilha Tupinambaranas, an extensive marshy region formed by the Madeira's distributaries.", "Do Norte River (Espírito Santo)\n The Do Norte River is a river of Espírito Santo state in eastern Brazil.", "Pernambuco\n The rivers of the state include a number of small plateau streams flowing southward to the São Francisco River, and several large streams in the eastern part flowing eastward to the Atlantic. The former are the Moxotó, Ema, Pajeú, Terra Nova, Brigida, Boa Vista and Pontai, and are dry channels the greater part of the year. The largest of the coastal rivers are the Goiana River, which is formed by the confluence of the Tracunhaem and Capibaribe-mirim, and drains a rich agricultural region in the north-east part of the state; the Capibaribe, which has its source in the Serra de Jacarara and flows eastward to the Atlantic at Recife with a course of nearly 300 mi; the Ipojuca, which rises in the Serra de Aldeia Velha and reaches the coast south of Recife; the Serinhaen; and the Uná. A large tributary of the Uná, the Rio Jacuhipe, forms part of the boundary line with Alagoas.", "Trairi River (Rio Grande do Norte)\n The Trairi River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil. The river basin contains the Nísia Floresta National Forest, a 169 ha sustainable use conservation unit created in 2001.", "Braço do Norte River\n The Braço do Norte River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "Jamanxim River\n The river flows through the Tapajós-Xingu moist forests ecoregion. It flows through the Itaituba I National Forest, a 220639 ha sustainable use conservation area established in 1998. The river basin also contains part of the 538151 ha Rio Novo National Park, a conservation unit created in 2006.", "Doce River (Rio Grande do Norte)\n The Doce River is a river of Rio Grande do Norte state in northeastern Brazil.", "Guajará-Mirim State Park\n section of BR-421 were built from castanheira wood, and a report from the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources showed that wood had been stolen along the route. The two cities of Guajará-Mirim and Nova Mamoré were isolated in February 2014 because the BR-425 highway had been flooded by the Igarapé das Araras, a tributary of the Madeira River. President Dilma Rousseff visited the state and supported work to open the road through the park. The road was opened in April 2014 after receiving authorisation from the federal court. The road connecting the municipalities of Buritis and Campo Novo ", "Piraí do Norte\n The term \"Piraí\" comes from the Tupi language, meaning \"fish river\", through the junction of pirá (fish) and 'y (river)  . The expression \"from the North\" was added to differentiate the municipality of the municipality of Piraí, in the state of Rio de Janeiro.", "Buranhém River\n The Buranhém River - also known as Rio do Peixe - is a watercourse flowing through the states of Minas Gerais (20km) and Bahia (128km), in Brazil. It ends its course at the Atlantic Ocean just by the city of Porto Seguro. The city holds a distinctive place in Brazilian history as in 1500 it was the first landing point of Portuguese navigators commanded by Pedro Álvares Cabral, who discovered Brazil." ]
In what country is Institute of Chemistry of Ireland?
[ "Ireland", "Éire", "IE", "IRL", "Republic of Ireland", "Hibernia", "Ireland, Republic of", "ie", "ireland", "🇮🇪", "Eire", "Southern Ireland" ]
country
Institute of Chemistry of Ireland
1,450,145
87
[ { "id": "415554", "title": "Institute of Health Sciences (Ireland)", "text": " The Institute of Health Sciences was established in 2008 by Anneliese Dressel and Suzanne Laurie. Anneliese Dressel is most known as a radio personality for her weekly slot on C103 which is a radio station in County Cork, Ireland. This education facility offer students certificate and diploma courses for those wishing to pursue a career in nutritional sciences and health.", "score": "1.7106752" }, { "id": "6936352", "title": "Royal College of Science for Ireland", "text": " The Royal College of Science for Ireland (RCScI ) was an institute for higher education in Dublin which existed from 1867 to 1926, specialising in physical sciences and applied science. It was originally based on St. Stephen's Green, moving in 1911 to a purpose-built \"Royal College of Science\" building on Merrion Street, now known as Government Buildings. In 1926 it was absorbed into University College Dublin (UCD) as the faculty of Science and Engineering.", "score": "1.5149379" }, { "id": "2575270", "title": "Institute of technology", "text": " University of Westminster), was founded in 1838 in Regent Street, London. In Ireland the term \"institute of technology\" is the more favored synonym of a \"regional technical college\" though the latter is the legally correct term; however, Dublin Institute of Technology is a university in all but name as it can confer degrees in accordance with law, Cork Institute of Technology and other Institutes of Technology have delegated authority from HETAC to make awards to and including master's degree level — Level 9 of the Republic of Ireland's National Framework for Qualifications (NFQ) — for all areas of study and Doctorate level in ", "score": "1.507848" }, { "id": "3572022", "title": "Irish Institute", "text": " The Irish Institute (Instituto Irlandés) is a highly selective catholic private preparatory school in Greater Mexico City. Operated by the Legionaries of Christ, the grounds, located in Naucalpan, State of Mexico, have separate areas for boys and girls, plus a third one for the coed preschool. The school levels in total range from preschool to bachillerato, equivalent to the American K-12. The Irish Institute is also present in Italy in the city of Rome and in other cities of Mexico, including: Nuevo Laredo and Monterrey.", "score": "1.5074914" }, { "id": "13387058", "title": "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies", "text": " The Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (DIAS) (Institiúid Ard-Léinn Bhaile Átha Cliath) is a statutory, independent research institute in Ireland. It was established in 1940 by the Taoiseach, Éamon de Valera in Dublin, Ireland. The Institute consists of three schools: the School of Theoretical Physics, the School of Cosmic Physics and the School of Celtic studies. The directors of these schools are currently Professor Werner Nahm, Professor Chris Bean and Professor Ruairí Ó hUiginn. The Institute under the act is empowered to \"train students in methods of advanced research\" but does not itself award degrees; graduate students working under the supervision of Institute researchers can, with the agreement of the governing board of the appropriate school, be registered for a higher degree in any university worldwide. Following a comprehensive review of the higher education sector, and its institutions, conducted by the Higher Education Authority for the Minister for Education and Skills in 2013, DIAS was approved to remain an independent research institute carrying out fundamental research. It appointed a new CEO, Dr Eucharia Meehan, formerly Director of the Irish Research Council, in the summer of 2017.", "score": "1.5040488" }, { "id": "15960597", "title": "Institute of Education (Dublin)", "text": " The school is located in a number of refurbished Georgian, terraced houses on Leeson Street in Dublin. It also has three newer buildings at the back of the terraced houses. The institute has a science laboratory, art room, home economics kitchen, computer laboratory, and a specialised technical drawing classroom. There are two halls for supervised study. There are also on-site cafe facilities serving a selection of warm and cold food and beverages. ", "score": "1.4831744" }, { "id": "15960596", "title": "Institute of Education (Dublin)", "text": " The institute is one of very few secondary schools in Ireland that is not funded at least in part by central government through the Department of Education. As a result, the school is not subject to inspections from the Department, is not obliged to follow a certain curriculum and may pay teachers as it wishes, rather than according to the public service wages paid to most teachers in the country. The school is owned and run by the Kearns family.", "score": "1.4687796" }, { "id": "27292324", "title": "The Institute of Chemists PNG", "text": " The Institute of Chemistry PNG is the professional organisation supporting chemical sciences in Papua New Guinea and a learned society promoting the science and practice of chemistry.", "score": "1.4652123" }, { "id": "30654937", "title": "Waterford Institute of Technology", "text": " technology\" title at the time in Ireland. Following a change of government and enormous political pressure on behalf of other regional technical colleges, especially Cork Regional Technical College, all other regional technical colleges were renamed similarly by Minister for Education Micheál Martin. Since 2001 Institute has conferred its own awards at all levels from Higher Certificate to PhD, subject to standards set and monitored by the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC) which was established by the Government in June 2001, under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act, 1999. In October 2005 the institute was selected by The Sunday Times newspaper as the \"Institute of Technology of the Year\" in Ireland. The institute now ", "score": "1.4629076" }, { "id": "7429142", "title": "Ireland", "text": " in 2003. John Lighton Synge made progress in different fields of science, including mechanics and geometrical methods in general relativity. He had mathematician John Nash as one of his students. Kathleen Lonsdale, born in Ireland and most known for her work with crystallography, became the first female president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Ireland has nine universities, seven in the Republic of Ireland and two in Northern Ireland, including Trinity College, Dublin and the University College Dublin, as well as numerous third-level colleges and institutes and a branch of the Open University, the Open University in Ireland. Ireland was ranked 15th in the Global Innovation Index in 2020, down from 12th in 2019.", "score": "1.45703" }, { "id": "13387062", "title": "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies", "text": " the seabed over which Ireland can claim economic exploitation rights under the international law of the sea. In addition to geophysical research, the Geophysics Section maintains the Irish National Seismic Network (INSN). Fundamental work in statistical mechanics by the School of Theoretical Physics has found application in computer switching technology and led to the establishment of an Irish campus company to exploit this intellectual property. The Institute has also in recent years been one of the main agents helping to set up a modern e-Infrastructure in support of all Irish research. In 1968 the Royal Society recognised de Valera's contribution to science in establishing the Institute by electing him to honorary fellowship.", "score": "1.4439679" }, { "id": "13387061", "title": "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies", "text": " The Institute was initially located at 64 and 65 Merrion Square and had 2 schools - the School of Theoretical Physics and the School of Celtic Studies - to which the School of Cosmic Physics was added in 1947. Currently, the Institute has its schools located at 3 premises on the Southside of Dublin at 10 Burlington Road, 31 Fitzwilliam Place and 5 Merrion Square. It also maintains a presence at Dunsink Observatory in north County Dublin. Work by the Geophysics section of the School of Cosmic Physics on the formation of the North Atlantic demonstrated that the Irish continental shelf extended much further than previously thought, thereby more than doubling the area ", "score": "1.4425554" }, { "id": "10667166", "title": "Dundalk Institute of Technology", "text": " The Sunday Times Higher Education analysis places the Institute as the top research income performer in the IoT sector. Researchers within the Institute carry out internationally recognised research within several key thematic areas from across its four academic schools. These thematic areas include Ageing and Health, Informatics and the Environment, Creative Media, Music and Entrepreneurship. DkIT is home to the Ion Channel Biotechnology Centre (ICBC). The ICBC is an Applied Research Enhancement Centre established by core funding from Enterprise Ireland. It is one of three ARE Centres in the Bio Life Sciences and Pharmaceutical cluster. The other two ARE Centres in this cluster include the Shannon Applied Biotechnology Centre based in the Institute of Technology, Tralee and Limerick Institute of Technology and the Pharmaceutical & Molecular Biotechnology Research Centre (PMBRC), based in Waterford Institute of Technology.", "score": "1.4414768" }, { "id": "28049915", "title": "List of Irish learned societies", "text": "Accounting Technicians Ireland, formerly the Institute of Accounting Technicians in Ireland (IATI) ; Archives and Records Association, Ireland† ; Bar Council of Ireland ; British and Irish Association of Law Librarians ; British Computer Society† ; Chartered Accountants Ireland ; Dublin Philosophical Society ; Galway Archaeological and Historical Society ; Geographical Society of Ireland† ; Honorable Society of King's Inns ; Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland (ICAI) ; Institute of Chemistry of Ireland ; Institute of Physics ‡ ; Institution of Engineers of Ireland ; Irish Archaeological Society ; Irish Association of Physicists in Medicine (IAPM)¥ ; Irish Concrete Society ; Irish Computer Society¥ ; Irish Hospitality Institute ; Irish Institute of Legal Executives ; Irish ", "score": "1.4409418" }, { "id": "10667363", "title": "Letterkenny Institute of Technology", "text": " The institute offers over 130 programmes that range from one to four years in computing, engineering, design, science, the \"social science\" of business, veterinary practice, nursing and law. The courses are offered at levels 6 through 10 on the NQAI framework. Courses are offered in a semesterised and modularised method. Specialist courses that may be found in LYIT include the Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Fire Safety Technology which is the only one of its kind in Ireland, other specialist degrees also include Bachelor of Science (Hons) In Analytical and Forensic Science. The Technical College is one of only two institutes in Ireland to offer degrees approved by the King's Inns. The BA (Hons) in law has been approved degree status by the society. The Institute also co-operates closely on many courses and much research with Magee College, part of the University of Ulster, in nearby Derry. The institute also offers support for businesses through specialized short-term courses, collaborative research, and the Co-Lab.", "score": "1.4320177" }, { "id": "14129330", "title": "Institute of Archaeologists of Ireland", "text": " Institute of Archaeologists of Ireland (Institiúid Seandálaithe na hÉireann) is an Irish archaeology organisation based in Dublin, Ireland. Founded in Merrion Square, Dublin in August 2001, the organisation represents archaeologists who are working throughout Ireland.", "score": "1.4289603" }, { "id": "6936354", "title": "Royal College of Science for Ireland", "text": " was created, modelled on the Royal School of Mines in London, with four professorships shared jointly by the MII school and the Royal Dublin Society (RDS). The MII and School shared premises at 51, St. Stephen's Green, acquired in 1846 and fitted out by 1852. In 1864, a select committee of the UK parliament recommended that the MII and School be entirely separated from the RDS and broadened into a government-supported College of Science for Ireland. In 1865, HM Treasury agreed and in 1867 a commission was appointed by the education committee of the Privy Council. The commission, headed by William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, outlined the scope and functions of the proposed college, and the RCScI mission statement on 11 September 1867 was: George Sigerson complained in 1868 that the RCScI was less open to Catholics than the MII had been.", "score": "1.4273318" }, { "id": "7708745", "title": "University of Limerick", "text": " Materials and Surface Science Institute (MSSI): The MSSI, established in 1998, generates fundamental research on topics of industrial significance in the fields of surface science and materials. The institute's strengths and interests are in four areas: nanomaterials; biomaterials; composite and glass materials, and biocatalysis and clean technology. Irish Software Research Centre (Lero): The university hosts (Lero), the Irish Software Research Centre. Lero was established in November 2005 with support from the Science Foundation Ireland’s CSET (Centre for Science, Engineering and Technology) programme as a collaborative organisation for software-engineering research activities at UL (the lead partner), Dublin City University (DCU), Trinity College Dublin (TCD) and University ", "score": "1.4266417" }, { "id": "31753575", "title": "Eva Philbin", "text": " the National Science Council, was the first female senior vice-president of the Royal Irish Academy, and was the first women president of the Institute of Chemistry in 1966. Since 2007, the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland Annual Award for Chemistry lectures series has been named in her honor as the Eva Philbin Public Lecture Series. Philbin's interests ranged beyond science, taking a strong interest in the treatment of those with learning difficulties, leading her to take up the chair of the Consultative Council on Mental Handicap as well as becoming honorary treasurer of the National Association for the Mentally Handicapped of Ireland. Her eldest daughter Eimear married broadcaster and historian John Bowman. Philbin died in 2005, aged 91.", "score": "1.4261608" }, { "id": "30526790", "title": "Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown", "text": " The Regional Technical Colleges (Amendment) Act 1999 was enacted by the Oireachtas in July 1999, putting the Institute of Technology Blanchardstown on the same statutory footing as the twelve other Institutes of Technologies in Ireland already operating under the Regional Technical Colleges Acts 1992 and 1994. The institute also operated under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act,1999 and the Institutes of Technology Act 2006.", "score": "1.418571" } ]
[ "Institute of Health Sciences (Ireland)\n The Institute of Health Sciences was established in 2008 by Anneliese Dressel and Suzanne Laurie. Anneliese Dressel is most known as a radio personality for her weekly slot on C103 which is a radio station in County Cork, Ireland. This education facility offer students certificate and diploma courses for those wishing to pursue a career in nutritional sciences and health.", "Royal College of Science for Ireland\n The Royal College of Science for Ireland (RCScI ) was an institute for higher education in Dublin which existed from 1867 to 1926, specialising in physical sciences and applied science. It was originally based on St. Stephen's Green, moving in 1911 to a purpose-built \"Royal College of Science\" building on Merrion Street, now known as Government Buildings. In 1926 it was absorbed into University College Dublin (UCD) as the faculty of Science and Engineering.", "Institute of technology\n University of Westminster), was founded in 1838 in Regent Street, London. In Ireland the term \"institute of technology\" is the more favored synonym of a \"regional technical college\" though the latter is the legally correct term; however, Dublin Institute of Technology is a university in all but name as it can confer degrees in accordance with law, Cork Institute of Technology and other Institutes of Technology have delegated authority from HETAC to make awards to and including master's degree level — Level 9 of the Republic of Ireland's National Framework for Qualifications (NFQ) — for all areas of study and Doctorate level in ", "Irish Institute\n The Irish Institute (Instituto Irlandés) is a highly selective catholic private preparatory school in Greater Mexico City. Operated by the Legionaries of Christ, the grounds, located in Naucalpan, State of Mexico, have separate areas for boys and girls, plus a third one for the coed preschool. The school levels in total range from preschool to bachillerato, equivalent to the American K-12. The Irish Institute is also present in Italy in the city of Rome and in other cities of Mexico, including: Nuevo Laredo and Monterrey.", "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies\n The Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies (DIAS) (Institiúid Ard-Léinn Bhaile Átha Cliath) is a statutory, independent research institute in Ireland. It was established in 1940 by the Taoiseach, Éamon de Valera in Dublin, Ireland. The Institute consists of three schools: the School of Theoretical Physics, the School of Cosmic Physics and the School of Celtic studies. The directors of these schools are currently Professor Werner Nahm, Professor Chris Bean and Professor Ruairí Ó hUiginn. The Institute under the act is empowered to \"train students in methods of advanced research\" but does not itself award degrees; graduate students working under the supervision of Institute researchers can, with the agreement of the governing board of the appropriate school, be registered for a higher degree in any university worldwide. Following a comprehensive review of the higher education sector, and its institutions, conducted by the Higher Education Authority for the Minister for Education and Skills in 2013, DIAS was approved to remain an independent research institute carrying out fundamental research. It appointed a new CEO, Dr Eucharia Meehan, formerly Director of the Irish Research Council, in the summer of 2017.", "Institute of Education (Dublin)\n The school is located in a number of refurbished Georgian, terraced houses on Leeson Street in Dublin. It also has three newer buildings at the back of the terraced houses. The institute has a science laboratory, art room, home economics kitchen, computer laboratory, and a specialised technical drawing classroom. There are two halls for supervised study. There are also on-site cafe facilities serving a selection of warm and cold food and beverages. ", "Institute of Education (Dublin)\n The institute is one of very few secondary schools in Ireland that is not funded at least in part by central government through the Department of Education. As a result, the school is not subject to inspections from the Department, is not obliged to follow a certain curriculum and may pay teachers as it wishes, rather than according to the public service wages paid to most teachers in the country. The school is owned and run by the Kearns family.", "The Institute of Chemists PNG\n The Institute of Chemistry PNG is the professional organisation supporting chemical sciences in Papua New Guinea and a learned society promoting the science and practice of chemistry.", "Waterford Institute of Technology\n technology\" title at the time in Ireland. Following a change of government and enormous political pressure on behalf of other regional technical colleges, especially Cork Regional Technical College, all other regional technical colleges were renamed similarly by Minister for Education Micheál Martin. Since 2001 Institute has conferred its own awards at all levels from Higher Certificate to PhD, subject to standards set and monitored by the Higher Education and Training Awards Council (HETAC) which was established by the Government in June 2001, under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act, 1999. In October 2005 the institute was selected by The Sunday Times newspaper as the \"Institute of Technology of the Year\" in Ireland. The institute now ", "Ireland\n in 2003. John Lighton Synge made progress in different fields of science, including mechanics and geometrical methods in general relativity. He had mathematician John Nash as one of his students. Kathleen Lonsdale, born in Ireland and most known for her work with crystallography, became the first female president of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. Ireland has nine universities, seven in the Republic of Ireland and two in Northern Ireland, including Trinity College, Dublin and the University College Dublin, as well as numerous third-level colleges and institutes and a branch of the Open University, the Open University in Ireland. Ireland was ranked 15th in the Global Innovation Index in 2020, down from 12th in 2019.", "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies\n the seabed over which Ireland can claim economic exploitation rights under the international law of the sea. In addition to geophysical research, the Geophysics Section maintains the Irish National Seismic Network (INSN). Fundamental work in statistical mechanics by the School of Theoretical Physics has found application in computer switching technology and led to the establishment of an Irish campus company to exploit this intellectual property. The Institute has also in recent years been one of the main agents helping to set up a modern e-Infrastructure in support of all Irish research. In 1968 the Royal Society recognised de Valera's contribution to science in establishing the Institute by electing him to honorary fellowship.", "Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies\n The Institute was initially located at 64 and 65 Merrion Square and had 2 schools - the School of Theoretical Physics and the School of Celtic Studies - to which the School of Cosmic Physics was added in 1947. Currently, the Institute has its schools located at 3 premises on the Southside of Dublin at 10 Burlington Road, 31 Fitzwilliam Place and 5 Merrion Square. It also maintains a presence at Dunsink Observatory in north County Dublin. Work by the Geophysics section of the School of Cosmic Physics on the formation of the North Atlantic demonstrated that the Irish continental shelf extended much further than previously thought, thereby more than doubling the area ", "Dundalk Institute of Technology\n The Sunday Times Higher Education analysis places the Institute as the top research income performer in the IoT sector. Researchers within the Institute carry out internationally recognised research within several key thematic areas from across its four academic schools. These thematic areas include Ageing and Health, Informatics and the Environment, Creative Media, Music and Entrepreneurship. DkIT is home to the Ion Channel Biotechnology Centre (ICBC). The ICBC is an Applied Research Enhancement Centre established by core funding from Enterprise Ireland. It is one of three ARE Centres in the Bio Life Sciences and Pharmaceutical cluster. The other two ARE Centres in this cluster include the Shannon Applied Biotechnology Centre based in the Institute of Technology, Tralee and Limerick Institute of Technology and the Pharmaceutical & Molecular Biotechnology Research Centre (PMBRC), based in Waterford Institute of Technology.", "List of Irish learned societies\nAccounting Technicians Ireland, formerly the Institute of Accounting Technicians in Ireland (IATI) ; Archives and Records Association, Ireland† ; Bar Council of Ireland ; British and Irish Association of Law Librarians ; British Computer Society† ; Chartered Accountants Ireland ; Dublin Philosophical Society ; Galway Archaeological and Historical Society ; Geographical Society of Ireland† ; Honorable Society of King's Inns ; Institute of Chartered Accountants in Ireland (ICAI) ; Institute of Chemistry of Ireland ; Institute of Physics ‡ ; Institution of Engineers of Ireland ; Irish Archaeological Society ; Irish Association of Physicists in Medicine (IAPM)¥ ; Irish Concrete Society ; Irish Computer Society¥ ; Irish Hospitality Institute ; Irish Institute of Legal Executives ; Irish ", "Letterkenny Institute of Technology\n The institute offers over 130 programmes that range from one to four years in computing, engineering, design, science, the \"social science\" of business, veterinary practice, nursing and law. The courses are offered at levels 6 through 10 on the NQAI framework. Courses are offered in a semesterised and modularised method. Specialist courses that may be found in LYIT include the Bachelor of Science (Hons) in Fire Safety Technology which is the only one of its kind in Ireland, other specialist degrees also include Bachelor of Science (Hons) In Analytical and Forensic Science. The Technical College is one of only two institutes in Ireland to offer degrees approved by the King's Inns. The BA (Hons) in law has been approved degree status by the society. The Institute also co-operates closely on many courses and much research with Magee College, part of the University of Ulster, in nearby Derry. The institute also offers support for businesses through specialized short-term courses, collaborative research, and the Co-Lab.", "Institute of Archaeologists of Ireland\n Institute of Archaeologists of Ireland (Institiúid Seandálaithe na hÉireann) is an Irish archaeology organisation based in Dublin, Ireland. Founded in Merrion Square, Dublin in August 2001, the organisation represents archaeologists who are working throughout Ireland.", "Royal College of Science for Ireland\n was created, modelled on the Royal School of Mines in London, with four professorships shared jointly by the MII school and the Royal Dublin Society (RDS). The MII and School shared premises at 51, St. Stephen's Green, acquired in 1846 and fitted out by 1852. In 1864, a select committee of the UK parliament recommended that the MII and School be entirely separated from the RDS and broadened into a government-supported College of Science for Ireland. In 1865, HM Treasury agreed and in 1867 a commission was appointed by the education committee of the Privy Council. The commission, headed by William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, outlined the scope and functions of the proposed college, and the RCScI mission statement on 11 September 1867 was: George Sigerson complained in 1868 that the RCScI was less open to Catholics than the MII had been.", "University of Limerick\n Materials and Surface Science Institute (MSSI): The MSSI, established in 1998, generates fundamental research on topics of industrial significance in the fields of surface science and materials. The institute's strengths and interests are in four areas: nanomaterials; biomaterials; composite and glass materials, and biocatalysis and clean technology. Irish Software Research Centre (Lero): The university hosts (Lero), the Irish Software Research Centre. Lero was established in November 2005 with support from the Science Foundation Ireland’s CSET (Centre for Science, Engineering and Technology) programme as a collaborative organisation for software-engineering research activities at UL (the lead partner), Dublin City University (DCU), Trinity College Dublin (TCD) and University ", "Eva Philbin\n the National Science Council, was the first female senior vice-president of the Royal Irish Academy, and was the first women president of the Institute of Chemistry in 1966. Since 2007, the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland Annual Award for Chemistry lectures series has been named in her honor as the Eva Philbin Public Lecture Series. Philbin's interests ranged beyond science, taking a strong interest in the treatment of those with learning difficulties, leading her to take up the chair of the Consultative Council on Mental Handicap as well as becoming honorary treasurer of the National Association for the Mentally Handicapped of Ireland. Her eldest daughter Eimear married broadcaster and historian John Bowman. Philbin died in 2005, aged 91.", "Institute of Technology, Blanchardstown\n The Regional Technical Colleges (Amendment) Act 1999 was enacted by the Oireachtas in July 1999, putting the Institute of Technology Blanchardstown on the same statutory footing as the twelve other Institutes of Technologies in Ireland already operating under the Regional Technical Colleges Acts 1992 and 1994. The institute also operated under the Qualifications (Education and Training) Act,1999 and the Institutes of Technology Act 2006." ]
In what country is Lima?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Lima (community), Wisconsin
4,966,829
29
[ { "id": "25642305", "title": "Lima metropolitan area", "text": " The Lima metropolitan area has become an unofficial megacity (a metropolitan area of more than ten million people) as of 2017. It was the first in the Andean States, the fourth in South America, the fifth in Latin America and the seventh in the Americas. According to the Globalization and World Cities Research Network, Lima is currently a Beta + city, one subcategory away from being in the\"Alpha\" category.", "score": "1.5854402" }, { "id": "25642297", "title": "Lima metropolitan area", "text": " In the present day, Lima is the most important metropolis in Peru and in the Andean region. The area's financial district is San Isidro. It is home to a large concentration of business centers, skyscrapers, and commerce. Miraflores and Barranco are two districts where the city's nightlife is mainly based in. Parts of the metropolis can be lively; music at night is common in some areas. Today different areas of the city have differing aspects and showcase variations in culture caused by varying times of settlement, differences in socio-economic level and immigration from other parts of Peru. The downtown area, unlike many downtowns in other major cities, is largely a historic district, and is home ", "score": "1.5635946" }, { "id": "25642295", "title": "Lima metropolitan area", "text": " The Lima Metropolitan Area (Área Metropolitana de Lima, also known as Lima Metropolitana) is an area formed by the conurbation of the Peruvian provinces of Lima (the nation's capital) and Callao. It is the largest of the metropolitan areas of Peru, the seventh largest in the Americas, the fourth largest in Latin America, and among the thirty largest in the world. The conurbation process started to be evident in the 1980s. The metropolitan area is composed of five subregions. These are Lima Norte, Lima Sur, Lima Este, Central Lima, and Callao. Its estimated 2020 population is over 11 million according to the INEI.", "score": "1.5616558" }, { "id": "15635644", "title": "Peru", "text": " Peru (Perú ; Piruw ; Piruw ), officially the Republic of Peru, is a country in western South America. It is bordered in the north by Ecuador and Colombia, in the east by Brazil, in the southeast by Bolivia, in the south by Chile, and in the south and west by the Pacific Ocean. Peru is a megadiverse country with habitats ranging from the arid plains of the Pacific coastal region in the west to the peaks of the Andes mountains extending from the north to the southeast of the country to the tropical Amazon Basin rainforest in the east with the Amazon river. Peru has a population of 34 million, and its capital and largest city is Lima. ", "score": "1.554884" }, { "id": "30057792", "title": "Metropolis", "text": " The Lima metropolitan area is Peru's capital and largest city with over 10 million inhabitants, more than one third of the total national population.", "score": "1.540009" }, { "id": "11985060", "title": "Transport in Lima", "text": " Lima is served by the Jorge Chavez International Airport, located in Callao. It is the largest airport of the country with the largest amount of domestic and international air traffic. It also serves as a major hub in the Latin American air network. Additionally, Lima possesses other airports: the Las Palmas Air Force Base, and in San Bartolo.", "score": "1.5273486" }, { "id": "5072455", "title": "Metropolitano (Lima)", "text": " 16. Canadá", "score": "1.5247047" }, { "id": "26335460", "title": "Department of Lima", "text": " The department of Lima is bordered by the departments of Ancash on the north, Huánuco, Pasco, and Junín on the east, Huancavelica on the southeast, Ica on the south, and the Pacific Ocean and the Lima Province on the west. The department has a coastal and an Andean zone, and has a great diversity of natural regions: the Coast or Chala (0 to 500 meters above sea level) up to the Janka or Mountain range (Cordillera, over 4800 meters). The predominating regions are the Yunga (500 to 2300 meters above sea level) and Quechua (2300 to 3500 meters)", "score": "1.5227686" }, { "id": "8480708", "title": "Wall Street English", "text": " Wall Street English has two centers in Lima.", "score": "1.5214608" }, { "id": "25642298", "title": "Lima metropolitan area", "text": " many cathedrals and churches built during the Spanish colonial period. In the latter half of the 20th century, the city has grown rapidly by migration from other regions of Peru. Many of these migrants began to form new communities called pueblos jovenes and asentamientos humanos, literally young towns and human settlements. These towns are similar to the favelas of Brazil but considerably smaller. Many of them have no running water or electricity and the city has been unable to provide the infrastructure to all the new residents. Many of the communities, such as Comas, and Villa El Salvador have evolved into modern districts, where residents have found the better life they were searching for.", "score": "1.51459" }, { "id": "26335459", "title": "Department of Lima", "text": " The Department of Lima is a department and region located in the central coast of Peru, the seat of the Regional Government is Huacho. Lima Province, which contains the city of Lima, the country's capital, is located west of the Department of Lima; this province is autonomous and not under the jurisdiction of the Regional Government.", "score": "1.5123711" }, { "id": "13677019", "title": "La Lima", "text": " a large number of foreigners still living there. In \"the American Zone\",is located the EILL, Escuela Internacional La Lima. La Lima has one of the largest golf courses in Central America. La Lima is also known as \"Little New York\", because over the years it has been said that if you were a great dancer, you had to be from La Lima. Also a large population of limeños have residency in New York City, especially The Bronx and Brooklyn. Most of these people come from the \"Colonia Sitraterco\". Recently, a large amount of limeños have been arriving to Miami. La Lima is a city where you can walk and see the many activities done in the \"centro\".", "score": "1.5093079" }, { "id": "5072449", "title": "Metropolitano (Lima)", "text": "} ", "score": "1.4994012" }, { "id": "9044721", "title": "Lima Group", "text": " Twelve countries initially signed the declaration: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, and Peru. Guyana, Saint Lucia, Belize, Bolivia and Haiti joined later.", "score": "1.4974955" }, { "id": "25642299", "title": "Lima metropolitan area", "text": " The conurbation has an area of 2,819.26 km2. It is concentrated mainly in the coastal area and runs north–south along the Pacific coast for almost 200 km, beginning in the district of Ancón, on the border with the Huaral Province of the Lima region, and ending in the district of Pucusana, on the border with the Cañete Province, also in the Lima region. The Rímac, Chillón and Lurín rivers pass through the area. It is made up of in total 50 districts (43 of Lima Province and 7 of Constitutional Province of Callao). Most of the area is located in the desert whereas the eastern portion is located in the foothills of the Andes. It is the world's second largest desert city after Cairo, Egypt. The Lima metropolitan area is informally divided into five areas, Northern Lima, Southern Lima, Eastern Lima, Centro Lima and Callao.", "score": "1.4967844" }, { "id": "2959106", "title": "Huaycán", "text": " The urban community of Huaycán (officially named Comunidad Urbana Autogestionaria de Huaycán) is a town of Lima, Peru, located in Ate District, approximately 16.5 kilometres east of Lima. It is home to thousands of immigrant settlers from different parts of Peru, looking to improve their standard of living and job opportunities in the city of Lima. Huaycán is also a notable archaeological site. It has a population of over 160,000 inhabitants.", "score": "1.4947476" }, { "id": "26335462", "title": "Department of Lima", "text": " Huacho, the capital of the Region Lima and the most populated city of the department (excluding Lima that is administrated by an autonomous government, the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima). Sitting at the bottom of a wide bay, it has a pleasant and dry climate. In its vicinity, the Huaura River - is where rice, cotton, sugar cane and different fruits and cereals are grown. This has given rise to an important cotton industry as well as soap and oil factories.", "score": "1.4862852" }, { "id": "25665631", "title": "Lima Cricket and Football Club", "text": " Lima Cricket & Football Club is a Peruvian sports club based in the country's capital city of Lima. Lima Cricket claims to be both the oldest cricket club in South America, and the oldest association football-practising club in Peru and the Americas, having been founded in 1859 by the city's British community. The football team currently participates in the local league of San Isidro District, Lima. The club is the de facto home of the Peru Cricket Association, and hosts the National T20 Cricket League during the summer months of January to April. It has also hosted a number of international tournaments, featuring the Peru national cricket team. The most recent was the South American Championship in April, 2014, with competing teams from Argentina (men & women), Brazil (men & women), Chile and Mexico (men only). Apart from football and cricket, nowadays the club hosts the practise of basketball, basque pelota, fencing, field hockey, squash, table tennis, tennis, swimming, volleyball, and water aerobics (rugby union is no longer practised). Other social activities include bocce, darts, pilates, snooker, and zumba.", "score": "1.486245" }, { "id": "9326715", "title": "Metropolitan Municipality of Lima", "text": " The Metropolitan Municipality of Lima (Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima) is the government entity of the Lima Province which accounts for about one-third of Peru's population. It has a special regime with the same attributions that those of the Regional Governments. It is established according to the 2002 Organic Law of Regional Governments (Ley Orgánica de Gobiernos Regionales) and the 2003 Organic Law of Municipalities (Ley Orgánica de Municipalidades).", "score": "1.4798341" }, { "id": "8533735", "title": "Little Lima", "text": " Little Lima is a Peruvian enclave in Downtown Paterson, New Jersey, United States, and the largest Peruvian enclave outside of South America, home to approximately 10,000 Peruvian immigrants, by U.S. Census Bureau estimates. New Jersey's Peruvian population continues to grow in its urban areas, especially in Paterson, which is considered by many to be the capital of the Peruvian Diaspora in the United States. Meanwhile, East Newark, a smaller borough, in Hudson County, New Jersey, has the largest Peruvian percentage in the U.S. per capita, and New Jersey is home to the largest per capita Peruvian American population of any U.S. state. Little Lima is bounded to the west by Spruce Street, to the north by McBride Avenue, to the east by Cianci Street, and to the south by Ward ", "score": "1.4792824" } ]
[ "Lima metropolitan area\n The Lima metropolitan area has become an unofficial megacity (a metropolitan area of more than ten million people) as of 2017. It was the first in the Andean States, the fourth in South America, the fifth in Latin America and the seventh in the Americas. According to the Globalization and World Cities Research Network, Lima is currently a Beta + city, one subcategory away from being in the\"Alpha\" category.", "Lima metropolitan area\n In the present day, Lima is the most important metropolis in Peru and in the Andean region. The area's financial district is San Isidro. It is home to a large concentration of business centers, skyscrapers, and commerce. Miraflores and Barranco are two districts where the city's nightlife is mainly based in. Parts of the metropolis can be lively; music at night is common in some areas. Today different areas of the city have differing aspects and showcase variations in culture caused by varying times of settlement, differences in socio-economic level and immigration from other parts of Peru. The downtown area, unlike many downtowns in other major cities, is largely a historic district, and is home ", "Lima metropolitan area\n The Lima Metropolitan Area (Área Metropolitana de Lima, also known as Lima Metropolitana) is an area formed by the conurbation of the Peruvian provinces of Lima (the nation's capital) and Callao. It is the largest of the metropolitan areas of Peru, the seventh largest in the Americas, the fourth largest in Latin America, and among the thirty largest in the world. The conurbation process started to be evident in the 1980s. The metropolitan area is composed of five subregions. These are Lima Norte, Lima Sur, Lima Este, Central Lima, and Callao. Its estimated 2020 population is over 11 million according to the INEI.", "Peru\n Peru (Perú ; Piruw ; Piruw ), officially the Republic of Peru, is a country in western South America. It is bordered in the north by Ecuador and Colombia, in the east by Brazil, in the southeast by Bolivia, in the south by Chile, and in the south and west by the Pacific Ocean. Peru is a megadiverse country with habitats ranging from the arid plains of the Pacific coastal region in the west to the peaks of the Andes mountains extending from the north to the southeast of the country to the tropical Amazon Basin rainforest in the east with the Amazon river. Peru has a population of 34 million, and its capital and largest city is Lima. ", "Metropolis\n The Lima metropolitan area is Peru's capital and largest city with over 10 million inhabitants, more than one third of the total national population.", "Transport in Lima\n Lima is served by the Jorge Chavez International Airport, located in Callao. It is the largest airport of the country with the largest amount of domestic and international air traffic. It also serves as a major hub in the Latin American air network. Additionally, Lima possesses other airports: the Las Palmas Air Force Base, and in San Bartolo.", "Metropolitano (Lima)\n 16. Canadá", "Department of Lima\n The department of Lima is bordered by the departments of Ancash on the north, Huánuco, Pasco, and Junín on the east, Huancavelica on the southeast, Ica on the south, and the Pacific Ocean and the Lima Province on the west. The department has a coastal and an Andean zone, and has a great diversity of natural regions: the Coast or Chala (0 to 500 meters above sea level) up to the Janka or Mountain range (Cordillera, over 4800 meters). The predominating regions are the Yunga (500 to 2300 meters above sea level) and Quechua (2300 to 3500 meters)", "Wall Street English\n Wall Street English has two centers in Lima.", "Lima metropolitan area\n many cathedrals and churches built during the Spanish colonial period. In the latter half of the 20th century, the city has grown rapidly by migration from other regions of Peru. Many of these migrants began to form new communities called pueblos jovenes and asentamientos humanos, literally young towns and human settlements. These towns are similar to the favelas of Brazil but considerably smaller. Many of them have no running water or electricity and the city has been unable to provide the infrastructure to all the new residents. Many of the communities, such as Comas, and Villa El Salvador have evolved into modern districts, where residents have found the better life they were searching for.", "Department of Lima\n The Department of Lima is a department and region located in the central coast of Peru, the seat of the Regional Government is Huacho. Lima Province, which contains the city of Lima, the country's capital, is located west of the Department of Lima; this province is autonomous and not under the jurisdiction of the Regional Government.", "La Lima\n a large number of foreigners still living there. In \"the American Zone\",is located the EILL, Escuela Internacional La Lima. La Lima has one of the largest golf courses in Central America. La Lima is also known as \"Little New York\", because over the years it has been said that if you were a great dancer, you had to be from La Lima. Also a large population of limeños have residency in New York City, especially The Bronx and Brooklyn. Most of these people come from the \"Colonia Sitraterco\". Recently, a large amount of limeños have been arriving to Miami. La Lima is a city where you can walk and see the many activities done in the \"centro\".", "Metropolitano (Lima)\n} ", "Lima Group\n Twelve countries initially signed the declaration: Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, and Peru. Guyana, Saint Lucia, Belize, Bolivia and Haiti joined later.", "Lima metropolitan area\n The conurbation has an area of 2,819.26 km2. It is concentrated mainly in the coastal area and runs north–south along the Pacific coast for almost 200 km, beginning in the district of Ancón, on the border with the Huaral Province of the Lima region, and ending in the district of Pucusana, on the border with the Cañete Province, also in the Lima region. The Rímac, Chillón and Lurín rivers pass through the area. It is made up of in total 50 districts (43 of Lima Province and 7 of Constitutional Province of Callao). Most of the area is located in the desert whereas the eastern portion is located in the foothills of the Andes. It is the world's second largest desert city after Cairo, Egypt. The Lima metropolitan area is informally divided into five areas, Northern Lima, Southern Lima, Eastern Lima, Centro Lima and Callao.", "Huaycán\n The urban community of Huaycán (officially named Comunidad Urbana Autogestionaria de Huaycán) is a town of Lima, Peru, located in Ate District, approximately 16.5 kilometres east of Lima. It is home to thousands of immigrant settlers from different parts of Peru, looking to improve their standard of living and job opportunities in the city of Lima. Huaycán is also a notable archaeological site. It has a population of over 160,000 inhabitants.", "Department of Lima\n Huacho, the capital of the Region Lima and the most populated city of the department (excluding Lima that is administrated by an autonomous government, the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima). Sitting at the bottom of a wide bay, it has a pleasant and dry climate. In its vicinity, the Huaura River - is where rice, cotton, sugar cane and different fruits and cereals are grown. This has given rise to an important cotton industry as well as soap and oil factories.", "Lima Cricket and Football Club\n Lima Cricket & Football Club is a Peruvian sports club based in the country's capital city of Lima. Lima Cricket claims to be both the oldest cricket club in South America, and the oldest association football-practising club in Peru and the Americas, having been founded in 1859 by the city's British community. The football team currently participates in the local league of San Isidro District, Lima. The club is the de facto home of the Peru Cricket Association, and hosts the National T20 Cricket League during the summer months of January to April. It has also hosted a number of international tournaments, featuring the Peru national cricket team. The most recent was the South American Championship in April, 2014, with competing teams from Argentina (men & women), Brazil (men & women), Chile and Mexico (men only). Apart from football and cricket, nowadays the club hosts the practise of basketball, basque pelota, fencing, field hockey, squash, table tennis, tennis, swimming, volleyball, and water aerobics (rugby union is no longer practised). Other social activities include bocce, darts, pilates, snooker, and zumba.", "Metropolitan Municipality of Lima\n The Metropolitan Municipality of Lima (Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima) is the government entity of the Lima Province which accounts for about one-third of Peru's population. It has a special regime with the same attributions that those of the Regional Governments. It is established according to the 2002 Organic Law of Regional Governments (Ley Orgánica de Gobiernos Regionales) and the 2003 Organic Law of Municipalities (Ley Orgánica de Municipalidades).", "Little Lima\n Little Lima is a Peruvian enclave in Downtown Paterson, New Jersey, United States, and the largest Peruvian enclave outside of South America, home to approximately 10,000 Peruvian immigrants, by U.S. Census Bureau estimates. New Jersey's Peruvian population continues to grow in its urban areas, especially in Paterson, which is considered by many to be the capital of the Peruvian Diaspora in the United States. Meanwhile, East Newark, a smaller borough, in Hudson County, New Jersey, has the largest Peruvian percentage in the U.S. per capita, and New Jersey is home to the largest per capita Peruvian American population of any U.S. state. Little Lima is bounded to the west by Spruce Street, to the north by McBride Avenue, to the east by Cianci Street, and to the south by Ward " ]
In what country is KMEI-LP?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
KMEI-LP
4,793,794
27
[ { "id": "9276849", "title": "KMAI-LP", "text": " KMAI-LP (97.9 FM) is a low-power radio station licensed to Alturas, California, United States. The station broadcasts highway information.", "score": "1.6129355" }, { "id": "11590556", "title": "97.3 FM", "text": " in Garden City, Kansas ; KKNG-FM in Blanchard, Oklahoma ; KKRC-FM in Sioux Falls, South Dakota ; in Davenport, Washington ; in Santa Fe, New Mexico ; in Blackfoot, Idaho ; in San Francisco, California ; in Lee's Summit, Missouri ; in New Deal, Texas ; in Kaplan, Louisiana ; KMEI-LP in Kamiah, Idaho ; in Redding, California ; KNEH-LP in Helena, Montana ; in Blair, Nebraska ; KOLC in Carson City, Nevada ; KPSQ-LP in Fayetteville, Arkansas ; KPUY in Garwood, Texas ; in Waskom, Texas ; KQSB-LP in Paris, Texas ; in Aurora, Nebraska ; KRJK in Lamont, California ; in Wailea-Makena, Hawaii ; ", "score": "1.4992406" }, { "id": "3941473", "title": "WXEI-LP", "text": " WXEI-LP (95.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a News/Talk radio format. Licensed to Crestview, Florida, United States, the station serves the Crestview/Fort Walton Beach area. The station is currently owned by X-Static Enterprises Inc. WXEI's most popular aired program is the nationally syndicated radio talk show \"Jon Arthur Live!\" airing Monday-Friday at 7 PM Central. Jon Arthur Live! is also broadcast on the First Amendment Radio Network.", "score": "1.4969647" }, { "id": "1391235", "title": "Far East Broadcasting Company", "text": " Far East Broadcasting Company is an international Christian radio network. From 1960 to 1994, FEBC owned and operated shortwave radio station KGEI in San Francisco, California.", "score": "1.478296" }, { "id": "15305215", "title": "KMTE-LP", "text": " KMTE-LP (99.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to Montrose, Colorado, United States. The station is currently owned by State of Colorado Telecommunication Services.", "score": "1.4739417" }, { "id": "30339370", "title": "KCEI-LD", "text": " KCEI-LD, virtual and UHF digital channel 18, is a low-powered independent television station licensed to Taos, New Mexico, United States. It airs local programming about the history of Taos from the Taos local television organization.", "score": "1.473691" }, { "id": "3620422", "title": "KMEC-LP", "text": " KMEC-LP is a Variety formatted broadcast radio station licensed to and serving Ukiah, California. KMEC-LP is owned and operated by Mendocino Environmental Center.", "score": "1.4593891" }, { "id": "1204237", "title": "KGEI", "text": " KGEI was a shortwave radio station founded by General Electric in 1939. It was purchased by the Far East Broadcasting Company in 1960.", "score": "1.4515743" }, { "id": "9302567", "title": "KMSI", "text": " The station began broadcasting in 1990 with the call letters KMSI. It has been a member of The Oasis Network.", "score": "1.4429862" }, { "id": "13091875", "title": "KMAH-LP", "text": " KMAH-LP, UHF analog channel 39, was a low-powered Cornerstone Television-affiliated television station licensed to Cheyenne, Wyoming, United States. The station was owned by local businessman Bob Rule, owner of Rule Communications.", "score": "1.4258753" }, { "id": "1986486", "title": "KMEX-DT", "text": " of this philosophy was later copied by other Spanish-language TV stations in the United States. KMEX had been the second U.S. station (after KWEX-TV in San Antonio, Texas) in what was the Spanish International Network; the venture also included Telesistema Mexicano—aligned stations along the U.S.–Mexico border. After buying into New York City-area station WXTV and Miami's WLTV, in 1972, SIN made its first western expansion when it built KFTV, serving Fresno, with Villanueva as its general manager. Originally, the Fresno station operated as a direct satellite of KMEX. The \"SIN West\" subnetwork also provided service to affiliated stations in Modesto (KLOC-TV) and San Francisco (KEMO-TV) and Telesistema Mexicano's XEWT-TV in Tijuana and XHBC-TV in Mexicali.", "score": "1.4254273" }, { "id": "6421845", "title": "KSSY-LP", "text": " KSSY-LP was a low-power television station in Arroyo Grande, California, broadcasting locally on channel 20. Founded February 28, 1990, the station was owned by Iglesia Jesuchristo Es Mi Refugio, Inc. Originally owned by Erwin Scala and known as K66CY broadcasting on channel 66, the station initially went with an approach to broadcast family-friendly programming. In 2004, KSSY was leased to OBN Holdings and broadcast Omni Broadcasting Network programs. Later it would become affiliated with Urban America Television, America One, Bloomberg Television, and Classic Arts Showcase. The station then signed off until the summer of 2007, when Scala sold the station to Hispanic Christian Community Network. On November 6, 2007, Hispanic Christian Community Network, Inc. assigned the license of KSSY-LP to Iglesia Jesuchristo Es Mi Refugio, Inc., a non-profit religious organization based in Dallas, Texas. On August 6, 2010, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cancelled the station's license and deleted the KSSY-LP call sign from its database.", "score": "1.4239897" }, { "id": "8274491", "title": "KGIA-LP", "text": " KGIA-LP (92.9 FM) was a low-power FM radio station broadcasting a Christian radio format. Licensed to Grand Island, in the U.S. state of Nebraska, it served the Grand Island-Kearney area. The station was owned by Grand Island Adventist Educational Radio. It was affiliated with Radio 74 Internationale, an international religious broadcasting network.", "score": "1.421233" }, { "id": "27206490", "title": "KMRI", "text": " KMRI (1550 AM) is an AM radio station. Licensed to West Valley City, Utah, United States, the station serves the Salt Lake City area. The station is owned by KMRI LLC. KMRI LLC is owned by communications attorney Barry Wood.", "score": "1.4211545" }, { "id": "1986490", "title": "KMEX-DT", "text": " time as SICC's ownership drama played out, the Los Angeles Spanish-language television market transformed. For more than two decades, KMEX-TV was the only full-time Spanish-language TV station, though other stations aired some programming or had a partial-day Spanish format, such as KSCI and KBSC-TV. This changed in late 1985, when KBSC-TV was sold to Reliance Capital and relaunched as KVEA, a key moment in the formation of Telemundo in early 1987. The management of the new full-time competitor felt that there was enough of a market for both stations to coexist, which was borne out by audience surveys in the wake of the launch of KVEA. However, its 22-year head start gave the station an extraordinarily high ", "score": "1.4179511" }, { "id": "15550183", "title": "KCEI", "text": " KCEI (90.1 FM) is an American radio station licensed to serve the community of Red River, New Mexico. The station's broadcast license is held by Cultural Energy. KCEI also serves Taos, New Mexico, via a booster station (KCEI-FM1) located in the suburb of El Prado. KCEI broadcasts a variety format to northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. The station was assigned the call sign \"KCEI\" by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on May 1, 2012. It held the call sign \"KRDR\" from January 14, 1997, through April 4, 2012. From April 4 to May 1, 2012, the station was licensed as \"KCEY\".", "score": "1.4158515" }, { "id": "1204239", "title": "KGEI", "text": " the station was purchased by the Far East Broadcasting Company. In 1962, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the station served as a temporary relay of the Voice of America. During the 1970s, a Missions Engineering 250 kW transmitter was added to the station along with log periodic antennas. FEBC closed the station down in July 1994. The 50 kW transmitter was donated to the Christian missionary organization SIM for use in Liberia. However, it was destroyed during an attack on the facility shortly after its installation there. The 250 kW transmitter was also donated to a Christian organization, Project Aurora and was moved to Alaska. The transmitter building was sold to Fully Alive Church, who eventually sold the building to Silicon Valley Clean Water, a wastewater treatment plant, on adjacent property.", "score": "1.4152923" }, { "id": "1204238", "title": "KGEI", "text": " KGEI was founded by GE in 1939 at the Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island with the call sign W6XBE, before changing to KGEI in August 1939. The station at this time had a 50 kW GE transmitter. In 1941, the station was relocated to Redwood City, California following the end of exposition, right next door to today's KNBR. The transmitter building was built with reinforced concrete construction designed to withstand bombs. Prior to World War II, the station aired isolationist programs such as those of Charles Lindbergh along with International News Service bulletins. During World War II, General Douglas MacArthur's \"I have returned\" speech was aired by WGEI. During the years of 1954 and 1955, the station was used to air Stanford University's International University of the Air program. In ", "score": "1.4117682" }, { "id": "3508197", "title": "Channel 9 virtual TV stations in the United States", "text": " Dickinson, North Dakota ; KECY-TV in El Centro, California ; KEFM-LD in Sacramento, California ; KETC in St. Louis, Missouri ; KETG in Arkadelphia, Arkansas ; KEZI in Eugene, Oregon ; KGMD-TV in Hilo, Hawaii ; KGUN-TV in Tucson, Arizona ; KHII-TV in Honolulu, Hawaii ; KIXE-TV in Redding, California ; KLRN in San Antonio, Texas ; KMBC-TV in Kansas City, Missouri ; KMSP-TV in Minneapolis, Minnesota ; KNIN-TV in Caldwell, Idaho ; KNMD-TV in Santa Fe, New Mexico ; KOOD in Hays, Kansas ; KPNE-TV in North Platte, Nebraska ; KQED in San Francisco, California ; KRBC-TV in Abilene, ", "score": "1.4099069" }, { "id": "32848931", "title": "KMRV", "text": " KNEI went on the air on July 1, 1967, originally on 1140 kHz. It initially broadcast with 250 watts during daytime hours only, increased to 1,000 watts in 1970. Original owner Ralph M. Sweeney sold the station to David H. Hogendorn, the original manager, in 1972. Though primarily a country music station, KNEI was block-formatted in the early years, with slots for polka and rock and roll music. In 1997, Hogendorn sold KNEI and its associated FM, KNEI-FM, to Marathon Media for $600,000. He exited radio to focus on his travel business; soon after, his weekly big band program also left the air. Greg Wennes bought the Waukon stations and KVIK in Decorah, in 2002; he had previously been manager of the company's cluster in La Crosse, Wisconsin. In 2019, the lease for KMRV's transmitter site was not renewed, and the station moved to broadcasting at reduced power with 250 watts, which it did until Wennes surrendered the license.", "score": "1.4091761" } ]
[ "KMAI-LP\n KMAI-LP (97.9 FM) is a low-power radio station licensed to Alturas, California, United States. The station broadcasts highway information.", "97.3 FM\n in Garden City, Kansas ; KKNG-FM in Blanchard, Oklahoma ; KKRC-FM in Sioux Falls, South Dakota ; in Davenport, Washington ; in Santa Fe, New Mexico ; in Blackfoot, Idaho ; in San Francisco, California ; in Lee's Summit, Missouri ; in New Deal, Texas ; in Kaplan, Louisiana ; KMEI-LP in Kamiah, Idaho ; in Redding, California ; KNEH-LP in Helena, Montana ; in Blair, Nebraska ; KOLC in Carson City, Nevada ; KPSQ-LP in Fayetteville, Arkansas ; KPUY in Garwood, Texas ; in Waskom, Texas ; KQSB-LP in Paris, Texas ; in Aurora, Nebraska ; KRJK in Lamont, California ; in Wailea-Makena, Hawaii ; ", "WXEI-LP\n WXEI-LP (95.3 FM) is a radio station broadcasting a News/Talk radio format. Licensed to Crestview, Florida, United States, the station serves the Crestview/Fort Walton Beach area. The station is currently owned by X-Static Enterprises Inc. WXEI's most popular aired program is the nationally syndicated radio talk show \"Jon Arthur Live!\" airing Monday-Friday at 7 PM Central. Jon Arthur Live! is also broadcast on the First Amendment Radio Network.", "Far East Broadcasting Company\n Far East Broadcasting Company is an international Christian radio network. From 1960 to 1994, FEBC owned and operated shortwave radio station KGEI in San Francisco, California.", "KMTE-LP\n KMTE-LP (99.1 FM) is a radio station licensed to Montrose, Colorado, United States. The station is currently owned by State of Colorado Telecommunication Services.", "KCEI-LD\n KCEI-LD, virtual and UHF digital channel 18, is a low-powered independent television station licensed to Taos, New Mexico, United States. It airs local programming about the history of Taos from the Taos local television organization.", "KMEC-LP\n KMEC-LP is a Variety formatted broadcast radio station licensed to and serving Ukiah, California. KMEC-LP is owned and operated by Mendocino Environmental Center.", "KGEI\n KGEI was a shortwave radio station founded by General Electric in 1939. It was purchased by the Far East Broadcasting Company in 1960.", "KMSI\n The station began broadcasting in 1990 with the call letters KMSI. It has been a member of The Oasis Network.", "KMAH-LP\n KMAH-LP, UHF analog channel 39, was a low-powered Cornerstone Television-affiliated television station licensed to Cheyenne, Wyoming, United States. The station was owned by local businessman Bob Rule, owner of Rule Communications.", "KMEX-DT\n of this philosophy was later copied by other Spanish-language TV stations in the United States. KMEX had been the second U.S. station (after KWEX-TV in San Antonio, Texas) in what was the Spanish International Network; the venture also included Telesistema Mexicano—aligned stations along the U.S.–Mexico border. After buying into New York City-area station WXTV and Miami's WLTV, in 1972, SIN made its first western expansion when it built KFTV, serving Fresno, with Villanueva as its general manager. Originally, the Fresno station operated as a direct satellite of KMEX. The \"SIN West\" subnetwork also provided service to affiliated stations in Modesto (KLOC-TV) and San Francisco (KEMO-TV) and Telesistema Mexicano's XEWT-TV in Tijuana and XHBC-TV in Mexicali.", "KSSY-LP\n KSSY-LP was a low-power television station in Arroyo Grande, California, broadcasting locally on channel 20. Founded February 28, 1990, the station was owned by Iglesia Jesuchristo Es Mi Refugio, Inc. Originally owned by Erwin Scala and known as K66CY broadcasting on channel 66, the station initially went with an approach to broadcast family-friendly programming. In 2004, KSSY was leased to OBN Holdings and broadcast Omni Broadcasting Network programs. Later it would become affiliated with Urban America Television, America One, Bloomberg Television, and Classic Arts Showcase. The station then signed off until the summer of 2007, when Scala sold the station to Hispanic Christian Community Network. On November 6, 2007, Hispanic Christian Community Network, Inc. assigned the license of KSSY-LP to Iglesia Jesuchristo Es Mi Refugio, Inc., a non-profit religious organization based in Dallas, Texas. On August 6, 2010, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cancelled the station's license and deleted the KSSY-LP call sign from its database.", "KGIA-LP\n KGIA-LP (92.9 FM) was a low-power FM radio station broadcasting a Christian radio format. Licensed to Grand Island, in the U.S. state of Nebraska, it served the Grand Island-Kearney area. The station was owned by Grand Island Adventist Educational Radio. It was affiliated with Radio 74 Internationale, an international religious broadcasting network.", "KMRI\n KMRI (1550 AM) is an AM radio station. Licensed to West Valley City, Utah, United States, the station serves the Salt Lake City area. The station is owned by KMRI LLC. KMRI LLC is owned by communications attorney Barry Wood.", "KMEX-DT\n time as SICC's ownership drama played out, the Los Angeles Spanish-language television market transformed. For more than two decades, KMEX-TV was the only full-time Spanish-language TV station, though other stations aired some programming or had a partial-day Spanish format, such as KSCI and KBSC-TV. This changed in late 1985, when KBSC-TV was sold to Reliance Capital and relaunched as KVEA, a key moment in the formation of Telemundo in early 1987. The management of the new full-time competitor felt that there was enough of a market for both stations to coexist, which was borne out by audience surveys in the wake of the launch of KVEA. However, its 22-year head start gave the station an extraordinarily high ", "KCEI\n KCEI (90.1 FM) is an American radio station licensed to serve the community of Red River, New Mexico. The station's broadcast license is held by Cultural Energy. KCEI also serves Taos, New Mexico, via a booster station (KCEI-FM1) located in the suburb of El Prado. KCEI broadcasts a variety format to northern New Mexico and southern Colorado. The station was assigned the call sign \"KCEI\" by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on May 1, 2012. It held the call sign \"KRDR\" from January 14, 1997, through April 4, 2012. From April 4 to May 1, 2012, the station was licensed as \"KCEY\".", "KGEI\n the station was purchased by the Far East Broadcasting Company. In 1962, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, the station served as a temporary relay of the Voice of America. During the 1970s, a Missions Engineering 250 kW transmitter was added to the station along with log periodic antennas. FEBC closed the station down in July 1994. The 50 kW transmitter was donated to the Christian missionary organization SIM for use in Liberia. However, it was destroyed during an attack on the facility shortly after its installation there. The 250 kW transmitter was also donated to a Christian organization, Project Aurora and was moved to Alaska. The transmitter building was sold to Fully Alive Church, who eventually sold the building to Silicon Valley Clean Water, a wastewater treatment plant, on adjacent property.", "KGEI\n KGEI was founded by GE in 1939 at the Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island with the call sign W6XBE, before changing to KGEI in August 1939. The station at this time had a 50 kW GE transmitter. In 1941, the station was relocated to Redwood City, California following the end of exposition, right next door to today's KNBR. The transmitter building was built with reinforced concrete construction designed to withstand bombs. Prior to World War II, the station aired isolationist programs such as those of Charles Lindbergh along with International News Service bulletins. During World War II, General Douglas MacArthur's \"I have returned\" speech was aired by WGEI. During the years of 1954 and 1955, the station was used to air Stanford University's International University of the Air program. In ", "Channel 9 virtual TV stations in the United States\n Dickinson, North Dakota ; KECY-TV in El Centro, California ; KEFM-LD in Sacramento, California ; KETC in St. Louis, Missouri ; KETG in Arkadelphia, Arkansas ; KEZI in Eugene, Oregon ; KGMD-TV in Hilo, Hawaii ; KGUN-TV in Tucson, Arizona ; KHII-TV in Honolulu, Hawaii ; KIXE-TV in Redding, California ; KLRN in San Antonio, Texas ; KMBC-TV in Kansas City, Missouri ; KMSP-TV in Minneapolis, Minnesota ; KNIN-TV in Caldwell, Idaho ; KNMD-TV in Santa Fe, New Mexico ; KOOD in Hays, Kansas ; KPNE-TV in North Platte, Nebraska ; KQED in San Francisco, California ; KRBC-TV in Abilene, ", "KMRV\n KNEI went on the air on July 1, 1967, originally on 1140 kHz. It initially broadcast with 250 watts during daytime hours only, increased to 1,000 watts in 1970. Original owner Ralph M. Sweeney sold the station to David H. Hogendorn, the original manager, in 1972. Though primarily a country music station, KNEI was block-formatted in the early years, with slots for polka and rock and roll music. In 1997, Hogendorn sold KNEI and its associated FM, KNEI-FM, to Marathon Media for $600,000. He exited radio to focus on his travel business; soon after, his weekly big band program also left the air. Greg Wennes bought the Waukon stations and KVIK in Decorah, in 2002; he had previously been manager of the company's cluster in La Crosse, Wisconsin. In 2019, the lease for KMRV's transmitter site was not renewed, and the station moved to broadcasting at reduced power with 250 watts, which it did until Wennes surrendered the license." ]
In what country is Záblatí?
[ "Czech Republic", "CZR", "cz", "Česko", "Česká republika", "ČR", "cze", "CZE", "Czechia" ]
country
Záblatí (Prachatice District)
2,979,928
53
[ { "id": "15159801", "title": "Záblatí (Prachatice District)", "text": " Záblatí is a municipality and village in Prachatice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 300 inhabitants. Záblatí lies approximately 5 km south-west of Prachatice, 39 km west of České Budějovice, and 127 km south of Prague.", "score": "1.8733968" }, { "id": "15159695", "title": "Záblatí (Jindřichův Hradec District)", "text": " Záblatí is a village and municipality (obec) in Jindřichův Hradec District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 10.26 km2, and has a population of 85. Záblatí lies approximately 25 km west of Jindřichův Hradec, 21 km north-east of České Budějovice, and 111 km south of Prague.", "score": "1.7932479" }, { "id": "9199602", "title": "Záblatí (Bohumín)", "text": " (Polish: ) is a village in Karviná District, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic. It was a separate municipality but became administratively a part of Bohumín in 1974. It has a population of 2,225 (August 2009).", "score": "1.7410098" }, { "id": "32566549", "title": "Zablatje", "text": " Zablatje is a village in Croatia.", "score": "1.487947" }, { "id": "15159802", "title": "Záblatí (Prachatice District)", "text": " Villages and hamlets of Albrechtovice, Hlásná Lhota, Horní Záblatí, Křišťanovice, Řepešín, Saladín and Zvěřenice are administrative parts of Záblatí.", "score": "1.4744068" }, { "id": "9199603", "title": "Záblatí (Bohumín)", "text": " It is one of the oldest villages in Cieszyn Silesia. It was first mentioned in the document of Pope Gregory IX issued in 1229 among villages belonging to Benedictine abbey in Tyniec, as Zablocie. In 1268 it was bestowed by Władysław Opolski to the newly established Benedictine abbey in Orlová. Politically it belonged then to the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz and Castellany of Cieszyn, which was in 1290 formed in the process of feudal fragmentation of Poland and was ruled by a local branch of Piast dynasty. In 1327 the duchy became a fee of Kingdom of Bohemia, which after 1526 became part of the Habsburg Monarchy. After World War I, fall of Austria-Hungary, Polish–Czechoslovak War and the division of Cieszyn Silesia in 1920, the village became a part of Czechoslovakia. Following the Munich Agreement, in October 1938 together with the Zaolzie region it was annexed by Poland, administratively organised in Frysztat County of Silesian Voivodeship. The village was then annexed by Nazi Germany at the beginning of World War II. After the war it was restored to Czechoslovakia.", "score": "1.45602" }, { "id": "8994960", "title": "Zaatar w Zeit", "text": " Zaatar w Zeit restaurant started as a self-operating business in Lebanon and has expanded through more branches in Lebanon and with franchisees abroad. Headquartered in Jeita, Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon, it is one of Lebanon's largest restaurant chains. The central kitchen and warehouses are also in Jeita, Zouk Mosbeh. The company began back in 1999 selling Lebanese dough food such as manakish. They also have international operations in a number of countries in the Middle East.", "score": "1.4348063" }, { "id": "31712191", "title": "Qalati Ghilji", "text": " Qalāti Ghilzay, also called Qalāti Zābul or Qalāti Khaljī (قلات خلجي), or simply Qalāt or Kalat, is a city in southern Afghanistan and the capital of Zabul Province. It is linked by Highway 1 with Kandahar to the southwest and Ghazni and Kabul to the northeast. The population of the town are ethnic Pashtuns, mostly from the Ghilji tribe, after whom the city is named. The total population of Qalati Ghilji is 49,158 (2015). The city has 4 police districts (nahias) with a total land area of 4,820 Hectares and 5,462 total number of dwellings. Qalati Ghilji is a Provincial Centre located in southern Afghanistan. ", "score": "1.4108821" }, { "id": "25438398", "title": "Zabrus morio", "text": " Zabrus morio is a species of ground beetle in the Pterostichinae subfamily that can be found in such Asian countries as Afghanistan, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Syria, Turkmenistan, Turkey and Uzbekistan.", "score": "1.4105597" }, { "id": "30441136", "title": "Zabol", "text": " Zabol (, also transliterated as Zâbol or Zābul) is a city and capital of Zabol County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. Zabol is near the border with Afghanistan. Referred to as Sistan until the late 1920s, the city was renamed Zabol by Reza Shah Pahlavi. At the 2006 census, its population was 130,642, in 27,867 families. Zabol is located near Lake Hamun and the region is irrigated by the Helmand River. Lake Hamun is a seasonal lake that is often dry. The people of Zabol are mixed of Persians who speak a variant of the Persian language and known as Sistani or Seistani which is very similar to Dari, also known as Afghan Persian, and Baloch who speak Balochi, a Northwestern Iranian language. The city is home to Zabol University, the largest university in the city, as well as the Zabol Medical Science University. Zabol has a regional airport. Zabol is connected by road to Milak and Zaranj (across the border in Afghanistan). The Delaram-Zaranj Highway provides road connectivity to the rest of Afghanistan. Zabol thus provides Afghanistan access to the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf via the Port of Chabahar.", "score": "1.3979993" }, { "id": "26481399", "title": "Záluží (Beroun District)", "text": "See other places named Záluží (disambiguation). Záluží is a village in Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has around 460 inhabitants. Ludmila Mottlova is mayor. First mention of the village is from charter of House of Zajíc of Valdek and King John of Bohemia, written in 1331.", "score": "1.3737731" }, { "id": "25438627", "title": "Zabrus seriatus", "text": " Zabrus seriatus is a species of ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus that can be found in Turkey and Erzerum, Armenia.", "score": "1.3694198" }, { "id": "31712196", "title": "Qalati Ghilji", "text": " In an effort to bring economic development to the area, Zabul province's first airstrip was built just outside the city in 2006. It is a dirt runway. The first flight brought in supplies for Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul and other organizations trying to rebuild the area. Three years later, a girls school was built to attempt to improve education in the area. An initial school supply and prayer mat donation was made, and regular book drops and school supply donations were made until the PRT left in 2013. Clean water programs around the city improved the availability of clean water sources. In 2009, efforts were completed to improve the water system at ", "score": "1.368408" }, { "id": "9585588", "title": "Zabłoto", "text": " Zabłoto (Sablath) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kostomłoty, within Środa Śląska County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south of Środa Śląska, and 31 km west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "score": "1.3499217" }, { "id": "31712192", "title": "Qalati Ghilji", "text": " land is the dominant land use classification 59% of total land. While built-up land use only accounts for 19% of total land use, within that classification there is a large proportion of institutional land (33%). Qalati Ghilji also has two distinct industrial areas in Districts 2 and 3. In 2006, Zabul's first airport was built near Qalat. Qalat became home to the U.S.-led Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul, which began assisting in development projects and building governance throughout the province. On 13 August 2021, Qalati Ghilji was seized by Taliban fighters, becoming the seventeenth provincial capital to be captured as part of wider 2021 Taliban offensive.", "score": "1.3496282" }, { "id": "3566202", "title": "Harpalus zabroides", "text": " Harpalus zabroides is a species of ground beetle native to Europe, where it can be found throughout Central Europe and in such countries as Baltic states (except for Estonia), Benelux, Belarus, Italy, Spain, Ukraine, in all states of former Yugoslavia (except for Croatia and North Macedonia), and all parts of Russia (except north and northwest). It is also found in such Asian countries as Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkey.", "score": "1.3473238" }, { "id": "25439332", "title": "Zabrus spectabilis", "text": " Zabrus spectabilis is a species of greenish-black coloured ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus that can be found in Armenia, Iran, and Turkey. The species males are 14 mm in length.", "score": "1.334652" }, { "id": "16267606", "title": "Zaatari refugee camp", "text": " Zaatari (Arabic: مخيم الزعتري) is a refugee camp in Jordan, located 10 km east of Mafraq, which has gradually evolved into a permanent settlement; it is the world’s largest camp for Syrian refugees. It was first opened on 28 July 2012 to host Syrians fleeing the violence in the ongoing Syrian Civil War that erupted in March 2011. It is connected to the road network by a short road which leads to Highway 10. The main concerns in early days related to the lack of sufficient food supplies and better accommodation. In 2013 it was reported that the camp was experiencing an increasing number of reports of ", "score": "1.3279924" }, { "id": "8994959", "title": "Zaatar w Zeit", "text": " Zaatar w Zeit (زعتر وزيت), a commercial brand of the Lebanese company Breakfast & Co. S.A.L., is an urban eatery franchise founded in Lebanon in 1999 and operating with 23 outlets in Lebanon and more than 70 outlets throughout the Middle East, including 20 in the United Arab Emirates. The company also has outlets in Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia and most recently, Canada. The name Zaatar W Zeit (stylized as zaatar w zeit) refers to thyme or za'atar in Arabic, a common Middle Eastern herb in Levantine Arabic cuisine used notably in preparation of za'atar manakish and other recipes, and zeit (Arabic for olive oil in this context). The franchise has since introduced a far more varied menu than just zaatar-based products.", "score": "1.326632" }, { "id": "25244820", "title": "Zabrus asiaticus", "text": " Zabrus asiaticus is a species of ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus. It was described by Francis de Laporte de Castelnau in 1834 and is found in Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, the North Aegean islands, European part of Turkey and the Near East.", "score": "1.3239491" } ]
[ "Záblatí (Prachatice District)\n Záblatí is a municipality and village in Prachatice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 300 inhabitants. Záblatí lies approximately 5 km south-west of Prachatice, 39 km west of České Budějovice, and 127 km south of Prague.", "Záblatí (Jindřichův Hradec District)\n Záblatí is a village and municipality (obec) in Jindřichův Hradec District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 10.26 km2, and has a population of 85. Záblatí lies approximately 25 km west of Jindřichův Hradec, 21 km north-east of České Budějovice, and 111 km south of Prague.", "Záblatí (Bohumín)\n (Polish: ) is a village in Karviná District, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic. It was a separate municipality but became administratively a part of Bohumín in 1974. It has a population of 2,225 (August 2009).", "Zablatje\n Zablatje is a village in Croatia.", "Záblatí (Prachatice District)\n Villages and hamlets of Albrechtovice, Hlásná Lhota, Horní Záblatí, Křišťanovice, Řepešín, Saladín and Zvěřenice are administrative parts of Záblatí.", "Záblatí (Bohumín)\n It is one of the oldest villages in Cieszyn Silesia. It was first mentioned in the document of Pope Gregory IX issued in 1229 among villages belonging to Benedictine abbey in Tyniec, as Zablocie. In 1268 it was bestowed by Władysław Opolski to the newly established Benedictine abbey in Orlová. Politically it belonged then to the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz and Castellany of Cieszyn, which was in 1290 formed in the process of feudal fragmentation of Poland and was ruled by a local branch of Piast dynasty. In 1327 the duchy became a fee of Kingdom of Bohemia, which after 1526 became part of the Habsburg Monarchy. After World War I, fall of Austria-Hungary, Polish–Czechoslovak War and the division of Cieszyn Silesia in 1920, the village became a part of Czechoslovakia. Following the Munich Agreement, in October 1938 together with the Zaolzie region it was annexed by Poland, administratively organised in Frysztat County of Silesian Voivodeship. The village was then annexed by Nazi Germany at the beginning of World War II. After the war it was restored to Czechoslovakia.", "Zaatar w Zeit\n Zaatar w Zeit restaurant started as a self-operating business in Lebanon and has expanded through more branches in Lebanon and with franchisees abroad. Headquartered in Jeita, Zouk Mosbeh, Lebanon, it is one of Lebanon's largest restaurant chains. The central kitchen and warehouses are also in Jeita, Zouk Mosbeh. The company began back in 1999 selling Lebanese dough food such as manakish. They also have international operations in a number of countries in the Middle East.", "Qalati Ghilji\n Qalāti Ghilzay, also called Qalāti Zābul or Qalāti Khaljī (قلات خلجي), or simply Qalāt or Kalat, is a city in southern Afghanistan and the capital of Zabul Province. It is linked by Highway 1 with Kandahar to the southwest and Ghazni and Kabul to the northeast. The population of the town are ethnic Pashtuns, mostly from the Ghilji tribe, after whom the city is named. The total population of Qalati Ghilji is 49,158 (2015). The city has 4 police districts (nahias) with a total land area of 4,820 Hectares and 5,462 total number of dwellings. Qalati Ghilji is a Provincial Centre located in southern Afghanistan. ", "Zabrus morio\n Zabrus morio is a species of ground beetle in the Pterostichinae subfamily that can be found in such Asian countries as Afghanistan, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Pakistan, Syria, Turkmenistan, Turkey and Uzbekistan.", "Zabol\n Zabol (, also transliterated as Zâbol or Zābul) is a city and capital of Zabol County, Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran. Zabol is near the border with Afghanistan. Referred to as Sistan until the late 1920s, the city was renamed Zabol by Reza Shah Pahlavi. At the 2006 census, its population was 130,642, in 27,867 families. Zabol is located near Lake Hamun and the region is irrigated by the Helmand River. Lake Hamun is a seasonal lake that is often dry. The people of Zabol are mixed of Persians who speak a variant of the Persian language and known as Sistani or Seistani which is very similar to Dari, also known as Afghan Persian, and Baloch who speak Balochi, a Northwestern Iranian language. The city is home to Zabol University, the largest university in the city, as well as the Zabol Medical Science University. Zabol has a regional airport. Zabol is connected by road to Milak and Zaranj (across the border in Afghanistan). The Delaram-Zaranj Highway provides road connectivity to the rest of Afghanistan. Zabol thus provides Afghanistan access to the Arabian Sea and Persian Gulf via the Port of Chabahar.", "Záluží (Beroun District)\nSee other places named Záluží (disambiguation). Záluží is a village in Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has around 460 inhabitants. Ludmila Mottlova is mayor. First mention of the village is from charter of House of Zajíc of Valdek and King John of Bohemia, written in 1331.", "Zabrus seriatus\n Zabrus seriatus is a species of ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus that can be found in Turkey and Erzerum, Armenia.", "Qalati Ghilji\n In an effort to bring economic development to the area, Zabul province's first airstrip was built just outside the city in 2006. It is a dirt runway. The first flight brought in supplies for Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul and other organizations trying to rebuild the area. Three years later, a girls school was built to attempt to improve education in the area. An initial school supply and prayer mat donation was made, and regular book drops and school supply donations were made until the PRT left in 2013. Clean water programs around the city improved the availability of clean water sources. In 2009, efforts were completed to improve the water system at ", "Zabłoto\n Zabłoto (Sablath) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kostomłoty, within Środa Śląska County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south of Środa Śląska, and 31 km west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "Qalati Ghilji\n land is the dominant land use classification 59% of total land. While built-up land use only accounts for 19% of total land use, within that classification there is a large proportion of institutional land (33%). Qalati Ghilji also has two distinct industrial areas in Districts 2 and 3. In 2006, Zabul's first airport was built near Qalat. Qalat became home to the U.S.-led Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul, which began assisting in development projects and building governance throughout the province. On 13 August 2021, Qalati Ghilji was seized by Taliban fighters, becoming the seventeenth provincial capital to be captured as part of wider 2021 Taliban offensive.", "Harpalus zabroides\n Harpalus zabroides is a species of ground beetle native to Europe, where it can be found throughout Central Europe and in such countries as Baltic states (except for Estonia), Benelux, Belarus, Italy, Spain, Ukraine, in all states of former Yugoslavia (except for Croatia and North Macedonia), and all parts of Russia (except north and northwest). It is also found in such Asian countries as Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Turkey.", "Zabrus spectabilis\n Zabrus spectabilis is a species of greenish-black coloured ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus that can be found in Armenia, Iran, and Turkey. The species males are 14 mm in length.", "Zaatari refugee camp\n Zaatari (Arabic: مخيم الزعتري) is a refugee camp in Jordan, located 10 km east of Mafraq, which has gradually evolved into a permanent settlement; it is the world’s largest camp for Syrian refugees. It was first opened on 28 July 2012 to host Syrians fleeing the violence in the ongoing Syrian Civil War that erupted in March 2011. It is connected to the road network by a short road which leads to Highway 10. The main concerns in early days related to the lack of sufficient food supplies and better accommodation. In 2013 it was reported that the camp was experiencing an increasing number of reports of ", "Zaatar w Zeit\n Zaatar w Zeit (زعتر وزيت), a commercial brand of the Lebanese company Breakfast & Co. S.A.L., is an urban eatery franchise founded in Lebanon in 1999 and operating with 23 outlets in Lebanon and more than 70 outlets throughout the Middle East, including 20 in the United Arab Emirates. The company also has outlets in Jordan, Kuwait, Qatar and Saudi Arabia and most recently, Canada. The name Zaatar W Zeit (stylized as zaatar w zeit) refers to thyme or za'atar in Arabic, a common Middle Eastern herb in Levantine Arabic cuisine used notably in preparation of za'atar manakish and other recipes, and zeit (Arabic for olive oil in this context). The franchise has since introduced a far more varied menu than just zaatar-based products.", "Zabrus asiaticus\n Zabrus asiaticus is a species of ground beetle in the Pelor subgenus. It was described by Francis de Laporte de Castelnau in 1834 and is found in Bulgaria, Greece, Romania, the North Aegean islands, European part of Turkey and the Near East." ]
In what country is Ba Thín River?
[ "Vietnam", "Socialist Republic of Vietnam", "VN", "VIE", "🇻🇳", "Việt Nam", "Viet Nam", "SRV", "VNM" ]
country
Ba Thín River
3,422,866
54
[ { "id": "103882", "title": "Ba Thín River", "text": " Ba Thín (Sông Ba Thín) is a tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It originates in the high mountains of Guangxi, China, and joins the Kỳ Cùng River in Qu Xa commune in Lộc Bình District of Lạng Sơn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river is 52 km long and has a catchment area of 320 km2.", "score": "1.96649" }, { "id": "6423766", "title": "Lạng Sơn province", "text": " basin in China. The Bản Thín River, a tributary of the Kỳ Cùng, which is 52 m long with a catchment area of 320 km2, has its source in a mountainous region in Guangxi in China, and empties into the Kỳ Cùng in the commune of Khuất Xá in Lộc Bình Province. Other tributaries of the Kỳ include the Bắc Giang River, which is 114 km long with a catchment area of 2670 km2 and the Bắc Khê River, which is 54 km long with a catchment area of 801 km2. Other rivers of note in the province include the Thương Là River, which is the second ", "score": "1.6864206" }, { "id": "450568", "title": "Ba Lai River", "text": " The Ba Lai River (Sông Ba Lai) is a river in the Mekong Delta region, Vietnam, in Ben Tre Province, flowing between An Hoa Island and Bao Island. It is a direct tributary of the Tien River at the boundary of Phu Duc and Tan Phu Communes. At the beginning of the 20th century, the flow from Tien River began to diminish. The water source of the Ba Lai River now comes mainly from the My Tho River. The Ba Lai River has also begun to diminish and the Ba Lai estuary is now filling with sediment and becoming blocked. In 2002, an irrigation dam was built across the River to stop the infiltration of salt water and preserve fresh water for 100,000 hectares of farmland in Bến Tre.", "score": "1.5526564" }, { "id": "10116229", "title": "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp", "text": " Dong Ba Thin Base Camp was established on Highway 1 at Dong Ba Thin, 4 km northwest of Cam Ranh Base and 22 km south of Nha Trang in 1964. The base comprised several different adjacent facilities: Dong Ba Thin Airfield, a short asphalt runway army airfield; Dong Ba Thin Heliport (also known as Flanders Army Heliport) on the west side of the airfield and the Special Forces Camp. The Special Forces Camp was first established by Detachment B-1, 5th Special Forces Group in December 1964 and was later used by Detachments 37, B-51, A-132, A-411 and A-521. In addition, the facility was a Special Forces forward operating base and used for Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations ", "score": "1.519192" }, { "id": "12692740", "title": "Battle of the Iron Triangle", "text": " to An Dien (11.148°N, 106.586°W) on the Thi Thinh River opposite Bến Cát. Each of these outposts, including Base 82 (11.133°N, 106.544°W), which was midway between Rach Bap and An Dien, was manned by a company of the 321st Regional Force (RF) Battalion. Another country road passed by the Rach Bap outpost, local Route 14, which generally paralleled the Saigon River from Tri Tam, through Rach Bap, and veered to the southeast through the Triangle, crossing the Thi Thinh River before it joined Highway 13 north of Phú Cường. The PAVN had blown the bridge on Route 14 over the Thi Thinh a few weeks earlier, but the stream could be spanned by pontoon sections. About midway between Rach Bap and the Thi Thinh ", "score": "1.505941" }, { "id": "10116228", "title": "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp", "text": " Dong Ba Thin Base Camp (also known as Dong Ba Thin Airfield and Dong Ba Thin Special Forces Camp) is a former U.S. Army base located northwest of Cam Ranh Base in Khánh Hòa Province, southern Vietnam.", "score": "1.4978039" }, { "id": "28813026", "title": "Thin Doem Khun Kala", "text": " Thin Doem Khun Kala (ถิ่นเดิมคุณกะลา, ) is a group of many little islands at Khlong Chaloem Chai Phatthana in Bangkok, Thailand. This area of Bang Khun Thian District was constructed to be a relaxing place and a tourist attraction. There are mangrove forests and about 400 macaque monkeys and a way along the canal to walk to Sanam Chai Park for go to the Khun Kala waterside market for relaxing and buy the local product after watching the macaque monkeys. There is also a monument of Khun Kala to recall the history and speech of king.", "score": "1.4778808" }, { "id": "9229160", "title": "Đà Rằng River", "text": " Đà Rằng (Sông Đà Rằng, upper parts of the river known as Ba River, Ea Pa, Ia Pa) is a river in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam. It has its source in Kon Tum Province and flows into the South China Sea in Tuy Hòa, Phú Yên Province. It has the largest river valley area in central Vietnam and one of the largest river systems in central Vietnam with a total basin area of 13,900 km² or 4.19% of Vietnam's total area. It has a total length of 374 km.", "score": "1.4656806" }, { "id": "13928603", "title": "Thin Thin Khaing", "text": " Thin Thin Khaing (သင်သင်ကြိုင်) born 4 May 1978) is an athlete from Pegu. Burma. She competes in archery. She is currently working in Sumitomo Corporation, Yangon, Myanmar. Thin represented Myanmar at the 2004 Summer Olympics. She placed 38th in the women's individual ranking round with a 72-arrow score of 622. In the first round of elimination, she faced 27th-ranked Małgorzata Sobieraj of Poland. Thin forced a tie-breaker by tying the match at 151 after the regulation 18 arrows. She then matched Sobieraj arrow for arrow through the three tie-breaker arrows, shooting two 9s and an 8. Unfortunately for Thin, Sobieraj's final arrow was slightly closer to the center of the target, allowing Sobieraj to advance and eliminating Thin with a final rank of 39th overall in women's individual archery.", "score": "1.4623215" }, { "id": "10116230", "title": "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp", "text": " operations. From November 1970 to February 1973 the base was used by the United States Army Vietnam UITG individual training group battalion, responsible for the training of Khmer National Armed Forces (FANK) infantry battalions in weapons use, tactics and first aid. In March 1972 the 18-man 2nd New Zealand Army Training Team Vietnam (2 NZATTV), which included members from different branches of service including two Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) personnel, was deployed to the camp to assist with the training of FANK personnel, they would remain there until December 1972. With the withdrawal of US and New Zealand forces from South Vietnam in 1972-3, the training mission was taken over by the Army of the Republic of Vietnam.", "score": "1.4604226" }, { "id": "10116231", "title": "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp", "text": " The base remains in use by the People's Army of Vietnam as Lữ Đoàn HQĐB 101.", "score": "1.4604062" }, { "id": "3692812", "title": "Slim River", "text": " There is a new modern government hospital providing basic medical care for the district. In addition, there is a public library for the locals to visit.", "score": "1.459466" }, { "id": "6423720", "title": "Bắc Giang province", "text": " a capacity of 25m3/s. However, the energy dissipation arrangements of the dam have been damaged, several times since it was built, by floods and bombing raids. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) funded the rehabilitation project in 2000. Although restored after 1955, the project is facing water shortages and is unable to meet the demands for irrigation due to building of many projects in the upstream reaches of the river, over utilisation by industries and poor maintenance. Transbasin diversions have been implemented along with pumping from other streams to meet the water demands for irrigation and other uses of drinking water and industries.", "score": "1.4500158" }, { "id": "1441545", "title": "Ba River (China)", "text": " The Ba River (巴江), located in China, is the largest tributary of the Nanpan River. It is the source of the Dadieshui Waterfall.", "score": "1.4481874" }, { "id": "29068321", "title": "Bae'e River", "text": " The Ba'e River is a river of Papua New Guinea, located in Eastern Highlands Province, in Ayura Valley.", "score": "1.4467939" }, { "id": "1441784", "title": "Ba River (Fiji)", "text": " The Ba River is located in the island of Viti Levu in Fiji. The town of Ba is built on its banks. The Rarawai Sugar Mill is located a kilometer upstream on the bank of the Ba River and makes use of the river water in its boilers. Ba River is famous for its clams, which are a local delicacy.", "score": "1.4416142" }, { "id": "145715", "title": "Thinungei", "text": "Loktak Lake ", "score": "1.439414" }, { "id": "103520", "title": "Bắc Giang River", "text": " The Bắc Giang (Sông Bắc Giang) is a left tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It is 114 km long with a catchment area of 2670 km2 and flows through Lạng Sơn Province and Bắc Kạn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river originates in Bắc Sơn District in Lạng Sơn Provinceand flows in a northwesterly direction.", "score": "1.4380322" }, { "id": "15751996", "title": "Protected areas of Vietnam", "text": " Ba Bể National Park lies in Bắc Kạn Province. Ba Be means three lakes, which form a continuous water body of 8 kmlength with width up to 800 m and is fed by the Ta Han, Nam Cuong and Cho Leng rivers. The park lies in the elevation range of 150 to 1,098 m. It has limestone forests (distributed on steep limestone slopes), which are rich in ground flora. The globally vulnerable Owston's civet (Hemigalus owstoni) and François's leaf monkey (Trachypithecus francoisi) are found here. It is also rich in butterfly species, about 332 species are reported. There is also diversity of fish species in the freshwater zones of the park, including endemic species.", "score": "1.4316809" }, { "id": "103524", "title": "Bắc Khê River", "text": " The Bắc Khê (Sông Bắc Khê) is a left tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It is 54 km long with a catchment area of 801 km2 and flows through Tràng Định District in Lạng Sơn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river flows in a northeasterly-north direction and ends near the border with Cao Bằng Province.", "score": "1.4300743" } ]
[ "Ba Thín River\n Ba Thín (Sông Ba Thín) is a tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It originates in the high mountains of Guangxi, China, and joins the Kỳ Cùng River in Qu Xa commune in Lộc Bình District of Lạng Sơn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river is 52 km long and has a catchment area of 320 km2.", "Lạng Sơn province\n basin in China. The Bản Thín River, a tributary of the Kỳ Cùng, which is 52 m long with a catchment area of 320 km2, has its source in a mountainous region in Guangxi in China, and empties into the Kỳ Cùng in the commune of Khuất Xá in Lộc Bình Province. Other tributaries of the Kỳ include the Bắc Giang River, which is 114 km long with a catchment area of 2670 km2 and the Bắc Khê River, which is 54 km long with a catchment area of 801 km2. Other rivers of note in the province include the Thương Là River, which is the second ", "Ba Lai River\n The Ba Lai River (Sông Ba Lai) is a river in the Mekong Delta region, Vietnam, in Ben Tre Province, flowing between An Hoa Island and Bao Island. It is a direct tributary of the Tien River at the boundary of Phu Duc and Tan Phu Communes. At the beginning of the 20th century, the flow from Tien River began to diminish. The water source of the Ba Lai River now comes mainly from the My Tho River. The Ba Lai River has also begun to diminish and the Ba Lai estuary is now filling with sediment and becoming blocked. In 2002, an irrigation dam was built across the River to stop the infiltration of salt water and preserve fresh water for 100,000 hectares of farmland in Bến Tre.", "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp\n Dong Ba Thin Base Camp was established on Highway 1 at Dong Ba Thin, 4 km northwest of Cam Ranh Base and 22 km south of Nha Trang in 1964. The base comprised several different adjacent facilities: Dong Ba Thin Airfield, a short asphalt runway army airfield; Dong Ba Thin Heliport (also known as Flanders Army Heliport) on the west side of the airfield and the Special Forces Camp. The Special Forces Camp was first established by Detachment B-1, 5th Special Forces Group in December 1964 and was later used by Detachments 37, B-51, A-132, A-411 and A-521. In addition, the facility was a Special Forces forward operating base and used for Military Assistance Command, Vietnam – Studies and Observations ", "Battle of the Iron Triangle\n to An Dien (11.148°N, 106.586°W) on the Thi Thinh River opposite Bến Cát. Each of these outposts, including Base 82 (11.133°N, 106.544°W), which was midway between Rach Bap and An Dien, was manned by a company of the 321st Regional Force (RF) Battalion. Another country road passed by the Rach Bap outpost, local Route 14, which generally paralleled the Saigon River from Tri Tam, through Rach Bap, and veered to the southeast through the Triangle, crossing the Thi Thinh River before it joined Highway 13 north of Phú Cường. The PAVN had blown the bridge on Route 14 over the Thi Thinh a few weeks earlier, but the stream could be spanned by pontoon sections. About midway between Rach Bap and the Thi Thinh ", "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp\n Dong Ba Thin Base Camp (also known as Dong Ba Thin Airfield and Dong Ba Thin Special Forces Camp) is a former U.S. Army base located northwest of Cam Ranh Base in Khánh Hòa Province, southern Vietnam.", "Thin Doem Khun Kala\n Thin Doem Khun Kala (ถิ่นเดิมคุณกะลา, ) is a group of many little islands at Khlong Chaloem Chai Phatthana in Bangkok, Thailand. This area of Bang Khun Thian District was constructed to be a relaxing place and a tourist attraction. There are mangrove forests and about 400 macaque monkeys and a way along the canal to walk to Sanam Chai Park for go to the Khun Kala waterside market for relaxing and buy the local product after watching the macaque monkeys. There is also a monument of Khun Kala to recall the history and speech of king.", "Đà Rằng River\n Đà Rằng (Sông Đà Rằng, upper parts of the river known as Ba River, Ea Pa, Ia Pa) is a river in the South Central Coast region of Vietnam. It has its source in Kon Tum Province and flows into the South China Sea in Tuy Hòa, Phú Yên Province. It has the largest river valley area in central Vietnam and one of the largest river systems in central Vietnam with a total basin area of 13,900 km² or 4.19% of Vietnam's total area. It has a total length of 374 km.", "Thin Thin Khaing\n Thin Thin Khaing (သင်သင်ကြိုင်) born 4 May 1978) is an athlete from Pegu. Burma. She competes in archery. She is currently working in Sumitomo Corporation, Yangon, Myanmar. Thin represented Myanmar at the 2004 Summer Olympics. She placed 38th in the women's individual ranking round with a 72-arrow score of 622. In the first round of elimination, she faced 27th-ranked Małgorzata Sobieraj of Poland. Thin forced a tie-breaker by tying the match at 151 after the regulation 18 arrows. She then matched Sobieraj arrow for arrow through the three tie-breaker arrows, shooting two 9s and an 8. Unfortunately for Thin, Sobieraj's final arrow was slightly closer to the center of the target, allowing Sobieraj to advance and eliminating Thin with a final rank of 39th overall in women's individual archery.", "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp\n operations. From November 1970 to February 1973 the base was used by the United States Army Vietnam UITG individual training group battalion, responsible for the training of Khmer National Armed Forces (FANK) infantry battalions in weapons use, tactics and first aid. In March 1972 the 18-man 2nd New Zealand Army Training Team Vietnam (2 NZATTV), which included members from different branches of service including two Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) personnel, was deployed to the camp to assist with the training of FANK personnel, they would remain there until December 1972. With the withdrawal of US and New Zealand forces from South Vietnam in 1972-3, the training mission was taken over by the Army of the Republic of Vietnam.", "Dong Ba Thin Base Camp\n The base remains in use by the People's Army of Vietnam as Lữ Đoàn HQĐB 101.", "Slim River\n There is a new modern government hospital providing basic medical care for the district. In addition, there is a public library for the locals to visit.", "Bắc Giang province\n a capacity of 25m3/s. However, the energy dissipation arrangements of the dam have been damaged, several times since it was built, by floods and bombing raids. The Asian Development Bank (ADB) funded the rehabilitation project in 2000. Although restored after 1955, the project is facing water shortages and is unable to meet the demands for irrigation due to building of many projects in the upstream reaches of the river, over utilisation by industries and poor maintenance. Transbasin diversions have been implemented along with pumping from other streams to meet the water demands for irrigation and other uses of drinking water and industries.", "Ba River (China)\n The Ba River (巴江), located in China, is the largest tributary of the Nanpan River. It is the source of the Dadieshui Waterfall.", "Bae'e River\n The Ba'e River is a river of Papua New Guinea, located in Eastern Highlands Province, in Ayura Valley.", "Ba River (Fiji)\n The Ba River is located in the island of Viti Levu in Fiji. The town of Ba is built on its banks. The Rarawai Sugar Mill is located a kilometer upstream on the bank of the Ba River and makes use of the river water in its boilers. Ba River is famous for its clams, which are a local delicacy.", "Thinungei\nLoktak Lake ", "Bắc Giang River\n The Bắc Giang (Sông Bắc Giang) is a left tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It is 114 km long with a catchment area of 2670 km2 and flows through Lạng Sơn Province and Bắc Kạn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river originates in Bắc Sơn District in Lạng Sơn Provinceand flows in a northwesterly direction.", "Protected areas of Vietnam\n Ba Bể National Park lies in Bắc Kạn Province. Ba Be means three lakes, which form a continuous water body of 8 kmlength with width up to 800 m and is fed by the Ta Han, Nam Cuong and Cho Leng rivers. The park lies in the elevation range of 150 to 1,098 m. It has limestone forests (distributed on steep limestone slopes), which are rich in ground flora. The globally vulnerable Owston's civet (Hemigalus owstoni) and François's leaf monkey (Trachypithecus francoisi) are found here. It is also rich in butterfly species, about 332 species are reported. There is also diversity of fish species in the freshwater zones of the park, including endemic species.", "Bắc Khê River\n The Bắc Khê (Sông Bắc Khê) is a left tributary of the Kỳ Cùng River. It is 54 km long with a catchment area of 801 km2 and flows through Tràng Định District in Lạng Sơn Province in northeastern Vietnam. The river flows in a northeasterly-north direction and ends near the border with Cao Bằng Province." ]
In what country is El Carmen Rivero Tórrez?
[ "Bolivia", "Plurinational State of Bolivia", "bo", "bol", "🇧🇴", "Republic of Bolivia", "BOL", "Bolivia (Plurinational State of)" ]
country
El Carmen Rivero Tórrez
425,031
64
[ { "id": "2844973", "title": "El Carmen Airport", "text": " El Carmen Airport is an airport serving the Bobonaza River village of Montalvo in Pastaza Province, Ecuador. The runway is within a bend of the river, and approaches to either end will cross the water. The Montalvo-El Carmen non-directional beacon (ident: MTL) is located near the runway.", "score": "1.4745371" }, { "id": "14904284", "title": "El Carmen de Bolívar", "text": " El Carmen de Bolívar is a municipality in the department of Bolívar, Colombia, 114 km southeast of Cartagena de Indias. It is located in the orographic system of the Montes de María, being the largest population, as well as the one that concentrates the economic and commercial movement of the subregion. It is the third most populated municipality in the department and an important agricultural center, considered \"the agricultural and food pantry of the department of Bolívar\" for being a great supplier to the entire department of products, especially avocado, tobacco, cocoa, banana, yam and sesame. This is how it is ", "score": "1.461429" }, { "id": "5312771", "title": "El Salto Dam", "text": " El Salto Dam (Presa El Salto), located on the Guadalquivir River in the municipal district of El Carpio (Province of Córdoba, Spain), comprises a dam and its corresponding hydroelectric power station. The dam is situated near the 3.3 km mark on the Pedro Abad-Adamuz highway (CO-412). Its Neo-Mudéjar design is the result of a collaboration between architect Casto Fernández Shaw and engineers Carlos Mendoza and Antonio del Águila. The Madrid-based engineering consulting firm undertook construction of the dam between 1918 and 1922. Since its inception, the dam has proved valuable to the local population for its contribution to the development and economic expansion of the area.", "score": "1.4224901" }, { "id": "14904285", "title": "El Carmen de Bolívar", "text": " as the Sweet City of Colombia since a part of its economy is based on food processing such as Chepacorinas Cookies, Coco Casadilla, Panochas, among others. As for transport infrastructure, its geographically privileged position makes it conducive to the construction of a dry port. Since it connects the Colombian Caribbean with the Santanderes through the Ruta del Sol, it is also a key point of connection of the west of the country to the large ports of Barranquilla and Cartagena by the Troncal de Occidente; and through the Transversal Montes de María communicates this important national road artery with the Gulf ", "score": "1.4181869" }, { "id": "6569604", "title": "El Carmen, Chile", "text": " According to the 2002 census of the National Statistics Institute, El Carmen spans an area of 664.3 sqkm and has 12,845 inhabitants (6,567 men and 6,278 women). Of these, 4,426 (34.5%) lived in urban areas and 8,419 (65.5%) in rural areas. The population fell by 9.3% (1316 persons) between the 1992 and 2002 censuses.", "score": "1.4077158" }, { "id": "27874533", "title": "Carmen River", "text": " The Carmen River is a river of Mexico.", "score": "1.4024158" }, { "id": "14904288", "title": "El Carmen de Bolívar", "text": " The municipality of El Carmen de Bolivar is located south of the municipality of San Jacinto, north of the municipality of Ovejas, Sucre, west of the municipalities of Zambrano and Córdoba, and east of the municipality of San Onofre, Sucre, covering a total area of 954 km2.", "score": "1.3906727" }, { "id": "2745364", "title": "Ramón Rivero", "text": "La Taberna India ; La Farándula Corona ", "score": "1.3712702" }, { "id": "28137499", "title": "Río Secreto", "text": " Río Secreto (English translation: Secret River) is a semi-flooded limestone cave system near Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo, Mexico. There are 38 kilometers of caves in the system, of which approximately 10% are used for ecotourism. Currently, Río Secreto is protected as a nature reserve.", "score": "1.3660095" }, { "id": "8452928", "title": "Church of el Carmen (Madrid)", "text": " The Church of el Carmen (Spanish: Iglesia del Carmen) is a church located in Madrid, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1983. It was formerly part of the Convento del Carmen Calzado complex.", "score": "1.3625089" }, { "id": "25335184", "title": "El Rio de Luz", "text": " El Rio de Luz (Spanish for The River of Light; also known as Morning in the Tropics) is an 1877 oil painting by American landscape artist Frederic Edwin Church. It is his last large-scale painting of South America, following pieces such as The Andes of Ecuador (1855) and The Heart of the Andes (1859). Like them, the painting is a composite of the many sketches and drawings Church made while traveling in South America twenty years earlier.", "score": "1.3497075" }, { "id": "7576402", "title": "Puerto del Carmen", "text": " Since the opening of the Hotel los Fariones in 1967 it attracts tourists from all over Europe, particularly Ireland, the UK and Germany as well as from Scandinavia and Spain. The Avenida de las Playas, the main street/avenue in the town, extends some 7 km along the island's southern coast, with beaches on one side and many restaurants, bars, shops and other tourist attractions on the other. Apartments, villas and hotels cover a kilometre or so inland from the coastline. The quaint and peaceful old town includes the harbour and docks, the Puerto Tinosa. Here there are a smaller variety of restaurants and bars with views across the harbour and the sea to the volcanic mountains of Papagayo beyond to views of the next island of Fuerteventura. ", "score": "1.3451552" }, { "id": "4480391", "title": "El Salto, Jalisco", "text": " The municipality belongs to the Lerma-Santiago hydrological region. Its hydrological resources are provided by several rivers and streams that are part of the sub-basin Santiago river (Verde-Atotonilco), belonging to the hydrological region Lerma-Chapala-Santiago. The main river is Santiago where the waterfall of El Salto de Juanacatlán is located. There are also the Ahogado stream and some springs, such as that of Cerro Colorado and de la Cruz. The Santiago River is one of the 11 most polluted rivers in the country, according to the National Water Commission (Conagua). The main sources of pollution are sewage from homes and hundreds of industrial discharges. The serious consequence of this contamination is the damage to people's health. The 120 thousand inhabitants of El Salto and Juanacatlán suffer from it with frequent conditions. The death of the river began about 40 years ago. In 1971 the first effects of the serious contamination appeared. Where before was the famous waterfall known as the \"Mexican Niagara\", now there is brown water that drags white foam, which in times of air flies and spreads.", "score": "1.3373003" }, { "id": "29174252", "title": "El Carmen, Norte de Santander", "text": " El Carmen is a Colombian municipality located in the department of North Santander.", "score": "1.3347129" }, { "id": "8498423", "title": "El Carmen (Madrid Metro)", "text": " El Carmen is a station on Line 5 of the Madrid Metro. It is located in fare Zone A.", "score": "1.3320637" }, { "id": "13149729", "title": "Jalcomulco", "text": " The Río de los Pescados section of the Rio Antigua is a whitewater river that flows through the town of Jalcomulco and is commercially rafted. Other activities to practice in town are rappelling, climbing, hiking, tyrolean crossing, mountain biking, landscape photography, and temazcal.", "score": "1.3318145" }, { "id": "27788892", "title": "Del Carmen River", "text": "El Toro River ; Socarrón River ; Sancarrón River ; Del Medio River ; Primero River (Huasco) The Del Carmen River (Río del Carmen) is a river of Chile. Its tributaries are:", "score": "1.329967" }, { "id": "6569603", "title": "El Carmen, Chile", "text": " El Carmen is a Chilean commune and town in Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region.", "score": "1.3261842" }, { "id": "11735306", "title": "Boquillas del Carmen", "text": " Boquillas del Carmen, frequently known simply as Boquillas, is a village in northern Mexico on the banks of the Rio Grande. It is the northernmost populated place in the municipality of Ocampo, which lies within the Mexican state of Coahuila. The village lies immediately west of the northern part of the Sierra del Carmen mountain range and at the south-west end of the Rio Grande's Boquillas Canyon. Boquillas del Carmen was founded as a mining town in the late 19th-century, after valuable minerals were found in the nearby mountains. Mining ceased in 1919 and the population rapidly declined. Boquillas del Carmen lies adjacent to the Mexico–United States border and visitors on foot from the United States can enter the village via the Boquillas Port of Entry. Situated just next to Big Bend National Park, tourism is the principal industry in Boquillas. After the September 11 attacks, the United States closed the border and the economy of Boquillas was severely affected and the population fell by nearly 50%. In 2013, the border was re-opened and the economy and population subsequently rebounded. From 2020 to 2021, the crossing was closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.", "score": "1.3228812" }, { "id": "8432593", "title": "El Naranjo, San Luis Potosi", "text": " town of El Naranjo, is on the river of the same name. The waterfall is 70 m high. A hydro-electric plant drains water from the river and the falls are often dry except during the rainy season in the summer. Below the falls, a canal returns water to the river and for three miles the El Salto River is a \"wonderful Class IV blue water river.\" Several small, 10 to 25 feet (3-8 mt) high waterfalls navigable by expert kayakers are in this section of the river. The 38 m high El Meco cascade is at the end of the three-mile stretch of rapids below El Salto. A stairway ", "score": "1.3195356" } ]
[ "El Carmen Airport\n El Carmen Airport is an airport serving the Bobonaza River village of Montalvo in Pastaza Province, Ecuador. The runway is within a bend of the river, and approaches to either end will cross the water. The Montalvo-El Carmen non-directional beacon (ident: MTL) is located near the runway.", "El Carmen de Bolívar\n El Carmen de Bolívar is a municipality in the department of Bolívar, Colombia, 114 km southeast of Cartagena de Indias. It is located in the orographic system of the Montes de María, being the largest population, as well as the one that concentrates the economic and commercial movement of the subregion. It is the third most populated municipality in the department and an important agricultural center, considered \"the agricultural and food pantry of the department of Bolívar\" for being a great supplier to the entire department of products, especially avocado, tobacco, cocoa, banana, yam and sesame. This is how it is ", "El Salto Dam\n El Salto Dam (Presa El Salto), located on the Guadalquivir River in the municipal district of El Carpio (Province of Córdoba, Spain), comprises a dam and its corresponding hydroelectric power station. The dam is situated near the 3.3 km mark on the Pedro Abad-Adamuz highway (CO-412). Its Neo-Mudéjar design is the result of a collaboration between architect Casto Fernández Shaw and engineers Carlos Mendoza and Antonio del Águila. The Madrid-based engineering consulting firm undertook construction of the dam between 1918 and 1922. Since its inception, the dam has proved valuable to the local population for its contribution to the development and economic expansion of the area.", "El Carmen de Bolívar\n as the Sweet City of Colombia since a part of its economy is based on food processing such as Chepacorinas Cookies, Coco Casadilla, Panochas, among others. As for transport infrastructure, its geographically privileged position makes it conducive to the construction of a dry port. Since it connects the Colombian Caribbean with the Santanderes through the Ruta del Sol, it is also a key point of connection of the west of the country to the large ports of Barranquilla and Cartagena by the Troncal de Occidente; and through the Transversal Montes de María communicates this important national road artery with the Gulf ", "El Carmen, Chile\n According to the 2002 census of the National Statistics Institute, El Carmen spans an area of 664.3 sqkm and has 12,845 inhabitants (6,567 men and 6,278 women). Of these, 4,426 (34.5%) lived in urban areas and 8,419 (65.5%) in rural areas. The population fell by 9.3% (1316 persons) between the 1992 and 2002 censuses.", "Carmen River\n The Carmen River is a river of Mexico.", "El Carmen de Bolívar\n The municipality of El Carmen de Bolivar is located south of the municipality of San Jacinto, north of the municipality of Ovejas, Sucre, west of the municipalities of Zambrano and Córdoba, and east of the municipality of San Onofre, Sucre, covering a total area of 954 km2.", "Ramón Rivero\nLa Taberna India ; La Farándula Corona ", "Río Secreto\n Río Secreto (English translation: Secret River) is a semi-flooded limestone cave system near Playa del Carmen, Quintana Roo, Mexico. There are 38 kilometers of caves in the system, of which approximately 10% are used for ecotourism. Currently, Río Secreto is protected as a nature reserve.", "Church of el Carmen (Madrid)\n The Church of el Carmen (Spanish: Iglesia del Carmen) is a church located in Madrid, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1983. It was formerly part of the Convento del Carmen Calzado complex.", "El Rio de Luz\n El Rio de Luz (Spanish for The River of Light; also known as Morning in the Tropics) is an 1877 oil painting by American landscape artist Frederic Edwin Church. It is his last large-scale painting of South America, following pieces such as The Andes of Ecuador (1855) and The Heart of the Andes (1859). Like them, the painting is a composite of the many sketches and drawings Church made while traveling in South America twenty years earlier.", "Puerto del Carmen\n Since the opening of the Hotel los Fariones in 1967 it attracts tourists from all over Europe, particularly Ireland, the UK and Germany as well as from Scandinavia and Spain. The Avenida de las Playas, the main street/avenue in the town, extends some 7 km along the island's southern coast, with beaches on one side and many restaurants, bars, shops and other tourist attractions on the other. Apartments, villas and hotels cover a kilometre or so inland from the coastline. The quaint and peaceful old town includes the harbour and docks, the Puerto Tinosa. Here there are a smaller variety of restaurants and bars with views across the harbour and the sea to the volcanic mountains of Papagayo beyond to views of the next island of Fuerteventura. ", "El Salto, Jalisco\n The municipality belongs to the Lerma-Santiago hydrological region. Its hydrological resources are provided by several rivers and streams that are part of the sub-basin Santiago river (Verde-Atotonilco), belonging to the hydrological region Lerma-Chapala-Santiago. The main river is Santiago where the waterfall of El Salto de Juanacatlán is located. There are also the Ahogado stream and some springs, such as that of Cerro Colorado and de la Cruz. The Santiago River is one of the 11 most polluted rivers in the country, according to the National Water Commission (Conagua). The main sources of pollution are sewage from homes and hundreds of industrial discharges. The serious consequence of this contamination is the damage to people's health. The 120 thousand inhabitants of El Salto and Juanacatlán suffer from it with frequent conditions. The death of the river began about 40 years ago. In 1971 the first effects of the serious contamination appeared. Where before was the famous waterfall known as the \"Mexican Niagara\", now there is brown water that drags white foam, which in times of air flies and spreads.", "El Carmen, Norte de Santander\n El Carmen is a Colombian municipality located in the department of North Santander.", "El Carmen (Madrid Metro)\n El Carmen is a station on Line 5 of the Madrid Metro. It is located in fare Zone A.", "Jalcomulco\n The Río de los Pescados section of the Rio Antigua is a whitewater river that flows through the town of Jalcomulco and is commercially rafted. Other activities to practice in town are rappelling, climbing, hiking, tyrolean crossing, mountain biking, landscape photography, and temazcal.", "Del Carmen River\nEl Toro River ; Socarrón River ; Sancarrón River ; Del Medio River ; Primero River (Huasco) The Del Carmen River (Río del Carmen) is a river of Chile. Its tributaries are:", "El Carmen, Chile\n El Carmen is a Chilean commune and town in Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region.", "Boquillas del Carmen\n Boquillas del Carmen, frequently known simply as Boquillas, is a village in northern Mexico on the banks of the Rio Grande. It is the northernmost populated place in the municipality of Ocampo, which lies within the Mexican state of Coahuila. The village lies immediately west of the northern part of the Sierra del Carmen mountain range and at the south-west end of the Rio Grande's Boquillas Canyon. Boquillas del Carmen was founded as a mining town in the late 19th-century, after valuable minerals were found in the nearby mountains. Mining ceased in 1919 and the population rapidly declined. Boquillas del Carmen lies adjacent to the Mexico–United States border and visitors on foot from the United States can enter the village via the Boquillas Port of Entry. Situated just next to Big Bend National Park, tourism is the principal industry in Boquillas. After the September 11 attacks, the United States closed the border and the economy of Boquillas was severely affected and the population fell by nearly 50%. In 2013, the border was re-opened and the economy and population subsequently rebounded. From 2020 to 2021, the crossing was closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.", "El Naranjo, San Luis Potosi\n town of El Naranjo, is on the river of the same name. The waterfall is 70 m high. A hydro-electric plant drains water from the river and the falls are often dry except during the rainy season in the summer. Below the falls, a canal returns water to the river and for three miles the El Salto River is a \"wonderful Class IV blue water river.\" Several small, 10 to 25 feet (3-8 mt) high waterfalls navigable by expert kayakers are in this section of the river. The 38 m high El Meco cascade is at the end of the three-mile stretch of rapids below El Salto. A stairway " ]
In what country is Kawahigashi Station?
[ "Japan", "State of Japan", "Land of the Rising Sun", "Nihon", "Nippon", "JP", "Nippon-koku", "Nihon-koku", "JA", "JPN", "jp", "JAP", "Ja", "Jap" ]
country
Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)
215,156
36
[ { "id": "16267584", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)", "text": " Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a train station located in Imari, Saga Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Nishi-Kyūshū Line which has been operated by the third-sector Matsuura Railway since 1988.", "score": "1.7980398" }, { "id": "26353034", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)", "text": " Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a railway station in the city of Sukagawa, Fukushima, Japan operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "score": "1.7073101" }, { "id": "1095538", "title": "Kawagishi Station", "text": " Kawagishi Station (川岸駅) is a railway station in the city of Okaya, Nagano Prefecture, Japan jointly operated by JR Central and JR East. It is managed by JR East.", "score": "1.7006063" }, { "id": "30048752", "title": "Shingashi Station", "text": " Shingashi Station (新河岸駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Kawagoe, Saitama, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway.", "score": "1.6434109" }, { "id": "32674152", "title": "Kawawachō Station", "text": " Kawawachō Station (川和町駅) is metro station located in Tsuzuki Ward, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is served by the Yokohama Municipal Subway’s Green Line (Line 4) and is 1.7 kilometers from the terminus of the Green Line at Nakayama Station.", "score": "1.6197331" }, { "id": "11330229", "title": "Higashi-Nakano Station", "text": " The JR station opened on 14 June 1906 as Kashiwagi Station (柏木駅). It was renamed Higashi-Nakano in 1917. The Toei station opened on 19 December 1997.", "score": "1.6163232" }, { "id": "30371486", "title": "Kawahara Station", "text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Inbi Line ", "score": "1.5900795" }, { "id": "16267586", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)", "text": " The station consists of one ground-level side platform with a bi-directional track.", "score": "1.5893743" }, { "id": "26353037", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)", "text": " Kawahigashi Station opened on October 10, 1931. The station was absorbed into the JR East network upon the privatization of the Japanese National Railways (JNR) on April 1, 1987.", "score": "1.5834932" }, { "id": "3073802", "title": "Kagaonsen Station", "text": " Kagaonsen Station (加賀温泉駅) is a railway station on the Hokuriku Main Line in Kaga, Ishikawa, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West).", "score": "1.5752835" }, { "id": "29579008", "title": "Kawabejuku Station", "text": " Kawabejuku Station (川辺宿駅) is a train station in the city of Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.", "score": "1.5735948" }, { "id": "30046021", "title": "Kawabata Station", "text": " Kawabata Station (川端駅) is a railway station on the Sekisho Line in Yuni, Yūfutsu District, Hokkaido, Japan, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido).", "score": "1.5735179" }, { "id": "26353038", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)", "text": "Kawahigashi Post Office ; Abukuma River ; Wada no Daibutsu ", "score": "1.5705762" }, { "id": "26273053", "title": "Kadosawabashi Station", "text": " Kadosawabashi Station (門沢橋駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Ebina, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "score": "1.5654662" }, { "id": "1095541", "title": "Kawagishi Station", "text": " The station opened on 28 October 1923. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR East.", "score": "1.5626522" }, { "id": "3537830", "title": "Kawaguchi Station", "text": " Kawaguchi Station (川口駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "score": "1.557991" }, { "id": "7549519", "title": "Kasahata Station", "text": " Kasahata Station (笠幡駅) is a passenger railway station on the Kawagoe Line located in the city of Kawagoe, Saitama, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "score": "1.5563463" }, { "id": "16267585", "title": "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)", "text": "Matsuura Railway ; Nishi-Kyūshū Line Trains on this branch terminate at either or. Travellers can transfer at for local trains to, then onto a local or rapid train to. It is 11.6 km from.", "score": "1.5542934" }, { "id": "33030093", "title": "Kawazoe Station", "text": " Kawazoe Station (川添駅) is a passenger railway station in located in the town of Ōdai, Taki District, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai).", "score": "1.552775" }, { "id": "33030099", "title": "Kawazoe Station", "text": "Japan National Route 42 ; Kawazoe Elementary School ", "score": "1.5493716" } ]
[ "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)\n Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a train station located in Imari, Saga Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Nishi-Kyūshū Line which has been operated by the third-sector Matsuura Railway since 1988.", "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)\n Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a railway station in the city of Sukagawa, Fukushima, Japan operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "Kawagishi Station\n Kawagishi Station (川岸駅) is a railway station in the city of Okaya, Nagano Prefecture, Japan jointly operated by JR Central and JR East. It is managed by JR East.", "Shingashi Station\n Shingashi Station (新河岸駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Kawagoe, Saitama, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway.", "Kawawachō Station\n Kawawachō Station (川和町駅) is metro station located in Tsuzuki Ward, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. It is served by the Yokohama Municipal Subway’s Green Line (Line 4) and is 1.7 kilometers from the terminus of the Green Line at Nakayama Station.", "Higashi-Nakano Station\n The JR station opened on 14 June 1906 as Kashiwagi Station (柏木駅). It was renamed Higashi-Nakano in 1917. The Toei station opened on 19 December 1997.", "Kawahara Station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Inbi Line ", "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)\n The station consists of one ground-level side platform with a bi-directional track.", "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)\n Kawahigashi Station opened on October 10, 1931. The station was absorbed into the JR East network upon the privatization of the Japanese National Railways (JNR) on April 1, 1987.", "Kagaonsen Station\n Kagaonsen Station (加賀温泉駅) is a railway station on the Hokuriku Main Line in Kaga, Ishikawa, Japan, operated by West Japan Railway Company (JR West).", "Kawabejuku Station\n Kawabejuku Station (川辺宿駅) is a train station in the city of Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.", "Kawabata Station\n Kawabata Station (川端駅) is a railway station on the Sekisho Line in Yuni, Yūfutsu District, Hokkaido, Japan, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido).", "Kawahigashi Station (Fukushima)\nKawahigashi Post Office ; Abukuma River ; Wada no Daibutsu ", "Kadosawabashi Station\n Kadosawabashi Station (門沢橋駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Ebina, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan, operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "Kawagishi Station\n The station opened on 28 October 1923. With the privatization of Japanese National Railways (JNR) on 1 April 1987, the station came under the control of JR East.", "Kawaguchi Station\n Kawaguchi Station (川口駅) is a passenger railway station located in the city of Kawaguchi, Saitama, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "Kasahata Station\n Kasahata Station (笠幡駅) is a passenger railway station on the Kawagoe Line located in the city of Kawagoe, Saitama, Japan, operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East).", "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)\nMatsuura Railway ; Nishi-Kyūshū Line Trains on this branch terminate at either or. Travellers can transfer at for local trains to, then onto a local or rapid train to. It is 11.6 km from.", "Kawazoe Station\n Kawazoe Station (川添駅) is a passenger railway station in located in the town of Ōdai, Taki District, Mie Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Tōkai).", "Kawazoe Station\nJapan National Route 42 ; Kawazoe Elementary School " ]
In what country is Los Santos mine?
[ "Spain", "España", "Kingdom of Spain", "ES", "ESP" ]
country
Los Santos mine
1,124,451
87
[ { "id": "31888906", "title": "Almonty Industries", "text": " Los Santos Mine is exploited through Daytal Resources Spain S.L. (\"Daytal\"), a wholly owned Spanish subsidiary of Almonty Industries Inc. It is located in the municipalities of Los Santos and Fuenterroble de Salvatierra in the province of Salamanca, about 180 km west of Madrid. The deposit was discovered by Billiton Española in 1979–1980 by targeted night use of ultra-violet lamps to disclose the presence of the tungsten mineral, scheelite (CaWO 4 ) which fluoresces under ultraviolet light. After the discovery, a period of intense exploration activity began, including diamond drilling and some preliminary engineering. In the 1980s it decided to ", "score": "1.7508028" }, { "id": "31888909", "title": "Almonty Industries", "text": " per year and works by gravimetry. It produces tungsten (scheelite) concentrates with 65% WO3 at an average of 100-140 ton per month. Since 2008, Los Santos has produced approximately 8,500 tons of tungsten concentrate, making it, in terms of production, the biggest tungsten mine in Spain, taking into consideration all historical producers. The tailings of the processing plant are dry-stacked for subsequent re-processing, as much of its contained mineralization is not extracted and in the future, with changes in plant design, will be reprocessed; then the final tailings will be dumped into the restoration of the last pit shell. ", "score": "1.6851232" }, { "id": "31888907", "title": "Almonty Industries", "text": " out a pre-feasibility study. By 1985, however, the prevailing price for tungsten of US$81/mtu, the project was considered non-viable. Later mining rights were acquired by the publicly owned company SIEMCALSA, which sold it to the Australian public company, |Heemskirk Consolidated Limited that had commissioned the project in June 2008. The Los Santos deposit is a typical skarn-hosted scheelite deposit, where intrusion of granitoids into carbonate-rich sedimentary rocks has resulted in their replacement by calcosilicate or siliceous minerals, together with mineralisation. It forms from impure carbonates rich in iron (Fe) and contains pyroxene, scheelite, plagioclase and locally magnetite. The scheelite is ", "score": "1.5828688" }, { "id": "11854493", "title": "Los Filos mine", "text": " The Los Filos mine is one of the largest gold mines in Mexico and in the world. The mine is located in the south of the country in Guerrero. The mine has estimated reserves of 7.43 million oz of gold and 52.54 million oz of silver. In January 2017, Goldcorp sold the mine to Leagold Mining Corporation for $438 million as part of a divestment of non-core assets.", "score": "1.5737278" }, { "id": "3816135", "title": "Los Santos Province", "text": " Los Santos has 6 national parks: La Tronosa, Tonosí, Cerro Hoya, Cerro Canajagua, Santa Ana and El Colmón. It has five wildlife refuges. These areas include El Peñón de la Honda, Isla Cañas, Isla Iguana, Pablo Arturo Barrios and La Marinera. The coastline of La Enea and El Espinal corregimiento and the basin of Cacao and Mensabé river are also protected.", "score": "1.5499747" }, { "id": "30017851", "title": "Los Santos, Santander", "text": " Los Santos is a town and municipality in the Santander Department in northeastern Colombia.", "score": "1.5384964" }, { "id": "12144406", "title": "Los Chancas mine", "text": " The Los Chancas mine is a large copper mine located in the Apurímac Region of southern Peru. Los Chancas represents one of the largest copper reserves in Peru and in the world, having an estimated 726 million tonnes of ore grading 0.47% copper, 0.04% molybdenum and 0.9 million oz of gold.", "score": "1.5079253" }, { "id": "3816129", "title": "Los Santos Province", "text": " Located in the tropics, Los Santos has a rainy season which stretches from May to November, and a dry season extending from late December to early May. According to the Köppen climate classification, the province of Los Santos has a tropical savanna climate (Aw). The southeast of Los Santos is usually warmer and drier than the west, owing to the influence of Pacific ocean currents and altitude. Rainfall varies widely across Los Santos. The eastern highlands of Los Santos are the wettest, with annual rainfall in a few places like Cerro Hoya and Canajagua exceeding 4,000 mm. In comparison, much of lowland Los Santos receives less than 1200 mm annually. Temperatures range between 23 and 32 °C on the coast, with a minimum of 14 °C in the mountain region. These variations are caused by the mountains of Azuero range and rainfall that occur over very short distances.", "score": "1.5018198" }, { "id": "11665830", "title": "La Francia", "text": " La Francia is a coal mine in the Cesar-Ranchería Basin, located in the municipalities Becerril and El Paso, Cesar, Colombia owned by the Goldman Sachs Group. It mines coal from the Paleocene Los Cuervos Formation, time-equivalent with the Cerrejón Formation, which is mined in the northeastern part of the basin in Latin America's largest coal mine, Cerrejón. In 2016, La Francia produced 11.6 Megatons of coal.", "score": "1.4962423" }, { "id": "10263041", "title": "La Colosa mine", "text": " La Colosa is a porphyry gold mine in Colombia. The mine is located in Cajamarca, Tolima on the eastern flanks of the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. La Colosa has estimated inferred resources of 24000000 oz of gold, grading at 0.9 to 1.0 mg/kg of Au. In 2015, the mine produced 1810.35 g of gold. In 2016, 88.4% of the mining value in Colombia came from coal and gold combined, with nickel following at 9.3%.", "score": "1.4951422" }, { "id": "11324401", "title": "La Pita", "text": " The La Pita concession agreement is active and registered with the National Mining Agency of Colombia. The title holders of Las Pita have a 30-year exploration/exploitation license, this title granted the exclusive right to extract the corresponding minerals and to conduct the necessary efforts to explore, exploit, process, transport and ship the relevant minerals.", "score": "1.4912533" }, { "id": "29216804", "title": "Rio Alto Mining", "text": " Rio Alto Mining was a Vancouver-based international gold producer engaged in the exploration, development, and production of mineral resource properties throughout Latin America, with its principal asset, the La Arena mine, in La Libertad Region, Peru. The company and its assets were acquired by Tahoe Resources, Inc. in 2015, and the company no longer exists.", "score": "1.4887545" }, { "id": "11665831", "title": "La Francia", "text": " The mine was owned by Coalcorp Mining until 2010. It was acquired by Goldman Sachs for US$200 million in 2010. It closed in January 2013 after the contractor hired by Colombian National Resources opted out, but opened again in January 2014, at a lesser capacity. During the strikes of 2013, miners occupied the mine and refused offers provided by the companies involved. In 2015, Murray Energy (now known as American Consolidated Natural Resources) purchased the mine from Goldman Sachs. As of August 2020, the mine has suspended operations indefinitely.", "score": "1.4876933" }, { "id": "16029227", "title": "Los Azules mine", "text": " Los Azules is a large copper deposit located in the north-west of Argentina, in the San Juan Province. Los Azules represents one of the largest copper deposits in Argentina and in the world, with 0.96 billion tonnes of ore grading 0.48% copper for 10.2 billion copper pounds of indicated resource and 2.67 billion tonnes of ore grading 0.33% copper for 19.3 billion copper pounds of inferred resource. In addition to the 29.3 billion pounds of copper, Los Azules has estimated resources of 251.3 million pounds of molybdenum, 191.1 million ounces of silver and 5.5 million ounces of gold. Los Azules was acquired by McEwen Mining in 2012 and is held in McEwen Copper from 2021. The company is advancing the project from the preliminary economic assessment to the pre-feasibility study level.", "score": "1.4876876" }, { "id": "3816132", "title": "Los Santos Province", "text": " province hills. A third area in low-lying coastal regions coastal plains and sedimentary basins, where the hilly reliefs that are part of the foothills of the mountains predominate. The coastline of Los Santos is characterized by an overwhelming predominance of beaches and coastal lowlands with the presence of some cliffs especially in the southern part of the Sierra de Azuero in Tonosí. Mangroves and small dune formations are the most characteristic element of the coastal relief. The beaches are dissipative, fine golden sand on the north and darke volcanic in the south, with annual variations in the coastline that can be labeled due to winter storms.", "score": "1.4748421" }, { "id": "5478191", "title": "Santos Limited", "text": " The company also participates in on- and off-shore oil and gas exploration and production ventures throughout Australia, in the Timor Gap, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, India, Bangladesh, Egypt, Vietnam and Kyrgyzstan.", "score": "1.472897" }, { "id": "8482144", "title": "Lev Avnerovich Leviev", "text": " respond to the charges, but noted his charitable activities in Angola. Both Isabel Dos Santos and Leviev, who has a majority ownership, are partners in Angola's first and, at the time, only kimberlite mine at Catoca in the Cuango Valley. In 2014, the Catoca mine was owned by Alrosa with a 32.8% stake, Angolan government holding a 32.8% stake, and Lev Leviev International (LLI) with an 18% stake, and Odebrecht holding a 16.4% stake. In December 2018, the Luaxe kimberlite deposit named Luele, which is only 25 kilometers from the Catoca mine, will be developed by the Catoca Mining Company which is owned ", "score": "1.466155" }, { "id": "2021114", "title": "Todos los Santos Lake", "text": " Lake Todos los Santos (Spanish for \"All Saints Lake\") is a lake located in the Los Lagos Region of southern Chile, 96 km northeast of the regional capital Puerto Montt and 76 km east of Puerto Varas, within the boundaries of the Vicente Pérez Rosales National Park. It has a surface area of 178.5 km² and a maximum depth of 337 m. The Lake's National Park status has ensured protection to its environment. The catchment is largely covered with old-growth Valdivian temperate rain forests. The present form of the lake is the result of glacial and volcanic processes.", "score": "1.4637033" }, { "id": "3816124", "title": "Los Santos Province", "text": " between the Gulf of Panama and the Central Mountain range which includes areas of the provinces of Coclé, Herrera and Veraguas in the south of the Isthmus of Panama. Its climate is mainly a tropical savanna climate with moderate temperatures, strongly influenced by the winds of the Pacific Ocean crashing against the mountains, and the Humboldt Current. The average annual rainfall is 1,200 mm, allowing the growth of either dry or humid rainforest. Its highest point is located at the peak of Cerro Hoya with 1559 metres. Other major peaks are Cambutal hill (1400 metres) and Mount The Ñopos (1068 metres). The modern province of Los Santos, was created in January 1945 replacing the defunct province of Azuero according to ", "score": "1.4623833" }, { "id": "3816122", "title": "Los Santos Province", "text": " Los Santos is a province in Panama, reaching from the La Villa river in the North to the Pacific Ocean in the south and east. It is part of the Azuero Peninsula, bounded by the province of Herrera to the north and northeast, and by Mariato District of Veraguas Province to the West. The City of Las Tablas is the capital and most populous city. There are seven administrative districts under the jurisdiction of Los Santos Province. Los Santos's area is 3,809.4 km ², and its population is 95,540 inhabitants in 2019. In this region are the oldest human settlements in the Isthmus of Panama. It was part of the cultural region of Gran Cocle where one of the first ", "score": "1.4623717" } ]
[ "Almonty Industries\n Los Santos Mine is exploited through Daytal Resources Spain S.L. (\"Daytal\"), a wholly owned Spanish subsidiary of Almonty Industries Inc. It is located in the municipalities of Los Santos and Fuenterroble de Salvatierra in the province of Salamanca, about 180 km west of Madrid. The deposit was discovered by Billiton Española in 1979–1980 by targeted night use of ultra-violet lamps to disclose the presence of the tungsten mineral, scheelite (CaWO 4 ) which fluoresces under ultraviolet light. After the discovery, a period of intense exploration activity began, including diamond drilling and some preliminary engineering. In the 1980s it decided to ", "Almonty Industries\n per year and works by gravimetry. It produces tungsten (scheelite) concentrates with 65% WO3 at an average of 100-140 ton per month. Since 2008, Los Santos has produced approximately 8,500 tons of tungsten concentrate, making it, in terms of production, the biggest tungsten mine in Spain, taking into consideration all historical producers. The tailings of the processing plant are dry-stacked for subsequent re-processing, as much of its contained mineralization is not extracted and in the future, with changes in plant design, will be reprocessed; then the final tailings will be dumped into the restoration of the last pit shell. ", "Almonty Industries\n out a pre-feasibility study. By 1985, however, the prevailing price for tungsten of US$81/mtu, the project was considered non-viable. Later mining rights were acquired by the publicly owned company SIEMCALSA, which sold it to the Australian public company, |Heemskirk Consolidated Limited that had commissioned the project in June 2008. The Los Santos deposit is a typical skarn-hosted scheelite deposit, where intrusion of granitoids into carbonate-rich sedimentary rocks has resulted in their replacement by calcosilicate or siliceous minerals, together with mineralisation. It forms from impure carbonates rich in iron (Fe) and contains pyroxene, scheelite, plagioclase and locally magnetite. The scheelite is ", "Los Filos mine\n The Los Filos mine is one of the largest gold mines in Mexico and in the world. The mine is located in the south of the country in Guerrero. The mine has estimated reserves of 7.43 million oz of gold and 52.54 million oz of silver. In January 2017, Goldcorp sold the mine to Leagold Mining Corporation for $438 million as part of a divestment of non-core assets.", "Los Santos Province\n Los Santos has 6 national parks: La Tronosa, Tonosí, Cerro Hoya, Cerro Canajagua, Santa Ana and El Colmón. It has five wildlife refuges. These areas include El Peñón de la Honda, Isla Cañas, Isla Iguana, Pablo Arturo Barrios and La Marinera. The coastline of La Enea and El Espinal corregimiento and the basin of Cacao and Mensabé river are also protected.", "Los Santos, Santander\n Los Santos is a town and municipality in the Santander Department in northeastern Colombia.", "Los Chancas mine\n The Los Chancas mine is a large copper mine located in the Apurímac Region of southern Peru. Los Chancas represents one of the largest copper reserves in Peru and in the world, having an estimated 726 million tonnes of ore grading 0.47% copper, 0.04% molybdenum and 0.9 million oz of gold.", "Los Santos Province\n Located in the tropics, Los Santos has a rainy season which stretches from May to November, and a dry season extending from late December to early May. According to the Köppen climate classification, the province of Los Santos has a tropical savanna climate (Aw). The southeast of Los Santos is usually warmer and drier than the west, owing to the influence of Pacific ocean currents and altitude. Rainfall varies widely across Los Santos. The eastern highlands of Los Santos are the wettest, with annual rainfall in a few places like Cerro Hoya and Canajagua exceeding 4,000 mm. In comparison, much of lowland Los Santos receives less than 1200 mm annually. Temperatures range between 23 and 32 °C on the coast, with a minimum of 14 °C in the mountain region. These variations are caused by the mountains of Azuero range and rainfall that occur over very short distances.", "La Francia\n La Francia is a coal mine in the Cesar-Ranchería Basin, located in the municipalities Becerril and El Paso, Cesar, Colombia owned by the Goldman Sachs Group. It mines coal from the Paleocene Los Cuervos Formation, time-equivalent with the Cerrejón Formation, which is mined in the northeastern part of the basin in Latin America's largest coal mine, Cerrejón. In 2016, La Francia produced 11.6 Megatons of coal.", "La Colosa mine\n La Colosa is a porphyry gold mine in Colombia. The mine is located in Cajamarca, Tolima on the eastern flanks of the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. La Colosa has estimated inferred resources of 24000000 oz of gold, grading at 0.9 to 1.0 mg/kg of Au. In 2015, the mine produced 1810.35 g of gold. In 2016, 88.4% of the mining value in Colombia came from coal and gold combined, with nickel following at 9.3%.", "La Pita\n The La Pita concession agreement is active and registered with the National Mining Agency of Colombia. The title holders of Las Pita have a 30-year exploration/exploitation license, this title granted the exclusive right to extract the corresponding minerals and to conduct the necessary efforts to explore, exploit, process, transport and ship the relevant minerals.", "Rio Alto Mining\n Rio Alto Mining was a Vancouver-based international gold producer engaged in the exploration, development, and production of mineral resource properties throughout Latin America, with its principal asset, the La Arena mine, in La Libertad Region, Peru. The company and its assets were acquired by Tahoe Resources, Inc. in 2015, and the company no longer exists.", "La Francia\n The mine was owned by Coalcorp Mining until 2010. It was acquired by Goldman Sachs for US$200 million in 2010. It closed in January 2013 after the contractor hired by Colombian National Resources opted out, but opened again in January 2014, at a lesser capacity. During the strikes of 2013, miners occupied the mine and refused offers provided by the companies involved. In 2015, Murray Energy (now known as American Consolidated Natural Resources) purchased the mine from Goldman Sachs. As of August 2020, the mine has suspended operations indefinitely.", "Los Azules mine\n Los Azules is a large copper deposit located in the north-west of Argentina, in the San Juan Province. Los Azules represents one of the largest copper deposits in Argentina and in the world, with 0.96 billion tonnes of ore grading 0.48% copper for 10.2 billion copper pounds of indicated resource and 2.67 billion tonnes of ore grading 0.33% copper for 19.3 billion copper pounds of inferred resource. In addition to the 29.3 billion pounds of copper, Los Azules has estimated resources of 251.3 million pounds of molybdenum, 191.1 million ounces of silver and 5.5 million ounces of gold. Los Azules was acquired by McEwen Mining in 2012 and is held in McEwen Copper from 2021. The company is advancing the project from the preliminary economic assessment to the pre-feasibility study level.", "Los Santos Province\n province hills. A third area in low-lying coastal regions coastal plains and sedimentary basins, where the hilly reliefs that are part of the foothills of the mountains predominate. The coastline of Los Santos is characterized by an overwhelming predominance of beaches and coastal lowlands with the presence of some cliffs especially in the southern part of the Sierra de Azuero in Tonosí. Mangroves and small dune formations are the most characteristic element of the coastal relief. The beaches are dissipative, fine golden sand on the north and darke volcanic in the south, with annual variations in the coastline that can be labeled due to winter storms.", "Santos Limited\n The company also participates in on- and off-shore oil and gas exploration and production ventures throughout Australia, in the Timor Gap, Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, India, Bangladesh, Egypt, Vietnam and Kyrgyzstan.", "Lev Avnerovich Leviev\n respond to the charges, but noted his charitable activities in Angola. Both Isabel Dos Santos and Leviev, who has a majority ownership, are partners in Angola's first and, at the time, only kimberlite mine at Catoca in the Cuango Valley. In 2014, the Catoca mine was owned by Alrosa with a 32.8% stake, Angolan government holding a 32.8% stake, and Lev Leviev International (LLI) with an 18% stake, and Odebrecht holding a 16.4% stake. In December 2018, the Luaxe kimberlite deposit named Luele, which is only 25 kilometers from the Catoca mine, will be developed by the Catoca Mining Company which is owned ", "Todos los Santos Lake\n Lake Todos los Santos (Spanish for \"All Saints Lake\") is a lake located in the Los Lagos Region of southern Chile, 96 km northeast of the regional capital Puerto Montt and 76 km east of Puerto Varas, within the boundaries of the Vicente Pérez Rosales National Park. It has a surface area of 178.5 km² and a maximum depth of 337 m. The Lake's National Park status has ensured protection to its environment. The catchment is largely covered with old-growth Valdivian temperate rain forests. The present form of the lake is the result of glacial and volcanic processes.", "Los Santos Province\n between the Gulf of Panama and the Central Mountain range which includes areas of the provinces of Coclé, Herrera and Veraguas in the south of the Isthmus of Panama. Its climate is mainly a tropical savanna climate with moderate temperatures, strongly influenced by the winds of the Pacific Ocean crashing against the mountains, and the Humboldt Current. The average annual rainfall is 1,200 mm, allowing the growth of either dry or humid rainforest. Its highest point is located at the peak of Cerro Hoya with 1559 metres. Other major peaks are Cambutal hill (1400 metres) and Mount The Ñopos (1068 metres). The modern province of Los Santos, was created in January 1945 replacing the defunct province of Azuero according to ", "Los Santos Province\n Los Santos is a province in Panama, reaching from the La Villa river in the North to the Pacific Ocean in the south and east. It is part of the Azuero Peninsula, bounded by the province of Herrera to the north and northeast, and by Mariato District of Veraguas Province to the West. The City of Las Tablas is the capital and most populous city. There are seven administrative districts under the jurisdiction of Los Santos Province. Los Santos's area is 3,809.4 km ², and its population is 95,540 inhabitants in 2019. In this region are the oldest human settlements in the Isthmus of Panama. It was part of the cultural region of Gran Cocle where one of the first " ]
In what country is Whited Township?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota
1,475,320
61
[ { "id": "30867314", "title": "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota", "text": " Whited Township is a township in Kanabec County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 808 at the 2000 census. Whited Township was named for Oric Ogilvie Whited, an early landowner.", "score": "1.7453781" }, { "id": "30867315", "title": "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 30.6 square miles (79.4 km2), of which 30.5 square miles (78.9 km2) is land and 0.2 square mile (0.4 km2) (0.55%) is water.", "score": "1.7176027" }, { "id": "1641693", "title": "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania", "text": " White Township is a township in Indiana County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 15,821 at the 2010 census.", "score": "1.6882433" }, { "id": "1054394", "title": "White Township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania", "text": " White Township is a township in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 1,394 at the 2010 census.", "score": "1.6734633" }, { "id": "1258816", "title": "White Township, Cambria County, Pennsylvania", "text": " White Township is a township in Cambria County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 836 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "score": "1.6423199" }, { "id": "32196009", "title": "White Township, New Jersey", "text": " White Township is a township in Warren County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the township's population was 4,882, reflecting an increase of 637 (+15.0%) from the 4,245 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 642 (+17.8%) from the 3,603 counted in the 1990 Census. It is part of the easternmost region of the Lehigh Valley. White Township was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 9, 1913, from portions of Oxford Township, based on the results of a referendum held on May 1, 1913, making it the second-youngest township in the county. The township was named after Alexander White, who came to the area sometime before 1760 and built a stone mansion called \"The White House\" near a place called Roxburg.", "score": "1.6412544" }, { "id": "1054395", "title": "White Township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 1.8 sqkm, all of it land.", "score": "1.6381624" }, { "id": "1641695", "title": "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania", "text": " The first non-Indian settlers within the current-day boundaries of the township were Fergus Moorhead and his family, who arrived in 1772 and built a grist mill in 1774. In 1781, Moorhead and family constructed a small fort where Philadelphia Street intersects Heritage Run Road today. White Township, named for Judge Thomas White, was officially formed as a municipality in 1843, from portions of Center, Washington, Green, and Armstrong Townships. On March 15, 1844, the first White Township municipal election was held, in which James Hood and William Ewing were elected supervisors, in addition to other township offices.", "score": "1.6278012" }, { "id": "13077941", "title": "White Township School District", "text": "White Township Consolidated School, with 268 students in grades PreK-8 Schools in the district (with 2017-18 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics ) are:", "score": "1.6216395" }, { "id": "30867316", "title": "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota", "text": " As of the census of 2000, there were 808 people, 300 households, and 233 families residing in the township. The population density was 26.5 people per square mile (10.2/km2). There were 363 housing units at an average density of 11.9/sq mi (4.6/km2). The racial makeup of the township was 97.90% White, none Black or African American, 0.99% Native American, 0.12% Asian, none are Pacific Islander or from other races, and 0.99% are from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.62% of the population. There were 300 households, out of which 37.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 64.7% were married couples living together, 8.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.3% were non-families. 19.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 4.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. ", "score": "1.6096342" }, { "id": "32196023", "title": "White Township, New Jersey", "text": " Regular meetings of the Warren County Board of chosen freeholders are held at the Wayne Dumont Jr. Administrative Building in White Township, which also houses most of the administrative offices of Warren County. Part of the Pequest Fish Hatchery also lies within the boundaries of White Township. Four Sisters Winery is located in White Township.", "score": "1.6073339" }, { "id": "1641694", "title": "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania", "text": " White Township entirely surrounds, but does not include, the Borough of Indiana. However, the township does include the community of Chevy Chase Heights, which is a census-designated place according to the US Census. The township also includes the communities of Ben Avon and Fulton Run. According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 42.9 square miles (111.0 km2), of which, 42.6 square miles (110.3 km2) is land and 0.3 square miles (0.8 km2) (0.70%) is water.", "score": "1.5831618" }, { "id": "11281267", "title": "White Post Township, Pulaski County, Indiana", "text": " White Post Township is one of twelve townships in Pulaski County, Indiana, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 1,075 and it contained 474 housing units. The township is an almost precise 6 mile by 6 mile square; 36.46 square miles and runs from the intersection of County Road 200N and County Road CR1700W (Jasper County line) southwards along CR1700W to CR400S thence east to CR 1100W thence north to CR200N and finally back west to the origin. White Post Township took its name from a stagecoach stop named White Post, and it is supposed the stop was named for a nearby large white stump.", "score": "1.5801446" }, { "id": "13077940", "title": "White Township School District", "text": " The White Township School District is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in pre-kindergarten through eighth grade from White Township, in Warren County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2017-18 school year, the district and its one school had an enrollment of 273 students and 34.6 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 7.9:1. The district is classified by the New Jersey Department of Education as being in District Factor Group \"DE\", the fifth-highest of eight groupings. District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts. From lowest socioeconomic status to highest, the categories are A, B, CD, DE, FG, GH, I and J. Public school students in grades nine through twelve from Harmony Township, Hope Township and White Township attend Belvidere High School as part of sending/receiving relationships with the Belvidere School District. As of the 2017-18 school year, the high school had an enrollment of 458 students and 42.3 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 10.8:1.", "score": "1.5785239" }, { "id": "32196016", "title": "White Township, New Jersey", "text": " White Township is located in the 5th Congressional District and is part of New Jersey's 24th state legislative district. Prior to the 2011 reapportionment following the 2010 Census, White Township had been in the 23rd state legislative district.", "score": "1.5744789" }, { "id": "32196015", "title": "White Township, New Jersey", "text": " White Township is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government, one of 141 municipalities (of the 565) statewide that use this form, the second-most commonly used form of government in the state. The governing body is comprised of a three-member Township Committee, whose members are elected directly by the voters at-large in partisan elections to serve three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or seat coming up for election each year as part of the November general election in a three-year cycle. At an annual reorganization meeting, the Township Committee selects one of its members to serve as Mayor. , members of the White Township Committee are Mayor Jeff Herb (R, term on committee ends December 31, 2022; term as mayor ends), Deputy Mayor Samuel Race (R, term on committee and as deputy mayor ends 2020) and Chanda Collom (R, 2021).", "score": "1.5683945" }, { "id": "12362013", "title": "White River Township, Hamilton County, Indiana", "text": " White River Township is one of nine townships in Hamilton County, Indiana, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 2,486 and it contained 1,028 housing units. It is the least developed township in the county and the only one without an incorporated community of any kind within its boundaries.", "score": "1.5650125" }, { "id": "31595158", "title": "White Mills, Pennsylvania", "text": " White Mills is a village and census-designated place in Texas Township, Wayne County, Pennsylvania. The CDP's population was 659 at time of the 2010 United States Census. White Mills is located along U.S. Route 6 in the eastern part of Wayne County.", "score": "1.5628865" }, { "id": "1858924", "title": "Eldred Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania", "text": " Eldred Township is one of the smallest townships in Lycoming County. A petition was filed proposing the formation of the new township from Hepburn Township in 1858. The court directed an election to be held at Warrensville on October 12, 1858. The question of division was hotly contested, resulting in 109 votes for to 91 against the proposition. On the November 16, 1858, Judge Jordan made a decree erecting the township, and it was named Eldred, in honor of C. D. Eldred, who was then an associate on the bench. The first white settlers in Eldred Township were mostly Quakers, attracted by the land speculations of Robert Morris, and ", "score": "1.5613691" }, { "id": "11902693", "title": "Whites' Woods Nature Center", "text": " The Whites' Woods Nature Center is a 250 acre nature center in Indiana County, Pennsylvania. It is publicly owned by White Township.", "score": "1.5567873" } ]
[ "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota\n Whited Township is a township in Kanabec County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 808 at the 2000 census. Whited Township was named for Oric Ogilvie Whited, an early landowner.", "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 30.6 square miles (79.4 km2), of which 30.5 square miles (78.9 km2) is land and 0.2 square mile (0.4 km2) (0.55%) is water.", "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania\n White Township is a township in Indiana County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 15,821 at the 2010 census.", "White Township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania\n White Township is a township in Beaver County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 1,394 at the 2010 census.", "White Township, Cambria County, Pennsylvania\n White Township is a township in Cambria County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 836 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Johnstown, Pennsylvania Metropolitan Statistical Area.", "White Township, New Jersey\n White Township is a township in Warren County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2010 United States Census, the township's population was 4,882, reflecting an increase of 637 (+15.0%) from the 4,245 counted in the 2000 Census, which had in turn increased by 642 (+17.8%) from the 3,603 counted in the 1990 Census. It is part of the easternmost region of the Lehigh Valley. White Township was incorporated as a township by an act of the New Jersey Legislature on April 9, 1913, from portions of Oxford Township, based on the results of a referendum held on May 1, 1913, making it the second-youngest township in the county. The township was named after Alexander White, who came to the area sometime before 1760 and built a stone mansion called \"The White House\" near a place called Roxburg.", "White Township, Beaver County, Pennsylvania\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 1.8 sqkm, all of it land.", "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania\n The first non-Indian settlers within the current-day boundaries of the township were Fergus Moorhead and his family, who arrived in 1772 and built a grist mill in 1774. In 1781, Moorhead and family constructed a small fort where Philadelphia Street intersects Heritage Run Road today. White Township, named for Judge Thomas White, was officially formed as a municipality in 1843, from portions of Center, Washington, Green, and Armstrong Townships. On March 15, 1844, the first White Township municipal election was held, in which James Hood and William Ewing were elected supervisors, in addition to other township offices.", "White Township School District\nWhite Township Consolidated School, with 268 students in grades PreK-8 Schools in the district (with 2017-18 enrollment data from the National Center for Education Statistics ) are:", "Whited Township, Kanabec County, Minnesota\n As of the census of 2000, there were 808 people, 300 households, and 233 families residing in the township. The population density was 26.5 people per square mile (10.2/km2). There were 363 housing units at an average density of 11.9/sq mi (4.6/km2). The racial makeup of the township was 97.90% White, none Black or African American, 0.99% Native American, 0.12% Asian, none are Pacific Islander or from other races, and 0.99% are from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.62% of the population. There were 300 households, out of which 37.7% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 64.7% were married couples living together, 8.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 22.3% were non-families. 19.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 4.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. ", "White Township, New Jersey\n Regular meetings of the Warren County Board of chosen freeholders are held at the Wayne Dumont Jr. Administrative Building in White Township, which also houses most of the administrative offices of Warren County. Part of the Pequest Fish Hatchery also lies within the boundaries of White Township. Four Sisters Winery is located in White Township.", "White Township, Indiana County, Pennsylvania\n White Township entirely surrounds, but does not include, the Borough of Indiana. However, the township does include the community of Chevy Chase Heights, which is a census-designated place according to the US Census. The township also includes the communities of Ben Avon and Fulton Run. According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 42.9 square miles (111.0 km2), of which, 42.6 square miles (110.3 km2) is land and 0.3 square miles (0.8 km2) (0.70%) is water.", "White Post Township, Pulaski County, Indiana\n White Post Township is one of twelve townships in Pulaski County, Indiana, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 1,075 and it contained 474 housing units. The township is an almost precise 6 mile by 6 mile square; 36.46 square miles and runs from the intersection of County Road 200N and County Road CR1700W (Jasper County line) southwards along CR1700W to CR400S thence east to CR 1100W thence north to CR200N and finally back west to the origin. White Post Township took its name from a stagecoach stop named White Post, and it is supposed the stop was named for a nearby large white stump.", "White Township School District\n The White Township School District is a comprehensive community public school district that serves students in pre-kindergarten through eighth grade from White Township, in Warren County, New Jersey, United States. As of the 2017-18 school year, the district and its one school had an enrollment of 273 students and 34.6 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 7.9:1. The district is classified by the New Jersey Department of Education as being in District Factor Group \"DE\", the fifth-highest of eight groupings. District Factor Groups organize districts statewide to allow comparison by common socioeconomic characteristics of the local districts. From lowest socioeconomic status to highest, the categories are A, B, CD, DE, FG, GH, I and J. Public school students in grades nine through twelve from Harmony Township, Hope Township and White Township attend Belvidere High School as part of sending/receiving relationships with the Belvidere School District. As of the 2017-18 school year, the high school had an enrollment of 458 students and 42.3 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 10.8:1.", "White Township, New Jersey\n White Township is located in the 5th Congressional District and is part of New Jersey's 24th state legislative district. Prior to the 2011 reapportionment following the 2010 Census, White Township had been in the 23rd state legislative district.", "White Township, New Jersey\n White Township is governed under the Township form of New Jersey municipal government, one of 141 municipalities (of the 565) statewide that use this form, the second-most commonly used form of government in the state. The governing body is comprised of a three-member Township Committee, whose members are elected directly by the voters at-large in partisan elections to serve three-year terms of office on a staggered basis, with one or seat coming up for election each year as part of the November general election in a three-year cycle. At an annual reorganization meeting, the Township Committee selects one of its members to serve as Mayor. , members of the White Township Committee are Mayor Jeff Herb (R, term on committee ends December 31, 2022; term as mayor ends), Deputy Mayor Samuel Race (R, term on committee and as deputy mayor ends 2020) and Chanda Collom (R, 2021).", "White River Township, Hamilton County, Indiana\n White River Township is one of nine townships in Hamilton County, Indiana, United States. As of the 2010 census, its population was 2,486 and it contained 1,028 housing units. It is the least developed township in the county and the only one without an incorporated community of any kind within its boundaries.", "White Mills, Pennsylvania\n White Mills is a village and census-designated place in Texas Township, Wayne County, Pennsylvania. The CDP's population was 659 at time of the 2010 United States Census. White Mills is located along U.S. Route 6 in the eastern part of Wayne County.", "Eldred Township, Lycoming County, Pennsylvania\n Eldred Township is one of the smallest townships in Lycoming County. A petition was filed proposing the formation of the new township from Hepburn Township in 1858. The court directed an election to be held at Warrensville on October 12, 1858. The question of division was hotly contested, resulting in 109 votes for to 91 against the proposition. On the November 16, 1858, Judge Jordan made a decree erecting the township, and it was named Eldred, in honor of C. D. Eldred, who was then an associate on the bench. The first white settlers in Eldred Township were mostly Quakers, attracted by the land speculations of Robert Morris, and ", "Whites' Woods Nature Center\n The Whites' Woods Nature Center is a 250 acre nature center in Indiana County, Pennsylvania. It is publicly owned by White Township." ]
In what country is Asalem Rural District?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Asalem Rural District
707,439
54
[ { "id": "6289621", "title": "Asalem District", "text": " Asalem District is a district (bakhsh) in Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 39,089, in 9,203 families. The District has one city: Asalem. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Asalem Rural District, Khaleh Sara Rural District, and Kharajgil Rural District.", "score": "1.8425326" }, { "id": "13411516", "title": "Asalem", "text": " Asalem (, also Romanized as Asālem) is a city and capital of Asalem District, in Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,347, in 827 families. Asalemi dialect is a variety of Talysh", "score": "1.6551424" }, { "id": "6009029", "title": "Asaluyeh Rural District", "text": " Asaluyeh Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. In the 2006 census, its population (including those portions later split off to form Akhand Rural District) was 31,319, in 2,476 families; excluding those portions, the population (as of 2006) was 27,228, in 1,763 families. The rural district has 4 villages.", "score": "1.6197543" }, { "id": "26966820", "title": "Akhand Rural District", "text": " Akhand Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,091, in 713 families. The rural district has 6 villages. The rural district's establishment was officially announced on 12 December 2012.", "score": "1.5741838" }, { "id": "28718611", "title": "Seyyed Jamal ol Din Rural District", "text": " Seyyed Jamal ol Din Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 13,428, in 3,294 families. The rural district has 20 villages.", "score": "1.57188" }, { "id": "28718588", "title": "Chaharduli Rural District (Hamadan Province)", "text": " Chaharduli Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 9,367, in 2,155 families. The rural district has 26 villages. All villages in the rural district are populated by Kurds, except Chenar-e Olya which is mixed Kurdish and Turkic.", "score": "1.5607235" }, { "id": "4394798", "title": "Almalu Rural District", "text": " Almalu Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Nazarkahrizi District, Hashtrud County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,561, in 1,171 families. The rural district has 32 villages.", "score": "1.5550609" }, { "id": "28718606", "title": "Jolgeh Rural District (Hamadan Province)", "text": " Jolgeh Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,669, in 1,574 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "score": "1.5504286" }, { "id": "6862596", "title": "Tulem District", "text": " Tulem District is a district (bakhsh) in Sowme'eh Sara County, Gilan Province, Iran. As of the 2006 census, its population was 29,355, in 8,131 families. The District has one city, Marjaghal, and two rural districts (dehestan): Hend Khaleh Rural District and Tulem Rural District.", "score": "1.5473351" }, { "id": "4150190", "title": "Asara Rural District", "text": " Asara Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (before Asara's elevation to city status, thus leaving the Rural District) was 3,780, in 1,109 families; afterward, the remaining population (as of 2006) was 3,283, in 964 families. The rural district has 11 villages.", "score": "1.5379355" }, { "id": "4150254", "title": "Nesa Rural District", "text": " Nesa Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,081, in 1,617 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "score": "1.5310272" }, { "id": "28718610", "title": "Pirsalman Rural District", "text": " Pirsalman Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,835, in 1,617 families. The rural district has 10 villages.", "score": "1.5079205" }, { "id": "4150185", "title": "Adaran Rural District", "text": " Adaran Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (prior to the transfer of Sira and Pol-e Khvab to Asara) was 8,995, in 2,681 families; afterward, the population (as of 2006) was 8,442, in 2,544 families. The rural district has 28 villages.", "score": "1.5017686" }, { "id": "6068219", "title": "Aslem District", "text": " Aslem District is a district of the Hajjah Governorate, Yemen. As of 2003, the district had a population of 49,227 inhabitants.", "score": "1.4998646" }, { "id": "8197313", "title": "Asara District", "text": " Asara District is a district (bakhsh) in Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 18,856, in 5,407 families. The District has one city: Asara. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Adaran Rural District, Asara Rural District, and Nesa Rural District.", "score": "1.4998643" }, { "id": "12242107", "title": "Gejlarat-e Sharqi Rural District", "text": " Gejlarat-e Sharqi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Aras District, Poldasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,578, in 1,445 families. The rural district has 18 villages.", "score": "1.4870219" }, { "id": "8103114", "title": "Alan Baraghush Rural District", "text": " Alan Baraghush Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Mehraban District, Sarab County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,072, in 1,407 families. The rural district has 15 villages.", "score": "1.4798105" }, { "id": "8265325", "title": "Amarlu District", "text": " A mountainous region.", "score": "1.4796733" }, { "id": "32750456", "title": "Arifiye", "text": " There are five villages in the rural area of the district. The total population of the district (urban+rural) is 37864", "score": "1.4753455" }, { "id": "15248517", "title": "Central District (Asaluyeh County)", "text": " The Central District or Asaluyeh County is a district (bakhsh) in Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 43,883, in 4,925 families. The District has two cities: Asaluyeh and Nakhl Taqi. The District has two rural districts (dehestan): Asaluyeh Rural District and Akhand Rural District. The Districts's establishment was officially announced on 12 December 2012.", "score": "1.4691577" } ]
[ "Asalem District\n Asalem District is a district (bakhsh) in Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 39,089, in 9,203 families. The District has one city: Asalem. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Asalem Rural District, Khaleh Sara Rural District, and Kharajgil Rural District.", "Asalem\n Asalem (, also Romanized as Asālem) is a city and capital of Asalem District, in Talesh County, Gilan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 3,347, in 827 families. Asalemi dialect is a variety of Talysh", "Asaluyeh Rural District\n Asaluyeh Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. In the 2006 census, its population (including those portions later split off to form Akhand Rural District) was 31,319, in 2,476 families; excluding those portions, the population (as of 2006) was 27,228, in 1,763 families. The rural district has 4 villages.", "Akhand Rural District\n Akhand Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,091, in 713 families. The rural district has 6 villages. The rural district's establishment was officially announced on 12 December 2012.", "Seyyed Jamal ol Din Rural District\n Seyyed Jamal ol Din Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 13,428, in 3,294 families. The rural district has 20 villages.", "Chaharduli Rural District (Hamadan Province)\n Chaharduli Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 9,367, in 2,155 families. The rural district has 26 villages. All villages in the rural district are populated by Kurds, except Chenar-e Olya which is mixed Kurdish and Turkic.", "Almalu Rural District\n Almalu Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Nazarkahrizi District, Hashtrud County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,561, in 1,171 families. The rural district has 32 villages.", "Jolgeh Rural District (Hamadan Province)\n Jolgeh Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,669, in 1,574 families. The rural district has 14 villages.", "Tulem District\n Tulem District is a district (bakhsh) in Sowme'eh Sara County, Gilan Province, Iran. As of the 2006 census, its population was 29,355, in 8,131 families. The District has one city, Marjaghal, and two rural districts (dehestan): Hend Khaleh Rural District and Tulem Rural District.", "Asara Rural District\n Asara Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (before Asara's elevation to city status, thus leaving the Rural District) was 3,780, in 1,109 families; afterward, the remaining population (as of 2006) was 3,283, in 964 families. The rural district has 11 villages.", "Nesa Rural District\n Nesa Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,081, in 1,617 families. The rural district has 17 villages.", "Pirsalman Rural District\n Pirsalman Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in the Central District of Asadabad County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,835, in 1,617 families. The rural district has 10 villages.", "Adaran Rural District\n Adaran Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Asara District, Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population (prior to the transfer of Sira and Pol-e Khvab to Asara) was 8,995, in 2,681 families; afterward, the population (as of 2006) was 8,442, in 2,544 families. The rural district has 28 villages.", "Aslem District\n Aslem District is a district of the Hajjah Governorate, Yemen. As of 2003, the district had a population of 49,227 inhabitants.", "Asara District\n Asara District is a district (bakhsh) in Karaj County, Alborz Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 18,856, in 5,407 families. The District has one city: Asara. The District has three rural districts (dehestan): Adaran Rural District, Asara Rural District, and Nesa Rural District.", "Gejlarat-e Sharqi Rural District\n Gejlarat-e Sharqi Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Aras District, Poldasht County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,578, in 1,445 families. The rural district has 18 villages.", "Alan Baraghush Rural District\n Alan Baraghush Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Mehraban District, Sarab County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 6,072, in 1,407 families. The rural district has 15 villages.", "Amarlu District\n A mountainous region.", "Arifiye\n There are five villages in the rural area of the district. The total population of the district (urban+rural) is 37864", "Central District (Asaluyeh County)\n The Central District or Asaluyeh County is a district (bakhsh) in Asaluyeh County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 43,883, in 4,925 families. The District has two cities: Asaluyeh and Nakhl Taqi. The District has two rural districts (dehestan): Asaluyeh Rural District and Akhand Rural District. The Districts's establishment was officially announced on 12 December 2012." ]
In what country is Contest?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Contest, Mayenne
5,189,030
44
[ { "id": "858261", "title": "OGAE Video Contest", "text": " of the Video Contest were presented on 5 February 2011. The OGAE Video Contest 2011 was the ninth edition of the competition. The contest took place in Wrocław, Poland after Justyna Steczkowska won the 2010 contest for Poland with \"Kim tu jestem\". Eleven countries participated in the contest. Andorra and South Africa returned after their absence from the 2008 and 2009 contests. Australia, Luxembourg and Turkey left the competition. The draw for the running order decided that South Africa would start the show, while the host country Poland would close it. The OGAE Video Contest 2012 was the tenth edition of the competition. The contest took place in Paris, France after Mylène Farmer won the 2011 contest for France with \"Lonely Lisa\". Fifteen countries participated in the contest. Belgium and the United States debuted in the contest, while Bulgaria, Croatia and Serbia returned. Austria left the competition.", "score": "1.762608" }, { "id": "1733292", "title": "Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " The Eurovision Song Contest is an international song competition held among broadcasting networks representing primarily European countries. Each participating broadcaster submits an original song to represent their respective country which is performed on live television and radio and transmitted via the European Broadcasting Union's Eurovision and Euroradio networks, hosted by one of the participating countries in an auditorium in a selected host city. Following all entries each participating country casts votes for their favourite performances from the other countries, and the song which has received the most points at the end of the programme is declared the winner. Each contest typically consists of three live television shows held over one week in May. ", "score": "1.7357522" }, { "id": "32130342", "title": "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " The contest has been broadcast in several countries that do not compete, such as the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and China. Since 2000, it has been broadcast online via the Eurovision website. It was also broadcast in several countries East of the Iron Curtain that have since dissolved, such as Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and the Soviet Union.", "score": "1.730324" }, { "id": "858254", "title": "OGAE Video Contest", "text": " Video Contests, organised between members of international Eurovision Song Contest fan club OGAE to select the best video released in their countries. The contest was held in Lisboa, the capital city of Portugal. 19 countries participated in the contest, with Spain returning to the contest after a year break. Ireland, Kazakhstan, Poland, and Ukraine made their debut. Withdrawn countries include Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Israel, Luxembourg, and Norway. The contest was won by Ukraine's Svetlana Loboda with \"I Will Forget You\", who received 171 points, the runner-up was Netherlands. Kazakhstan placed last, receiving nul points. France had received 35 points, but OGAE France requested that ", "score": "1.7228231" }, { "id": "10178074", "title": "Eurovision (network)", "text": " The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual international song competition that was first held in Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956. Seven countries participated – each submitting two songs, for a total of 14. This was the only contest in which more than one song per country was performed: since 1957 all contests have allowed one entry per country. The was won by the host nation, Switzerland. In this competition, only countries that are members of the EBU can participate. The first winner was, and the most recent is. The first host city was Lugano, and the most recent is Rotterdam.", "score": "1.7201858" }, { "id": "10178079", "title": "Eurovision (network)", "text": " Junior Eurovision Song Contest, is an annual international song competition, that was first held in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 15 November 2003. Sixteen countries participated in the inaugural edition – each submitting one song, for a total of 16 entries. The 2003 Contest was won by Croatia and the current winner is France with a new voting system. The first host city was Copenhagen (2003) and the most recent is Warsaw (2020).", "score": "1.7171994" }, { "id": "8279276", "title": "European Broadcasting Union", "text": " The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual international song competition between EBU Members, that was first held in Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956. Seven countries participated – each submitting two songs, for a total of 14. This was the only contest in which more than one song per country was performed: since 1957 all contests have allowed one entry per country. The 1956 contest was won by the host nation, Switzerland. The most recent host city was Rotterdam, the Netherlands, where Italy won the competition.", "score": "1.715218" }, { "id": "15431634", "title": "List of Eurovision Song Contest entries (2004–present)", "text": " inclusion within the traditional boundaries of Europe. Several countries from outside of Europe have previously submitted entries into the contest, including countries in Western Asia and North Africa, as well as transcontinental countries with only part of their territory in Europe. Australia, a country in Oceania, made its first contest appearance in 2015 when SBS, an EBU associate member broadcaster from the country, received an invitation to submit an entry to mark the contest's 60th anniversary. Each year a date is typically set by which time broadcasters may announce to the EBU their intent to participate in the contest, which can be revoked condition-free up to this ", "score": "1.70647" }, { "id": "32130308", "title": "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " Fifty-two countries have participated in the Eurovision Song Contest since it started in 1956. Winners of the contest have come from twenty-seven of those countries. The contest, organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), is held annually between members of the Union. Broadcasters from different countries submit songs to the event and cast votes to determine the most popular in the competition. Participation in the contest is primarily open to all broadcasters with active membership of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). To become an active member of the EBU, a broadcaster has to be from a country which is covered by the European Broadcasting Area ", "score": "1.7040007" }, { "id": "25079880", "title": "Junior Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " The overall winner of the contest is the entry that receives the most points after the scores from every country have been collected and totalled. The most recent winner is Maléna of Armenia, who won the 2021 contest in Paris, France, with her song \"Qami Qami\". In addition to the countries taking part, the 2003 contest was also broadcast in Estonia, Finland and Germany (who would not debut until the 2020 contest), followed by Andorra in 2006, Bosnia and Herzegovina (from 2006 to 2011) and Iceland in 2021, however these countries have yet to participate. Since 2006, the contest has been streamed live on the Internet through the official website of the contest. Australia was invited to participate in the contest, while Kazakhstan was invited in the contest, making it the only major Eurovision event to feature multiple associate member broadcasters.", "score": "1.6994565" }, { "id": "7557877", "title": "Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " Greenwich in the east, and parallel 30° North in the south. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Ukraine, and the territory of Iraq, Jordan and Syria lying outside these limits are included in the European Broadcasting Area. Eligibility to participate in the contest is therefore not limited to countries in Europe, as several states geographically outside the boundaries of the continent or which span more than one continent are included in the Broadcasting Area. Countries from these groups have taken part in past editions, including countries in Western Asia such as Israel and Cyprus, countries which span Europe and Asia like Russia and Turkey, and North African countries such as Morocco. Australia became the first country to ", "score": "1.6981996" }, { "id": "16536111", "title": "OGAE", "text": " Fourteen countries have won the contest since it began in 1986. The most successful country in the contest is the United Kingdom, who have won the contest seven times.", "score": "1.695015" }, { "id": "25079890", "title": "Junior Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " 2014 until 2017, the winning country had first refusal on hosting the following contest. Italy used this clause in 2015 to decline hosting the contest that year after their victory in 2014. On 15 October 2017, the EBU announced a return to the original system in 2018, claiming that it would help provide broadcasters with a greater amount of time to prepare, ensuring the continuation of the contest into the future. However, from 2019 onwards all contests have been hosted by the previous year's winning country. The contest usually features two presenters, one man and one woman, who regularly appear on stage and with the contestants in the green room. The presenters are ", "score": "1.6929412" }, { "id": "858262", "title": "OGAE Video Contest", "text": " Eleven countries have won the contest since it began in 2003. The most successful countries in the contest are France and Russia, who have won the contest three times each.", "score": "1.6865473" }, { "id": "16536114", "title": "OGAE", "text": " Nine countries have won the contest since it began in 2003. The most successful countries in the contest has been Russia and France, who have won the contest three times each.", "score": "1.6808898" }, { "id": "374041", "title": "Eurovision Song Contest 2004", "text": " hosted in the host country's capital city. It was the first Eurovision Song Contest held in a transcontinental country and city, in a Muslim-majority country and in a Turkic language-speaking country. Thirty-six countries participated in the contest, beating the record of twenty-six in the previous edition. Albania, Andorra, Belarus and Serbia and Montenegro took part for the first time this year. The old relegation system was replaced with a semi-final format. This was done in order to accommodate the increasing number of countries who wished to participate. The new format allowed all countries to participate every year, rather than being forced to sit out per the relegation rules, which had been the standard since. Because of this, Denmark, Finland, Lithuania, Macedonia, Monaco and Switzerland ", "score": "1.6781853" }, { "id": "32130311", "title": "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " each year has grown steadily, from seven in 1956 to over twenty in the late 1980s. A record 43 countries participated in 2008, 2011 and 2018. As the number of contestants has risen, preliminary competitions and relegation have been introduced, to ensure that as many countries as possible get the chance to compete. In 1993, a preliminary show, Kvalifikacija za Millstreet (\"Qualification for Millstreet\"), was held to select three Eastern European countries to compete for the first time at the main Contest. After the 1993 Contest, a relegation rule was introduced; the six lowest-placed countries in the contest would not compete in the following ", "score": "1.6724763" }, { "id": "858253", "title": "OGAE Video Contest", "text": " international Eurovision Song Contest fan club OGAE to select the best video released in their countries. The contest was held in Paris, the capital city of France. 20 countries participated in the contest. Four countries - Bulgaria, Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro, and Luxembourg - made their debut. Armenia, Iceland, Spain, and the United Kingdom all withdrew from the contest. The contest was won by Portugal's Mariza with Cavaleiro Monge which received 133 points, the runner-up was Russia. Malta placed last, receiving 3 points. The full result of the Video Contest were presented on 25 February 2004. The OGAE Video Contest 2005 was the third edition of ", "score": "1.6690571" }, { "id": "25079889", "title": "Junior Eurovision Song Contest", "text": " entries that have received the most votes in each country are awarded points ranging from one to eight, then ten and twelve. These points are then announced live during the programme by a spokesperson representing the participating country (who, like the participants, is aged between ten and fifteen). Once all participating countries have announced their results, the country that has received the most points is declared the winner of that year's contest. Until 2013 the winners receive a trophy and a certificate. Since 2013 contest the winner, runner-up and third place all win trophies and certificates. Originally, unlike its adult version, the winning country did not receive the rights to host the next contest. ", "score": "1.6581097" }, { "id": "8279282", "title": "European Broadcasting Union", "text": " Junior Eurovision Song Contest, is an annual international song competition, that was first held in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 15 November 2003. Sixteen countries participated – each submitting one song, for a total of 16 entries. The 2003 Contest was won by Croatia and the current winner is France.", "score": "1.6577243" } ]
[ "OGAE Video Contest\n of the Video Contest were presented on 5 February 2011. The OGAE Video Contest 2011 was the ninth edition of the competition. The contest took place in Wrocław, Poland after Justyna Steczkowska won the 2010 contest for Poland with \"Kim tu jestem\". Eleven countries participated in the contest. Andorra and South Africa returned after their absence from the 2008 and 2009 contests. Australia, Luxembourg and Turkey left the competition. The draw for the running order decided that South Africa would start the show, while the host country Poland would close it. The OGAE Video Contest 2012 was the tenth edition of the competition. The contest took place in Paris, France after Mylène Farmer won the 2011 contest for France with \"Lonely Lisa\". Fifteen countries participated in the contest. Belgium and the United States debuted in the contest, while Bulgaria, Croatia and Serbia returned. Austria left the competition.", "Rules of the Eurovision Song Contest\n The Eurovision Song Contest is an international song competition held among broadcasting networks representing primarily European countries. Each participating broadcaster submits an original song to represent their respective country which is performed on live television and radio and transmitted via the European Broadcasting Union's Eurovision and Euroradio networks, hosted by one of the participating countries in an auditorium in a selected host city. Following all entries each participating country casts votes for their favourite performances from the other countries, and the song which has received the most points at the end of the programme is declared the winner. Each contest typically consists of three live television shows held over one week in May. ", "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest\n The contest has been broadcast in several countries that do not compete, such as the United States, Canada, New Zealand, and China. Since 2000, it has been broadcast online via the Eurovision website. It was also broadcast in several countries East of the Iron Curtain that have since dissolved, such as Czechoslovakia, East Germany, and the Soviet Union.", "OGAE Video Contest\n Video Contests, organised between members of international Eurovision Song Contest fan club OGAE to select the best video released in their countries. The contest was held in Lisboa, the capital city of Portugal. 19 countries participated in the contest, with Spain returning to the contest after a year break. Ireland, Kazakhstan, Poland, and Ukraine made their debut. Withdrawn countries include Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Israel, Luxembourg, and Norway. The contest was won by Ukraine's Svetlana Loboda with \"I Will Forget You\", who received 171 points, the runner-up was Netherlands. Kazakhstan placed last, receiving nul points. France had received 35 points, but OGAE France requested that ", "Eurovision (network)\n The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual international song competition that was first held in Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956. Seven countries participated – each submitting two songs, for a total of 14. This was the only contest in which more than one song per country was performed: since 1957 all contests have allowed one entry per country. The was won by the host nation, Switzerland. In this competition, only countries that are members of the EBU can participate. The first winner was, and the most recent is. The first host city was Lugano, and the most recent is Rotterdam.", "Eurovision (network)\n Junior Eurovision Song Contest, is an annual international song competition, that was first held in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 15 November 2003. Sixteen countries participated in the inaugural edition – each submitting one song, for a total of 16 entries. The 2003 Contest was won by Croatia and the current winner is France with a new voting system. The first host city was Copenhagen (2003) and the most recent is Warsaw (2020).", "European Broadcasting Union\n The Eurovision Song Contest is an annual international song competition between EBU Members, that was first held in Lugano, Switzerland, on 24 May 1956. Seven countries participated – each submitting two songs, for a total of 14. This was the only contest in which more than one song per country was performed: since 1957 all contests have allowed one entry per country. The 1956 contest was won by the host nation, Switzerland. The most recent host city was Rotterdam, the Netherlands, where Italy won the competition.", "List of Eurovision Song Contest entries (2004–present)\n inclusion within the traditional boundaries of Europe. Several countries from outside of Europe have previously submitted entries into the contest, including countries in Western Asia and North Africa, as well as transcontinental countries with only part of their territory in Europe. Australia, a country in Oceania, made its first contest appearance in 2015 when SBS, an EBU associate member broadcaster from the country, received an invitation to submit an entry to mark the contest's 60th anniversary. Each year a date is typically set by which time broadcasters may announce to the EBU their intent to participate in the contest, which can be revoked condition-free up to this ", "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest\n Fifty-two countries have participated in the Eurovision Song Contest since it started in 1956. Winners of the contest have come from twenty-seven of those countries. The contest, organised by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), is held annually between members of the Union. Broadcasters from different countries submit songs to the event and cast votes to determine the most popular in the competition. Participation in the contest is primarily open to all broadcasters with active membership of the European Broadcasting Union (EBU). To become an active member of the EBU, a broadcaster has to be from a country which is covered by the European Broadcasting Area ", "Junior Eurovision Song Contest\n The overall winner of the contest is the entry that receives the most points after the scores from every country have been collected and totalled. The most recent winner is Maléna of Armenia, who won the 2021 contest in Paris, France, with her song \"Qami Qami\". In addition to the countries taking part, the 2003 contest was also broadcast in Estonia, Finland and Germany (who would not debut until the 2020 contest), followed by Andorra in 2006, Bosnia and Herzegovina (from 2006 to 2011) and Iceland in 2021, however these countries have yet to participate. Since 2006, the contest has been streamed live on the Internet through the official website of the contest. Australia was invited to participate in the contest, while Kazakhstan was invited in the contest, making it the only major Eurovision event to feature multiple associate member broadcasters.", "Eurovision Song Contest\n Greenwich in the east, and parallel 30° North in the south. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Ukraine, and the territory of Iraq, Jordan and Syria lying outside these limits are included in the European Broadcasting Area. Eligibility to participate in the contest is therefore not limited to countries in Europe, as several states geographically outside the boundaries of the continent or which span more than one continent are included in the Broadcasting Area. Countries from these groups have taken part in past editions, including countries in Western Asia such as Israel and Cyprus, countries which span Europe and Asia like Russia and Turkey, and North African countries such as Morocco. Australia became the first country to ", "OGAE\n Fourteen countries have won the contest since it began in 1986. The most successful country in the contest is the United Kingdom, who have won the contest seven times.", "Junior Eurovision Song Contest\n 2014 until 2017, the winning country had first refusal on hosting the following contest. Italy used this clause in 2015 to decline hosting the contest that year after their victory in 2014. On 15 October 2017, the EBU announced a return to the original system in 2018, claiming that it would help provide broadcasters with a greater amount of time to prepare, ensuring the continuation of the contest into the future. However, from 2019 onwards all contests have been hosted by the previous year's winning country. The contest usually features two presenters, one man and one woman, who regularly appear on stage and with the contestants in the green room. The presenters are ", "OGAE Video Contest\n Eleven countries have won the contest since it began in 2003. The most successful countries in the contest are France and Russia, who have won the contest three times each.", "OGAE\n Nine countries have won the contest since it began in 2003. The most successful countries in the contest has been Russia and France, who have won the contest three times each.", "Eurovision Song Contest 2004\n hosted in the host country's capital city. It was the first Eurovision Song Contest held in a transcontinental country and city, in a Muslim-majority country and in a Turkic language-speaking country. Thirty-six countries participated in the contest, beating the record of twenty-six in the previous edition. Albania, Andorra, Belarus and Serbia and Montenegro took part for the first time this year. The old relegation system was replaced with a semi-final format. This was done in order to accommodate the increasing number of countries who wished to participate. The new format allowed all countries to participate every year, rather than being forced to sit out per the relegation rules, which had been the standard since. Because of this, Denmark, Finland, Lithuania, Macedonia, Monaco and Switzerland ", "List of countries in the Eurovision Song Contest\n each year has grown steadily, from seven in 1956 to over twenty in the late 1980s. A record 43 countries participated in 2008, 2011 and 2018. As the number of contestants has risen, preliminary competitions and relegation have been introduced, to ensure that as many countries as possible get the chance to compete. In 1993, a preliminary show, Kvalifikacija za Millstreet (\"Qualification for Millstreet\"), was held to select three Eastern European countries to compete for the first time at the main Contest. After the 1993 Contest, a relegation rule was introduced; the six lowest-placed countries in the contest would not compete in the following ", "OGAE Video Contest\n international Eurovision Song Contest fan club OGAE to select the best video released in their countries. The contest was held in Paris, the capital city of France. 20 countries participated in the contest. Four countries - Bulgaria, Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro, and Luxembourg - made their debut. Armenia, Iceland, Spain, and the United Kingdom all withdrew from the contest. The contest was won by Portugal's Mariza with Cavaleiro Monge which received 133 points, the runner-up was Russia. Malta placed last, receiving 3 points. The full result of the Video Contest were presented on 25 February 2004. The OGAE Video Contest 2005 was the third edition of ", "Junior Eurovision Song Contest\n entries that have received the most votes in each country are awarded points ranging from one to eight, then ten and twelve. These points are then announced live during the programme by a spokesperson representing the participating country (who, like the participants, is aged between ten and fifteen). Once all participating countries have announced their results, the country that has received the most points is declared the winner of that year's contest. Until 2013 the winners receive a trophy and a certificate. Since 2013 contest the winner, runner-up and third place all win trophies and certificates. Originally, unlike its adult version, the winning country did not receive the rights to host the next contest. ", "European Broadcasting Union\n Junior Eurovision Song Contest, is an annual international song competition, that was first held in Copenhagen, Denmark, on 15 November 2003. Sixteen countries participated – each submitting one song, for a total of 16 entries. The 2003 Contest was won by Croatia and the current winner is France." ]
In what country is Genoa?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Genoa, Minnesota
4,202,811
64
[ { "id": "1670022", "title": "Metropolitan City of Genoa", "text": " The Metropolitan City of Genoa (Città Metropolitana di Genova) is one of the fourteen Metropolitan cities of Italy, located in the region of Liguria. Its capital is the city of Genoa. It replaced the Province of Genoa.", "score": "1.6440417" }, { "id": "31900153", "title": "History of Genoa", "text": " Genoa as the European Capital of Culture, along with the French city of Lille. In 2009 the Genoese actor and political activist Beppe Grillo founded the Five Star Movement. In 2011, Genoa, like other European cities, suffered disastrous flooding. In 2013, 11 deaths resulted from the collapse of the control tower of Genoa's port after being hit by the cargo ship Jolly Nero. In 2014, the sunken wreck from the Costa Concordia was transported to the port of Genoa to be broken up. 14 August 2018 was a black day for Genoa: the Ponte Morandi bridge collapsed, killing 43 people.", "score": "1.601637" }, { "id": "31462425", "title": "Genoa, Nebraska", "text": " Genoa ''(pron. gen-OH-uh)'' is a city in Nance County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 1,003 at the 2010 census. The city was founded by Mormons in 1857. In the fall of 1859, the Mormon Colony was forced to abandon Genoa when the town and surrounding area were incorporated into the newly created Pawnee Reservation. The Pawnee Indian Agency utilized the structures vacated by the Mormons.", "score": "1.5846229" }, { "id": "4529224", "title": "Genoa C.F.C.", "text": " Genoa CFC has the bulk of its fans in Liguria, however they are also popular in Piedmont and the Aosta Valley. The seafaring traditions of the Genoese and the presence of Genoese communities in distant countries did much to spread the appeal of Genoa some further than just Italy, and immigrants founded fan clubs in Buenos Aires, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Toronto, New York, San Francisco, Barcelona, Iceland and other places. The most significant and traditional rivalry for Genoa, is the inner-city one with the club with whom they share a ground; Sampdoria. The two clubs compete together in the heated Derby della Lanterna (\"Derby of the Lantern\"); a reference to the Lighthouse of Genoa. ", "score": "1.574772" }, { "id": "1670023", "title": "Metropolitan City of Genoa", "text": " It was first created by the reform of local authorities (Law 142/1990) and then established by the Law 56/2014. It has been operative since January 1, 2015.", "score": "1.561692" }, { "id": "31862540", "title": "Republic of Genoa", "text": " The Republic of Genoa (Repúbrica de Zêna ; Repubblica di Genova; Res Publica Ianuensis) was a medieval and early modern maritime republic from the 11th century to 1797 in Liguria on the northwestern Italian coast. During the Late Middle Ages, it was a major commercial power in both the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. Between the 16th and 17th centuries it was one of the major financial centers in Europe. Throughout its history, the Genoese Republic established numerous colonies throughout the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, including Corsica from 1347 to 1768, Monaco, Southern Crimea from 1266 to 1475 and the islands of Lesbos and Chios from the 14th ", "score": "1.5599687" }, { "id": "9916773", "title": "Italian Riviera", "text": " The Riviera's centre is Genoa, which divides it into two main sections: the Riviera di Ponente (“the coast of the setting sun”), extending westwards from Genoa to the French border; and the Riviera di Levante (“the coast of the rising sun”) between Genoa and Capo Corvo. It is famous for its particularly mild climate and relaxed way of life which, together with the charm of its old fishing ports and the beauty of its landscape, has made it a popular destination for travellers and tourists since the time of Byron and Percy Shelley. Many villages and towns in the area are internationally known, such as Portofino, Bordighera, Lerici and the Cinque Terre. The part of the Riviera di Ponente centred on Savona, is called the Riviera delle Palme (the Riviera of palms); the part centred on Sanremo, is the Riviera dei Fiori, after the long-established flower growing industry. Places on or near the Italian Riviera include:", "score": "1.55878" }, { "id": "28399559", "title": "Genoa, Victoria", "text": " Genoa is a town in Eastern Gippsland, Victoria, Australia. It is close to the New South Wales border where the Princes Highway crosses the Genoa River. The town is an important access point to the Croajingolong National Park. At the 2006 census, Genoa and the surrounding area had a population of 304. The Genoa Post Office opened on 9 April 1888. In 1972 the earliest fossil trackway of primitive tetrapods were found in the Genoa River Gorge, dating back 350 million years. In 2019, bush fires in Eastern Gippsland did \"significant\" damage to Genoa and the nearby town of Mallacoota.", "score": "1.5584009" }, { "id": "9916772", "title": "Italian Riviera", "text": " golf courses, sailing, rock climbing and scenic views of centuries old farmhouses and cottages. Industries are concentrated in and around Genoa, Savona, and along the shores of the Gulf of La Spezia. Genoa and La Spezia are Italy's leading shipyards; La Spezia is Italy's major naval base, and Savona is a major centre of the Italian iron industry. Chemical, textile, and food industries are also important. A number of streets and palaces in the center of Genoa and the Cinque Terre National Park (which includes Cinque Terre, Portovenere, and the islands Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto) are two of Italy's 58 World Heritage Sites.", "score": "1.5556087" }, { "id": "31900141", "title": "History of Genoa", "text": " the 20th century, was born in Genoa in 1893. In this period many Genoese emigrated to the Americas (see also Italian diaspora). Among the most interesting experiences of this exodus was the creation of the Buenos Aires district called La Boca, now famous for its colorful houses in the Ligurian style, in addition on 3 April 1905 a group of Genoese boys founded the Boca Juniors football club in Buenos Aires. This is why the fans of Boca Juniors are called \"Los Xeneizes\", which means the Genoese. In addition, Amadeo Giannini, the son of Genoese immigrants in North America, founded ", "score": "1.5549587" }, { "id": "14777450", "title": "Genoa, Nevada", "text": " Genoa is an unincorporated town in Douglas County, Nevada, United States. Founded in 1851, it was the first settlement in what became the Nevada Territory. It is situated within Carson River Valley and is approximately 42 mi south of Reno. The population was 939 at the 2010 census. It is home to the oldest bar in the state of Nevada which opened in 1853.", "score": "1.5471089" }, { "id": "2587940", "title": "Province of Genoa", "text": " The Province of Genoa (Italian Provincia di Genova) was a province in the Liguria region of Italy. Its capital was the city of Genoa. It was replaced by Metropolitan City of Genoa.", "score": "1.5401556" }, { "id": "2992459", "title": "Genoa Cristoforo Colombo Airport", "text": " The airport is the most important one of Liguria and it serves the city and Port of Genoa, as well as considerable population in Southern Piedmont (Asti and Alessandria Provinces, Southern areas of Cuneo Province). In 2018, with 1,455,626 passengers having passed through the airport, Genoa is the 21st busiest Italian airport by passenger traffic. The Spanish low-cost airline Volotea operates one of its four bases in Italy in Genoa Airport. It is currently operated by Aeroporto di Genova S.P.A., which has recently upgraded the airport complex. The airport is named after the notable Genoese navigator and explorer Christopher Columbus. The airport was the manufacturing base for Piaggio Aerospace, an Italian aircraft design and production company.", "score": "1.5343838" }, { "id": "8133167", "title": "Railway stations in Genoa", "text": " The city and comune of Genoa, capital of the region of Liguria, northwestern Italy, has twenty six railway stations and stops in use today. The majority of these stations is managed by RFI. Four remaining stations, Genova Piazza Manin and others, are operated by AMT. The only station in Genoa that has been completely closed without being replaced is Sant'Ilario, in the Genoa district of that name.", "score": "1.5303564" }, { "id": "1670025", "title": "Metropolitan City of Genoa", "text": " The Metropolitan City is headed by the Metropolitan Mayor (Sindaco metropolitano) and by the Metropolitan Council (Consiglio metropolitano).", "score": "1.5220639" }, { "id": "15671938", "title": "Great Genoa", "text": "Maddalena ; Molo ; Portoria ; Prè ; San Teodoro (Genoa) ; San Vincenzo (Genoa) The aggregation of neighboring municipalities was in 1926, but the process started many years earlier. Until 1874 the municipality of the city of Genoa was the same as the urban area surrounded by the 17th century city walls, divided into six districts, called \"sestieri\": With increasing population in the 19th century, the city expanded into the hills behind the old town, but still within the city walls: during that time were built the stately neighborhood of Castelletto, and those of Oregina and Lagaccio for working-class people.", "score": "1.5195645" }, { "id": "28049816", "title": "Genoa Area High School", "text": " Genoa Area High School is a public high school in Genoa, Ohio, United States. It is the only high school in the Genoa Area Local School District. Other towns in the district are Curtice, Clay Center, Martin, and Williston. The nickname for the athletic teams is the Comets. Genoa became a charter member of the Northern Buckeye Conference in 2011. It was a charter member of the Suburban Lakes League in 1972, the Northern Lakes League in 1956 and the Sandusky Bay Conference in 1948. There is one K-5 elementary school in the Genoa Area School District, Genoa Area Local Elementary School. ", "score": "1.51804" }, { "id": "12091254", "title": "Liguria", "text": " coast, where all the four major cities above 50,000 are located: Genoa (pop. 610,000), La Spezia (pop. 95,000), Savona (pop. 62,000) and Sanremo (pop. 56,000). The population of Liguria has been declining from 1971 to 2001, most markedly in the cities of Genoa, Savona and La Spezia. The age pyramid now looks more like a 'mushroom' resting on a fragile base. The negative trend has been partially interrupted only in the last decade when, after a successful economic recovery, the region has attracted consistent fluxes of immigrants. , the Italian national institute of statistics, ISTAT, estimated that 90,881 foreign-born immigrants live in Liguria, equal to 5.8% of the total regional population.", "score": "1.5162915" }, { "id": "11819194", "title": "Music of Genoa", "text": " The music of Genoa includes a number of important musical venues. Genoa, a major port, is the capital of the region of Liguria and in the 19th century aspired to recognition as a cultural center more in keeping with its role as a major city in the history of the Risorgimento, the political, social, and military movement that eventually led to the unification of the modern nation state of Italy.", "score": "1.5137827" }, { "id": "16502400", "title": "University of Genoa", "text": "in machine learning and pattern recognition the University of Genoa is the best scientific institution in Italy and is ranked 36th in Europe; ; in computer vision the University of Genoa is the best scientific institution in Italy and is ranked 34th in Europe; ; in computer graphics the University of Genoa is ranked 2nd institution in Italy and 35th in Europe. The University of Genoa, known also with the acronym UniGe (Università di Genova), is one of the largest universities in Italy. It is located in the city of Genoa and regional Metropolitan City of Genoa, on the Italian Riviera in the Liguria region of northwestern Italy. The ", "score": "1.509884" } ]
[ "Metropolitan City of Genoa\n The Metropolitan City of Genoa (Città Metropolitana di Genova) is one of the fourteen Metropolitan cities of Italy, located in the region of Liguria. Its capital is the city of Genoa. It replaced the Province of Genoa.", "History of Genoa\n Genoa as the European Capital of Culture, along with the French city of Lille. In 2009 the Genoese actor and political activist Beppe Grillo founded the Five Star Movement. In 2011, Genoa, like other European cities, suffered disastrous flooding. In 2013, 11 deaths resulted from the collapse of the control tower of Genoa's port after being hit by the cargo ship Jolly Nero. In 2014, the sunken wreck from the Costa Concordia was transported to the port of Genoa to be broken up. 14 August 2018 was a black day for Genoa: the Ponte Morandi bridge collapsed, killing 43 people.", "Genoa, Nebraska\n Genoa ''(pron. gen-OH-uh)'' is a city in Nance County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 1,003 at the 2010 census. The city was founded by Mormons in 1857. In the fall of 1859, the Mormon Colony was forced to abandon Genoa when the town and surrounding area were incorporated into the newly created Pawnee Reservation. The Pawnee Indian Agency utilized the structures vacated by the Mormons.", "Genoa C.F.C.\n Genoa CFC has the bulk of its fans in Liguria, however they are also popular in Piedmont and the Aosta Valley. The seafaring traditions of the Genoese and the presence of Genoese communities in distant countries did much to spread the appeal of Genoa some further than just Italy, and immigrants founded fan clubs in Buenos Aires, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Toronto, New York, San Francisco, Barcelona, Iceland and other places. The most significant and traditional rivalry for Genoa, is the inner-city one with the club with whom they share a ground; Sampdoria. The two clubs compete together in the heated Derby della Lanterna (\"Derby of the Lantern\"); a reference to the Lighthouse of Genoa. ", "Metropolitan City of Genoa\n It was first created by the reform of local authorities (Law 142/1990) and then established by the Law 56/2014. It has been operative since January 1, 2015.", "Republic of Genoa\n The Republic of Genoa (Repúbrica de Zêna ; Repubblica di Genova; Res Publica Ianuensis) was a medieval and early modern maritime republic from the 11th century to 1797 in Liguria on the northwestern Italian coast. During the Late Middle Ages, it was a major commercial power in both the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea. Between the 16th and 17th centuries it was one of the major financial centers in Europe. Throughout its history, the Genoese Republic established numerous colonies throughout the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, including Corsica from 1347 to 1768, Monaco, Southern Crimea from 1266 to 1475 and the islands of Lesbos and Chios from the 14th ", "Italian Riviera\n The Riviera's centre is Genoa, which divides it into two main sections: the Riviera di Ponente (“the coast of the setting sun”), extending westwards from Genoa to the French border; and the Riviera di Levante (“the coast of the rising sun”) between Genoa and Capo Corvo. It is famous for its particularly mild climate and relaxed way of life which, together with the charm of its old fishing ports and the beauty of its landscape, has made it a popular destination for travellers and tourists since the time of Byron and Percy Shelley. Many villages and towns in the area are internationally known, such as Portofino, Bordighera, Lerici and the Cinque Terre. The part of the Riviera di Ponente centred on Savona, is called the Riviera delle Palme (the Riviera of palms); the part centred on Sanremo, is the Riviera dei Fiori, after the long-established flower growing industry. Places on or near the Italian Riviera include:", "Genoa, Victoria\n Genoa is a town in Eastern Gippsland, Victoria, Australia. It is close to the New South Wales border where the Princes Highway crosses the Genoa River. The town is an important access point to the Croajingolong National Park. At the 2006 census, Genoa and the surrounding area had a population of 304. The Genoa Post Office opened on 9 April 1888. In 1972 the earliest fossil trackway of primitive tetrapods were found in the Genoa River Gorge, dating back 350 million years. In 2019, bush fires in Eastern Gippsland did \"significant\" damage to Genoa and the nearby town of Mallacoota.", "Italian Riviera\n golf courses, sailing, rock climbing and scenic views of centuries old farmhouses and cottages. Industries are concentrated in and around Genoa, Savona, and along the shores of the Gulf of La Spezia. Genoa and La Spezia are Italy's leading shipyards; La Spezia is Italy's major naval base, and Savona is a major centre of the Italian iron industry. Chemical, textile, and food industries are also important. A number of streets and palaces in the center of Genoa and the Cinque Terre National Park (which includes Cinque Terre, Portovenere, and the islands Palmaria, Tino and Tinetto) are two of Italy's 58 World Heritage Sites.", "History of Genoa\n the 20th century, was born in Genoa in 1893. In this period many Genoese emigrated to the Americas (see also Italian diaspora). Among the most interesting experiences of this exodus was the creation of the Buenos Aires district called La Boca, now famous for its colorful houses in the Ligurian style, in addition on 3 April 1905 a group of Genoese boys founded the Boca Juniors football club in Buenos Aires. This is why the fans of Boca Juniors are called \"Los Xeneizes\", which means the Genoese. In addition, Amadeo Giannini, the son of Genoese immigrants in North America, founded ", "Genoa, Nevada\n Genoa is an unincorporated town in Douglas County, Nevada, United States. Founded in 1851, it was the first settlement in what became the Nevada Territory. It is situated within Carson River Valley and is approximately 42 mi south of Reno. The population was 939 at the 2010 census. It is home to the oldest bar in the state of Nevada which opened in 1853.", "Province of Genoa\n The Province of Genoa (Italian Provincia di Genova) was a province in the Liguria region of Italy. Its capital was the city of Genoa. It was replaced by Metropolitan City of Genoa.", "Genoa Cristoforo Colombo Airport\n The airport is the most important one of Liguria and it serves the city and Port of Genoa, as well as considerable population in Southern Piedmont (Asti and Alessandria Provinces, Southern areas of Cuneo Province). In 2018, with 1,455,626 passengers having passed through the airport, Genoa is the 21st busiest Italian airport by passenger traffic. The Spanish low-cost airline Volotea operates one of its four bases in Italy in Genoa Airport. It is currently operated by Aeroporto di Genova S.P.A., which has recently upgraded the airport complex. The airport is named after the notable Genoese navigator and explorer Christopher Columbus. The airport was the manufacturing base for Piaggio Aerospace, an Italian aircraft design and production company.", "Railway stations in Genoa\n The city and comune of Genoa, capital of the region of Liguria, northwestern Italy, has twenty six railway stations and stops in use today. The majority of these stations is managed by RFI. Four remaining stations, Genova Piazza Manin and others, are operated by AMT. The only station in Genoa that has been completely closed without being replaced is Sant'Ilario, in the Genoa district of that name.", "Metropolitan City of Genoa\n The Metropolitan City is headed by the Metropolitan Mayor (Sindaco metropolitano) and by the Metropolitan Council (Consiglio metropolitano).", "Great Genoa\nMaddalena ; Molo ; Portoria ; Prè ; San Teodoro (Genoa) ; San Vincenzo (Genoa) The aggregation of neighboring municipalities was in 1926, but the process started many years earlier. Until 1874 the municipality of the city of Genoa was the same as the urban area surrounded by the 17th century city walls, divided into six districts, called \"sestieri\": With increasing population in the 19th century, the city expanded into the hills behind the old town, but still within the city walls: during that time were built the stately neighborhood of Castelletto, and those of Oregina and Lagaccio for working-class people.", "Genoa Area High School\n Genoa Area High School is a public high school in Genoa, Ohio, United States. It is the only high school in the Genoa Area Local School District. Other towns in the district are Curtice, Clay Center, Martin, and Williston. The nickname for the athletic teams is the Comets. Genoa became a charter member of the Northern Buckeye Conference in 2011. It was a charter member of the Suburban Lakes League in 1972, the Northern Lakes League in 1956 and the Sandusky Bay Conference in 1948. There is one K-5 elementary school in the Genoa Area School District, Genoa Area Local Elementary School. ", "Liguria\n coast, where all the four major cities above 50,000 are located: Genoa (pop. 610,000), La Spezia (pop. 95,000), Savona (pop. 62,000) and Sanremo (pop. 56,000). The population of Liguria has been declining from 1971 to 2001, most markedly in the cities of Genoa, Savona and La Spezia. The age pyramid now looks more like a 'mushroom' resting on a fragile base. The negative trend has been partially interrupted only in the last decade when, after a successful economic recovery, the region has attracted consistent fluxes of immigrants. , the Italian national institute of statistics, ISTAT, estimated that 90,881 foreign-born immigrants live in Liguria, equal to 5.8% of the total regional population.", "Music of Genoa\n The music of Genoa includes a number of important musical venues. Genoa, a major port, is the capital of the region of Liguria and in the 19th century aspired to recognition as a cultural center more in keeping with its role as a major city in the history of the Risorgimento, the political, social, and military movement that eventually led to the unification of the modern nation state of Italy.", "University of Genoa\nin machine learning and pattern recognition the University of Genoa is the best scientific institution in Italy and is ranked 36th in Europe; ; in computer vision the University of Genoa is the best scientific institution in Italy and is ranked 34th in Europe; ; in computer graphics the University of Genoa is ranked 2nd institution in Italy and 35th in Europe. The University of Genoa, known also with the acronym UniGe (Università di Genova), is one of the largest universities in Italy. It is located in the city of Genoa and regional Metropolitan City of Genoa, on the Italian Riviera in the Liguria region of northwestern Italy. The " ]
In what country is Normania Township?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota
1,469,534
57
[ { "id": "2770453", "title": "Normania Township, Benson County, North Dakota", "text": " Normania Township is a civil township in Benson County, North Dakota, United States. As of the 2000 census, its population was 56.", "score": "1.7760204" }, { "id": "31114646", "title": "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " Normania Township was originally called Ree Township, and under the latter name was organized in 1872. The present name, adopted in 1874, is supposedly after a place in Norway.", "score": "1.774934" }, { "id": "31114647", "title": "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 36.3 square miles (93.9 km2), of which 35.5 square miles (92.0 km2) is land and 0.8 square mile (1.9 km2) (2.07%) is water.", "score": "1.7692907" }, { "id": "31114645", "title": "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " Normania Township is a township (T114N R41W) in Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 188 at the 2000 census.", "score": "1.7173915" }, { "id": "31114648", "title": "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " As of the census of 2000, there were 188 people, 74 households, and 54 families residing in the township. The population density was 5.3 people per square mile (2.0/km2). There were 82 housing units at an average density of 2.3/sq mi (0.9/km2). The racial makeup of the township was 100.00% White. There were 74 households, out of which 31.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 66.2% were married couples living together, 4.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 25.7% were non-families. 23.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 8.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.54 and the average family size was 2.98. In the township the population was ", "score": "1.6397445" }, { "id": "30427955", "title": "Norman Township, Michigan", "text": " This climatic region has large seasonal temperature differences, with warm to hot (and often humid) summers and cold (sometimes severely cold) winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Norman Township has a humid continental climate, abbreviated \"Dfb\" on climate maps.", "score": "1.6044936" }, { "id": "30427953", "title": "Norman Township, Michigan", "text": " Norman Township was formed in 1911 and was named after Ed Norman. He was a surveyor and estimated, bought and sold timber and cut a lot of it himself. He located here in about 1897, and the second year, E. G. Filer, who owned the standing timber, donated the school house. Norman and his wife Elizabeth had 16 children. During this time Ed was supervisor of Stronach Township. He cut limbs off his poplars at home and planted them along the drive to Filer City. Mrs. Norman recalled that there was some criticism about it by a neighboring township. Residents from this section usually got what they wanted at Stronach. They thought it would be better to divide the township. Ed took about 200 men who were working on Stronach Dam over to vote and they won their point. Thus Norman township was formed in 1911. Dublin is where the voice of Darth Vader, James Earl Jones, grew up.", "score": "1.6034002" }, { "id": "31114649", "title": "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " out, with 30.9% under the age of 18, 4.3% from 18 to 24, 27.7% from 25 to 44, 22.9% from 45 to 64, and 14.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females there were 111.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 113.1 males. The median income for a household in the township was $36,750, and the median income for a family was $39,688. Males had a median income of $31,250 versus $27,083 for females. The per capita income for the township was $19,067. About 1.8% of families and 6.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 7.5% of those under the age of eighteen and 14.3% of those 65 or over.", "score": "1.5983849" }, { "id": "30427954", "title": "Norman Township, Michigan", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 72.2 sqmi, of which 70.8 sqmi is land and 1.3 sqmi (1.86%) is water. Norman Township is the only township in Manistee County that connects to both Meade Township, Mason County and South Branch Township, Wexford County.", "score": "1.5965258" }, { "id": "14156706", "title": "Norman Township, Grundy County, Illinois", "text": " Norman Township is one of seventeen townships in Grundy County, Illinois, USA. As of the 2010 census, its population was 308 and it contained 123 housing units.", "score": "1.5699171" }, { "id": "14156707", "title": "Norman Township, Grundy County, Illinois", "text": " According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of 17.47 sqmi, of which 16.74 sqmi (or 95.82%) is land and 0.73 sqmi (or 4.18%) is water.", "score": "1.5651059" }, { "id": "30954685", "title": "Norman Township, Pine County, Minnesota", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 35.9 square miles (93.0 km2), of which 35.7 square miles (92.4 km2) is land and 0.2 square mile (0.5 km2) (0.56%) is water.", "score": "1.5636339" }, { "id": "6047062", "title": "Eulalia, Norman Park", "text": " Eulalia is a single-storeyed brick house which was constructed in 1889. The land on which the house stands was first bought by August Dimper who purchased 88 acre in 1860. In 1888, the land was further subdivided and 22 acre was purchased by Patrick Real. In the following year Real employed Brisbane architects, John Hall & Sons to design a house for the site and Morley Whitehead of Ipswich were subsequently contracted to build Eulalia, a Greek word meaning speaking well of everybody. At this period, John Smith Murdoch was employed in the office of John Hall and Sons and it is possible that he may have been the designer for Eulalia. Patrick Real was the son of impoverished Irish emigrants and left school ", "score": "1.5623002" }, { "id": "30427950", "title": "Norman Township, Michigan", "text": " Norman Township is a civil township of Manistee County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 1,676 at the 2000 census.", "score": "1.5610684" }, { "id": "31007502", "title": "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota", "text": " Normanna Township was named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "score": "1.552885" }, { "id": "31007503", "title": "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 36.5 sqmi; 0.04 sqmi, or 0.11%, is water. The French River and the Sucker River both flow through the township.", "score": "1.5499517" }, { "id": "30954684", "title": "Norman Township, Pine County, Minnesota", "text": " Norman Township is a township in Pine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 247 at the 2000 census. Norman Township was named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "score": "1.5465472" }, { "id": "3286561", "title": "Norman, Indiana", "text": " Norman (also Norman Station) is an unincorporated community in northwestern Owen Township, Jackson County, Indiana, United States. It lies along State Road 58 northwest of the town of Brownstown, the county seat of Jackson County. Its elevation is 869 feet (265 m), and it is located at 38.9525°N, -86.275°W (38.9525511, -86.2749872). Because the community had two different names, the Board on Geographic Names officially decided in favor of \"Norman\" in 1943. Although Norman is unincorporated, it has a post office, with the ZIP code of 47264.", "score": "1.5412855" }, { "id": "31114641", "title": "Norman Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota", "text": " Norman Township is a township (T114N R45W) in Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 291 at the 2000 census. Norman Township was organized in 1874, and named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "score": "1.5407057" }, { "id": "31007501", "title": "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota", "text": " Normanna Township is a township in Saint Louis County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 796 at the 2010 census. Jean Duluth Road, Normanna Road, and Pequaywan Lake Road are three of the main routes in the township. Other routes include North Tischer Road, East Pioneer Road, and French River Road.", "score": "1.5394738" } ]
[ "Normania Township, Benson County, North Dakota\n Normania Township is a civil township in Benson County, North Dakota, United States. As of the 2000 census, its population was 56.", "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n Normania Township was originally called Ree Township, and under the latter name was organized in 1872. The present name, adopted in 1874, is supposedly after a place in Norway.", "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 36.3 square miles (93.9 km2), of which 35.5 square miles (92.0 km2) is land and 0.8 square mile (1.9 km2) (2.07%) is water.", "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n Normania Township is a township (T114N R41W) in Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 188 at the 2000 census.", "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n As of the census of 2000, there were 188 people, 74 households, and 54 families residing in the township. The population density was 5.3 people per square mile (2.0/km2). There were 82 housing units at an average density of 2.3/sq mi (0.9/km2). The racial makeup of the township was 100.00% White. There were 74 households, out of which 31.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 66.2% were married couples living together, 4.1% had a female householder with no husband present, and 25.7% were non-families. 23.0% of all households were made up of individuals, and 8.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.54 and the average family size was 2.98. In the township the population was ", "Norman Township, Michigan\n This climatic region has large seasonal temperature differences, with warm to hot (and often humid) summers and cold (sometimes severely cold) winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Norman Township has a humid continental climate, abbreviated \"Dfb\" on climate maps.", "Norman Township, Michigan\n Norman Township was formed in 1911 and was named after Ed Norman. He was a surveyor and estimated, bought and sold timber and cut a lot of it himself. He located here in about 1897, and the second year, E. G. Filer, who owned the standing timber, donated the school house. Norman and his wife Elizabeth had 16 children. During this time Ed was supervisor of Stronach Township. He cut limbs off his poplars at home and planted them along the drive to Filer City. Mrs. Norman recalled that there was some criticism about it by a neighboring township. Residents from this section usually got what they wanted at Stronach. They thought it would be better to divide the township. Ed took about 200 men who were working on Stronach Dam over to vote and they won their point. Thus Norman township was formed in 1911. Dublin is where the voice of Darth Vader, James Earl Jones, grew up.", "Normania Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n out, with 30.9% under the age of 18, 4.3% from 18 to 24, 27.7% from 25 to 44, 22.9% from 45 to 64, and 14.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 38 years. For every 100 females there were 111.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 113.1 males. The median income for a household in the township was $36,750, and the median income for a family was $39,688. Males had a median income of $31,250 versus $27,083 for females. The per capita income for the township was $19,067. About 1.8% of families and 6.1% of the population were below the poverty line, including 7.5% of those under the age of eighteen and 14.3% of those 65 or over.", "Norman Township, Michigan\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 72.2 sqmi, of which 70.8 sqmi is land and 1.3 sqmi (1.86%) is water. Norman Township is the only township in Manistee County that connects to both Meade Township, Mason County and South Branch Township, Wexford County.", "Norman Township, Grundy County, Illinois\n Norman Township is one of seventeen townships in Grundy County, Illinois, USA. As of the 2010 census, its population was 308 and it contained 123 housing units.", "Norman Township, Grundy County, Illinois\n According to the 2010 census, the township has a total area of 17.47 sqmi, of which 16.74 sqmi (or 95.82%) is land and 0.73 sqmi (or 4.18%) is water.", "Norman Township, Pine County, Minnesota\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 35.9 square miles (93.0 km2), of which 35.7 square miles (92.4 km2) is land and 0.2 square mile (0.5 km2) (0.56%) is water.", "Eulalia, Norman Park\n Eulalia is a single-storeyed brick house which was constructed in 1889. The land on which the house stands was first bought by August Dimper who purchased 88 acre in 1860. In 1888, the land was further subdivided and 22 acre was purchased by Patrick Real. In the following year Real employed Brisbane architects, John Hall & Sons to design a house for the site and Morley Whitehead of Ipswich were subsequently contracted to build Eulalia, a Greek word meaning speaking well of everybody. At this period, John Smith Murdoch was employed in the office of John Hall and Sons and it is possible that he may have been the designer for Eulalia. Patrick Real was the son of impoverished Irish emigrants and left school ", "Norman Township, Michigan\n Norman Township is a civil township of Manistee County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 1,676 at the 2000 census.", "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota\n Normanna Township was named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the township has a total area of 36.5 sqmi; 0.04 sqmi, or 0.11%, is water. The French River and the Sucker River both flow through the township.", "Norman Township, Pine County, Minnesota\n Norman Township is a township in Pine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 247 at the 2000 census. Norman Township was named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "Norman, Indiana\n Norman (also Norman Station) is an unincorporated community in northwestern Owen Township, Jackson County, Indiana, United States. It lies along State Road 58 northwest of the town of Brownstown, the county seat of Jackson County. Its elevation is 869 feet (265 m), and it is located at 38.9525°N, -86.275°W (38.9525511, -86.2749872). Because the community had two different names, the Board on Geographic Names officially decided in favor of \"Norman\" in 1943. Although Norman is unincorporated, it has a post office, with the ZIP code of 47264.", "Norman Township, Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota\n Norman Township is a township (T114N R45W) in Yellow Medicine County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 291 at the 2000 census. Norman Township was organized in 1874, and named for the Norwegians, or Normans, who settled in this area.", "Normanna Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota\n Normanna Township is a township in Saint Louis County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 796 at the 2010 census. Jean Duluth Road, Normanna Road, and Pequaywan Lake Road are three of the main routes in the township. Other routes include North Tischer Road, East Pioneer Road, and French River Road." ]
In what country is Chicche District?
[ "Peru", "pe", "Republic of Peru", "República del Perú", "🇵🇪", "Republica del Peru" ]
country
Chicche District
3,711,589
37
[ { "id": "26103907", "title": "Chichas District", "text": "Solimana ", "score": "1.5459201" }, { "id": "32105766", "title": "Manjacaze District", "text": " The district is divided into seven postos, Manjacaze (two localities), Chidenguele (four localities), Nguzene (three localities), Chibonzane (three localities), Macuacua (two localities), Madzucane (three localities), and Chalala (two localities).", "score": "1.5299748" }, { "id": "28562480", "title": "Chicualacuala District", "text": " There is a road network in the district which includes a stretch of the national road EN340 to Chokwe, as well as 268 km of secondary roads. The Limpopo Railroad (Southern System) runs through the district.", "score": "1.4760942" }, { "id": "14903961", "title": "Chaccho District", "text": " The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (73.57%) learnt to speak in childhood, 25.88% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "score": "1.4677652" }, { "id": "28562475", "title": "Chicualacuala District", "text": " Chicualacuala District (Portuguese: Distrito de Chicualacuala) is a district of Gaza Province in south-western Mozambique. It has a population of 41,638 (2011) and covers 18155 km2. The population density of Chicualacuala District 2.1 residents per square kilometers, significantly lower than the average of 17.5 in Gaza Province. The district seat is the town of Chicualacuala. Chicuacuala District is bordered to the north by the Massangena District, to the east by Chigubo District, to the southwest by Mabalane District, to the south by Massingir District, to the southwest by South Africa, and to the northwest by Zimbabwe. It is home to several villages along the Limpopo River including Dumela, Mbuzi, Kunguma, Mawene, Xicumba, Xicumbane, Ngala, Panhame, Mabuzane, and Xitshutswini. Chicuacuala District has four health centers; the single hospital in the province is located outside the district. The district also lacks a bank.", "score": "1.463155" }, { "id": "9662680", "title": "Chiara District, Andahuaylas", "text": " The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (96.79%) learnt to speak in childhood, 3.05% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "score": "1.4597213" }, { "id": "32105782", "title": "Xai-Xai District", "text": " The district is divided into three postos, Chicumbane (five localities), Chongoene (five localities), and Zongoene (three localities). The city of Xai-Xai is incorporated separately and does not belong to the district.", "score": "1.4546378" }, { "id": "13258745", "title": "Succha District", "text": " Succha District is one of five districts in the Aija Province, of the Ancash Region in Peru. The capital of the district is Villa de Succha.", "score": "1.4514318" }, { "id": "10737117", "title": "Jinkouhe District", "text": " Jinkouhe is a district of the city of Leshan, Sichuan Province, China. Sichuan Honghua Industrial Corporation (formerly the 814 Plant), a subsidiary of China National Nuclear Corporation is located in Heping Yi Autonomous Town in the district, thus the district is one of the few areas in China that are still closed to foreigners.", "score": "1.4432142" }, { "id": "32105718", "title": "Chibuto District", "text": " The district is divided into six postos, Chibuto (two localities), Alto Changane (two localities), Godide (two localities), Malehice (six localities), Chaimite (three localities), and Changanine (two localities).", "score": "1.4378676" }, { "id": "26103906", "title": "Chichas District", "text": " Chichas District is one of eight districts of the province Condesuyos in Peru.", "score": "1.4356511" }, { "id": "4699462", "title": "Chirakchi District", "text": " Chirakchi (Chiroqchi, Чироқчи) is a district (tuman) in the north-east of Qashqadaryo Region in Uzbekistan. The administrative center of the district is the town of Chirakchi. Population: app. 20,000. Mainly Uzbeks, few Tatars, Jews, Russians. There is a Polish war cemetery for World War II soldiers in Chirakchi.", "score": "1.4314561" }, { "id": "16169368", "title": "Chisquilla District", "text": "Chisquilla ; Señoria ; Chilac ; Chirosh ; California ; Callejon ; Puerto el Milagro ; Shotaran ; Chinchango ; Puerto Arturo ; Tialango ; Conejo ; Galurco ; Payo ; yerba Buena ; Ganso Azul The populated places in the district are:", "score": "1.4241731" }, { "id": "9662679", "title": "Chiara District, Andahuaylas", "text": " Chiara District is one of the nineteen districts of the province Andahuaylas in Peru.", "score": "1.4236963" }, { "id": "28879811", "title": "Machaze District", "text": " The district is divided into two postos, Chitobe (five localities, including Machaze) and Save (four localities).", "score": "1.4202745" }, { "id": "10119310", "title": "Chilcayoc District", "text": " Chilcayoc (in Hispanicized spelling) or Ch'illkayuq (Quechua ch'illka baccharis, -yuq a suffix to indicate possession, \"the one that has got baccharis\" or \"the one with baccharis\") is the smallest of 11 districts of the Sucre Province in the Ayacucho region in Peru.", "score": "1.4185088" }, { "id": "16045826", "title": "Chikomba District", "text": "Chivhu ; Nhidza ; Maware business centre ; Chikara Township ; Nharira business centre ; St Pauls Kuimba ; Chikasha business centre ; Chirasavana township ; Sadza growth point ; Munyora Business center ; Kadye enterprise/Tatenda Night club ; Kumanhika ; Pokoteke Clinic & Township ; Chirasavana Township ; Mutsinze Village ; Ndoro Village ; mupatsi town ship ; chitsvuku town ship ; Chiguvare homestead ", "score": "1.417762" }, { "id": "28880275", "title": "Changara District", "text": " The district is divided into three postos, Luenha (three localities), Chioco (three localities), and Mavara (three localities).", "score": "1.4170647" }, { "id": "7089046", "title": "Chitipa District", "text": " Chitipa District is the northernmost district in the Northern Region of Malawi. The capital is Chitipa (formerly known as Fort Hill). The district covers an area of 4,288 km.², and has a population of 234,927. Chitipa borders fellow districts Karonga and Rumphi, as well as neighboring countries Tanzania and Zambia. The district is divided into five main areas known as Misuku to the east, Kameme to the north, Bulambia right at the centre while Wenya and Nthalire areas are situated to the south.", "score": "1.4130213" }, { "id": "16169367", "title": "Chisquilla District", "text": " Chisquilla is one of 12 districts of the Bongará Province in the Amazonas region in Peru. Chisquilla, competitive, productive district, and, articulated to the national markets, with an agricultural sustainable diversity, promoter of an integral development, model of local management participativa and democratic; propitiating feeling of solidarity and cultural identification.", "score": "1.4110076" } ]
[ "Chichas District\nSolimana ", "Manjacaze District\n The district is divided into seven postos, Manjacaze (two localities), Chidenguele (four localities), Nguzene (three localities), Chibonzane (three localities), Macuacua (two localities), Madzucane (three localities), and Chalala (two localities).", "Chicualacuala District\n There is a road network in the district which includes a stretch of the national road EN340 to Chokwe, as well as 268 km of secondary roads. The Limpopo Railroad (Southern System) runs through the district.", "Chaccho District\n The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (73.57%) learnt to speak in childhood, 25.88% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "Chicualacuala District\n Chicualacuala District (Portuguese: Distrito de Chicualacuala) is a district of Gaza Province in south-western Mozambique. It has a population of 41,638 (2011) and covers 18155 km2. The population density of Chicualacuala District 2.1 residents per square kilometers, significantly lower than the average of 17.5 in Gaza Province. The district seat is the town of Chicualacuala. Chicuacuala District is bordered to the north by the Massangena District, to the east by Chigubo District, to the southwest by Mabalane District, to the south by Massingir District, to the southwest by South Africa, and to the northwest by Zimbabwe. It is home to several villages along the Limpopo River including Dumela, Mbuzi, Kunguma, Mawene, Xicumba, Xicumbane, Ngala, Panhame, Mabuzane, and Xitshutswini. Chicuacuala District has four health centers; the single hospital in the province is located outside the district. The district also lacks a bank.", "Chiara District, Andahuaylas\n The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (96.79%) learnt to speak in childhood, 3.05% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "Xai-Xai District\n The district is divided into three postos, Chicumbane (five localities), Chongoene (five localities), and Zongoene (three localities). The city of Xai-Xai is incorporated separately and does not belong to the district.", "Succha District\n Succha District is one of five districts in the Aija Province, of the Ancash Region in Peru. The capital of the district is Villa de Succha.", "Jinkouhe District\n Jinkouhe is a district of the city of Leshan, Sichuan Province, China. Sichuan Honghua Industrial Corporation (formerly the 814 Plant), a subsidiary of China National Nuclear Corporation is located in Heping Yi Autonomous Town in the district, thus the district is one of the few areas in China that are still closed to foreigners.", "Chibuto District\n The district is divided into six postos, Chibuto (two localities), Alto Changane (two localities), Godide (two localities), Malehice (six localities), Chaimite (three localities), and Changanine (two localities).", "Chichas District\n Chichas District is one of eight districts of the province Condesuyos in Peru.", "Chirakchi District\n Chirakchi (Chiroqchi, Чироқчи) is a district (tuman) in the north-east of Qashqadaryo Region in Uzbekistan. The administrative center of the district is the town of Chirakchi. Population: app. 20,000. Mainly Uzbeks, few Tatars, Jews, Russians. There is a Polish war cemetery for World War II soldiers in Chirakchi.", "Chisquilla District\nChisquilla ; Señoria ; Chilac ; Chirosh ; California ; Callejon ; Puerto el Milagro ; Shotaran ; Chinchango ; Puerto Arturo ; Tialango ; Conejo ; Galurco ; Payo ; yerba Buena ; Ganso Azul The populated places in the district are:", "Chiara District, Andahuaylas\n Chiara District is one of the nineteen districts of the province Andahuaylas in Peru.", "Machaze District\n The district is divided into two postos, Chitobe (five localities, including Machaze) and Save (four localities).", "Chilcayoc District\n Chilcayoc (in Hispanicized spelling) or Ch'illkayuq (Quechua ch'illka baccharis, -yuq a suffix to indicate possession, \"the one that has got baccharis\" or \"the one with baccharis\") is the smallest of 11 districts of the Sucre Province in the Ayacucho region in Peru.", "Chikomba District\nChivhu ; Nhidza ; Maware business centre ; Chikara Township ; Nharira business centre ; St Pauls Kuimba ; Chikasha business centre ; Chirasavana township ; Sadza growth point ; Munyora Business center ; Kadye enterprise/Tatenda Night club ; Kumanhika ; Pokoteke Clinic & Township ; Chirasavana Township ; Mutsinze Village ; Ndoro Village ; mupatsi town ship ; chitsvuku town ship ; Chiguvare homestead ", "Changara District\n The district is divided into three postos, Luenha (three localities), Chioco (three localities), and Mavara (three localities).", "Chitipa District\n Chitipa District is the northernmost district in the Northern Region of Malawi. The capital is Chitipa (formerly known as Fort Hill). The district covers an area of 4,288 km.², and has a population of 234,927. Chitipa borders fellow districts Karonga and Rumphi, as well as neighboring countries Tanzania and Zambia. The district is divided into five main areas known as Misuku to the east, Kameme to the north, Bulambia right at the centre while Wenya and Nthalire areas are situated to the south.", "Chisquilla District\n Chisquilla is one of 12 districts of the Bongará Province in the Amazonas region in Peru. Chisquilla, competitive, productive district, and, articulated to the national markets, with an agricultural sustainable diversity, promoter of an integral development, model of local management participativa and democratic; propitiating feeling of solidarity and cultural identification." ]
In what country is canton of Marseille-La Pomme?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Canton of Marseille-La Pomme
1,202,978
57
[ { "id": "14467138", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV", "text": "André Guinde (Socialist Party (France), 2004-2010) The Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV or Aix-en-Provence-Sud-Ouest is a former canton in the Bouches-du-Rhône department of France. It was created 27 February 2003 by the decree 2003-156. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. At 70,749 inhabitants (2012), it was one of the most populous cantons in France. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Bouches-du-Rhône'' :", "score": "1.525217" }, { "id": "2616625", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I", "text": "Bruno Genzana (UMP, 2001-2008) The Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I or Aix-en-Provence-Centre is a former canton located within the commune of Aix-en-Provence in the Bouches-du-Rhône department of France. It was created 27 February 2003 by the decree 2003-156 of that date. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Bouches-du-Rhône'' :", "score": "1.4834092" }, { "id": "7358089", "title": "Canton of L'Arbresle", "text": " The Canton of L'Arbresle is a French administrative division, located in the Rhône department. The canton was established in 1790. Its boundaries are modified by decree of 27 February 2014 which came into force in March 2015.", "score": "1.4068482" }, { "id": "14467140", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV", "text": "Luynes ; Les Milles ; Les Granettes ; Brédasque ; Jas-de-Bouffan ; Pont-de-l'Arc ; La Parade ; Célony ; La Beauvalle ; Les Deux-Ormes ; Saint-Mitre ", "score": "1.3853326" }, { "id": "14467139", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV", "text": "Aix-en-Provence (southwest : 58,003 inhabitants) ; Éguilles ; Meyreuil The canton is made up of the following communes: ", "score": "1.3715878" }, { "id": "14694629", "title": "Marseille", "text": " Marseille (, , ; also spelled in English as Marseilles; Marselha ) is the prefecture of the Bouches-du-Rhône department and Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, France. Situated in the Provence historical province, it is located on the coast of the Gulf of Lion, part of the Mediterranean Sea, near the mouth of the Rhône. Marseille is the second-largest city in France, covering an area of 241 km2; it had a population of 870,018 in 2016. Its metropolitan area, which extends over 3174 km2, is the third-largest in France after those of Paris and Lyon, with a population of 1,760,653 as of 2017, or 3,100,329 (2019) by the broader Eurostat definition of metropolitan region. Its ", "score": "1.364701" }, { "id": "30901714", "title": "Canton of Toulon-3", "text": "1) Le Revest-les-Eaux ; 2) Toulon (partly) ; 3) La Valette-du-Var The canton of Toulon-3 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3545192" }, { "id": "2616627", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I", "text": "Centre-ville: Mazarin, Villeneuve, Tanneurs, Ville comtale et Bourg Saint-Sauveur, Ville de Tours ; Sextius-Mirabeau ; Montperrin ; Encagnane ; Val de l'Arc ; Pont de Béraud ; Tour d'Aygosi ; Val Saint-André ; Corsy ; Beisson ; Saint-Eutrope ", "score": "1.342945" }, { "id": "2616626", "title": "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I", "text": " It is composed of the part of Aix-en-Provence along the centre of a line defined by the axis of the following roads: avenue Eugène-de-Mazenod, avenue Joseph-Rigaud, avenue Georges-Brassens, route des Alpes, ruisseau La Torse, avenue Jean-et-Marcel-Fontenaille, avenue Sainte-Victoire, cours Saint-Louis, boulevard Carnot, cours Gambetta, rue Paul-Beltçaguy, avenue Saint-Jérôme, chemin Robert, boulevard du Roi-René, avenue Benjamin-Abram, voie de chemin de fer, avenue des Belges, avenue de l'Europe, avenue du Petit-Barthélemy, avenue de la Figuière, avenue du Club-Hippique, chemin des Piboules, chemin des Aubépines, chemin des Flâneurs, avenue de l'Europe, route de Valcros, route de Galice, voie de chemin de fer, avenue Jean-Dalmas, cours des Minimes, avenue De Lattre-de-Tassigny, avenue Henri-Pontier, avenue Paul-Cézanne, chemin des Lauves.", "score": "1.341271" }, { "id": "14333926", "title": "Arrondissement of Marseille", "text": " ; 26) Marseille - Saint-Mauront ; 27) Marseille-Les Trois Lucs ; 28) Marseille-Vauban ; 29) Marseille-Verduron ; 30) Roquevaire The arrondissement of Marseille was created in 1800. At the March 2017 reorganisation of the arrondissements of Bouches-du-Rhône, it lost one commune to the arrondissement of Aix-en-Provence, and it gained one commune from the arrondissement of Aix-en-Provence. As a result of the reorganisation of the cantons of France which came into effect in 2015, the borders of the cantons are no longer related to the borders of the arrondissements. The cantons of the arrondissement of Marseille were, as of January 2015: ", "score": "1.3392022" }, { "id": "30901713", "title": "Canton of Toulon-2", "text": "1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-2 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3375447" }, { "id": "30901715", "title": "Canton of Toulon-4", "text": "1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-4 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.335567" }, { "id": "29206634", "title": "Canton of Champtoceaux", "text": "Roger Chevalier (UDF, 2001-2008) Canton of Champtoceaux is a former canton of France, located in the Maine-et-Loire department, in the Pays de la Loire region. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 9 communes, which joined the canton of La Pommeraye in 2015. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Maine-et-Loire :", "score": "1.3340423" }, { "id": "14333923", "title": "Arrondissement of Marseille", "text": " The arrondissement of Marseille is an arrondissement of France in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region. It has 21 communes. Its population is 1,069,909 (2016), and its area is 683.2 km2.", "score": "1.3326831" }, { "id": "12696224", "title": "Palais omnisports Marseille Grand-Est", "text": " The Palais omnisports Marseille Grand-Est, abbreviated as POMGE, is a multi-purpose arena primarily used as an ice rink, located in Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France. It is the home venue for ice hockey team Spartiates de Marseille. It was inaugurated in 2009, and is popularly known as Patinoire de la Capelette after the Marseille quarter it sits in, la Capelette.", "score": "1.3305495" }, { "id": "30901711", "title": "Canton of Toulon-1", "text": "1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-1 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3276987" }, { "id": "26740750", "title": "Canton of Mauges-sur-Loire", "text": "1) Mauges-sur-Loire ; 2) Orée-d'Anjou The canton of Mauges-sur-Loire (before March 2020: canton of La Pommeraye) is an administrative division of the Maine-et-Loire department, in western France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Mauges-sur-Loire. It consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.3210895" }, { "id": "29100455", "title": "Provence, Switzerland", "text": " The Chalet D’Alpage La Redalle is listed as a Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Provence is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "score": "1.3198264" }, { "id": "29100449", "title": "Provence, Switzerland", "text": " Provence has a population of. , 4.9% of the population are resident foreign nationals. Over the last 10 years (1999–2009) the population has changed at a rate of 5.6%. It has changed at a rate of 8.3% due to migration and at a rate of -2.7% due to births and deaths. Most of the population speaks French (354 or 96.2%), with German being second most common (11 or 3.0%) and Italian being third (1 or 0.3%). Of the population in the municipality 154 or about 41.8% were born in Provence and lived there in 2000. There were 57 or 15.5% who were born in the same canton, while 96 or 26.1% were born somewhere ", "score": "1.3148508" }, { "id": "27367686", "title": "Canton of Île de Ré", "text": "1) Ars-en-Ré ; 2) Le Bois-Plage-en-Ré ; 3) La Couarde-sur-Mer ; 4) La Flotte ; 5) Loix ; 6) Les Portes-en-Ré ; 7) Rivedoux-Plage ; 8) Saint-Clément-des-Baleines ; 9) Sainte-Marie-de-Ré ; 10) Saint-Martin-de-Ré The Canton of Île de Ré (canton de l'Île de Ré) is a canton on the Ré Island in the French department of Charente-Maritime, New Aquitaine, western France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Saint-Martin-de-Ré. It consists of the following communes: ", "score": "1.31301" } ]
[ "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV\nAndré Guinde (Socialist Party (France), 2004-2010) The Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV or Aix-en-Provence-Sud-Ouest is a former canton in the Bouches-du-Rhône department of France. It was created 27 February 2003 by the decree 2003-156. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. At 70,749 inhabitants (2012), it was one of the most populous cantons in France. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Bouches-du-Rhône'' :", "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I\nBruno Genzana (UMP, 2001-2008) The Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I or Aix-en-Provence-Centre is a former canton located within the commune of Aix-en-Provence in the Bouches-du-Rhône department of France. It was created 27 February 2003 by the decree 2003-156 of that date. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Bouches-du-Rhône'' :", "Canton of L'Arbresle\n The Canton of L'Arbresle is a French administrative division, located in the Rhône department. The canton was established in 1790. Its boundaries are modified by decree of 27 February 2014 which came into force in March 2015.", "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV\nLuynes ; Les Milles ; Les Granettes ; Brédasque ; Jas-de-Bouffan ; Pont-de-l'Arc ; La Parade ; Célony ; La Beauvalle ; Les Deux-Ormes ; Saint-Mitre ", "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-IV\nAix-en-Provence (southwest : 58,003 inhabitants) ; Éguilles ; Meyreuil The canton is made up of the following communes: ", "Marseille\n Marseille (, , ; also spelled in English as Marseilles; Marselha ) is the prefecture of the Bouches-du-Rhône department and Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region, France. Situated in the Provence historical province, it is located on the coast of the Gulf of Lion, part of the Mediterranean Sea, near the mouth of the Rhône. Marseille is the second-largest city in France, covering an area of 241 km2; it had a population of 870,018 in 2016. Its metropolitan area, which extends over 3174 km2, is the third-largest in France after those of Paris and Lyon, with a population of 1,760,653 as of 2017, or 3,100,329 (2019) by the broader Eurostat definition of metropolitan region. Its ", "Canton of Toulon-3\n1) Le Revest-les-Eaux ; 2) Toulon (partly) ; 3) La Valette-du-Var The canton of Toulon-3 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I\nCentre-ville: Mazarin, Villeneuve, Tanneurs, Ville comtale et Bourg Saint-Sauveur, Ville de Tours ; Sextius-Mirabeau ; Montperrin ; Encagnane ; Val de l'Arc ; Pont de Béraud ; Tour d'Aygosi ; Val Saint-André ; Corsy ; Beisson ; Saint-Eutrope ", "Canton of Aix-en-Provence-I\n It is composed of the part of Aix-en-Provence along the centre of a line defined by the axis of the following roads: avenue Eugène-de-Mazenod, avenue Joseph-Rigaud, avenue Georges-Brassens, route des Alpes, ruisseau La Torse, avenue Jean-et-Marcel-Fontenaille, avenue Sainte-Victoire, cours Saint-Louis, boulevard Carnot, cours Gambetta, rue Paul-Beltçaguy, avenue Saint-Jérôme, chemin Robert, boulevard du Roi-René, avenue Benjamin-Abram, voie de chemin de fer, avenue des Belges, avenue de l'Europe, avenue du Petit-Barthélemy, avenue de la Figuière, avenue du Club-Hippique, chemin des Piboules, chemin des Aubépines, chemin des Flâneurs, avenue de l'Europe, route de Valcros, route de Galice, voie de chemin de fer, avenue Jean-Dalmas, cours des Minimes, avenue De Lattre-de-Tassigny, avenue Henri-Pontier, avenue Paul-Cézanne, chemin des Lauves.", "Arrondissement of Marseille\n ; 26) Marseille - Saint-Mauront ; 27) Marseille-Les Trois Lucs ; 28) Marseille-Vauban ; 29) Marseille-Verduron ; 30) Roquevaire The arrondissement of Marseille was created in 1800. At the March 2017 reorganisation of the arrondissements of Bouches-du-Rhône, it lost one commune to the arrondissement of Aix-en-Provence, and it gained one commune from the arrondissement of Aix-en-Provence. As a result of the reorganisation of the cantons of France which came into effect in 2015, the borders of the cantons are no longer related to the borders of the arrondissements. The cantons of the arrondissement of Marseille were, as of January 2015: ", "Canton of Toulon-2\n1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-2 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Toulon-4\n1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-4 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Champtoceaux\nRoger Chevalier (UDF, 2001-2008) Canton of Champtoceaux is a former canton of France, located in the Maine-et-Loire department, in the Pays de la Loire region. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 9 communes, which joined the canton of La Pommeraye in 2015. Elected to represent the canton in the General Council of Maine-et-Loire :", "Arrondissement of Marseille\n The arrondissement of Marseille is an arrondissement of France in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region. It has 21 communes. Its population is 1,069,909 (2016), and its area is 683.2 km2.", "Palais omnisports Marseille Grand-Est\n The Palais omnisports Marseille Grand-Est, abbreviated as POMGE, is a multi-purpose arena primarily used as an ice rink, located in Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France. It is the home venue for ice hockey team Spartiates de Marseille. It was inaugurated in 2009, and is popularly known as Patinoire de la Capelette after the Marseille quarter it sits in, la Capelette.", "Canton of Toulon-1\n1) Toulon (partly) The canton of Toulon-1 is an administrative division of the Var department, southeastern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Toulon. It consists of the following communes:", "Canton of Mauges-sur-Loire\n1) Mauges-sur-Loire ; 2) Orée-d'Anjou The canton of Mauges-sur-Loire (before March 2020: canton of La Pommeraye) is an administrative division of the Maine-et-Loire department, in western France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Mauges-sur-Loire. It consists of the following communes:", "Provence, Switzerland\n The Chalet D’Alpage La Redalle is listed as a Swiss heritage site of national significance. The entire village of Provence is part of the Inventory of Swiss Heritage Sites.", "Provence, Switzerland\n Provence has a population of. , 4.9% of the population are resident foreign nationals. Over the last 10 years (1999–2009) the population has changed at a rate of 5.6%. It has changed at a rate of 8.3% due to migration and at a rate of -2.7% due to births and deaths. Most of the population speaks French (354 or 96.2%), with German being second most common (11 or 3.0%) and Italian being third (1 or 0.3%). Of the population in the municipality 154 or about 41.8% were born in Provence and lived there in 2000. There were 57 or 15.5% who were born in the same canton, while 96 or 26.1% were born somewhere ", "Canton of Île de Ré\n1) Ars-en-Ré ; 2) Le Bois-Plage-en-Ré ; 3) La Couarde-sur-Mer ; 4) La Flotte ; 5) Loix ; 6) Les Portes-en-Ré ; 7) Rivedoux-Plage ; 8) Saint-Clément-des-Baleines ; 9) Sainte-Marie-de-Ré ; 10) Saint-Martin-de-Ré The Canton of Île de Ré (canton de l'Île de Ré) is a canton on the Ré Island in the French department of Charente-Maritime, New Aquitaine, western France. It was created at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Saint-Martin-de-Ré. It consists of the following communes: " ]
In what country is Devanur?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Devanur
3,905,343
89
[ { "id": "9702614", "title": "Devanur", "text": " Devanur is a village in the Andimadam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "score": "1.8363054" }, { "id": "6777838", "title": "Devargudihal", "text": " As of the 2011 Census of India there were 586 households in Devanur and a total population of 3,111 consisting of 1,631 males and 1,480 females. There were 392 children ages 0-6.", "score": "1.7077647" }, { "id": "9702615", "title": "Devanur", "text": " As per the 2001 census, Devanur had a total population of 1915 with 964 males and 951 females. The historical name of the village is devanagarapattinam.", "score": "1.622349" }, { "id": "7107894", "title": "Devanur Mahadeva", "text": " Devanuru Mahadeva (ದೇವನೂರು ಮಹಾದೇವ) is an Indian writer, novelist and public intellectual who writes in Kannada language. Devanuru Mahadeva was born in 1948 in Devanuru village in Nanjanagudu Taluk, Mysore district of the Karnataka state, India, He worked at CIIL in Mysore, The Government of India conferred upon him the Padma Shri award, the fourth highest civilian award. Known among literary circles to be a rebel, Mahadeva rejected the Nrupatunga Award (carrying a purse of Rs 5,01,000) in 2010. Devanura's rejection of the award was based on his dissatisfaction that despite being the official language of the state, Kannada is yet to be made the primary language of instruction in schools and colleges. He wants Kannada to be made the medium of learning at least up to the college level. Mahadeva is a Central Sahitya Academy awardee for his novel Kusuma Baale. In the 1990s he rejected the government's offer to nominate him to Rajya Sabha (the upper house of the Parliament of India) under the writer's quota.", "score": "1.5645046" }, { "id": "6148818", "title": "Tellanur", "text": " Tellanur is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. It is located in the Kollegal taluk of Chamarajanagar district.This is a gram panchayath which includes surrounding villages of Balagunase, Ankanapura, Masti gowdana doddi, Bolegowdana doddi, Chikkalluru.Tellanuru Maramma and Dannavva is the most popular god's in this area.They worship Malemahadeshwara,Kendagannayya also.", "score": "1.5606396" }, { "id": "26377785", "title": "Valathi", "text": "Shri Adthinathar Digambar Jain Temple also known as Nainar Temple - Devotees, many from northern India visit this temple. Valathi Outreach Church Ministries is run by local a church. It mainly focuses on public education. ; Devanur Fort, ; Melmalayanur Temple is 6 km away. ; Gingee Fort is located 21 km from the village. ; Pallavas temple in 7 km in Siyamangalam and Thirumalpadi ; D.V.Narayana memorial hospital. It mainly focus on public health. ; Lord shiva temple at devanur ; Thanakathamman temple, Kalikambal temple, Mariamman temple, Vinayagar temples (3), Murugan temple,(2), Police Station, Registrar Office, Muslim Mosque, Government Hospitial, Post office, Banks (2), Lakes (2), Markets ( Sunday ) Schools (5), Village Administrative Office,", "score": "1.5578346" }, { "id": "7907231", "title": "Devanancheri", "text": " Devanancheri is a village in the Kumbakonam taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu. It is located 42 km north of the district headquarters in Thanjavur, 8 km from Kumbakonam, and 286 km from the state capital, Chennai. The local language is Tamil.", "score": "1.5221081" }, { "id": "10672645", "title": "Anganur", "text": " Anganur is a village in the Sannasinallur panchayat Sendurai taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India, located 14 km from Sendurai and 8 km from Tittakudi. The river called as Chinna aaru (small river) crossing this village. Thol Thirumavalavan, the Dalit activist, was born here.", "score": "1.5180948" }, { "id": "399562", "title": "Deveboynu, Çüngüş", "text": " Deveboynu is a village in the Çüngüş District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "score": "1.516638" }, { "id": "7107895", "title": "Devanur Mahadeva", "text": "Dyavanuru (ದ್ಯಾವನೂರು) ; Odalaala (ಒಡಲಾಳ) ; Kusuma Baale (ಕುಸುಮಬಾಲೆ) ; Edege Bidda Akshara (ಎದೆಗೆ ಬಿದ್ದ ಅಕ್ಷರ) ; Devanura Mahadeva Avara Krithigalu (ದೇವನೂರ ಮಹಾದೇವ ಅವರ ಎಲ್ಲ ಕಥೆ ಕಾದಂಬರಿಗಳು) ", "score": "1.5100199" }, { "id": "679337", "title": "Devarkandanallur", "text": " Devarkandanallur is a village in the Kudavasal taluk of Tiruvarur district in Tamil Nadu, India.", "score": "1.5089712" }, { "id": "16346320", "title": "Dev-Kesken", "text": " Dev-Kesken or Vazir is an archaeological site in the Dashoguz region of northern Turkmenistan, 62 km west of Koneurgench.", "score": "1.5072489" }, { "id": "8816366", "title": "Devendrakula Velalar", "text": " Devendrakula Velalar is an agricultural community found in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu comprising seven subcastes: Devendra Kulathar, Kudumbar, Kadaiyar, Kaladi, Pallar, Pannadi and Vathiriyar.", "score": "1.504775" }, { "id": "6148819", "title": "Tellanur", "text": " India census, Tellanur had a population of 6993 with 3575 males and 3418 females.", "score": "1.5023308" }, { "id": "6409006", "title": "Devalan, Vezirköprü", "text": " Devalan is a village in the District of Vezirköprü, Samsun Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.4841928" }, { "id": "26107222", "title": "Devala, India", "text": " Devala is a town in the Nilgiris district of Tamil Nadu. It is situated at about 16 km from Gudalur on the Gudalur–Pandalur road. It is close to the Kerala-Tamil Nadu border, with Nilambur on the Kerala side.", "score": "1.4806461" }, { "id": "7907232", "title": "Devanancheri", "text": " Devanancheri is located 42 km north of the district headquarters in Thanjavur, 8 km from Kumbakonam, and 286 km from the state capital, Chennai. The neighboring villages are Athiyur (2 km), Neerathanallur (2 km), Thirunallur (1 km), Inaipriyalvattam (1 km), Kadichambadi (3 km), and Cholapuram (4 km). Devanancheri is surrounded by Thiruppanandal Taluk and Tiruvidaimarudur Taluk towards the east, and Kumbakonam Taluk and Valangaiman Taluk towards the south. It is also on the border with the district of Ariyalur (39 km). Devanancheri's postal code is 612501 and the postal head office is at Koranattukkaruppur.", "score": "1.4800221" }, { "id": "13634296", "title": "Devaragudda", "text": " Devaragudda (Kannada ದೆವರಗುಡ್ಡ) in Kannada means \"the sacred hill belonging to the almighty\". Devaragudda is situated at about 10 km from Ranebennur in Haveri district in Karnataka State (\"ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ\" ), India. The nearest railroad is at Ranebennur. The nearest airport is at Hubli, about 113 km. On top of Devaragudda is situated the temple of Lord Malatesha (ಮಾಲತೆಶ್) (the deity is also known as Jyotiba / Khandoba in some parts of the neighboring state of Maharashtra, in Andhra Pradesh the same Deity is called Mallanna). This temple is operated and maintained privately by a family residing within the temple premises as well as Karnataka government mujarai department. Religious rituals are performed here on a daily basis and special pujas are performed on ", "score": "1.4786761" }, { "id": "930202", "title": "Develi, Ergani", "text": " Develi is a village in the Ergani District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "score": "1.4753132" }, { "id": "2417628", "title": "Deveerahalli", "text": " Deveerahalli is a village located in Krishnagiri district of North Western Tamil Nadu. It is located at the confluence of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. It is situated on the banks of Then (South) Pennaiyar. Its postal code is 635123. It is a scenic village located amidst hills with visitors coming from all around the world during the summer season.", "score": "1.4740766" } ]
[ "Devanur\n Devanur is a village in the Andimadam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.", "Devargudihal\n As of the 2011 Census of India there were 586 households in Devanur and a total population of 3,111 consisting of 1,631 males and 1,480 females. There were 392 children ages 0-6.", "Devanur\n As per the 2001 census, Devanur had a total population of 1915 with 964 males and 951 females. The historical name of the village is devanagarapattinam.", "Devanur Mahadeva\n Devanuru Mahadeva (ದೇವನೂರು ಮಹಾದೇವ) is an Indian writer, novelist and public intellectual who writes in Kannada language. Devanuru Mahadeva was born in 1948 in Devanuru village in Nanjanagudu Taluk, Mysore district of the Karnataka state, India, He worked at CIIL in Mysore, The Government of India conferred upon him the Padma Shri award, the fourth highest civilian award. Known among literary circles to be a rebel, Mahadeva rejected the Nrupatunga Award (carrying a purse of Rs 5,01,000) in 2010. Devanura's rejection of the award was based on his dissatisfaction that despite being the official language of the state, Kannada is yet to be made the primary language of instruction in schools and colleges. He wants Kannada to be made the medium of learning at least up to the college level. Mahadeva is a Central Sahitya Academy awardee for his novel Kusuma Baale. In the 1990s he rejected the government's offer to nominate him to Rajya Sabha (the upper house of the Parliament of India) under the writer's quota.", "Tellanur\n Tellanur is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India. It is located in the Kollegal taluk of Chamarajanagar district.This is a gram panchayath which includes surrounding villages of Balagunase, Ankanapura, Masti gowdana doddi, Bolegowdana doddi, Chikkalluru.Tellanuru Maramma and Dannavva is the most popular god's in this area.They worship Malemahadeshwara,Kendagannayya also.", "Valathi\nShri Adthinathar Digambar Jain Temple also known as Nainar Temple - Devotees, many from northern India visit this temple. Valathi Outreach Church Ministries is run by local a church. It mainly focuses on public education. ; Devanur Fort, ; Melmalayanur Temple is 6 km away. ; Gingee Fort is located 21 km from the village. ; Pallavas temple in 7 km in Siyamangalam and Thirumalpadi ; D.V.Narayana memorial hospital. It mainly focus on public health. ; Lord shiva temple at devanur ; Thanakathamman temple, Kalikambal temple, Mariamman temple, Vinayagar temples (3), Murugan temple,(2), Police Station, Registrar Office, Muslim Mosque, Government Hospitial, Post office, Banks (2), Lakes (2), Markets ( Sunday ) Schools (5), Village Administrative Office,", "Devanancheri\n Devanancheri is a village in the Kumbakonam taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu. It is located 42 km north of the district headquarters in Thanjavur, 8 km from Kumbakonam, and 286 km from the state capital, Chennai. The local language is Tamil.", "Anganur\n Anganur is a village in the Sannasinallur panchayat Sendurai taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India, located 14 km from Sendurai and 8 km from Tittakudi. The river called as Chinna aaru (small river) crossing this village. Thol Thirumavalavan, the Dalit activist, was born here.", "Deveboynu, Çüngüş\n Deveboynu is a village in the Çüngüş District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "Devanur Mahadeva\nDyavanuru (ದ್ಯಾವನೂರು) ; Odalaala (ಒಡಲಾಳ) ; Kusuma Baale (ಕುಸುಮಬಾಲೆ) ; Edege Bidda Akshara (ಎದೆಗೆ ಬಿದ್ದ ಅಕ್ಷರ) ; Devanura Mahadeva Avara Krithigalu (ದೇವನೂರ ಮಹಾದೇವ ಅವರ ಎಲ್ಲ ಕಥೆ ಕಾದಂಬರಿಗಳು) ", "Devarkandanallur\n Devarkandanallur is a village in the Kudavasal taluk of Tiruvarur district in Tamil Nadu, India.", "Dev-Kesken\n Dev-Kesken or Vazir is an archaeological site in the Dashoguz region of northern Turkmenistan, 62 km west of Koneurgench.", "Devendrakula Velalar\n Devendrakula Velalar is an agricultural community found in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu comprising seven subcastes: Devendra Kulathar, Kudumbar, Kadaiyar, Kaladi, Pallar, Pannadi and Vathiriyar.", "Tellanur\n India census, Tellanur had a population of 6993 with 3575 males and 3418 females.", "Devalan, Vezirköprü\n Devalan is a village in the District of Vezirköprü, Samsun Province, Turkey.", "Devala, India\n Devala is a town in the Nilgiris district of Tamil Nadu. It is situated at about 16 km from Gudalur on the Gudalur–Pandalur road. It is close to the Kerala-Tamil Nadu border, with Nilambur on the Kerala side.", "Devanancheri\n Devanancheri is located 42 km north of the district headquarters in Thanjavur, 8 km from Kumbakonam, and 286 km from the state capital, Chennai. The neighboring villages are Athiyur (2 km), Neerathanallur (2 km), Thirunallur (1 km), Inaipriyalvattam (1 km), Kadichambadi (3 km), and Cholapuram (4 km). Devanancheri is surrounded by Thiruppanandal Taluk and Tiruvidaimarudur Taluk towards the east, and Kumbakonam Taluk and Valangaiman Taluk towards the south. It is also on the border with the district of Ariyalur (39 km). Devanancheri's postal code is 612501 and the postal head office is at Koranattukkaruppur.", "Devaragudda\n Devaragudda (Kannada ದೆವರಗುಡ್ಡ) in Kannada means \"the sacred hill belonging to the almighty\". Devaragudda is situated at about 10 km from Ranebennur in Haveri district in Karnataka State (\"ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ\" ), India. The nearest railroad is at Ranebennur. The nearest airport is at Hubli, about 113 km. On top of Devaragudda is situated the temple of Lord Malatesha (ಮಾಲತೆಶ್) (the deity is also known as Jyotiba / Khandoba in some parts of the neighboring state of Maharashtra, in Andhra Pradesh the same Deity is called Mallanna). This temple is operated and maintained privately by a family residing within the temple premises as well as Karnataka government mujarai department. Religious rituals are performed here on a daily basis and special pujas are performed on ", "Develi, Ergani\n Develi is a village in the Ergani District of Diyarbakır Province in Turkey.", "Deveerahalli\n Deveerahalli is a village located in Krishnagiri district of North Western Tamil Nadu. It is located at the confluence of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh. It is situated on the banks of Then (South) Pennaiyar. Its postal code is 635123. It is a scenic village located amidst hills with visitors coming from all around the world during the summer season." ]
In what country is Tegher?
[ "Armenia", "Republic of Armenia", "🇦🇲", "ARM", "AM" ]
country
Tegher, Armenia
1,949,764
93
[ { "id": "14163578", "title": "Tegher Monastery", "text": " Tegher Monastery (Տեղեր or Տեղերի Վանք; also Tegheri Vank) is an early 13th-century Armenian monastery and church located on the southeastern slopes of Mount Aragats near the modern village of Tegher, and across the gorge from the village of Byurakan in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. It was built for Princess Khatun (also known as Mamakhatun), the wife of Prince Vache I Vachutian who had purchased the district of Aragatzotn from the Zakarian brothers. The architect Vardapet Aghbayrik designed Tegher and the monasteries of Saghmosavank and Hovhannavank during the 13th century. The monastery survived intact during a time when Mongol invasions plagued the lands. Ruins of the 9th century village of Tegher (Old Tegher) sit a short distance walk from the monastery. Numerous foundations may be seen, along with the remains of a Tukh Manuk funerary chapel of the 5th century. Nearby is also the medieval to 19th century cemetery with some mausoleums and khachkars.", "score": "1.6181259" }, { "id": "27209941", "title": "Tigherghar", "text": " Tigherghar is a town in north-eastern Algeria.", "score": "1.5239615" }, { "id": "8247962", "title": "Tegh Municipality", "text": " Tegh Municipality, referred to as Tegh Community (Տեղ Համայնք Tegh Hamaynk), is a rural community and administrative subdivision of Syunik Province of Armenia, at the south of the country. Consisted of a group of settlements, its administrative centre is the village of Tegh.", "score": "1.4675473" }, { "id": "31614589", "title": "Egher (Batar)", "text": " The Egher is a left tributary of the river Batar in Romania and Ukraine. It discharges into the Batar near Nevetlenfolu, Vynohradiv Raion.", "score": "1.4574437" }, { "id": "28930654", "title": "Garhanga", "text": " Birni Ader (also: Birni n'Ader), today an administrative village in the municipality of Garhanga, was in 1674 named the capital of the province of Ader in the Sultanate of Agadez. In the early 19th century, the capital was moved to Illela. The French first created in 1904 the cantons of Keita, Tahoua and Illela. In 1913, the canton of Keita was subdivided into Keita, Tamaské, and Garhanga.", "score": "1.4433904" }, { "id": "11786385", "title": "Cheurfa Tizi Tegyar", "text": " Cheurfa Tizi Tegyar is a village in the Taourirt Ighil commune in Béjaïa Province, in the Kabylie region of Algeria.", "score": "1.4424065" }, { "id": "3741968", "title": "Jegher", "text": " Jegher (, also Romanized as Jaghar; also known as Chigir, Chiqur, and Jeghīr) is a village in Ujan-e Sharqi Rural District, Tekmeh Dash District, Bostanabad County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 31, in 6 families.", "score": "1.4316237" }, { "id": "6455451", "title": "Teghra, Bihiya", "text": " Teghra is a village in Bihiya block of Bhojpur district in Bihar, India. As of 2011, its population was 3,049, in 420 households. It is located northeast of Bihiya, at a crossroads, with one road running north–south from Jhaua to Jagdishpur and the other running east–west from Arrah to Shahpur.", "score": "1.4315249" }, { "id": "5008376", "title": "Egher (Tur)", "text": " The Egher is a right tributary of the river Racta in Romania. It flows into the Racta in Adrian. Its length is 26 km and its basin size is 85 km2.", "score": "1.4279042" }, { "id": "4785484", "title": "Direction Generale de L'Hydraulique et de l'Electrification Rurales", "text": " Direction Generale de L'Hydraulique et del'Electrification Rurales (DGHER) is a hydraulic and electricity scheme in Burundi. Also known as Direction Generale de l'Hydraulique et des Energies Rurales, the World Bank has been involved with the funding.", "score": "1.418719" }, { "id": "8297802", "title": "Shekher", "text": " Shekher (Շեխեր; Şexer) is a village in the Khojavend District of Azerbaijan. The village had an ethnic Armenian-majority population prior to the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, and also had an Armenian majority in 1989.", "score": "1.4007056" }, { "id": "13467877", "title": "Teghari", "text": " Teghari is a census town in Barrackpore II CD Block in Barrackpore subdivision of North 24 Parganas district in the state of West Bengal, India. It is close to Kolkata and also a part of Kolkata Urban Agglomeration.", "score": "1.3937364" }, { "id": "16410780", "title": "Armenians in Lebanon", "text": " Mzher (or Dzaghgatzor in Armenian) is a small town located between Antelias and Bsalim, in Matn district. It is a new town, where most of the population is Armenian, along with other Christians. In Mzher the Armenian community has one of the top Armenian schools, Melankton and Haig Arslanian College (Jemaran) and a socio-cultural sport club, Aghpalian. The headquarters of SAHALCO are also situated nearby. Most of the Armenians of Mzher come from Bourj Hamoud, Ashrafieh, Anjar and the other old Armenian quarters.", "score": "1.3765266" }, { "id": "25460721", "title": "Tegerek, Naryn", "text": " Tegerek (Тегерек) is a village in the Naryn District, Naryn Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 129 in 2021.", "score": "1.3653133" }, { "id": "7269042", "title": "Tordher", "text": " Tordher is a town in the Swabi District of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan. It is the second leading trading city in the district, after Swabi. The town is located on rich, alluvial soil. It is situated near the rivers Kabul and Indus. The city was incorporated as a municipality in 1998, when it had a population of 27,861. By 2017, it had grown to 41,420, which meant that the average annual population growth rate of the city was about 2.1% during that period. It is the third-largest city in Swabi District, and the fifth-largest city in Mardan Division. There are 30 primary schools, two high schools and one higher secondary school. The town is known for its cricket ground where sport events are arranged throughout the year.", "score": "1.3630712" }, { "id": "1232804", "title": "Sandra Dagher", "text": " Sandra Dagher (born 1978 in Beirut, Lebanon) is a Lebanese curator. Considered as an “art activist”, she currently is the advisor and head of programs of the Saradar Collection.", "score": "1.3621812" }, { "id": "9092942", "title": "IraQueer", "text": " IraQueer (عراق کویر, عیڕاق کویر) is an Iraqi non-governmental organization that is based in Sweden dedicated to the rights of the Iraqi LGBT+ community. It was founded in 2015. The organization undertakes education, advocacy, and direct services. IraQueer offers direct services that respond to urgent needs including safe housing, and supporting asylum seekers. IraQueer also engages with the United Nations and other international platforms, publishing reports and submissions, and holding events. The organization has partnered with local and international organizations and institutions including OutRight Action International, MADRE, COC Nederland, and Gay Times. It has also generated backlash from inside the country and has been renounced by Iraqi government officials. IraQueer is not registered in Iraq because LGBT organisations cannot register there, and is forced for security reasons to carry out most work anonymously. Its founder Amir Ashour lives in Sweden and was honoured with a \"Generation Change Award\" at the 2021 MTV Europe Music Awards in Budapest.", "score": "1.3567871" }, { "id": "2711289", "title": "Danghara", "text": " Danghara (Дангара Данғара), is a town in the Khatlon Region of Tajikistan. It is the capital of Danghara District. Danghara is the hometown of Tajikistan's President, Emomali Rahmon as well as the country's first Deputy Prime Minister, Asadullo Ghulomov, and a number of other senior government officials and members of parliament. The population of the town is 31,100 (January 2020 estimate). In 2012, Radio Free Europe reported that the town might be the target of a plan to relocate the country's capital city.", "score": "1.3553114" }, { "id": "13467882", "title": "Teghari", "text": " As per the District Census Handbook 2011, Teghari covered an area of 0.7657 km2. Amongst the medical facilities it had were a dispensary/ health centre, a family welfare centre, a maternity home and 5 medicine shops. Amongst the educational facilities it had 4 primary schools. The nearest middle, secondary and senior secondary schools were available almost next door at Muragachha (officially half a kilometre away).", "score": "1.3509619" }, { "id": "9751664", "title": "Tassili n'Ajjer", "text": " The Tin-Taghirt site is located in the Tassili n'Ajjer between the cities of Dider and Iherir.", "score": "1.3477455" } ]
[ "Tegher Monastery\n Tegher Monastery (Տեղեր or Տեղերի Վանք; also Tegheri Vank) is an early 13th-century Armenian monastery and church located on the southeastern slopes of Mount Aragats near the modern village of Tegher, and across the gorge from the village of Byurakan in the Aragatsotn Province of Armenia. It was built for Princess Khatun (also known as Mamakhatun), the wife of Prince Vache I Vachutian who had purchased the district of Aragatzotn from the Zakarian brothers. The architect Vardapet Aghbayrik designed Tegher and the monasteries of Saghmosavank and Hovhannavank during the 13th century. The monastery survived intact during a time when Mongol invasions plagued the lands. Ruins of the 9th century village of Tegher (Old Tegher) sit a short distance walk from the monastery. Numerous foundations may be seen, along with the remains of a Tukh Manuk funerary chapel of the 5th century. Nearby is also the medieval to 19th century cemetery with some mausoleums and khachkars.", "Tigherghar\n Tigherghar is a town in north-eastern Algeria.", "Tegh Municipality\n Tegh Municipality, referred to as Tegh Community (Տեղ Համայնք Tegh Hamaynk), is a rural community and administrative subdivision of Syunik Province of Armenia, at the south of the country. Consisted of a group of settlements, its administrative centre is the village of Tegh.", "Egher (Batar)\n The Egher is a left tributary of the river Batar in Romania and Ukraine. It discharges into the Batar near Nevetlenfolu, Vynohradiv Raion.", "Garhanga\n Birni Ader (also: Birni n'Ader), today an administrative village in the municipality of Garhanga, was in 1674 named the capital of the province of Ader in the Sultanate of Agadez. In the early 19th century, the capital was moved to Illela. The French first created in 1904 the cantons of Keita, Tahoua and Illela. In 1913, the canton of Keita was subdivided into Keita, Tamaské, and Garhanga.", "Cheurfa Tizi Tegyar\n Cheurfa Tizi Tegyar is a village in the Taourirt Ighil commune in Béjaïa Province, in the Kabylie region of Algeria.", "Jegher\n Jegher (, also Romanized as Jaghar; also known as Chigir, Chiqur, and Jeghīr) is a village in Ujan-e Sharqi Rural District, Tekmeh Dash District, Bostanabad County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 31, in 6 families.", "Teghra, Bihiya\n Teghra is a village in Bihiya block of Bhojpur district in Bihar, India. As of 2011, its population was 3,049, in 420 households. It is located northeast of Bihiya, at a crossroads, with one road running north–south from Jhaua to Jagdishpur and the other running east–west from Arrah to Shahpur.", "Egher (Tur)\n The Egher is a right tributary of the river Racta in Romania. It flows into the Racta in Adrian. Its length is 26 km and its basin size is 85 km2.", "Direction Generale de L'Hydraulique et de l'Electrification Rurales\n Direction Generale de L'Hydraulique et del'Electrification Rurales (DGHER) is a hydraulic and electricity scheme in Burundi. Also known as Direction Generale de l'Hydraulique et des Energies Rurales, the World Bank has been involved with the funding.", "Shekher\n Shekher (Շեխեր; Şexer) is a village in the Khojavend District of Azerbaijan. The village had an ethnic Armenian-majority population prior to the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war, and also had an Armenian majority in 1989.", "Teghari\n Teghari is a census town in Barrackpore II CD Block in Barrackpore subdivision of North 24 Parganas district in the state of West Bengal, India. It is close to Kolkata and also a part of Kolkata Urban Agglomeration.", "Armenians in Lebanon\n Mzher (or Dzaghgatzor in Armenian) is a small town located between Antelias and Bsalim, in Matn district. It is a new town, where most of the population is Armenian, along with other Christians. In Mzher the Armenian community has one of the top Armenian schools, Melankton and Haig Arslanian College (Jemaran) and a socio-cultural sport club, Aghpalian. The headquarters of SAHALCO are also situated nearby. Most of the Armenians of Mzher come from Bourj Hamoud, Ashrafieh, Anjar and the other old Armenian quarters.", "Tegerek, Naryn\n Tegerek (Тегерек) is a village in the Naryn District, Naryn Region of Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 129 in 2021.", "Tordher\n Tordher is a town in the Swabi District of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan. It is the second leading trading city in the district, after Swabi. The town is located on rich, alluvial soil. It is situated near the rivers Kabul and Indus. The city was incorporated as a municipality in 1998, when it had a population of 27,861. By 2017, it had grown to 41,420, which meant that the average annual population growth rate of the city was about 2.1% during that period. It is the third-largest city in Swabi District, and the fifth-largest city in Mardan Division. There are 30 primary schools, two high schools and one higher secondary school. The town is known for its cricket ground where sport events are arranged throughout the year.", "Sandra Dagher\n Sandra Dagher (born 1978 in Beirut, Lebanon) is a Lebanese curator. Considered as an “art activist”, she currently is the advisor and head of programs of the Saradar Collection.", "IraQueer\n IraQueer (عراق کویر, عیڕاق کویر) is an Iraqi non-governmental organization that is based in Sweden dedicated to the rights of the Iraqi LGBT+ community. It was founded in 2015. The organization undertakes education, advocacy, and direct services. IraQueer offers direct services that respond to urgent needs including safe housing, and supporting asylum seekers. IraQueer also engages with the United Nations and other international platforms, publishing reports and submissions, and holding events. The organization has partnered with local and international organizations and institutions including OutRight Action International, MADRE, COC Nederland, and Gay Times. It has also generated backlash from inside the country and has been renounced by Iraqi government officials. IraQueer is not registered in Iraq because LGBT organisations cannot register there, and is forced for security reasons to carry out most work anonymously. Its founder Amir Ashour lives in Sweden and was honoured with a \"Generation Change Award\" at the 2021 MTV Europe Music Awards in Budapest.", "Danghara\n Danghara (Дангара Данғара), is a town in the Khatlon Region of Tajikistan. It is the capital of Danghara District. Danghara is the hometown of Tajikistan's President, Emomali Rahmon as well as the country's first Deputy Prime Minister, Asadullo Ghulomov, and a number of other senior government officials and members of parliament. The population of the town is 31,100 (January 2020 estimate). In 2012, Radio Free Europe reported that the town might be the target of a plan to relocate the country's capital city.", "Teghari\n As per the District Census Handbook 2011, Teghari covered an area of 0.7657 km2. Amongst the medical facilities it had were a dispensary/ health centre, a family welfare centre, a maternity home and 5 medicine shops. Amongst the educational facilities it had 4 primary schools. The nearest middle, secondary and senior secondary schools were available almost next door at Muragachha (officially half a kilometre away).", "Tassili n'Ajjer\n The Tin-Taghirt site is located in the Tassili n'Ajjer between the cities of Dider and Iherir." ]
In what country is Kodki?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Kodki
4,874,451
67
[ { "id": "9951511", "title": "Kodki", "text": " Kodki is a village, located 11 km west of Bhuj, in Kachchh District in the state of Gujarat, India. It is one of 24 gramas (villages) occupied by the Shree Kutch Leva Patel Community (SKPLC). Kodki was originally a settlement of Rebari and Maaldharis. (Nomadic tribes, whose main activity is cattle herding). The earliest arrival of Kanbis dates back to 1870s (from dabasiya and Hiranis). Halais and Hiranis were the earliest Kanbis to settle in Kodki and take up agriculture. The original name was Bhavanipur, named after the Maaldhari's family goddess Bhavani Maa. In 2007, the village had a population of approximately 4000 people, and a total of 600 houses.", "score": "1.5892837" }, { "id": "4415056", "title": "Koninki", "text": " Koninki – settlement in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, situated at the south-east end of the so-called Poręba key. Administratively, part of village Poręba Wielka, Limanowa County. Koninki is a tourist centre on the border of the Gorczański National Park at the foot of the Tobołów mountain (957 m n.p.m.) fitted with a chairlift. The town is an excellent base for treks into the Gorce Mountains. A Koninka river flows through the town. Two tourist trails lead from Koninki toward the Turbacz mountain (blue and green). In winter the ski lift is used mainly by skiers reaching the Tobołów slopes, the longest ski run in the Gorce Mountains. The base station of the ski-lift is situated in the former leisure centre of the Sendzimir Steelworks from Kraków. In the 18th century the area, on which the centre is situated, called Hucisko, contained a glass factory. Koninki's biggest vacation centre is called Ostoja Górska with 200 accommodations, the ski station, and the popular chairlift to the top of Tobołów mountain. In the centre of Koninki there is a small chapel which, according to legend, stopped a cholera epidemic.", "score": "1.5469251" }, { "id": "28719903", "title": "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " The village of Kozki was the fictional setting for the 2010 film, The Shrine, though it was actually filmed in multiple locations in Ontario, Canada.", "score": "1.5085219" }, { "id": "28719902", "title": "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki in Polish and Koske in German, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pawłowiczki, within Kędzierzyn-Koźle County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-west of Pawłowiczki, 20 km south-west of Kędzierzyn-Koźle, and 43 km south of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "score": "1.5028105" }, { "id": "12360033", "title": "Kobyłki, Lublin Voivodeship", "text": " Kobyłki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ludwin, within Łęczna County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Ludwin, 11 km north-east of Łęczna, and 33 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. Name of Kobyłki, the most closely can be translated as \"Mares\". In mid 1990s the area south of Kobyłki had enjoyed minor mining damage, the cause was quite close neighborhood of Bogdanka Coal Mine and its large-scale operations, and as the result the least urbanized parts of the village are planned to be sunk, seamlessly expanding an artificial lake. The area is rich in open landscapes, natural resources, including number of fish (close proximity to Nadrybie), and rare species of birds living on Pojezierze Łęczyńskie. The area has been focused on sustainable development, observing a slight decrease in the reliance on agriculture, in favor of agrotourism serving residents of near-by Łęczna, and Lublin area. The community hosts number of farmers who grow apples, strawberries, pears, currants, raspberries, gooseberries, tobacco, corn, beer hops and various other crops.", "score": "1.5025959" }, { "id": "2614605", "title": "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast", "text": " Kozki is located 28 km northeast of Kamenka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Marki is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.4932785" }, { "id": "26828376", "title": "Kosky", "text": "Koski Duże, a village in Poland ; Koski Tl, a municipality in Finland ", "score": "1.4877715" }, { "id": "31936763", "title": "Koziki, Podlaskie Voivodeship", "text": " Koziki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Śniadowo, within Łomża County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Śniadowo, 6 km south of Łomża, and 75 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 240.", "score": "1.4836802" }, { "id": "13393715", "title": "Kopki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship", "text": " Nisko, and 48 km north-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.It also hosts a fire station. The closest towns that neighbour Kopki are Gmina Rudnik nad Sanem and Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship.Many parts of Kopki are covered by trees which contain wildlife such as deer, rabbits and different birds. Before the year of 1344 in Kopki there was a customs chamber at the ancient commercial course from Toruń intercepting Sandomierz, Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, to Lviv and further to Ruś. In 1657, Prince Of The Seven- Pronouns Jerzy Rakoczy burned and completely demolished the village. In 1895, the Volunteer Fire Brigade in Kopki was created.", "score": "1.4813492" }, { "id": "228419", "title": "Kociołki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kociołki (Kotziolken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubeninki, within Gołdap County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "score": "1.4721271" }, { "id": "13206027", "title": "Kózki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skalbmierz, within Kazimierza County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Skalbmierz, 7 km north-west of Kazimierza Wielka, and 67 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.464497" }, { "id": "2614604", "title": "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast", "text": " Kozki (Козки) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Markovskoye Rural Settlement, Kamensky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 106 as of 2010.", "score": "1.4609976" }, { "id": "279976", "title": "Kotki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kotki (German Krausen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Barciany, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 27.", "score": "1.4483073" }, { "id": "31642453", "title": "Koszki", "text": " Koszki (Кошкі, Podlachian: Kôški) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orla, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Orla, 10 km south of Bielsk Podlaski, and 49 km south of the regional capital Białystok. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "score": "1.4453048" }, { "id": "28532754", "title": "Koziki, Vladimir Oblast", "text": " Koziki (Козики) is a rural locality (a village) in Novoalexandrovskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 38 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "score": "1.4360769" }, { "id": "28038262", "title": "Koluszki", "text": " Koluszki is a town, and a major railway junction, in central Poland, in Łódź Voivodeship, about 20 km east of Łódź with a population of 12,776 (2020). The junction in Koluszki serves trains that go from Warsaw to Łódź, Wrocław, Częstochowa and Katowice. It is also connected to Radom and Lublin by an eastbound line.", "score": "1.419081" }, { "id": "1439767", "title": "Kózki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kózki (Kosken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Biała Piska, 19 km east of Pisz, and 107 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 90.", "score": "1.418751" }, { "id": "13464959", "title": "Koniuszki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship", "text": " Koniuszki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Fredropol, within Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 6 km east of Fredropol, 9 km south-east of Przemyśl, and 69 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "score": "1.4185877" }, { "id": "27703341", "title": "Korf, Russia", "text": " Korf is connected to Tilichiki by ferry and to other neighboring locations by helicopter service. Platinum and lignite are mined in the district.", "score": "1.4175241" }, { "id": "13160169", "title": "Kotki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship", "text": " Kotki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Busko-Zdrój, within Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Busko-Zdrój and 44 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "score": "1.4167678" } ]
[ "Kodki\n Kodki is a village, located 11 km west of Bhuj, in Kachchh District in the state of Gujarat, India. It is one of 24 gramas (villages) occupied by the Shree Kutch Leva Patel Community (SKPLC). Kodki was originally a settlement of Rebari and Maaldharis. (Nomadic tribes, whose main activity is cattle herding). The earliest arrival of Kanbis dates back to 1870s (from dabasiya and Hiranis). Halais and Hiranis were the earliest Kanbis to settle in Kodki and take up agriculture. The original name was Bhavanipur, named after the Maaldhari's family goddess Bhavani Maa. In 2007, the village had a population of approximately 4000 people, and a total of 600 houses.", "Koninki\n Koninki – settlement in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, situated at the south-east end of the so-called Poręba key. Administratively, part of village Poręba Wielka, Limanowa County. Koninki is a tourist centre on the border of the Gorczański National Park at the foot of the Tobołów mountain (957 m n.p.m.) fitted with a chairlift. The town is an excellent base for treks into the Gorce Mountains. A Koninka river flows through the town. Two tourist trails lead from Koninki toward the Turbacz mountain (blue and green). In winter the ski lift is used mainly by skiers reaching the Tobołów slopes, the longest ski run in the Gorce Mountains. The base station of the ski-lift is situated in the former leisure centre of the Sendzimir Steelworks from Kraków. In the 18th century the area, on which the centre is situated, called Hucisko, contained a glass factory. Koninki's biggest vacation centre is called Ostoja Górska with 200 accommodations, the ski station, and the popular chairlift to the top of Tobołów mountain. In the centre of Koninki there is a small chapel which, according to legend, stopped a cholera epidemic.", "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship\n The village of Kozki was the fictional setting for the 2010 film, The Shrine, though it was actually filmed in multiple locations in Ontario, Canada.", "Kózki, Opole Voivodeship\n Kózki in Polish and Koske in German, is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pawłowiczki, within Kędzierzyn-Koźle County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-west of Pawłowiczki, 20 km south-west of Kędzierzyn-Koźle, and 43 km south of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "Kobyłki, Lublin Voivodeship\n Kobyłki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ludwin, within Łęczna County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Ludwin, 11 km north-east of Łęczna, and 33 km north-east of the regional capital Lublin. Name of Kobyłki, the most closely can be translated as \"Mares\". In mid 1990s the area south of Kobyłki had enjoyed minor mining damage, the cause was quite close neighborhood of Bogdanka Coal Mine and its large-scale operations, and as the result the least urbanized parts of the village are planned to be sunk, seamlessly expanding an artificial lake. The area is rich in open landscapes, natural resources, including number of fish (close proximity to Nadrybie), and rare species of birds living on Pojezierze Łęczyńskie. The area has been focused on sustainable development, observing a slight decrease in the reliance on agriculture, in favor of agrotourism serving residents of near-by Łęczna, and Lublin area. The community hosts number of farmers who grow apples, strawberries, pears, currants, raspberries, gooseberries, tobacco, corn, beer hops and various other crops.", "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast\n Kozki is located 28 km northeast of Kamenka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Marki is the nearest rural locality.", "Kosky\nKoski Duże, a village in Poland ; Koski Tl, a municipality in Finland ", "Koziki, Podlaskie Voivodeship\n Koziki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Śniadowo, within Łomża County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km north-east of Śniadowo, 6 km south of Łomża, and 75 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 240.", "Kopki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship\n Nisko, and 48 km north-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.It also hosts a fire station. The closest towns that neighbour Kopki are Gmina Rudnik nad Sanem and Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship.Many parts of Kopki are covered by trees which contain wildlife such as deer, rabbits and different birds. Before the year of 1344 in Kopki there was a customs chamber at the ancient commercial course from Toruń intercepting Sandomierz, Krzeszów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, to Lviv and further to Ruś. In 1657, Prince Of The Seven- Pronouns Jerzy Rakoczy burned and completely demolished the village. In 1895, the Volunteer Fire Brigade in Kopki was created.", "Kociołki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kociołki (Kotziolken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dubeninki, within Gołdap County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "Kózki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship\n Kózki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skalbmierz, within Kazimierza County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Skalbmierz, 7 km north-west of Kazimierza Wielka, and 67 km south of the regional capital Kielce.", "Kozki, Voronezh Oblast\n Kozki (Козки) is a rural locality (a khutor) in Markovskoye Rural Settlement, Kamensky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 106 as of 2010.", "Kotki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kotki (German Krausen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Barciany, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 27.", "Koszki\n Koszki (Кошкі, Podlachian: Kôški) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orla, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Orla, 10 km south of Bielsk Podlaski, and 49 km south of the regional capital Białystok. It is in one of five Polish/Belarusian bilingual Gmina in Podlaskie Voivodeship regulated by the Act of 6 January 2005 on National and Ethnic Minorities and on the Regional Languages, which permits certain gminas with significant linguistic minorities to introduce a second, auxiliary language to be used in official contexts alongside Polish.", "Koziki, Vladimir Oblast\n Koziki (Козики) is a rural locality (a village) in Novoalexandrovskoye Rural Settlement, Suzdalsky District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 38 as of 2010. There are 9 streets.", "Koluszki\n Koluszki is a town, and a major railway junction, in central Poland, in Łódź Voivodeship, about 20 km east of Łódź with a population of 12,776 (2020). The junction in Koluszki serves trains that go from Warsaw to Łódź, Wrocław, Częstochowa and Katowice. It is also connected to Radom and Lublin by an eastbound line.", "Kózki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kózki (Kosken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Biała Piska, 19 km east of Pisz, and 107 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 90.", "Koniuszki, Podkarpackie Voivodeship\n Koniuszki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Fredropol, within Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 6 km east of Fredropol, 9 km south-east of Przemyśl, and 69 km south-east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "Korf, Russia\n Korf is connected to Tilichiki by ferry and to other neighboring locations by helicopter service. Platinum and lignite are mined in the district.", "Kotki, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship\n Kotki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Busko-Zdrój, within Busko County, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, in south-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Busko-Zdrój and 44 km south of the regional capital Kielce." ]
In what country is Javar Tan?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Javar Tan
4,650,612
40
[ { "id": "28721928", "title": "Javar Tan", "text": " Javar Tan (, also Romanized as Jāvar Tan, Javer Tan, and Jūratān; also known as Jāyartan) is a village in Dasturan Rural District, in the Central District of Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 172, in 50 families.", "score": "1.5770761" }, { "id": "7454275", "title": "Sofyan Tan", "text": " Sofyan Tan (陈金揚; peh-oe-ji: Tan Kim Yang) is an Chinese Indonesian doctor and politician from Medan. He was elected as member of the People's Representative Council in 2019 from the North Sumatran first electoral district. He was born and raised in Medan, attending Sutomo School and later studying Medicine at the Universitas Methodist Indonesia.", "score": "1.438253" }, { "id": "26414915", "title": "Tandi Dorji", "text": " Tandi Dorji (རྟ་མགྲིན་རྡོ་རྗེ་, Wylie : Rta mgrin rdo rje; born 2 September 1968) is a Bhutanese politician who has been Foreign Minister for Bhutan since November 2018. He has been a member of the National Assembly of Bhutan, since October 2018.", "score": "1.4228464" }, { "id": "13818413", "title": "Tan Lioe Ie", "text": " He was born and lives on the island of Bali. He studied architecture at the Jakarta University which he hasn't graduated. In 1996, he completed the management course at the Faculty of Economics of Udayana University (Denpasar). He works as an editor of the cultural magazines “Cak” and “Paradoks”. Participant of poetry festivals in Indonesia, Holland, France, Tasmania, Suriname, South Africa. He used to be also a guitarist of the band \"Ariesta\". A member of the literary association \"Sanggar Minum Kopi\".", "score": "1.4044812" }, { "id": "12442778", "title": "Tan Tjin Kie", "text": " Tan Tjin Kie, Majoor-titulair der Chinezen (January 25, 1853–February 13, 1919) was a high-ranking bureaucrat, courtier, sugar baron and head of the prominent Tan family of Cirebon, part of the ‘Cabang Atas’ or Chinese gentry of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). He is best remembered today for his lavish, 40-day-long funeral ceremony of 1919, reputedly the most expensive ever held in Java.", "score": "1.3987732" }, { "id": "9833957", "title": "Tan France", "text": " Tanveer Wasim \"Tan\" France (né Safdar; تنوير وسيم فرانس; born 20 April 1983) is a British-American fashion designer, television personality and author. He is one of the first openly gay South Asian men on a major show and one of the first out Muslim gay men on western television as the fashion expert for the Netflix series Queer Eye, host of the web series Dressing Funny and co-host of Next In Fashion. His memoir, Naturally Tan, was released in June 2019.", "score": "1.3962326" }, { "id": "32372212", "title": "Vincent Tan", "text": " Vincent Tan Chee Yioun (born 1952) is a Malaysian Chinese businessman and investor. He is the founder of Berjaya Corporation Berhad, a diversified conglomerate listed on the Malaysian stock exchange. Besides holding stakes through the Berjaya Corporation group of companies, Tan's other stakes include interest in internet–related businesses, water utilities, media, retail and telecommunications. In 2010, he entered the Forbes billionaire list with an estimated worth of USD 1.6 billion (RM4.2 billion). Tan's success in the Malaysian business sector has been attributed in part to his close association with prominent Malay political figures.", "score": "1.384128" }, { "id": "7636721", "title": "Buon Tan", "text": " In Parliament, Tan serves as member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. In addition to his committee assignments, he is the president of the French-Chinese Parliamentary Friendship Group. In a ranking published by Le Parisien in early 2021, Tan was ranked as one of the least active members of the National Assembly between 2017 and 2020, having participated in only 10 percent of all parliamentary votes.", "score": "1.3774612" }, { "id": "14869733", "title": "Tong Tana", "text": " Tong Tana is a 1989 Swedish documentary film about the Penan people of Sarawak, Borneo, a federal state of Malaysia, and their struggle to protect their natural environment, the Tropical rainforest of the low and hilly parts of the island and the global support they get through Swiss citizen Bruno Manser. It was made by Björn Cederberg and Kristian Petri and stars Alec Baldwin as narrator.", "score": "1.3771074" }, { "id": "26026658", "title": "May 1998 riots of Indonesia", "text": " in New Zealand. Tan founded the website in response to \"seeming indifference\" around the world and spread news of the violence to professionals and colleagues. Members then coordinated rallies at Indonesian embassies and consulates in major Pacific Rim cities. Solidarity from the international community brought about a renewed awareness of ethnic and national identity—Indonesian and Chinese—among Chinese Indonesians \"because for so long the one had been sacrificed for the other\". China's cautious response to the issue caused an uproar among human rights groups. Following protests at the Indonesian embassy in Beijing in August, Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan made a direct appeal to the Indonesian government to ensure the protection ", "score": "1.3739645" }, { "id": "16386198", "title": "Jawahir Thontowi", "text": " Jawahir Thontowi was born in West Java, on 8 September 1956. He is currently working as a lecturer in the Islamic University of Indonesia. His education background is from the Law faculty of the Islamic University of Indonesia and on 1999 graduated his PhD from the University of Western Australia concerning Legal Anthropology. He was a member of the Constitution Commission RI 2003-2004 1, and received various awards and acknowledgments. He has become a speaker in the International Human Right Conference (Custom Center for Human Rights Studies, Law School Monash University of Melbourne on December 2003)2, Delegation for International Conference on Clinical Legal Education in Cambodia, Phnom Penh on November 2005 and received a Grant ", "score": "1.371306" }, { "id": "26414840", "title": "Jenny Tan", "text": " Jenny Tan (born May 21, 1981 in Jakarta) is an Indonesian television presenter who became anchor of the news program Fokus Indosiar.", "score": "1.3695092" }, { "id": "30611609", "title": "Sezgin Tanrıkulu", "text": " Tanrıkulu is from Diyarbakır, Turkey. He attended law school in Istanbul, graduating in 1984. When he returned to Diyarbakır, he found it under emergency rule by the Turkish government and its mayor Mehdi Zana, husband of politician Leyla Zana, charged with separatism. Tanrıkulu became involved in Zana's case and soon became a full-time human rights lawyer.", "score": "1.3691151" }, { "id": "15669273", "title": "Tan Kee Kwong", "text": " Tan is born and raised in Kuala Lumpur. His father, Tan Sri Tan Chee Khoon is the founder of the Gerakan party and the former official leader of opposition between 1964 and 1978. Tan was educated in the Victoria Institution, Kuala Lumpur. A medical doctor by profession, Tan graduated from University of Malaya and worked in United Kingdom during 1977 and 1981. He then worked for two years in Southern Sudan, practising community medicine with a voluntary Christian NGO. He later returned to Malaysia and started a private clinic on Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman in Kuala Lumpur.", "score": "1.361829" }, { "id": "16421406", "title": "Üner Tan", "text": " Uner Tan (Turkish: Üner Tan) (born May 1, 1937) is a Turkish neuroscientist and evolutionary biologist. He is best known for his discovery and study of the human quadrupedal condition he named the Uner Tan syndrome. He taught at Çukurova University until his retirement in 2004 and had previously taught at several other institutions.", "score": "1.3606374" }, { "id": "6804243", "title": "Justin Tan", "text": " Tan was born and grew up in Cardiff, South Wales, United Kingdom, until the age of seven, when his family moved to Melbourne, Australia. He is a dual Australian and British citizen. Until 2013, Tan was an elite national gymnast and a member of the Australian national artistic gymnastics squad. He was the Australian Under-16 national individual apparatus champion on pommel horse in 2012. Tan graduated in law with honours from the University of Edinburgh in 2020 with a one-year Erasmus programme exchange at Utrecht University.", "score": "1.3569105" }, { "id": "12213390", "title": "Tan family of Cirebon", "text": " The Tan family of Cirebon was an influential family of government officials, sugar barons and landowners in the Dutch East Indies, particularly in the Residency of Cirebon. The preeminent and oldest family of the ‘Cabang Atas’ gentry in Cirebon all through the 19th and early 20th century, their most well-known member today is Tan Tjin Kie, Majoor-titulair der Chinezen (January 25, 1853 – February 13, 1919).", "score": "1.3557494" }, { "id": "5853253", "title": "Jáva", "text": " Jáva is a weekly newspaper published in Pristina, Kosovo by author Migjen Kelmendi. On May 9, 2006, the organization Reporters Without Borders awarded the paper its Signal for Europe Press Freedom Award for the year.", "score": "1.3537031" }, { "id": "9474275", "title": "Rajah & Tann", "text": " Rajah & Tann Singapore LLP is a law firm headquartered in Singapore, with affiliate offices in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. Founded in 1976, it is a member firm of Rajah & Tann Asia, a network of law firms in Southeast Asia with over 800 fee earners. Rajah & Tann has practices in banking, competition, corporate governance, corporate finance, dispute resolution, information technology, infrastructure, insolvency, insurance, mergers and acquisitions, shipping, telecommunications and trade. The firm is additionally known for its China, Japan and South Asia specific practice groups. Its network also includes R&T Asia Resources that procures project-specific in-house lawyers to support the firm's clients, and R&T Technologies, ", "score": "1.3524405" }, { "id": "15102271", "title": "JianHao Tan", "text": " Tan was born on 14 June 1993 in Singapore. At 8 years old, his father was posted to Cambodia by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Tan moved there with his family. He then moved to Hanoi, Vietnam and studied in United Nations International School of Hanoi until he graduated high school.", "score": "1.3496984" } ]
[ "Javar Tan\n Javar Tan (, also Romanized as Jāvar Tan, Javer Tan, and Jūratān; also known as Jāyartan) is a village in Dasturan Rural District, in the Central District of Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 172, in 50 families.", "Sofyan Tan\n Sofyan Tan (陈金揚; peh-oe-ji: Tan Kim Yang) is an Chinese Indonesian doctor and politician from Medan. He was elected as member of the People's Representative Council in 2019 from the North Sumatran first electoral district. He was born and raised in Medan, attending Sutomo School and later studying Medicine at the Universitas Methodist Indonesia.", "Tandi Dorji\n Tandi Dorji (རྟ་མགྲིན་རྡོ་རྗེ་, Wylie : Rta mgrin rdo rje; born 2 September 1968) is a Bhutanese politician who has been Foreign Minister for Bhutan since November 2018. He has been a member of the National Assembly of Bhutan, since October 2018.", "Tan Lioe Ie\n He was born and lives on the island of Bali. He studied architecture at the Jakarta University which he hasn't graduated. In 1996, he completed the management course at the Faculty of Economics of Udayana University (Denpasar). He works as an editor of the cultural magazines “Cak” and “Paradoks”. Participant of poetry festivals in Indonesia, Holland, France, Tasmania, Suriname, South Africa. He used to be also a guitarist of the band \"Ariesta\". A member of the literary association \"Sanggar Minum Kopi\".", "Tan Tjin Kie\n Tan Tjin Kie, Majoor-titulair der Chinezen (January 25, 1853–February 13, 1919) was a high-ranking bureaucrat, courtier, sugar baron and head of the prominent Tan family of Cirebon, part of the ‘Cabang Atas’ or Chinese gentry of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). He is best remembered today for his lavish, 40-day-long funeral ceremony of 1919, reputedly the most expensive ever held in Java.", "Tan France\n Tanveer Wasim \"Tan\" France (né Safdar; تنوير وسيم فرانس; born 20 April 1983) is a British-American fashion designer, television personality and author. He is one of the first openly gay South Asian men on a major show and one of the first out Muslim gay men on western television as the fashion expert for the Netflix series Queer Eye, host of the web series Dressing Funny and co-host of Next In Fashion. His memoir, Naturally Tan, was released in June 2019.", "Vincent Tan\n Vincent Tan Chee Yioun (born 1952) is a Malaysian Chinese businessman and investor. He is the founder of Berjaya Corporation Berhad, a diversified conglomerate listed on the Malaysian stock exchange. Besides holding stakes through the Berjaya Corporation group of companies, Tan's other stakes include interest in internet–related businesses, water utilities, media, retail and telecommunications. In 2010, he entered the Forbes billionaire list with an estimated worth of USD 1.6 billion (RM4.2 billion). Tan's success in the Malaysian business sector has been attributed in part to his close association with prominent Malay political figures.", "Buon Tan\n In Parliament, Tan serves as member of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. In addition to his committee assignments, he is the president of the French-Chinese Parliamentary Friendship Group. In a ranking published by Le Parisien in early 2021, Tan was ranked as one of the least active members of the National Assembly between 2017 and 2020, having participated in only 10 percent of all parliamentary votes.", "Tong Tana\n Tong Tana is a 1989 Swedish documentary film about the Penan people of Sarawak, Borneo, a federal state of Malaysia, and their struggle to protect their natural environment, the Tropical rainforest of the low and hilly parts of the island and the global support they get through Swiss citizen Bruno Manser. It was made by Björn Cederberg and Kristian Petri and stars Alec Baldwin as narrator.", "May 1998 riots of Indonesia\n in New Zealand. Tan founded the website in response to \"seeming indifference\" around the world and spread news of the violence to professionals and colleagues. Members then coordinated rallies at Indonesian embassies and consulates in major Pacific Rim cities. Solidarity from the international community brought about a renewed awareness of ethnic and national identity—Indonesian and Chinese—among Chinese Indonesians \"because for so long the one had been sacrificed for the other\". China's cautious response to the issue caused an uproar among human rights groups. Following protests at the Indonesian embassy in Beijing in August, Foreign Minister Tang Jiaxuan made a direct appeal to the Indonesian government to ensure the protection ", "Jawahir Thontowi\n Jawahir Thontowi was born in West Java, on 8 September 1956. He is currently working as a lecturer in the Islamic University of Indonesia. His education background is from the Law faculty of the Islamic University of Indonesia and on 1999 graduated his PhD from the University of Western Australia concerning Legal Anthropology. He was a member of the Constitution Commission RI 2003-2004 1, and received various awards and acknowledgments. He has become a speaker in the International Human Right Conference (Custom Center for Human Rights Studies, Law School Monash University of Melbourne on December 2003)2, Delegation for International Conference on Clinical Legal Education in Cambodia, Phnom Penh on November 2005 and received a Grant ", "Jenny Tan\n Jenny Tan (born May 21, 1981 in Jakarta) is an Indonesian television presenter who became anchor of the news program Fokus Indosiar.", "Sezgin Tanrıkulu\n Tanrıkulu is from Diyarbakır, Turkey. He attended law school in Istanbul, graduating in 1984. When he returned to Diyarbakır, he found it under emergency rule by the Turkish government and its mayor Mehdi Zana, husband of politician Leyla Zana, charged with separatism. Tanrıkulu became involved in Zana's case and soon became a full-time human rights lawyer.", "Tan Kee Kwong\n Tan is born and raised in Kuala Lumpur. His father, Tan Sri Tan Chee Khoon is the founder of the Gerakan party and the former official leader of opposition between 1964 and 1978. Tan was educated in the Victoria Institution, Kuala Lumpur. A medical doctor by profession, Tan graduated from University of Malaya and worked in United Kingdom during 1977 and 1981. He then worked for two years in Southern Sudan, practising community medicine with a voluntary Christian NGO. He later returned to Malaysia and started a private clinic on Jalan Tuanku Abdul Rahman in Kuala Lumpur.", "Üner Tan\n Uner Tan (Turkish: Üner Tan) (born May 1, 1937) is a Turkish neuroscientist and evolutionary biologist. He is best known for his discovery and study of the human quadrupedal condition he named the Uner Tan syndrome. He taught at Çukurova University until his retirement in 2004 and had previously taught at several other institutions.", "Justin Tan\n Tan was born and grew up in Cardiff, South Wales, United Kingdom, until the age of seven, when his family moved to Melbourne, Australia. He is a dual Australian and British citizen. Until 2013, Tan was an elite national gymnast and a member of the Australian national artistic gymnastics squad. He was the Australian Under-16 national individual apparatus champion on pommel horse in 2012. Tan graduated in law with honours from the University of Edinburgh in 2020 with a one-year Erasmus programme exchange at Utrecht University.", "Tan family of Cirebon\n The Tan family of Cirebon was an influential family of government officials, sugar barons and landowners in the Dutch East Indies, particularly in the Residency of Cirebon. The preeminent and oldest family of the ‘Cabang Atas’ gentry in Cirebon all through the 19th and early 20th century, their most well-known member today is Tan Tjin Kie, Majoor-titulair der Chinezen (January 25, 1853 – February 13, 1919).", "Jáva\n Jáva is a weekly newspaper published in Pristina, Kosovo by author Migjen Kelmendi. On May 9, 2006, the organization Reporters Without Borders awarded the paper its Signal for Europe Press Freedom Award for the year.", "Rajah & Tann\n Rajah & Tann Singapore LLP is a law firm headquartered in Singapore, with affiliate offices in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam. Founded in 1976, it is a member firm of Rajah & Tann Asia, a network of law firms in Southeast Asia with over 800 fee earners. Rajah & Tann has practices in banking, competition, corporate governance, corporate finance, dispute resolution, information technology, infrastructure, insolvency, insurance, mergers and acquisitions, shipping, telecommunications and trade. The firm is additionally known for its China, Japan and South Asia specific practice groups. Its network also includes R&T Asia Resources that procures project-specific in-house lawyers to support the firm's clients, and R&T Technologies, ", "JianHao Tan\n Tan was born on 14 June 1993 in Singapore. At 8 years old, his father was posted to Cambodia by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Tan moved there with his family. He then moved to Hanoi, Vietnam and studied in United Nations International School of Hanoi until he graduated high school." ]
In what country is New England?
[ "Australia", "Commonwealth of Australia", "AU", "AUS", "au", "British Colony of Australia", "🇦🇺", "Straya", "Aussieland" ]
country
Electoral district of New England
4,012,395
85
[ { "id": "29138813", "title": "New England", "text": " New England is a region comprising six states in the Northeastern United States: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. It is bordered by the state of New York to the west and by the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick to the northeast and Quebec to the north. The Atlantic Ocean is to the east and southeast, and Long Island Sound is to the southwest. Boston is New England's largest city, as well as the capital of Massachusetts. Greater Boston is the largest metropolitan area, with nearly a third of New England's population; this area includes Worcester, Massachusetts (the second-largest city in New England), Manchester, ", "score": "1.5406195" }, { "id": "26292952", "title": "Eastern United States", "text": " New England is a region of the United States located in the northeastern corner of the country, bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Canada and the state of New York, consisting of the modern states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. In one of the earliest English settlements in the New World, English Pilgrims from Europe first settled in New England in 1620, in the colony of Plymouth. In the late 18th century, the New England colonies would be among the first North American British colonies to demonstrate ambitions of independence from the British Crown. New England produced the first examples of American literature and philosophy and ", "score": "1.5278975" }, { "id": "29138817", "title": "New England", "text": " as the Connecticut River, which bisects the region from north to south. Each state is generally subdivided into small municipalities known as towns, many of which are governed by town meetings. While unincorporated areas do exist, they are limited to roughly half of Maine, along with some isolated, sparsely populated northern regions of New Hampshire and Vermont. New England is one of the U.S. Census Bureau's nine regional divisions and the only multi-state region with clear, consistent boundaries. It maintains a strong sense of cultural identity, although the terms of this identity are often contrasted, combining Puritanism with liberalism, agrarian life with industry, and isolation with immigration.", "score": "1.4474703" }, { "id": "29138850", "title": "New England", "text": " in the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The combined population density of these states is 786.83/sq mi, compared to northern New England's 63.56/sq mi (2000 census). According to the 2006–08 American Community Survey, 48.7% of New Englanders were male and 51.3% were female. Approximately 22.4% of the population were under 18 years of age; 13.5% were over 65 years of age. The six states of New England have the lowest birth rate in the U.S. White Americans make up the majority of New England's population at 83.4% of the total population, Hispanic and Latino Americans are New England's largest minority, and they are the second-largest group ", "score": "1.4465718" }, { "id": "28448254", "title": "Culture of New England", "text": " exists between urban, mobile New Englanders living along the densely populated coastline, and in much of Connecticut, and rural New Englanders in western Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, where population density is low. The creative economy also plays an important role in the larger economy of New England. In 2002, there were nearly 275,000 workers in the region engaged in cultural enterprises, with nearly half in Massachusetts alone. As a percentage of the workforce compared to other US states, Massachusetts ranks first for architects, Connecticut ranks third for producers and directors, Maine ranks fourth for visual artists, New Hampshire ranks eleventh for writers, Rhode Island ranks first for photographers, and Vermont ranks third for visual artists, announcers, and writers.", "score": "1.4148738" }, { "id": "29416447", "title": "Demographics of New England", "text": " for the most part, its historical population layout. New England's coast is dotted with urban centers, such as Portland, Portsmouth, Boston, New Bedford, Fall River, Providence, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Stamford, as well as smaller cities such as Newburyport, Gloucester, Biddeford, Bath, Rockland, Newport, Westerly, and the small twin cities of Groton and New London in Connecticut. Southern New England forms an integral part of the BosWash megalopolis, a conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston to Washington, D.C. The region includes three of the four most densely populated states in the U.S.; only New Jersey has a higher population density than the states ", "score": "1.3970355" }, { "id": "14406817", "title": "List of place names of Native American origin in New England", "text": " The region of New England in the United States has numerous place names derived from the indigenous peoples of the area. New England is in the Northeastern United States, and comprises six states: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Listed are well-known names of towns, significant bodies of water, and mountains. This list can virtually never be sufficiently completed as there are hundreds of thousands of place names in New England.", "score": "1.3793323" }, { "id": "8712042", "title": "Geology of New England", "text": " New England is a region in the North Eastern United States consisting of the states Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. Most of New England consists geologically of volcanic island arcs that accreted onto the eastern edge of the Laurentian Craton in prehistoric times. Much of the bedrock found in New England is heavily metamorphosed due to the numerous mountain building events that occurred in the region. These events culminated in the formation of Pangaea; the coastline as it exists today was created by rifting during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. The most recent rock layers are glacial conglomerates.", "score": "1.3751917" }, { "id": "28214897", "title": "Economy of New England", "text": " Agriculture is limited by the area's rocky soil, cool climate, and small area. Some New England states, however, are ranked highly among U.S. states for particular areas of production. Maine is ranked ninth for aquaculture, and has abundant potato fields in its northeast part. Vermont is fifteenth for dairy products, and Connecticut and Massachusetts seventh and eleventh for tobacco, respectively. Cranberries are grown in Massachusetts' Cape Cod-Plymouth-South Shore area, and blueberries in Maine.", "score": "1.3740366" }, { "id": "29138854", "title": "New England", "text": " Latin America, 28.6% were born in Asia, 22.9% were born in Europe, and 8.5% were born in Africa. Southern New England forms an integral part of the BosWash megalopolis, a conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston to Washington, D.C. The region includes three of the four most densely populated states in the U.S.; only New Jersey has a higher population density than the states of Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. Greater Boston, which includes parts of southern New Hampshire, has a total population of approximately 4.8 million, while over half the population of New England falls inside Boston's Combined Statistical Area of over 8.2 million.", "score": "1.3732395" }, { "id": "1567108", "title": "American cuisine", "text": " New England is a Northeastern region of the United States bordering the Maritime Provinces of Canada and portions of Quebec in the north. It includes the six states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, with its largest city and cultural capital Boston, founded in 1630. Native American cuisine became part of the cookery style that the early colonists brought with them. Tribes like the Nipmuck, Wampanoag, Passamaquoddy and other Algonquian cultures were noted for slashing and burning areas to create meadows and bogs that would attract animals like moose and deer, but also encourage the growth of plants like black ", "score": "1.3681111" }, { "id": "29416450", "title": "Demographics of New England", "text": " The six states of New England ranked within the top thirteen \"healthiest states\" of the U.S. in 2007. In 2008, they all placed within the top eleven states. New England also had the largest proportion of its population covered by health insurance. For 2006, four states in the region, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, joined 12 others nationwide, where the number of deaths caused by drugs had overtaken traffic fatalities. This was due in part to declining traffic fatalities, and in part to increased deaths caused by prescription drugs. Data from 2008 comparing national obesity rates by state, four of the six lowest obesity states were Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and Rhode Island. ", "score": "1.3679397" }, { "id": "29416445", "title": "Demographics of New England", "text": " the majority (54.4%) were naturalized citizens of the U.S. The six states of New England have the lowest birth rate in the U.S. In 2018, the New England population of 14.85 million was roughly an 80% increase from its 1930 population of 8.2 million. The region's average population density is 236.9 inhabitants/sq mi (91.5/km2), although a great disparity exists between its northern and southern portions. The population density is much greater than that of the U.S. as a whole (86.2/sq mi) or even just the contiguous 48 states (108.6/sq mi). Three-quarters of the population of New England, and most of the major cities, are in ", "score": "1.3662977" }, { "id": "29138860", "title": "New England", "text": " Agriculture is limited by the area's rocky soil, cool climate, and small area. Some New England states, however, are ranked highly among U.S. states for particular areas of production. Maine is ranked ninth for aquaculture, and has abundant potato fields in its northeast part. Vermont is fifteenth for dairy products, and Connecticut and Massachusetts seventh and eleventh for tobacco, respectively. Cranberries are grown in Massachusetts' Cape Cod-Plymouth-South Shore area, and blueberries in Maine.", "score": "1.3610795" }, { "id": "29138849", "title": "New England", "text": " In 2020, New England had a population of 15,116,205, a growth of 4.6% from 2010. Massachusetts is the most populous state with 7,029,917 residents, while Vermont is the least populous state with 643,077 residents. Boston is by far the region's most populous city and metropolitan area. Although a great disparity exists between New England's northern and southern portions, the region's average population density is 234.93 inhabitants/sq mi (90.7/km2). New England has a significantly higher population density than that of the U.S. as a whole (79.56/sq mi), or even just the contiguous 48 states (94.48/sq mi). Three-quarters of the population of New England, and most of the major cities, ", "score": "1.3604544" }, { "id": "8333116", "title": "New England Colonies", "text": " The New England Colonies of British America included Connecticut Colony, the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, and the Province of New Hampshire, as well as a few smaller short-lived colonies. The New England colonies were part of the Thirteen Colonies and eventually became five of the six states in New England, with Plymouth Colony absorbed into Massachusetts and Maine separating from it. Captain John Smith's 1616 work A Description of New England first applied the term \"New England\" to the coastal lands from Long Island Sound to Newfoundland.", "score": "1.3601663" }, { "id": "29416446", "title": "Demographics of New England", "text": " states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Their combined population density is 839.7/sq mi, compared to northern New England's 67.1/sq mi (2018 estimates). The most populous state is Massachusetts, and the most populous city is Massachusetts' political and cultural capital, Boston. The coastline is more urban than the western parts of the region, which are typically rural, even in urban states like Massachusetts. This is due mainly to historical factors; the original colonists settled mostly near the coastline of Massachusetts Bay. The only New England state without access to the Atlantic Ocean, Vermont, is also the least urbanized. After nearly 400 years, the region still ", "score": "1.3580582" }, { "id": "29416433", "title": "Demographics of New England", "text": " New Englanders are the inhabitants of the New England region in the Northeastern United States. Beginning with the New England Colonies, the name \"New Englander\" refers to those whose ancestors have lived in the six New England states for at least five generations. Originally inhabited by Algonquin American Indians, including tribes Abenakis, Mi'kmaq, Penobscot, Pequots, Mohegans, Narragansetts, Pocumtucks, and Wampanoag. The region was first settled by European colonists from the Mayflower as part of the Plymouth Company in 1620. The region has seen many different waves of immigration since 1620, creating a unique and diverse culture. New Englanders have played a prominent role in the colonial and modern history of the United States, from political dynasties to influential artists and writers. Famous for their distinct dialect and attitude, New Englanders hold a strong regional identity and a distinct history and culture within the United States.", "score": "1.355597" }, { "id": "29138880", "title": "New England", "text": " Many of the first European colonists of New England had a maritime orientation toward whaling (first noted about 1650) and fishing, in addition to farming. New England has developed a distinct cuisine, dialect, architecture, and government. New England cuisine has a reputation for its emphasis on seafood and dairy; clam chowder, lobster, and other products of the sea are among some of the region's most popular foods. New England has largely preserved its regional character, especially in its historic places. The region has become more ethnically diverse, having seen waves of immigration from Ireland, Quebec, Italy, Portugal, Germany, Poland, Scandinavia, Asia, Latin America, Africa, other parts of the U.S., and elsewhere. The enduring European influence can be seen in the region in the use of traffic rotaries, the bilingual French and English towns of northern Vermont, ", "score": "1.3539708" }, { "id": "29138828", "title": "New England", "text": " part of Massachusetts, but it was granted statehood on March 15, 1820, as part of the Missouri Compromise. Today, New England is defined as the six states of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. New England's economic growth relied heavily on trade with the British Empire, and the region's merchants and politicians strongly opposed trade restrictions. As the United States and the United Kingdom fought the War of 1812, New England Federalists organized the Hartford Convention in the winter of 1814 to discuss the region's grievances concerning the war, and to propose changes to the U.S. constitution to protect the region's interests and maintain its political power. Radical delegates within the convention proposed ", "score": "1.3530054" } ]
[ "New England\n New England is a region comprising six states in the Northeastern United States: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. It is bordered by the state of New York to the west and by the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick to the northeast and Quebec to the north. The Atlantic Ocean is to the east and southeast, and Long Island Sound is to the southwest. Boston is New England's largest city, as well as the capital of Massachusetts. Greater Boston is the largest metropolitan area, with nearly a third of New England's population; this area includes Worcester, Massachusetts (the second-largest city in New England), Manchester, ", "Eastern United States\n New England is a region of the United States located in the northeastern corner of the country, bounded by the Atlantic Ocean, Canada and the state of New York, consisting of the modern states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. In one of the earliest English settlements in the New World, English Pilgrims from Europe first settled in New England in 1620, in the colony of Plymouth. In the late 18th century, the New England colonies would be among the first North American British colonies to demonstrate ambitions of independence from the British Crown. New England produced the first examples of American literature and philosophy and ", "New England\n as the Connecticut River, which bisects the region from north to south. Each state is generally subdivided into small municipalities known as towns, many of which are governed by town meetings. While unincorporated areas do exist, they are limited to roughly half of Maine, along with some isolated, sparsely populated northern regions of New Hampshire and Vermont. New England is one of the U.S. Census Bureau's nine regional divisions and the only multi-state region with clear, consistent boundaries. It maintains a strong sense of cultural identity, although the terms of this identity are often contrasted, combining Puritanism with liberalism, agrarian life with industry, and isolation with immigration.", "New England\n in the states of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The combined population density of these states is 786.83/sq mi, compared to northern New England's 63.56/sq mi (2000 census). According to the 2006–08 American Community Survey, 48.7% of New Englanders were male and 51.3% were female. Approximately 22.4% of the population were under 18 years of age; 13.5% were over 65 years of age. The six states of New England have the lowest birth rate in the U.S. White Americans make up the majority of New England's population at 83.4% of the total population, Hispanic and Latino Americans are New England's largest minority, and they are the second-largest group ", "Culture of New England\n exists between urban, mobile New Englanders living along the densely populated coastline, and in much of Connecticut, and rural New Englanders in western Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine, where population density is low. The creative economy also plays an important role in the larger economy of New England. In 2002, there were nearly 275,000 workers in the region engaged in cultural enterprises, with nearly half in Massachusetts alone. As a percentage of the workforce compared to other US states, Massachusetts ranks first for architects, Connecticut ranks third for producers and directors, Maine ranks fourth for visual artists, New Hampshire ranks eleventh for writers, Rhode Island ranks first for photographers, and Vermont ranks third for visual artists, announcers, and writers.", "Demographics of New England\n for the most part, its historical population layout. New England's coast is dotted with urban centers, such as Portland, Portsmouth, Boston, New Bedford, Fall River, Providence, New Haven, Bridgeport, and Stamford, as well as smaller cities such as Newburyport, Gloucester, Biddeford, Bath, Rockland, Newport, Westerly, and the small twin cities of Groton and New London in Connecticut. Southern New England forms an integral part of the BosWash megalopolis, a conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston to Washington, D.C. The region includes three of the four most densely populated states in the U.S.; only New Jersey has a higher population density than the states ", "List of place names of Native American origin in New England\n The region of New England in the United States has numerous place names derived from the indigenous peoples of the area. New England is in the Northeastern United States, and comprises six states: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Listed are well-known names of towns, significant bodies of water, and mountains. This list can virtually never be sufficiently completed as there are hundreds of thousands of place names in New England.", "Geology of New England\n New England is a region in the North Eastern United States consisting of the states Rhode Island, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. Most of New England consists geologically of volcanic island arcs that accreted onto the eastern edge of the Laurentian Craton in prehistoric times. Much of the bedrock found in New England is heavily metamorphosed due to the numerous mountain building events that occurred in the region. These events culminated in the formation of Pangaea; the coastline as it exists today was created by rifting during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. The most recent rock layers are glacial conglomerates.", "Economy of New England\n Agriculture is limited by the area's rocky soil, cool climate, and small area. Some New England states, however, are ranked highly among U.S. states for particular areas of production. Maine is ranked ninth for aquaculture, and has abundant potato fields in its northeast part. Vermont is fifteenth for dairy products, and Connecticut and Massachusetts seventh and eleventh for tobacco, respectively. Cranberries are grown in Massachusetts' Cape Cod-Plymouth-South Shore area, and blueberries in Maine.", "New England\n Latin America, 28.6% were born in Asia, 22.9% were born in Europe, and 8.5% were born in Africa. Southern New England forms an integral part of the BosWash megalopolis, a conglomeration of urban centers that spans from Boston to Washington, D.C. The region includes three of the four most densely populated states in the U.S.; only New Jersey has a higher population density than the states of Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. Greater Boston, which includes parts of southern New Hampshire, has a total population of approximately 4.8 million, while over half the population of New England falls inside Boston's Combined Statistical Area of over 8.2 million.", "American cuisine\n New England is a Northeastern region of the United States bordering the Maritime Provinces of Canada and portions of Quebec in the north. It includes the six states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, with its largest city and cultural capital Boston, founded in 1630. Native American cuisine became part of the cookery style that the early colonists brought with them. Tribes like the Nipmuck, Wampanoag, Passamaquoddy and other Algonquian cultures were noted for slashing and burning areas to create meadows and bogs that would attract animals like moose and deer, but also encourage the growth of plants like black ", "Demographics of New England\n The six states of New England ranked within the top thirteen \"healthiest states\" of the U.S. in 2007. In 2008, they all placed within the top eleven states. New England also had the largest proportion of its population covered by health insurance. For 2006, four states in the region, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Connecticut, joined 12 others nationwide, where the number of deaths caused by drugs had overtaken traffic fatalities. This was due in part to declining traffic fatalities, and in part to increased deaths caused by prescription drugs. Data from 2008 comparing national obesity rates by state, four of the six lowest obesity states were Connecticut, Massachusetts, Vermont and Rhode Island. ", "Demographics of New England\n the majority (54.4%) were naturalized citizens of the U.S. The six states of New England have the lowest birth rate in the U.S. In 2018, the New England population of 14.85 million was roughly an 80% increase from its 1930 population of 8.2 million. The region's average population density is 236.9 inhabitants/sq mi (91.5/km2), although a great disparity exists between its northern and southern portions. The population density is much greater than that of the U.S. as a whole (86.2/sq mi) or even just the contiguous 48 states (108.6/sq mi). Three-quarters of the population of New England, and most of the major cities, are in ", "New England\n Agriculture is limited by the area's rocky soil, cool climate, and small area. Some New England states, however, are ranked highly among U.S. states for particular areas of production. Maine is ranked ninth for aquaculture, and has abundant potato fields in its northeast part. Vermont is fifteenth for dairy products, and Connecticut and Massachusetts seventh and eleventh for tobacco, respectively. Cranberries are grown in Massachusetts' Cape Cod-Plymouth-South Shore area, and blueberries in Maine.", "New England\n In 2020, New England had a population of 15,116,205, a growth of 4.6% from 2010. Massachusetts is the most populous state with 7,029,917 residents, while Vermont is the least populous state with 643,077 residents. Boston is by far the region's most populous city and metropolitan area. Although a great disparity exists between New England's northern and southern portions, the region's average population density is 234.93 inhabitants/sq mi (90.7/km2). New England has a significantly higher population density than that of the U.S. as a whole (79.56/sq mi), or even just the contiguous 48 states (94.48/sq mi). Three-quarters of the population of New England, and most of the major cities, ", "New England Colonies\n The New England Colonies of British America included Connecticut Colony, the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Massachusetts Bay Colony, Plymouth Colony, and the Province of New Hampshire, as well as a few smaller short-lived colonies. The New England colonies were part of the Thirteen Colonies and eventually became five of the six states in New England, with Plymouth Colony absorbed into Massachusetts and Maine separating from it. Captain John Smith's 1616 work A Description of New England first applied the term \"New England\" to the coastal lands from Long Island Sound to Newfoundland.", "Demographics of New England\n states of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Their combined population density is 839.7/sq mi, compared to northern New England's 67.1/sq mi (2018 estimates). The most populous state is Massachusetts, and the most populous city is Massachusetts' political and cultural capital, Boston. The coastline is more urban than the western parts of the region, which are typically rural, even in urban states like Massachusetts. This is due mainly to historical factors; the original colonists settled mostly near the coastline of Massachusetts Bay. The only New England state without access to the Atlantic Ocean, Vermont, is also the least urbanized. After nearly 400 years, the region still ", "Demographics of New England\n New Englanders are the inhabitants of the New England region in the Northeastern United States. Beginning with the New England Colonies, the name \"New Englander\" refers to those whose ancestors have lived in the six New England states for at least five generations. Originally inhabited by Algonquin American Indians, including tribes Abenakis, Mi'kmaq, Penobscot, Pequots, Mohegans, Narragansetts, Pocumtucks, and Wampanoag. The region was first settled by European colonists from the Mayflower as part of the Plymouth Company in 1620. The region has seen many different waves of immigration since 1620, creating a unique and diverse culture. New Englanders have played a prominent role in the colonial and modern history of the United States, from political dynasties to influential artists and writers. Famous for their distinct dialect and attitude, New Englanders hold a strong regional identity and a distinct history and culture within the United States.", "New England\n Many of the first European colonists of New England had a maritime orientation toward whaling (first noted about 1650) and fishing, in addition to farming. New England has developed a distinct cuisine, dialect, architecture, and government. New England cuisine has a reputation for its emphasis on seafood and dairy; clam chowder, lobster, and other products of the sea are among some of the region's most popular foods. New England has largely preserved its regional character, especially in its historic places. The region has become more ethnically diverse, having seen waves of immigration from Ireland, Quebec, Italy, Portugal, Germany, Poland, Scandinavia, Asia, Latin America, Africa, other parts of the U.S., and elsewhere. The enduring European influence can be seen in the region in the use of traffic rotaries, the bilingual French and English towns of northern Vermont, ", "New England\n part of Massachusetts, but it was granted statehood on March 15, 1820, as part of the Missouri Compromise. Today, New England is defined as the six states of Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. New England's economic growth relied heavily on trade with the British Empire, and the region's merchants and politicians strongly opposed trade restrictions. As the United States and the United Kingdom fought the War of 1812, New England Federalists organized the Hartford Convention in the winter of 1814 to discuss the region's grievances concerning the war, and to propose changes to the U.S. constitution to protect the region's interests and maintain its political power. Radical delegates within the convention proposed " ]
In what country is Kowale, Lower Silesian Voivodeship?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Kowale, Lower Silesian Voivodeship
4,883,237
20
[ { "id": "11512821", "title": "Kowale, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowale (Kawallen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Oborniki Śląskie, within Trzebnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "score": "1.9094164" }, { "id": "16491921", "title": "Kowale, Częstochowa County", "text": " Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Konopiska, within Częstochowa County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 14 km south-west of Częstochowa and 51 km north of the regional capital Katowice. The village has a population of 129.", "score": "1.7915113" }, { "id": "9419859", "title": "Kowalów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wiązów, within Strzelin County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 7 km south of Wiązów, 12 km east of Strzelin, and 43 km south of the regional capital Wrocław.", "score": "1.7862633" }, { "id": "13851537", "title": "Kowalowa, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalowa (Schmidtsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Mieroszów, within Wałbrzych County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 2 km east of Mieroszów, 14 km south of Wałbrzych, and 78 km south-west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "score": "1.7553847" }, { "id": "12157466", "title": "Kowalowo", "text": " Kowalowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wąsosz, within Góra County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "score": "1.6933489" }, { "id": "28801057", "title": "Kowale, Opole Voivodeship", "text": " Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Praszka, within Olesno County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Praszka, 24 km north of Olesno, and 61 km north-east of the regional capital Opole.", "score": "1.6496358" }, { "id": "26683557", "title": "Kowalewo, Lubusz Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalewo (German: Kabel) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szlichtyngowa, within Wschowa County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Szlichtyngowa, 8 km south of Wschowa, and 61 km east of Zielona Góra.", "score": "1.5910895" }, { "id": "28720716", "title": "Kowalowice", "text": " Kowalowice (German Kaulwitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Namysłów, within Namysłów County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Namysłów and 54 km north of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "score": "1.5833429" }, { "id": "32861890", "title": "Kowale, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowale (Schönsee) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pieniężno, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km east of Pieniężno, 32 km south-east of Braniewo, and 54 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "score": "1.5826135" }, { "id": "9163887", "title": "Kowalskie, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalskie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kondratowice, within Strzelin County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "score": "1.5751145" }, { "id": "32175790", "title": "Kowale, Kwidzyn County", "text": " Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Prabuty, within Kwidzyn County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 40.", "score": "1.5747197" }, { "id": "280210", "title": "Kowalewo Małe", "text": " Kowalewo Małe (Wotterkeim) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Korsze, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Korsze, 24 km west of Kętrzyn, and 55 km north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The settlement has a population of 10.", "score": "1.5721511" }, { "id": "11889400", "title": "Kowale, Łódź Voivodeship", "text": " Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sieradz, within Sieradz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km north-west of Sieradz and 58 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.5711377" }, { "id": "588410", "title": "Kowale Oleckie", "text": " Kowale Oleckie (Kowahlen, from 1938-45 Reimannswalde) is a village in Olecko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kowale Oleckie. It lies approximately 16 km north of Olecko and 133 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 2,400.", "score": "1.568737" }, { "id": "14413843", "title": "Kobyla Głowa, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Kobyla Głowa (Kobelau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ciepłowody, within Ząbkowice Śląskie County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Ciepłowody, 9 km north-east of Ząbkowice Śląskie, and 54 km south of the regional capital Wrocław.", "score": "1.5670117" }, { "id": "11283080", "title": "Chwalęcin, Lower Silesian Voivodeship", "text": " Chwalęcin (Quanzendorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Niemcza, within Dzierżoniów County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Niemcza, 24 km east of Dzierżoniów, and 43 km south of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has a population of 70.", "score": "1.5597029" }, { "id": "3283934", "title": "Kowalówka, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Andrzejewo, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Andrzejewo, 14 km east of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 100 km north-east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 170.", "score": "1.5538557" }, { "id": "1439766", "title": "Kowalewo, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Kowalewo (Richtwalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south of Biała Piska, 20 km south-east of Pisz, and 108 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 220.", "score": "1.5500556" }, { "id": "32800466", "title": "Kowal (town)", "text": " Kowal is a town in Włocławek County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, with 3,478 inhabitants (2004). The town is located on Poland's most important north-south highway, National Road 1 (DK1). The town bypass for this road was opened in December, 2007, allowing heavy traffic to avoid the town center. The A1 motorway passes just to the northeast of the town. Its local association football team is Kujawiak Kowal.", "score": "1.5480182" }, { "id": "26759872", "title": "Kowalice", "text": " Kowalice (Nikolschmiede is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Iłowa, within Żagań County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-east of Iłowa, 16 km south-west of Żagań, and 54 km south of Zielona Góra. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "score": "1.542372" } ]
[ "Kowale, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Kowale (Kawallen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Oborniki Śląskie, within Trzebnica County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "Kowale, Częstochowa County\n Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Konopiska, within Częstochowa County, Silesian Voivodeship, in southern Poland. It lies approximately 14 km south-west of Częstochowa and 51 km north of the regional capital Katowice. The village has a population of 129.", "Kowalów, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Kowalów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wiązów, within Strzelin County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 7 km south of Wiązów, 12 km east of Strzelin, and 43 km south of the regional capital Wrocław.", "Kowalowa, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Kowalowa (Schmidtsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Mieroszów, within Wałbrzych County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 2 km east of Mieroszów, 14 km south of Wałbrzych, and 78 km south-west of the regional capital Wrocław.", "Kowalowo\n Kowalowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wąsosz, within Góra County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "Kowale, Opole Voivodeship\n Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Praszka, within Olesno County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Praszka, 24 km north of Olesno, and 61 km north-east of the regional capital Opole.", "Kowalewo, Lubusz Voivodeship\n Kowalewo (German: Kabel) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szlichtyngowa, within Wschowa County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 5 km east of Szlichtyngowa, 8 km south of Wschowa, and 61 km east of Zielona Góra.", "Kowalowice\n Kowalowice (German Kaulwitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Namysłów, within Namysłów County, Opole Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Namysłów and 54 km north of the regional capital Opole. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II).", "Kowale, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kowale (Schönsee) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pieniężno, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 11 km east of Pieniężno, 32 km south-east of Braniewo, and 54 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "Kowalskie, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Kowalskie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kondratowice, within Strzelin County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany.", "Kowale, Kwidzyn County\n Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Prabuty, within Kwidzyn County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 40.", "Kowalewo Małe\n Kowalewo Małe (Wotterkeim) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Korsze, within Kętrzyn County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Korsze, 24 km west of Kętrzyn, and 55 km north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The settlement has a population of 10.", "Kowale, Łódź Voivodeship\n Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sieradz, within Sieradz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km north-west of Sieradz and 58 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Kowale Oleckie\n Kowale Oleckie (Kowahlen, from 1938-45 Reimannswalde) is a village in Olecko County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Kowale Oleckie. It lies approximately 16 km north of Olecko and 133 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 2,400.", "Kobyla Głowa, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Kobyla Głowa (Kobelau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ciepłowody, within Ząbkowice Śląskie County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. Prior to 1945 it was in Germany. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Ciepłowody, 9 km north-east of Ząbkowice Śląskie, and 54 km south of the regional capital Wrocław.", "Chwalęcin, Lower Silesian Voivodeship\n Chwalęcin (Quanzendorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Niemcza, within Dzierżoniów County, Lower Silesian Voivodeship, in south-western Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Niemcza, 24 km east of Dzierżoniów, and 43 km south of the regional capital Wrocław. The village has a population of 70.", "Kowalówka, Masovian Voivodeship\n Kowalówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Andrzejewo, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Andrzejewo, 14 km east of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 100 km north-east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 170.", "Kowalewo, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Kowalewo (Richtwalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south of Biała Piska, 20 km south-east of Pisz, and 108 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 220.", "Kowal (town)\n Kowal is a town in Włocławek County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, with 3,478 inhabitants (2004). The town is located on Poland's most important north-south highway, National Road 1 (DK1). The town bypass for this road was opened in December, 2007, allowing heavy traffic to avoid the town center. The A1 motorway passes just to the northeast of the town. Its local association football team is Kujawiak Kowal.", "Kowalice\n Kowalice (Nikolschmiede is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Iłowa, within Żagań County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-east of Iłowa, 16 km south-west of Żagań, and 54 km south of Zielona Góra. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (see Territorial changes of Poland after World War II)." ]
In what country is Obeakpu?
[ "Nigeria", "Federal Republic of Nigeria", "🇳🇬", "NG", "FRN", "NGA", "NGR", "Naija" ]
country
Obeakpu
1,098,833
53
[ { "id": "29782630", "title": "Obeakpu", "text": " Obeakpu is a small village in Umuaka, Njaba, Imo State, Nigeria. Obeakpu is located at 5.69933°N, -7.031°W. The village of Amakor (now an autonomous community) is located to the east. Umele village is nearby in the west. The southern part of Obeakpu borders Ibele (now also an autonomous community). The Njaba River borders the village to the north.", "score": "1.8847733" }, { "id": "14190004", "title": "Oladipupo Olatunde Adebutu", "text": " Oladipupo Olatunde Adebutu was born on 25 February 1962 in Lagos, Nigeria. In 1964, he began his primary education at the International Day Nursery school, Yaba and went on to further his education at St. Saviours Primary School, Oke-Ira, Ebute-Metta and Igbobi College where he obtained his West African School Certificate in 1978. Adebutu completed his educational career in Ireland where he obtained an Irish Leaving Certificate in 1980 and an Irish National Certificate in 1983. In 1984, he obtained an Irish National Diploma in Analytical Chemistry. Adebutu returned to Nigeria in 1987 to serve his country under the National Youth Service Corps Scheme in Biu, Borno State. Despite his wealth, Adebutu lives in Iperu with his family, having all his assets in Ogun State without any traces of financial crimes. He is perceived by many as a grassroot politician and businessman.", "score": "1.4187684" }, { "id": "12825548", "title": "Edikor Eyokpu", "text": " Edikor Eyokpu is an Oron Village in Udung Uko local government area of Akwa Ibom state in Nigeria.", "score": "1.4100378" }, { "id": "14011157", "title": "Yupun Abeykoon", "text": " He was born in Negombo, Western Province near Pannala. He pursued his primary education at the Pannala National School. He also pursued his interest in track and field events while studying at the Pannala National School. He later switched to the St. Joseph Vaz College, Wennepuwa at the age of 16 with the recommendation of his personal coach. He also follows MotoGP.", "score": "1.4045573" }, { "id": "6910786", "title": "Atapupu", "text": " Atapupu is a port town in the Indonesian part of Timor Island (West Timor, in Kakuluk Mesak District of Belu Regency in East Nusa Tenggara Province. It is located on the northernmost part of West Timor, close to the border with East Timor.", "score": "1.3724432" }, { "id": "12825479", "title": "Eyokpu", "text": " Eyokpu is an Oron Village in Udung Uko local government area of Akwa Ibom state in Nigeria.", "score": "1.3719096" }, { "id": "27372464", "title": "Aapua", "text": " Aapua is a village in the county of Norrbotten in Sweden. The village is situated in Övertorneå Municipality, 60 km from Pajala, and in 2000 the village had 137 inhabitants. To the south there is a lake, Aapuajärvi. In 2005 seven wind turbines were built on the mountain Etu-Aapua, which is nearby. These wind turbines are considered to be the most effective in Sweden.", "score": "1.3681493" }, { "id": "27737595", "title": "Jacob Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey", "text": " Ghana in 1974 and thereafter worked on a number of programmes for the company and others in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Kenya. From 1984 to 1999, he worked with the World Health Organization (WHO). Obetsebi-Lamptey was the Plenary Speaker at the World Summit on AIDS, London, and Second International Symposium on the disease in Yaoundé, Cameroon. He is a past president of the Advertising Association of Ghana, and has several publications to his credit, covering topics from family planning to AIDS prevention in Africa. From 2005 to July 2007, Obetsebi-Lamptey served as Minister of Tourism and Diasporan Relations in the cabinet of President John Kufuor. Previously Obetsebi-Lamptey was ", "score": "1.3675303" }, { "id": "28220908", "title": "Chris Obekpa", "text": " Christopher Ewaoche Obekpa (born 14 November 1993) is a Nigerian professional basketball player. He played college basketball for St. John's University in Jamaica, New York from 2012 to 2015. As a freshman in 2012–13 he led NCAA Division I in blocks per game with a 4.03 average. After three years at St. John's, Obekpa transferred to UNLV, redshirted 2015–16, but then declared for the 2016 NBA draft. On 23 April 2016, Obekpa hired an agent, which officially prohibited him from finishing his college career.", "score": "1.359161" }, { "id": "3112962", "title": "Parjok", "text": " Australia` State Governments. Agola Kapuk North America has successfully had its first Conference in Nashville, Tennessee in 2016. There is always After-Conference Party where people from all works of life are invited to attend and or participate in. Activities that take place in the After-Conference Party are Acholi traditional and contemporary music, African and western music extravaganza, free drinks and foods, catching up with mates, speeches from community and church leaders, games and fun. We are so grateful to our women and the youth for always volunteering themselves to make the events run smoothly, not forgetting participants who facilitate the discussions.", "score": "1.3554573" }, { "id": "27737596", "title": "Jacob Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey", "text": " of Tourism and Modernization of the Capital (2002–05) and Minister of Information (2001–02). He was the National Campaign Manager of the victorious New Patriotic Party (NPP) during the 2000 Presidential elections, which saw the first constitutional (civilian-to-civilian) transition of power in that country. He resigned his posts in July 2007 to campaign for the NPP nomination for the 2008 Presidential elections. As of February 2010, he was the National Chairman of the NPP. Obetsebi-Lamptey died at a hospital in London on 20 March 2016 at the age of 70. He had been suffering from leukemia and in December had received treatment in South Africa after becoming unwell.", "score": "1.3302464" }, { "id": "6568282", "title": "Alampu", "text": " Alampu (आलाम्पु) is a village development committee in Dolakha District in the Janakpur Zone of north-eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 3,392 people living in 739 individual households.", "score": "1.3235431" }, { "id": "27888477", "title": "Ikot Ikpuho", "text": " Ikot Ikpuho is a village in Etinan local government area of Akwa Ibom State.", "score": "1.3208323" }, { "id": "14442134", "title": "Pelelu Tepu", "text": " Pelelu Tepu is an Amerindian village in the interior of Suriname. Also known as \"Pe'reru Tepu\", the village is typically referred to simply as \"Tepu,\" which mean \"high\" in the Indian Tiriyó language. The village is located on Tepu hill, on the Tapanahoni River. Though inhabited by Amerindian tribes indigenous to the area, the village was created by Christian missionaries and (primarily) Tiriyó Indians, though it now also includes small numbers of Wayana and Akuriyo Indians. The village has a tribal organization, led by a Trio Captain. Pelelu Tepu has a school, and electricity, however there is often no fuel to run the diesel generators. Pelelu Tepu is home to a Medische Zending healthcare centre.", "score": "1.317022" }, { "id": "4669154", "title": "Yupukari", "text": " Yupukari (also: Eupukari ) is an indigenous village of Macushi and Wapishana Amerindians in the Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo Region of Guyana. It is located between the Kanuku and Pakaraima Mountains along the Rupununi River.", "score": "1.3159558" }, { "id": "32612344", "title": "Ntak Ibesit", "text": " Ntak Ibesit is a densely populated rural town in Akwa Ibom State of Nigeria. The town was noted for production and trade in palm oil and kernel. In recognition of its strategic importance, the Colonial administration established a river port at Ekpene Okpo, with a colonial court. The court is still in operation today. One of the distinguishing features of Ntak Ibesitt is the network of colonial roads. There is a road linking Ikot Okoro, Mbon Ebre, Ukpom and Ekparakwa- all neighbouring towns and villages. A very popular market in Ntak Ibesit is Urua Ekenyong Obom, which is centrally located to serve Ukpom Edem Inyang, Mbon Ebre, Ediene Ikot Ebom. The road linking Ikot Afanga town and Ntak Ibesit was named after a man called Udo Anwa-the Man Leopard. He was a ", "score": "1.315027" }, { "id": "13230825", "title": "Olatubosun Oladapo", "text": " Ọlátúbọ̀sún Oládàpọ̀, also known as Túbọ́sún Ọládàpọ̀, or Odídẹrẹ́ Ayékòótọ́ – \"the loquacious parrot\" (born 19 September 1943), is a Yoruba-language folk poet, playwright, music producer, radio personality/broadcaster, writer, and researcher from Nigeria whose audience speaks Yorùbá and resides chiefly in South-West Nigeria.", "score": "1.3137507" }, { "id": "16454768", "title": "Agbogbloshie", "text": " Agbogbloshie is a nickname of a commercial district on the Korle Lagoon of the Odaw River, near the center of Accra, Ghana's capital city in the Greater Accra region. Near the slum called \"Old Fadama\", the Agbogbloshie site became known as a destination for externally generated automobile and electronic scrap collected from mostly the western world. It was alleged to be at the center of a legal and illegal exportation network for the environmental dumping of electronic waste (e-waste) from industrialized nations. The Basel Action Network, a small NGO based in Seattle, has referred to Agbogbloshie as a \"digital dumping ground\", where they allege millions ", "score": "1.3136978" }, { "id": "3112961", "title": "Parjok", "text": " in 2009 - 2010, it had it in Tasmania, in 2010 - 2011, it was in Brisbane; Qld, in 2011 - 2012, it was held in Sydney; New South Wales again and in 2013 - 2014, it had it in Perth Western Australia, in 2015 - 2016, it had it in Melbourne, Victoria and In 2017 – 2018, the community will descend down to Adelaide, South Australia for its conference; in that conference, it will decide where it will hold the next conference. All these Conferences are funded by Agola Kapuk Community contributions and occasionally some additional funding is provided by ", "score": "1.3126414" }, { "id": "3765747", "title": "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta", "text": " The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany.", "score": "1.3114887" } ]
[ "Obeakpu\n Obeakpu is a small village in Umuaka, Njaba, Imo State, Nigeria. Obeakpu is located at 5.69933°N, -7.031°W. The village of Amakor (now an autonomous community) is located to the east. Umele village is nearby in the west. The southern part of Obeakpu borders Ibele (now also an autonomous community). The Njaba River borders the village to the north.", "Oladipupo Olatunde Adebutu\n Oladipupo Olatunde Adebutu was born on 25 February 1962 in Lagos, Nigeria. In 1964, he began his primary education at the International Day Nursery school, Yaba and went on to further his education at St. Saviours Primary School, Oke-Ira, Ebute-Metta and Igbobi College where he obtained his West African School Certificate in 1978. Adebutu completed his educational career in Ireland where he obtained an Irish Leaving Certificate in 1980 and an Irish National Certificate in 1983. In 1984, he obtained an Irish National Diploma in Analytical Chemistry. Adebutu returned to Nigeria in 1987 to serve his country under the National Youth Service Corps Scheme in Biu, Borno State. Despite his wealth, Adebutu lives in Iperu with his family, having all his assets in Ogun State without any traces of financial crimes. He is perceived by many as a grassroot politician and businessman.", "Edikor Eyokpu\n Edikor Eyokpu is an Oron Village in Udung Uko local government area of Akwa Ibom state in Nigeria.", "Yupun Abeykoon\n He was born in Negombo, Western Province near Pannala. He pursued his primary education at the Pannala National School. He also pursued his interest in track and field events while studying at the Pannala National School. He later switched to the St. Joseph Vaz College, Wennepuwa at the age of 16 with the recommendation of his personal coach. He also follows MotoGP.", "Atapupu\n Atapupu is a port town in the Indonesian part of Timor Island (West Timor, in Kakuluk Mesak District of Belu Regency in East Nusa Tenggara Province. It is located on the northernmost part of West Timor, close to the border with East Timor.", "Eyokpu\n Eyokpu is an Oron Village in Udung Uko local government area of Akwa Ibom state in Nigeria.", "Aapua\n Aapua is a village in the county of Norrbotten in Sweden. The village is situated in Övertorneå Municipality, 60 km from Pajala, and in 2000 the village had 137 inhabitants. To the south there is a lake, Aapuajärvi. In 2005 seven wind turbines were built on the mountain Etu-Aapua, which is nearby. These wind turbines are considered to be the most effective in Sweden.", "Jacob Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey\n Ghana in 1974 and thereafter worked on a number of programmes for the company and others in Liberia, Sierra Leone and Kenya. From 1984 to 1999, he worked with the World Health Organization (WHO). Obetsebi-Lamptey was the Plenary Speaker at the World Summit on AIDS, London, and Second International Symposium on the disease in Yaoundé, Cameroon. He is a past president of the Advertising Association of Ghana, and has several publications to his credit, covering topics from family planning to AIDS prevention in Africa. From 2005 to July 2007, Obetsebi-Lamptey served as Minister of Tourism and Diasporan Relations in the cabinet of President John Kufuor. Previously Obetsebi-Lamptey was ", "Chris Obekpa\n Christopher Ewaoche Obekpa (born 14 November 1993) is a Nigerian professional basketball player. He played college basketball for St. John's University in Jamaica, New York from 2012 to 2015. As a freshman in 2012–13 he led NCAA Division I in blocks per game with a 4.03 average. After three years at St. John's, Obekpa transferred to UNLV, redshirted 2015–16, but then declared for the 2016 NBA draft. On 23 April 2016, Obekpa hired an agent, which officially prohibited him from finishing his college career.", "Parjok\n Australia` State Governments. Agola Kapuk North America has successfully had its first Conference in Nashville, Tennessee in 2016. There is always After-Conference Party where people from all works of life are invited to attend and or participate in. Activities that take place in the After-Conference Party are Acholi traditional and contemporary music, African and western music extravaganza, free drinks and foods, catching up with mates, speeches from community and church leaders, games and fun. We are so grateful to our women and the youth for always volunteering themselves to make the events run smoothly, not forgetting participants who facilitate the discussions.", "Jacob Otanka Obetsebi-Lamptey\n of Tourism and Modernization of the Capital (2002–05) and Minister of Information (2001–02). He was the National Campaign Manager of the victorious New Patriotic Party (NPP) during the 2000 Presidential elections, which saw the first constitutional (civilian-to-civilian) transition of power in that country. He resigned his posts in July 2007 to campaign for the NPP nomination for the 2008 Presidential elections. As of February 2010, he was the National Chairman of the NPP. Obetsebi-Lamptey died at a hospital in London on 20 March 2016 at the age of 70. He had been suffering from leukemia and in December had received treatment in South Africa after becoming unwell.", "Alampu\n Alampu (आलाम्पु) is a village development committee in Dolakha District in the Janakpur Zone of north-eastern Nepal. At the time of the 1991 Nepal census it had a population of 3,392 people living in 739 individual households.", "Ikot Ikpuho\n Ikot Ikpuho is a village in Etinan local government area of Akwa Ibom State.", "Pelelu Tepu\n Pelelu Tepu is an Amerindian village in the interior of Suriname. Also known as \"Pe'reru Tepu\", the village is typically referred to simply as \"Tepu,\" which mean \"high\" in the Indian Tiriyó language. The village is located on Tepu hill, on the Tapanahoni River. Though inhabited by Amerindian tribes indigenous to the area, the village was created by Christian missionaries and (primarily) Tiriyó Indians, though it now also includes small numbers of Wayana and Akuriyo Indians. The village has a tribal organization, led by a Trio Captain. Pelelu Tepu has a school, and electricity, however there is often no fuel to run the diesel generators. Pelelu Tepu is home to a Medische Zending healthcare centre.", "Yupukari\n Yupukari (also: Eupukari ) is an indigenous village of Macushi and Wapishana Amerindians in the Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo Region of Guyana. It is located between the Kanuku and Pakaraima Mountains along the Rupununi River.", "Ntak Ibesit\n Ntak Ibesit is a densely populated rural town in Akwa Ibom State of Nigeria. The town was noted for production and trade in palm oil and kernel. In recognition of its strategic importance, the Colonial administration established a river port at Ekpene Okpo, with a colonial court. The court is still in operation today. One of the distinguishing features of Ntak Ibesitt is the network of colonial roads. There is a road linking Ikot Okoro, Mbon Ebre, Ukpom and Ekparakwa- all neighbouring towns and villages. A very popular market in Ntak Ibesit is Urua Ekenyong Obom, which is centrally located to serve Ukpom Edem Inyang, Mbon Ebre, Ediene Ikot Ebom. The road linking Ikot Afanga town and Ntak Ibesit was named after a man called Udo Anwa-the Man Leopard. He was a ", "Olatubosun Oladapo\n Ọlátúbọ̀sún Oládàpọ̀, also known as Túbọ́sún Ọládàpọ̀, or Odídẹrẹ́ Ayékòótọ́ – \"the loquacious parrot\" (born 19 September 1943), is a Yoruba-language folk poet, playwright, music producer, radio personality/broadcaster, writer, and researcher from Nigeria whose audience speaks Yorùbá and resides chiefly in South-West Nigeria.", "Agbogbloshie\n Agbogbloshie is a nickname of a commercial district on the Korle Lagoon of the Odaw River, near the center of Accra, Ghana's capital city in the Greater Accra region. Near the slum called \"Old Fadama\", the Agbogbloshie site became known as a destination for externally generated automobile and electronic scrap collected from mostly the western world. It was alleged to be at the center of a legal and illegal exportation network for the environmental dumping of electronic waste (e-waste) from industrialized nations. The Basel Action Network, a small NGO based in Seattle, has referred to Agbogbloshie as a \"digital dumping ground\", where they allege millions ", "Parjok\n in 2009 - 2010, it had it in Tasmania, in 2010 - 2011, it was in Brisbane; Qld, in 2011 - 2012, it was held in Sydney; New South Wales again and in 2013 - 2014, it had it in Perth Western Australia, in 2015 - 2016, it had it in Melbourne, Victoria and In 2017 – 2018, the community will descend down to Adelaide, South Australia for its conference; in that conference, it will decide where it will hold the next conference. All these Conferences are funded by Agola Kapuk Community contributions and occasionally some additional funding is provided by ", "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta\n The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany." ]
In what country is La Couarde-sur-Mer?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
La Couarde-sur-Mer
6,265,961
87
[ { "id": "2526391", "title": "La Couarde-sur-Mer", "text": " La Couarde-sur-Mer is a commune in the Charente-Maritime department in southwestern France. It is situated on the Île de Ré.", "score": "1.8355079" }, { "id": "5386625", "title": "La Couarde", "text": " La Couarde is a former commune in the Deux-Sèvres department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in western France. On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Prailles-La Couarde.", "score": "1.4508232" }, { "id": "30678144", "title": "Villers-sur-Mer", "text": " The commune is located on the French coast of the English Channel, on the Côte Fleurie, between Deauville and Houlgate, approximately 200 km from Paris. It is the northernmost French commune through which falls the Prime meridian. The latter is represented on the seafront promenade with a blue mark on the ground and on the parapet. This mark is positioned 32 metres west of the actual meridian in use today, the IERS Reference Meridian.", "score": "1.4222796" }, { "id": "16000913", "title": "Pointe du Grouin du Cou Lighthouse", "text": " The Pointe du Grouin du Cou Lighthouse (sometimes called the La Tranche-sur-Mer Lighthouse) is a French lighthouse, located on the eponymous point in the southern part of the Vendée department; it guards the entrance to the Pertuis Breton on the Île de Ré, on the west side of La Tranche-sur-Mer. The lighthouse, constructed in 1953 to a design by Maurice Durand, replaces an earlier tower that was destroyed by retreating German troops during World War II.", "score": "1.4186702" }, { "id": "25010505", "title": "L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue", "text": " L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue (L'Illa de Sòrga or L'Illa de Venissa ) is a town and commune on the Sorgue river in Southeastern France. Politically, the commune is in the arrondissement of Avignon within the department of Vaucluse, in the région of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. The small town is famous for its many antique shops and hosts antique markets most Sundays. It has many waterside cafés and restaurants, all within walking distance of each other. Its many attractive water wheels throughout the town are still in working order. Keith Floyd, the British TV chef and bon viveur, established a restaurant there during a lengthy sojourn in France. L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue had a population of 19,398 as of 2016. It is twinned with the towns of Penicuik in the United Kingdom and Anagni in Italy.", "score": "1.4030721" }, { "id": "15031093", "title": "Coudeville-sur-Mer", "text": " Coudeville-sur-Mer is a commune in the Manche department in Normandy in north-western France.", "score": "1.3991499" }, { "id": "8435552", "title": "L'Aiguillon-sur-Mer", "text": " L'Aiguillon-sur-Mer (, literally L'Aiguillon on Sea) is a commune in the Vendée department in western France.", "score": "1.3909194" }, { "id": "11004963", "title": "Côte de Lumière", "text": "Noirmoutier-en-l'Ile ; Barbâtre ; La Barre-de-Monts ; Notre-Dame-de-Monts ; Saint-Jean-de-Monts ; Saint-Hilaire-de-Riez ; Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie ; Bretignolles-sur-Mer ; Brem-sur-Mer ; Olonne-sur-Mer ; Les Sables d'Olonne ; Château-d'Olonne ; Talmont-Saint-Hilaire ; Jard-sur-Mer ; Saint-Vincent-sur-Jard ; Longeville-sur-Mer ; La Tranche-sur-Mer ; La Faute-sur-Mer The Côte de Lumière (Coast of Light) refers to the seaside resorts located along the coast of the Vendée, France. Communes situated on the coast, from north to south, include:", "score": "1.3897398" }, { "id": "30023804", "title": "Ver-sur-Mer", "text": " Ver-sur-Mer is a commune in the Calvados department and Normandy region of north-western France. It is situated at the eastern end of Gold Beach between Arromanches and Courseulles. The town lies 20 km north-west of Caen and 14 km north-east of Bayeux. As well as its beach, the village has a bakery, pony club, sailing club, shrimp fishery, small supermarket, tennis court, and youth hostel. It is also home to the America Gold Beach Museum. Ver-sur-Mer lighthouse, still active today, was built in 1908 on the heights above the beach. During World War II, Canadian troops swiftly seized the lighthouse; however, it was badly damaged and had to be restored after the end of the war. Ver-sur-Mer's church, which was constructed between the 10th and 12th centuries, is dedicated to Saint Martin. ", "score": "1.3843757" }, { "id": "27781011", "title": "Cagnes-sur-Mer", "text": " Places of interest include Renoir's estate, Les Collettes, surrounded by olive trees; the Medieval castle at le Haut-de-Cagnes and the Cros quarter, founded by Italian fishermen in the nineteenth century. It is also known for its horse racing venue, the Hippodrome de la Côte d'Azur, and a four-kilometre beach.", "score": "1.38131" }, { "id": "6369411", "title": "Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer", "text": " Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer (, lit.: Saint Marys of the Sea; Provençal Occitan: Li Santi Mario de la Mar) is the capital of the Camargue (Provençal Occitan Camarga) in the south of France. It is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department by the Mediterranean Sea. Its 2012 population was 2,495, though it can swell to 500,000 during the summer holidays. It covers the second-largest area of all communes in Metropolitan France, smaller only than that of neighbouring Arles.", "score": "1.3772663" }, { "id": "27781008", "title": "Cagnes-sur-Mer", "text": " Cagnes-sur-Mer is a town in south-eastern France located on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, between Saint-Laurent-du-Var and Villeneuve-Loubet. It stretches along a cove offering nearly four kilometers of beach and is surrounded by hills, including that of the castle which rises to 90 meters above sea level.", "score": "1.3767569" }, { "id": "27753658", "title": "La Corbière", "text": " La Corbière (Jèrriais: La Corbiéthe) is the extreme south-western point of Jersey in St. Brélade. The name means \"a place where crows gather\", deriving from the word corbîn meaning crow. However, seagulls have long since displaced the crows from their coastal nesting sites. The rocks and extreme tidal variation around this stretch of Jersey's coast have been treacherous for navigation and La Corbière has been the scene of many shipwrecks, including that of the mail packet \"Express\" on 20 September 1859.", "score": "1.3744531" }, { "id": "14894097", "title": "La Calotterie", "text": " A small village situated some 2 miles (3 km) northwest of Montreuil-sur-Mer at the D146 and D149 crossroads.", "score": "1.3726537" }, { "id": "12331827", "title": "Courbet Peninsula", "text": " The Courbet Peninsula (Péninsule Courbet) is a peninsula in northeastern Grande Terre Island, the main island of the subantarctic Kerguelen Archipelago, Southern Indian Ocean. In the south of the peninsula is Port-aux-Français, the principal station of the archipelago.", "score": "1.3553607" }, { "id": "25398388", "title": "Cherbourg-Octeville", "text": " Saire; local television has installed its headquarters and its main studio in the area. Jobs in the construction sector are divided between Faucillion (80 employees), Eiffage (75 employees) and Colas (60 employees). Since its opening, the Cité de la Mer is the tourist engine of Nord-Cotentin. The cruise terminal also attracts liners each year. The marina of 1,500 spaces is the first French port of call (11,000 per year). The capacity of the city was, as of 1 January 2007, 15 hotels and 429 rooms. The casino, owned by the Cogit Group is the 109th in France, with a turnover of €6.7 million.", "score": "1.3533552" }, { "id": "29015424", "title": "Trouville-sur-Mer", "text": "Barnstaple, United Kingdom ; 🇨🇿 Vrchlabí, Czech Republic Trouville-sur-Mer is twinned with:", "score": "1.3486855" }, { "id": "32419286", "title": "Le Grau-du-Roi", "text": " Le Grau-du-Roi (Lo Grau dau Rei) is a commune in the Gard department in southern France. It is the only commune in Gard to have a frontage on the Mediterranean. To the west is the Herault department and La Grande-Motte village, and to the east is the Bouches-du-Rhone department. Using the sea as a vantage point, the commune has four distinct sections: the right beach (Plage de Rive Droite), the Village, the left beach (Plage de Rive Gauche), Port-Camargue and L'Espiguette. Immediately landwards are the large shallow étangs, saline marshes, which separate it from Aigues Mortes, a neighboring mediaeval walled city that used to be a port. The étangs are home to numerous flamingoes.", "score": "1.3472965" }, { "id": "3940859", "title": "Cayeux-sur-Mer", "text": " The commune is a seaside town, situated on the D102 road, some 14 mi northwest of Abbeville.", "score": "1.3470578" }, { "id": "1963503", "title": "La Trinité-sur-Mer", "text": " Inhabitants of La Trinité-sur-Mer are called Trinitains.", "score": "1.3469095" } ]
[ "La Couarde-sur-Mer\n La Couarde-sur-Mer is a commune in the Charente-Maritime department in southwestern France. It is situated on the Île de Ré.", "La Couarde\n La Couarde is a former commune in the Deux-Sèvres department in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region in western France. On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Prailles-La Couarde.", "Villers-sur-Mer\n The commune is located on the French coast of the English Channel, on the Côte Fleurie, between Deauville and Houlgate, approximately 200 km from Paris. It is the northernmost French commune through which falls the Prime meridian. The latter is represented on the seafront promenade with a blue mark on the ground and on the parapet. This mark is positioned 32 metres west of the actual meridian in use today, the IERS Reference Meridian.", "Pointe du Grouin du Cou Lighthouse\n The Pointe du Grouin du Cou Lighthouse (sometimes called the La Tranche-sur-Mer Lighthouse) is a French lighthouse, located on the eponymous point in the southern part of the Vendée department; it guards the entrance to the Pertuis Breton on the Île de Ré, on the west side of La Tranche-sur-Mer. The lighthouse, constructed in 1953 to a design by Maurice Durand, replaces an earlier tower that was destroyed by retreating German troops during World War II.", "L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue\n L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue (L'Illa de Sòrga or L'Illa de Venissa ) is a town and commune on the Sorgue river in Southeastern France. Politically, the commune is in the arrondissement of Avignon within the department of Vaucluse, in the région of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur. The small town is famous for its many antique shops and hosts antique markets most Sundays. It has many waterside cafés and restaurants, all within walking distance of each other. Its many attractive water wheels throughout the town are still in working order. Keith Floyd, the British TV chef and bon viveur, established a restaurant there during a lengthy sojourn in France. L'Isle-sur-la-Sorgue had a population of 19,398 as of 2016. It is twinned with the towns of Penicuik in the United Kingdom and Anagni in Italy.", "Coudeville-sur-Mer\n Coudeville-sur-Mer is a commune in the Manche department in Normandy in north-western France.", "L'Aiguillon-sur-Mer\n L'Aiguillon-sur-Mer (, literally L'Aiguillon on Sea) is a commune in the Vendée department in western France.", "Côte de Lumière\nNoirmoutier-en-l'Ile ; Barbâtre ; La Barre-de-Monts ; Notre-Dame-de-Monts ; Saint-Jean-de-Monts ; Saint-Hilaire-de-Riez ; Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie ; Bretignolles-sur-Mer ; Brem-sur-Mer ; Olonne-sur-Mer ; Les Sables d'Olonne ; Château-d'Olonne ; Talmont-Saint-Hilaire ; Jard-sur-Mer ; Saint-Vincent-sur-Jard ; Longeville-sur-Mer ; La Tranche-sur-Mer ; La Faute-sur-Mer The Côte de Lumière (Coast of Light) refers to the seaside resorts located along the coast of the Vendée, France. Communes situated on the coast, from north to south, include:", "Ver-sur-Mer\n Ver-sur-Mer is a commune in the Calvados department and Normandy region of north-western France. It is situated at the eastern end of Gold Beach between Arromanches and Courseulles. The town lies 20 km north-west of Caen and 14 km north-east of Bayeux. As well as its beach, the village has a bakery, pony club, sailing club, shrimp fishery, small supermarket, tennis court, and youth hostel. It is also home to the America Gold Beach Museum. Ver-sur-Mer lighthouse, still active today, was built in 1908 on the heights above the beach. During World War II, Canadian troops swiftly seized the lighthouse; however, it was badly damaged and had to be restored after the end of the war. Ver-sur-Mer's church, which was constructed between the 10th and 12th centuries, is dedicated to Saint Martin. ", "Cagnes-sur-Mer\n Places of interest include Renoir's estate, Les Collettes, surrounded by olive trees; the Medieval castle at le Haut-de-Cagnes and the Cros quarter, founded by Italian fishermen in the nineteenth century. It is also known for its horse racing venue, the Hippodrome de la Côte d'Azur, and a four-kilometre beach.", "Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer\n Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer (, lit.: Saint Marys of the Sea; Provençal Occitan: Li Santi Mario de la Mar) is the capital of the Camargue (Provençal Occitan Camarga) in the south of France. It is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department by the Mediterranean Sea. Its 2012 population was 2,495, though it can swell to 500,000 during the summer holidays. It covers the second-largest area of all communes in Metropolitan France, smaller only than that of neighbouring Arles.", "Cagnes-sur-Mer\n Cagnes-sur-Mer is a town in south-eastern France located on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, between Saint-Laurent-du-Var and Villeneuve-Loubet. It stretches along a cove offering nearly four kilometers of beach and is surrounded by hills, including that of the castle which rises to 90 meters above sea level.", "La Corbière\n La Corbière (Jèrriais: La Corbiéthe) is the extreme south-western point of Jersey in St. Brélade. The name means \"a place where crows gather\", deriving from the word corbîn meaning crow. However, seagulls have long since displaced the crows from their coastal nesting sites. The rocks and extreme tidal variation around this stretch of Jersey's coast have been treacherous for navigation and La Corbière has been the scene of many shipwrecks, including that of the mail packet \"Express\" on 20 September 1859.", "La Calotterie\n A small village situated some 2 miles (3 km) northwest of Montreuil-sur-Mer at the D146 and D149 crossroads.", "Courbet Peninsula\n The Courbet Peninsula (Péninsule Courbet) is a peninsula in northeastern Grande Terre Island, the main island of the subantarctic Kerguelen Archipelago, Southern Indian Ocean. In the south of the peninsula is Port-aux-Français, the principal station of the archipelago.", "Cherbourg-Octeville\n Saire; local television has installed its headquarters and its main studio in the area. Jobs in the construction sector are divided between Faucillion (80 employees), Eiffage (75 employees) and Colas (60 employees). Since its opening, the Cité de la Mer is the tourist engine of Nord-Cotentin. The cruise terminal also attracts liners each year. The marina of 1,500 spaces is the first French port of call (11,000 per year). The capacity of the city was, as of 1 January 2007, 15 hotels and 429 rooms. The casino, owned by the Cogit Group is the 109th in France, with a turnover of €6.7 million.", "Trouville-sur-Mer\nBarnstaple, United Kingdom ; 🇨🇿 Vrchlabí, Czech Republic Trouville-sur-Mer is twinned with:", "Le Grau-du-Roi\n Le Grau-du-Roi (Lo Grau dau Rei) is a commune in the Gard department in southern France. It is the only commune in Gard to have a frontage on the Mediterranean. To the west is the Herault department and La Grande-Motte village, and to the east is the Bouches-du-Rhone department. Using the sea as a vantage point, the commune has four distinct sections: the right beach (Plage de Rive Droite), the Village, the left beach (Plage de Rive Gauche), Port-Camargue and L'Espiguette. Immediately landwards are the large shallow étangs, saline marshes, which separate it from Aigues Mortes, a neighboring mediaeval walled city that used to be a port. The étangs are home to numerous flamingoes.", "Cayeux-sur-Mer\n The commune is a seaside town, situated on the D102 road, some 14 mi northwest of Abbeville.", "La Trinité-sur-Mer\n Inhabitants of La Trinité-sur-Mer are called Trinitains." ]
In what country is Riechheimer Berg?
[ "Germany", "FRG", "BRD", "Bundesrepublik Deutschland", "Federal Republic of Germany", "de", "Deutschland", "GER", "BR Deutschland", "DE" ]
country
Riechheimer Berg
6,376,093
39
[ { "id": "7205099", "title": "Riechheimer Berg", "text": "1) Alkersleben ; 2) Bösleben-Wüllersleben ; 3) Dornheim ; 4) Elleben ; 5) Elxleben ; 6) Osthausen-Wülfershausen ; 7) Witzleben Riechheimer Berg is a Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (\"collective municipality\") in the district Ilm-Kreis, in Thuringia, Germany. The seat of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft is in Kirchheim, itself not part of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft. The Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Riechheimer Berg consists of the following municipalities: ", "score": "1.7363722" }, { "id": "5389014", "title": "Bergstein (Hohe Loog)", "text": " The Bergstein is a natural monument in the borough of Neustadt an der Weinstraße in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is designated as ND-7316-202.", "score": "1.5066622" }, { "id": "9349456", "title": "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia", "text": " Bergheim is a German town, some twenty km west of Cologne and the capital of the Rhein-Erft-Kreis (district). The town's Niederaußem district is one of the most important suppliers for energy from lignites in Europe.", "score": "1.4499317" }, { "id": "9349460", "title": "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia", "text": " Points of interest are the Niederaussem Power Station with the world's tallest cooling tower as well as the Kottenforst-Ville Nature Park.", "score": "1.4182223" }, { "id": "26802683", "title": "Berg, Germersheim", "text": " Berg is a municipality in the district of Germersheim, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is situated on the border with France. The Ortsteil Neulauterburg, 2 km west of the centre of Berg, is contiguous with the French town Lauterbourg, across the small river Lauter. Berg has a railway station on the regional line from Wörth am Rhein to Lauterbourg.", "score": "1.407516" }, { "id": "6140308", "title": "Rodigo", "text": "🇩🇪 Berg, Germany, since 2004 ", "score": "1.3933892" }, { "id": "15494252", "title": "Kreuzberg (Tempelhofer Berge)", "text": " Rhein (1975), as well by the Bergstraße county (1971 and 1973) and from Bad Bergzabern (1985). About 600 bottles are pressed every year, not in Berlin, but in wineries in Mainz-Kostheim and Ingelheim. In 1994 the Schultheiss brewery, department II, ceased production. The brewery compound, with many excellent examples of industrial brick architecture, listed buildings, is since transformed into a new residential area called Viktoria-Quartier (Victoria Quarter). The deformed villa of 1872 on Methfesselstraße 17–21, northerly neighbouring Lindenberg House, is called the yellow Villa (die gelbe Villa), after the tiles covering the building since its extensions in the 1950s ", "score": "1.3886012" }, { "id": "5388993", "title": "Bergstein (Weinbiet)", "text": " The Bergstein is a natural monument in the borough of Neustadt an der Weinstraße in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It has the number ND-7316-173. The Bergstein is described as a rock group and lies at an elevation of ca. 354 m at the eastern end of the Palatinate Forest and is part of the Weinbiet massif. The Bergstein lies above the Speyerbach valley and has a view of the valley and the town of Neustadt. It is accessible and is protected by railings. It is only accessible on footpaths.", "score": "1.3726263" }, { "id": "16184728", "title": "Bergheim, Haut-Rhin", "text": " Bergheim is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. It is a completely fortified town and has an ancient and remarkable church, as well as magnificent towers and walls. The entire population was wiped out by two wars and the plague in the 17th-18th centuries. To replace the population, thousands of people from other countries were invited to immigrate to Bergheim. The majority of people who immigrated at that times were Swiss, German, Hungarian, Austrian, or Romanian. The city runs on tourism and the grape vines that surround the city and the region.", "score": "1.3705819" }, { "id": "11682774", "title": "Rieti", "text": "🇯🇵 Ito, Japan, since 1985 ; Saint-Pierre-lès-Elbeuf, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France, since 2000 ; Nordhorn, Lower Saxony, Germany, since 2010 ", "score": "1.3597515" }, { "id": "9349457", "title": "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia", "text": " Bergheim is about 20 km west of Cologne, approximately 72 metres above sea level. Its highest point is the Glessener Höhe (Glessen Height) at 204 metres. The Erft River flows through Bergheim. The town lies in the Zülpicher Börde, which belongs to the Kölner Bucht. Economically and geographically Bergheim is in the Rhenish lignite coalfield.", "score": "1.3533186" }, { "id": "12801991", "title": "Rietburg", "text": " The Rietburg is a ruined hillside castle on the edge of the Palatinate Forest above the village of Rhodt in the county of Südliche Weinstrasse in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. The remains of this castle are located on the side of the 613-metre-high Blättersberg mountain.", "score": "1.3523002" }, { "id": "5221285", "title": "Rivenich", "text": " Northwest of Rivenich runs the Autobahn A 1. In nearby Hetzerath is a railway station on the Koblenz-Trier railway line.", "score": "1.3433357" }, { "id": "8395208", "title": "Castle Berg (Stuttgart)", "text": " Castle Berg is a ruined water castle situated around 210 m above Sea level in the Nesenbach valley on the grounds of the Berg mineral spa in the Berg district of Baden-Württemberg's state capitol of Stuttgart, Germany. The castle was built by the Lords von Berg during the 12th century and had already been destroyed in 1287. The foundations were unearthed in 1856 during construction of the spa's spring water bathhouses. The excavated foundations belonged to a residence tower with a square base with a side length of 10.5 m and a wall thickness of 3 m.", "score": "1.3373771" }, { "id": "13682242", "title": "Heidelberg-Bergheim", "text": " Bergheim is bordered by the Old Town to the east, the West Town to the south and the Neckar river to the north. To the west are Wieblingen-Süd with its rehab center (SRH) and Pfaffengrund. The settlement Ochsenkopf already belongs to Wieblingen. Bergheim stretches along the banks of the Neckar. Bergheimer Strasse, which is centrally located and defines the district area with its starting and ending points, flows into the Federal Highway 656/Bundesstrasse 37 in the west and is bordered by Bismarckplatz in the east. It's one of Heidelberg's main traffic arteries. The Bergheim district still contains areas of the so-called Alt Klinikum of the University Hospital (now partially converted into the Samariterhaus residential quarter) and Heidelberg Central Station. The largest employer here is the Stadtwerke Heidelberg. Furthermore, there are many office workplaces of other companies. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG maintained its headquarters in the Kurfürstenanlage for a long time, as well as its large research and development center in Bergheimer Strasse. The southern boundary is the four- to six-lane Kurfürstenanlage, which begins at Bismarckplatz on the border with the old town and runs to the main train station.", "score": "1.3366109" }, { "id": "31866610", "title": "Riquewihr", "text": " Riquewihr (Alsatian: Richewihr; Reichenweier ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. A popular tourist attraction for its historical architecture, Riquewihr is also known for the Riesling and other wines produced in the village. Riquewihr looks today more or less as it did in the 16th century. It is located on the Route des Vins (The Wines Road), close to Colmar.", "score": "1.3360295" }, { "id": "6184356", "title": "Riehen", "text": " Riehen is bounded by two different municipalities in Switzerland and Germany.", "score": "1.3344738" }, { "id": "1770971", "title": "Rietburg Chairlift", "text": " The Rietburg chairlift (Rietburgbahn) is a chair lift that runs from the village of Rhodt in the Palatinate region of Germany to the ruins of the medieval castle of Rietburg. The chairlift is the county of Südliche Weinstraße in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.", "score": "1.3323512" }, { "id": "3212401", "title": "Zwingenberg (Bergstraße) station", "text": " Zwingenberg (Bergstr) station is a station on the Main-Neckar Railway in the town of Zwingenberg on the Mountain Road in the German state of Hesse. It has a heritage-listed entrance building. The station is classified by Deutsche Bahn (DB) as a category 5 station.", "score": "1.3309894" }, { "id": "5389015", "title": "Bergstein (Hohe Loog)", "text": " The Bergstein is described as a rock formation (Felspartie) and lies at an elevation of ca. 469 metres at the eastern edge of the Palatinate Forest and is part of the Hohe Loog massif. It lies about 300 metres southwest of the Trittbrunnen Way/Bergsteinstraße in the village of Hambach an der Weinstraße and is only accessible on foot. It has good views of Hambach Castle and the Rhine valley.", "score": "1.3220661" } ]
[ "Riechheimer Berg\n1) Alkersleben ; 2) Bösleben-Wüllersleben ; 3) Dornheim ; 4) Elleben ; 5) Elxleben ; 6) Osthausen-Wülfershausen ; 7) Witzleben Riechheimer Berg is a Verwaltungsgemeinschaft (\"collective municipality\") in the district Ilm-Kreis, in Thuringia, Germany. The seat of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft is in Kirchheim, itself not part of the Verwaltungsgemeinschaft. The Verwaltungsgemeinschaft Riechheimer Berg consists of the following municipalities: ", "Bergstein (Hohe Loog)\n The Bergstein is a natural monument in the borough of Neustadt an der Weinstraße in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is designated as ND-7316-202.", "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia\n Bergheim is a German town, some twenty km west of Cologne and the capital of the Rhein-Erft-Kreis (district). The town's Niederaußem district is one of the most important suppliers for energy from lignites in Europe.", "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia\n Points of interest are the Niederaussem Power Station with the world's tallest cooling tower as well as the Kottenforst-Ville Nature Park.", "Berg, Germersheim\n Berg is a municipality in the district of Germersheim, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It is situated on the border with France. The Ortsteil Neulauterburg, 2 km west of the centre of Berg, is contiguous with the French town Lauterbourg, across the small river Lauter. Berg has a railway station on the regional line from Wörth am Rhein to Lauterbourg.", "Rodigo\n🇩🇪 Berg, Germany, since 2004 ", "Kreuzberg (Tempelhofer Berge)\n Rhein (1975), as well by the Bergstraße county (1971 and 1973) and from Bad Bergzabern (1985). About 600 bottles are pressed every year, not in Berlin, but in wineries in Mainz-Kostheim and Ingelheim. In 1994 the Schultheiss brewery, department II, ceased production. The brewery compound, with many excellent examples of industrial brick architecture, listed buildings, is since transformed into a new residential area called Viktoria-Quartier (Victoria Quarter). The deformed villa of 1872 on Methfesselstraße 17–21, northerly neighbouring Lindenberg House, is called the yellow Villa (die gelbe Villa), after the tiles covering the building since its extensions in the 1950s ", "Bergstein (Weinbiet)\n The Bergstein is a natural monument in the borough of Neustadt an der Weinstraße in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It has the number ND-7316-173. The Bergstein is described as a rock group and lies at an elevation of ca. 354 m at the eastern end of the Palatinate Forest and is part of the Weinbiet massif. The Bergstein lies above the Speyerbach valley and has a view of the valley and the town of Neustadt. It is accessible and is protected by railings. It is only accessible on footpaths.", "Bergheim, Haut-Rhin\n Bergheim is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. It is a completely fortified town and has an ancient and remarkable church, as well as magnificent towers and walls. The entire population was wiped out by two wars and the plague in the 17th-18th centuries. To replace the population, thousands of people from other countries were invited to immigrate to Bergheim. The majority of people who immigrated at that times were Swiss, German, Hungarian, Austrian, or Romanian. The city runs on tourism and the grape vines that surround the city and the region.", "Rieti\n🇯🇵 Ito, Japan, since 1985 ; Saint-Pierre-lès-Elbeuf, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France, since 2000 ; Nordhorn, Lower Saxony, Germany, since 2010 ", "Bergheim, North Rhine-Westphalia\n Bergheim is about 20 km west of Cologne, approximately 72 metres above sea level. Its highest point is the Glessener Höhe (Glessen Height) at 204 metres. The Erft River flows through Bergheim. The town lies in the Zülpicher Börde, which belongs to the Kölner Bucht. Economically and geographically Bergheim is in the Rhenish lignite coalfield.", "Rietburg\n The Rietburg is a ruined hillside castle on the edge of the Palatinate Forest above the village of Rhodt in the county of Südliche Weinstrasse in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. The remains of this castle are located on the side of the 613-metre-high Blättersberg mountain.", "Rivenich\n Northwest of Rivenich runs the Autobahn A 1. In nearby Hetzerath is a railway station on the Koblenz-Trier railway line.", "Castle Berg (Stuttgart)\n Castle Berg is a ruined water castle situated around 210 m above Sea level in the Nesenbach valley on the grounds of the Berg mineral spa in the Berg district of Baden-Württemberg's state capitol of Stuttgart, Germany. The castle was built by the Lords von Berg during the 12th century and had already been destroyed in 1287. The foundations were unearthed in 1856 during construction of the spa's spring water bathhouses. The excavated foundations belonged to a residence tower with a square base with a side length of 10.5 m and a wall thickness of 3 m.", "Heidelberg-Bergheim\n Bergheim is bordered by the Old Town to the east, the West Town to the south and the Neckar river to the north. To the west are Wieblingen-Süd with its rehab center (SRH) and Pfaffengrund. The settlement Ochsenkopf already belongs to Wieblingen. Bergheim stretches along the banks of the Neckar. Bergheimer Strasse, which is centrally located and defines the district area with its starting and ending points, flows into the Federal Highway 656/Bundesstrasse 37 in the west and is bordered by Bismarckplatz in the east. It's one of Heidelberg's main traffic arteries. The Bergheim district still contains areas of the so-called Alt Klinikum of the University Hospital (now partially converted into the Samariterhaus residential quarter) and Heidelberg Central Station. The largest employer here is the Stadtwerke Heidelberg. Furthermore, there are many office workplaces of other companies. Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG maintained its headquarters in the Kurfürstenanlage for a long time, as well as its large research and development center in Bergheimer Strasse. The southern boundary is the four- to six-lane Kurfürstenanlage, which begins at Bismarckplatz on the border with the old town and runs to the main train station.", "Riquewihr\n Riquewihr (Alsatian: Richewihr; Reichenweier ) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. A popular tourist attraction for its historical architecture, Riquewihr is also known for the Riesling and other wines produced in the village. Riquewihr looks today more or less as it did in the 16th century. It is located on the Route des Vins (The Wines Road), close to Colmar.", "Riehen\n Riehen is bounded by two different municipalities in Switzerland and Germany.", "Rietburg Chairlift\n The Rietburg chairlift (Rietburgbahn) is a chair lift that runs from the village of Rhodt in the Palatinate region of Germany to the ruins of the medieval castle of Rietburg. The chairlift is the county of Südliche Weinstraße in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.", "Zwingenberg (Bergstraße) station\n Zwingenberg (Bergstr) station is a station on the Main-Neckar Railway in the town of Zwingenberg on the Mountain Road in the German state of Hesse. It has a heritage-listed entrance building. The station is classified by Deutsche Bahn (DB) as a category 5 station.", "Bergstein (Hohe Loog)\n The Bergstein is described as a rock formation (Felspartie) and lies at an elevation of ca. 469 metres at the eastern edge of the Palatinate Forest and is part of the Hohe Loog massif. It lies about 300 metres southwest of the Trittbrunnen Way/Bergsteinstraße in the village of Hambach an der Weinstraße and is only accessible on foot. It has good views of Hambach Castle and the Rhine valley." ]
In what country is Alexeni River?
[ "Romania", "Roumania", "Rumania", "România", "ro", "🇷🇴" ]
country
Alexeni River
3,282,404
8
[ { "id": "11913833", "title": "Alexeni", "text": " Alexeni is a commune in Ialomița County, Muntenia, Romania, some 65 km north-east of Bucharest, near the town of Urziceni. It is composed of a single village, Alexeni. Until 2001 a Romanian Air Force military helicopters unit was located at the nearby airfield. In 2007, as the airfield was not used by the Romanian Air Force anylonger, the former Minister of Transport Radu Berceanu suggested to use the location for Bucharest's new low-cost flights airport (as the operational tariffs for Bucharest's previous low-cost hub, Aurel Vlaicu Airport, were set to grow). However, some analysts considered the project unrealistic and doomed to fail due to the poor conditions of the infrastructure in the area. Eventually those plans were abandoned and all low-cost flights were moved in March 2012 at Bucharest main airport Henri Coandă International Airport.", "score": "1.5744584" }, { "id": "2265071", "title": "Ogosta", "text": " The Ogosta (Огоста, Latin: Augusta), is the largest river in Northwestern Bulgaria, a right tributary of the Danube. It originates at Chiprovska Mountain, 2,168 meters high section of the Western Balkan Mountains, at about an altitude of 1,760 meters, on the border with Serbia. The towns of Chiprovtsi, Montana, and Miziya are situated on the river's banks. The Ogosta river is 147.4 km in length and is fed by 40 tributaries (including the Skat River) in a watershed of 3,157 square kilometers. The average water discharge in the lower course of the river is 18 cubic meters per second. Along the river's length there are 14 irrigation systems, 8 hydropower plants, and 13 dams. Although the river is used ", "score": "1.4920123" }, { "id": "27647772", "title": "Vardar", "text": " The river rises at Vrutok, a few kilometers southwest of Gostivar in North Macedonia. It passes through Gostivar, Skopje and into Veles, crosses the Greek border near Gevgelija, Polykastro and Axioupoli (\"town on the Axiós\"), before emptying into the Aegean Sea in Central Macedonia, west of Thessaloniki in northern Greece. The Vardar basin comprises two-thirds of the territory of North Macedonia. The valley features fertile lands in the Polog region, around Gevgelija and in the Thessaloniki regional unit. The river is surrounded by mountains elsewhere. The superhighways Greek National Road 1 in Greece and M1 and E75 run within the valley along the river's entire length to near Skopje. The river was very famous during the Ottoman Empire and remains so in modern-day Turkey as the inspiration for many folk songs, of which the most famous is Vardar Ovasi. It has also been depicted on the coat of arms of Skopje, which in turn is incorporated in the city's flag.", "score": "1.4569495" }, { "id": "8697837", "title": "Arda (Maritsa tributary)", "text": " The Arda (Арда, Άρδας , Arda ) is a 290 km river in Bulgaria and Greece. It is a tributary of the Maritsa (or Evros). Its source lies in the Bulgarian Rhodope Mountains near the village Arda, part of the municipality of Smolyan. It flows eastward past Rudozem, Kardzhali and Ivaylovgrad and enters Greece in the northern part of the Evros regional unit. It flows into the Maritsa on the border of Greece and Turkey, between the Greek village Kastanies and the Turkish city Edirne. In the Bulgarian section there are three hydroelectric and irrigation dams, Kardzhali Dam, Studen Kladenets and Ivaylovgrad Dam. The Bulgarian section is 229 ", "score": "1.4550846" }, { "id": "27027597", "title": "Natanebi", "text": " The Natanebi (ნატანები) is a river in western Georgia, located in the region of Guria. It flows into the Black Sea near Shekvetili. It is 60 km long, and has a drainage basin of 657 km2. The Natanebi corresponds to the ancient River Isis, described by Greek historian Arrian of Nicomedia in his Periplus of the Euxine Sea.", "score": "1.4526985" }, { "id": "29441816", "title": "Alexeni Airfield", "text": " Alexeni airfield was a military airfield, which was proposed as a new low-cost airport for Bucharest, located in the Alexeni town, in Ialomiţa County, at 60 km north-east of the capital city of Romania. Until 2001 a Romanian Air Force military helicopter unit was based on this airfield. Former Minister of Transport Radu Berceanu suggested the location for Bucharest's new low-cost flights airport (as the operational tariffs for Bucharest's previous low-cost hub, Aurel Vlaicu Airport, were set to grow). However, some analysts considered the project unrealistic and doomed to fail due to the poor conditions of the infrastructure in the area. As of April 2013 those plans have been abandoned and all Bucharest's low-cost flights were moved at Henri Coandă International Airport in March 2012.", "score": "1.442108" }, { "id": "4613817", "title": "Qvirila", "text": " It originates in South Ossetia, in the gorges of the Racha Mountains. Most of the river is located in Georgia. After the confluence with its left tributary Dzirula it flows through flat terrain, before - through the mountains. The river is fed mainly by rain. On average, water flow per year near the city Zestafoni, located 42 kilometers from its mouth, 61 m³ / s, at the mouth of about 90 m³ /from. The river is suitable for whitewater canoeing. The Chiatura manganese ore deposit is located in the river basin.", "score": "1.4351377" }, { "id": "30060061", "title": "Veleka", "text": " The Veleka (Велека, Kocadere ) is a river in the very southeast of Bulgaria (Burgas Province), as well as the very northeast of European Turkey. It is 147 km long, of which 108 km in Bulgaria and 25 km in Turkey, and takes it sources from a number of Karst springs in the Turkish part of the Strandzha (İstranca) mountain to flow into the Black Sea at the Bulgarian village of Sinemorets. Veleka is situated in Strandzha Nature Park. The river's width near the mouth is from 8 to 10 m and its depth ranges from 2 to 4 m. At its mouth, the Veleka is 50 m wide and 7 to 8 m deep, overflowing shortly before making a turn and pouring into the sea. The waters of the Veleka are rich in flora and fauna, with more than 30 species of freshwater fish being present, the most frequent one being the chub. Five endangered animal species inhabit the river, as well as important regional plants.", "score": "1.4331884" }, { "id": "5168719", "title": "Prut", "text": " Romania and the Russian Empire. After World War II, the river once again dominated a border, this time between Romania and the Soviet Union. Nowadays, for a length of 31 km, it forms the border between Romania and Ukraine, and for 711 km, it forms the border between Romania and Moldova. It has a hydrographic basin of 27,540 km2, of which 10,990 km2 are in Romania and 7,790 km2 in Moldova. The largest city along its banks is Chernivtsi, Ukraine. The Stânca-Costești Dam, operated jointly by Moldova and Romania, is built on the Prut. There is also a Hydro-Electric Station in ", "score": "1.4310224" }, { "id": "4613815", "title": "Tskhenistsqali", "text": " Tskhenistsqali (ცხენისწყალი, Cxenisċqali, also: Tskhenistskali) is a river in northern Georgia. Its source is in the main range of the Caucasus Mountains, in the easternmost part of the Lentekhi Municipality, lower Svaneti. A tributary of the river Rioni, it is 176 km long, and has a drainage basin of 2120 km2. It flows through the small towns Lentekhi and Tsageri and joins the Rioni near the town of Samtredia. The main tributaries of Tskhenistskali are: Zsekho, Kheleldula, Janolula ( from the right ), Kobishuri, Leuseri, Khopuri (from the left). From etymological standpoint the name is derived from the Georgian words ცხენი (Cxeni, \"horse\") and წყალი (Tsqali, \"water\"), thereby meaning \"horse water\" or perhaps more precisely \"horse river\".", "score": "1.413625" }, { "id": "28770208", "title": "Vohitra River", "text": " The Vohitra river in Alaotra-Mangoro and Atsinanana regions, is located in central-eastern Madagascar. It drains to the eastern coast. It flows into the Rianila River near Anivorano Est. It has a hydro-power station at Andekaleka, the Andekaleka Dam.", "score": "1.4130335" }, { "id": "14523925", "title": "Geography of North Macedonia", "text": " The Vardar is the longest and most important river in North Macedonia. It is 388 km long, and drains an area of around 25000 km2. The river rises at Vrutok, a few kilometers north of Gostivar in the Republic of North Macedonia. It passes through Gostivar, Skopje and into Veles, crosses the Greek border near Gevgelija, Polykastro and Axioupoli, before emptying into the Aegean Sea in Central Macedonia west of Thessaloniki in northern Greece. The Vardar basin includes two-thirds of the territory of the Republic of North Macedonia. For that the area is called \"Vardar Macedonia\" after the river, to distinguish it from \"Aegean Macedonia\" (in Greece) and \"Pirin Macedonia\" (in Bulgaria). The valley comprises fertile lands in Polog, Gevgelija and other parts. The river is surrounded by mountains elsewhere. The M1 / E75, connecting with Greek National Road 1, runs through the valley along the river's entire length to near Skopje. The river is depicted on the coat of arms of Skopje, which in turn is incorporated in the city's flag.", "score": "1.4105017" }, { "id": "14536567", "title": "Moldova", "text": " the main river, flowing through the country from north to south, receiving the waters of Răut, Bîc, Ichel, Botna. Ialpug flows into one of the Danube limans, while Cogâlnic into the Black Sea chain of limans. The country is landlocked, though it is close to the Black Sea; at its closest point it is separated from the Dniester Liman, an estuary of the Black Sea, by only 3 km of Ukrainian territory. While most of the country is hilly, elevations never exceed 430 m – the highest point being the Bălănești Hill. Moldova's hills are part of the Moldavian Plateau, which geologically originate from the Carpathian Mountains. Its subdivisions in Moldova ", "score": "1.4075844" }, { "id": "13768008", "title": "Moglenitsas", "text": " The Moglenitsas (Μογλενίτσας) is a river in Almopia, northern Greece. The river has its headwater in the Vermio Mountains of Macedonia, Greece and it flows into the Aliakmonas River near Kouloura, between Veria and Alexandreia, twenty kilometers west of Thessaloniki. Tributaries of the Moglenitsas include the Xiropotamos, Toplitsas, Koziakas and Golemas rivers. As the only outflow from the region of Almopia it flows between low hills to the south, where it forms a small canyon. In the 1930s the river was redirected by use of a canal and today irrigates the region of Almopia. The river is used for sports such as rafting and kayaking and for irrigation.", "score": "1.403477" }, { "id": "2612789", "title": "Maritsa", "text": " flowing east-southeast between the Balkan and Rhodope Mountains, past Plovdiv and Dimitrovgrad to Edirne in Turkey. East of Svilengrad, Bulgaria, the river flows eastwards, forming the border between Bulgaria (on the north bank) and Greece (on the south bank), and then between Turkey and Greece. At Edirne, the river meets it two chief tributaries Tundzha and Arda, and flows through Turkish territory on both banks. It then turns towards the south and forms the border between Greece on the west bank and Turkey on the east bank all the way to the Aegean Sea, which it enters near Enez forming a river delta. The upper Maritsa valley is a principal east–west route in Bulgaria. The unnavigable river is used for power production and irrigation.", "score": "1.4031104" }, { "id": "2612794", "title": "Maritsa", "text": " The lower course of the river Maritsa/Evros, where it forms the border of Greece and Turkey, is very vulnerable to flooding. For about 4 months every year, the low lands around the river are flooded. This causes significant economic damage (loss of agricultural production and damage to infrastructure), which is estimated at several hundreds million Euro. Recent large floods took place in 2006, 2007, 2014, with the largest flood taking place in 2021. Several causes have been proposed: more rainfall due to climate change, deforestation in the Bulgarian part of the catchment area, increased land use in the flood plains and difficult communication between the three countries.", "score": "1.4021652" }, { "id": "12366180", "title": "List of rivers of Bulgaria", "text": " A country rich in water resources, Bulgaria has a large number of rivers that are divided into several regions based on their mouth's location. Rivers of northern Bulgaria, with the exception of the very east of the region, are typically tributaries of the Danube. Notable rivers in the area are the Iskar, Vit, Ogosta, Osam and Yantra. The rivers in the eastern part of the country are typically short (except for Kamchiya) and flow into the Black Sea. Notable rivers in the region include the Kamchiya, Batova, Provadiyska, Devnenska, Ropotamo, Veleka and Rezovska. Most of the rivers that rise in southern Bulgaria have their mouths in the Aegean Sea outside Bulgarian territory. A notable exception is the Iskar that takes its source from Rila and runs through Stara Planina forming a gorge to reach the Danube. Depending on their location, they are divided into two regions, a Western Aegean and Eastern Aegean one. The former embraces the Struma and Mesta, while rivers in the latter include the Arda, Maritsa and Tundzha.", "score": "1.3980013" }, { "id": "6254427", "title": "Paatsjoki", "text": " The Paatsjoki River (Paatsjoki,, , Pasvikelva, Pasvik älv, Паз or Патсойоки, Paz or Patsoyoki) is a river that flows through Finland, Norway, and Russia. Since 1826, the river has marked parts of the Norway–Russia border, except from 1920 to 1944 when it was along the Finland–Norway border. The river is the outlet from the large Lake Inari in Finland and flows through Norway and Russia to discharge into the Bøkfjorden (which later flows into the Varangerfjorden and then the Barents Sea), not far from the town of Kirkenes. The river has a watershed of 18404 km2, and is 145 km long. A series of hydroelectric stations, known as the Paatsjoki River Hydroelectric Plants, are along the river. The river provides good fishing opportunities for Atlantic salmon, although fishermen must ensure that their fishing lines do not cross the international border.", "score": "1.3968322" }, { "id": "5230724", "title": "Bythinella gloeeri", "text": " This species is endemic to Bulgaria, and is known only from a river in Lepenitsa Cave, in the Western Rhodopes mountain range.", "score": "1.3953315" }, { "id": "28555309", "title": "Lieksanjoki", "text": " Lieksanjoki or Lenderka (Лендерка) is a river of Finland and Russia that begins in the Republic of Karelia in Russia. It flows into the Lake Pielinen in Northern Karelia, Finland. Parts of its basin in Russia are the lakes Lake Leksozero and Lake Tulos in the Republic of Karelia. The river itself is a part the Vuoksi River basin in Finland and Russia, which in turn is a part of the Neva basin in Russia.", "score": "1.3925781" } ]
[ "Alexeni\n Alexeni is a commune in Ialomița County, Muntenia, Romania, some 65 km north-east of Bucharest, near the town of Urziceni. It is composed of a single village, Alexeni. Until 2001 a Romanian Air Force military helicopters unit was located at the nearby airfield. In 2007, as the airfield was not used by the Romanian Air Force anylonger, the former Minister of Transport Radu Berceanu suggested to use the location for Bucharest's new low-cost flights airport (as the operational tariffs for Bucharest's previous low-cost hub, Aurel Vlaicu Airport, were set to grow). However, some analysts considered the project unrealistic and doomed to fail due to the poor conditions of the infrastructure in the area. Eventually those plans were abandoned and all low-cost flights were moved in March 2012 at Bucharest main airport Henri Coandă International Airport.", "Ogosta\n The Ogosta (Огоста, Latin: Augusta), is the largest river in Northwestern Bulgaria, a right tributary of the Danube. It originates at Chiprovska Mountain, 2,168 meters high section of the Western Balkan Mountains, at about an altitude of 1,760 meters, on the border with Serbia. The towns of Chiprovtsi, Montana, and Miziya are situated on the river's banks. The Ogosta river is 147.4 km in length and is fed by 40 tributaries (including the Skat River) in a watershed of 3,157 square kilometers. The average water discharge in the lower course of the river is 18 cubic meters per second. Along the river's length there are 14 irrigation systems, 8 hydropower plants, and 13 dams. Although the river is used ", "Vardar\n The river rises at Vrutok, a few kilometers southwest of Gostivar in North Macedonia. It passes through Gostivar, Skopje and into Veles, crosses the Greek border near Gevgelija, Polykastro and Axioupoli (\"town on the Axiós\"), before emptying into the Aegean Sea in Central Macedonia, west of Thessaloniki in northern Greece. The Vardar basin comprises two-thirds of the territory of North Macedonia. The valley features fertile lands in the Polog region, around Gevgelija and in the Thessaloniki regional unit. The river is surrounded by mountains elsewhere. The superhighways Greek National Road 1 in Greece and M1 and E75 run within the valley along the river's entire length to near Skopje. The river was very famous during the Ottoman Empire and remains so in modern-day Turkey as the inspiration for many folk songs, of which the most famous is Vardar Ovasi. It has also been depicted on the coat of arms of Skopje, which in turn is incorporated in the city's flag.", "Arda (Maritsa tributary)\n The Arda (Арда, Άρδας , Arda ) is a 290 km river in Bulgaria and Greece. It is a tributary of the Maritsa (or Evros). Its source lies in the Bulgarian Rhodope Mountains near the village Arda, part of the municipality of Smolyan. It flows eastward past Rudozem, Kardzhali and Ivaylovgrad and enters Greece in the northern part of the Evros regional unit. It flows into the Maritsa on the border of Greece and Turkey, between the Greek village Kastanies and the Turkish city Edirne. In the Bulgarian section there are three hydroelectric and irrigation dams, Kardzhali Dam, Studen Kladenets and Ivaylovgrad Dam. The Bulgarian section is 229 ", "Natanebi\n The Natanebi (ნატანები) is a river in western Georgia, located in the region of Guria. It flows into the Black Sea near Shekvetili. It is 60 km long, and has a drainage basin of 657 km2. The Natanebi corresponds to the ancient River Isis, described by Greek historian Arrian of Nicomedia in his Periplus of the Euxine Sea.", "Alexeni Airfield\n Alexeni airfield was a military airfield, which was proposed as a new low-cost airport for Bucharest, located in the Alexeni town, in Ialomiţa County, at 60 km north-east of the capital city of Romania. Until 2001 a Romanian Air Force military helicopter unit was based on this airfield. Former Minister of Transport Radu Berceanu suggested the location for Bucharest's new low-cost flights airport (as the operational tariffs for Bucharest's previous low-cost hub, Aurel Vlaicu Airport, were set to grow). However, some analysts considered the project unrealistic and doomed to fail due to the poor conditions of the infrastructure in the area. As of April 2013 those plans have been abandoned and all Bucharest's low-cost flights were moved at Henri Coandă International Airport in March 2012.", "Qvirila\n It originates in South Ossetia, in the gorges of the Racha Mountains. Most of the river is located in Georgia. After the confluence with its left tributary Dzirula it flows through flat terrain, before - through the mountains. The river is fed mainly by rain. On average, water flow per year near the city Zestafoni, located 42 kilometers from its mouth, 61 m³ / s, at the mouth of about 90 m³ /from. The river is suitable for whitewater canoeing. The Chiatura manganese ore deposit is located in the river basin.", "Veleka\n The Veleka (Велека, Kocadere ) is a river in the very southeast of Bulgaria (Burgas Province), as well as the very northeast of European Turkey. It is 147 km long, of which 108 km in Bulgaria and 25 km in Turkey, and takes it sources from a number of Karst springs in the Turkish part of the Strandzha (İstranca) mountain to flow into the Black Sea at the Bulgarian village of Sinemorets. Veleka is situated in Strandzha Nature Park. The river's width near the mouth is from 8 to 10 m and its depth ranges from 2 to 4 m. At its mouth, the Veleka is 50 m wide and 7 to 8 m deep, overflowing shortly before making a turn and pouring into the sea. The waters of the Veleka are rich in flora and fauna, with more than 30 species of freshwater fish being present, the most frequent one being the chub. Five endangered animal species inhabit the river, as well as important regional plants.", "Prut\n Romania and the Russian Empire. After World War II, the river once again dominated a border, this time between Romania and the Soviet Union. Nowadays, for a length of 31 km, it forms the border between Romania and Ukraine, and for 711 km, it forms the border between Romania and Moldova. It has a hydrographic basin of 27,540 km2, of which 10,990 km2 are in Romania and 7,790 km2 in Moldova. The largest city along its banks is Chernivtsi, Ukraine. The Stânca-Costești Dam, operated jointly by Moldova and Romania, is built on the Prut. There is also a Hydro-Electric Station in ", "Tskhenistsqali\n Tskhenistsqali (ცხენისწყალი, Cxenisċqali, also: Tskhenistskali) is a river in northern Georgia. Its source is in the main range of the Caucasus Mountains, in the easternmost part of the Lentekhi Municipality, lower Svaneti. A tributary of the river Rioni, it is 176 km long, and has a drainage basin of 2120 km2. It flows through the small towns Lentekhi and Tsageri and joins the Rioni near the town of Samtredia. The main tributaries of Tskhenistskali are: Zsekho, Kheleldula, Janolula ( from the right ), Kobishuri, Leuseri, Khopuri (from the left). From etymological standpoint the name is derived from the Georgian words ცხენი (Cxeni, \"horse\") and წყალი (Tsqali, \"water\"), thereby meaning \"horse water\" or perhaps more precisely \"horse river\".", "Vohitra River\n The Vohitra river in Alaotra-Mangoro and Atsinanana regions, is located in central-eastern Madagascar. It drains to the eastern coast. It flows into the Rianila River near Anivorano Est. It has a hydro-power station at Andekaleka, the Andekaleka Dam.", "Geography of North Macedonia\n The Vardar is the longest and most important river in North Macedonia. It is 388 km long, and drains an area of around 25000 km2. The river rises at Vrutok, a few kilometers north of Gostivar in the Republic of North Macedonia. It passes through Gostivar, Skopje and into Veles, crosses the Greek border near Gevgelija, Polykastro and Axioupoli, before emptying into the Aegean Sea in Central Macedonia west of Thessaloniki in northern Greece. The Vardar basin includes two-thirds of the territory of the Republic of North Macedonia. For that the area is called \"Vardar Macedonia\" after the river, to distinguish it from \"Aegean Macedonia\" (in Greece) and \"Pirin Macedonia\" (in Bulgaria). The valley comprises fertile lands in Polog, Gevgelija and other parts. The river is surrounded by mountains elsewhere. The M1 / E75, connecting with Greek National Road 1, runs through the valley along the river's entire length to near Skopje. The river is depicted on the coat of arms of Skopje, which in turn is incorporated in the city's flag.", "Moldova\n the main river, flowing through the country from north to south, receiving the waters of Răut, Bîc, Ichel, Botna. Ialpug flows into one of the Danube limans, while Cogâlnic into the Black Sea chain of limans. The country is landlocked, though it is close to the Black Sea; at its closest point it is separated from the Dniester Liman, an estuary of the Black Sea, by only 3 km of Ukrainian territory. While most of the country is hilly, elevations never exceed 430 m – the highest point being the Bălănești Hill. Moldova's hills are part of the Moldavian Plateau, which geologically originate from the Carpathian Mountains. Its subdivisions in Moldova ", "Moglenitsas\n The Moglenitsas (Μογλενίτσας) is a river in Almopia, northern Greece. The river has its headwater in the Vermio Mountains of Macedonia, Greece and it flows into the Aliakmonas River near Kouloura, between Veria and Alexandreia, twenty kilometers west of Thessaloniki. Tributaries of the Moglenitsas include the Xiropotamos, Toplitsas, Koziakas and Golemas rivers. As the only outflow from the region of Almopia it flows between low hills to the south, where it forms a small canyon. In the 1930s the river was redirected by use of a canal and today irrigates the region of Almopia. The river is used for sports such as rafting and kayaking and for irrigation.", "Maritsa\n flowing east-southeast between the Balkan and Rhodope Mountains, past Plovdiv and Dimitrovgrad to Edirne in Turkey. East of Svilengrad, Bulgaria, the river flows eastwards, forming the border between Bulgaria (on the north bank) and Greece (on the south bank), and then between Turkey and Greece. At Edirne, the river meets it two chief tributaries Tundzha and Arda, and flows through Turkish territory on both banks. It then turns towards the south and forms the border between Greece on the west bank and Turkey on the east bank all the way to the Aegean Sea, which it enters near Enez forming a river delta. The upper Maritsa valley is a principal east–west route in Bulgaria. The unnavigable river is used for power production and irrigation.", "Maritsa\n The lower course of the river Maritsa/Evros, where it forms the border of Greece and Turkey, is very vulnerable to flooding. For about 4 months every year, the low lands around the river are flooded. This causes significant economic damage (loss of agricultural production and damage to infrastructure), which is estimated at several hundreds million Euro. Recent large floods took place in 2006, 2007, 2014, with the largest flood taking place in 2021. Several causes have been proposed: more rainfall due to climate change, deforestation in the Bulgarian part of the catchment area, increased land use in the flood plains and difficult communication between the three countries.", "List of rivers of Bulgaria\n A country rich in water resources, Bulgaria has a large number of rivers that are divided into several regions based on their mouth's location. Rivers of northern Bulgaria, with the exception of the very east of the region, are typically tributaries of the Danube. Notable rivers in the area are the Iskar, Vit, Ogosta, Osam and Yantra. The rivers in the eastern part of the country are typically short (except for Kamchiya) and flow into the Black Sea. Notable rivers in the region include the Kamchiya, Batova, Provadiyska, Devnenska, Ropotamo, Veleka and Rezovska. Most of the rivers that rise in southern Bulgaria have their mouths in the Aegean Sea outside Bulgarian territory. A notable exception is the Iskar that takes its source from Rila and runs through Stara Planina forming a gorge to reach the Danube. Depending on their location, they are divided into two regions, a Western Aegean and Eastern Aegean one. The former embraces the Struma and Mesta, while rivers in the latter include the Arda, Maritsa and Tundzha.", "Paatsjoki\n The Paatsjoki River (Paatsjoki,, , Pasvikelva, Pasvik älv, Паз or Патсойоки, Paz or Patsoyoki) is a river that flows through Finland, Norway, and Russia. Since 1826, the river has marked parts of the Norway–Russia border, except from 1920 to 1944 when it was along the Finland–Norway border. The river is the outlet from the large Lake Inari in Finland and flows through Norway and Russia to discharge into the Bøkfjorden (which later flows into the Varangerfjorden and then the Barents Sea), not far from the town of Kirkenes. The river has a watershed of 18404 km2, and is 145 km long. A series of hydroelectric stations, known as the Paatsjoki River Hydroelectric Plants, are along the river. The river provides good fishing opportunities for Atlantic salmon, although fishermen must ensure that their fishing lines do not cross the international border.", "Bythinella gloeeri\n This species is endemic to Bulgaria, and is known only from a river in Lepenitsa Cave, in the Western Rhodopes mountain range.", "Lieksanjoki\n Lieksanjoki or Lenderka (Лендерка) is a river of Finland and Russia that begins in the Republic of Karelia in Russia. It flows into the Lake Pielinen in Northern Karelia, Finland. Parts of its basin in Russia are the lakes Lake Leksozero and Lake Tulos in the Republic of Karelia. The river itself is a part the Vuoksi River basin in Finland and Russia, which in turn is a part of the Neva basin in Russia." ]
In what country is Villers-sous-Foucarmont?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Villers-sous-Foucarmont
4,977,081
57
[ { "id": "30678144", "title": "Villers-sur-Mer", "text": " The commune is located on the French coast of the English Channel, on the Côte Fleurie, between Deauville and Houlgate, approximately 200 km from Paris. It is the northernmost French commune through which falls the Prime meridian. The latter is represented on the seafront promenade with a blue mark on the ground and on the parapet. This mark is positioned 32 metres west of the actual meridian in use today, the IERS Reference Meridian.", "score": "1.4908977" }, { "id": "10397001", "title": "Fougères", "text": " Fougères (Felger; Gallo: Foujerr) is a commune and a sub-prefecture of the Ille-et-Vilaine department in the region of Brittany in northwestern France. As of 2017, Fougères had 20,418 inhabitants. The Fougères area comprises approximately 88,000 inhabitants and is currently growing, unlike the town centre. ", "score": "1.4411345" }, { "id": "27661391", "title": "Villers-sur-Thère station", "text": " Villers-sur-Thère is a former railway station located in the village Villers-sur-Thère near Allonne in the Oise department, France. It was served by TER Picardie trains from Paris-Nord to Beauvais. As of 2017, it is closed for passenger traffic.", "score": "1.432823" }, { "id": "31697246", "title": "Villers-au-Flos", "text": " Villers-au-Flos is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Hauts-de-France region of France.", "score": "1.4300017" }, { "id": "6792682", "title": "Villers-Chief", "text": " Villers-Chief is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "score": "1.4257548" }, { "id": "30678143", "title": "Villers-sur-Mer", "text": " Villers-sur-Mer is a commune in the Calvados department in Normandy, northwestern France, with a population of 2,765 as of 2016.", "score": "1.4214618" }, { "id": "29684175", "title": "Villers-Campeau", "text": " Villers-Campeau is a former commune in the Nord department in northern France, absorbed in 1947 into Somain.", "score": "1.4121087" }, { "id": "1592861", "title": "Villers-Bretonneux Australian National Memorial", "text": " The Australian National Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux is the main memorial to Australian military personnel killed on the Western Front during World War I. It is located on the Route Villiers-Bretonneux (D 23), between the towns of Fouilloy and Villers-Bretonneux, in the Somme département, France. The memorial lists 10,773 names of soldiers of the Australian Imperial Force with no known grave who were killed between 1916, when Australian forces arrived in France and Belgium, and the end of the war. The location was chosen to commemorate the role played by Australian soldiers in the Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux (24–27 April 1918). Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, the memorial consists of a tower within the Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery, which also includes a Cross of Sacrifice. The tower is surrounded by walls and panels on which the names of the missing dead are listed. The main inscription is in both French and English, on either side of the entrance to the tower. The memorial and cemetery are maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.", "score": "1.4078074" }, { "id": "31713609", "title": "Villers-sur-Fère", "text": " Villers-sur-Fère is a commune in the Aisne department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.", "score": "1.406857" }, { "id": "5283534", "title": "Villers-la-Faye", "text": " Villers-la-Faye is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "score": "1.4066919" }, { "id": "5702856", "title": "Villers-sous-Chalamont", "text": " Villers-sous-Chalamont is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "score": "1.4056091" }, { "id": "11352665", "title": "Villers-lès-Nancy", "text": "🇩🇪 Oerlinghausen, Germany, 1988 ", "score": "1.404731" }, { "id": "6792687", "title": "Villers-le-Lac", "text": " Villers-le-Lac is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "score": "1.4011436" }, { "id": "24943171", "title": "Villers-Saint-Sépulcre station", "text": " Villers-Saint-Sépulcre is a railway station located in the commune of Villers-Saint-Sépulcre in the Oise department, France. The station is served by TER Hauts-de-France trains from Creil to Beauvais.", "score": "1.3996817" }, { "id": "31982817", "title": "Villers-sur-Bar", "text": " Villers-sur-Bar (, literally Villers on Bar) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.", "score": "1.3991865" }, { "id": "13041639", "title": "Villers-Bretonneux", "text": " Delacour's château, or, as the Australian force called it, the \"Red château\", served as headquarters and billets for Allied generals during the Battle of the Somme. Marshal Foch stayed there. At the end of fighting in November 1918 it became the local headquarters of the Imperial (later Commonwealth) Graves Commission. Later abandoned, it was extensively cannibalised for building materials. Its skeleton, which remained as a tourist attraction until 2004, was razed in that year and all traces of it were removed to make way for a supermarket.", "score": "1.3969455" }, { "id": "6284055", "title": "Villers-au-Tertre", "text": " Villers-au-Tertre is a commune in the Nord department in northern France. It is around 10 km south-east of Douai.", "score": "1.3913875" }, { "id": "14233050", "title": "Villers-les-Bois", "text": " Villers-les-Bois is a commune in the Jura department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "score": "1.3899009" }, { "id": "6792685", "title": "Villers-la-Combe", "text": " Villers-la-Combe is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "score": "1.3894627" }, { "id": "31697248", "title": "Villers-au-Flos", "text": "The church of St.Pierre, rebuilt, as was the rest of the village, after the First World War. ; The German military cemetery. ", "score": "1.387876" } ]
[ "Villers-sur-Mer\n The commune is located on the French coast of the English Channel, on the Côte Fleurie, between Deauville and Houlgate, approximately 200 km from Paris. It is the northernmost French commune through which falls the Prime meridian. The latter is represented on the seafront promenade with a blue mark on the ground and on the parapet. This mark is positioned 32 metres west of the actual meridian in use today, the IERS Reference Meridian.", "Fougères\n Fougères (Felger; Gallo: Foujerr) is a commune and a sub-prefecture of the Ille-et-Vilaine department in the region of Brittany in northwestern France. As of 2017, Fougères had 20,418 inhabitants. The Fougères area comprises approximately 88,000 inhabitants and is currently growing, unlike the town centre. ", "Villers-sur-Thère station\n Villers-sur-Thère is a former railway station located in the village Villers-sur-Thère near Allonne in the Oise department, France. It was served by TER Picardie trains from Paris-Nord to Beauvais. As of 2017, it is closed for passenger traffic.", "Villers-au-Flos\n Villers-au-Flos is a commune in the Pas-de-Calais department in the Hauts-de-France region of France.", "Villers-Chief\n Villers-Chief is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "Villers-sur-Mer\n Villers-sur-Mer is a commune in the Calvados department in Normandy, northwestern France, with a population of 2,765 as of 2016.", "Villers-Campeau\n Villers-Campeau is a former commune in the Nord department in northern France, absorbed in 1947 into Somain.", "Villers-Bretonneux Australian National Memorial\n The Australian National Memorial, Villers-Bretonneux is the main memorial to Australian military personnel killed on the Western Front during World War I. It is located on the Route Villiers-Bretonneux (D 23), between the towns of Fouilloy and Villers-Bretonneux, in the Somme département, France. The memorial lists 10,773 names of soldiers of the Australian Imperial Force with no known grave who were killed between 1916, when Australian forces arrived in France and Belgium, and the end of the war. The location was chosen to commemorate the role played by Australian soldiers in the Second Battle of Villers-Bretonneux (24–27 April 1918). Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, the memorial consists of a tower within the Villers-Bretonneux Military Cemetery, which also includes a Cross of Sacrifice. The tower is surrounded by walls and panels on which the names of the missing dead are listed. The main inscription is in both French and English, on either side of the entrance to the tower. The memorial and cemetery are maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.", "Villers-sur-Fère\n Villers-sur-Fère is a commune in the Aisne department in Hauts-de-France in northern France.", "Villers-la-Faye\n Villers-la-Faye is a commune in the Côte-d'Or department in eastern France.", "Villers-sous-Chalamont\n Villers-sous-Chalamont is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "Villers-lès-Nancy\n🇩🇪 Oerlinghausen, Germany, 1988 ", "Villers-le-Lac\n Villers-le-Lac is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "Villers-Saint-Sépulcre station\n Villers-Saint-Sépulcre is a railway station located in the commune of Villers-Saint-Sépulcre in the Oise department, France. The station is served by TER Hauts-de-France trains from Creil to Beauvais.", "Villers-sur-Bar\n Villers-sur-Bar (, literally Villers on Bar) is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.", "Villers-Bretonneux\n Delacour's château, or, as the Australian force called it, the \"Red château\", served as headquarters and billets for Allied generals during the Battle of the Somme. Marshal Foch stayed there. At the end of fighting in November 1918 it became the local headquarters of the Imperial (later Commonwealth) Graves Commission. Later abandoned, it was extensively cannibalised for building materials. Its skeleton, which remained as a tourist attraction until 2004, was razed in that year and all traces of it were removed to make way for a supermarket.", "Villers-au-Tertre\n Villers-au-Tertre is a commune in the Nord department in northern France. It is around 10 km south-east of Douai.", "Villers-les-Bois\n Villers-les-Bois is a commune in the Jura department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "Villers-la-Combe\n Villers-la-Combe is a commune in the Doubs department in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region in eastern France.", "Villers-au-Flos\nThe church of St.Pierre, rebuilt, as was the rest of the village, after the First World War. ; The German military cemetery. " ]
In what country is North Lake?
[ "Canada", "Dominion of Canada", "British North America", "CAN", "CA", "ca", "can", "Can." ]
country
North Lake (Nova Scotia)
5,308,029
57
[ { "id": "6950240", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " The North Lake is a former railway station located near North Lake, Thunder Bay District, Ontario. It lies close to La Verendrye Provincial Park and to the well known Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in the Boundary Waters between Canada and the United States. It was constructed in 1907 as a major station along the Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Railway.", "score": "1.6511772" }, { "id": "29185663", "title": "North Lake (Western Australia)", "text": " North Lake is a freshwater lake in the suburb of North Lake, located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. The suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area. It is part of the northernmost lake within a chain of lakes which make up the Beeliar Regional Park (North Lake, Bibra Lake, South Lake, Booragoon Lake, Yangebup Lake, and Thomsons Lake). The lake has been known by this name since 1877, and the name was approved for the suburb in 1954.", "score": "1.5735984" }, { "id": "29654290", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " The Lakeside Recreation Centre is located in North Lake on the corner of Farrington Road and Bibra Drive. It is home to four basketball courts, a Baptist church, a gym, and a creche. Lakeside Recreation Centre is the home court of the State Basketball League team, the Lakeside Lightning. Apart from North Lake and the surrounding Beeliar Regional Park, the suburb contains the Perth Spanish Club, a golf driving range, Adventure World, Cockburn Ice Skating arena, and an adventure playground next to the lake at Progress Drive.", "score": "1.5597675" }, { "id": "9700436", "title": "North Country (New York)", "text": " The North Country (Pays du Nord) is a region of the U.S. state of New York that encompasses the state's extreme northern frontier, bordered by Lake Champlain to the east, the Adirondack Mountains to the south, the Canadian border to the north, and Lake Ontario and the Saint Lawrence Seaway to the west. A mostly rural area, the North Country includes seven counties. Fort Drum, a U.S. Army base, is also located in the North Country, as is the Adirondack Park. As of 2009, the population of the region was 429,092. The term \"North Country\" was first widely popularized within New York by the 1900 novel Eben Holden by Irving Bacheller.", "score": "1.5553267" }, { "id": "29654287", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " North Lake is a suburb located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. Named after the eponymous lake, the suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area.", "score": "1.5340031" }, { "id": "10929160", "title": "North Lake Parish, New Brunswick", "text": " North Lake is a civil parish in York County, New Brunswick, Canada. For governance purposes it forms the local service district of the parish of North Lake, which is a member of the Western Valley Regional Service Commission (WVRSC).", "score": "1.5186801" }, { "id": "274987", "title": "North Lake Early College High School", "text": " North Lake Early College High School, also known as North Lake Collegiate Academy, is a public high school located in Dallas County, Texas and operated by the Dallas Independent School District (DISD). It has a campus for 9th and 10th grade students at the main campus at North Lake College in Irving and will have a campus for 11th and 12th grade students in the future. Under Texas law, DISD can have operations, including schools, outside of its own boundaries, and North Lake College is not in the DISD boundaries. The school opened with grade 9 students in 2019 and will expand by one grade level per year.", "score": "1.5034609" }, { "id": "31922937", "title": "North Long Lake", "text": " At 6,000 acres (24 km²), North Long Lake is one of the larger lakes in the Brainerd Lakes Area of the U.S. state of Minnesota.", "score": "1.4993573" }, { "id": "31037121", "title": "North Lake, Wisconsin", "text": " James Barney Marsh (1856-1936), engineer and bridge builder, was born in North Lake. In 2020, team 5 in the pee wee division of the Lake Country Chiefs football league took all other opponents by storm on the road to total dominance.", "score": "1.4896163" }, { "id": "9700438", "title": "North Country (New York)", "text": " North Country consists of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, St. Lawrence, Jefferson and Lewis Counties. The New York State Department of Labor, the New York State Regional Development Council, and the Empire State Development Agency serve people who live in the state-sanctioned North Country. The contemporary North Country takes in the largest area of all the North Countries. It extends from the Canadian border on the north to the Erie Canal on the south, and from the shores of Lake Ontario in the west to the edge of Lake Champlain in the east. The contemporary North Country includes all of the Adirondack Park, 14 counties, 14 cities, 255 towns and almost 40 percent of the state’s geographic area. The Adirondack North Country Association, an economic development organization that also promotes tourism, serves people living in the contemporary North Country, as does North Country Public Radio.\"", "score": "1.4874824" }, { "id": "3417579", "title": "North Shore (Lake Superior)", "text": "Thunder Bay, Ontario ; Lake Nipigon ; Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario ", "score": "1.4823542" }, { "id": "6899100", "title": "Lakes of the North, Michigan", "text": " Lakes of the North is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Antrim County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The CDP is located in Mancelona and Star townships. The population was 925 at the 2010 census. The community of Lakes of the North was listed as a newly-organized census-designated place for the 2010 census, meaning it now has officially defined boundaries and population statistics for the first time.", "score": "1.4769666" }, { "id": "31704950", "title": "North Spirit Lake First Nation", "text": " North Spirit Lake First Nation is a small Oji-Cree First Nation reserve in Northern Ontario, located north of Red Lake, Ontario. It is connected to Sandy Lake First Nation, and Deer Lake First Nation by winter/ice roads. It is part of the Keewaytinook Okimakanak Council (Northern Chiefs) and the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. North Spirit Lake is policed by the Nishnawbe-Aski Police Service, an Aboriginal-based service.", "score": "1.476757" }, { "id": "6950243", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " areas. This pattern was designed by architect Ralph Benjamin Pratt and first introduced in 1901 as plan 100-3. North Lake utilized the updated Plan 100-29 which debuted in 1907 and resulted in a slightly larger station. In 1918 the bankrupt CNoR was nationalized into the Canadian National Railways (CNR) and the line became known as the CNR-North Lake Sub-Division. North Lake Station remained in service until 1923, when, due to a lack of business on this portion of line, CNR decided to shorten the line by 24 miles. Service terminated at Mackies on Whitefish Lake, Milepost 47. The station and its nearby coal bunker were abandoned by CNR.", "score": "1.463294" }, { "id": "29654289", "title": "North Lake, Western Australia", "text": " There are no schools within the suburb, with many North Lake residents using the state government primary schools in Coolbellup and Kardinya. Directly to the north of the suburb lies Murdoch University and Kennedy Baptist College.", "score": "1.456485" }, { "id": "14927840", "title": "North Lakes, Queensland", "text": " The suburb is mostly made up of newly developed housing originally around the North Lakes Golf Course. Lake Eden is within the suburb of North Lakes. The lake is surrounded by a public park and features many waterbirds and other wildlife. Amenities at the lakeside park include a café, children's playground and walking track. The North Lakes Business Park is a commercial site situated on the edge of the North Lakes masterplanned community. It started construction in 2007 and is planned to take more than ten years to fully complete. Construction of a road bridge crossing the Bruce Highway and leading to Dakabin railway station opened on 12 December 2014; the distance is approximately 2.5 km. The Moreton Bay Rail Link from Petrie to Kippa-Ring with closest station Mango Hill just south of Westfield North Lakes opened on 4 October 2016.", "score": "1.4535897" }, { "id": "14927837", "title": "North Lakes, Queensland", "text": " North Lakes is a suburb of the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. North Lakes is located approximately 26 km north of the Brisbane central business district. At the the suburb recorded a population of 21,671.", "score": "1.4524608" }, { "id": "6950245", "title": "North Lake station", "text": " North Lake Station sat derelict in its remote locate until the 1970s when efforts were made to save the deteriorating structure. A group based out of Nolalu called the Localmotive Society attempted to renovate the old station. Unfortunately resistance from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) forced the group to alter their plans and construct a replica station one mile east on Addie Lake. Work began in early in 1977 and was completed by the end of that summer. However, attempts to create a park and trails around the station were never realized and the replica was burned by the MNR in 2004.", "score": "1.4478253" }, { "id": "11043751", "title": "North Caribou Lake First Nation", "text": " North Caribou Lake First Nation or Weagamow First Nation, sometimes also known as Round Lake First Nation, is an Oji-Cree First Nations band government who inhabit the Kenora District in northern Ontario, Canada. It is approximately 320 km by air north of Sioux Lookout. As of January 2008, the First Nations had a registered population of 928 people, of which their on-Reserve population was 677.", "score": "1.4460986" }, { "id": "25916754", "title": "North Tea Lake", "text": " North Tea Lake is a lake in the Ottawa River drainage basin in the geographic townships of Ballantyne and Wilkes in the Unorganized South Part of Nipissing District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is on the Amable du Fond River and lies in the northwest of Algonquin Provincial Park. The lake is a popular destination for canoeists. The primary inflow is the Amable du Fond River arriving from Kawawaymog Lake at the west. The primary outflow is the Amable du Fond River, at the northeast to Manitou Lake, which flows via the Mattawa River to the Ottawa River.", "score": "1.4450576" } ]
[ "North Lake station\n The North Lake is a former railway station located near North Lake, Thunder Bay District, Ontario. It lies close to La Verendrye Provincial Park and to the well known Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness in the Boundary Waters between Canada and the United States. It was constructed in 1907 as a major station along the Port Arthur, Duluth and Western Railway.", "North Lake (Western Australia)\n North Lake is a freshwater lake in the suburb of North Lake, located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. The suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area. It is part of the northernmost lake within a chain of lakes which make up the Beeliar Regional Park (North Lake, Bibra Lake, South Lake, Booragoon Lake, Yangebup Lake, and Thomsons Lake). The lake has been known by this name since 1877, and the name was approved for the suburb in 1954.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n The Lakeside Recreation Centre is located in North Lake on the corner of Farrington Road and Bibra Drive. It is home to four basketball courts, a Baptist church, a gym, and a creche. Lakeside Recreation Centre is the home court of the State Basketball League team, the Lakeside Lightning. Apart from North Lake and the surrounding Beeliar Regional Park, the suburb contains the Perth Spanish Club, a golf driving range, Adventure World, Cockburn Ice Skating arena, and an adventure playground next to the lake at Progress Drive.", "North Country (New York)\n The North Country (Pays du Nord) is a region of the U.S. state of New York that encompasses the state's extreme northern frontier, bordered by Lake Champlain to the east, the Adirondack Mountains to the south, the Canadian border to the north, and Lake Ontario and the Saint Lawrence Seaway to the west. A mostly rural area, the North Country includes seven counties. Fort Drum, a U.S. Army base, is also located in the North Country, as is the Adirondack Park. As of 2009, the population of the region was 429,092. The term \"North Country\" was first widely popularized within New York by the 1900 novel Eben Holden by Irving Bacheller.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n North Lake is a suburb located 18 km south of the central business district of Perth, the capital of Western Australia, and 8 km from the Indian Ocean. Named after the eponymous lake, the suburb and lake are located within the City of Cockburn local government area.", "North Lake Parish, New Brunswick\n North Lake is a civil parish in York County, New Brunswick, Canada. For governance purposes it forms the local service district of the parish of North Lake, which is a member of the Western Valley Regional Service Commission (WVRSC).", "North Lake Early College High School\n North Lake Early College High School, also known as North Lake Collegiate Academy, is a public high school located in Dallas County, Texas and operated by the Dallas Independent School District (DISD). It has a campus for 9th and 10th grade students at the main campus at North Lake College in Irving and will have a campus for 11th and 12th grade students in the future. Under Texas law, DISD can have operations, including schools, outside of its own boundaries, and North Lake College is not in the DISD boundaries. The school opened with grade 9 students in 2019 and will expand by one grade level per year.", "North Long Lake\n At 6,000 acres (24 km²), North Long Lake is one of the larger lakes in the Brainerd Lakes Area of the U.S. state of Minnesota.", "North Lake, Wisconsin\n James Barney Marsh (1856-1936), engineer and bridge builder, was born in North Lake. In 2020, team 5 in the pee wee division of the Lake Country Chiefs football league took all other opponents by storm on the road to total dominance.", "North Country (New York)\n North Country consists of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Hamilton, St. Lawrence, Jefferson and Lewis Counties. The New York State Department of Labor, the New York State Regional Development Council, and the Empire State Development Agency serve people who live in the state-sanctioned North Country. The contemporary North Country takes in the largest area of all the North Countries. It extends from the Canadian border on the north to the Erie Canal on the south, and from the shores of Lake Ontario in the west to the edge of Lake Champlain in the east. The contemporary North Country includes all of the Adirondack Park, 14 counties, 14 cities, 255 towns and almost 40 percent of the state’s geographic area. The Adirondack North Country Association, an economic development organization that also promotes tourism, serves people living in the contemporary North Country, as does North Country Public Radio.\"", "North Shore (Lake Superior)\nThunder Bay, Ontario ; Lake Nipigon ; Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario ", "Lakes of the North, Michigan\n Lakes of the North is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Antrim County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The CDP is located in Mancelona and Star townships. The population was 925 at the 2010 census. The community of Lakes of the North was listed as a newly-organized census-designated place for the 2010 census, meaning it now has officially defined boundaries and population statistics for the first time.", "North Spirit Lake First Nation\n North Spirit Lake First Nation is a small Oji-Cree First Nation reserve in Northern Ontario, located north of Red Lake, Ontario. It is connected to Sandy Lake First Nation, and Deer Lake First Nation by winter/ice roads. It is part of the Keewaytinook Okimakanak Council (Northern Chiefs) and the Nishnawbe Aski Nation. North Spirit Lake is policed by the Nishnawbe-Aski Police Service, an Aboriginal-based service.", "North Lake station\n areas. This pattern was designed by architect Ralph Benjamin Pratt and first introduced in 1901 as plan 100-3. North Lake utilized the updated Plan 100-29 which debuted in 1907 and resulted in a slightly larger station. In 1918 the bankrupt CNoR was nationalized into the Canadian National Railways (CNR) and the line became known as the CNR-North Lake Sub-Division. North Lake Station remained in service until 1923, when, due to a lack of business on this portion of line, CNR decided to shorten the line by 24 miles. Service terminated at Mackies on Whitefish Lake, Milepost 47. The station and its nearby coal bunker were abandoned by CNR.", "North Lake, Western Australia\n There are no schools within the suburb, with many North Lake residents using the state government primary schools in Coolbellup and Kardinya. Directly to the north of the suburb lies Murdoch University and Kennedy Baptist College.", "North Lakes, Queensland\n The suburb is mostly made up of newly developed housing originally around the North Lakes Golf Course. Lake Eden is within the suburb of North Lakes. The lake is surrounded by a public park and features many waterbirds and other wildlife. Amenities at the lakeside park include a café, children's playground and walking track. The North Lakes Business Park is a commercial site situated on the edge of the North Lakes masterplanned community. It started construction in 2007 and is planned to take more than ten years to fully complete. Construction of a road bridge crossing the Bruce Highway and leading to Dakabin railway station opened on 12 December 2014; the distance is approximately 2.5 km. The Moreton Bay Rail Link from Petrie to Kippa-Ring with closest station Mango Hill just south of Westfield North Lakes opened on 4 October 2016.", "North Lakes, Queensland\n North Lakes is a suburb of the Moreton Bay Region, Queensland, Australia. North Lakes is located approximately 26 km north of the Brisbane central business district. At the the suburb recorded a population of 21,671.", "North Lake station\n North Lake Station sat derelict in its remote locate until the 1970s when efforts were made to save the deteriorating structure. A group based out of Nolalu called the Localmotive Society attempted to renovate the old station. Unfortunately resistance from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources (MNR) forced the group to alter their plans and construct a replica station one mile east on Addie Lake. Work began in early in 1977 and was completed by the end of that summer. However, attempts to create a park and trails around the station were never realized and the replica was burned by the MNR in 2004.", "North Caribou Lake First Nation\n North Caribou Lake First Nation or Weagamow First Nation, sometimes also known as Round Lake First Nation, is an Oji-Cree First Nations band government who inhabit the Kenora District in northern Ontario, Canada. It is approximately 320 km by air north of Sioux Lookout. As of January 2008, the First Nations had a registered population of 928 people, of which their on-Reserve population was 677.", "North Tea Lake\n North Tea Lake is a lake in the Ottawa River drainage basin in the geographic townships of Ballantyne and Wilkes in the Unorganized South Part of Nipissing District in Northeastern Ontario, Canada. It is on the Amable du Fond River and lies in the northwest of Algonquin Provincial Park. The lake is a popular destination for canoeists. The primary inflow is the Amable du Fond River arriving from Kawawaymog Lake at the west. The primary outflow is the Amable du Fond River, at the northeast to Manitou Lake, which flows via the Mattawa River to the Ottawa River." ]
In what country is 112th United States Colored Infantry?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment
902,091
35
[ { "id": "470078", "title": "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 112th United States Colored Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment was composed of African American enlisted men commanded by white officers and was authorized by the Bureau of Colored Troops which was created by the United States War Department on May 22, 1863.", "score": "1.9423867" }, { "id": "470079", "title": "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was organized at Little Rock, Arkansas, April 23 to November 8, 1864, as the 5th Regiment Arkansas Volunteer Infantry (African Descent) and assigned to the VII Corps (Union Army). The unit was later re-designated as the 112th United States Colored Infantry.", "score": "1.897081" }, { "id": "470081", "title": "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was consolidated with the 11th U.S. Colored Infantry (Old) and the 113th U.S. Colored Infantry (old) the 113th United States Colored Troops (New) on April 1, 1865. The resulted regiment was mustered out on April 9, 1866.", "score": "1.8749421" }, { "id": "1951078", "title": "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was consolidated with the 11th Regiment United States Colored Infantry (Old) and the 112th U.S. Colored Infantry on April 1, 1865. The 113th United States Colored Infantry were mustered out a year later, on April 9, 1866.", "score": "1.8494265" }, { "id": "470080", "title": "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was attached to 1st Division, 7th Corps, Dept. of Arkansas, June, 1864, to January, 1865. Colored Brigade, 7th Corps, to February, 1865. General Orders No. 14 Department of Arkansas, dated February 1, 1865, from Little Rock, included the 112th United States Colored Infantry is reported as belonging to the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the 7th Army Corps. The regiment was attached to 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, 7th Corps, to April, 1865. The regiment was assigned to post and garrison duty at Little Rock, Ark., entire term.", "score": "1.8163674" }, { "id": "1951076", "title": "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was organized at Little Rock, Arkansas, June 25, 1864, from the 6th Arkansas Colored Infantry and assigned to the VII Corps (Union Army). The unit was later re-designated as the 113th United States Colored Infantry.", "score": "1.7869192" }, { "id": "1951075", "title": "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 113th United States Colored Infantry (formerly the 6th Arkansas Colored Infantry Regiment) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment was composed of African American enlisted men commanded by white officers and was authorized by the Bureau of Colored Troops which was created by the United States War Department on May 22, 1863.", "score": "1.7635518" }, { "id": "5691070", "title": "110th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 2nd Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army between November 20, 1863, and June 25, 1864, during the American Civil War.", "score": "1.7242644" }, { "id": "5691072", "title": "111th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 3rd Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army between January 3, 1864, and June 25, 1864, during the American Civil War.", "score": "1.6962342" }, { "id": "1951077", "title": "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment was attached to 1st Division, 7th Corps, Dept. of Arkansas, to January, 1865. The regiment was attached to Colored Brigade, 7th Corps, until February, 1865. General Orders No. 14, Department of Arkansas, dated February 1, 1865, from Little Rock, included the 113th United States Colored Infantry is reported as belonging to the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the 7th Army Corps. The regiment was attached to 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, 7th Corps, until April 1865. The regiment was assigned to post and garrison duty at Little Rock, Ark., for its entire term of service.", "score": "1.6850582" }, { "id": "5691071", "title": "110th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The infantry regiment was organized at Pulaski, Tennessee, on November 20, 1863. From there it was attached to the 2nd Division, 16th Army Corps, Department of Tennessee. In the meantime, it was on garrison duty at Pulaski and Athens, Alabama, which included acting as guard for railroads into Northern Alabama until June 25, 1864. On June 25, 1864, the regiment was designated the 110th U.S. Regiment Colored Troops.", "score": "1.6755301" }, { "id": "9880418", "title": "List of United States Colored Troops Civil War units", "text": " 103rd Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 104th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 105th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops - Failed to complete organization. ; 106th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 107th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 108th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 109th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 110th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 111th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 112th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 113th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 114th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 115th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 116th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 117th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored ", "score": "1.6664886" }, { "id": "5691073", "title": "111th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The infantry regiment was organized at Pulaski, Tennessee, on January 3, 1864. Straight away it was placed on garrison duty at Pulaski and Athens, Alabama. While they were on garrison duty they were attached to the Department of Tennessee. In the meantime, they acted as guard for railroads into Northern Alabama until June 25, 1864. On June 25, 1864, the regiment was designated the 111th U.S. Regiment Colored Troops.", "score": "1.6616778" }, { "id": "484517", "title": "116th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 116th United States Colored Infantry was an infantry regiment of the United States Colored Troops serving in the Union Army organization made up of African-American troops and white officers during the American Civil War.", "score": "1.6558548" }, { "id": "31781274", "title": "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 127th U.S. Colored Infantry was formed on August 23, 1864, at Camp William Penn, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The regiment's enlisted personnel were African Americans, under the command of white officers. Its first central command staff included: Colonel Benjamin F. Tracy, Lieutenant Colonel James Given, Major Arthur M. Greene, Quartermaster John W. Taylor, Surgeon William C. Powell, Assistant Surgeon Eugene A. Chapman, and Chaplain Thomas S. Johnson. After completing training on September 10, the regiment was ordered to City Point, Virginia. The regiment was attached to the 1st Brigade, 3rd Division of the U.S. Army's 10th Corps (Army of the James) until ", "score": "1.6417376" }, { "id": "31781273", "title": "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 127th United States Colored Infantry was an American infantry regiment which fought with the Union Army during the American Civil War. Staffed by African American enlisted men who were placed under the command of white officers, the regiment was formed and trained at Camp William Penn near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania between August 23 and September 10, 1864. Following training, the regiment joined the 10th Corps, within the Army of the James, and later took part in some of the final battles of the war including the Battle of Chaffin's Farm, the Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road and the fighting around the Appomattox Court House. After the war, the regiment undertook occupation duties as part of the 25th Corps in Texas along the Mexican frontier and the Rio Grande River before its personnel were mustered out in September and October 1865. This regiment's battle flag was one of eleven designed by African American ornamental artist and portraitist David Bustill Bowser.", "score": "1.6401138" }, { "id": "31781278", "title": "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The regiment's battle flag (shown above) was one of 11 designed by African American ornamental artist and portraitist David Bustill Bowser, and was \"one of the first widely viewed, positive images of African Americans painted by an African American,\" according to historians at the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.", "score": "1.6217144" }, { "id": "5691103", "title": "106th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 106th United States Colored Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment of the United States Colored Troops, formed during the American Civil War. It was organized as the 4th Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) in late March 1864, and redesignated as the 106th United States Colored Infantry in May. The regiment spent its service on garrison duty at Pulaski, Tennessee, guarding railroads. It was consolidated into the 40th United States Colored Infantry Regiment in November 1865.", "score": "1.603859" }, { "id": "484522", "title": "116th United States Colored Infantry Regiment", "text": "History Engine web site, article, The 116th Colored Troops at the Battle of Petersburgh ; History of the 116th Regiment, U.S.C. Infantry, by Charles Kireker, 1866 ; The Black Phalanx: a history of the Negro Soldiers of the United States, by Joseph Thomas Wilson, 1890 ; African Americans at War: an Encyclopedia, by Jonathan Sutherland, 2004, Volume 2 ; Camp Nelson, Kentucky: a Civil War History, by Richard D. Sears, 2002 ; The United States Army and Reconstruction, 1865–1877, by James E. Sefton, 1967 ; The Petersburg Campaign: June 1864-April 1865, John Horn, 1999 ; Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, by Ervin L. Jordan, 1995 ; A History of Blacks in Kentucky: from Slavery to Segregation, 1760–1891, Marion Brunson Lucas, 2003 ; American Civil War web site, Colored Troops in the American Civil War page ; Camp Nelson Civil War Heritage Park web site ; Texas Historical Commission pamphlet, Rio Grande City ", "score": "1.5988826" }, { "id": "3329188", "title": "112th Illinois Infantry Regiment", "text": " The 112th Illinois Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War.", "score": "1.5986078" } ]
[ "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 112th United States Colored Infantry was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment was composed of African American enlisted men commanded by white officers and was authorized by the Bureau of Colored Troops which was created by the United States War Department on May 22, 1863.", "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was organized at Little Rock, Arkansas, April 23 to November 8, 1864, as the 5th Regiment Arkansas Volunteer Infantry (African Descent) and assigned to the VII Corps (Union Army). The unit was later re-designated as the 112th United States Colored Infantry.", "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was consolidated with the 11th U.S. Colored Infantry (Old) and the 113th U.S. Colored Infantry (old) the 113th United States Colored Troops (New) on April 1, 1865. The resulted regiment was mustered out on April 9, 1866.", "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was consolidated with the 11th Regiment United States Colored Infantry (Old) and the 112th U.S. Colored Infantry on April 1, 1865. The 113th United States Colored Infantry were mustered out a year later, on April 9, 1866.", "112th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was attached to 1st Division, 7th Corps, Dept. of Arkansas, June, 1864, to January, 1865. Colored Brigade, 7th Corps, to February, 1865. General Orders No. 14 Department of Arkansas, dated February 1, 1865, from Little Rock, included the 112th United States Colored Infantry is reported as belonging to the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the 7th Army Corps. The regiment was attached to 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, 7th Corps, to April, 1865. The regiment was assigned to post and garrison duty at Little Rock, Ark., entire term.", "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was organized at Little Rock, Arkansas, June 25, 1864, from the 6th Arkansas Colored Infantry and assigned to the VII Corps (Union Army). The unit was later re-designated as the 113th United States Colored Infantry.", "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 113th United States Colored Infantry (formerly the 6th Arkansas Colored Infantry Regiment) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army during the American Civil War. The regiment was composed of African American enlisted men commanded by white officers and was authorized by the Bureau of Colored Troops which was created by the United States War Department on May 22, 1863.", "110th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 2nd Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army between November 20, 1863, and June 25, 1864, during the American Civil War.", "111th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 3rd Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) was an infantry regiment that served in the Union Army between January 3, 1864, and June 25, 1864, during the American Civil War.", "113th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment was attached to 1st Division, 7th Corps, Dept. of Arkansas, to January, 1865. The regiment was attached to Colored Brigade, 7th Corps, until February, 1865. General Orders No. 14, Department of Arkansas, dated February 1, 1865, from Little Rock, included the 113th United States Colored Infantry is reported as belonging to the 2nd Brigade of the 1st Division of the 7th Army Corps. The regiment was attached to 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, 7th Corps, until April 1865. The regiment was assigned to post and garrison duty at Little Rock, Ark., for its entire term of service.", "110th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The infantry regiment was organized at Pulaski, Tennessee, on November 20, 1863. From there it was attached to the 2nd Division, 16th Army Corps, Department of Tennessee. In the meantime, it was on garrison duty at Pulaski and Athens, Alabama, which included acting as guard for railroads into Northern Alabama until June 25, 1864. On June 25, 1864, the regiment was designated the 110th U.S. Regiment Colored Troops.", "List of United States Colored Troops Civil War units\n 103rd Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 104th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 105th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops - Failed to complete organization. ; 106th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 107th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 108th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 109th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 110th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 111th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 112th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 113th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 114th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 115th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 116th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored Troops ; 117th Regiment Infantry U.S. Colored ", "111th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The infantry regiment was organized at Pulaski, Tennessee, on January 3, 1864. Straight away it was placed on garrison duty at Pulaski and Athens, Alabama. While they were on garrison duty they were attached to the Department of Tennessee. In the meantime, they acted as guard for railroads into Northern Alabama until June 25, 1864. On June 25, 1864, the regiment was designated the 111th U.S. Regiment Colored Troops.", "116th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 116th United States Colored Infantry was an infantry regiment of the United States Colored Troops serving in the Union Army organization made up of African-American troops and white officers during the American Civil War.", "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 127th U.S. Colored Infantry was formed on August 23, 1864, at Camp William Penn, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The regiment's enlisted personnel were African Americans, under the command of white officers. Its first central command staff included: Colonel Benjamin F. Tracy, Lieutenant Colonel James Given, Major Arthur M. Greene, Quartermaster John W. Taylor, Surgeon William C. Powell, Assistant Surgeon Eugene A. Chapman, and Chaplain Thomas S. Johnson. After completing training on September 10, the regiment was ordered to City Point, Virginia. The regiment was attached to the 1st Brigade, 3rd Division of the U.S. Army's 10th Corps (Army of the James) until ", "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 127th United States Colored Infantry was an American infantry regiment which fought with the Union Army during the American Civil War. Staffed by African American enlisted men who were placed under the command of white officers, the regiment was formed and trained at Camp William Penn near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania between August 23 and September 10, 1864. Following training, the regiment joined the 10th Corps, within the Army of the James, and later took part in some of the final battles of the war including the Battle of Chaffin's Farm, the Battle of Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road and the fighting around the Appomattox Court House. After the war, the regiment undertook occupation duties as part of the 25th Corps in Texas along the Mexican frontier and the Rio Grande River before its personnel were mustered out in September and October 1865. This regiment's battle flag was one of eleven designed by African American ornamental artist and portraitist David Bustill Bowser.", "127th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The regiment's battle flag (shown above) was one of 11 designed by African American ornamental artist and portraitist David Bustill Bowser, and was \"one of the first widely viewed, positive images of African Americans painted by an African American,\" according to historians at the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission.", "106th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\n The 106th United States Colored Infantry Regiment was an infantry regiment of the United States Colored Troops, formed during the American Civil War. It was organized as the 4th Alabama Volunteer Infantry Regiment (African Descent) in late March 1864, and redesignated as the 106th United States Colored Infantry in May. The regiment spent its service on garrison duty at Pulaski, Tennessee, guarding railroads. It was consolidated into the 40th United States Colored Infantry Regiment in November 1865.", "116th United States Colored Infantry Regiment\nHistory Engine web site, article, The 116th Colored Troops at the Battle of Petersburgh ; History of the 116th Regiment, U.S.C. Infantry, by Charles Kireker, 1866 ; The Black Phalanx: a history of the Negro Soldiers of the United States, by Joseph Thomas Wilson, 1890 ; African Americans at War: an Encyclopedia, by Jonathan Sutherland, 2004, Volume 2 ; Camp Nelson, Kentucky: a Civil War History, by Richard D. Sears, 2002 ; The United States Army and Reconstruction, 1865–1877, by James E. Sefton, 1967 ; The Petersburg Campaign: June 1864-April 1865, John Horn, 1999 ; Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia, by Ervin L. Jordan, 1995 ; A History of Blacks in Kentucky: from Slavery to Segregation, 1760–1891, Marion Brunson Lucas, 2003 ; American Civil War web site, Colored Troops in the American Civil War page ; Camp Nelson Civil War Heritage Park web site ; Texas Historical Commission pamphlet, Rio Grande City ", "112th Illinois Infantry Regiment\n The 112th Illinois Volunteer Infantry was an infantry regiment in the Union Army during the American Civil War." ]
In what country is Storsteinnes Chapel?
[ "Norway", "Kingdom of Norway", "Norge", "Norvège‏", "NO", "NOR", "no", "Noreg", "Norwegen‏", "🇳🇴" ]
country
Storsteinnes Chapel
5,837,309
41
[ { "id": "31488864", "title": "Storsteinnes Chapel", "text": " Storsteinnes Chapel (Storsteinnes kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Balsfjord Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located on the south side of the village of Storsteinnes. It is one of the churches for the Balsfjord parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1968. The church seats about 200 people.", "score": "2.0822473" }, { "id": "1283031", "title": "Stordalen Chapel", "text": " Stordalen Chapel (Stordalen kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Meråker municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the village of Stordalen. It is one of the three churches in the Meråker parish which is part of the Stjørdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white and yellow, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1863 by the architect Jacob Wilhelm Nordan. The church seats about 130 people.", "score": "1.7218193" }, { "id": "29863641", "title": "Sollihøgda Chapel", "text": " Sollihøgda Chapel (Sollihøgda kapell) is \"long church\" (langkirke) dating from 1911 in Sollihøgda in the municipality of Hole in Viken county, Norway. The church is part of the Church of Norway and it belongs to the deanery of Ringerike in the Diocese of Tunsberg. The church is built of wood and can accommodate 100 people. It was designed by the architect Herman Major Backer (1856–1932). It can be reached from Kapellveien (Chapel Road), which turns off of European route E16 at the bridge marked Ringeriksporten 'Gateway to Ringerike'.", "score": "1.7087419" }, { "id": "11835681", "title": "Chapel in the Hills", "text": " The Chapel in the Hills was dedicated on July 6, 1969, as the home for the radio ministry of Lutheran Vespers. Lutheran Vespers hosts such as, Richard A. Jensen were broadcast nationwide from this location in the Black Hills. The church is a special ministry of the South Dakota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The Chapel in the Hills is an exact replica of the Borgund stave church in Norway. The Borgund stavkirke was built around the year 1150 and is considered the most completely preserved stave church still standing in Norway. The Norwegian Department of Antiquities provided a set of blueprints of the Borgund church to be used in the construction of the Chapel in the Hills. The woodcarvings resulted from the combined effort by Norwegian woodcarver Erik Fridstrøm and Rapid City resident, Helge Christiansen. The site includes an authentic log cabin museum that was built in 1876 by Edward Nielsen, a Norwegian immigrant gold prospector from Hole, Ringerike, Norway. There is also a stabbur, a grass-roofed house, that serves as the visitor center and gift shop.", "score": "1.6716862" }, { "id": "25910570", "title": "Stongfjorden Chapel", "text": " Stongfjorden Chapel (Stongfjorden bedehuskapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Askvoll Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Stongfjorden. It is one of three annex chapels in the Askvoll parish which is part of the Sunnfjord prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The white, wooden chapel was built in 1908 in a long church design using plans drawn up by the architect Martinus Haugen. The chapel seats about 300 people.", "score": "1.6711304" }, { "id": "32325982", "title": "Straumen Chapel", "text": " Straumen Chapel (Straumen kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Sørreisa Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørreisa. It is one of the churches for the Sørreisa parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, brick church was built in a rectangular design in 1973 using plans drawn up by the architect Elisabeth Breen Fidjestøl. The church seats about 170 people. There is a free standing bell tower to the east of the main entrance. The church includes a parish hall, offices, and lounge area. In 2014, the church was renovated and a new chancel was added to enlarge the sanctuary.", "score": "1.668544" }, { "id": "26244337", "title": "Verdalsøra Chapel", "text": " Verdalsøra Chapel (Verdalsøra kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Verdal municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the town of Verdalsøra. It is one of the churches for the Stiklestad parish. The parish is part of the Stiklestad prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white brick and wood church was built in a rectangular style in 1969 using plans drawn up by the architect Torgeir Suul. The church seats about 200 people. In 1993, the chapel was expanded by adding a church hall, kitchen, bathrooms, and office space.", "score": "1.6515702" }, { "id": "1283032", "title": "Stordalen Chapel", "text": " A Royal Decree on 28 October 1861 granted permission for the parish to build a chapel on Stordalen in Meråker for the people who lived in the Stordalen and Teveldalen valleys along the border with Sweden. The chapel was designed by Jacob Wilhelm Nordan. The lead builder for the construction was Gunnar Hågensen Gresset from Hegra. Stordalen Chapel was consecrated on 22 July 1863.", "score": "1.648695" }, { "id": "7006402", "title": "Floren Chapel", "text": " Floren Chapel or Flora Chapel (Floren kapell or Flora kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Stjørdal municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the village of Flornes. It is one of the churches for the Hegra parish which is part of the Stjørdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1902 using plans drawn up by the architect Gunnar Øverkil. The church seats about 170 people. ", "score": "1.6411326" }, { "id": "8828517", "title": "Sørskot Chapel", "text": " Sørskot Chapel (Sørskot kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Steigen Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørskot. It is an annex chapel in the Leiranger parish which is part of the Salten prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland. The white, wooden chapel (with attached church hall) was built in a rectangular style in 1953 as a school, but on 22 April 1977 it was consecrated for use by the Church of Norway. The chapel seats about 70 people.", "score": "1.6351426" }, { "id": "26779326", "title": "Salangsdalen Chapel", "text": " Salangsdalen Chapel (Salangsdalen kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Bardu Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the southern part of Bardu in the Salangsdalen valley, just east of the European route E06 highway and not far from the Polar Park. It is an annex chapel for the Bardu parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The brown, wooden church was built in 1981 using plans drawn up by the architects Dalsbø and Østgård. The church seats about 110 people.", "score": "1.6314002" }, { "id": "11908779", "title": "Storfors Church", "text": " Storfors Church (Storfors kyrka) is a church building in Storfors, which is located in the Diocese of Karlstad of the Church of Sweden. Storfors is situated between Kristinehamn and Filipstad. The church was built in 1959 from drawing plans by architect Tor Engloo. On 10 May 1959, the church was inaugurated by bishop Gert Borgenstierna. The building has a concrete base and outer walls in glavashiffer. The roof is made of copper plates. The church room is orientated in an east-west direction, with the cross located to the east. The inner-walls are twelve meters high. A seven sided baptismal font of limestone from Gotland was made by the stone shopper R Eklund in Bisby, and was placed in the church in 1964. In the cross hangs an apostle crown designed by Knut Hallberg; the apostle crown is a light crown made of brass with twelve stearing lights. The pulpit is made of light wood.", "score": "1.6019635" }, { "id": "442013", "title": "Gunnarnes Chapel", "text": " Gunnarnes Chapel (Gunnarnes kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Måsøy Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Gunnarnes on the island of Rolvsøya. It is an annex chapel for the Måsøy parish which is part of the Hammerfest prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in 1986. The church seats about 77 people.", "score": "1.5999095" }, { "id": "30121781", "title": "Saint Birgitta's chapel", "text": " Saint Birgitta's chapel (Sankt Britas kapell) is located on the east coast of the island of Öland, Sweden, some four kilometers from the village of Bredsättra in Bredsättra socken, Borgholm Municipality, in a marshy area called Kapelludden. The chapel dates from the 13th century; today nothing remains but the foundation and the eastern wall, the western wall having fallen down during a storm in 1914.", "score": "1.5969002" }, { "id": "25910571", "title": "Stongfjorden Chapel", "text": " The chapel was originally constructed as a prayer house (bedehus) in 1908. The cost of the building was NOK6643. Initially, the parish held two worship services per year at the prayer house. Soon after, it was decided to upgrade the building to a chapel. It was consecrated for regular church use on 6 December 1914 by the local dean Jonas Rein Landmark. This meant that the church would now have six worship services per year. During the 1960s, the basement was finished with a kitchen, dining hall, and bathrooms. In 1970, a choir was added to the building and in 1971, a new belltower with steeple were added. On 1 August 2014, the chapel was taken out of regular use. This means that regular worship services are no longer held there, however, the church can still be used on special occasions.", "score": "1.5937619" }, { "id": "29840494", "title": "Rafsbotn Chapel", "text": " Rafsbotn Chapel (Rafsbotn kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Alta Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Rafsbotn. It is one of the churches for the Alta parish which is part of the Alta prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1989 using plans drawn up by the architects Arne Rasmussen and Asbjørn Nilsen. The church seats about 100 people.", "score": "1.5931672" }, { "id": "31185212", "title": "Stamsund Church", "text": " The old Steine Chapel was built in the nearby village of Steine in 1853, but was heavily damaged during a storm on 28 January 1905. The chapel needed to be rebuilt and was no longer usable. During the discussion about the structure of the chapel there was a debate about where the new church would be built. After more than 30 years of debate and discussion, a church was built in Stamsund to replace the old Steine Chapel. The church was consecrated on 13 July 1937 by the Bishop Eivind Berggrav. The church was built with its own crematorium that was in operation until 2002. The church was originally part of the Buksnes parish, but in 1969 it became its own parish.", "score": "1.5903974" }, { "id": "14955922", "title": "Elgsnes Chapel", "text": " Elgsnes Chapel (Elgsnes kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Harstad Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Elgsnes on the island of Hinnøya, just northwest of the town of Harstad. It is an annex chapel for the Trondenes parish which is part of the Trondenes prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The brown, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1985 using plans drawn up by the architect Ivar Tolo who was hired by Edvard Ruud. The church seats about 100 people. The chapel was built as a memorial Hans Egede, the famous 17th-century missionary to Greenland who was from this part of Trondenes. As such, the chapel is often called Hans Egedes minne (Hans Egede's memorial).", "score": "1.5889692" }, { "id": "12122845", "title": "Sørfjorden Chapel", "text": " Sørfjorden Chapel (Sørfjorden kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Gildeskål Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørfinnset. It is an annex chapel in the Gildeskål parish which is part of the Bodø domprosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland, although the chapel building is not owned by the parish, it is privately owned by the local residents of the Sørfjorden farms. The white, wooden chapel was built in a long church style in 1927 using plans drawn up by the architect Thomas Strandskogen. The chapel seats about 300 people. The church is used for worship services about four times each year.", "score": "1.588881" }, { "id": "15683183", "title": "Fjæra Chapel", "text": " Fjæra Chapel (Fjæra kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Etne Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Fjæra at the innermost end of the Åkrafjorden. It is one of the churches for the Skånevik parish which is part of the Sunnhordland prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The white, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1913 using plans drawn up by the architect Hartvig Sverdrup Eckhoff. The church seats about 150 people.", "score": "1.5867391" } ]
[ "Storsteinnes Chapel\n Storsteinnes Chapel (Storsteinnes kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Balsfjord Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located on the south side of the village of Storsteinnes. It is one of the churches for the Balsfjord parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1968. The church seats about 200 people.", "Stordalen Chapel\n Stordalen Chapel (Stordalen kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Meråker municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the village of Stordalen. It is one of the three churches in the Meråker parish which is part of the Stjørdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white and yellow, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1863 by the architect Jacob Wilhelm Nordan. The church seats about 130 people.", "Sollihøgda Chapel\n Sollihøgda Chapel (Sollihøgda kapell) is \"long church\" (langkirke) dating from 1911 in Sollihøgda in the municipality of Hole in Viken county, Norway. The church is part of the Church of Norway and it belongs to the deanery of Ringerike in the Diocese of Tunsberg. The church is built of wood and can accommodate 100 people. It was designed by the architect Herman Major Backer (1856–1932). It can be reached from Kapellveien (Chapel Road), which turns off of European route E16 at the bridge marked Ringeriksporten 'Gateway to Ringerike'.", "Chapel in the Hills\n The Chapel in the Hills was dedicated on July 6, 1969, as the home for the radio ministry of Lutheran Vespers. Lutheran Vespers hosts such as, Richard A. Jensen were broadcast nationwide from this location in the Black Hills. The church is a special ministry of the South Dakota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. The Chapel in the Hills is an exact replica of the Borgund stave church in Norway. The Borgund stavkirke was built around the year 1150 and is considered the most completely preserved stave church still standing in Norway. The Norwegian Department of Antiquities provided a set of blueprints of the Borgund church to be used in the construction of the Chapel in the Hills. The woodcarvings resulted from the combined effort by Norwegian woodcarver Erik Fridstrøm and Rapid City resident, Helge Christiansen. The site includes an authentic log cabin museum that was built in 1876 by Edward Nielsen, a Norwegian immigrant gold prospector from Hole, Ringerike, Norway. There is also a stabbur, a grass-roofed house, that serves as the visitor center and gift shop.", "Stongfjorden Chapel\n Stongfjorden Chapel (Stongfjorden bedehuskapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Askvoll Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Stongfjorden. It is one of three annex chapels in the Askvoll parish which is part of the Sunnfjord prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The white, wooden chapel was built in 1908 in a long church design using plans drawn up by the architect Martinus Haugen. The chapel seats about 300 people.", "Straumen Chapel\n Straumen Chapel (Straumen kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Sørreisa Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørreisa. It is one of the churches for the Sørreisa parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, brick church was built in a rectangular design in 1973 using plans drawn up by the architect Elisabeth Breen Fidjestøl. The church seats about 170 people. There is a free standing bell tower to the east of the main entrance. The church includes a parish hall, offices, and lounge area. In 2014, the church was renovated and a new chancel was added to enlarge the sanctuary.", "Verdalsøra Chapel\n Verdalsøra Chapel (Verdalsøra kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Verdal municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the town of Verdalsøra. It is one of the churches for the Stiklestad parish. The parish is part of the Stiklestad prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white brick and wood church was built in a rectangular style in 1969 using plans drawn up by the architect Torgeir Suul. The church seats about 200 people. In 1993, the chapel was expanded by adding a church hall, kitchen, bathrooms, and office space.", "Stordalen Chapel\n A Royal Decree on 28 October 1861 granted permission for the parish to build a chapel on Stordalen in Meråker for the people who lived in the Stordalen and Teveldalen valleys along the border with Sweden. The chapel was designed by Jacob Wilhelm Nordan. The lead builder for the construction was Gunnar Hågensen Gresset from Hegra. Stordalen Chapel was consecrated on 22 July 1863.", "Floren Chapel\n Floren Chapel or Flora Chapel (Floren kapell or Flora kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Stjørdal municipality in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is located in the village of Flornes. It is one of the churches for the Hegra parish which is part of the Stjørdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nidaros. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1902 using plans drawn up by the architect Gunnar Øverkil. The church seats about 170 people. ", "Sørskot Chapel\n Sørskot Chapel (Sørskot kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Steigen Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørskot. It is an annex chapel in the Leiranger parish which is part of the Salten prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland. The white, wooden chapel (with attached church hall) was built in a rectangular style in 1953 as a school, but on 22 April 1977 it was consecrated for use by the Church of Norway. The chapel seats about 70 people.", "Salangsdalen Chapel\n Salangsdalen Chapel (Salangsdalen kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Bardu Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the southern part of Bardu in the Salangsdalen valley, just east of the European route E06 highway and not far from the Polar Park. It is an annex chapel for the Bardu parish which is part of the Senja prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The brown, wooden church was built in 1981 using plans drawn up by the architects Dalsbø and Østgård. The church seats about 110 people.", "Storfors Church\n Storfors Church (Storfors kyrka) is a church building in Storfors, which is located in the Diocese of Karlstad of the Church of Sweden. Storfors is situated between Kristinehamn and Filipstad. The church was built in 1959 from drawing plans by architect Tor Engloo. On 10 May 1959, the church was inaugurated by bishop Gert Borgenstierna. The building has a concrete base and outer walls in glavashiffer. The roof is made of copper plates. The church room is orientated in an east-west direction, with the cross located to the east. The inner-walls are twelve meters high. A seven sided baptismal font of limestone from Gotland was made by the stone shopper R Eklund in Bisby, and was placed in the church in 1964. In the cross hangs an apostle crown designed by Knut Hallberg; the apostle crown is a light crown made of brass with twelve stearing lights. The pulpit is made of light wood.", "Gunnarnes Chapel\n Gunnarnes Chapel (Gunnarnes kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Måsøy Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Gunnarnes on the island of Rolvsøya. It is an annex chapel for the Måsøy parish which is part of the Hammerfest prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in 1986. The church seats about 77 people.", "Saint Birgitta's chapel\n Saint Birgitta's chapel (Sankt Britas kapell) is located on the east coast of the island of Öland, Sweden, some four kilometers from the village of Bredsättra in Bredsättra socken, Borgholm Municipality, in a marshy area called Kapelludden. The chapel dates from the 13th century; today nothing remains but the foundation and the eastern wall, the western wall having fallen down during a storm in 1914.", "Stongfjorden Chapel\n The chapel was originally constructed as a prayer house (bedehus) in 1908. The cost of the building was NOK6643. Initially, the parish held two worship services per year at the prayer house. Soon after, it was decided to upgrade the building to a chapel. It was consecrated for regular church use on 6 December 1914 by the local dean Jonas Rein Landmark. This meant that the church would now have six worship services per year. During the 1960s, the basement was finished with a kitchen, dining hall, and bathrooms. In 1970, a choir was added to the building and in 1971, a new belltower with steeple were added. On 1 August 2014, the chapel was taken out of regular use. This means that regular worship services are no longer held there, however, the church can still be used on special occasions.", "Rafsbotn Chapel\n Rafsbotn Chapel (Rafsbotn kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Alta Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Rafsbotn. It is one of the churches for the Alta parish which is part of the Alta prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1989 using plans drawn up by the architects Arne Rasmussen and Asbjørn Nilsen. The church seats about 100 people.", "Stamsund Church\n The old Steine Chapel was built in the nearby village of Steine in 1853, but was heavily damaged during a storm on 28 January 1905. The chapel needed to be rebuilt and was no longer usable. During the discussion about the structure of the chapel there was a debate about where the new church would be built. After more than 30 years of debate and discussion, a church was built in Stamsund to replace the old Steine Chapel. The church was consecrated on 13 July 1937 by the Bishop Eivind Berggrav. The church was built with its own crematorium that was in operation until 2002. The church was originally part of the Buksnes parish, but in 1969 it became its own parish.", "Elgsnes Chapel\n Elgsnes Chapel (Elgsnes kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Harstad Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. It is located in the village of Elgsnes on the island of Hinnøya, just northwest of the town of Harstad. It is an annex chapel for the Trondenes parish which is part of the Trondenes prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Nord-Hålogaland. The brown, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1985 using plans drawn up by the architect Ivar Tolo who was hired by Edvard Ruud. The church seats about 100 people. The chapel was built as a memorial Hans Egede, the famous 17th-century missionary to Greenland who was from this part of Trondenes. As such, the chapel is often called Hans Egedes minne (Hans Egede's memorial).", "Sørfjorden Chapel\n Sørfjorden Chapel (Sørfjorden kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Gildeskål Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sørfinnset. It is an annex chapel in the Gildeskål parish which is part of the Bodø domprosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland, although the chapel building is not owned by the parish, it is privately owned by the local residents of the Sørfjorden farms. The white, wooden chapel was built in a long church style in 1927 using plans drawn up by the architect Thomas Strandskogen. The chapel seats about 300 people. The church is used for worship services about four times each year.", "Fjæra Chapel\n Fjæra Chapel (Fjæra kapell) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Etne Municipality in Vestland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Fjæra at the innermost end of the Åkrafjorden. It is one of the churches for the Skånevik parish which is part of the Sunnhordland prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Bjørgvin. The white, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1913 using plans drawn up by the architect Hartvig Sverdrup Eckhoff. The church seats about 150 people." ]
In what country is Ch'uch'u Apachita?
[ "Bolivia", "Plurinational State of Bolivia", "bo", "bol", "🇧🇴", "Republic of Bolivia", "BOL", "Bolivia (Plurinational State of)" ]
country
Ch'uch'u Apachita
1,405,876
53
[ { "id": "4123921", "title": "Ch'uch'u Apachita", "text": " Ch'uch'u Apachita (Aymara ch'uch'u cold, cold liquid, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Chuchu Apacheta, Chunchu Apacheta ) is a 4855 m mountain in the Andes of Bolivia. It is situated in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Ch'uch'u Apachita lies north of the main range of the Cordillera Real, south to southwest of the mountain Ch'uch'u, northwest of Chunta Qullu and east of Jukumarini. This is where the river Ch'uch'u Jawira originates.", "score": "1.6599591" }, { "id": "3399227", "title": "Ch'uch'u", "text": " Ch'uch'u (Aymara for cold, cold liquid, also spelled Chuchu) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia, about 5100 m high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Ch'uch'u lies north of the main range of the Cordillera Real, north to northeast of the mountain Ch'uch'u Apachita. This is where the river Ch'uch'u Jawira originates.", "score": "1.4525971" }, { "id": "29422979", "title": "Guachichil", "text": " The Guachichil, Cuauchichil, or Quauhchichitl, are an Indigenous people of Mexico. Pre-contact, they occupied the most extensive territory of all the indigenous Chichimeca Nations tribes in pre-Columbian Central Mexico. The Guachichiles roamed through a large region of Zacatecas; as well as portions of San Luis Potosí, Guanajuato, and northeastern Jalisco; south to the northern corners of Michoacán; and north to Saltillo in Coahuila. The Guachichil Nation continues to exist in the city of San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, and is recognized by the city. They have tribal members in Mexico and the United States.", "score": "1.4275045" }, { "id": "4623608", "title": "Quri Ch'uma", "text": " Quri Ch'uma (Aymara quri gold, ch'uma filtering, \"gold filtering\", also spelled Corichuma, Corri Chuma, Khori Chuma, Korichuma), also named Inmaculado, is a mountain in the Kimsa Cruz mountain range in the Bolivian Andes, about 5,312 metres (17,428 ft) high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, at the border of the Inquisivi Province, Quime Municipality, and the Loayza Province, Cairoma Municipality and Malla Municipality. Quri Ch'uma lies south of Salvador Apachita and northwest of Yaypuri.", "score": "1.4208496" }, { "id": "5050028", "title": "Chutixtiox", "text": " Chutixtiox (alternatively spelled Xutixtiox, or Chu'Taxtyoox in the Sakapultek language) is an archaeological site of the ancient Maya civilization near Sacapulas, in the Quiché department of modern Guatemala. The site was excavated during the 20th century by A. Ledyard Smith. Ceramic evidence excavated at the site suggests a close relationship with the K'iche' capital of Q'umarkaj. Chutixtiox may have been a settlement in a polity that included the nearby sites of Chutinamit and Xolpacol. The site has been dated to the Late Postclassic period and shows two distinct architectural phases, with the late phase demonstrating close similarity to the central K'iche' region around Q'umarkaj. This matches ethnohistoric documents that describe an early 15th-century conquest of the region by the central K'iche'. The site has been identified as the settlement of the Kumatz group, described as migrating to the area in the Popul Vuh.", "score": "1.3844975" }, { "id": "6655962", "title": "Chalalan", "text": " The lodge is owned by the Indigenous People of San José de Uchupiamonas, which designates a directory to which management responsibilities are delegated. The contact staff is also from the community. The enterprise has been self-sustaining and independent since 2000, since then it has operated uninterruptedly", "score": "1.3837578" }, { "id": "29195857", "title": "Quriwayrachina, Ayacucho", "text": " Quriwayrachina, Quri Wayrachina (Quechua quri gold, wayrachina a special oven for smelting metal, \"oven for smelting gold\"), Hatun Quriwayrachina or Hatun Quri Wayrachina (Quechua hatun big, also spelled Qatun Quriwayrachina) is an archaeological site of the Inca period in Peru located in the Ayacucho Region, Lucanas Province, Carmen Salcedo District. It lies near the mountain Inka Pallanka which is venerated as an apu by the people of the area. There are two platforms which are known as Hatun Quri Wayrachina and Huch'uy Quri Wayrachina (Quechua huch'uy small, also spelled Uchuy Quriwayrachina) by the locals. On April 20, 2011, the site was declared a National Cultural Heritage by Resolución Viceministerial No. 459-2011-VMPCIC-MC.", "score": "1.3815694" }, { "id": "32289939", "title": "Apolista", "text": " Apolista is a native South American nation of western Bolivia. Sedentary farmers, hunters, gatherers and fishers, they spoke an Arawakan languages now gravely endangered, if not extinct. From 1713, they were gathered at a variety of missions with other nations, and rapidly lost their traditional culture to the point that a realistic census count is no longer possible.", "score": "1.3806784" }, { "id": "14322747", "title": "Uqi Apachita", "text": " Uqi Apachita (Aymara uqi brown, grey brown, Quechua uqi lead-colored, lead, Aymara apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Uqui Apacheta) is a mountain in the Peruvian Andes, about 4800 m high. It is located in the Puno Region, Azángaro Province, on the border of the districts Muñani and San Antón. Uqi Apachita lies northeast of the mountain Yuraq Apachita and southeast of Ichhu Muruq'u and Ch'iyar Jaqhi.", "score": "1.3695049" }, { "id": "1736898", "title": "Waxra Apachita", "text": " Waxra Apachita (Aymara waxra horn, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Wajra Apacheta) is a mountain in the Cordillera Real in the Andes of Bolivia, about 5200 m high. It is located in the La Paz Department, Los Andes Province, Batallas Municipality. It is situated southwest of the mountain Wila Lluxita, north of the lake Janq'u Quta, northeast of Wila Lluxi and southeast of Janq'u Uyu. The two small lakes southwest of Waxra Apachita are Muruqu Quta (Morokho Kkota) and Ch'uxña Quta (\"green lake\", Chojña Kkota)", "score": "1.3567916" }, { "id": "26472660", "title": "Apachita (Potosí)", "text": " Apachita (Aymara for the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Apacheta) is a mountain in the Cordillera Occidental in the Bolivian Andes. It is located in the Potosí Department, Sur Lípez Province, San Pablo de Lípez Municipality, near the Chilean border. Apachita lies within the borders of the Eduardo Avaroa Andean Fauna National Reserve. It is situated east of Michina.", "score": "1.3527677" }, { "id": "32004521", "title": "Apachita (Pando)", "text": " Apachita (Aymara for the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Apacheta) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia, about 4800 m high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, José Manuel Pando Province, Catacora Municipality. Apachita lies south of the mountain Wila Qullu, north-west of Ch'iyar Jaqhi and south-east of Laram Q'awa and Chuqiwa Qullu (Chuquivakkollu).", "score": "1.3512192" }, { "id": "3399065", "title": "Ch'uch'u Jawira", "text": " Ch'uch'u Jawira (Aymara ch'uch'u cold, cold liquid, jawira river, \"cold river\", Hispanicized spelling Chuchu Jahuira) is a Bolivian river in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Its waters flow the Kaka River which belongs to the watershed of the Beni River. Ch'uch'u Jawira originates north of the main range of the Cordillera Real near the mountains Ch'uch'u and Llachasani. Along the mountains Wila Wilani and Jach'a Waylla Punta it flows to the village of Janq'uma (Ancoma) in the southeast. From now on its direction is to the northeast. Before reaching Janq'uma it receives waters from Q'asiri Jawira (Khasiri Jauira) from the left and from Janq'u Uma Jawira (\"white water river\", Anco Humu Jahuira) which originates between the mountain Wila Quta and the Janq'u Uma-Illampu massif.", "score": "1.3487029" }, { "id": "1768689", "title": "Apachita (Chayanta)", "text": " Apachita (Aymara: the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes via a stone cairn(a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains); also spelled Apacheta) is a 4061 m mountain in the Bolivian Andes. It is located in the Potosí Department, Chayanta Province, Ravelo Municipality. It lies northeast of the village of Wari Pampa (Huari Pampa).", "score": "1.3478849" }, { "id": "16375367", "title": "Jach'a Apachita", "text": " Jach'a Apachita (Aymara jach'a big, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Jachcha Apacheta) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia which reaches a height of approximately 4920 m. It is located in the Oruro Department, Sajama Province, in the southeast of the Curahuara de Carangas Municipality.", "score": "1.3475443" }, { "id": "13418669", "title": "Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations", "text": " The Pech are an indigenous people in northeastern Honduras, previously known as the Paya. As of early 2005 their population had been reduced to 3,800. The Pech language is a member of the Chibchan family of languages, and, although it is still spoken by older people, it is in danger of extinction in the relatively near future. Social complexity began among the Pech or probable Pech speakers as long ago as 300 CE. The earlier Pech cultures may have developed independently of the Maya, their near neighbors, or they may have been influenced by Maya, a hypothesis that has been corroborated to some extent by the discovery of Mayan loan-words in the Pech language. In archaeological reckoning, the Pech formed a number of chiefdoms, ", "score": "1.3474162" }, { "id": "13856834", "title": "Dulce Nombre de Culmí", "text": " This area of Olancho is the home of one of the seven indigenous peoples living in Honduras, the Pech, formerly known as \"Payas\". As of early 2005, the Pech population had been reduced to 3,800. The Pech language is a member of the Chibchan family of languages, and, although it is still spoken by older people, it is in danger of extinction in the relatively near future. Despite modern influences the Pech still preserve their simple way of living and traditions.", "score": "1.3407403" }, { "id": "14322613", "title": "Yuraq Apachita (Azángaro)", "text": " Yuraq Apachita (Quechua yuraq white, Aymara apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Yurac Apacheta) is a mountain in the Peruvian Andes, about 4800 m high. It is located in the Puno Region, Azángaro Province, San Antón District. Yuraq Apachita lies southwest of the mountain Ichhu Muruq'u and northeast of Hatun Anta. It is situated at the river Tawqani (Taucane).", "score": "1.3398561" }, { "id": "15552098", "title": "Cangallo Province", "text": "Anta Q'asa, Apachita Achamarka, Apachita Awqanqa, Apachita Manchayniyuq, Kunkachayuq, Llaqta Punta, Marka, Ñawpa Llaqta, Pirwaylla, Turichayuq, Wakuya, Waman Pukyu, Wantay Llamuqu, Waña Q'asa and Wichinka in the Paras District ; Añas Qullpa, Kullku Wasi, Pillwa Pampa and Pisqu Pata in the Totos District Various archaeological sites of the province were declared a National Cultural Heritage. Some of the most important sites of the province are listed below: ", "score": "1.338735" }, { "id": "4114860", "title": "Cristos Negros of Central America and Mexico", "text": " called Ek Chuaj. Today over a million people visit the shrine each year, making it one of the most important in Latin America. The fest day of this Christ image, January 15, brings pilgrims from much of Central America into southern Mexico, especially Chiapas. Esquipulas was visited by John Paul II in 1996. In Esquipulas and many other sanctuaries, the Christ image is placed on a raised altar with stairs, which allows worshippers to ascend approach the images from in front and behind. In the past, worshippers could touch the image but today it is encased in glass. Visitors leave offerings at the foot of the images, an extension of the tradition of doing the same to the earth gods to assure the well-being of loved ones.", "score": "1.3328421" } ]
[ "Ch'uch'u Apachita\n Ch'uch'u Apachita (Aymara ch'uch'u cold, cold liquid, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Chuchu Apacheta, Chunchu Apacheta ) is a 4855 m mountain in the Andes of Bolivia. It is situated in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Ch'uch'u Apachita lies north of the main range of the Cordillera Real, south to southwest of the mountain Ch'uch'u, northwest of Chunta Qullu and east of Jukumarini. This is where the river Ch'uch'u Jawira originates.", "Ch'uch'u\n Ch'uch'u (Aymara for cold, cold liquid, also spelled Chuchu) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia, about 5100 m high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Ch'uch'u lies north of the main range of the Cordillera Real, north to northeast of the mountain Ch'uch'u Apachita. This is where the river Ch'uch'u Jawira originates.", "Guachichil\n The Guachichil, Cuauchichil, or Quauhchichitl, are an Indigenous people of Mexico. Pre-contact, they occupied the most extensive territory of all the indigenous Chichimeca Nations tribes in pre-Columbian Central Mexico. The Guachichiles roamed through a large region of Zacatecas; as well as portions of San Luis Potosí, Guanajuato, and northeastern Jalisco; south to the northern corners of Michoacán; and north to Saltillo in Coahuila. The Guachichil Nation continues to exist in the city of San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, and is recognized by the city. They have tribal members in Mexico and the United States.", "Quri Ch'uma\n Quri Ch'uma (Aymara quri gold, ch'uma filtering, \"gold filtering\", also spelled Corichuma, Corri Chuma, Khori Chuma, Korichuma), also named Inmaculado, is a mountain in the Kimsa Cruz mountain range in the Bolivian Andes, about 5,312 metres (17,428 ft) high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, at the border of the Inquisivi Province, Quime Municipality, and the Loayza Province, Cairoma Municipality and Malla Municipality. Quri Ch'uma lies south of Salvador Apachita and northwest of Yaypuri.", "Chutixtiox\n Chutixtiox (alternatively spelled Xutixtiox, or Chu'Taxtyoox in the Sakapultek language) is an archaeological site of the ancient Maya civilization near Sacapulas, in the Quiché department of modern Guatemala. The site was excavated during the 20th century by A. Ledyard Smith. Ceramic evidence excavated at the site suggests a close relationship with the K'iche' capital of Q'umarkaj. Chutixtiox may have been a settlement in a polity that included the nearby sites of Chutinamit and Xolpacol. The site has been dated to the Late Postclassic period and shows two distinct architectural phases, with the late phase demonstrating close similarity to the central K'iche' region around Q'umarkaj. This matches ethnohistoric documents that describe an early 15th-century conquest of the region by the central K'iche'. The site has been identified as the settlement of the Kumatz group, described as migrating to the area in the Popul Vuh.", "Chalalan\n The lodge is owned by the Indigenous People of San José de Uchupiamonas, which designates a directory to which management responsibilities are delegated. The contact staff is also from the community. The enterprise has been self-sustaining and independent since 2000, since then it has operated uninterruptedly", "Quriwayrachina, Ayacucho\n Quriwayrachina, Quri Wayrachina (Quechua quri gold, wayrachina a special oven for smelting metal, \"oven for smelting gold\"), Hatun Quriwayrachina or Hatun Quri Wayrachina (Quechua hatun big, also spelled Qatun Quriwayrachina) is an archaeological site of the Inca period in Peru located in the Ayacucho Region, Lucanas Province, Carmen Salcedo District. It lies near the mountain Inka Pallanka which is venerated as an apu by the people of the area. There are two platforms which are known as Hatun Quri Wayrachina and Huch'uy Quri Wayrachina (Quechua huch'uy small, also spelled Uchuy Quriwayrachina) by the locals. On April 20, 2011, the site was declared a National Cultural Heritage by Resolución Viceministerial No. 459-2011-VMPCIC-MC.", "Apolista\n Apolista is a native South American nation of western Bolivia. Sedentary farmers, hunters, gatherers and fishers, they spoke an Arawakan languages now gravely endangered, if not extinct. From 1713, they were gathered at a variety of missions with other nations, and rapidly lost their traditional culture to the point that a realistic census count is no longer possible.", "Uqi Apachita\n Uqi Apachita (Aymara uqi brown, grey brown, Quechua uqi lead-colored, lead, Aymara apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Uqui Apacheta) is a mountain in the Peruvian Andes, about 4800 m high. It is located in the Puno Region, Azángaro Province, on the border of the districts Muñani and San Antón. Uqi Apachita lies northeast of the mountain Yuraq Apachita and southeast of Ichhu Muruq'u and Ch'iyar Jaqhi.", "Waxra Apachita\n Waxra Apachita (Aymara waxra horn, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Wajra Apacheta) is a mountain in the Cordillera Real in the Andes of Bolivia, about 5200 m high. It is located in the La Paz Department, Los Andes Province, Batallas Municipality. It is situated southwest of the mountain Wila Lluxita, north of the lake Janq'u Quta, northeast of Wila Lluxi and southeast of Janq'u Uyu. The two small lakes southwest of Waxra Apachita are Muruqu Quta (Morokho Kkota) and Ch'uxña Quta (\"green lake\", Chojña Kkota)", "Apachita (Potosí)\n Apachita (Aymara for the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Apacheta) is a mountain in the Cordillera Occidental in the Bolivian Andes. It is located in the Potosí Department, Sur Lípez Province, San Pablo de Lípez Municipality, near the Chilean border. Apachita lies within the borders of the Eduardo Avaroa Andean Fauna National Reserve. It is situated east of Michina.", "Apachita (Pando)\n Apachita (Aymara for the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Apacheta) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia, about 4800 m high. It is situated in the La Paz Department, José Manuel Pando Province, Catacora Municipality. Apachita lies south of the mountain Wila Qullu, north-west of Ch'iyar Jaqhi and south-east of Laram Q'awa and Chuqiwa Qullu (Chuquivakkollu).", "Ch'uch'u Jawira\n Ch'uch'u Jawira (Aymara ch'uch'u cold, cold liquid, jawira river, \"cold river\", Hispanicized spelling Chuchu Jahuira) is a Bolivian river in the La Paz Department, Larecaja Province, Sorata Municipality. Its waters flow the Kaka River which belongs to the watershed of the Beni River. Ch'uch'u Jawira originates north of the main range of the Cordillera Real near the mountains Ch'uch'u and Llachasani. Along the mountains Wila Wilani and Jach'a Waylla Punta it flows to the village of Janq'uma (Ancoma) in the southeast. From now on its direction is to the northeast. Before reaching Janq'uma it receives waters from Q'asiri Jawira (Khasiri Jauira) from the left and from Janq'u Uma Jawira (\"white water river\", Anco Humu Jahuira) which originates between the mountain Wila Quta and the Janq'u Uma-Illampu massif.", "Apachita (Chayanta)\n Apachita (Aymara: the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes via a stone cairn(a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains); also spelled Apacheta) is a 4061 m mountain in the Bolivian Andes. It is located in the Potosí Department, Chayanta Province, Ravelo Municipality. It lies northeast of the village of Wari Pampa (Huari Pampa).", "Jach'a Apachita\n Jach'a Apachita (Aymara jach'a big, apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name in the Andes for a stone cairn, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, also spelled Jachcha Apacheta) is a mountain in the Andes of Bolivia which reaches a height of approximately 4920 m. It is located in the Oruro Department, Sajama Province, in the southeast of the Curahuara de Carangas Municipality.", "Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations\n The Pech are an indigenous people in northeastern Honduras, previously known as the Paya. As of early 2005 their population had been reduced to 3,800. The Pech language is a member of the Chibchan family of languages, and, although it is still spoken by older people, it is in danger of extinction in the relatively near future. Social complexity began among the Pech or probable Pech speakers as long ago as 300 CE. The earlier Pech cultures may have developed independently of the Maya, their near neighbors, or they may have been influenced by Maya, a hypothesis that has been corroborated to some extent by the discovery of Mayan loan-words in the Pech language. In archaeological reckoning, the Pech formed a number of chiefdoms, ", "Dulce Nombre de Culmí\n This area of Olancho is the home of one of the seven indigenous peoples living in Honduras, the Pech, formerly known as \"Payas\". As of early 2005, the Pech population had been reduced to 3,800. The Pech language is a member of the Chibchan family of languages, and, although it is still spoken by older people, it is in danger of extinction in the relatively near future. Despite modern influences the Pech still preserve their simple way of living and traditions.", "Yuraq Apachita (Azángaro)\n Yuraq Apachita (Quechua yuraq white, Aymara apachita the place of transit of an important pass in the principal routes of the Andes; name for a stone cairn in the Andes, a little pile of rocks built along the trail in the high mountains, Hispanicized spelling Yurac Apacheta) is a mountain in the Peruvian Andes, about 4800 m high. It is located in the Puno Region, Azángaro Province, San Antón District. Yuraq Apachita lies southwest of the mountain Ichhu Muruq'u and northeast of Hatun Anta. It is situated at the river Tawqani (Taucane).", "Cangallo Province\nAnta Q'asa, Apachita Achamarka, Apachita Awqanqa, Apachita Manchayniyuq, Kunkachayuq, Llaqta Punta, Marka, Ñawpa Llaqta, Pirwaylla, Turichayuq, Wakuya, Waman Pukyu, Wantay Llamuqu, Waña Q'asa and Wichinka in the Paras District ; Añas Qullpa, Kullku Wasi, Pillwa Pampa and Pisqu Pata in the Totos District Various archaeological sites of the province were declared a National Cultural Heritage. Some of the most important sites of the province are listed below: ", "Cristos Negros of Central America and Mexico\n called Ek Chuaj. Today over a million people visit the shrine each year, making it one of the most important in Latin America. The fest day of this Christ image, January 15, brings pilgrims from much of Central America into southern Mexico, especially Chiapas. Esquipulas was visited by John Paul II in 1996. In Esquipulas and many other sanctuaries, the Christ image is placed on a raised altar with stairs, which allows worshippers to ascend approach the images from in front and behind. In the past, worshippers could touch the image but today it is encased in glass. Visitors leave offerings at the foot of the images, an extension of the tradition of doing the same to the earth gods to assure the well-being of loved ones." ]
In what country is Bārta?
[ "Latvia", "Republic of Latvia", "Latvian Republic", "lv", "Latvija", "🇱🇻", "LAT", "LVA" ]
country
Bārta
4,591,269
78
[ { "id": "14282964", "title": "Barta'a", "text": " Barta'a (برطعة, בַּרְטַּעָה) is a town in Israel and the Palestinian territories that straddles both sides of the Green Line in the Wadi Ara (or Nahal 'Iron) region. Western Barta'a is in the Haifa District of Israel, and forms part of the Basma local council. Its 4,700 residents are Arab citizens of Israel. Eastern Barta'a is in the Palestinian territories in the northern part of the Jenin Governorate of the West Bank in what was designated under the Oslo Accords as Area C. It has 3,600 residents, of whom 30-40 percent carry Israeli identity cards and the rest of whom carry Palestinian identity cards.", "score": "1.6653321" }, { "id": "27427368", "title": "Barta, Bangladesh", "text": " Barta is a village in Barisal District in the Barisal Division of southern-central Bangladesh.", "score": "1.5948801" }, { "id": "12093976", "title": "The Bonik Barta", "text": " Bonik Barta is a Bengali-language daily newspaper of Bangladesh. The newspaper is publishing from Dhaka. The name of the editor of the newspaper is Dewan Hanif Mahmud. In 2018, the circulation of the newspaper was 134,000.", "score": "1.5202534" }, { "id": "7356956", "title": "Vít Bárta", "text": " Vít Bárta (born 5 December 1973) is a Czech politician and businessman who served as Minister of Transport from 2010 to 2011 and as Member of the Chamber of Deputies (MP) from 2010 to 2013. Bárta also led political party Věci veřejné during 2011–2013. In 2011 Bárta announced his resignation from the government due to prosecution when he was accused of bribery by his party colleagues.", "score": "1.4964337" }, { "id": "13063298", "title": "Aleš Bárta", "text": " Aleš Bárta (born 1960 in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czech republic) is a Czech Organist. He began his studies at the Brno Conservatory (under Josef Pukl) and continued at the Academy of Music in Prague (Vaclav Rabas). He appears as soloist with leading Czech symphony and chamber orchestras, among them the Prague Symphony orchestra FOK, the Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra and the Czech Philharmonic. During his tour of Japan his appearance marked the opening of a new concert hall in Yokohama.", "score": "1.4607697" }, { "id": "4133735", "title": "Niyomiya Barta", "text": " Niyomiya Barta (নিয়মীয়া বাৰ্তা) is an Indian Assamese language daily newspaper. The newspaper was launched on 4 March 2011. It is published simultaneously from Guwahati, Dibrugarh, Biswanath Chariali and Goalpara of Assam. Niyomiya Barta is run and published by Pride East Entertainment Private Limited. The head office of this newspaper is located at News Live Building, Christian Basti, Guwahati.", "score": "1.4541061" }, { "id": "5895463", "title": "Jan Bárta", "text": " Jan Bárta (born 7 December 1984) is a Czech professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team.", "score": "1.4347205" }, { "id": "747866", "title": "Barta Barry", "text": "1) REDIRECT: Barta Barri ", "score": "1.4231787" }, { "id": "7356958", "title": "Vít Bárta", "text": " In April 2011, Bárta was accused of bribery by his colleagues from Public Affairs, deputies Jaroslav Škárka, Stanislav Huml, and Kristýna Kočí. The deputies were subsequently expelled from the party. The incident caused serious problems in the Czech government coalition. On 8 April 2011, Bárta announced his resignation from the government of Petr Nečas. A year later, in April 2012, Barta was convicted of bribery and conditionally sentenced to 18 months of imprisonment.", "score": "1.4085635" }, { "id": "9540522", "title": "Hilary Barta", "text": " Hilary Barta (born June 17, 1957) is an American comic book writer and artist.", "score": "1.4045494" }, { "id": "11721018", "title": "Bartica", "text": " The region 7 hospital is located in Bartica and is known for having implemented the country’s first electronic Health Information System in 2005, developed by Peace Corps volunteers Geoffrey Thompson and Jason Knueppel.", "score": "1.4035571" }, { "id": "25575372", "title": "Bartosz Beda", "text": " Beda has been showing nationally and internationally. He has participated in many group shows in Poland, Germany, Spain, United States, United Kingdom and Colombia. He had his solo exhibitions in Poland, United Kingdom, Spain and Colombia and forthcoming in United States. He is also a founder of Execute Magazine. Beda was selected for the 2012 Catlin Art Guide as one of the promising emerging artists in the UK. In 2012, Beda was short-listed for Saatchi New Sensations, and won the esteemed Towry Award for the Best of North of England as well as a six-month scholarship to Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. Beda had solo exhibitions at Galeria Liebre, Spain (2013), BAC Gallery, Colombia (2015), Jackson-Teed, England (2016), and received a fellowship from Fondazione per l'Arte in Rome, Italy in 2016.", "score": "1.4015832" }, { "id": "16101726", "title": "Bārta Parish", "text": "Bārta ; Krūte ; Ķīburi ; Plosti ", "score": "1.3924596" }, { "id": "14282965", "title": "Barta'a", "text": " Ceramics from the Byzantine era have been found in Barta'a.", "score": "1.390487" }, { "id": "16101725", "title": "Bārta Parish", "text": " Bārta Parish (Bārtas pagasts) is an administrative unit of Grobiņa Municipality, Latvia. The parish has a population of 683 (as of 1/07/2010) and covers an area of 115.6 km2.", "score": "1.3883567" }, { "id": "8927063", "title": "Boban Birmančević", "text": " Republic of the Congo, Egypt, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Grenada, Guinea-Bissau, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Nauru, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, the Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Sao Tome and Principe, the Solomon Islands, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "score": "1.3836721" }, { "id": "31765579", "title": "Martina Bárta", "text": " Martina Bárta (born 1 September 1988) is a Czech jazz singer and musician. A vocalist and a player of the French horn, she was part of the Frankfurt am Main-based jazz band 4 To The Bar. She also had a role in the musical Robin Hood and worked with Felix Slováček and Karel Gott. She represented the Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 with the song My Turn but failed to qualify to the final. In 2018 she took part in Deutschland sucht den Superstar and reached the recall.", "score": "1.3819187" }, { "id": "14282971", "title": "Barta'a", "text": " (the Kabha family), the de facto \"reunification\" was viewed positively by town residents. Residents of East Barta'a began to work in Israel and agriculture became a source of secondary income. Thanks to the proximity to Israel, the standard of living in East Barta'a rose faster than in the rest of the West Bank. In 1978, East Barta'a was connected to electricity from generators, and in 1984, it was connected to the Israeli electricity grid. Barta'a students study at high schools in Ya'abed and Jenin, In 1995, an outline plan for East Barta'a, intended to meet the expansion needs of East Barta'a by 2015, ", "score": "1.3768048" }, { "id": "13063299", "title": "Aleš Bárta", "text": "1982 - won the Anton Bruckner International Organ Competition in Linz ; 1983 - prize winner at the Franz Liszt International Organ Competition in Budapest ; 1984 - absolute winner of the Prague Spring International Organ Competition ", "score": "1.3766606" }, { "id": "883192", "title": "Barta (surname)", "text": "Adam Barta (born 1979), American actor ; Aleš Bárta (born 1960), Czech organist ; Alexander Barta (born 1983), German professional ice hockey centre ; Bernart de la Barta (fl. 1229), troubadour from La Barthe ; Bjorn Barta (born 1980), German professional ice hockey player ; Dan Bárta, Czech singer ; Franz Barta (born 1902), Austrian boxer ; Gary Barta (born 1963), athletic director at the University of Iowa ; Hilary Barta (born 1957), American comic book writer and artist ; István Barta (1895–1948), Hungarian water polo player ; Jan Bárta (born 1984), professional Czech road cyclist ; Jiří Barta (born 1948), Czech stop-motion animation director ; Jiří Bárta (1935–2012), Czech pianist and composer ; Josef Bárta (1744-1787), Czech composer ; Krisztina Barta (born 1991), Hungarian ice dancer ; Libor Barta (born 1967), Czech ", "score": "1.371106" } ]
[ "Barta'a\n Barta'a (برطعة, בַּרְטַּעָה) is a town in Israel and the Palestinian territories that straddles both sides of the Green Line in the Wadi Ara (or Nahal 'Iron) region. Western Barta'a is in the Haifa District of Israel, and forms part of the Basma local council. Its 4,700 residents are Arab citizens of Israel. Eastern Barta'a is in the Palestinian territories in the northern part of the Jenin Governorate of the West Bank in what was designated under the Oslo Accords as Area C. It has 3,600 residents, of whom 30-40 percent carry Israeli identity cards and the rest of whom carry Palestinian identity cards.", "Barta, Bangladesh\n Barta is a village in Barisal District in the Barisal Division of southern-central Bangladesh.", "The Bonik Barta\n Bonik Barta is a Bengali-language daily newspaper of Bangladesh. The newspaper is publishing from Dhaka. The name of the editor of the newspaper is Dewan Hanif Mahmud. In 2018, the circulation of the newspaper was 134,000.", "Vít Bárta\n Vít Bárta (born 5 December 1973) is a Czech politician and businessman who served as Minister of Transport from 2010 to 2011 and as Member of the Chamber of Deputies (MP) from 2010 to 2013. Bárta also led political party Věci veřejné during 2011–2013. In 2011 Bárta announced his resignation from the government due to prosecution when he was accused of bribery by his party colleagues.", "Aleš Bárta\n Aleš Bárta (born 1960 in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czech republic) is a Czech Organist. He began his studies at the Brno Conservatory (under Josef Pukl) and continued at the Academy of Music in Prague (Vaclav Rabas). He appears as soloist with leading Czech symphony and chamber orchestras, among them the Prague Symphony orchestra FOK, the Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra and the Czech Philharmonic. During his tour of Japan his appearance marked the opening of a new concert hall in Yokohama.", "Niyomiya Barta\n Niyomiya Barta (নিয়মীয়া বাৰ্তা) is an Indian Assamese language daily newspaper. The newspaper was launched on 4 March 2011. It is published simultaneously from Guwahati, Dibrugarh, Biswanath Chariali and Goalpara of Assam. Niyomiya Barta is run and published by Pride East Entertainment Private Limited. The head office of this newspaper is located at News Live Building, Christian Basti, Guwahati.", "Jan Bárta\n Jan Bárta (born 7 December 1984) is a Czech professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team.", "Barta Barry\n1) REDIRECT: Barta Barri ", "Vít Bárta\n In April 2011, Bárta was accused of bribery by his colleagues from Public Affairs, deputies Jaroslav Škárka, Stanislav Huml, and Kristýna Kočí. The deputies were subsequently expelled from the party. The incident caused serious problems in the Czech government coalition. On 8 April 2011, Bárta announced his resignation from the government of Petr Nečas. A year later, in April 2012, Barta was convicted of bribery and conditionally sentenced to 18 months of imprisonment.", "Hilary Barta\n Hilary Barta (born June 17, 1957) is an American comic book writer and artist.", "Bartica\n The region 7 hospital is located in Bartica and is known for having implemented the country’s first electronic Health Information System in 2005, developed by Peace Corps volunteers Geoffrey Thompson and Jason Knueppel.", "Bartosz Beda\n Beda has been showing nationally and internationally. He has participated in many group shows in Poland, Germany, Spain, United States, United Kingdom and Colombia. He had his solo exhibitions in Poland, United Kingdom, Spain and Colombia and forthcoming in United States. He is also a founder of Execute Magazine. Beda was selected for the 2012 Catlin Art Guide as one of the promising emerging artists in the UK. In 2012, Beda was short-listed for Saatchi New Sensations, and won the esteemed Towry Award for the Best of North of England as well as a six-month scholarship to Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. Beda had solo exhibitions at Galeria Liebre, Spain (2013), BAC Gallery, Colombia (2015), Jackson-Teed, England (2016), and received a fellowship from Fondazione per l'Arte in Rome, Italy in 2016.", "Bārta Parish\nBārta ; Krūte ; Ķīburi ; Plosti ", "Barta'a\n Ceramics from the Byzantine era have been found in Barta'a.", "Bārta Parish\n Bārta Parish (Bārtas pagasts) is an administrative unit of Grobiņa Municipality, Latvia. The parish has a population of 683 (as of 1/07/2010) and covers an area of 115.6 km2.", "Boban Birmančević\n Republic of the Congo, Egypt, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Grenada, Guinea-Bissau, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Nauru, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, the Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Sao Tome and Principe, the Solomon Islands, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.", "Martina Bárta\n Martina Bárta (born 1 September 1988) is a Czech jazz singer and musician. A vocalist and a player of the French horn, she was part of the Frankfurt am Main-based jazz band 4 To The Bar. She also had a role in the musical Robin Hood and worked with Felix Slováček and Karel Gott. She represented the Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 with the song My Turn but failed to qualify to the final. In 2018 she took part in Deutschland sucht den Superstar and reached the recall.", "Barta'a\n (the Kabha family), the de facto \"reunification\" was viewed positively by town residents. Residents of East Barta'a began to work in Israel and agriculture became a source of secondary income. Thanks to the proximity to Israel, the standard of living in East Barta'a rose faster than in the rest of the West Bank. In 1978, East Barta'a was connected to electricity from generators, and in 1984, it was connected to the Israeli electricity grid. Barta'a students study at high schools in Ya'abed and Jenin, In 1995, an outline plan for East Barta'a, intended to meet the expansion needs of East Barta'a by 2015, ", "Aleš Bárta\n1982 - won the Anton Bruckner International Organ Competition in Linz ; 1983 - prize winner at the Franz Liszt International Organ Competition in Budapest ; 1984 - absolute winner of the Prague Spring International Organ Competition ", "Barta (surname)\nAdam Barta (born 1979), American actor ; Aleš Bárta (born 1960), Czech organist ; Alexander Barta (born 1983), German professional ice hockey centre ; Bernart de la Barta (fl. 1229), troubadour from La Barthe ; Bjorn Barta (born 1980), German professional ice hockey player ; Dan Bárta, Czech singer ; Franz Barta (born 1902), Austrian boxer ; Gary Barta (born 1963), athletic director at the University of Iowa ; Hilary Barta (born 1957), American comic book writer and artist ; István Barta (1895–1948), Hungarian water polo player ; Jan Bárta (born 1984), professional Czech road cyclist ; Jiří Barta (born 1948), Czech stop-motion animation director ; Jiří Bárta (1935–2012), Czech pianist and composer ; Josef Bárta (1744-1787), Czech composer ; Krisztina Barta (born 1991), Hungarian ice dancer ; Libor Barta (born 1967), Czech " ]
In what country is Urge?
[ "Estonia", "Republic of Estonia", "Estland", "Eesti", "ee", "EST", "🇪🇪" ]
country
Urge, Rapla County
1,639,019
77
[ { "id": "27260838", "title": "Urge (drink)", "text": " Urge is a citrus flavored soft drink produced by Coca-Cola Norway that was first introduced in the country in 1996, and later on was released in Denmark and Sweden. It is the predecessor of the American soft drink Surge, which was introduced in the US in 1997. Urge was discontinued in Denmark and Sweden in 2001. In Norway, Urge sales increased greatly over the years reaching a market share near 10% despite receiving no marketing since its initial launch.", "score": "2.0001333" }, { "id": "3601215", "title": "The Urge", "text": " The Urge is an alternative rock band based in St. Louis, Missouri. Their music combines several genres, including hardcore punk, heavy metal, ska, reggae, funk, rock, and rhythm and blues. Consistent touring throughout the 1990s earned the band a reputation for high-energy live performances.", "score": "1.8484373" }, { "id": "29346316", "title": "Urge, Pärnu County", "text": " Urge is a village in Tori Parish, Pärnu County in southwestern Estonia. Prior to the administrative reform of Estonian local governments in 2017, the village was part of Sauga Parish.", "score": "1.8368495" }, { "id": "5345215", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " Urge is a 2016 American thriller film directed by Aaron Kaufman, written by Jerry Stahl, and starring Justin Chatwin, Ashley Greene, Alexis Knapp, Bar Paly, Chris Geere, Nick Thune, Kea Ho, Danny Masterson, and Pierce Brosnan. The film was released on June 3, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand by Lionsgate Premiere.", "score": "1.8033098" }, { "id": "10662145", "title": "Surge (drink)", "text": " firm, the product was launched as \"Urge\". Local food regulation prevented the bright green color from being used, so it was launched with a pale, more natural juice drink look and given a slight orange taste to match the flavor with the color. Until September 15, 2014, when Coca-Cola re-released Surge, Norway was the only country where one could still buy a similar soft drink in any form, as the original Surge recipe was still popular there. Surge was widely associated with the extreme sports lifestyle, with television commercials similar to those used by Mountain Dew at the time. Coca-Cola also used ", "score": "1.7106333" }, { "id": "27260839", "title": "Urge (drink)", "text": " Urge was available in Norway in 0.5 L and 1.5 L bottles, and later also in 0.33 L cans, but in Q1 of 1999 the 1.5 L bottles were taken off the market due to unsatisfactory sales. The cans also vanished from the market a few years later, leaving only the 0.5 L bottles. A massive campaign by the consumers on the internet community Facebook led to the relaunch of the 1.5 L bottle size on 1 September 2008. It has a sugar content of 68 grams per 0.5 L bottle. In February 2017, due to fan demand, the 0.33 L cans were reintroduced in a multipack of four. ", "score": "1.6921251" }, { "id": "27260841", "title": "Urge (drink)", "text": " In September 2017, a Zero Sugar version was launched known as Urge Uten Sukker, which like it's regular counterpart, was made especially for Norway. This sugar-free variant comes in orange-tinted bottles, rather than the clear ones regular Urge uses. In 2018, the first flavor addition to Urge Uten Sukker was introduced, known as Urge Chill Guarana. In September 2020, Coca-Cola launched \"Urge Smooth Mango\", which is also part of the Uten Sukker line.", "score": "1.6729865" }, { "id": "5345227", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " The film was released on June 3, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand by Lionsgate Premiere. The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on September 6, 2016.", "score": "1.6629426" }, { "id": "14962625", "title": "The Urges", "text": " The Urges are a psychedelic garage rock music group from Dublin, Ireland.", "score": "1.6540048" }, { "id": "32819106", "title": "Amigos de Urgeses", "text": " GDR Amigos de Urgeses is a Portuguese sports team from Urgezes, in Guimarães, Portugal. It is a very well known team in the Braga district, and has an important work with social affairs in the city of Guimarães, also being a cultural promoter.", "score": "1.6433952" }, { "id": "30938350", "title": "Urge, Rapla County", "text": " Urge is a village in Kohila Parish, Rapla County in northwestern Estonia.", "score": "1.6321474" }, { "id": "29004668", "title": "Urgenda", "text": " Urgenda is a nonprofit foundation (Stichting) in The Netherlands which aims to help enforce national, European and international environment treaties. In 2013, Urgenda filed a lawsuit against the state of the Netherlands – respectively also against the government – at the court of The Hague, to force them to make more effective policies that reduce the amount of emissions, with the aim to protect the people of the Netherlands against the effects of climate change and pollution.", "score": "1.6167525" }, { "id": "5345228", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 0%, based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 1.5/10. Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com called the film \"a movie that’s as empty and unlikable as the characters themselves\" in her 1-star review Frank Scheck, writing for The Hollywood Reporter, while enjoying \"a dapper Pierce Brosnan gleefully hamming it up as a devil-like figure\" otherwise panned the film, saying \"Audiences tempted to catch Urge in its limited theatrical release or on VOD would be well-advised to remember Nancy Reagan's famous advice: Just say no.\"", "score": "1.6147563" }, { "id": "11722501", "title": "Tesfaye Urgessa", "text": " Tesfaye Geleta Urgessa (born 1983) is an Ethiopian artist from Addis Ababa, based in Germany.", "score": "1.6109318" }, { "id": "25437329", "title": "Urge (album)", "text": " Urge is an album by American trumpeter Ted Curson which was recorded in the Netherlands and first released on the Dutch Fontana label in 1966.", "score": "1.6102011" }, { "id": "5345216", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " A group of friends enters Man's nightclub, Volcano, where one of them, Jason, is approached by one of the entertainers called the \"Red Bastard\". Jason follows the Red Bastard with the intention to buy party drugs from him or his employer. Jason is led to a back room of the club where the Man is entertaining some guests. Upon Jason's arrival, the Man cryptically announces that they have been expecting Jason, only to burst out into laughter immediately afterward. After the others have left, the Man introduces Jason to his drug, a new creation called Urge. The Man explains that Urge is something different from normal party drugs - claiming ", "score": "1.6014234" }, { "id": "5345226", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " Principal photography began on October 6, 2014, and ended on November 14, 2014.", "score": "1.5837653" }, { "id": "5345220", "title": "Urge (film)", "text": " takes the drug that they are only allowed to use the drug once in their life. At that moment, Jason is distracted by a girl at the counter and when he looks back into his booth, the Man has vanished without a trace. Upon leaving the diner, Jason witnesses a man deliberately jumping in front of a truck in an apparent suicide attempt. Jason rushes him to a hospital where he realizes the true extent of the drug, dozens of people are brought in because of wounds caused under Urge influence. One man shoots a police officer at the hospital for no apparent reason in front of Jason, who ", "score": "1.5790043" }, { "id": "14669671", "title": "HMS Urge", "text": " Official sources had long attributed her loss to a mine outside Malta, although there was some speculation that Urge had in fact been sunk by an Italian air attack at Marsa el Hilal, Libya. On 16 April 2015, Belgian diver Jean-Pierre Misson claimed to have found the wreck of Urge on sonar recordings taken off the coast of Libya, at Marsa el Hilal. The wreck lies to the east of which foundered at Ras Hilal, while being towed by the corvette after her capture on 17 February 1943. On 26 February 1943, it was visited by British divers led by Cdr. Bartlett. In 2003, a hydrographic survey of Ras Hilal located only ", "score": "1.5778062" }, { "id": "11722502", "title": "Tesfaye Urgessa", "text": " Tesfaye Urgessa studied under Tadesse Mesfin in Ethiopia. He graduated from the Ale School of Fine Arts and Design, Addis Ababa in 2006, and the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart in 2014. Urgessa was taught by professors who had studied art in Russia in the 1970s and 1980s, when the dominant art movement was socialist realism. Their focus was on the study of anatomy, which influenced Urgessa’s style. At this time, through internet research, Urgessa's practice was inspired by prominent artists in Europe including Picasso, Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon.", "score": "1.5735228" } ]
[ "Urge (drink)\n Urge is a citrus flavored soft drink produced by Coca-Cola Norway that was first introduced in the country in 1996, and later on was released in Denmark and Sweden. It is the predecessor of the American soft drink Surge, which was introduced in the US in 1997. Urge was discontinued in Denmark and Sweden in 2001. In Norway, Urge sales increased greatly over the years reaching a market share near 10% despite receiving no marketing since its initial launch.", "The Urge\n The Urge is an alternative rock band based in St. Louis, Missouri. Their music combines several genres, including hardcore punk, heavy metal, ska, reggae, funk, rock, and rhythm and blues. Consistent touring throughout the 1990s earned the band a reputation for high-energy live performances.", "Urge, Pärnu County\n Urge is a village in Tori Parish, Pärnu County in southwestern Estonia. Prior to the administrative reform of Estonian local governments in 2017, the village was part of Sauga Parish.", "Urge (film)\n Urge is a 2016 American thriller film directed by Aaron Kaufman, written by Jerry Stahl, and starring Justin Chatwin, Ashley Greene, Alexis Knapp, Bar Paly, Chris Geere, Nick Thune, Kea Ho, Danny Masterson, and Pierce Brosnan. The film was released on June 3, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand by Lionsgate Premiere.", "Surge (drink)\n firm, the product was launched as \"Urge\". Local food regulation prevented the bright green color from being used, so it was launched with a pale, more natural juice drink look and given a slight orange taste to match the flavor with the color. Until September 15, 2014, when Coca-Cola re-released Surge, Norway was the only country where one could still buy a similar soft drink in any form, as the original Surge recipe was still popular there. Surge was widely associated with the extreme sports lifestyle, with television commercials similar to those used by Mountain Dew at the time. Coca-Cola also used ", "Urge (drink)\n Urge was available in Norway in 0.5 L and 1.5 L bottles, and later also in 0.33 L cans, but in Q1 of 1999 the 1.5 L bottles were taken off the market due to unsatisfactory sales. The cans also vanished from the market a few years later, leaving only the 0.5 L bottles. A massive campaign by the consumers on the internet community Facebook led to the relaunch of the 1.5 L bottle size on 1 September 2008. It has a sugar content of 68 grams per 0.5 L bottle. In February 2017, due to fan demand, the 0.33 L cans were reintroduced in a multipack of four. ", "Urge (drink)\n In September 2017, a Zero Sugar version was launched known as Urge Uten Sukker, which like it's regular counterpart, was made especially for Norway. This sugar-free variant comes in orange-tinted bottles, rather than the clear ones regular Urge uses. In 2018, the first flavor addition to Urge Uten Sukker was introduced, known as Urge Chill Guarana. In September 2020, Coca-Cola launched \"Urge Smooth Mango\", which is also part of the Uten Sukker line.", "Urge (film)\n The film was released on June 3, 2016, in a limited release and through video on demand by Lionsgate Premiere. The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on September 6, 2016.", "The Urges\n The Urges are a psychedelic garage rock music group from Dublin, Ireland.", "Amigos de Urgeses\n GDR Amigos de Urgeses is a Portuguese sports team from Urgezes, in Guimarães, Portugal. It is a very well known team in the Braga district, and has an important work with social affairs in the city of Guimarães, also being a cultural promoter.", "Urge, Rapla County\n Urge is a village in Kohila Parish, Rapla County in northwestern Estonia.", "Urgenda\n Urgenda is a nonprofit foundation (Stichting) in The Netherlands which aims to help enforce national, European and international environment treaties. In 2013, Urgenda filed a lawsuit against the state of the Netherlands – respectively also against the government – at the court of The Hague, to force them to make more effective policies that reduce the amount of emissions, with the aim to protect the people of the Netherlands against the effects of climate change and pollution.", "Urge (film)\n On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 0%, based on 5 reviews, with an average rating of 1.5/10. Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com called the film \"a movie that’s as empty and unlikable as the characters themselves\" in her 1-star review Frank Scheck, writing for The Hollywood Reporter, while enjoying \"a dapper Pierce Brosnan gleefully hamming it up as a devil-like figure\" otherwise panned the film, saying \"Audiences tempted to catch Urge in its limited theatrical release or on VOD would be well-advised to remember Nancy Reagan's famous advice: Just say no.\"", "Tesfaye Urgessa\n Tesfaye Geleta Urgessa (born 1983) is an Ethiopian artist from Addis Ababa, based in Germany.", "Urge (album)\n Urge is an album by American trumpeter Ted Curson which was recorded in the Netherlands and first released on the Dutch Fontana label in 1966.", "Urge (film)\n A group of friends enters Man's nightclub, Volcano, where one of them, Jason, is approached by one of the entertainers called the \"Red Bastard\". Jason follows the Red Bastard with the intention to buy party drugs from him or his employer. Jason is led to a back room of the club where the Man is entertaining some guests. Upon Jason's arrival, the Man cryptically announces that they have been expecting Jason, only to burst out into laughter immediately afterward. After the others have left, the Man introduces Jason to his drug, a new creation called Urge. The Man explains that Urge is something different from normal party drugs - claiming ", "Urge (film)\n Principal photography began on October 6, 2014, and ended on November 14, 2014.", "Urge (film)\n takes the drug that they are only allowed to use the drug once in their life. At that moment, Jason is distracted by a girl at the counter and when he looks back into his booth, the Man has vanished without a trace. Upon leaving the diner, Jason witnesses a man deliberately jumping in front of a truck in an apparent suicide attempt. Jason rushes him to a hospital where he realizes the true extent of the drug, dozens of people are brought in because of wounds caused under Urge influence. One man shoots a police officer at the hospital for no apparent reason in front of Jason, who ", "HMS Urge\n Official sources had long attributed her loss to a mine outside Malta, although there was some speculation that Urge had in fact been sunk by an Italian air attack at Marsa el Hilal, Libya. On 16 April 2015, Belgian diver Jean-Pierre Misson claimed to have found the wreck of Urge on sonar recordings taken off the coast of Libya, at Marsa el Hilal. The wreck lies to the east of which foundered at Ras Hilal, while being towed by the corvette after her capture on 17 February 1943. On 26 February 1943, it was visited by British divers led by Cdr. Bartlett. In 2003, a hydrographic survey of Ras Hilal located only ", "Tesfaye Urgessa\n Tesfaye Urgessa studied under Tadesse Mesfin in Ethiopia. He graduated from the Ale School of Fine Arts and Design, Addis Ababa in 2006, and the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart in 2014. Urgessa was taught by professors who had studied art in Russia in the 1970s and 1980s, when the dominant art movement was socialist realism. Their focus was on the study of anatomy, which influenced Urgessa’s style. At this time, through internet research, Urgessa's practice was inspired by prominent artists in Europe including Picasso, Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon." ]
In what country is Domašov?
[ "Czech Republic", "CZR", "cz", "Česko", "Česká republika", "ČR", "cze", "CZE", "Czechia" ]
country
Domašov
5,835,502
88
[ { "id": "3037791", "title": "Siamion Domash", "text": " Siamion Mikalayevich Domash (Сямён Мікалаевіч Домаш, Семён Никола́евич До́маш; 2 January 1950 – 9 February 2019) was a Belarusian politician. Chairman of Grodno Region in 19-1994. He was registered to run in the 2001 Belarusian presidential election, but exited from the campaign, endorsing Vladimir Goncharik.", "score": "1.6469204" }, { "id": "29570205", "title": "Domaslovec", "text": " Domaslovec is a settlement (naselje) in the Samobor administrative territory of Zagreb County, Croatia. As of 2011 it had a population of 949 people.", "score": "1.5492799" }, { "id": "2092943", "title": "Domašov u Šternberka", "text": " Domašov u Šternberka (German: Sternberg) is a village and municipality (obec) in Olomouc District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 11.74 km2, and has a population of 292 (as at 3 July 2006). Domašov u Šternberka lies approximately 14 km north-east of Olomouc and 214 km east of Prague.", "score": "1.5491796" }, { "id": "30387860", "title": "Kiril Domuschiev", "text": " Kiril Petrov Domuschiev (Кирил Петров Домусчиев; born 18 April 1969) is a Bulgarian industrialist, entrepreneur and owner of PFC Ludogorets Razgrad. On 27 January 2012 he was named an honorary citizen of Razgrad, and in 2019 became an honorary citizen of the state of Nebraska, USA.", "score": "1.5420475" }, { "id": "27374858", "title": "Domovina", "text": " Domovina (in Czech: Homeland) is a modernist building in Prague 7-Holešovice. It was built between 1919 and 1922 to house a co-operative of railway workers and conductors. The building was designed by Otto V. Máca a Karel Roštík and is listed as a cultural monument of the Czech Republic. On 18 to 23 February 1929, a congress of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia took place in the Domovina hall. Klement Gottwald was elected the chairman of the party. On the facade, there is a plaque commemorating this event.", "score": "1.5328157" }, { "id": "33028349", "title": "Vjačeslavs Dombrovskis", "text": " Vjačeslavs Dombrovskis (Вячесла́в Домбро́вский; born 27 December 1977 in Riga) is a Latvian Russian politician and economist, who has previously served as the Minister for Education and Science and as Minister of Economics of Latvia. Dombrovskis has a bachelor's degree from the University of Latvia in economics and finance and a doctor's degree from Clark University in economics. He also attended George Mason University as Visiting Fulbright Scholar. Dombrovskis gained Latvian citizenship through naturalization in 1997.", "score": "1.531568" }, { "id": "30387872", "title": "Kiril Domuschiev", "text": " Sofia. Kiril Domuschiev is the largest Bulgarian investor in the state of Nebraska and in the US. He has manufacturing plants in 5 American states, with investments in Missouri, North Carolina, Arkansas and Colorado, in addition to Nebraska. On January 20, 2020, Kiril Domuschiev was awarded with the \"Winner’s Wreath\" by the Sports Minister Krasen Kralev during a ceremony at the \"Champion's Night\". \"Winner's Wreath\" is the highest state honors in sports and is given to individuals with great contribution to Bulgarian sport. In mid March 2020, Domuschiev announced he had tested positive for COVID-19; he recovered towards the end of the month.", "score": "1.526077" }, { "id": "31141720", "title": "Dom-2", "text": " (Евгений Кузин), Novorossiysk, Krasnodar Region ; 4) 2012. Valeriya Masterko (Валерия Мастерко), Novokuznetsk, Kemerovo oblast/Valeriya Kashubina (Валерия Кашубина), Elektrostal, MSK (1/2 1st place); Yekaterina Tokarewa (Екатерина Токарева), Rostov-on-Don (2nd place); Olga Hajiyenko (Ольга Гажиенко), Pavlovski Posad, Moscow Region (3rd place) ; 5) 2013. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy/ Andrei Chuev (Андрей Чуев), Miami, Florida, United States (1/2 1st place); Węcesław Węgrzanowski (Węcesław Węgrzanowski), Krasnodar (2nd place); Nikolay Dolzhanskiy (Николай Должанский), Moscow (3rd place) ; 6) 2014. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy (1st place; Andrei Cercassov; the second times in succession); Aleksandr Gobozetâ (Александр Гобозеты), Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia (2nd place); Hanna Kudymava (Ганна Кудымава), Minsk, Belarus (3rd place) ", "score": "1.5229526" }, { "id": "25610584", "title": "Domna, Republic of Buryatia", "text": " Domna is located 13 km northeast of Sosnovo-Ozerskoye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Sosnovo-Ozerskoye is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.5023584" }, { "id": "7923793", "title": "Democratic Renewal of Macedonia", "text": " The Democratic Renewal of Macedonia (Демократска обнова на Македонија, Demokratska obnova na Makedonija) is a green-liberal political party in North Macedonia. This party actively promotes the green idea for North Macedonia. DOM's political objectives are: green jobs, renewable energy, human rights, democracy, ecology, tourism, eco-agriculture, women empowerment, culture, more funds for science and education. At their first elections, 5 July 2006, the party won 1.9% and 1 out of 120 seats. From 2008, DOM is part of Coalition run by Macedonia ruling party VMRO-DPMNE. In the parliamentary elections 2008 and 2011 DOM as part of the Coalition won 1 seat. 2016 DOM was part of the SDSM-led \"For life in Macedonia\" and won 1 seat.", "score": "1.4993181" }, { "id": "4654493", "title": "Pavel Dõmov", "text": " Dõmov started his international youth career in 2011 with the under-19 team. He made his international debut for Estonia on 19 November 2016, in a 1–1 away draw against Saint Kitts and Nevis in a friendly.", "score": "1.4955003" }, { "id": "30050204", "title": "Domanjševci", "text": " Domanjševci (in older sources also Domanjšovci, Domonkosfa ) is a village in the Municipality of Šalovci in the Prekmurje region of Slovenia, right on the border with Hungary. There are two churches in the settlement. The Roman Catholic church is built on a small hill southwest of the settlement in the middle of a small cemetery and is dedicated to Saint Martin. It is a single-nave brick building with a Romanesque portal dating to the 13th century. It was originally dedicated to Saint Wenceslas. The Lutheran church in the settlement was built in 1902 in a Neo-Romanesque style. Its designer was the architect Alojz Kleiber. The poet, writer, and teacher István Szijjártó lived and died in the village.", "score": "1.4935237" }, { "id": "4654491", "title": "Pavel Dõmov", "text": " Pavel Dõmov (born 31 December 1993) is an Estonian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Estonian Meistriliiga club TJK Legion.", "score": "1.4925295" }, { "id": "11085928", "title": "Miles Jesu", "text": " It was reported in 2004 that there were 27 Miles Jesu houses in 14 countries. The latest (January 2012) information indicates that there are domus communities in 9 countries and vinculum members in an additional 3 countries. Domus communities are found in the following countries (with date of first foundation): United States (1964), India (1984), Spain (1985), Nigeria (1987), Italy (1988) Czech Republic (1990), Ukraine (1990), Poland (1991), and Slovakia (2004). The three additional countries are Puerto Rico, England and Austria. The members in the Ukraine belong to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.", "score": "1.4904044" }, { "id": "8579835", "title": "Igor Domnikov", "text": " Igor Domnikov (May 29, 1959 – July 16, 2000) was a Russian journalist and editor for special topics involving business corruption for Novaya Gazeta in Moscow, Russia, who was murdered in 2000. Although some individuals were convicted of the attack in 2007, the suspected mastermind, Sergey Dorovsky, an ex-government official from Lipetsk Region, was never convicted as the statute of limitations on the case had expired.", "score": "1.4739807" }, { "id": "31141716", "title": "Dom-2", "text": " and Italian Diaspora of Russia) ; 7) 2014. Controversies Tournament: Marina Afrikantova (Марина Африкантова), Burgas, Bulgaria (automatically 1st place, but basically voted from Bulgaria, Balkan states, European Bulgarian diaspora and Post-Soviet Bulgarian diaspora); Aleksandr Zadoynov (Александр Задойнов), Yaroslavl (DSQ); Aliyono Ustinenko (Алиёно Устиненко), Farg'ona, Uzbekistan (DSQ in final); Siarhei Syčkari (Сяргей Сычкарь), Minsk, Belarus (previous winner; DSQ in final); Anna Kruchinina (Анна Кручинина), Moscow Oblast (automatically 2nd place) ; 8) 2015. Viktorija Romanjec, Maribor, Slovenia (1st place; basically voted from the Yugoslavian Diaspora of the Russian Federation); Ricardo José Zalas García, Gijón, Asturia, Spain (2nd place; basically voted from Spain); Alexandra Gozias, Cape Town (3rd place; basically voted from German-speaking countries) ", "score": "1.4693868" }, { "id": "31141719", "title": "Dom-2", "text": "1) 2009. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy (1st place; 2013 Man of Year for Official Website winner); Andrei Chuev (Андрей Чуев), Miami, Florida, United States (2nd place; 2013 Man of Year for Official Website winner); Daria Cherni'x (Дарья Черных), Balakovo, Saratov obl. (3rd place) ; 2) 2010. Sergey Adoyevtsev (Серге́й Адоевцев), Moscow/Serghei Pînzari, (Сіргей Пинзарь; Serghei Pînzari) St. Petersburg (1st/2nd place); Gleb Strawberry (Глеб Клубничка (Строберри)), Vladivostok (3rd place) ; 3) 2011. Węcesław Węgrzanowski (Węcesław Węgrzanowski), Krasnodar (1st place); Vlad Kadonyi (Влад Кадони), Novosibirsk (2nd place); winner of the 2011 Man of the Year and Winner of the 2011 Man of the Year for the Official Magazine; Yevgeni ", "score": "1.4683373" }, { "id": "13108966", "title": "Nicholas of Dömös", "text": " }}", "score": "1.4630405" }, { "id": "26151725", "title": "Domodedovo International Airport bombing", "text": " the dead, as well as one German citizen. Gordon Cousland, an analyst for CACI, was confirmed to be a British citizen, while another victim, Kirill Bodrashov, who had been listed as a British citizen by EMERCOM, was a Russian citizen who lived in London for several years. The Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported that a Bulgarian man was among the casualties; however, it was later clarified that the ethnic Bulgarian who had died in the blast actually had Austrian citizenship. According to the Slovak embassy in Moscow, Slovak actress Zuzana Fialová and Slovak actor Ľuboš Kostelný were injured in the blast.", "score": "1.4624593" }, { "id": "1928413", "title": "Damir Doma", "text": " Damir Doma is a luxury clothing brand and Croatian fashion designer based in Milano.", "score": "1.4594219" } ]
[ "Siamion Domash\n Siamion Mikalayevich Domash (Сямён Мікалаевіч Домаш, Семён Никола́евич До́маш; 2 January 1950 – 9 February 2019) was a Belarusian politician. Chairman of Grodno Region in 19-1994. He was registered to run in the 2001 Belarusian presidential election, but exited from the campaign, endorsing Vladimir Goncharik.", "Domaslovec\n Domaslovec is a settlement (naselje) in the Samobor administrative territory of Zagreb County, Croatia. As of 2011 it had a population of 949 people.", "Domašov u Šternberka\n Domašov u Šternberka (German: Sternberg) is a village and municipality (obec) in Olomouc District in the Olomouc Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 11.74 km2, and has a population of 292 (as at 3 July 2006). Domašov u Šternberka lies approximately 14 km north-east of Olomouc and 214 km east of Prague.", "Kiril Domuschiev\n Kiril Petrov Domuschiev (Кирил Петров Домусчиев; born 18 April 1969) is a Bulgarian industrialist, entrepreneur and owner of PFC Ludogorets Razgrad. On 27 January 2012 he was named an honorary citizen of Razgrad, and in 2019 became an honorary citizen of the state of Nebraska, USA.", "Domovina\n Domovina (in Czech: Homeland) is a modernist building in Prague 7-Holešovice. It was built between 1919 and 1922 to house a co-operative of railway workers and conductors. The building was designed by Otto V. Máca a Karel Roštík and is listed as a cultural monument of the Czech Republic. On 18 to 23 February 1929, a congress of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia took place in the Domovina hall. Klement Gottwald was elected the chairman of the party. On the facade, there is a plaque commemorating this event.", "Vjačeslavs Dombrovskis\n Vjačeslavs Dombrovskis (Вячесла́в Домбро́вский; born 27 December 1977 in Riga) is a Latvian Russian politician and economist, who has previously served as the Minister for Education and Science and as Minister of Economics of Latvia. Dombrovskis has a bachelor's degree from the University of Latvia in economics and finance and a doctor's degree from Clark University in economics. He also attended George Mason University as Visiting Fulbright Scholar. Dombrovskis gained Latvian citizenship through naturalization in 1997.", "Kiril Domuschiev\n Sofia. Kiril Domuschiev is the largest Bulgarian investor in the state of Nebraska and in the US. He has manufacturing plants in 5 American states, with investments in Missouri, North Carolina, Arkansas and Colorado, in addition to Nebraska. On January 20, 2020, Kiril Domuschiev was awarded with the \"Winner’s Wreath\" by the Sports Minister Krasen Kralev during a ceremony at the \"Champion's Night\". \"Winner's Wreath\" is the highest state honors in sports and is given to individuals with great contribution to Bulgarian sport. In mid March 2020, Domuschiev announced he had tested positive for COVID-19; he recovered towards the end of the month.", "Dom-2\n (Евгений Кузин), Novorossiysk, Krasnodar Region ; 4) 2012. Valeriya Masterko (Валерия Мастерко), Novokuznetsk, Kemerovo oblast/Valeriya Kashubina (Валерия Кашубина), Elektrostal, MSK (1/2 1st place); Yekaterina Tokarewa (Екатерина Токарева), Rostov-on-Don (2nd place); Olga Hajiyenko (Ольга Гажиенко), Pavlovski Posad, Moscow Region (3rd place) ; 5) 2013. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy/ Andrei Chuev (Андрей Чуев), Miami, Florida, United States (1/2 1st place); Węcesław Węgrzanowski (Węcesław Węgrzanowski), Krasnodar (2nd place); Nikolay Dolzhanskiy (Николай Должанский), Moscow (3rd place) ; 6) 2014. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy (1st place; Andrei Cercassov; the second times in succession); Aleksandr Gobozetâ (Александр Гобозеты), Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia (2nd place); Hanna Kudymava (Ганна Кудымава), Minsk, Belarus (3rd place) ", "Domna, Republic of Buryatia\n Domna is located 13 km northeast of Sosnovo-Ozerskoye (the district's administrative centre) by road. Sosnovo-Ozerskoye is the nearest rural locality.", "Democratic Renewal of Macedonia\n The Democratic Renewal of Macedonia (Демократска обнова на Македонија, Demokratska obnova na Makedonija) is a green-liberal political party in North Macedonia. This party actively promotes the green idea for North Macedonia. DOM's political objectives are: green jobs, renewable energy, human rights, democracy, ecology, tourism, eco-agriculture, women empowerment, culture, more funds for science and education. At their first elections, 5 July 2006, the party won 1.9% and 1 out of 120 seats. From 2008, DOM is part of Coalition run by Macedonia ruling party VMRO-DPMNE. In the parliamentary elections 2008 and 2011 DOM as part of the Coalition won 1 seat. 2016 DOM was part of the SDSM-led \"For life in Macedonia\" and won 1 seat.", "Pavel Dõmov\n Dõmov started his international youth career in 2011 with the under-19 team. He made his international debut for Estonia on 19 November 2016, in a 1–1 away draw against Saint Kitts and Nevis in a friendly.", "Domanjševci\n Domanjševci (in older sources also Domanjšovci, Domonkosfa ) is a village in the Municipality of Šalovci in the Prekmurje region of Slovenia, right on the border with Hungary. There are two churches in the settlement. The Roman Catholic church is built on a small hill southwest of the settlement in the middle of a small cemetery and is dedicated to Saint Martin. It is a single-nave brick building with a Romanesque portal dating to the 13th century. It was originally dedicated to Saint Wenceslas. The Lutheran church in the settlement was built in 1902 in a Neo-Romanesque style. Its designer was the architect Alojz Kleiber. The poet, writer, and teacher István Szijjártó lived and died in the village.", "Pavel Dõmov\n Pavel Dõmov (born 31 December 1993) is an Estonian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Estonian Meistriliiga club TJK Legion.", "Miles Jesu\n It was reported in 2004 that there were 27 Miles Jesu houses in 14 countries. The latest (January 2012) information indicates that there are domus communities in 9 countries and vinculum members in an additional 3 countries. Domus communities are found in the following countries (with date of first foundation): United States (1964), India (1984), Spain (1985), Nigeria (1987), Italy (1988) Czech Republic (1990), Ukraine (1990), Poland (1991), and Slovakia (2004). The three additional countries are Puerto Rico, England and Austria. The members in the Ukraine belong to the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church.", "Igor Domnikov\n Igor Domnikov (May 29, 1959 – July 16, 2000) was a Russian journalist and editor for special topics involving business corruption for Novaya Gazeta in Moscow, Russia, who was murdered in 2000. Although some individuals were convicted of the attack in 2007, the suspected mastermind, Sergey Dorovsky, an ex-government official from Lipetsk Region, was never convicted as the statute of limitations on the case had expired.", "Dom-2\n and Italian Diaspora of Russia) ; 7) 2014. Controversies Tournament: Marina Afrikantova (Марина Африкантова), Burgas, Bulgaria (automatically 1st place, but basically voted from Bulgaria, Balkan states, European Bulgarian diaspora and Post-Soviet Bulgarian diaspora); Aleksandr Zadoynov (Александр Задойнов), Yaroslavl (DSQ); Aliyono Ustinenko (Алиёно Устиненко), Farg'ona, Uzbekistan (DSQ in final); Siarhei Syčkari (Сяргей Сычкарь), Minsk, Belarus (previous winner; DSQ in final); Anna Kruchinina (Анна Кручинина), Moscow Oblast (automatically 2nd place) ; 8) 2015. Viktorija Romanjec, Maribor, Slovenia (1st place; basically voted from the Yugoslavian Diaspora of the Russian Federation); Ricardo José Zalas García, Gijón, Asturia, Spain (2nd place; basically voted from Spain); Alexandra Gozias, Cape Town (3rd place; basically voted from German-speaking countries) ", "Dom-2\n1) 2009. Andrei Cercassov (Андрей Черкассов), Milano, Italy (1st place; 2013 Man of Year for Official Website winner); Andrei Chuev (Андрей Чуев), Miami, Florida, United States (2nd place; 2013 Man of Year for Official Website winner); Daria Cherni'x (Дарья Черных), Balakovo, Saratov obl. (3rd place) ; 2) 2010. Sergey Adoyevtsev (Серге́й Адоевцев), Moscow/Serghei Pînzari, (Сіргей Пинзарь; Serghei Pînzari) St. Petersburg (1st/2nd place); Gleb Strawberry (Глеб Клубничка (Строберри)), Vladivostok (3rd place) ; 3) 2011. Węcesław Węgrzanowski (Węcesław Węgrzanowski), Krasnodar (1st place); Vlad Kadonyi (Влад Кадони), Novosibirsk (2nd place); winner of the 2011 Man of the Year and Winner of the 2011 Man of the Year for the Official Magazine; Yevgeni ", "Nicholas of Dömös\n }}", "Domodedovo International Airport bombing\n the dead, as well as one German citizen. Gordon Cousland, an analyst for CACI, was confirmed to be a British citizen, while another victim, Kirill Bodrashov, who had been listed as a British citizen by EMERCOM, was a Russian citizen who lived in London for several years. The Bulgarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported that a Bulgarian man was among the casualties; however, it was later clarified that the ethnic Bulgarian who had died in the blast actually had Austrian citizenship. According to the Slovak embassy in Moscow, Slovak actress Zuzana Fialová and Slovak actor Ľuboš Kostelný were injured in the blast.", "Damir Doma\n Damir Doma is a luxury clothing brand and Croatian fashion designer based in Milano." ]
In what country is Vaiea?
[ "Niue", "Niuē", "nu", "🇳🇺" ]
country
Vaiea
2,300,498
98
[ { "id": "6946624", "title": "Vaiea", "text": " Vaiea is one of the fourteen villages of Niue. Its population was 115 as of 2017.", "score": "1.4962525" }, { "id": "33041320", "title": "Vaie", "text": " Vaie is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 35 km west of Turin in the Susa Valley. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 1,413 and an area of 7.1 km2. Vaie borders the following municipalities: Condove, Sant'Antonino di Susa, Chiusa di San Michele, Coazze and Valgioie.", "score": "1.4226291" }, { "id": "32735587", "title": "Hausjärvi", "text": "🇯🇵 Naie, Japan (since 1995) ; 🇪🇪 Väike-Maarja Parish, Estonia (since 1989) ", "score": "1.3913374" }, { "id": "15681413", "title": "Besla vaga", "text": " This marine species is known to be distributed throughout marine terrain off the coasts of New Zealand, within the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone (NZEEZ).", "score": "1.3604473" }, { "id": "28531864", "title": "Vao, Lääne-Viru County", "text": " Vao is a village in Väike-Maarja Parish, Lääne-Viru County, in northeastern Estonia. Since 2014, Vao is the location of Vao Accommodation Centre, an accommodation centre for asylum seekers. Since the European migrant crisis has gained wide media attention in Estonia, Vao Centre has become the site of demonstrations against refugees. On 3 September 2015, the external wall of the center was set to fire. No one was hurt in the incident.", "score": "1.3365781" }, { "id": "1517743", "title": "Vaba Maa", "text": " Vaba Maa ('Free Country') was a daily newspaper in Estonia, published from Tallinn. It was the organ of the Estonian Labour Party. Vaba Maa had a circulation of about 50,000 in the early 1920s. Ants Piip became the editor of Vaba Maa in 1923. Vaba Maa was owned by Aleksander Weiler.", "score": "1.3309002" }, { "id": "10349043", "title": "Vaasa", "text": " Vaasa (Vasa,, Sweden ), in the years 1855–1917 as Nikolainkaupunki (Nikolaistad; literally meaning \"city of Nicholas), is a city on the west coast of Finland. It received its charter in 1606, during the reign of Charles IX of Sweden and is named after the Royal House of Vasa. Vaasa has a population of 0 (approximately 120,000 in the Vaasa sub-region), and is the regional capital of Ostrobothnia (Österbotten; Pohjanmaa). Vaasa is also well-known as a major university and college city in Finland. The city is bilingual with 0 of the population speaking Finnish as their first language and 0 speaking Swedish. The surrounding Ostrobothnian municipalities (such as Korsholm and Malax) have a clear Swedish-speaking majority, which is why the Swedish language maintains a strong position in the city, making it the most significant cultural center for Swedish-Finns. Vaasa is also known for Tropiclandia Water Park, which is located in the Vaskiluoto Island right next to a local spa hotel. In the immediate vicinity of Tropiclandia was the now deserted Wasalandia Amusement Park, which ceased operations in 2015 due to a small number of visitors.", "score": "1.3191721" }, { "id": "29906901", "title": "Loch Vaa", "text": " Loch Vaa is a body of water in Highland, Scotland. It is located between Boat of Garten and Aviemore in the Cairngorms National Park. It is used for fishing, swimming and boating and its wooden boathouse is a popular location for tourists and photographers. The loch also contains the remains of a historic crannog structure. In 2018-19 the loch was subject to a dramatic drop in water levels over a dry winter period and was not restored to usual levels until prolonged rainfall in July 2019.", "score": "1.2953169" }, { "id": "439909", "title": "Ita Vaea", "text": " Ita Vaea (born 9 February 1989) is a former Tongan rugby union player who played for the Brumbies in Super Rugby. His playing position was number eight. He made his Brumbies debut during the 2011 Super Rugby season against the Sharks in Canberra. Vaea made 26 appearances for the during the 2011 and 2012 seasons and signed a contract extension in 2012 to keep him in Canberra until 2014, but was ruled out of the entire 2013 and 2014 Super Rugby season after a blood clot was discovered on his heart. He returned to action for the Brumbies during the 2015 Super Rugby season, scoring four tries in seventeen appearances and signed a contract tying him to the Brumbies until 2017. However, after starting four matches during the 2016 Super Rugby season, Vaea was forced to retire from rugby union following ongoing health issues relating to his heart. Vaea attended Nelson College from 2006 to 2007.", "score": "1.2926232" }, { "id": "28734093", "title": "Heidi Hautala", "text": " In 2008, Hautala published the book \"Venäjä-teesit. Vakaus vai vapaus\" about Russia. In 2015, news media reported that she was included in a Russian blacklist of prominent people from the European Union who are not allowed to enter the country.", "score": "1.2902257" }, { "id": "8645275", "title": "Rasiei", "text": "About Rasiei ", "score": "1.289975" }, { "id": "27118928", "title": "Vision Aid Overseas", "text": " Vision Aid Overseas (VAO) is a registered charity in the United Kingdom, which provides optical aid and services to developing countries in Africa.", "score": "1.2897115" }, { "id": "29248166", "title": "Vasikalaid", "text": " Vasikalaid is an island belonging to the country of Estonia.", "score": "1.2833357" }, { "id": "28531865", "title": "Vao, Lääne-Viru County", "text": " Vao (Wack) castle is a well-preserved medieval tower fortress. It was built in the later half of the 14th century as a so-called \"vassal castle\", i.e. a smaller fortress built to keep control in areas where large strongholds were not needed. Other notable examples of such castles in Estonia are Purtse and Kiiu castles. In 1442, the castle belonged to the family Wack. Subsequently it has belonged to various aristocratic families. In the 1770s the tower was certainly no longer used a manor, since at this time a new baroque manor house was built in the vicinity. In 1986, the castle was renovated. During the renovation new painted glass windows ", "score": "1.2704744" }, { "id": "9097642", "title": "Vaia (river)", "text": " The Vaia is a left tributary of the river Niraj in Romania. Near Acățari it flows into the Vețca canal, which discharges into the Niraj in Cinta. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 35 km2.", "score": "1.2694998" }, { "id": "2143190", "title": "Vaiala", "text": " Vaiala is a village on the island of Upolu in Samoa. It is situated on the central north coast of the island, to the east of the capital Apia. The village is in the political district of Tuamasaga. The population is 972 (2016 Census).", "score": "1.2680206" }, { "id": "8792573", "title": "Ouvéa", "text": " Ouvéa or Uvea is a commune in the Loyalty Islands Province of New Caledonia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean. The settlement of Fayaoué, on Ouvéa Island, is the administrative centre of the commune.", "score": "1.2671113" }, { "id": "25575758", "title": "Vaide", "text": " Vaide (Livonian: Vaid) is a populated place in Kolka parish, Dundaga municipality, Latvia. One of the twelve Livonian villages on the Livonian Coast. Poulin Klavin (Paulīne Klaviņa) one of only a handful of native speakers of Livonian language was born in Vaide. Poulin would help establish the Livonian folk ensemble \"Līvlist\". One of the first dachas on Livonian coast was established here in the 1960s by the Gorniks family. Later its descendants called their famous clothing manufacturer and chain of shops \"VAIDE\". Vaide is also the location of the summer residence for the former President of Latvia Andris Bērziņš. There is also a private museum, a horn collection assembled over 40 years by the museum guide and former head of Slitere National Park Edgars Hausmanis. There is also an old cemetery next to an artificial pond.", "score": "1.265537" }, { "id": "32474929", "title": "Vaiala Tongan", "text": " Vaiala Tongan is an association football team from Pago Pago, American Samoa. They play in the territory's top division, the FFAS Senior League.", "score": "1.260585" }, { "id": "11664213", "title": "Broscărie", "text": " Broscărie is a district located in the eastern part of Sibiu, Romania, next to the eastern industrial area. The district was built on a drained marshland, during the 1970 communist industrialization program, to house the workers of the industrial area. The buildings are typical communist style apartment buildings.", "score": "1.2604344" } ]
[ "Vaiea\n Vaiea is one of the fourteen villages of Niue. Its population was 115 as of 2017.", "Vaie\n Vaie is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 35 km west of Turin in the Susa Valley. As of 31 December 2004, it had a population of 1,413 and an area of 7.1 km2. Vaie borders the following municipalities: Condove, Sant'Antonino di Susa, Chiusa di San Michele, Coazze and Valgioie.", "Hausjärvi\n🇯🇵 Naie, Japan (since 1995) ; 🇪🇪 Väike-Maarja Parish, Estonia (since 1989) ", "Besla vaga\n This marine species is known to be distributed throughout marine terrain off the coasts of New Zealand, within the New Zealand Exclusive Economic Zone (NZEEZ).", "Vao, Lääne-Viru County\n Vao is a village in Väike-Maarja Parish, Lääne-Viru County, in northeastern Estonia. Since 2014, Vao is the location of Vao Accommodation Centre, an accommodation centre for asylum seekers. Since the European migrant crisis has gained wide media attention in Estonia, Vao Centre has become the site of demonstrations against refugees. On 3 September 2015, the external wall of the center was set to fire. No one was hurt in the incident.", "Vaba Maa\n Vaba Maa ('Free Country') was a daily newspaper in Estonia, published from Tallinn. It was the organ of the Estonian Labour Party. Vaba Maa had a circulation of about 50,000 in the early 1920s. Ants Piip became the editor of Vaba Maa in 1923. Vaba Maa was owned by Aleksander Weiler.", "Vaasa\n Vaasa (Vasa,, Sweden ), in the years 1855–1917 as Nikolainkaupunki (Nikolaistad; literally meaning \"city of Nicholas), is a city on the west coast of Finland. It received its charter in 1606, during the reign of Charles IX of Sweden and is named after the Royal House of Vasa. Vaasa has a population of 0 (approximately 120,000 in the Vaasa sub-region), and is the regional capital of Ostrobothnia (Österbotten; Pohjanmaa). Vaasa is also well-known as a major university and college city in Finland. The city is bilingual with 0 of the population speaking Finnish as their first language and 0 speaking Swedish. The surrounding Ostrobothnian municipalities (such as Korsholm and Malax) have a clear Swedish-speaking majority, which is why the Swedish language maintains a strong position in the city, making it the most significant cultural center for Swedish-Finns. Vaasa is also known for Tropiclandia Water Park, which is located in the Vaskiluoto Island right next to a local spa hotel. In the immediate vicinity of Tropiclandia was the now deserted Wasalandia Amusement Park, which ceased operations in 2015 due to a small number of visitors.", "Loch Vaa\n Loch Vaa is a body of water in Highland, Scotland. It is located between Boat of Garten and Aviemore in the Cairngorms National Park. It is used for fishing, swimming and boating and its wooden boathouse is a popular location for tourists and photographers. The loch also contains the remains of a historic crannog structure. In 2018-19 the loch was subject to a dramatic drop in water levels over a dry winter period and was not restored to usual levels until prolonged rainfall in July 2019.", "Ita Vaea\n Ita Vaea (born 9 February 1989) is a former Tongan rugby union player who played for the Brumbies in Super Rugby. His playing position was number eight. He made his Brumbies debut during the 2011 Super Rugby season against the Sharks in Canberra. Vaea made 26 appearances for the during the 2011 and 2012 seasons and signed a contract extension in 2012 to keep him in Canberra until 2014, but was ruled out of the entire 2013 and 2014 Super Rugby season after a blood clot was discovered on his heart. He returned to action for the Brumbies during the 2015 Super Rugby season, scoring four tries in seventeen appearances and signed a contract tying him to the Brumbies until 2017. However, after starting four matches during the 2016 Super Rugby season, Vaea was forced to retire from rugby union following ongoing health issues relating to his heart. Vaea attended Nelson College from 2006 to 2007.", "Heidi Hautala\n In 2008, Hautala published the book \"Venäjä-teesit. Vakaus vai vapaus\" about Russia. In 2015, news media reported that she was included in a Russian blacklist of prominent people from the European Union who are not allowed to enter the country.", "Rasiei\nAbout Rasiei ", "Vision Aid Overseas\n Vision Aid Overseas (VAO) is a registered charity in the United Kingdom, which provides optical aid and services to developing countries in Africa.", "Vasikalaid\n Vasikalaid is an island belonging to the country of Estonia.", "Vao, Lääne-Viru County\n Vao (Wack) castle is a well-preserved medieval tower fortress. It was built in the later half of the 14th century as a so-called \"vassal castle\", i.e. a smaller fortress built to keep control in areas where large strongholds were not needed. Other notable examples of such castles in Estonia are Purtse and Kiiu castles. In 1442, the castle belonged to the family Wack. Subsequently it has belonged to various aristocratic families. In the 1770s the tower was certainly no longer used a manor, since at this time a new baroque manor house was built in the vicinity. In 1986, the castle was renovated. During the renovation new painted glass windows ", "Vaia (river)\n The Vaia is a left tributary of the river Niraj in Romania. Near Acățari it flows into the Vețca canal, which discharges into the Niraj in Cinta. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 35 km2.", "Vaiala\n Vaiala is a village on the island of Upolu in Samoa. It is situated on the central north coast of the island, to the east of the capital Apia. The village is in the political district of Tuamasaga. The population is 972 (2016 Census).", "Ouvéa\n Ouvéa or Uvea is a commune in the Loyalty Islands Province of New Caledonia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean. The settlement of Fayaoué, on Ouvéa Island, is the administrative centre of the commune.", "Vaide\n Vaide (Livonian: Vaid) is a populated place in Kolka parish, Dundaga municipality, Latvia. One of the twelve Livonian villages on the Livonian Coast. Poulin Klavin (Paulīne Klaviņa) one of only a handful of native speakers of Livonian language was born in Vaide. Poulin would help establish the Livonian folk ensemble \"Līvlist\". One of the first dachas on Livonian coast was established here in the 1960s by the Gorniks family. Later its descendants called their famous clothing manufacturer and chain of shops \"VAIDE\". Vaide is also the location of the summer residence for the former President of Latvia Andris Bērziņš. There is also a private museum, a horn collection assembled over 40 years by the museum guide and former head of Slitere National Park Edgars Hausmanis. There is also an old cemetery next to an artificial pond.", "Vaiala Tongan\n Vaiala Tongan is an association football team from Pago Pago, American Samoa. They play in the territory's top division, the FFAS Senior League.", "Broscărie\n Broscărie is a district located in the eastern part of Sibiu, Romania, next to the eastern industrial area. The district was built on a drained marshland, during the 1970 communist industrialization program, to house the workers of the industrial area. The buildings are typical communist style apartment buildings." ]
In what country is Monitor House?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Monitor House
5,204,915
71
[ { "id": "28612988", "title": "Monitor House", "text": " The Monitor House is a historic house in St. Paris, Ohio, United States. Located along West Main Street, it is a square brick structure resting on a foundation of stone and covered with an asphalt roof. Although the house is primarily one story tall, it is built around a 1 1⁄2-story square clerestory. The house was constructed circa 1860, although its precise date of erection — as well as the names of its first owner and its designer — is unknown. Its five-bay, 30 ft-long exterior is decorated with cornices around the window lintels. Inside, the rooms open onto a central hallway that concludes with a stairway to the second floor of the central ", "score": "1.7261114" }, { "id": "28612989", "title": "Monitor House", "text": " of the house. In 1974, the Monitor House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its unusual architecture. Only two or three monitor houses, featuring an elevated center, are known to exist in Ohio, and the one in St. Paris is architecturally the most well-preserved; consequently, it is considered historically significant statewide. In contrast, a similar monitor house in Chillicothe, known as \"Tanglewood,\" is only considered locally significant. The house in St. Paris was the first of over thirty places in Champaign County to be listed on the National Register; it is one of two in the village with this distinction, along with the Kiser Mansion on East Main Street.", "score": "1.5081027" }, { "id": "4698813", "title": "International Election Monitors Institute", "text": " The International Election Monitors Institute is an association of former Members of the United States Congress (Senate and House of Representatives), the Canadian Parliament and the European Parliament, \"to provide former legislators as election observers to operate worldwide in collaboration with other democracy-building organizations\".", "score": "1.4938462" }, { "id": "10295649", "title": "Al-Monitor", "text": " Al-Monitor (المونيتور) is a news website launched in February 2012 by the Arab American entrepreneur Jamal Daniel and based in Washington, DC, United States. Al-Monitor provides reporting and analysis from and about the Middle East.", "score": "1.4456002" }, { "id": "3120962", "title": "Monitor Action Group", "text": " The Monitor Action Group is a political party in Namibia. The party came into existence as the transformation of the National Party of South West Africa in 1991, Kosie Pretorius became its first chairperson and served until his retirement from active politics in June 2013. The party is based among conservative Afrikaners, with most of the top leadership having served in the government of apartheid South West Africa. In June 2009, the party contended that aspects of the affirmative action policy of Namibia violated the country's constitution.", "score": "1.441312" }, { "id": "219345", "title": "Korean House for International Solidarity", "text": " The Korean House for International Solidarity has focused on monitoring labour rights within multinational Korean corporations in the Asia Pacific region, and whether the National Human Rights Institution of Korea is abiding by the Paris Principle. The Korean House for International Solidarity monitors the human rights violations and anti-environmental actions of globalised Korean corporations. It also monitors whether these corporations investing overseas respect the local culture and uphold human rights. KHIS cooperates with local organisations in the areas in which Korean multinational corporations are located to achieve its goals. The organisation also monitors the trustworthiness of products made by multi-national corporations, and conducts research on domestic and international standards which multinational corporations should comply with.", "score": "1.4339414" }, { "id": "1719755", "title": "NGO Monitor", "text": " NGO Monitor (Non-governmental Organization Monitor) is a non-governmental organization based in Jerusalem, which analyzes and reports on the output of the international NGO community from a pro-Israel perspective. It has been characterized as being pro-Israel and as right-wing. NGO Monitor says in its mission statement that it was founded \"to promote accountability, and advance a vigorous discussion on the reports and activities of humanitarian NGOs in the framework of the Arab–Israeli conflict.\" The organization was founded in 2001 by Gerald M. Steinberg under the auspices of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. NGO Monitor became a legally and financially independent organization in 2007. The organization has been criticized by academic figures, diplomats, and journalists who have said that NGO Monitor's research and conclusions are driven by politics, that it does not examine right-wing NGOs, and that it puts out misleading information. Jennifer Rubin wrote in her Washington Post opinion column \"Right Turn\" that the organization exposes self-described human rights groups as being what they call anti-Israeli groups.", "score": "1.4339337" }, { "id": "14691644", "title": "World Travel Monitor", "text": " The European Travel Monitor has been continuously surveying the most important data on outbound travel behaviour from all European countries since 1988. In 1995, the European Travel Monitor was expanded to the World Travel Monitor to cover all the important overseas markets (United States, Canada, Australia, Argentina, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Japan, China, India, etc.). Data is collected by the architects of the Monitor or by means of working cooperations in the various countries. Today (2013), the World Travel Monitor chronicles about 90% of all international travel flows. Conceived and realised by IPK International, the surveys have the objective of ", "score": "1.4227176" }, { "id": "4833306", "title": "Construction Monitor", "text": " Construction Monitor is a business that makes building permit information available to suppliers, subcontractors, and building industry professionals in the construction industry. Construction Monitor provides records of residential, commercial, swimming pool, and solar building permits in a searchable database. This lead generation service is available in all 50 US states, making Construction Monitor the nation's largest provider of real-time building permit data.", "score": "1.4133795" }, { "id": "10178738", "title": "Hall monitor", "text": " is only monitor who has responsibilities for assisting teachers in class. In South Korea, monitors do not walk around the hall. In the morning, they are all around the school, looking for students who aren't wearing the proper uniform or shoes, or who are late for school. They catch them and write their names so they will get points for doing wrong things. If they get too many points they have to work for the school. If they get even more points after that, or an extremely high number of points, then they have to transfer to another school.", "score": "1.391206" }, { "id": "4698814", "title": "International Election Monitors Institute", "text": " The International Election Monitors Institute contributes to election monitoring, particularly in emerging democracies. The Institute was established in June, 2006, as a joint project of the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians, the United States Association of Former Members of Congress, and the European Parliament Former Members Association. The initial goal was to \"establish and operate an International Election Monitors Institute, which manages a dedicated and professional program to recruit, train, and arrange for the deployment of former parliamentarians from the three organizations\". In addition to election monitoring, a goal of the Institute is to \"work with governmental and non-governmental partners on post-election democracy-building endeavours, in countries where the Institute has observed elections\". The Institute works with other monitoring organizations, including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the Carter Center. The Institute has offices in Washington, Brussels and Ottawa, and has endorsed the Declaration of Principles for International Election Observation.", "score": "1.3865001" }, { "id": "25849963", "title": "Monitor Records (New York)", "text": " Monitor Records is record label from the United States specializing in classical and folk music.", "score": "1.3819923" }, { "id": "31543201", "title": "Ottawa Treaty", "text": " The Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor (\"the Monitor\") is an initiative providing research for the ICBL and the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC), and acting as their de facto monitoring regime. As an initiative of ICBL which was founded in 1998 through Human Rights Watch, the Monitor gives monitoring on the humanitarian development and uses of landmines, cluster munitions, and explosive remnants of war (ERW). It provides reports on all aspects of the landmine, cluster munitions, and ERW issues. It issues annual report updates on all countries in the world, keeps an international network with experts, provides research findings for all mediums, and remains flexible to adapt its reports to any changes. The Monitor has earned respect with its transparency whose states must be provided under the relevant treaties for independent reporting. Its main audiences are not only governments, NGOs, and other international organizations, but also media, academics and the public.", "score": "1.3775034" }, { "id": "8065463", "title": "Daily Monitor", "text": " The headquarters of the Daily Monitor and the Daily Monitor Publications, as well as the printing press of the newspaper, are located at 29-35 8th Street (Namuwongo Road) in the Industrial Area of Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city.", "score": "1.3753355" }, { "id": "26246946", "title": "Prague Daily Monitor", "text": " The Prague Daily Monitor is an English-language electronic daily about the Czech Republic. It has been published since 2003. It covers news from Europe, particularly Czech politics, business, society and culture from a variety of sources. It is available online and via email delivery.", "score": "1.3723961" }, { "id": "8065464", "title": "Daily Monitor", "text": " The newspaper was established in 1992 as The Monitor, and relaunched as the Daily Monitor in June 2005. The paper asserts that its private ownership guarantees the independence of its editors and journalists. The newspaper headquarters are housed in the same building that houses the other investments owned by Monitor Publications Limited, including Daily Monitor newspaper, Monitor Business Directory, Ennyanda sports newspaper (in Luganda), 90.4 Dembe FM radio station (in Luganda and English), 93.3 KFM radio station, Daily Monitor e-paper, The Monitor E-paper app, and Daily Monitor social media channels. Monitor Publications Limited and all its subsidiaries listed above are owned by Nation Media Group, a media conglomerate, based in Nairobi, Kenya and whose shares are listed on the Nairobi Stock Exchange and are crosslisted on the Uganda Securities Exchange, the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange, and the Rwanda Stock Exchange.", "score": "1.3712785" }, { "id": "14797969", "title": "Monitory democracy", "text": " of majority-rule democracy in representative form\" in tandem with the development of human rights recognition. This historical shift was facilitated by individual actors, collective groups, NGO's and the media. A monitor is a \"device used for observing, checking, or keeping a continuous record of something.\" to ensure it is carried out fairly. Monitory institutions developed to democratise and scrutinise power. Technological and communicatory shifts such as the creation of the Internet and the commercialisation of the media, led to an increased demand for factual and objective based power monitoring. Within monitory democracy public political participation is not exclusively achieved through representation. Through means of unelected representatives \"all ", "score": "1.370141" }, { "id": "13140041", "title": "House on the Rock (Sighișoara)", "text": " House on the Rock (Casa de pe stâncă in Romanian) is an historic building in Romania. The house was built after the great fire of 1676 and today restored by Veritas Foundation, It houses a center for intercultural exchange and an Internet cafe.", "score": "1.3662426" }, { "id": "15673858", "title": "Inter-Korean Peace House", "text": " can be monitored in real time at the Blue House in Seoul. The inter-Korean Peace House (House of Peace or Home of Peace) is a venue for peace talks between North and South Korea. The building is situated in the Joint Security Area on the south side of the Military Demarcation Line bisecting the area. Before the Korean War, the village, named Panmunjom, consisted of householders. [[File:Map of Joint Security Area.svg|thumb| ]] The Peace House is a three-story structure built in December 1989 and is solely designated for non-military purposes. It is a place where peace talks are held except for the military talks between the two Koreas. It was the location of the 2018 inter-Korean summit in April 2018. ", "score": "1.3629123" }, { "id": "3608697", "title": "Forests Monitor", "text": "Democratic Republic of Congo ; Republic of Congo ; Cameroon ; Papua New Guinea ; Malaysia ; Solomon Islands ; Siberia ; Liberia Forests Monitor is the lead organisation on the current project of monitoring forest exploitation in the Republic of Congo, working in partnership with REM (Resource Extraction Monitoring). Forests Monitor along with UCL ExCiteS produced a beta version of a mobile application as part of their work in the Republic of Congo, which enables local communities to monitor forestry activities around their village. Although the app released on the organisation's website is only a beta version, the licence is Apache 2 open source, and the aim is to encourage other organisations to use this method to assist people in protecting their local environment. Forests Monitor supported the establishment of a charitable trust, Forests Monitor Charitable Trust. Forests Monitor Charitable Trust ceased activities in 2011. Forests Monitor Ltd (a non-profit organisation) continues with its work. Forests Monitor has carried out many projects worldwide to investigate and raise awareness of the forest industry. Areas covered include: ", "score": "1.3609158" } ]
[ "Monitor House\n The Monitor House is a historic house in St. Paris, Ohio, United States. Located along West Main Street, it is a square brick structure resting on a foundation of stone and covered with an asphalt roof. Although the house is primarily one story tall, it is built around a 1 1⁄2-story square clerestory. The house was constructed circa 1860, although its precise date of erection — as well as the names of its first owner and its designer — is unknown. Its five-bay, 30 ft-long exterior is decorated with cornices around the window lintels. Inside, the rooms open onto a central hallway that concludes with a stairway to the second floor of the central ", "Monitor House\n of the house. In 1974, the Monitor House was listed on the National Register of Historic Places because of its unusual architecture. Only two or three monitor houses, featuring an elevated center, are known to exist in Ohio, and the one in St. Paris is architecturally the most well-preserved; consequently, it is considered historically significant statewide. In contrast, a similar monitor house in Chillicothe, known as \"Tanglewood,\" is only considered locally significant. The house in St. Paris was the first of over thirty places in Champaign County to be listed on the National Register; it is one of two in the village with this distinction, along with the Kiser Mansion on East Main Street.", "International Election Monitors Institute\n The International Election Monitors Institute is an association of former Members of the United States Congress (Senate and House of Representatives), the Canadian Parliament and the European Parliament, \"to provide former legislators as election observers to operate worldwide in collaboration with other democracy-building organizations\".", "Al-Monitor\n Al-Monitor (المونيتور) is a news website launched in February 2012 by the Arab American entrepreneur Jamal Daniel and based in Washington, DC, United States. Al-Monitor provides reporting and analysis from and about the Middle East.", "Monitor Action Group\n The Monitor Action Group is a political party in Namibia. The party came into existence as the transformation of the National Party of South West Africa in 1991, Kosie Pretorius became its first chairperson and served until his retirement from active politics in June 2013. The party is based among conservative Afrikaners, with most of the top leadership having served in the government of apartheid South West Africa. In June 2009, the party contended that aspects of the affirmative action policy of Namibia violated the country's constitution.", "Korean House for International Solidarity\n The Korean House for International Solidarity has focused on monitoring labour rights within multinational Korean corporations in the Asia Pacific region, and whether the National Human Rights Institution of Korea is abiding by the Paris Principle. The Korean House for International Solidarity monitors the human rights violations and anti-environmental actions of globalised Korean corporations. It also monitors whether these corporations investing overseas respect the local culture and uphold human rights. KHIS cooperates with local organisations in the areas in which Korean multinational corporations are located to achieve its goals. The organisation also monitors the trustworthiness of products made by multi-national corporations, and conducts research on domestic and international standards which multinational corporations should comply with.", "NGO Monitor\n NGO Monitor (Non-governmental Organization Monitor) is a non-governmental organization based in Jerusalem, which analyzes and reports on the output of the international NGO community from a pro-Israel perspective. It has been characterized as being pro-Israel and as right-wing. NGO Monitor says in its mission statement that it was founded \"to promote accountability, and advance a vigorous discussion on the reports and activities of humanitarian NGOs in the framework of the Arab–Israeli conflict.\" The organization was founded in 2001 by Gerald M. Steinberg under the auspices of the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs. NGO Monitor became a legally and financially independent organization in 2007. The organization has been criticized by academic figures, diplomats, and journalists who have said that NGO Monitor's research and conclusions are driven by politics, that it does not examine right-wing NGOs, and that it puts out misleading information. Jennifer Rubin wrote in her Washington Post opinion column \"Right Turn\" that the organization exposes self-described human rights groups as being what they call anti-Israeli groups.", "World Travel Monitor\n The European Travel Monitor has been continuously surveying the most important data on outbound travel behaviour from all European countries since 1988. In 1995, the European Travel Monitor was expanded to the World Travel Monitor to cover all the important overseas markets (United States, Canada, Australia, Argentina, Brazil, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Japan, China, India, etc.). Data is collected by the architects of the Monitor or by means of working cooperations in the various countries. Today (2013), the World Travel Monitor chronicles about 90% of all international travel flows. Conceived and realised by IPK International, the surveys have the objective of ", "Construction Monitor\n Construction Monitor is a business that makes building permit information available to suppliers, subcontractors, and building industry professionals in the construction industry. Construction Monitor provides records of residential, commercial, swimming pool, and solar building permits in a searchable database. This lead generation service is available in all 50 US states, making Construction Monitor the nation's largest provider of real-time building permit data.", "Hall monitor\n is only monitor who has responsibilities for assisting teachers in class. In South Korea, monitors do not walk around the hall. In the morning, they are all around the school, looking for students who aren't wearing the proper uniform or shoes, or who are late for school. They catch them and write their names so they will get points for doing wrong things. If they get too many points they have to work for the school. If they get even more points after that, or an extremely high number of points, then they have to transfer to another school.", "International Election Monitors Institute\n The International Election Monitors Institute contributes to election monitoring, particularly in emerging democracies. The Institute was established in June, 2006, as a joint project of the Canadian Association of Former Parliamentarians, the United States Association of Former Members of Congress, and the European Parliament Former Members Association. The initial goal was to \"establish and operate an International Election Monitors Institute, which manages a dedicated and professional program to recruit, train, and arrange for the deployment of former parliamentarians from the three organizations\". In addition to election monitoring, a goal of the Institute is to \"work with governmental and non-governmental partners on post-election democracy-building endeavours, in countries where the Institute has observed elections\". The Institute works with other monitoring organizations, including the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the Carter Center. The Institute has offices in Washington, Brussels and Ottawa, and has endorsed the Declaration of Principles for International Election Observation.", "Monitor Records (New York)\n Monitor Records is record label from the United States specializing in classical and folk music.", "Ottawa Treaty\n The Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor (\"the Monitor\") is an initiative providing research for the ICBL and the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC), and acting as their de facto monitoring regime. As an initiative of ICBL which was founded in 1998 through Human Rights Watch, the Monitor gives monitoring on the humanitarian development and uses of landmines, cluster munitions, and explosive remnants of war (ERW). It provides reports on all aspects of the landmine, cluster munitions, and ERW issues. It issues annual report updates on all countries in the world, keeps an international network with experts, provides research findings for all mediums, and remains flexible to adapt its reports to any changes. The Monitor has earned respect with its transparency whose states must be provided under the relevant treaties for independent reporting. Its main audiences are not only governments, NGOs, and other international organizations, but also media, academics and the public.", "Daily Monitor\n The headquarters of the Daily Monitor and the Daily Monitor Publications, as well as the printing press of the newspaper, are located at 29-35 8th Street (Namuwongo Road) in the Industrial Area of Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city.", "Prague Daily Monitor\n The Prague Daily Monitor is an English-language electronic daily about the Czech Republic. It has been published since 2003. It covers news from Europe, particularly Czech politics, business, society and culture from a variety of sources. It is available online and via email delivery.", "Daily Monitor\n The newspaper was established in 1992 as The Monitor, and relaunched as the Daily Monitor in June 2005. The paper asserts that its private ownership guarantees the independence of its editors and journalists. The newspaper headquarters are housed in the same building that houses the other investments owned by Monitor Publications Limited, including Daily Monitor newspaper, Monitor Business Directory, Ennyanda sports newspaper (in Luganda), 90.4 Dembe FM radio station (in Luganda and English), 93.3 KFM radio station, Daily Monitor e-paper, The Monitor E-paper app, and Daily Monitor social media channels. Monitor Publications Limited and all its subsidiaries listed above are owned by Nation Media Group, a media conglomerate, based in Nairobi, Kenya and whose shares are listed on the Nairobi Stock Exchange and are crosslisted on the Uganda Securities Exchange, the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange, and the Rwanda Stock Exchange.", "Monitory democracy\n of majority-rule democracy in representative form\" in tandem with the development of human rights recognition. This historical shift was facilitated by individual actors, collective groups, NGO's and the media. A monitor is a \"device used for observing, checking, or keeping a continuous record of something.\" to ensure it is carried out fairly. Monitory institutions developed to democratise and scrutinise power. Technological and communicatory shifts such as the creation of the Internet and the commercialisation of the media, led to an increased demand for factual and objective based power monitoring. Within monitory democracy public political participation is not exclusively achieved through representation. Through means of unelected representatives \"all ", "House on the Rock (Sighișoara)\n House on the Rock (Casa de pe stâncă in Romanian) is an historic building in Romania. The house was built after the great fire of 1676 and today restored by Veritas Foundation, It houses a center for intercultural exchange and an Internet cafe.", "Inter-Korean Peace House\n can be monitored in real time at the Blue House in Seoul. The inter-Korean Peace House (House of Peace or Home of Peace) is a venue for peace talks between North and South Korea. The building is situated in the Joint Security Area on the south side of the Military Demarcation Line bisecting the area. Before the Korean War, the village, named Panmunjom, consisted of householders. [[File:Map of Joint Security Area.svg|thumb| ]] The Peace House is a three-story structure built in December 1989 and is solely designated for non-military purposes. It is a place where peace talks are held except for the military talks between the two Koreas. It was the location of the 2018 inter-Korean summit in April 2018. ", "Forests Monitor\nDemocratic Republic of Congo ; Republic of Congo ; Cameroon ; Papua New Guinea ; Malaysia ; Solomon Islands ; Siberia ; Liberia Forests Monitor is the lead organisation on the current project of monitoring forest exploitation in the Republic of Congo, working in partnership with REM (Resource Extraction Monitoring). Forests Monitor along with UCL ExCiteS produced a beta version of a mobile application as part of their work in the Republic of Congo, which enables local communities to monitor forestry activities around their village. Although the app released on the organisation's website is only a beta version, the licence is Apache 2 open source, and the aim is to encourage other organisations to use this method to assist people in protecting their local environment. Forests Monitor supported the establishment of a charitable trust, Forests Monitor Charitable Trust. Forests Monitor Charitable Trust ceased activities in 2011. Forests Monitor Ltd (a non-profit organisation) continues with its work. Forests Monitor has carried out many projects worldwide to investigate and raise awareness of the forest industry. Areas covered include: " ]
In what country is Sagoni?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Sagoni
5,667,395
64
[ { "id": "25083592", "title": "Sagoni", "text": " Sagoni is a town in Katni district, Madhya Pradesh, India.", "score": "1.8246918" }, { "id": "26068349", "title": "Sagone", "text": " Sagone is a village on the island of Savai'i in Samoa. It is situated on the south coast of the island in the district of Satupa'itea and the electoral district of Salega 2. The population is 625.", "score": "1.6874073" }, { "id": "26147910", "title": "Sagoni Khurd", "text": " Sagoni Khurd is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "score": "1.6684289" }, { "id": "26359947", "title": "Sagoni Jora", "text": " Sagoni Jora is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "score": "1.5792164" }, { "id": "27203650", "title": "Antonio Sagona", "text": " Antonio (Tony) Giuseppe Sagona (1956 – 2017), was an archaeologist and classics professor who taught at the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia. Tony Sagona was born in Tripoli, Libya, on April 30, 1956. Accompanying his parents, Salvatore and Maria he migrated to Australia in 1960, initially settling in Williamstown, Victoria. Sagona received his education at Emmanuel College, Altona, completing his secondary education in 1973 and in the Humanities Department at the University of Melbourne. His PhD topic was the archaeology of the early Bronze Age Kura-Araxes culture of the Caucasus Region, which he completed in 1984. This was published as The Caucasian ", "score": "1.5531802" }, { "id": "25119383", "title": "Sagoni Kalan, Berasia", "text": " Sagoni Kalan is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "score": "1.549058" }, { "id": "25119664", "title": "Sagoni Kalan, Huzur", "text": " Sagoni Kalan is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Huzur tehsil and the Phanda block.", "score": "1.5464163" }, { "id": "26147911", "title": "Sagoni Khurd", "text": " Most of the village's population now lives in Sagoni Kalan. According to the 2011 census of India, Sagoni Khurd has only 1 household. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 50%.", "score": "1.5234305" }, { "id": "10023368", "title": "Marina Sagona", "text": " Marina Sagona (born 1967) is an Italian and American artist living in New York City. She works in a variety of visual media around the concepts of control and codependency, often collaborating with other artists. Sagona is the recipient of the 2017 Strategic 50 Award and of the 2019 Domus Artist Residency in Galatina, Italy.", "score": "1.5138595" }, { "id": "9948298", "title": "Siyah Banuiyeh", "text": " Siyah Banuiyeh (, also Romanized as Sīyah Banū’īyeh and Sīāhbenū’īyeh; also known as Sīāhbenūyeh and Banū’īyeh)‌. Local name is Sagono ( is a village in Siyah Banuiyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rabor County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,285, in 499 families.", "score": "1.5061319" }, { "id": "26359948", "title": "Sagoni Jora", "text": " According to the 2011 census of India, Sagoni Jora has 53 households. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 63.8%.", "score": "1.5029447" }, { "id": "25994155", "title": "Sakkigoni", "text": " Sakkigoni is a Nepali TV series that airs every Thursday on Himalaya TV at 8:00 pm. It is one of the most popular television programs in Nepal. The producers are Jpt Creation Pvt Ltd. Kumar Kattel with Arjun Ghimire as the writer and director of the show. The story is based on the rural lifestyle of lower-middle-class people. The show stars Arjun Ghimire, Kumar Kattel, Rakshya Shrestha, Hari Niraula, and Sagar Lamsal as the main characters. The show, originally airing on Nepal Television, was halted in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In November 2020, it was announced that the show would return on 10 December 2020, now airing on Himalaya TV and OSR Digital's official YouTube channel at 8:30 pm. ", "score": "1.4925773" }, { "id": "27203653", "title": "Antonio Sagona", "text": " Battlefield, for the Australian Department of Veterans’ Affairs, and the New Zealand Ministry of Culture and Heritage in collaboration with Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University. An edition of the publication Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta was dedicated in his honour. Sagona was an elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2005 and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 2004. He was editor of the Ancient Near Eastern Studies journal and co-editor of its monograph series. He was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in 2013. Sagona died on 29 June 2017 from a cancer related illness.", "score": "1.4773824" }, { "id": "13465622", "title": "Progonia kurosawai", "text": " Progonia kurosawai is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Owada in 1987. It is found in Japan, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Nepal, Myanmar, Borneo and Sulawesi. Forewings narrow and brownish with a darker border. Reniform kidney shaped. Dark, very fine, crenulate antemedial and postmedial lines present. Hindwings pale, straw coloured with a darker, dull brown border.", "score": "1.4744327" }, { "id": "15643665", "title": "Swietenia mahagoni", "text": " Since 1954 the United States government has owned and maintained a 147-acre observation plot of secondary growth S. mahagoni at Estate Thomas on St. Croix, United States Virgin Islands. It is managed jointly by the International Institute of Tropical Forestry with an adjoining privately owned tree farm at Estate Bellevue which belongs to the testamentary estate of Dr. Richard Marshall Bond, a biologist who supervised the establishment of the federal tree farm at Estate Thomas.", "score": "1.4572023" }, { "id": "29163719", "title": "Julia of Corsica", "text": " out of context, as it is also the Latin for \"Saxon.\" Ruinart suggests Sago for Sagona (or Sagone as it is still sometimes listed on the map), a vanished ancient town of western Corsica, the former port of Vico, Corse-du-Sud, in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ajaccio. Apparently the Romans had given the tribunate to a native Corsican. As to why he did not just take the girl by eminent domain, Vitensis gives the answer by calling Eusebius civis. The penalty for disrespecting the rights of Roman citizens was severe, and the girl was the property of Eusebius. He could do as he ", "score": "1.4556954" }, { "id": "27203652", "title": "Antonio Sagona", "text": " cemeteries in Anatolia, the Caucasus and Syria. His fieldwork has covers late prehistory to modern historic periods, with a focus on ancient settlements, landscapes and cemeteries in Turkey (Anatolia), the Caucasus, and Syria. His Work in Turkey included the first systematic archaeological investigations of Erzurum and Bayburt Provinces, helping to establish cultural sequences for the area east of the Euphrates River. He also collaborated with the Georgian National Museum in the southern Caucasus at the site of Samtavro. From 2007 he also undertook investigations into the World War I battlefields at Gallipoli, as part of the Joint Historical and Archaeological Survey of the ", "score": "1.4431224" }, { "id": "773254", "title": "David Rozgonyi", "text": " Rozgonyi has visited over fifty countries, including most recently India, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar, Hungary, The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Germany (2006–2007); and Russia, Ukraine, Albania, Macedonia, Serbia (2008), Romania, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, Kosovo (2009). He prefers backpacking, walking, motorcycling, or his vintage Volkswagen bus for transport, and has lived locally among the residents of many countries during his visits.", "score": "1.4379493" }, { "id": "12208170", "title": "Pogon, Albania", "text": " The villages of Pogon (except Selckë) are part of the wider Pogoni region, which is divided between Greece (40 villages) and Albania (7 villages). Polyphonic singing, although shared among several ethnic groups, tends to be mostly identified with the Pogoni area.", "score": "1.4280839" }, { "id": "6237657", "title": "Zagoni (Bijeljina)", "text": " Zagoni is a village in the municipality of Bijeljina, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.4254303" } ]
[ "Sagoni\n Sagoni is a town in Katni district, Madhya Pradesh, India.", "Sagone\n Sagone is a village on the island of Savai'i in Samoa. It is situated on the south coast of the island in the district of Satupa'itea and the electoral district of Salega 2. The population is 625.", "Sagoni Khurd\n Sagoni Khurd is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "Sagoni Jora\n Sagoni Jora is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "Antonio Sagona\n Antonio (Tony) Giuseppe Sagona (1956 – 2017), was an archaeologist and classics professor who taught at the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia. Tony Sagona was born in Tripoli, Libya, on April 30, 1956. Accompanying his parents, Salvatore and Maria he migrated to Australia in 1960, initially settling in Williamstown, Victoria. Sagona received his education at Emmanuel College, Altona, completing his secondary education in 1973 and in the Humanities Department at the University of Melbourne. His PhD topic was the archaeology of the early Bronze Age Kura-Araxes culture of the Caucasus Region, which he completed in 1984. This was published as The Caucasian ", "Sagoni Kalan, Berasia\n Sagoni Kalan is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Berasia tehsil.", "Sagoni Kalan, Huzur\n Sagoni Kalan is a village in the Bhopal district of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is located in the Huzur tehsil and the Phanda block.", "Sagoni Khurd\n Most of the village's population now lives in Sagoni Kalan. According to the 2011 census of India, Sagoni Khurd has only 1 household. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 50%.", "Marina Sagona\n Marina Sagona (born 1967) is an Italian and American artist living in New York City. She works in a variety of visual media around the concepts of control and codependency, often collaborating with other artists. Sagona is the recipient of the 2017 Strategic 50 Award and of the 2019 Domus Artist Residency in Galatina, Italy.", "Siyah Banuiyeh\n Siyah Banuiyeh (, also Romanized as Sīyah Banū’īyeh and Sīāhbenū’īyeh; also known as Sīāhbenūyeh and Banū’īyeh)‌. Local name is Sagono ( is a village in Siyah Banuiyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rabor County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 2,285, in 499 families.", "Sagoni Jora\n According to the 2011 census of India, Sagoni Jora has 53 households. The effective literacy rate (i.e. the literacy rate of population excluding children aged 6 and below) is 63.8%.", "Sakkigoni\n Sakkigoni is a Nepali TV series that airs every Thursday on Himalaya TV at 8:00 pm. It is one of the most popular television programs in Nepal. The producers are Jpt Creation Pvt Ltd. Kumar Kattel with Arjun Ghimire as the writer and director of the show. The story is based on the rural lifestyle of lower-middle-class people. The show stars Arjun Ghimire, Kumar Kattel, Rakshya Shrestha, Hari Niraula, and Sagar Lamsal as the main characters. The show, originally airing on Nepal Television, was halted in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In November 2020, it was announced that the show would return on 10 December 2020, now airing on Himalaya TV and OSR Digital's official YouTube channel at 8:30 pm. ", "Antonio Sagona\n Battlefield, for the Australian Department of Veterans’ Affairs, and the New Zealand Ministry of Culture and Heritage in collaboration with Çanakkale Onsekiz Mart University. An edition of the publication Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta was dedicated in his honour. Sagona was an elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities in 2005 and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 2004. He was editor of the Ancient Near Eastern Studies journal and co-editor of its monograph series. He was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in 2013. Sagona died on 29 June 2017 from a cancer related illness.", "Progonia kurosawai\n Progonia kurosawai is a moth of the family Noctuidae first described by Owada in 1987. It is found in Japan, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Nepal, Myanmar, Borneo and Sulawesi. Forewings narrow and brownish with a darker border. Reniform kidney shaped. Dark, very fine, crenulate antemedial and postmedial lines present. Hindwings pale, straw coloured with a darker, dull brown border.", "Swietenia mahagoni\n Since 1954 the United States government has owned and maintained a 147-acre observation plot of secondary growth S. mahagoni at Estate Thomas on St. Croix, United States Virgin Islands. It is managed jointly by the International Institute of Tropical Forestry with an adjoining privately owned tree farm at Estate Bellevue which belongs to the testamentary estate of Dr. Richard Marshall Bond, a biologist who supervised the establishment of the federal tree farm at Estate Thomas.", "Julia of Corsica\n out of context, as it is also the Latin for \"Saxon.\" Ruinart suggests Sago for Sagona (or Sagone as it is still sometimes listed on the map), a vanished ancient town of western Corsica, the former port of Vico, Corse-du-Sud, in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Ajaccio. Apparently the Romans had given the tribunate to a native Corsican. As to why he did not just take the girl by eminent domain, Vitensis gives the answer by calling Eusebius civis. The penalty for disrespecting the rights of Roman citizens was severe, and the girl was the property of Eusebius. He could do as he ", "Antonio Sagona\n cemeteries in Anatolia, the Caucasus and Syria. His fieldwork has covers late prehistory to modern historic periods, with a focus on ancient settlements, landscapes and cemeteries in Turkey (Anatolia), the Caucasus, and Syria. His Work in Turkey included the first systematic archaeological investigations of Erzurum and Bayburt Provinces, helping to establish cultural sequences for the area east of the Euphrates River. He also collaborated with the Georgian National Museum in the southern Caucasus at the site of Samtavro. From 2007 he also undertook investigations into the World War I battlefields at Gallipoli, as part of the Joint Historical and Archaeological Survey of the ", "David Rozgonyi\n Rozgonyi has visited over fifty countries, including most recently India, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar, Hungary, The Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Germany (2006–2007); and Russia, Ukraine, Albania, Macedonia, Serbia (2008), Romania, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece, Kosovo (2009). He prefers backpacking, walking, motorcycling, or his vintage Volkswagen bus for transport, and has lived locally among the residents of many countries during his visits.", "Pogon, Albania\n The villages of Pogon (except Selckë) are part of the wider Pogoni region, which is divided between Greece (40 villages) and Albania (7 villages). Polyphonic singing, although shared among several ethnic groups, tends to be mostly identified with the Pogoni area.", "Zagoni (Bijeljina)\n Zagoni is a village in the municipality of Bijeljina, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina." ]
In what country is Eeuwfeestkliniek?
[ "Belgium", "Kingdom of Belgium", "BEL", "be", "🇧🇪", "BE" ]
country
Eeuwfeestkliniek
4,003,566
66
[ { "id": "29161300", "title": "Eeuwfeestkliniek", "text": " The Eeuwfeestkliniek (Centenary Clinic) is a surgical hospital in Antwerp, Belgium. Built in 1930, it was constructed on the centenary of Belgium for the city of Antwerp. After World War II, it came under the control of the Augustinian nuns and in the 1980s became part of the Monica healthcare umbrella. It was extensively renovated in the 1990s. The hospital specialises in oncology, Emergency medical services, Cardiothoracic Surgery and Oral and maxillofacial surgery.", "score": "1.9215851" }, { "id": "10325977", "title": "Eeklo", "text": "The town hall and belfry have been designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1999. ; Eeklo has a few notable churches and chapels, such as the St Vincent Church (Sint-Vincentiuskerk) and the chapel of the clinic of the Holy Heart (Heilig Hartkliniek). ; A nearby provincial park, “Het Leen”, includes an arboretum and museum. ; A local park, the Heldenpark, offers concerts in summer, and houses a playground for children, bowling areas for seniors, and a soccer and baseball field. ", "score": "1.452614" }, { "id": "27480019", "title": "Joke van der Leeuw-Roord", "text": " has since 1992 initiated and coordinated a multitude of national, trans-national projects amongst others in Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, Bosnia-in-Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. In these projects she has worked on professional capacity building, development of educational tools, implementation through training and the development of independent local networks and organizations promoting innovative and responsible history and citizenship education. Joke van der Leeuw-Roord operates as consultant for the Council of Europe, UNESCO, OSCE, International Alert and the European Union. She is Member of the Advisory Board of the Georg Eckert Institute in Braunschweig ", "score": "1.437918" }, { "id": "32491702", "title": "Triangle building", "text": " The seat of the European External Action Service (initially referred to as The Capital, and thereafter sometimes the Triangle building) is the office building on Schuman roundabout in the heart of the European Quarter of Brussels, Belgium, in which most of the European External Action Service (EEAS) resides. The building also houses some other EU departments. The EEAS staff moved into the building in February 2012.", "score": "1.417005" }, { "id": "25881627", "title": "Ee, Noardeast-Fryslân", "text": " Ee is a village in the northern Netherlands. It is located in the municipality of Noardeast-Fryslân, Friesland, east of Dokkum. Ee had approximately 834 inhabitants in January 2017. Before 2019, the village was part of the Dongeradeel municipality. There are various types of buildings in Ee, including a church built in 1220. The only flax museum of the Netherlands is also located in Ee. Ee has mostly remained an intact rural village. Ee has the shortest name of all places in the Netherlands.", "score": "1.415729" }, { "id": "30652738", "title": "Pajottenland", "text": "Affligem: Essene, Hekelgem and Teralfene ; Asse: Asse, Bekkerzeel, Kobbegem, Mollem, Relegem and Zellik ; Bever ; Dilbeek: Dilbeek, Itterbeek (with Sint-Anna-Pede), Schepdaal (with Sint-Gertrudis-Pede), Sint-Martens-Bodegem, Sint-Ulriks-Kapelle, Groot-Bijgaarden ; Galmaarden: Galmaarden, Tollembeek, Vollezele ; Gooik: Gooik (with Strijland), Kester, Leerbeek, Oetingen ; Herne: Herne (with Kokejane), Herfelingen, Sint-Pieters-Kapelle ; Lennik: Gaasbeek, Sint-Kwintens-Lennik (with Eizeringen), Sint-Martens-Lennik ; Liedekerke ; Pepingen: Pepingen, Beert, Bellingen, Bogaarden, Elingen, Heikruis ; Roosdaal: Pamel (with Ledeberg), Borchtlombeek, Onze-Lieve-Vrouw-Lombeek, Strijtem, Kattem ; Sint-Pieters-Leeuw: Sint-Pieters-Leeuw, Oudenaken, Ruisbroek, Sint-Laureins-Berchem, Vlezenbeek ; Ternat: Ternat, Sint-Katherina-Lombeek, Wambeek The Pajottenland is generally understood to cover the following municipalities and submunicipalities: According to a lawyer named De Gronckel who first described it, the Pajottenland also includes Liedekerke and the Ninove deelgemeenten Neigem and Lieferinge. The rural part of Anderlecht, particularly in earlier times before it became a municipality of the Brussels region, may also be included. The tourist area marketed under the name Pajottenland en Zennevallei (Pajottenland and Zenne Valley) also includes the municipalities Beersel, Drogenbos, Halle, Linkebeek, Sint-Genesius-Rode, which are clustered around the Zenne Valley to the south-west of the main Pajottenland region.", "score": "1.3828739" }, { "id": "2940843", "title": "We Are Here (collective)", "text": " were from Somalia (48), Eritrea (31) and Ethiopia (28). On 13 December 2013, a building in Amsterdam Zuid Oost was occupied by a group of 90 migrants and their supporters. It was a derelict parking garage with offices attached, which became known as the Vluchtgarage. It was occupied until April 2015. In August 2014, a Somali man called Nassir Guuleed died at the squat. A few days later, Ibrahim Touré from Côte d'Ivoire suffered a brain haemorrhage and broken vertebra when he fell off a stairway. Police and ambulance services refused to enter the building, citing fears of the presence of asbestos, though the ", "score": "1.3598101" }, { "id": "10663952", "title": "Liyang", "text": "Leeuwarden, Netherlands (since 2011) ", "score": "1.3573685" }, { "id": "30531339", "title": "Ede, Netherlands", "text": "Fruit juice and drinks-factory Riedel, now part of FrieslandCampina. ; Plant and flower auction house Plantion (since 1 March 2010). ; Advertising agency Lukkien who developed their own heliport on the roof of their office. ; The Dutch headquarters for Kimberly-Clark. ; The Dutch headquarters of mattress and pillow manufacturer Tempur-Pedic. ; Deli-XL, a foodservice distributor in Belgium and the Netherlands. ; The head office and two of the main datacenters of independent internet provider BIT. The world headquarters of organ manufacturer Johannus Orgelbouw. Economically, the town of Ede is doing fairly well thanks to the proximity of major highways and railways which offer fast connections to the port of ", "score": "1.3562014" }, { "id": "30612782", "title": "Heusden", "text": " • Doeveren • Drunen • Elshout • Giersbergen • Haarsteeg • Hedikhuizen • Heesbeen • Herpt • Heusden • Nieuwkuijk • Oudheusden • Vlijmen", "score": "1.350791" }, { "id": "2322509", "title": "Philippe Samyn", "text": "Couverture des quais de la gare de Leuven.jpg – Psychiatric Clinic \"Sans Souci\", Brussels, Belgium ; 2001 – UCLouvain Aula Magna, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium ; 2008 – \"Vesuvio-Est\" railway station, Striano, Italy ; 2009 – Studio for the painter Erik Salvesen, Ekenäs, Finland ; 2009 – Faculty of Applied Science, Université libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium ; 2010 – Lujiazhi cultural creativity garden, reception hall, large auditorium and hotel, Zhoushan, China ; 2014 – Social housing at rue de l'Olivier, Schaerbeek, Belgium ; 2015 – European Space Agency of Redu, Belgium ; 2015 – Namur Province House of Culture, Namur, Belgium ; 2017 – Namur Province Administration House, Namur, Belgium ; 2017 – \"M'as-tu vu\" square, Knokke-Heist, Belgium ; 2017 – Arctic Circle theater, Rovaniemi, Finland ; 2017 – Europa Building (Council of the European Union and European Council), Brussels, Belgium ; 2018 – Steel tent for a multipurpose public space in Avilés, Spain ; 2018 – Cash Centre, National Bank of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium ", "score": "1.349227" }, { "id": "31946868", "title": "Oost-Indisch Huis", "text": " The Oost-Indisch Huis (Dutch for \"East India House\") is an early 17th-century building in the centre of Amsterdam. It was the headquarters of the Amsterdam chamber of the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC). It is a listed Dutch national heritage site (rijksmonument).", "score": "1.3479315" }, { "id": "6070669", "title": "Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel", "text": " European University College Brussels was founded in 1925 as St. Aloysius University College of Economics (EHSAL), as a Dutch-speaking department of the Faculté universitaire Saint-Louis, nowadays Saint-Louis University, Brussels. At the merger with VLEKHO, HONIM and KUBrussel in 2008, more than 9,000 students were attending classes in undergraduate, graduate and academic advanced programmes at seven faculties. HUBrussel had five faculties in the Brussels-Capital Region and one in the nearby town of Dilbeek, Flanders. There used to be one in Dubai, called European University College Brussels Dubai, but this has been closed. HUBrussel is associated with the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.", "score": "1.3478572" }, { "id": "7832915", "title": "DRU Cultuurfabriek", "text": " The DRU Cultuurfabriek (several spellings and versions; until December 2010: DRU-fabriek or Drufabriek) is the most important cultural centre of the municipality Oude IJsselstreek in the east of the Netherlands. The 'culture factory' in the northeast of the village Ulft is situated by the river Oude IJssel, Netherlands. The basis for the centre are buildings of the former ironworks of Diepenbrock en Reigers te Ulft (DRU). The buildings are protected national monuments. The whole ensemble includes also the buildings of the Beltmancomplex with the highly visible water tower. These are used now as residences. Some of the buildings remain unused.", "score": "1.3451805" }, { "id": "7768485", "title": "Molenwijk (Amsterdam)", "text": " The Molenwijk district is a neighborhood in Amsterdam-Noord in the Dutch province of North Holland. It is part of the Oostzanerwerf district. The Molenwijk borders the east side of the ribbons and on the South End, on the south side of Oostzanerdijk, a part of the Water Zeedijk, which forms the border with the adjacent Tuindorp Oostzaan, on the west side of the Kermis Area and on the north by the Whale neighborhood. The area is easily accessible by car, bicycle and bus. The neighborhood is located near the nature reserve Twiske. The Oostzanerwerf the polder in which the district has ", "score": "1.3444896" }, { "id": "30612789", "title": "Heusden", "text": " and built in the style of the Bossche School, it has much less splendour than its late-gothic predecessor. A memorial tablet in the forecourt still remembers the lives that were lost in the night of 4 to 5 November 1944. Its inscription: \"Wandelaar, waar gij staat vielen vijf november 1944 honderd vier en dertig burgers den oorlog ten offer.\" (\"Passer-by, where you are, on five November 1944 one hundred and thirty four civilians fell victim to the war.\") Inscriptions on one of the larger bells in the tower \"Nabestaanden, als ik luid, weet: Uw vele, vele doden zijn niet oorlogs droeve buit, ", "score": "1.3437185" }, { "id": "15679530", "title": "Concerns over Chinese involvement in 5G wireless networks", "text": " Belgium is seat of the European Commission, other EU institutions, the NATO headquarters, SHAPE and other high-ranking institutions. On 9 October 2020 Orange S.A. and its competitor Proximus (ex belgacom) have declared that Nokia and Ericsson are going to deliver 5G equipment.", "score": "1.3435048" }, { "id": "30530080", "title": "Aa en Hunze", "text": " • Achter 't Hout • Amen • Anderen • Anloo • Annen • Annerveenschekanaal • Balloërveld • Balloo • Bareveld • Bonnen • Bonnerveen • Bosje • Bovenstreek • De Hilte • Deurze • Eext • Eexterveen • Eexterveenschekanaal • Eexterzandvoort • Ekehaar • Eldersloo • Eleveld • Gasselte • Gasselterboerveen • Gasselterboerveenschemond • Gasselternijveen • Gasselternijveenschemond 1e Dwarsdiep • Gasselternijveenschemond 2e Dwarsdiep • Gasteren • Geelbroek • Gieten • Gieterveen • Gieterzandvoort • Grolloo • Kostvlies • Marwijksoord • Nieuw-Annerveen • Nieuwediep • Nijlande • Nooitgedacht • Oud-Annerveen • Papenvoort • Rolde • Schipborg • Schoonlo • Schreierswijk • Spijkerboor • Streek • Torenveen • Veenhof • Vredenheim", "score": "1.3426603" }, { "id": "10840146", "title": "Forest National", "text": " Forest National (also known as Vorst Nationaal in Dutch) is a multi-purpose arena located in the municipality of Forest near Brussels, Belgium. The arena can hold more than 8,000 people. It hosts indoor sporting events as well as concerts done by a wide variety of artists. The arena, which opened in 1970, offers between 2,500 and 8,000 seats, depending on the event and is a member of European Arenas Association (EAA). Known for its circular interior, it is owned by the Music Hall Group and operated by the Sportpaleis Groep.", "score": "1.3416944" }, { "id": "15967238", "title": "Netherlands", "text": " Netherlands 1st in child well-being in rich countries, both in 2007 and in 2013. On the Index of Economic Freedom Netherlands is the 14th most free market capitalist economy out of 180 surveyed countries. Amsterdam is the financial and business capital of the Netherlands. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange (AEX), part of Euronext, is the world's oldest stock exchange and is one of Europe's largest bourses. It is situated near Dam Square in the city's centre. As a founding member of the euro, the Netherlands replaced (for accounting purposes) its former currency, the \"gulden\" (guilder), on 1 January 1999, along with 15 other adopters of the euro. Actual euro coins ", "score": "1.3412912" } ]
[ "Eeuwfeestkliniek\n The Eeuwfeestkliniek (Centenary Clinic) is a surgical hospital in Antwerp, Belgium. Built in 1930, it was constructed on the centenary of Belgium for the city of Antwerp. After World War II, it came under the control of the Augustinian nuns and in the 1980s became part of the Monica healthcare umbrella. It was extensively renovated in the 1990s. The hospital specialises in oncology, Emergency medical services, Cardiothoracic Surgery and Oral and maxillofacial surgery.", "Eeklo\nThe town hall and belfry have been designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site in 1999. ; Eeklo has a few notable churches and chapels, such as the St Vincent Church (Sint-Vincentiuskerk) and the chapel of the clinic of the Holy Heart (Heilig Hartkliniek). ; A nearby provincial park, “Het Leen”, includes an arboretum and museum. ; A local park, the Heldenpark, offers concerts in summer, and houses a playground for children, bowling areas for seniors, and a soccer and baseball field. ", "Joke van der Leeuw-Roord\n has since 1992 initiated and coordinated a multitude of national, trans-national projects amongst others in Albania, Belarus, Bulgaria, Bosnia-in-Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Latvia, Macedonia, Montenegro, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. In these projects she has worked on professional capacity building, development of educational tools, implementation through training and the development of independent local networks and organizations promoting innovative and responsible history and citizenship education. Joke van der Leeuw-Roord operates as consultant for the Council of Europe, UNESCO, OSCE, International Alert and the European Union. She is Member of the Advisory Board of the Georg Eckert Institute in Braunschweig ", "Triangle building\n The seat of the European External Action Service (initially referred to as The Capital, and thereafter sometimes the Triangle building) is the office building on Schuman roundabout in the heart of the European Quarter of Brussels, Belgium, in which most of the European External Action Service (EEAS) resides. The building also houses some other EU departments. The EEAS staff moved into the building in February 2012.", "Ee, Noardeast-Fryslân\n Ee is a village in the northern Netherlands. It is located in the municipality of Noardeast-Fryslân, Friesland, east of Dokkum. Ee had approximately 834 inhabitants in January 2017. Before 2019, the village was part of the Dongeradeel municipality. There are various types of buildings in Ee, including a church built in 1220. The only flax museum of the Netherlands is also located in Ee. Ee has mostly remained an intact rural village. Ee has the shortest name of all places in the Netherlands.", "Pajottenland\nAffligem: Essene, Hekelgem and Teralfene ; Asse: Asse, Bekkerzeel, Kobbegem, Mollem, Relegem and Zellik ; Bever ; Dilbeek: Dilbeek, Itterbeek (with Sint-Anna-Pede), Schepdaal (with Sint-Gertrudis-Pede), Sint-Martens-Bodegem, Sint-Ulriks-Kapelle, Groot-Bijgaarden ; Galmaarden: Galmaarden, Tollembeek, Vollezele ; Gooik: Gooik (with Strijland), Kester, Leerbeek, Oetingen ; Herne: Herne (with Kokejane), Herfelingen, Sint-Pieters-Kapelle ; Lennik: Gaasbeek, Sint-Kwintens-Lennik (with Eizeringen), Sint-Martens-Lennik ; Liedekerke ; Pepingen: Pepingen, Beert, Bellingen, Bogaarden, Elingen, Heikruis ; Roosdaal: Pamel (with Ledeberg), Borchtlombeek, Onze-Lieve-Vrouw-Lombeek, Strijtem, Kattem ; Sint-Pieters-Leeuw: Sint-Pieters-Leeuw, Oudenaken, Ruisbroek, Sint-Laureins-Berchem, Vlezenbeek ; Ternat: Ternat, Sint-Katherina-Lombeek, Wambeek The Pajottenland is generally understood to cover the following municipalities and submunicipalities: According to a lawyer named De Gronckel who first described it, the Pajottenland also includes Liedekerke and the Ninove deelgemeenten Neigem and Lieferinge. The rural part of Anderlecht, particularly in earlier times before it became a municipality of the Brussels region, may also be included. The tourist area marketed under the name Pajottenland en Zennevallei (Pajottenland and Zenne Valley) also includes the municipalities Beersel, Drogenbos, Halle, Linkebeek, Sint-Genesius-Rode, which are clustered around the Zenne Valley to the south-west of the main Pajottenland region.", "We Are Here (collective)\n were from Somalia (48), Eritrea (31) and Ethiopia (28). On 13 December 2013, a building in Amsterdam Zuid Oost was occupied by a group of 90 migrants and their supporters. It was a derelict parking garage with offices attached, which became known as the Vluchtgarage. It was occupied until April 2015. In August 2014, a Somali man called Nassir Guuleed died at the squat. A few days later, Ibrahim Touré from Côte d'Ivoire suffered a brain haemorrhage and broken vertebra when he fell off a stairway. Police and ambulance services refused to enter the building, citing fears of the presence of asbestos, though the ", "Liyang\nLeeuwarden, Netherlands (since 2011) ", "Ede, Netherlands\nFruit juice and drinks-factory Riedel, now part of FrieslandCampina. ; Plant and flower auction house Plantion (since 1 March 2010). ; Advertising agency Lukkien who developed their own heliport on the roof of their office. ; The Dutch headquarters for Kimberly-Clark. ; The Dutch headquarters of mattress and pillow manufacturer Tempur-Pedic. ; Deli-XL, a foodservice distributor in Belgium and the Netherlands. ; The head office and two of the main datacenters of independent internet provider BIT. The world headquarters of organ manufacturer Johannus Orgelbouw. Economically, the town of Ede is doing fairly well thanks to the proximity of major highways and railways which offer fast connections to the port of ", "Heusden\n • Doeveren • Drunen • Elshout • Giersbergen • Haarsteeg • Hedikhuizen • Heesbeen • Herpt • Heusden • Nieuwkuijk • Oudheusden • Vlijmen", "Philippe Samyn\nCouverture des quais de la gare de Leuven.jpg – Psychiatric Clinic \"Sans Souci\", Brussels, Belgium ; 2001 – UCLouvain Aula Magna, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium ; 2008 – \"Vesuvio-Est\" railway station, Striano, Italy ; 2009 – Studio for the painter Erik Salvesen, Ekenäs, Finland ; 2009 – Faculty of Applied Science, Université libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium ; 2010 – Lujiazhi cultural creativity garden, reception hall, large auditorium and hotel, Zhoushan, China ; 2014 – Social housing at rue de l'Olivier, Schaerbeek, Belgium ; 2015 – European Space Agency of Redu, Belgium ; 2015 – Namur Province House of Culture, Namur, Belgium ; 2017 – Namur Province Administration House, Namur, Belgium ; 2017 – \"M'as-tu vu\" square, Knokke-Heist, Belgium ; 2017 – Arctic Circle theater, Rovaniemi, Finland ; 2017 – Europa Building (Council of the European Union and European Council), Brussels, Belgium ; 2018 – Steel tent for a multipurpose public space in Avilés, Spain ; 2018 – Cash Centre, National Bank of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium ", "Oost-Indisch Huis\n The Oost-Indisch Huis (Dutch for \"East India House\") is an early 17th-century building in the centre of Amsterdam. It was the headquarters of the Amsterdam chamber of the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC). It is a listed Dutch national heritage site (rijksmonument).", "Hogeschool-Universiteit Brussel\n European University College Brussels was founded in 1925 as St. Aloysius University College of Economics (EHSAL), as a Dutch-speaking department of the Faculté universitaire Saint-Louis, nowadays Saint-Louis University, Brussels. At the merger with VLEKHO, HONIM and KUBrussel in 2008, more than 9,000 students were attending classes in undergraduate, graduate and academic advanced programmes at seven faculties. HUBrussel had five faculties in the Brussels-Capital Region and one in the nearby town of Dilbeek, Flanders. There used to be one in Dubai, called European University College Brussels Dubai, but this has been closed. HUBrussel is associated with the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven.", "DRU Cultuurfabriek\n The DRU Cultuurfabriek (several spellings and versions; until December 2010: DRU-fabriek or Drufabriek) is the most important cultural centre of the municipality Oude IJsselstreek in the east of the Netherlands. The 'culture factory' in the northeast of the village Ulft is situated by the river Oude IJssel, Netherlands. The basis for the centre are buildings of the former ironworks of Diepenbrock en Reigers te Ulft (DRU). The buildings are protected national monuments. The whole ensemble includes also the buildings of the Beltmancomplex with the highly visible water tower. These are used now as residences. Some of the buildings remain unused.", "Molenwijk (Amsterdam)\n The Molenwijk district is a neighborhood in Amsterdam-Noord in the Dutch province of North Holland. It is part of the Oostzanerwerf district. The Molenwijk borders the east side of the ribbons and on the South End, on the south side of Oostzanerdijk, a part of the Water Zeedijk, which forms the border with the adjacent Tuindorp Oostzaan, on the west side of the Kermis Area and on the north by the Whale neighborhood. The area is easily accessible by car, bicycle and bus. The neighborhood is located near the nature reserve Twiske. The Oostzanerwerf the polder in which the district has ", "Heusden\n and built in the style of the Bossche School, it has much less splendour than its late-gothic predecessor. A memorial tablet in the forecourt still remembers the lives that were lost in the night of 4 to 5 November 1944. Its inscription: \"Wandelaar, waar gij staat vielen vijf november 1944 honderd vier en dertig burgers den oorlog ten offer.\" (\"Passer-by, where you are, on five November 1944 one hundred and thirty four civilians fell victim to the war.\") Inscriptions on one of the larger bells in the tower \"Nabestaanden, als ik luid, weet: Uw vele, vele doden zijn niet oorlogs droeve buit, ", "Concerns over Chinese involvement in 5G wireless networks\n Belgium is seat of the European Commission, other EU institutions, the NATO headquarters, SHAPE and other high-ranking institutions. On 9 October 2020 Orange S.A. and its competitor Proximus (ex belgacom) have declared that Nokia and Ericsson are going to deliver 5G equipment.", "Aa en Hunze\n • Achter 't Hout • Amen • Anderen • Anloo • Annen • Annerveenschekanaal • Balloërveld • Balloo • Bareveld • Bonnen • Bonnerveen • Bosje • Bovenstreek • De Hilte • Deurze • Eext • Eexterveen • Eexterveenschekanaal • Eexterzandvoort • Ekehaar • Eldersloo • Eleveld • Gasselte • Gasselterboerveen • Gasselterboerveenschemond • Gasselternijveen • Gasselternijveenschemond 1e Dwarsdiep • Gasselternijveenschemond 2e Dwarsdiep • Gasteren • Geelbroek • Gieten • Gieterveen • Gieterzandvoort • Grolloo • Kostvlies • Marwijksoord • Nieuw-Annerveen • Nieuwediep • Nijlande • Nooitgedacht • Oud-Annerveen • Papenvoort • Rolde • Schipborg • Schoonlo • Schreierswijk • Spijkerboor • Streek • Torenveen • Veenhof • Vredenheim", "Forest National\n Forest National (also known as Vorst Nationaal in Dutch) is a multi-purpose arena located in the municipality of Forest near Brussels, Belgium. The arena can hold more than 8,000 people. It hosts indoor sporting events as well as concerts done by a wide variety of artists. The arena, which opened in 1970, offers between 2,500 and 8,000 seats, depending on the event and is a member of European Arenas Association (EAA). Known for its circular interior, it is owned by the Music Hall Group and operated by the Sportpaleis Groep.", "Netherlands\n Netherlands 1st in child well-being in rich countries, both in 2007 and in 2013. On the Index of Economic Freedom Netherlands is the 14th most free market capitalist economy out of 180 surveyed countries. Amsterdam is the financial and business capital of the Netherlands. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange (AEX), part of Euronext, is the world's oldest stock exchange and is one of Europe's largest bourses. It is situated near Dam Square in the city's centre. As a founding member of the euro, the Netherlands replaced (for accounting purposes) its former currency, the \"gulden\" (guilder), on 1 January 1999, along with 15 other adopters of the euro. Actual euro coins " ]
In what country is Łupiny, Masovian Voivodeship?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Łupiny, Masovian Voivodeship
2,057,039
57
[ { "id": "4899180", "title": "Łupiny, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Łupiny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wiśniew, within Siedlce County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-west of Wiśniew, 13 km south of Siedlce, and 87 km east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 293.", "score": "1.8544846" }, { "id": "32237528", "title": "Łupiny, Pomeranian Voivodeship", "text": " Łupiny, Lupinenfelde, is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Słupsk, within Słupsk County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-east of Słupsk and 99 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. Before 1945 the area of Farther Pomerania, where the settlement is located, was part of Germany. For the post-war history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The settlement has a population of 6.", "score": "1.6364645" }, { "id": "4379601", "title": "Słupca, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Słupca is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bulkowo, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-west of Bulkowo, 26 km east of Płock, and 76 km north-west of Warsaw.", "score": "1.6015431" }, { "id": "2502591", "title": "Słup, Gostynin County", "text": " Słup is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczawin Kościelny, within Gostynin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.5603218" }, { "id": "1439704", "title": "Łupki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship", "text": " Łupki (Lupken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Pisz and 92 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "score": "1.5369041" }, { "id": "3741245", "title": "Skorupy, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Skorupy is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kołbiel, within Otwock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Kołbiel, 14 km south-east of Otwock, and 35 km south-east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.5281656" }, { "id": "2501720", "title": "Słup, Garwolin County", "text": " Słup is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Parysów, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km east of Parysów, 10 km north-east of Garwolin, and 57 km south-east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.4852054" }, { "id": "4516082", "title": "Lipiny, Przysucha County", "text": " Lipiny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Odrzywół, within Przysucha County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Odrzywół, 21 km north of Przysucha, and 82 km south-west of Warsaw.", "score": "1.4851594" }, { "id": "5058450", "title": "Chałupki Łaziskie", "text": " Chałupki Łaziskie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orońsko, within Szydłowiec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km west of Orońsko, 13 km north of Szydłowiec, and 98 km south of Warsaw.", "score": "1.4711432" }, { "id": "4412427", "title": "Liszyno", "text": " Liszyno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słupno, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.4693946" }, { "id": "6021782", "title": "Słupno, Wołomin County", "text": " Słupno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radzymin, within Wołomin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Radzymin, 8 km north-west of Wołomin, and 23 km north-east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 1,500.", "score": "1.4649482" }, { "id": "4412441", "title": "Wykowo, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Wykowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słupno, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south of Słupno, 13 km south-east of Płock, and 84 km west of Warsaw.", "score": "1.463788" }, { "id": "32861860", "title": "Słup, Braniewo County", "text": " Słup (Schlepstein) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lelkowo, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately 26 km east of Braniewo and 61 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 30.", "score": "1.4628825" }, { "id": "4379593", "title": "Nowa Słupca", "text": " Nowa Słupca is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bulkowo, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.4626737" }, { "id": "5058211", "title": "Skorupki, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Skorupki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Repki, within Sokołów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Repki, 9 km south-east of Sokołów Podlaski, and 94 km east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.4554833" }, { "id": "14787752", "title": "Łupice, Greater Poland Voivodeship", "text": " Łupice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pyzdry, within Września County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Pyzdry, 26 km south of Września, and 62 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 40.", "score": "1.4530752" }, { "id": "32293552", "title": "Łupawsko", "text": " Łupawsko (Łëpawskò; Lupowske) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarna Dąbrówka, within Bytów County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south of Czarna Dąbrówka, 18 km north of Bytów, and 69 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. The village has a population of 54.", "score": "1.4498049" }, { "id": "2627433", "title": "Okup Mały", "text": " Okup Mały is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łask, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km west of Łask and 35 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.441354" }, { "id": "2627434", "title": "Okup Wielki", "text": " Okup Wielki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łask, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Łask and 36 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.4407477" }, { "id": "2449772", "title": "Laliny", "text": " Laliny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Borowie, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 15 km north-east of Garwolin and 63 km south-east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.4404778" } ]
[ "Łupiny, Masovian Voivodeship\n Łupiny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Wiśniew, within Siedlce County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-west of Wiśniew, 13 km south of Siedlce, and 87 km east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 293.", "Łupiny, Pomeranian Voivodeship\n Łupiny, Lupinenfelde, is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Słupsk, within Słupsk County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-east of Słupsk and 99 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. Before 1945 the area of Farther Pomerania, where the settlement is located, was part of Germany. For the post-war history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The settlement has a population of 6.", "Słupca, Masovian Voivodeship\n Słupca is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bulkowo, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-west of Bulkowo, 26 km east of Płock, and 76 km north-west of Warsaw.", "Słup, Gostynin County\n Słup is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczawin Kościelny, within Gostynin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Łupki, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship\n Łupki (Lupken) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Pisz and 92 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).", "Skorupy, Masovian Voivodeship\n Skorupy is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kołbiel, within Otwock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Kołbiel, 14 km south-east of Otwock, and 35 km south-east of Warsaw.", "Słup, Garwolin County\n Słup is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Parysów, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km east of Parysów, 10 km north-east of Garwolin, and 57 km south-east of Warsaw.", "Lipiny, Przysucha County\n Lipiny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Odrzywół, within Przysucha County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Odrzywół, 21 km north of Przysucha, and 82 km south-west of Warsaw.", "Chałupki Łaziskie\n Chałupki Łaziskie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orońsko, within Szydłowiec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 8 km west of Orońsko, 13 km north of Szydłowiec, and 98 km south of Warsaw.", "Liszyno\n Liszyno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słupno, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Słupno, Wołomin County\n Słupno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radzymin, within Wołomin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Radzymin, 8 km north-west of Wołomin, and 23 km north-east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 1,500.", "Wykowo, Masovian Voivodeship\n Wykowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Słupno, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south of Słupno, 13 km south-east of Płock, and 84 km west of Warsaw.", "Słup, Braniewo County\n Słup (Schlepstein) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lelkowo, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately 26 km east of Braniewo and 61 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 30.", "Nowa Słupca\n Nowa Słupca is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bulkowo, within Płock County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Skorupki, Masovian Voivodeship\n Skorupki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Repki, within Sokołów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Repki, 9 km south-east of Sokołów Podlaski, and 94 km east of Warsaw.", "Łupice, Greater Poland Voivodeship\n Łupice is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pyzdry, within Września County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Pyzdry, 26 km south of Września, and 62 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 40.", "Łupawsko\n Łupawsko (Łëpawskò; Lupowske) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarna Dąbrówka, within Bytów County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south of Czarna Dąbrówka, 18 km north of Bytów, and 69 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. The village has a population of 54.", "Okup Mały\n Okup Mały is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łask, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km west of Łask and 35 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Okup Wielki\n Okup Wielki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łask, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Łask and 36 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Laliny\n Laliny is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Borowie, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 15 km north-east of Garwolin and 63 km south-east of Warsaw." ]
In what country is Xaga?
[ "People's Republic of China", "China", "CN", "PR China", "PRC", "cn", "CHN", "🇨🇳", "China PR", "Mainland China" ]
country
Xaga
6,218,249
15
[ { "id": "29826703", "title": "Xaaga", "text": " Xaaga (pronounced Saaga) is a small town South-West from the town of San Pablo Villa de Mitla in the Valles Centrales of the State of Oaxaca, Mexico. It is about 10 km (as the crow flies) far away from Hierve el Agua.", "score": "1.5768573" }, { "id": "16533654", "title": "Xagal", "text": " Xagal is a town in Berbera District, in the Sahil Region of Somaliland.", "score": "1.5342319" }, { "id": "28564746", "title": "Enagás", "text": " Enagás, S.A. (, originally an initialism for Empresa Nacional del Gas) is a Spanish energy company and European transmission system operator (TSO), which owns and operates the nation's gas grid. The firm also owns four liquefied natural gas regasification terminals in the country, at Huelva, Barcelona, Cartagena and Gijon. In addition, it owns 50% of the plant BBG (Bilbao) and 100% of Gascan. The chairman of Enagás is Antonio Llardén Carratalá and his Chief Executive Officer is Marcelino Oreja Arburúa. The firm's headquarters are located in Madrid. Apart from Spain, Enagás has presence in Mexico, Perú, Chile, Sweden and in the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) European project. ", "score": "1.4858799" }, { "id": "27555051", "title": "Ximelagatran", "text": " Ximelagatran (Exanta or Exarta, H 376/95) is an anticoagulant that has been investigated extensively as a replacement for warfarin that would overcome the problematic dietary, drug interaction, and monitoring issues associated with warfarin therapy. In 2006, its manufacturer AstraZeneca announced that it would withdraw pending applications for marketing approval after reports of hepatotoxicity (liver damage) during trials, and discontinue its distribution in countries where the drug had been approved (Germany, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Iceland, Austria, Denmark, France, Switzerland, Argentina and Brazil).", "score": "1.424757" }, { "id": "3256090", "title": "Ráfaga", "text": " Ráfaga is a band in the Argentine cumbia. Formed in 1994, they started playing in Argentine cumbia clubs and quickly gained popularity. The band is characterised by medieval outfits and jewelry, sometimes becoming close to an image that can be described like a Liberace style. In 1997 and 1998 they participated in the Midem Latino de Musica in Miami, which gave them an international reputation, taking their music to other countries such as Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, and even to Spain at the end of 1999. In 2001 they went on a North American tour to Canada, then to New York, Washington and Miami. They continued touring, with concerts in other countries such as Romania (where \"La luna y tú\" was used for a commercial), Sweden, Norway, Switzerland, China and Australia.", "score": "1.4183043" }, { "id": "5194593", "title": "Sonaga language", "text": " Sonaga (; ; Xinfeng Yi 新峰彝) is a recently discovered Loloish language of Heqing County, Yunnan, China. Sonaga is spoken in Dongdeng 东登 of Xinfeng Village 新峰村 (as well as Anle Village 安乐村 ), Caohai Township 草海乡, Heqing County (Castro, et al. 2010).", "score": "1.3990828" }, { "id": "8003372", "title": "New Xanagas", "text": " New Xanagas is a village in Ghanzi District of Botswana. It is located western part of the district. New Xanagas has a primary school and the population was 540 in 2001 census.", "score": "1.3789206" }, { "id": "15426509", "title": "Xylota stenogaster", "text": " Mexico.", "score": "1.3455491" }, { "id": "7467790", "title": "XETAR-AM", "text": " XETAR-AM (La Voz de la Sierra Tarahumara – \"The Voice of the Sierra Tarahumara\") is an indigenous community radio station that broadcasts in Spanish, Tarahumara and Northern Tepehuán from Guachochi, in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. It is run by the Cultural Indigenist Broadcasting System (SRCI) of the National Commission for the Development of Indigenous Peoples (CDI). XETAR-AM broadcasts on the United States clear-channel frequency of 870 kHz.", "score": "1.3443503" }, { "id": "6912809", "title": "Xabi Aburruzaga", "text": " Xabi Aburruzaga (Portugalete, 1978) is a Biscayan Trikitilari who began studying music when he was seven years old and began playing the Accordion and Piano a year later. His first teacher was Rufino Arrola. Aburruzaga has won multiple awards playing his instrument and has published several books and records.", "score": "1.3372052" }, { "id": "14179223", "title": "Xylota azurea", "text": " Mexico, United States.", "score": "1.3359993" }, { "id": "15554635", "title": "Santo Domingo Xagacía", "text": " Santo Domingo Xagacía is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. It is part of the Villa Alta District in the center of the Sierra Norte Region. In 2004, the municipality had a total population of approx. 1,000.", "score": "1.3301189" }, { "id": "27167280", "title": "Xeniconeura", "text": " USA (Colorado), Mexico.", "score": "1.3293126" }, { "id": "10967736", "title": "Xanağa", "text": " Xanağa (also Khanagha, known as Çapayevka until 2000) is a municipality and village in the Ordubad District of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan. It is located near the Ordubad-Vanand highway, 14 km in the north-west from the district center, on the left bank of the Araz River. Its population is busy with gardening, farming and animal husbandry. There are secondary school, club, library and a medical center in the village. It has a population of 665. It forms part of the municipality of Vənənd.", "score": "1.328376" }, { "id": "14606727", "title": "Xylota flukei", "text": " Canada, United States.", "score": "1.3276006" }, { "id": "31566967", "title": "Antonio Llardén", "text": " Antonio Llardén Carratalá (born 1951, Barcelona, Spain) is Executive Chairman of Enagás, the main carrier of natural gas in Spain and the Technical Manager of the Spanish Gas System. The company has presence in México, Chile and Perú, and participates in the European project Trans Adriatic Pipeline. It is also certified as independent TSO European Union, which homologates the company to gas transmission network operators of other European countries.", "score": "1.3234504" }, { "id": "5741601", "title": "Xabier Benito Ziluaga", "text": " Xabier Benito was born in Getxo, Basque Country, in 1988. He obtained a Bachelor in Social Works and, before focusing on politics, he developed his professional career working with social excluded people, with special attention to those who suffered drug addictions.", "score": "1.3226566" }, { "id": "29903656", "title": "Traga", "text": " Traga is the third album by the Chilean band Fiskales Ad-Hok, launched in 1995 under \"Culebra Records\", BMG sub-label. After releasing this album, Fiskales Ad-Hok decide they do not feel comfortable in their workplace, so I founded an independent record label themselves, CFA - Autonomous Phonographic Corporation - under which throw all his later works.", "score": "1.3144219" }, { "id": "26201111", "title": "Laura Olascuaga", "text": " Olascuaga was born in Cartagena, raised in the capital of the Department of Bolívar. She graduated from the Universidad del Norte in Barranquilla city, where she earned her bachelor degree in social communication and journalism.", "score": "1.3121579" }, { "id": "6912808", "title": "Xabi Aburruzaga", "text": " Xabi Aburruzaga (born 1978 in Portugalete, Euskadi, Spain) is a Basque musician and composer, who is a master of the Trikitixa, the diatonic accordion.", "score": "1.3101966" } ]
[ "Xaaga\n Xaaga (pronounced Saaga) is a small town South-West from the town of San Pablo Villa de Mitla in the Valles Centrales of the State of Oaxaca, Mexico. It is about 10 km (as the crow flies) far away from Hierve el Agua.", "Xagal\n Xagal is a town in Berbera District, in the Sahil Region of Somaliland.", "Enagás\n Enagás, S.A. (, originally an initialism for Empresa Nacional del Gas) is a Spanish energy company and European transmission system operator (TSO), which owns and operates the nation's gas grid. The firm also owns four liquefied natural gas regasification terminals in the country, at Huelva, Barcelona, Cartagena and Gijon. In addition, it owns 50% of the plant BBG (Bilbao) and 100% of Gascan. The chairman of Enagás is Antonio Llardén Carratalá and his Chief Executive Officer is Marcelino Oreja Arburúa. The firm's headquarters are located in Madrid. Apart from Spain, Enagás has presence in Mexico, Perú, Chile, Sweden and in the Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) European project. ", "Ximelagatran\n Ximelagatran (Exanta or Exarta, H 376/95) is an anticoagulant that has been investigated extensively as a replacement for warfarin that would overcome the problematic dietary, drug interaction, and monitoring issues associated with warfarin therapy. In 2006, its manufacturer AstraZeneca announced that it would withdraw pending applications for marketing approval after reports of hepatotoxicity (liver damage) during trials, and discontinue its distribution in countries where the drug had been approved (Germany, Portugal, Sweden, Finland, Norway, Iceland, Austria, Denmark, France, Switzerland, Argentina and Brazil).", "Ráfaga\n Ráfaga is a band in the Argentine cumbia. Formed in 1994, they started playing in Argentine cumbia clubs and quickly gained popularity. The band is characterised by medieval outfits and jewelry, sometimes becoming close to an image that can be described like a Liberace style. In 1997 and 1998 they participated in the Midem Latino de Musica in Miami, which gave them an international reputation, taking their music to other countries such as Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, and even to Spain at the end of 1999. In 2001 they went on a North American tour to Canada, then to New York, Washington and Miami. They continued touring, with concerts in other countries such as Romania (where \"La luna y tú\" was used for a commercial), Sweden, Norway, Switzerland, China and Australia.", "Sonaga language\n Sonaga (; ; Xinfeng Yi 新峰彝) is a recently discovered Loloish language of Heqing County, Yunnan, China. Sonaga is spoken in Dongdeng 东登 of Xinfeng Village 新峰村 (as well as Anle Village 安乐村 ), Caohai Township 草海乡, Heqing County (Castro, et al. 2010).", "New Xanagas\n New Xanagas is a village in Ghanzi District of Botswana. It is located western part of the district. New Xanagas has a primary school and the population was 540 in 2001 census.", "Xylota stenogaster\n Mexico.", "XETAR-AM\n XETAR-AM (La Voz de la Sierra Tarahumara – \"The Voice of the Sierra Tarahumara\") is an indigenous community radio station that broadcasts in Spanish, Tarahumara and Northern Tepehuán from Guachochi, in the Mexican state of Chihuahua. It is run by the Cultural Indigenist Broadcasting System (SRCI) of the National Commission for the Development of Indigenous Peoples (CDI). XETAR-AM broadcasts on the United States clear-channel frequency of 870 kHz.", "Xabi Aburruzaga\n Xabi Aburruzaga (Portugalete, 1978) is a Biscayan Trikitilari who began studying music when he was seven years old and began playing the Accordion and Piano a year later. His first teacher was Rufino Arrola. Aburruzaga has won multiple awards playing his instrument and has published several books and records.", "Xylota azurea\n Mexico, United States.", "Santo Domingo Xagacía\n Santo Domingo Xagacía is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. It is part of the Villa Alta District in the center of the Sierra Norte Region. In 2004, the municipality had a total population of approx. 1,000.", "Xeniconeura\n USA (Colorado), Mexico.", "Xanağa\n Xanağa (also Khanagha, known as Çapayevka until 2000) is a municipality and village in the Ordubad District of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan. It is located near the Ordubad-Vanand highway, 14 km in the north-west from the district center, on the left bank of the Araz River. Its population is busy with gardening, farming and animal husbandry. There are secondary school, club, library and a medical center in the village. It has a population of 665. It forms part of the municipality of Vənənd.", "Xylota flukei\n Canada, United States.", "Antonio Llardén\n Antonio Llardén Carratalá (born 1951, Barcelona, Spain) is Executive Chairman of Enagás, the main carrier of natural gas in Spain and the Technical Manager of the Spanish Gas System. The company has presence in México, Chile and Perú, and participates in the European project Trans Adriatic Pipeline. It is also certified as independent TSO European Union, which homologates the company to gas transmission network operators of other European countries.", "Xabier Benito Ziluaga\n Xabier Benito was born in Getxo, Basque Country, in 1988. He obtained a Bachelor in Social Works and, before focusing on politics, he developed his professional career working with social excluded people, with special attention to those who suffered drug addictions.", "Traga\n Traga is the third album by the Chilean band Fiskales Ad-Hok, launched in 1995 under \"Culebra Records\", BMG sub-label. After releasing this album, Fiskales Ad-Hok decide they do not feel comfortable in their workplace, so I founded an independent record label themselves, CFA - Autonomous Phonographic Corporation - under which throw all his later works.", "Laura Olascuaga\n Olascuaga was born in Cartagena, raised in the capital of the Department of Bolívar. She graduated from the Universidad del Norte in Barranquilla city, where she earned her bachelor degree in social communication and journalism.", "Xabi Aburruzaga\n Xabi Aburruzaga (born 1978 in Portugalete, Euskadi, Spain) is a Basque musician and composer, who is a master of the Trikitixa, the diatonic accordion." ]
In what country is Babino, Haiti?
[ "Haiti", "Republic of Haiti", "ht", "Hayti", "HT", "République d'Haïti", "Haitian Republic", "Ayiti", "🇭🇹", "HAI" ]
country
Babino, Grand'Anse
1,332,334
45
[ { "id": "9943013", "title": "Babino, Grand'Anse", "text": " Babino is a rural settlement in the Chambellan commune of the Jérémie Arrondissement, in the Grand'Anse department of Haiti.", "score": "1.9441338" }, { "id": "26825559", "title": "Bas-Limbé", "text": " Bas-Limbé (Ba Lenbe) is a commune in the Limbé Arrondissement, in the Nord department of Haiti. It has 50 ,456 inhabitants.", "score": "1.5767617" }, { "id": "26825272", "title": "Chambellan", "text": " Chambellan (Chanbèlan) is a commune in the Jérémie Arrondissement, in the Grand'Anse department of Haiti. It has 16,883 inhabitants. Villages located within the commune include: Babino, Cadette, Grande Plaine, Granger, La Coude and Laterriere.", "score": "1.5684447" }, { "id": "32458315", "title": "Bahon", "text": " Bahon (Bawon), sometimes called Bohon, is a commune in Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement in the Nord, department of Haiti. It is located on the Grand Rivière du Nord (river). It was formerly (1915) located on the railroad south from Cap-Haïtien.", "score": "1.5377395" }, { "id": "5393449", "title": "Ouanaminthe", "text": " Canada has recently financed the renovation of the police station. The town's primary economic activity is trade with neighboring Dajabon. • Seeking to combat contraband and encourage domestic production, in 2015 Haiti banned the importation by truck of 23 items, including bottled drinking water and spaghetti.", "score": "1.5114193" }, { "id": "5569214", "title": "Belladère", "text": " Belladère (Beladè, Veladero) is a commune in the Lascahobas Arrondissement, inside the Centre department of Haiti. Its border crossing to Comendador (Elías Piña) is one of the four chief land crossings to the Dominican Republic. It belonged to the Dominican Republic until 1936, when Dominican and Haitian leaders agreed to a boundary change in favor of Haiti, as the Haitian government commanded by Sténio Vincent wanted to move the border eastward while the Dominican regime under Rafael Trujillo saw the relinquish of the territory (despite some domestic opposition) as a de-Haitianization of the country, as that area had experienced a significant Haitian settlement in the previous decades, bolster by both Haiti's population explosion and scarcity of wastelands, with ethnic Dominicans becoming a minority in Belladère (then Veladero) and its surrounding areas.", "score": "1.4900314" }, { "id": "7317731", "title": "Babino, Voronezh Oblast", "text": " Babino (Бабино) is a rural locality (a village) in Ternovskoye Rural Settlement, Ternovsky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 70 as of 2010. There are 3 streets.", "score": "1.4847254" }, { "id": "13591234", "title": "Jabon, Saint-Jean-du-Sud, Haiti", "text": " Jabon is a village in the Saint-Jean-du-Sud commune of the Port-Salut Arrondissement, in the Sud department of Haiti.", "score": "1.4822358" }, { "id": "26826186", "title": "Jean-Rabel", "text": " Jean-Rabel (Jan Rabèl) is a commune located west of the city of Port-de-Paix and east of the city of the Môle-Saint-Nicolas Arrondissement, in the Nord-Ouest department of Haiti. As of 2015, the estimated adult population was 148,416. The city of Jean-Rabel is the most important in the western area of the department. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean on the north, the District of Môle Saint Nicolas on the west side, the District of Port-de-Paix on the east, and the City of Anse-Rouge in the Department of Artibonite on the south.", "score": "1.4677577" }, { "id": "26999169", "title": "Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement", "text": "Grande-Rivière-du-Nord ; Bahon Grande-Rivière-du-Nord (Grann Rivyè dinò) is an arrondissement in the Nord Department of Haiti. As of 2015, the population was 64,613 inhabitants. Postal codes in the Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement start with the number 13. The arrondissement consists of the following communes:", "score": "1.4652219" }, { "id": "9930642", "title": "Haiti", "text": " Haiti (Ayiti ; Haïti ), officially the Republic of Haiti (République d'Haïti; Repiblik d Ayiti), and formerly known as Hayti, is a country located on the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean Sea, to the east of Cuba and Jamaica and south of The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands. It occupies the western three-eighths of the island which it shares with the Dominican Republic. To its south-west lies the small island of Navassa Island, which is claimed by Haiti but is disputed as a United States territory under federal administration. Haiti is 27750 km2 in size, the third ", "score": "1.4634833" }, { "id": "14396511", "title": "Sergine André", "text": " Française, Jacmel, Haiti ; 2002: \"Haitian art show\", Friends of Hôpital Albert Schweitzer Haiti, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States ; 2002: \"Haitian Art in Bloom\", New York, United States ; 2002: \"Quand passent les chevaux\", Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2001: Ethno Galerie, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Héritage de Couleurs\", Ethno Galerie, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Trio - Sergine Andre, Barbara Cardone, \", Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Haïti: Anges and Démons\", Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France ; 1998: Paginkob association, Brussels, Belgium ; 1997: \"Les femmes peintres d'Haïti\", Musée du Panthéon National Haïtien, Port-au-Prince, Haiti ; 1996: \"L'invisible\", Sergine Andre and Pascale Monnin, Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ", "score": "1.4629519" }, { "id": "9930733", "title": "Haiti", "text": " The tourism market in Haiti is undeveloped and the government is heavily promoting this sector. Haiti has many of the features that attract tourists to other Caribbean destinations, such as white sand beaches, mountainous scenery and a year-round warm climate. However, the country's poor image overseas, at times exaggerated, has hampered the development of this sector. In 2014, the country received 1,250,000 tourists (mostly from cruise ships), and the industry generated US$200 million in 2014. Several hotels were opened in 2014, including an upscale Best Western Premier, a five-star Royal Oasis hotel by Occidental Hotel and Resorts in Pétion-Ville, a four-star Marriott Hotel in the Turgeau area of Port-au-Prince and other new hotel developments in Port-au-Prince, Les Cayes, Cap-Haïtien and Jacmel. The Haitian Carnival has been one of the most popular carnivals in the Caribbean. In 2010, the government decided to stage the event in a different city outside Port-au-Prince every year in an attempt to decentralize the country. The National Carnival – usually held in one of the country's largest cities (i.e., Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien or Les Cayes) – follows the also very popular Jacmel Carnival, which takes place a week earlier in February or March.", "score": "1.4592403" }, { "id": "400282", "title": "Babino, Demir Hisar", "text": " Babino (Macedonian Бабино) is a small village in the municipality of Demir Hisar, in the area of Zeleznik, in the vicinity of the town of Demir Hisar. It used to be part of the former municipality of Sopotnica. The village is best known for having the largest private library in North Macedonia, the private library \"Al-Bi\" owned by Stevo Stepanovski, which has over 20,000 books, making it a tourist destination for bibliophiles. According to the classification of the Ministry of Local Self-Government, Babino belongs to the category of hilly and mountainous villages.", "score": "1.458669" }, { "id": "10896605", "title": "Babino, Bulgaria", "text": " Babino is a village in Bobov Dol Municipality, Kyustendil Province, south-western Bulgaria.", "score": "1.4542499" }, { "id": "26847607", "title": "Babino, Vladimir Oblast", "text": " Babino (Бабино) is a rural locality (a village) in Posyolok Anopino, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 31 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "score": "1.4541075" }, { "id": "28194151", "title": "Rabies in Haiti", "text": " The Context PAHO’s regional programme of rabies control defines Haiti as a priority country, i.e., countries where canine rabies variants are either circulating or did so in the recent past. The context and capacities of priority countries are diverse, and efforts are undergoing to evaluate the best port-folio of actions to address country-specific limitations [2]. Brazil, for example, remains a priority country because of the persistent, albeit well-circumscribed, occurrence of dog-mediated human rabies in the northeast of the country, in the state of Maranhao [3]. Even with this occurrence,", "score": "1.4505386" }, { "id": "9739036", "title": "Cives Mundi", "text": " In the Dominican Republic and Haiti, AIDS prevention has been one of Cives Mundi's main priorities. A project to optimize coffee harvest was also carried out in Loma de Panzo, in the Dominican Republic. After the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Cives Mundi implemented two projects to help rebuilding the country by reactivating the local economy through craftmanship in the town of Jacmel.", "score": "1.4503832" }, { "id": "7998266", "title": "Bangladesh–Haiti relations", "text": " Bangladeshi peace keepers are playing an active role in maintaining peace and stability in Haiti. Bangladeshi peace keepers in Haiti were first deployed in 2004 as part of United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti. In 2010, Haiti became the first country to receive all-female Bangladeshi police contingent. In 2012, officers of Bangladeshi police unit were awarded United Nations medal for their contribution in managing law enforcement in Haiti.", "score": "1.443302" }, { "id": "31366790", "title": "Babino, Podlaskie Voivodeship", "text": " Babino is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Choroszcz, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-west of Choroszcz and 18 km west of the regional capital Białystok. On March 22, 1952, in the town, near the Warsaw-Białystok road, the National Military Union (NZW) patrol commanded by Stanisław Franciszek Grabowski (\"Wiarus\") were ambushed and killed. Stanisław Grabowski was one of the longest fighting soldiers of the anti-communist underground in post-war Poland. During the tearing up of the raid, Grabowski and two other partisans (Edward Wądołowski, pseudonym \"Humorek\" and Lucjan Zalewski, pseudonym \"Żbik\") died with weapons in hand.", "score": "1.4415002" } ]
[ "Babino, Grand'Anse\n Babino is a rural settlement in the Chambellan commune of the Jérémie Arrondissement, in the Grand'Anse department of Haiti.", "Bas-Limbé\n Bas-Limbé (Ba Lenbe) is a commune in the Limbé Arrondissement, in the Nord department of Haiti. It has 50 ,456 inhabitants.", "Chambellan\n Chambellan (Chanbèlan) is a commune in the Jérémie Arrondissement, in the Grand'Anse department of Haiti. It has 16,883 inhabitants. Villages located within the commune include: Babino, Cadette, Grande Plaine, Granger, La Coude and Laterriere.", "Bahon\n Bahon (Bawon), sometimes called Bohon, is a commune in Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement in the Nord, department of Haiti. It is located on the Grand Rivière du Nord (river). It was formerly (1915) located on the railroad south from Cap-Haïtien.", "Ouanaminthe\n Canada has recently financed the renovation of the police station. The town's primary economic activity is trade with neighboring Dajabon. • Seeking to combat contraband and encourage domestic production, in 2015 Haiti banned the importation by truck of 23 items, including bottled drinking water and spaghetti.", "Belladère\n Belladère (Beladè, Veladero) is a commune in the Lascahobas Arrondissement, inside the Centre department of Haiti. Its border crossing to Comendador (Elías Piña) is one of the four chief land crossings to the Dominican Republic. It belonged to the Dominican Republic until 1936, when Dominican and Haitian leaders agreed to a boundary change in favor of Haiti, as the Haitian government commanded by Sténio Vincent wanted to move the border eastward while the Dominican regime under Rafael Trujillo saw the relinquish of the territory (despite some domestic opposition) as a de-Haitianization of the country, as that area had experienced a significant Haitian settlement in the previous decades, bolster by both Haiti's population explosion and scarcity of wastelands, with ethnic Dominicans becoming a minority in Belladère (then Veladero) and its surrounding areas.", "Babino, Voronezh Oblast\n Babino (Бабино) is a rural locality (a village) in Ternovskoye Rural Settlement, Ternovsky District, Voronezh Oblast, Russia. The population was 70 as of 2010. There are 3 streets.", "Jabon, Saint-Jean-du-Sud, Haiti\n Jabon is a village in the Saint-Jean-du-Sud commune of the Port-Salut Arrondissement, in the Sud department of Haiti.", "Jean-Rabel\n Jean-Rabel (Jan Rabèl) is a commune located west of the city of Port-de-Paix and east of the city of the Môle-Saint-Nicolas Arrondissement, in the Nord-Ouest department of Haiti. As of 2015, the estimated adult population was 148,416. The city of Jean-Rabel is the most important in the western area of the department. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean on the north, the District of Môle Saint Nicolas on the west side, the District of Port-de-Paix on the east, and the City of Anse-Rouge in the Department of Artibonite on the south.", "Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement\nGrande-Rivière-du-Nord ; Bahon Grande-Rivière-du-Nord (Grann Rivyè dinò) is an arrondissement in the Nord Department of Haiti. As of 2015, the population was 64,613 inhabitants. Postal codes in the Grande-Rivière-du-Nord Arrondissement start with the number 13. The arrondissement consists of the following communes:", "Haiti\n Haiti (Ayiti ; Haïti ), officially the Republic of Haiti (République d'Haïti; Repiblik d Ayiti), and formerly known as Hayti, is a country located on the island of Hispaniola in the Greater Antilles archipelago of the Caribbean Sea, to the east of Cuba and Jamaica and south of The Bahamas and the Turks and Caicos Islands. It occupies the western three-eighths of the island which it shares with the Dominican Republic. To its south-west lies the small island of Navassa Island, which is claimed by Haiti but is disputed as a United States territory under federal administration. Haiti is 27750 km2 in size, the third ", "Sergine André\n Française, Jacmel, Haiti ; 2002: \"Haitian art show\", Friends of Hôpital Albert Schweitzer Haiti, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States ; 2002: \"Haitian Art in Bloom\", New York, United States ; 2002: \"Quand passent les chevaux\", Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2001: Ethno Galerie, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Héritage de Couleurs\", Ethno Galerie, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Trio - Sergine Andre, Barbara Cardone, \", Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ; 2000: \"Haïti: Anges and Démons\", Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France ; 1998: Paginkob association, Brussels, Belgium ; 1997: \"Les femmes peintres d'Haïti\", Musée du Panthéon National Haïtien, Port-au-Prince, Haiti ; 1996: \"L'invisible\", Sergine Andre and Pascale Monnin, Galerie Monnin, Pétion-Ville, Haiti ", "Haiti\n The tourism market in Haiti is undeveloped and the government is heavily promoting this sector. Haiti has many of the features that attract tourists to other Caribbean destinations, such as white sand beaches, mountainous scenery and a year-round warm climate. However, the country's poor image overseas, at times exaggerated, has hampered the development of this sector. In 2014, the country received 1,250,000 tourists (mostly from cruise ships), and the industry generated US$200 million in 2014. Several hotels were opened in 2014, including an upscale Best Western Premier, a five-star Royal Oasis hotel by Occidental Hotel and Resorts in Pétion-Ville, a four-star Marriott Hotel in the Turgeau area of Port-au-Prince and other new hotel developments in Port-au-Prince, Les Cayes, Cap-Haïtien and Jacmel. The Haitian Carnival has been one of the most popular carnivals in the Caribbean. In 2010, the government decided to stage the event in a different city outside Port-au-Prince every year in an attempt to decentralize the country. The National Carnival – usually held in one of the country's largest cities (i.e., Port-au-Prince, Cap-Haïtien or Les Cayes) – follows the also very popular Jacmel Carnival, which takes place a week earlier in February or March.", "Babino, Demir Hisar\n Babino (Macedonian Бабино) is a small village in the municipality of Demir Hisar, in the area of Zeleznik, in the vicinity of the town of Demir Hisar. It used to be part of the former municipality of Sopotnica. The village is best known for having the largest private library in North Macedonia, the private library \"Al-Bi\" owned by Stevo Stepanovski, which has over 20,000 books, making it a tourist destination for bibliophiles. According to the classification of the Ministry of Local Self-Government, Babino belongs to the category of hilly and mountainous villages.", "Babino, Bulgaria\n Babino is a village in Bobov Dol Municipality, Kyustendil Province, south-western Bulgaria.", "Babino, Vladimir Oblast\n Babino (Бабино) is a rural locality (a village) in Posyolok Anopino, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 31 as of 2010. There is 1 street.", "Rabies in Haiti\n The Context PAHO’s regional programme of rabies control defines Haiti as a priority country, i.e., countries where canine rabies variants are either circulating or did so in the recent past. The context and capacities of priority countries are diverse, and efforts are undergoing to evaluate the best port-folio of actions to address country-specific limitations [2]. Brazil, for example, remains a priority country because of the persistent, albeit well-circumscribed, occurrence of dog-mediated human rabies in the northeast of the country, in the state of Maranhao [3]. Even with this occurrence,", "Cives Mundi\n In the Dominican Republic and Haiti, AIDS prevention has been one of Cives Mundi's main priorities. A project to optimize coffee harvest was also carried out in Loma de Panzo, in the Dominican Republic. After the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Cives Mundi implemented two projects to help rebuilding the country by reactivating the local economy through craftmanship in the town of Jacmel.", "Bangladesh–Haiti relations\n Bangladeshi peace keepers are playing an active role in maintaining peace and stability in Haiti. Bangladeshi peace keepers in Haiti were first deployed in 2004 as part of United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti. In 2010, Haiti became the first country to receive all-female Bangladeshi police contingent. In 2012, officers of Bangladeshi police unit were awarded United Nations medal for their contribution in managing law enforcement in Haiti.", "Babino, Podlaskie Voivodeship\n Babino is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Choroszcz, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-west of Choroszcz and 18 km west of the regional capital Białystok. On March 22, 1952, in the town, near the Warsaw-Białystok road, the National Military Union (NZW) patrol commanded by Stanisław Franciszek Grabowski (\"Wiarus\") were ambushed and killed. Stanisław Grabowski was one of the longest fighting soldiers of the anti-communist underground in post-war Poland. During the tearing up of the raid, Grabowski and two other partisans (Edward Wądołowski, pseudonym \"Humorek\" and Lucjan Zalewski, pseudonym \"Żbik\") died with weapons in hand." ]
In what country is Hatnagoda?
[ "Sri Lanka", "Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka", "Ceylon", "Taprobane", "Serendib", "Ceylan", "🇱🇰", "lk", "Lanka, Sri", "sri", "lke", "ce", "Srilanka", "SRI", "سرنديب", "سيلان" ]
country
Hatnagoda
4,350,340
30
[ { "id": "31472535", "title": "Hatna", "text": " Hatna is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India, located in the Mandya district.", "score": "1.4829788" }, { "id": "26488570", "title": "Nangolmora Union", "text": " There are no big markets in this union. The villagers usually go to Hathazari for marketings. A haat takes place on the bank of Halda River twice a week which is known as \"Kanno Hat\".", "score": "1.4349828" }, { "id": "30209582", "title": "Index of Sri Lanka–related articles (H)", "text": " 353) Hathugoda ; 354) Hatiya Island ; 355) Hatiya Upazila ; 356) Hatiyaldeniya ; 357) Hatiyalwela ; 358) Hatnagoda ; 359) Hatrick Hodi Maga ; 360) Hatthikuchchi ; 361) Hatthikuchchi Museum ; 362) Hatton National Bank ; 363) Hatton railway station (Sri Lanka) ; 364) Hatton, Sri Lanka ; 365) Hatugoda ; 366) Havelock City ; 367) Havelock Island ; 368) Havelock Park ; 369) Havelock Road bombing ; 370) Havelock Sports Club ; 371) Havelock Town ; 372) Havelock executive council of Ceylon ; 373) Havigannada dialect ; 374) Havina Hede ; 375) Hay MacDowall ; 376) Hayden Crozier ; ", "score": "1.3756487" }, { "id": "25239318", "title": "Matgoda", "text": " Matgoda is located at 22.7745°N, 86.9038°W.", "score": "1.3465147" }, { "id": "11302875", "title": "Hatadage", "text": " Hatadage (Sinhala: හැටදාගේ) is an ancient relic shrine in the city of Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka. It was built by King Nissanka Malla, and had been used to keep the Relic of the tooth of the Buddha. The Hatadage had been built using stone, brick and wood, although only parts of the brick and stone walls now remain. It appears to have been a two-storey structure, but the upper storey has now been destroyed. Three Buddha statues carved out of granite rock are located within a chamber of the shrine.", "score": "1.3397233" }, { "id": "11302876", "title": "Hatadage", "text": " The Hatadage is located in the ancient city of Polonnaruwa, in the North Central province of Sri Lanka. It is close to the northern edge of the Dalada Maluva there, the quadrangular area which contains some of the oldest and most sacred monuments of the city. Its entrance, which is oriented to the south, directly faces the entrance of the Polonnaruwa Vatadage. The Galpotha stone inscription is near its eastern side, while the Atadage lies to its west.", "score": "1.3393121" }, { "id": "14026263", "title": "Hatvan", "text": "🇮🇹 Barberino Tavarnelle, Italy ; 🇺🇦 Berehove, Ukraine ; 🇱🇹 Ignalina, Lithuania ; 🇫🇮 Kokkola, Finland ; Maassluis, Netherlands ; 🇸🇰 Nižný Hrušov, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Prachatice, Czech Republic ; 🇳🇴 Østfold, Norway ; 🇷🇴 Târgu Secuiesc, Romania Hatvan is twinned with: ", "score": "1.338198" }, { "id": "32287387", "title": "Vansda National Park", "text": " Vansda National Park, also known as Bansda National Park, is a protected area which represents the thick woodlands of the Dangs and southern Gujarat, and is situated in the Vansda tehsil, Navsari District of Gujarat state, India. Riding on the banks of Ambika River and measuring roughly 24 km2 in area, the park lies about 65 km east of the town of Chikhali on the National Highway 8, and about 80 km northeast of the city of Valsad. Vansda, the town from which the name of the park is derived, is an important trading place for the surrounding area where the majority of the population is represented by adivasis. Vansda-Waghai state highway runs through the park, so does the ", "score": "1.3358417" }, { "id": "11946796", "title": "Hatgobindapur", "text": " Hatgobindapur is located at 23.2625°N, 87.9784°W.", "score": "1.3331897" }, { "id": "27627902", "title": "Hatokaliotsy Special Reserve", "text": " The Hatokaliotsy Site of Biological Interest is a site of biological interest in Madagascar located near Marolinta, the Menarandra River and the Bay of Langarano.", "score": "1.3285462" }, { "id": "31692640", "title": "Nida, Lithuania", "text": " The town is an upmarket holiday resort, hosting about 200,000 to 300,000 tourists each summer, mostly Lithuanians, Germans, Latvians, and Russians. It is characterized by low-key entertainment and a distinct family focus. However, during recent years it has become a decent point of interest for fine electronica music and modern art shows at an eclectic forest retreat. Since 2001, a jazz festival has been held every year. A local radio station Neringa FM streams live beats over FM and online. There are also interesting places to see nearby, including some of the highest sand dunes in Europe, a large sundial (which has been restored after being damaged by a Baltic gale), ", "score": "1.3231754" }, { "id": "11946795", "title": "Hatgobindapur", "text": " Hatgobindapur is a village in Burdwan II CD block in Bardhaman Sadar North subdivision of Purba Bardhaman district in the state of West Bengal, India.", "score": "1.3177295" }, { "id": "9282792", "title": "Loluwagoda", "text": " Loluwagoda is a village in the Gampaha District, Sri Lanka. It is located on the Nittambuwa - Giriulla 221 main road, between the towns of Mirigama and Giriulla. The villages that surround it include: Godakalana, Niyandagala, Giriullagama, Thalahena, Harakahawa, Kandangamuwa, Delwala, Dambuwa, Kithalawalana and Nalla. The main religion of the people in the village is Theravada Buddhism. The old Ramanna Nikaya temple in the village (Sri Mahendraramaya) was well known among Buddhist monks in the area as a hidden and quiet temple which is not promoting social services or festivals in order to obtain donations. A group from the villagers annually donate medicine to the Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya with a group from Atambe village. Like the most villages in Gampaha district, the population in this area is increasing with the value of the land which has not yet encountered any considerable environmental disaster. Though several industrial factories have been established in Loluwagoda area including an export processing zone, it is still considered to be a secure and attractive area to live in.", "score": "1.3156269" }, { "id": "2791487", "title": "Hata Station (Hyōgo)", "text": " Hata Station (葉多駅) is a train station in Ono, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.", "score": "1.3040435" }, { "id": "512840", "title": "Kotugodella fort", "text": " Kotugodella Fort (කොටුගොඩැල්ල බලකොටුව), also known as Katugodalla Fort or Katugodælla Balakotuwa, was a Portuguese fort, located near Haldummulla. In 1630 the Portuguese, under the command of Constantino de Sá de Noronha attempted to use the ldalgashinna pass to force a way into the Uva. The fort was used as a staging post for troops in the attack. The fort is 5 km south of the Idalgashinna railway station, within the Needwood tea plantation. All that remains of the fort are the stone foundations of the semi-circular bastions. The fort was declared a protected archaeological site in November 2002.", "score": "1.3027692" }, { "id": "5403836", "title": "Hattalkhindi", "text": " The majority of the population in the village is Hindu.", "score": "1.2978492" }, { "id": "25239324", "title": "Matgoda", "text": " There is a primary health centre at Matgoda, with 6 beds.", "score": "1.2927902" }, { "id": "25239320", "title": "Matgoda", "text": " According to the 2011 Census of India, Matgoda had a total population of 5,197, of which 2,697 (52%) were males and 2,500 (48%) were females. There were 568 persons in the age range of 0–6 years. The total number of literate persons in Matgoda was 3,625 (78.31% of the population over 6 years).", "score": "1.2894717" }, { "id": "1280176", "title": "Hatgyi Dam", "text": " The dam is being funded by the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT), a Thai government owned company which has built dams since 1964, China's Sinohydro Corporation, and Myanmar's Ministry of Electric Power and International Group of Entrepreneurs (IGE), with Sinohydro holding the majority of shares, EGAT being the second largest shareholder, and Myanmar holding the fewest shares. IGE is owned by Nay Aung, son of Aung Thaung, the central advisor for Myanmar's Union Solidarity and Development Party. The majority of the generated energy will be sent to Thailand, which is looking to secure cheap energy supplies to replace its high reliance on natural gas. Currently, 70 percent of Thailand's energy comes from natural gas, the supply of which is expected to last only thirty years.", "score": "1.289454" }, { "id": "26627973", "title": "Rova of Antananarivo", "text": " (HAT), was widely viewed as a coup d'état by members of the international community, leading many bilateral and intergovernmental donors to suspend non-humanitarian support to the regime. The HAT declared its intention to continue the Manjakamiadana reconstruction project using a combination of state funds and donations from private Malagasy citizens. Six banking agencies in Madagascar were selected to serve as collection points for private donations. On 7 March 2011 the HAT relieved the original members of the National Heritage Committee of their posts and mandated the appointment of new members selected from among the regime's ministerial staff. Despite the introduction of these diverse ", "score": "1.2879905" } ]
[ "Hatna\n Hatna is a village in the southern state of Karnataka, India, located in the Mandya district.", "Nangolmora Union\n There are no big markets in this union. The villagers usually go to Hathazari for marketings. A haat takes place on the bank of Halda River twice a week which is known as \"Kanno Hat\".", "Index of Sri Lanka–related articles (H)\n 353) Hathugoda ; 354) Hatiya Island ; 355) Hatiya Upazila ; 356) Hatiyaldeniya ; 357) Hatiyalwela ; 358) Hatnagoda ; 359) Hatrick Hodi Maga ; 360) Hatthikuchchi ; 361) Hatthikuchchi Museum ; 362) Hatton National Bank ; 363) Hatton railway station (Sri Lanka) ; 364) Hatton, Sri Lanka ; 365) Hatugoda ; 366) Havelock City ; 367) Havelock Island ; 368) Havelock Park ; 369) Havelock Road bombing ; 370) Havelock Sports Club ; 371) Havelock Town ; 372) Havelock executive council of Ceylon ; 373) Havigannada dialect ; 374) Havina Hede ; 375) Hay MacDowall ; 376) Hayden Crozier ; ", "Matgoda\n Matgoda is located at 22.7745°N, 86.9038°W.", "Hatadage\n Hatadage (Sinhala: හැටදාගේ) is an ancient relic shrine in the city of Polonnaruwa, Sri Lanka. It was built by King Nissanka Malla, and had been used to keep the Relic of the tooth of the Buddha. The Hatadage had been built using stone, brick and wood, although only parts of the brick and stone walls now remain. It appears to have been a two-storey structure, but the upper storey has now been destroyed. Three Buddha statues carved out of granite rock are located within a chamber of the shrine.", "Hatadage\n The Hatadage is located in the ancient city of Polonnaruwa, in the North Central province of Sri Lanka. It is close to the northern edge of the Dalada Maluva there, the quadrangular area which contains some of the oldest and most sacred monuments of the city. Its entrance, which is oriented to the south, directly faces the entrance of the Polonnaruwa Vatadage. The Galpotha stone inscription is near its eastern side, while the Atadage lies to its west.", "Hatvan\n🇮🇹 Barberino Tavarnelle, Italy ; 🇺🇦 Berehove, Ukraine ; 🇱🇹 Ignalina, Lithuania ; 🇫🇮 Kokkola, Finland ; Maassluis, Netherlands ; 🇸🇰 Nižný Hrušov, Slovakia ; 🇨🇿 Prachatice, Czech Republic ; 🇳🇴 Østfold, Norway ; 🇷🇴 Târgu Secuiesc, Romania Hatvan is twinned with: ", "Vansda National Park\n Vansda National Park, also known as Bansda National Park, is a protected area which represents the thick woodlands of the Dangs and southern Gujarat, and is situated in the Vansda tehsil, Navsari District of Gujarat state, India. Riding on the banks of Ambika River and measuring roughly 24 km2 in area, the park lies about 65 km east of the town of Chikhali on the National Highway 8, and about 80 km northeast of the city of Valsad. Vansda, the town from which the name of the park is derived, is an important trading place for the surrounding area where the majority of the population is represented by adivasis. Vansda-Waghai state highway runs through the park, so does the ", "Hatgobindapur\n Hatgobindapur is located at 23.2625°N, 87.9784°W.", "Hatokaliotsy Special Reserve\n The Hatokaliotsy Site of Biological Interest is a site of biological interest in Madagascar located near Marolinta, the Menarandra River and the Bay of Langarano.", "Nida, Lithuania\n The town is an upmarket holiday resort, hosting about 200,000 to 300,000 tourists each summer, mostly Lithuanians, Germans, Latvians, and Russians. It is characterized by low-key entertainment and a distinct family focus. However, during recent years it has become a decent point of interest for fine electronica music and modern art shows at an eclectic forest retreat. Since 2001, a jazz festival has been held every year. A local radio station Neringa FM streams live beats over FM and online. There are also interesting places to see nearby, including some of the highest sand dunes in Europe, a large sundial (which has been restored after being damaged by a Baltic gale), ", "Hatgobindapur\n Hatgobindapur is a village in Burdwan II CD block in Bardhaman Sadar North subdivision of Purba Bardhaman district in the state of West Bengal, India.", "Loluwagoda\n Loluwagoda is a village in the Gampaha District, Sri Lanka. It is located on the Nittambuwa - Giriulla 221 main road, between the towns of Mirigama and Giriulla. The villages that surround it include: Godakalana, Niyandagala, Giriullagama, Thalahena, Harakahawa, Kandangamuwa, Delwala, Dambuwa, Kithalawalana and Nalla. The main religion of the people in the village is Theravada Buddhism. The old Ramanna Nikaya temple in the village (Sri Mahendraramaya) was well known among Buddhist monks in the area as a hidden and quiet temple which is not promoting social services or festivals in order to obtain donations. A group from the villagers annually donate medicine to the Mitirigala Nissarana Vanaya with a group from Atambe village. Like the most villages in Gampaha district, the population in this area is increasing with the value of the land which has not yet encountered any considerable environmental disaster. Though several industrial factories have been established in Loluwagoda area including an export processing zone, it is still considered to be a secure and attractive area to live in.", "Hata Station (Hyōgo)\n Hata Station (葉多駅) is a train station in Ono, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.", "Kotugodella fort\n Kotugodella Fort (කොටුගොඩැල්ල බලකොටුව), also known as Katugodalla Fort or Katugodælla Balakotuwa, was a Portuguese fort, located near Haldummulla. In 1630 the Portuguese, under the command of Constantino de Sá de Noronha attempted to use the ldalgashinna pass to force a way into the Uva. The fort was used as a staging post for troops in the attack. The fort is 5 km south of the Idalgashinna railway station, within the Needwood tea plantation. All that remains of the fort are the stone foundations of the semi-circular bastions. The fort was declared a protected archaeological site in November 2002.", "Hattalkhindi\n The majority of the population in the village is Hindu.", "Matgoda\n There is a primary health centre at Matgoda, with 6 beds.", "Matgoda\n According to the 2011 Census of India, Matgoda had a total population of 5,197, of which 2,697 (52%) were males and 2,500 (48%) were females. There were 568 persons in the age range of 0–6 years. The total number of literate persons in Matgoda was 3,625 (78.31% of the population over 6 years).", "Hatgyi Dam\n The dam is being funded by the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand (EGAT), a Thai government owned company which has built dams since 1964, China's Sinohydro Corporation, and Myanmar's Ministry of Electric Power and International Group of Entrepreneurs (IGE), with Sinohydro holding the majority of shares, EGAT being the second largest shareholder, and Myanmar holding the fewest shares. IGE is owned by Nay Aung, son of Aung Thaung, the central advisor for Myanmar's Union Solidarity and Development Party. The majority of the generated energy will be sent to Thailand, which is looking to secure cheap energy supplies to replace its high reliance on natural gas. Currently, 70 percent of Thailand's energy comes from natural gas, the supply of which is expected to last only thirty years.", "Rova of Antananarivo\n (HAT), was widely viewed as a coup d'état by members of the international community, leading many bilateral and intergovernmental donors to suspend non-humanitarian support to the regime. The HAT declared its intention to continue the Manjakamiadana reconstruction project using a combination of state funds and donations from private Malagasy citizens. Six banking agencies in Madagascar were selected to serve as collection points for private donations. On 7 March 2011 the HAT relieved the original members of the National Heritage Committee of their posts and mandated the appointment of new members selected from among the regime's ministerial staff. Despite the introduction of these diverse " ]
In what country is Deodara?
[ "India", "Bharat", "Hindustan", "Bharatvarsh", "in", "IN", "Republic of India", "🇮🇳", "IND", "Aryavratt" ]
country
Deodara
6,513,064
58
[ { "id": "31449901", "title": "Deodara", "text": " Deodara is a census town in Mandla district in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is an extended part of Mandla city. It connects the city centre to the local tourist spot of Shehestra Dhara, a holy site situated on the bank of Narmada river. Poor roads and no government water pipeline availability are some of the concerning issues of the locals residing here. There are many beautiful Ghats on the bank of River Narmada situated here like Gau Ghat and Chakrateerath Gath.It is considered as an urban panchayat which is part of Mandla city.", "score": "1.6872895" }, { "id": "5174235", "title": "Cedrus deodara", "text": " The species natively occurs in Afghanistan, Tibet, Nepal, Pakistan, and India (Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jammu-Kashmir).", "score": "1.6443434" }, { "id": "31449902", "title": "Deodara", "text": " As of the 2011 Census of India, Deodara had a population of 10,008. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Deodara has an average literacy rate of 91%, higher than the national average of 74%: male literacy is 95% and, female literacy is 84%. In Deodara, 13% of the population is under 6 years of age.", "score": "1.5490918" }, { "id": "8438810", "title": "Deodar forests", "text": " Deodar Forests are forests dominated by Cedrus deodara also known as Deodar Cedars. These types of trees are found naturally in Western Himalayas from Gandaki river in central Nepal to Hindukush Mountain range in Afghanistan. Deodar Cedar (Cedrus deodara) is native to the Himalayan Mountains where its local name is Deodar, which translates from the original Sanskrit as \"timber of the gods\". They were officially introduced into cultivation in 1831 although they have been grown in Chinese parks and gardens for centuries.", "score": "1.4855965" }, { "id": "8438811", "title": "Deodar forests", "text": " The native forests of the Deodar Cedar are located in the Himalayan mountain range and spread from Nepal through Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. This range is mostly dominated by Cedrus deodara but also shares its space with an assortment of other species as well. Other species include Quercus ilex, Juglans regia, Taxus wallichiana, Picea smithiana, Abies pinerow, Pinus giardiana, Pinus wallichiana. There are several areas that appear \"monospecific\" where 99 percent Cedrus deodara is the dominant species. Most of the monospecific areas are dry temperate areas, however there are a few recorded monospecific areas that are moist temperate regions. Deodar forests have been recorded to start growing at an elevation of 5,600 ft and will stop at about 9,000 ft. The Cedrus deodara will not tolerate temperatures below 0 degrees Fahrenheit despite its natural high elevation.", "score": "1.46717" }, { "id": "5020701", "title": "Neeraj Dangi", "text": " United States of America, Venezuela (South America), Vietnam, Indonesia, China, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Nepal", "score": "1.4367261" }, { "id": "5174238", "title": "Cedrus deodara", "text": " Deodar is in great demand as building material because of its durability, rot-resistant character and fine, close grain, which is capable of taking a high polish. Its historical use to construct religious temples and in landscaping around temples is well recorded. Its rot-resistant character also makes it an ideal wood for constructing the well-known houseboats of Srinagar, Kashmir. In Pakistan and India, during the British colonial period, deodar wood was used extensively for construction of barracks, public buildings, bridges, canals and railway cars. Despite its durability, it is not a strong timber, and its brittle nature makes it unsuitable for delicate work where strength is required, such as chair-making.", "score": "1.435243" }, { "id": "7308483", "title": "Automotive industry in India", "text": " after Japan (1.77m), Korea (1.12m) and Thailand (0.26m). In July 2010, The Economic Times reported that PSA Peugeot Citroën was planning to re-enter the Indian market and open a production plant in Andhra Pradesh that would have an annual capacity of 100,000 vehicles, investing €700M in the operation. PSA's intention to utilise this production facility for export purposes however remains unclear as of December 2010. In recent years, India has emerged as a leading center for the manufacture of small cars. Hyundai, the biggest exporter from the country, now ships more than 250,000 cars annually from India. Apart from Maruti Exports' shipments ", "score": "1.4226465" }, { "id": "6767797", "title": "Tata Motors", "text": " Tata Motors Cars is a division of Tata Motors which produces passenger cars under the Tata Motors marque. Tata Motors is among the top four passenger vehicle brands in India with products in the compact, midsize car, and utility vehicle segments. The company's manufacturing base in India is spread across Jamshedpur (Jharkhand), Pune (Maharashtra), Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh), Pantnagar (Uttarakhand), Dharwad (Karnataka) and Sanand (Gujarat). Tata's dealership, sales, service, and spare parts network comprises over 3,500 touch points. Tata Motors has more than 250 dealerships in more than 195 cities across 27 states and four Union Territories of India. It has the third-largest sales and service network after Maruti Suzuki and Hyundai. Tata also has franchisee/joint venture assembly operations in Kenya, Bangladesh, Ukraine, Russia, and Senegal. Tata has dealerships in 26 countries across 4 continents. Tata is present in many countries, it has managed to create a large consumer base in the Indian subcontinent, namely India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and Nepal. Tata is also present in Italy, Spain, Poland, Romania, Turkey, Chile, South Africa, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Iraq, Syria and Australia.", "score": "1.414742" }, { "id": "10795822", "title": "Transport in India", "text": " Nationwide, India still has a very low rate of car ownership. When comparing car ownership between BRIC developing countries, it is on a par with China, and exceeded by Brazil and Russia. Compact cars, especially hatchbacks predominate due to affordability, fuel efficiency, congestion, and lack of parking space in most cities. Chennai is known as the \"Detroit of India\" for its automobile industry. Maruti, Hyundai and Tata Motors are the most popular brands in the order of their market share. The Ambassador once had a monopoly, but is now an icon of pre-liberalisation India, and is still used by taxi companies. ", "score": "1.3966292" }, { "id": "5174232", "title": "Cedrus deodara", "text": " Cedrus deodara, the deodar cedar, Himalayan cedar, or deodar, is a species of cedar native to the western Himalayas. It grows at altitudes of 1500 - 3200 m.", "score": "1.3942473" }, { "id": "5174236", "title": "Cedrus deodara", "text": " Among Hindus, as the etymology of deodar suggests, it is worshiped as a divine tree. Deva, the first half of the Sanskrit term, means divine, deity, or deus. Dāru, the second part, is cognate with (related to) the words durum, druid, tree, and true. Several Hindu legends refer to this tree. For example, Valmiki Ramayan reads: \"In the stands of Lodhra trees, Padmaka trees and in the woods of Devadaru, or Deodar trees, Ravana is to be searched there and there, together with Sita. [4-43-13]\" The deodar is the national tree of Pakistan, and the state tree of Himachal Pradesh, India.", "score": "1.3851211" }, { "id": "384414", "title": "Maa Dewri Temple", "text": " Dewri Mandir is a mandir situated in Diuri village, Tamar near Ranchi in Jharkhand in India. It is located near the Tata-Ranchi Highway (NH33). The main attraction of this ancient mandir is, 700 year old murti of the Goddess Durga, Kali. The murti have 16 hands (Normally Goddess Durga has 8 Hands). It is an ancient Mandir and It was renovated few years back. The ancient mandir was constructed by interlocking stones without using chalk or binding material. At the temple devotees tie yellow and red sacred threads on bamboo for the fulfilment of their wishes. Upon the fulfillment of their wishes, they again come to the temple and untie the thread. Dedicated to Solha Bhuji ", "score": "1.3724779" }, { "id": "3690577", "title": "Dekotora", "text": " Dekotora or decotora (デコトラ), an abbreviation for \"decoration truck\", are extravagantly decorated trucks in Japan. Commonly displaying neon or ultraviolet lights, extravagant paints, and stainless or golden parts (both on the exterior and the interior), dekotora may be created by workers out of their work trucks for fun, or they may be designed by hobbyists for special events. They are sometimes also referred to as art trucks (アートトラック)).", "score": "1.3675146" }, { "id": "7308491", "title": "Automotive industry in India", "text": "Audi India: A4, A6, Q7 ; BMW India: 3 Series, 5 Series, X1, X3, X4, X5, X7 ; Citroën India: C3, C5 Aircross ; Datsun: Go, Go+, redi-Go ; Honda Cars India Limited: Jazz, Amaze, City, WR-V ; Hyundai Motor India: Santro, Grand i10, Grand i10 Nios, i20, Aura, Verna, Elantra, Creta, Tucson, Venue, Kona Electric, Alcazar ; Isuzu: MU-X, V-Cross ; Jaguar (subsidiary of Tata Motors): XE, XF ; Jeep: Compass, Wrangler ; Kia: Carnival, Seltos, Sonet ; MG: Astor, Gloster, Hector, ZS EV ; Land Rover (subsidiary of Tata Motors): Range Rover Evoque ; Mercedes-Benz India: C-Class, E-Class, GLC-Class, GLE-Class, S-Class ; MINI: Countryman ; Nissan Motor India: Kicks, Magnite ; Renault India: Duster, Kwid, Triber, Kiger ; Škoda Auto India: Kushaq, Octavia, Slavia, Superb ; Toyota Kirloskar: Innova Crysta, Fortuner, Camry, Glanza, Urban Cruiser, Lexus ES300h, Lexus NX300h ; Volkswagen India: Polo, Vento, Taigun Ford India stopped producing passenger cars for the Indian market in late 2021. Opel was present in India until 2006. As of 2013, Opel only provides spare parts and vehicle servicing to existing Opel vehicle owners. General Motors India stopped producing passenger cars for the Indian market in late 2017.", "score": "1.3642328" }, { "id": "5999197", "title": "Datsun", "text": " and Lebanon in 2016. The Datsun Go is being built at the Renault-Nissan plant in Chennai, India. It was also produced in Russia and Indonesia. The Go is based on the same Nissan V platform as the Nissan Micra. The Go+, a 5+2 seater station wagon, was added to the range in September 2013. In February 2014, the redi-Go concept car was presented. The redi-Go crossover became available in India mid-2015. In April 2014, the first model for the Russian market, the Datsun on-Do based on Lada Granta, was launched. In November 2019, it was announced that Datsun would stop its production in Indonesia and Russia in 2020.", "score": "1.3608041" }, { "id": "14772086", "title": "Economy of Vellore", "text": "SAME Deutz-Fahr India, part of the SAME Deutz-Fahr group of Italy, has their plant in Ranipet, Vellore. Manufacturers of tractors, engines, and agricultural machinery entered India in 2005 with an initial investment of INR 88 crores. It exports tractors in the range of 35-70 HP as well as components for engines and transmission. Production capacity was 6,300 tractors per annum in the year 2009. In 2008, the company exported 1,500 units to the US and Europe and set a target to double the figure the following year. The facility caters to markets in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and African countries. SAME Deutz-Fahr (SDF) India Group is planning to introduce the premium brand, Lamborghini, tractors in India. The group is also planning to make India its global production hub for engines ", "score": "1.3589122" }, { "id": "4185618", "title": "Dicladispa armigera", "text": " Discladispa armigera is known to be widespread in the following countries: Bangladesh, India, and Laos. Additionally, D. armigera is present, but not wide-spread in: Bhutan, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Iran, Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, and Papua New Guinea.", "score": "1.3536553" }, { "id": "9340005", "title": "Akodara", "text": " The cattle of the village are housed in a co-operatively managed \"animal hostel\" with a capacity of 900 animals. The scheme has been developed as a prototype model. It provides improved conditions for the cattle and produces compost and methane gas.", "score": "1.3486947" }, { "id": "613266", "title": "Debus emarginatus", "text": " It is native to China, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Australia, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands.", "score": "1.3473692" } ]
[ "Deodara\n Deodara is a census town in Mandla district in the state of Madhya Pradesh, India. It is an extended part of Mandla city. It connects the city centre to the local tourist spot of Shehestra Dhara, a holy site situated on the bank of Narmada river. Poor roads and no government water pipeline availability are some of the concerning issues of the locals residing here. There are many beautiful Ghats on the bank of River Narmada situated here like Gau Ghat and Chakrateerath Gath.It is considered as an urban panchayat which is part of Mandla city.", "Cedrus deodara\n The species natively occurs in Afghanistan, Tibet, Nepal, Pakistan, and India (Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Jammu-Kashmir).", "Deodara\n As of the 2011 Census of India, Deodara had a population of 10,008. Males constitute 52% of the population and females 48%. Deodara has an average literacy rate of 91%, higher than the national average of 74%: male literacy is 95% and, female literacy is 84%. In Deodara, 13% of the population is under 6 years of age.", "Deodar forests\n Deodar Forests are forests dominated by Cedrus deodara also known as Deodar Cedars. These types of trees are found naturally in Western Himalayas from Gandaki river in central Nepal to Hindukush Mountain range in Afghanistan. Deodar Cedar (Cedrus deodara) is native to the Himalayan Mountains where its local name is Deodar, which translates from the original Sanskrit as \"timber of the gods\". They were officially introduced into cultivation in 1831 although they have been grown in Chinese parks and gardens for centuries.", "Deodar forests\n The native forests of the Deodar Cedar are located in the Himalayan mountain range and spread from Nepal through Pakistan, India and Afghanistan. This range is mostly dominated by Cedrus deodara but also shares its space with an assortment of other species as well. Other species include Quercus ilex, Juglans regia, Taxus wallichiana, Picea smithiana, Abies pinerow, Pinus giardiana, Pinus wallichiana. There are several areas that appear \"monospecific\" where 99 percent Cedrus deodara is the dominant species. Most of the monospecific areas are dry temperate areas, however there are a few recorded monospecific areas that are moist temperate regions. Deodar forests have been recorded to start growing at an elevation of 5,600 ft and will stop at about 9,000 ft. The Cedrus deodara will not tolerate temperatures below 0 degrees Fahrenheit despite its natural high elevation.", "Neeraj Dangi\n United States of America, Venezuela (South America), Vietnam, Indonesia, China, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, Nepal", "Cedrus deodara\n Deodar is in great demand as building material because of its durability, rot-resistant character and fine, close grain, which is capable of taking a high polish. Its historical use to construct religious temples and in landscaping around temples is well recorded. Its rot-resistant character also makes it an ideal wood for constructing the well-known houseboats of Srinagar, Kashmir. In Pakistan and India, during the British colonial period, deodar wood was used extensively for construction of barracks, public buildings, bridges, canals and railway cars. Despite its durability, it is not a strong timber, and its brittle nature makes it unsuitable for delicate work where strength is required, such as chair-making.", "Automotive industry in India\n after Japan (1.77m), Korea (1.12m) and Thailand (0.26m). In July 2010, The Economic Times reported that PSA Peugeot Citroën was planning to re-enter the Indian market and open a production plant in Andhra Pradesh that would have an annual capacity of 100,000 vehicles, investing €700M in the operation. PSA's intention to utilise this production facility for export purposes however remains unclear as of December 2010. In recent years, India has emerged as a leading center for the manufacture of small cars. Hyundai, the biggest exporter from the country, now ships more than 250,000 cars annually from India. Apart from Maruti Exports' shipments ", "Tata Motors\n Tata Motors Cars is a division of Tata Motors which produces passenger cars under the Tata Motors marque. Tata Motors is among the top four passenger vehicle brands in India with products in the compact, midsize car, and utility vehicle segments. The company's manufacturing base in India is spread across Jamshedpur (Jharkhand), Pune (Maharashtra), Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh), Pantnagar (Uttarakhand), Dharwad (Karnataka) and Sanand (Gujarat). Tata's dealership, sales, service, and spare parts network comprises over 3,500 touch points. Tata Motors has more than 250 dealerships in more than 195 cities across 27 states and four Union Territories of India. It has the third-largest sales and service network after Maruti Suzuki and Hyundai. Tata also has franchisee/joint venture assembly operations in Kenya, Bangladesh, Ukraine, Russia, and Senegal. Tata has dealerships in 26 countries across 4 continents. Tata is present in many countries, it has managed to create a large consumer base in the Indian subcontinent, namely India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and Nepal. Tata is also present in Italy, Spain, Poland, Romania, Turkey, Chile, South Africa, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Iraq, Syria and Australia.", "Transport in India\n Nationwide, India still has a very low rate of car ownership. When comparing car ownership between BRIC developing countries, it is on a par with China, and exceeded by Brazil and Russia. Compact cars, especially hatchbacks predominate due to affordability, fuel efficiency, congestion, and lack of parking space in most cities. Chennai is known as the \"Detroit of India\" for its automobile industry. Maruti, Hyundai and Tata Motors are the most popular brands in the order of their market share. The Ambassador once had a monopoly, but is now an icon of pre-liberalisation India, and is still used by taxi companies. ", "Cedrus deodara\n Cedrus deodara, the deodar cedar, Himalayan cedar, or deodar, is a species of cedar native to the western Himalayas. It grows at altitudes of 1500 - 3200 m.", "Cedrus deodara\n Among Hindus, as the etymology of deodar suggests, it is worshiped as a divine tree. Deva, the first half of the Sanskrit term, means divine, deity, or deus. Dāru, the second part, is cognate with (related to) the words durum, druid, tree, and true. Several Hindu legends refer to this tree. For example, Valmiki Ramayan reads: \"In the stands of Lodhra trees, Padmaka trees and in the woods of Devadaru, or Deodar trees, Ravana is to be searched there and there, together with Sita. [4-43-13]\" The deodar is the national tree of Pakistan, and the state tree of Himachal Pradesh, India.", "Maa Dewri Temple\n Dewri Mandir is a mandir situated in Diuri village, Tamar near Ranchi in Jharkhand in India. It is located near the Tata-Ranchi Highway (NH33). The main attraction of this ancient mandir is, 700 year old murti of the Goddess Durga, Kali. The murti have 16 hands (Normally Goddess Durga has 8 Hands). It is an ancient Mandir and It was renovated few years back. The ancient mandir was constructed by interlocking stones without using chalk or binding material. At the temple devotees tie yellow and red sacred threads on bamboo for the fulfilment of their wishes. Upon the fulfillment of their wishes, they again come to the temple and untie the thread. Dedicated to Solha Bhuji ", "Dekotora\n Dekotora or decotora (デコトラ), an abbreviation for \"decoration truck\", are extravagantly decorated trucks in Japan. Commonly displaying neon or ultraviolet lights, extravagant paints, and stainless or golden parts (both on the exterior and the interior), dekotora may be created by workers out of their work trucks for fun, or they may be designed by hobbyists for special events. They are sometimes also referred to as art trucks (アートトラック)).", "Automotive industry in India\nAudi India: A4, A6, Q7 ; BMW India: 3 Series, 5 Series, X1, X3, X4, X5, X7 ; Citroën India: C3, C5 Aircross ; Datsun: Go, Go+, redi-Go ; Honda Cars India Limited: Jazz, Amaze, City, WR-V ; Hyundai Motor India: Santro, Grand i10, Grand i10 Nios, i20, Aura, Verna, Elantra, Creta, Tucson, Venue, Kona Electric, Alcazar ; Isuzu: MU-X, V-Cross ; Jaguar (subsidiary of Tata Motors): XE, XF ; Jeep: Compass, Wrangler ; Kia: Carnival, Seltos, Sonet ; MG: Astor, Gloster, Hector, ZS EV ; Land Rover (subsidiary of Tata Motors): Range Rover Evoque ; Mercedes-Benz India: C-Class, E-Class, GLC-Class, GLE-Class, S-Class ; MINI: Countryman ; Nissan Motor India: Kicks, Magnite ; Renault India: Duster, Kwid, Triber, Kiger ; Škoda Auto India: Kushaq, Octavia, Slavia, Superb ; Toyota Kirloskar: Innova Crysta, Fortuner, Camry, Glanza, Urban Cruiser, Lexus ES300h, Lexus NX300h ; Volkswagen India: Polo, Vento, Taigun Ford India stopped producing passenger cars for the Indian market in late 2021. Opel was present in India until 2006. As of 2013, Opel only provides spare parts and vehicle servicing to existing Opel vehicle owners. General Motors India stopped producing passenger cars for the Indian market in late 2017.", "Datsun\n and Lebanon in 2016. The Datsun Go is being built at the Renault-Nissan plant in Chennai, India. It was also produced in Russia and Indonesia. The Go is based on the same Nissan V platform as the Nissan Micra. The Go+, a 5+2 seater station wagon, was added to the range in September 2013. In February 2014, the redi-Go concept car was presented. The redi-Go crossover became available in India mid-2015. In April 2014, the first model for the Russian market, the Datsun on-Do based on Lada Granta, was launched. In November 2019, it was announced that Datsun would stop its production in Indonesia and Russia in 2020.", "Economy of Vellore\nSAME Deutz-Fahr India, part of the SAME Deutz-Fahr group of Italy, has their plant in Ranipet, Vellore. Manufacturers of tractors, engines, and agricultural machinery entered India in 2005 with an initial investment of INR 88 crores. It exports tractors in the range of 35-70 HP as well as components for engines and transmission. Production capacity was 6,300 tractors per annum in the year 2009. In 2008, the company exported 1,500 units to the US and Europe and set a target to double the figure the following year. The facility caters to markets in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and African countries. SAME Deutz-Fahr (SDF) India Group is planning to introduce the premium brand, Lamborghini, tractors in India. The group is also planning to make India its global production hub for engines ", "Dicladispa armigera\n Discladispa armigera is known to be widespread in the following countries: Bangladesh, India, and Laos. Additionally, D. armigera is present, but not wide-spread in: Bhutan, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Iran, Korea, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Vietnam, and Papua New Guinea.", "Akodara\n The cattle of the village are housed in a co-operatively managed \"animal hostel\" with a capacity of 900 animals. The scheme has been developed as a prototype model. It provides improved conditions for the cattle and produces compost and methane gas.", "Debus emarginatus\n It is native to China, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, South Korea, Thailand, Vietnam, Australia, Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands." ]
In what country is Puzdrowizna?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Puzdrowizna
266,049
26
[ { "id": "3284075", "title": "Puzdrowizna", "text": " Puzdrowizna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Brok, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Brok, 10 km south-west of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 80 km north-east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.6007094" }, { "id": "32156412", "title": "Puzdrowo", "text": " Puzdrowo (Kashubian: Pùzdrowò, Pusdrowo) is a Kashubian village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Sierakowice, 23 km west of Kartuzy, and 51 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 810.", "score": "1.5120826" }, { "id": "32156413", "title": "Puzdrowski Młyn", "text": " Puzdrowski Młyn (Pùzdrowsczi Młin) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km west of Sierakowice, 23 km west of Kartuzy, and 51 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "score": "1.448457" }, { "id": "12234181", "title": "Puszcza Darżlubska", "text": " Puszcza Darżlubska or Lasy Piaśnickie (Darżlubska Wilderness or Darżlubie / Piaśnica Forest) located in northernmost part of Poland, is a Polish forests complex on the Baltic Sea, within the geographical region of Pobrzeże Kaszubskie; on the south-side bordering the Tricity Landscape Park (Trójmiejski Park Krajobrazowy) from which it is separated by the Reda river. Inside Darżlubie Forest there are two nature reserves (Polish protected areas). The wilderness is also the source of two rivers: Piaśnica and Gizdepka. The name of Puszcza Darżlubska comes from the nearby village of Darżlubie in the administrative district of Gmina Puck, north of Gdańsk. Puszcza Darżlubska is the second largest site of mass killings of Polish civilians in Pomerania (after Stutthof) during World War II, with up to 16,000 victims murdered on the site. Polish migrant worker families residing in Germany pre-war were the he ", "score": "1.4337634" }, { "id": "11861615", "title": "Püspökladány", "text": "🇦🇹 Fischamend, Austria ; 🇷🇴 Ghindari, Romania ; 🇫🇮 Hämeenlinna, Finland ; Hattem, Netherlands ; 🇵🇱 Krasnystaw, Poland Püspökladány is twinned with:", "score": "1.391038" }, { "id": "4658425", "title": "Puzdrino", "text": " Puzdrino is located 12 km northeast of Beryozovka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Tuyasy is the nearest rural locality.", "score": "1.3602383" }, { "id": "4532055", "title": "Châteaugiron", "text": "🇵🇱 Puszczykowo, Poland ", "score": "1.3588536" }, { "id": "285929", "title": "Puszczykowo", "text": "🇫🇷 Châteaugiron, France ", "score": "1.3557737" }, { "id": "2989443", "title": "Puszcza Piska", "text": " European scale, featuring eleven nature reserves within its own Masurian Landscape Park (Mazurski Park Krajobrazowy) established in 1977 with the total area of 53,600 ha. The most valuable reserve is located at the Łuknajno Lake near the town of Mikołajki – a Ramsar site designated by UNESCO as a biosphere reserve. It is the home of the mute swan (pictured), native to temperate regions of Europe and western Asia, in time of moult arriving in numbers reaching up to 2,000 birds. Many species of wild animals live in the forest, among them: deer, elk, moose, wild boar, hare, fox and recently reintroduced lynx. On wetlands, most saturated with water, beaver lodges can be found. The symbol of the park is a white stork with nests scattered over many local villages.", "score": "1.3530805" }, { "id": "7255714", "title": "Piwniczna-Zdrój", "text": " Piwniczna-Zdrój (until 1999 Piwniczna, Північна, Pivnichna) is a town in Nowy Sącz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, near the border with Slovakia. Piwniczna-Zdrój is the name of both the town and its administrative district called a gmina in Polish, namely the Gmina Piwniczna-Zdrój. Piwniczna-Zdrój is a popular tourist destination in Beskid Sądecki, part of the Western Carpathians mountain range of southern Poland featuring a protected area called the Poprad Landscape Park with its picturesque Poprad River Gorge.", "score": "1.3438244" }, { "id": "8574066", "title": "Międzyzdroje", "text": "🇺🇦🇷🇺 Bakhchysarai Raion, Ukraine / Russia ; 🇷🇸 Čačak, Serbia ; 🇸🇪 Helsingborg, Sweden ; 🇸🇮 Izola, Slovenia ; 🇸🇪 Lomma, Sweden ; 🇩🇪 Sellin, Germany Międzyzdroje was the birthplace of the Harvard World Model United Nations Conference in 1991. Międzyzdroje is twinned with: ", "score": "1.343431" }, { "id": "13427595", "title": "Jastrzębie-Zdrój", "text": "🇺🇦 Borshchiv, Ukraine (2017) ; 🇨🇿 Havířov, Czech Republic (2007) ; 🇩🇪 Ibbenbüren, Germany (2007) ; 🇨🇿 Karviná, Czech Republic (1995) ; 🇸🇰 Prievidza, Slovakia (2009) ; 🇫🇷 Tourcoing, France (2007) Jastrzębie-Zdrój is twinned with: ", "score": "1.3391823" }, { "id": "32156357", "title": "Dąbrowa Puzdrowska", "text": " Dąbrowa Puzdrowska (Dąbrowa Pùzdrowskô) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Sierakowice, 22 km west of Kartuzy, and 50 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 79.", "score": "1.3341962" }, { "id": "9824073", "title": "Nadvirna", "text": " Nadvírna, also referred to as Nadwirna or Nadvorna (Надві́рна, Nadwórna, נאַדוואָרנאַ, Nadvorna) is a city located in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast in western Ukraine. It is the administrative centre of Nadvirna Raion. Nadvirna hosts the administration of Nadvirna urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Population:. From the mid-14th century until 1772 (see Partitions of Poland) Nadvirna, known in Polish as Nadwórna, was part of the Kingdom of Poland. In 1772, it was annexed by the Habsburg Empire, and remained in the province of Galicia until late 1918. In the inter-war years, the borders changed and the town became part of the Second Polish Republic. Following ", "score": "1.3274655" }, { "id": "4658424", "title": "Puzdrino", "text": " Puzdrino (Пуздрино) is a rural locality (a village) in Beryozovsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 113 as of 2010.", "score": "1.3269925" }, { "id": "28955556", "title": "Wola Piotrowa", "text": " Wola Piotrowa (Воля Петрова, Volia Petrova) is a village in East Małopolska in the Bukowsko Upland mountains, Bukowsko rural commune, Latin parish in Bukowsko, Protestant parish in loco. Wola Piotrowa is about 17 miles from Sanok in southeast Poland. It is situated below the main watershed at the foot of the Słonne Mountain, and has an elevation of 340 metres. Situated in the Subcarpathian Voivodship (since 1999), previously in Krosno Voivodship (1975-1998) and Sanok district, (10 miles east of Sanok), located near the towns of Medzilaborce and Palota (in northeastern Slovakia).", "score": "1.3202548" }, { "id": "13142482", "title": "Schwedt", "text": " Gartz (Germany), Penkun (Germany), Szczecin (Poland), Gryfino (Poland), Cedynia (Poland), Chojna (Poland), Mieszkowice (Poland), Moryń (Poland), Trzcińsko-Zdrój (Poland), Myślibórz (Poland), Pyrzyce (Poland).", "score": "1.3112941" }, { "id": "13313596", "title": "Podemszczyzna", "text": " Podemszczyzna (Подемщина, Podemshchyna) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Horyniec-Zdrój, within Lubaczów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 15 km north-east of Lubaczów and 95 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "score": "1.30675" }, { "id": "9824078", "title": "Nadvirna", "text": " traveled the line on October 21, 1894. In the late 18th century, Count Ignacy Cetner founded here a tobacco field, excavated local salt deposits, and invited German settlers. After World War I and the Polish–Ukrainian War, Nadwórna returned to Poland, where it remained until the 1939 Invasion of Poland. During World War I, the 2nd Brigade of the Polish Legions operated in the area of Nadvirna. In the winter of 1914/1915, the brigade faced here the Imperial Russian Army, which planned to cross the Carpathian Mountains, and enter Hungary. In 1929, in a nearby village of Starunia, almost complete Woolly rhinoceros was found, preserved in ozokerite. This unique trove, one of ", "score": "1.3027612" }, { "id": "8574061", "title": "Międzyzdroje", "text": " Międzyzdroje ( Misdroy; Mizëzdroje; Misdroy), in English known as Misdroy, is a city and a seaside resort in northwestern Poland on the island of Wolin on the Baltic coast. The city is located in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, and is a seat of the Kamień County and the municipilaty of Międzyzdroje. In 2016, it was inhabitated by around 5 500 people. The town is often referred to as The Pearl of the Baltic. It is situated between wide sandy beaches with high cliffs and the forests of the Woliński National Park (which includes a bison reserve). Międzyzdroje has a spa climate and is rich in tourist services.", "score": "1.3017693" } ]
[ "Puzdrowizna\n Puzdrowizna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Brok, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Brok, 10 km south-west of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 80 km north-east of Warsaw.", "Puzdrowo\n Puzdrowo (Kashubian: Pùzdrowò, Pusdrowo) is a Kashubian village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-west of Sierakowice, 23 km west of Kartuzy, and 51 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 810.", "Puzdrowski Młyn\n Puzdrowski Młyn (Pùzdrowsczi Młin) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km west of Sierakowice, 23 km west of Kartuzy, and 51 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "Puszcza Darżlubska\n Puszcza Darżlubska or Lasy Piaśnickie (Darżlubska Wilderness or Darżlubie / Piaśnica Forest) located in northernmost part of Poland, is a Polish forests complex on the Baltic Sea, within the geographical region of Pobrzeże Kaszubskie; on the south-side bordering the Tricity Landscape Park (Trójmiejski Park Krajobrazowy) from which it is separated by the Reda river. Inside Darżlubie Forest there are two nature reserves (Polish protected areas). The wilderness is also the source of two rivers: Piaśnica and Gizdepka. The name of Puszcza Darżlubska comes from the nearby village of Darżlubie in the administrative district of Gmina Puck, north of Gdańsk. Puszcza Darżlubska is the second largest site of mass killings of Polish civilians in Pomerania (after Stutthof) during World War II, with up to 16,000 victims murdered on the site. Polish migrant worker families residing in Germany pre-war were the he ", "Püspökladány\n🇦🇹 Fischamend, Austria ; 🇷🇴 Ghindari, Romania ; 🇫🇮 Hämeenlinna, Finland ; Hattem, Netherlands ; 🇵🇱 Krasnystaw, Poland Püspökladány is twinned with:", "Puzdrino\n Puzdrino is located 12 km northeast of Beryozovka (the district's administrative centre) by road. Tuyasy is the nearest rural locality.", "Châteaugiron\n🇵🇱 Puszczykowo, Poland ", "Puszczykowo\n🇫🇷 Châteaugiron, France ", "Puszcza Piska\n European scale, featuring eleven nature reserves within its own Masurian Landscape Park (Mazurski Park Krajobrazowy) established in 1977 with the total area of 53,600 ha. The most valuable reserve is located at the Łuknajno Lake near the town of Mikołajki – a Ramsar site designated by UNESCO as a biosphere reserve. It is the home of the mute swan (pictured), native to temperate regions of Europe and western Asia, in time of moult arriving in numbers reaching up to 2,000 birds. Many species of wild animals live in the forest, among them: deer, elk, moose, wild boar, hare, fox and recently reintroduced lynx. On wetlands, most saturated with water, beaver lodges can be found. The symbol of the park is a white stork with nests scattered over many local villages.", "Piwniczna-Zdrój\n Piwniczna-Zdrój (until 1999 Piwniczna, Північна, Pivnichna) is a town in Nowy Sącz County, Lesser Poland Voivodeship, Poland, near the border with Slovakia. Piwniczna-Zdrój is the name of both the town and its administrative district called a gmina in Polish, namely the Gmina Piwniczna-Zdrój. Piwniczna-Zdrój is a popular tourist destination in Beskid Sądecki, part of the Western Carpathians mountain range of southern Poland featuring a protected area called the Poprad Landscape Park with its picturesque Poprad River Gorge.", "Międzyzdroje\n🇺🇦🇷🇺 Bakhchysarai Raion, Ukraine / Russia ; 🇷🇸 Čačak, Serbia ; 🇸🇪 Helsingborg, Sweden ; 🇸🇮 Izola, Slovenia ; 🇸🇪 Lomma, Sweden ; 🇩🇪 Sellin, Germany Międzyzdroje was the birthplace of the Harvard World Model United Nations Conference in 1991. Międzyzdroje is twinned with: ", "Jastrzębie-Zdrój\n🇺🇦 Borshchiv, Ukraine (2017) ; 🇨🇿 Havířov, Czech Republic (2007) ; 🇩🇪 Ibbenbüren, Germany (2007) ; 🇨🇿 Karviná, Czech Republic (1995) ; 🇸🇰 Prievidza, Slovakia (2009) ; 🇫🇷 Tourcoing, France (2007) Jastrzębie-Zdrój is twinned with: ", "Dąbrowa Puzdrowska\n Dąbrowa Puzdrowska (Dąbrowa Pùzdrowskô) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierakowice, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Sierakowice, 22 km west of Kartuzy, and 50 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 79.", "Nadvirna\n Nadvírna, also referred to as Nadwirna or Nadvorna (Надві́рна, Nadwórna, נאַדוואָרנאַ, Nadvorna) is a city located in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast in western Ukraine. It is the administrative centre of Nadvirna Raion. Nadvirna hosts the administration of Nadvirna urban hromada, one of the hromadas of Ukraine. Population:. From the mid-14th century until 1772 (see Partitions of Poland) Nadvirna, known in Polish as Nadwórna, was part of the Kingdom of Poland. In 1772, it was annexed by the Habsburg Empire, and remained in the province of Galicia until late 1918. In the inter-war years, the borders changed and the town became part of the Second Polish Republic. Following ", "Puzdrino\n Puzdrino (Пуздрино) is a rural locality (a village) in Beryozovsky District, Perm Krai, Russia. The population was 113 as of 2010.", "Wola Piotrowa\n Wola Piotrowa (Воля Петрова, Volia Petrova) is a village in East Małopolska in the Bukowsko Upland mountains, Bukowsko rural commune, Latin parish in Bukowsko, Protestant parish in loco. Wola Piotrowa is about 17 miles from Sanok in southeast Poland. It is situated below the main watershed at the foot of the Słonne Mountain, and has an elevation of 340 metres. Situated in the Subcarpathian Voivodship (since 1999), previously in Krosno Voivodship (1975-1998) and Sanok district, (10 miles east of Sanok), located near the towns of Medzilaborce and Palota (in northeastern Slovakia).", "Schwedt\n Gartz (Germany), Penkun (Germany), Szczecin (Poland), Gryfino (Poland), Cedynia (Poland), Chojna (Poland), Mieszkowice (Poland), Moryń (Poland), Trzcińsko-Zdrój (Poland), Myślibórz (Poland), Pyrzyce (Poland).", "Podemszczyzna\n Podemszczyzna (Подемщина, Podemshchyna) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Horyniec-Zdrój, within Lubaczów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland, close to the border with Ukraine. It lies approximately 15 km north-east of Lubaczów and 95 km east of the regional capital Rzeszów.", "Nadvirna\n traveled the line on October 21, 1894. In the late 18th century, Count Ignacy Cetner founded here a tobacco field, excavated local salt deposits, and invited German settlers. After World War I and the Polish–Ukrainian War, Nadwórna returned to Poland, where it remained until the 1939 Invasion of Poland. During World War I, the 2nd Brigade of the Polish Legions operated in the area of Nadvirna. In the winter of 1914/1915, the brigade faced here the Imperial Russian Army, which planned to cross the Carpathian Mountains, and enter Hungary. In 1929, in a nearby village of Starunia, almost complete Woolly rhinoceros was found, preserved in ozokerite. This unique trove, one of ", "Międzyzdroje\n Międzyzdroje ( Misdroy; Mizëzdroje; Misdroy), in English known as Misdroy, is a city and a seaside resort in northwestern Poland on the island of Wolin on the Baltic coast. The city is located in the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, and is a seat of the Kamień County and the municipilaty of Międzyzdroje. In 2016, it was inhabitated by around 5 500 people. The town is often referred to as The Pearl of the Baltic. It is situated between wide sandy beaches with high cliffs and the forests of the Woliński National Park (which includes a bison reserve). Międzyzdroje has a spa climate and is rich in tourist services." ]
In what country is Harisan?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Harisan
2,136,260
59
[ { "id": "25596566", "title": "Harisan", "text": " Harisan (, also Romanized as Harīsān; also known as Harsān) is a village in Qareh Chay Rural District, in the Central District of Saveh County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 686, in 168 families.", "score": "1.4931617" }, { "id": "32306905", "title": "Hari Hari", "text": " Hari Hari is defined by Statistics New Zealand as a rural settlement and covers 50.43 km2. It is part of the wider Whataroa-Harihari statistical area. The population of Hari Hari was 237 in the 2018 census, a decrease of 6 from 2013. There were 120 males and 117 females. 93.7% of people identified as European/Pākehā, 11.4% as Māori, 2.5% as Pacific peoples and 2.5% as Asian. 16.5% were under 15 years old, 13.9% were 15–29, 48.1% were 30–64, and 21.5% were 65 or older.", "score": "1.4175575" }, { "id": "32248751", "title": "Sinar Harian", "text": " Sinar Harian (Daily Light) is a Malay-language daily newspaper published in Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia in a compact format. It first hit the newsstands on 31 March 2006 in the East Coast states of Kelantan and Terengganu before expanding its distribution to the state of Selangor and the federal territory of Kuala Lumpur in the West Coast in September 2007. The newspaper occasionally organises public forums and debates at which politicians and public figures are invited to speak, regardless of viewpoint. Sinar Daily is published by Akhbar Cabaran Sdn Bhd, a company related to the Kumpulan Karangkraf & Ultimate Group of Companies, a major publishing interest in Malaysia and currently has a cover price of RM 1.20.", "score": "1.4134927" }, { "id": "12570852", "title": "Badr Hari", "text": " Badr Hari was born and raised in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands. He began kickboxing at the age of seven under the guidance of former World Champion Mousid Akamrane. As a teenager, he trained at the Sitan Gym of Mohammed Aït Hassou. When the Sitan Gym moved to Rotterdam, he joined Chakuriki Gym, run by Thom Harinck. Hari fought under the Dutch flag until he lost to Stefan Leko in 2005. Hari, who tried to publicly address the audience after his defeat, was booed so loudly that no one could make out his words. He expressed disappointment in the Dutch fans: \"I thought to myself, I have never witnessed such ungratefulness.\" From then on Hari has represented Morocco and stopped working with Harinck. Mike Passenier became his new coach.", "score": "1.3870049" }, { "id": "7375067", "title": "Haría (village)", "text": " Haría is a village in the municipality of Haría in the north of the island of Lanzarote in the Canary Islands. The town had a population of 1,128 in the 2011 census. The town is the capital of the municipality of Haría. It lies in a valley known as the Valley of 1,000 Palms. A craft market is held in the town on Saturdays. The artist Cesar Manrique is buried in the cemetery of Haría.", "score": "1.3806405" }, { "id": "8200226", "title": "Daoud Hari", "text": " After escaping an assault on his village, Hari entered the refugee camps in neighboring Chad and began serving as a translator for major news organizations, as well as for UN agencies and other aid groups. He now lives in the United States, and was part of Save Darfur Coalition’s “Voices from Darfur” tour. In August 2006, Hari was captured and detained by the government of Sudan under suspicion of being a spy, along with Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Paul Salopek and their Chadian driver Abdulraham Anu (aka \"Ali\"). During their months-long ordeal, all three men were severely beaten and deprived. The American journalist knew that the Sudanese government did not want to risk more bad publicity ", "score": "1.3745701" }, { "id": "13813077", "title": "Hariss", "text": " Hariss (or Haris) (حاريص) is a village is southern Lebanon, in the region of Bint Jbeil.", "score": "1.3716446" }, { "id": "3307371", "title": "Bahaa Hariri", "text": " Bahaa Hariri was born in Saudi-Arabia on 26 April 1966. He holds a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Boston University. After completing his studies, he moved to work for his family Construction and Development company Saudi Oger Ltd.", "score": "1.3715119" }, { "id": "2595123", "title": "Harith Iskander", "text": " tour started off in Kuala Lumpur before showing at six other cities in Malaysia: including Johor, Malacca, Penang, Kuching, Kota Kinabalu and Labuan. Harith Iskander also succeeded in putting Malaysia on the comedy map the second time by releasing his Netflix original comedy special, I Told You So in 2018. Apart from that in 2018, Harith held his Australia tour named Harith Iskander The Tour - Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2018, Adelaide Fringe 2018 and Perth Fringe 2018. Besides, Harith tickled the audiences in the City Of Angels (Los Angeles) in June 2017 where the organizer was The Laugh Factory.", "score": "1.3675058" }, { "id": "14254453", "title": "Harissa-Daraoun", "text": " Harissa-Daraoun (حريصا–درعون) is a municipality that consists of two villages, Harissa and Daraoun, in the Keserwan District of the Keserwan-Jbeil Governorate of Lebanon. The municipality mayor from 2016 until 2022 is Mr. Nizar Chemaly. The municipality is located 27 km north of Beirut. Its average elevation is 550 meters above sea level and its total land area is 435 hectares. Harissa is accessible from the coastal city of Jounieh either by road or by a nine-minute journey by a gondola lift, known as the Téléphérique. Harissa is home to an important Lebanese pilgrimage site, Our Lady of Lebanon. It attracts both pilgrims and tourists who want to enjoy views of the bay of Jounieh. Daraoun contains three schools, one public and two private, that enrolled a total of 457 students as of 2008, while Harissa had one private school with 242 students during that same time period. There were eight companies with over five employees operating in Daraoun as of 2008, and two companies with over five employees in Harissa during that same period. Daraoun's inhabitants are predominantly Maronite Catholics, while Harissa has a mixed population of Melkite and Maronite Catholics.", "score": "1.3662313" }, { "id": "27260514", "title": "Hari Mata Hari", "text": " Hari Mata Hari is a Bosnian rock band. Hari Mata Hari is the stage name for the singer Hari Varešanović. The group originated from the city of Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The group has performed over 1,000 concerts and sold 5 million albums to date. Their songs are among the most famous and popular love ballads in the former Yugoslavia era. Hari Mata Hari was the representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 held in Athens, Greece. Coincidentally, hari mata hari is Malay for 'day of the sun, or Sunday'.", "score": "1.3639748" }, { "id": "32306900", "title": "Hari Hari", "text": " Hari Hari is a small rural settlement in the south west of the West Coast region of New Zealand's South Island. The name has a Maori meaning, from Te Aka Maori/English Dictionary, as \"to take/carry joy\" or, as local legend suggests, \"come together in unison\" from a Maori canoe paddling chant/song. In recent years, Hari Hari has been increasingly referred to as \"Harihari\" with Maori meaning as \"ambulance\". No official statutory process has taken place in order for this to happen. It is slightly inland from the Tasman Sea and the Saltwater Lagoon and is situated between the Wanganui and Poerua Rivers, 45 minutes south of the tourist town of Hokitika. passes through the town on its route ", "score": "1.3602084" }, { "id": "27719636", "title": "Haris Khan (comedian)", "text": " Khan’s first solo International tour (Haris Khan & Friends Tour), had sold out shows in Canada, USA, Oman, Pakistan and UAE. He represented Canada Internationally. He is among the few of non-Aboriginal comedians who had performed on First Nation reserves in Canada.", "score": "1.358902" }, { "id": "32306908", "title": "Hari Hari", "text": " South Westland Area School is a coeducational composite school (years 1-15), with a roll of students as of It opened in 1969, replacing Hari Hari School which had existed since 1865. The school has a satellite class at Franz Josef Glacier School. There is also a University of Canterbury Field Station, \"The Green Elephant\".", "score": "1.3580297" }, { "id": "15783295", "title": "Harissa", "text": " In Algeria, harissa is commonly added to soups, stews, and couscous. Harissa paste can also be used as a rub for meat or eggplants. Another significant producer is Algeria's Annaba Province, which is also a significant consumer. According to cookbook author Martha Rose Shulman, premade harissa tastes rather different from that which is served in Tunisian and expatriate restaurants.", "score": "1.354974" }, { "id": "32306907", "title": "Hari Hari", "text": " ethnicities (totals add to more than 100% since people could identify with multiple ethnicities). The proportion of people born overseas was 11.7%, compared with 27.1% nationally. Although some people objected to giving their religion, 51.9% had no religion, 35.5% were Christian, 0.5% were Buddhist and 2.3% had other religions. Of those at least 15 years old, 57 (11.5%) people had a bachelor or higher degree, and 129 (26.1%) people had no formal qualifications. The median income was $31,400, compared with $31,800 nationally. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 276 (55.8%) people were employed full-time, 84 (17.0%) were part-time, and 12 (2.4%) were unemployed.", "score": "1.3543589" }, { "id": "32537777", "title": "Harima, Hyōgo", "text": "Lima, Ohio, United States, since March 16, 1999 ; Heping, Tianjin, China, since March 25, 1993 As of May 1, 2017, the town has an estimated population of 34,590, with 14,668 households. The total area is 9.13 km². Approximately 30 percent of the area is a man-made island. The island is one part of the East Harima Coastal Industrial Region. It also includes a large port for international shipping. Several large companies have factories in this area. The town flower is the chrysanthemum. Harima currently has two sister city relationships:", "score": "1.3542356" }, { "id": "30476397", "title": "Harifal", "text": " Harifal territory is situated 372 kilometers south west of the capital, Islamabad. The location is sparsely populated, with 21 people per square kilometer.", "score": "1.3517171" }, { "id": "15112048", "title": "Paula Yacoubian", "text": " Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri in Saudi Arabia in a significant live broadcast direct from Riyadh after Hariri presented his resignation from the Saudi capital amidst rumors about his actual conditions in Saudi Arabia. This interview served in dispelling grave concerns about his status in Saudi Arabia, and included the announcement of his return to Lebanon. As a humanist/social activist, always advocating on behalf of the less privileged, Paula was successful in launching “Dafa Campaign”, one of the largest and most successful donation campaigns in Lebanon and the Middle East for the second year in a row. \"Dafa Campaign\" has reached 14,800 underprivileged families in Lebanon in November 2015, 43,000 families ", "score": "1.346149" }, { "id": "27622257", "title": "Harimau! Harimau!", "text": " Sanip is a married twenty-five-year-old student of Wak Katok. He is optimistic and enjoys joking. Together with Sutan and Talib, he stole four water buffaloes from a neighboring village. He also frequented prostitutes and once kicked a copy of the Quran to the middle of the street. Sanip is eventually able to return home to Air Jernih.", "score": "1.3401847" } ]
[ "Harisan\n Harisan (, also Romanized as Harīsān; also known as Harsān) is a village in Qareh Chay Rural District, in the Central District of Saveh County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 686, in 168 families.", "Hari Hari\n Hari Hari is defined by Statistics New Zealand as a rural settlement and covers 50.43 km2. It is part of the wider Whataroa-Harihari statistical area. The population of Hari Hari was 237 in the 2018 census, a decrease of 6 from 2013. There were 120 males and 117 females. 93.7% of people identified as European/Pākehā, 11.4% as Māori, 2.5% as Pacific peoples and 2.5% as Asian. 16.5% were under 15 years old, 13.9% were 15–29, 48.1% were 30–64, and 21.5% were 65 or older.", "Sinar Harian\n Sinar Harian (Daily Light) is a Malay-language daily newspaper published in Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia in a compact format. It first hit the newsstands on 31 March 2006 in the East Coast states of Kelantan and Terengganu before expanding its distribution to the state of Selangor and the federal territory of Kuala Lumpur in the West Coast in September 2007. The newspaper occasionally organises public forums and debates at which politicians and public figures are invited to speak, regardless of viewpoint. Sinar Daily is published by Akhbar Cabaran Sdn Bhd, a company related to the Kumpulan Karangkraf & Ultimate Group of Companies, a major publishing interest in Malaysia and currently has a cover price of RM 1.20.", "Badr Hari\n Badr Hari was born and raised in Amsterdam, the capital of the Netherlands. He began kickboxing at the age of seven under the guidance of former World Champion Mousid Akamrane. As a teenager, he trained at the Sitan Gym of Mohammed Aït Hassou. When the Sitan Gym moved to Rotterdam, he joined Chakuriki Gym, run by Thom Harinck. Hari fought under the Dutch flag until he lost to Stefan Leko in 2005. Hari, who tried to publicly address the audience after his defeat, was booed so loudly that no one could make out his words. He expressed disappointment in the Dutch fans: \"I thought to myself, I have never witnessed such ungratefulness.\" From then on Hari has represented Morocco and stopped working with Harinck. Mike Passenier became his new coach.", "Haría (village)\n Haría is a village in the municipality of Haría in the north of the island of Lanzarote in the Canary Islands. The town had a population of 1,128 in the 2011 census. The town is the capital of the municipality of Haría. It lies in a valley known as the Valley of 1,000 Palms. A craft market is held in the town on Saturdays. The artist Cesar Manrique is buried in the cemetery of Haría.", "Daoud Hari\n After escaping an assault on his village, Hari entered the refugee camps in neighboring Chad and began serving as a translator for major news organizations, as well as for UN agencies and other aid groups. He now lives in the United States, and was part of Save Darfur Coalition’s “Voices from Darfur” tour. In August 2006, Hari was captured and detained by the government of Sudan under suspicion of being a spy, along with Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist Paul Salopek and their Chadian driver Abdulraham Anu (aka \"Ali\"). During their months-long ordeal, all three men were severely beaten and deprived. The American journalist knew that the Sudanese government did not want to risk more bad publicity ", "Hariss\n Hariss (or Haris) (حاريص) is a village is southern Lebanon, in the region of Bint Jbeil.", "Bahaa Hariri\n Bahaa Hariri was born in Saudi-Arabia on 26 April 1966. He holds a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Boston University. After completing his studies, he moved to work for his family Construction and Development company Saudi Oger Ltd.", "Harith Iskander\n tour started off in Kuala Lumpur before showing at six other cities in Malaysia: including Johor, Malacca, Penang, Kuching, Kota Kinabalu and Labuan. Harith Iskander also succeeded in putting Malaysia on the comedy map the second time by releasing his Netflix original comedy special, I Told You So in 2018. Apart from that in 2018, Harith held his Australia tour named Harith Iskander The Tour - Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2018, Adelaide Fringe 2018 and Perth Fringe 2018. Besides, Harith tickled the audiences in the City Of Angels (Los Angeles) in June 2017 where the organizer was The Laugh Factory.", "Harissa-Daraoun\n Harissa-Daraoun (حريصا–درعون) is a municipality that consists of two villages, Harissa and Daraoun, in the Keserwan District of the Keserwan-Jbeil Governorate of Lebanon. The municipality mayor from 2016 until 2022 is Mr. Nizar Chemaly. The municipality is located 27 km north of Beirut. Its average elevation is 550 meters above sea level and its total land area is 435 hectares. Harissa is accessible from the coastal city of Jounieh either by road or by a nine-minute journey by a gondola lift, known as the Téléphérique. Harissa is home to an important Lebanese pilgrimage site, Our Lady of Lebanon. It attracts both pilgrims and tourists who want to enjoy views of the bay of Jounieh. Daraoun contains three schools, one public and two private, that enrolled a total of 457 students as of 2008, while Harissa had one private school with 242 students during that same time period. There were eight companies with over five employees operating in Daraoun as of 2008, and two companies with over five employees in Harissa during that same period. Daraoun's inhabitants are predominantly Maronite Catholics, while Harissa has a mixed population of Melkite and Maronite Catholics.", "Hari Mata Hari\n Hari Mata Hari is a Bosnian rock band. Hari Mata Hari is the stage name for the singer Hari Varešanović. The group originated from the city of Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The group has performed over 1,000 concerts and sold 5 million albums to date. Their songs are among the most famous and popular love ballads in the former Yugoslavia era. Hari Mata Hari was the representative of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Eurovision Song Contest 2006 held in Athens, Greece. Coincidentally, hari mata hari is Malay for 'day of the sun, or Sunday'.", "Hari Hari\n Hari Hari is a small rural settlement in the south west of the West Coast region of New Zealand's South Island. The name has a Maori meaning, from Te Aka Maori/English Dictionary, as \"to take/carry joy\" or, as local legend suggests, \"come together in unison\" from a Maori canoe paddling chant/song. In recent years, Hari Hari has been increasingly referred to as \"Harihari\" with Maori meaning as \"ambulance\". No official statutory process has taken place in order for this to happen. It is slightly inland from the Tasman Sea and the Saltwater Lagoon and is situated between the Wanganui and Poerua Rivers, 45 minutes south of the tourist town of Hokitika. passes through the town on its route ", "Haris Khan (comedian)\n Khan’s first solo International tour (Haris Khan & Friends Tour), had sold out shows in Canada, USA, Oman, Pakistan and UAE. He represented Canada Internationally. He is among the few of non-Aboriginal comedians who had performed on First Nation reserves in Canada.", "Hari Hari\n South Westland Area School is a coeducational composite school (years 1-15), with a roll of students as of It opened in 1969, replacing Hari Hari School which had existed since 1865. The school has a satellite class at Franz Josef Glacier School. There is also a University of Canterbury Field Station, \"The Green Elephant\".", "Harissa\n In Algeria, harissa is commonly added to soups, stews, and couscous. Harissa paste can also be used as a rub for meat or eggplants. Another significant producer is Algeria's Annaba Province, which is also a significant consumer. According to cookbook author Martha Rose Shulman, premade harissa tastes rather different from that which is served in Tunisian and expatriate restaurants.", "Hari Hari\n ethnicities (totals add to more than 100% since people could identify with multiple ethnicities). The proportion of people born overseas was 11.7%, compared with 27.1% nationally. Although some people objected to giving their religion, 51.9% had no religion, 35.5% were Christian, 0.5% were Buddhist and 2.3% had other religions. Of those at least 15 years old, 57 (11.5%) people had a bachelor or higher degree, and 129 (26.1%) people had no formal qualifications. The median income was $31,400, compared with $31,800 nationally. The employment status of those at least 15 was that 276 (55.8%) people were employed full-time, 84 (17.0%) were part-time, and 12 (2.4%) were unemployed.", "Harima, Hyōgo\nLima, Ohio, United States, since March 16, 1999 ; Heping, Tianjin, China, since March 25, 1993 As of May 1, 2017, the town has an estimated population of 34,590, with 14,668 households. The total area is 9.13 km². Approximately 30 percent of the area is a man-made island. The island is one part of the East Harima Coastal Industrial Region. It also includes a large port for international shipping. Several large companies have factories in this area. The town flower is the chrysanthemum. Harima currently has two sister city relationships:", "Harifal\n Harifal territory is situated 372 kilometers south west of the capital, Islamabad. The location is sparsely populated, with 21 people per square kilometer.", "Paula Yacoubian\n Lebanese prime minister Saad Hariri in Saudi Arabia in a significant live broadcast direct from Riyadh after Hariri presented his resignation from the Saudi capital amidst rumors about his actual conditions in Saudi Arabia. This interview served in dispelling grave concerns about his status in Saudi Arabia, and included the announcement of his return to Lebanon. As a humanist/social activist, always advocating on behalf of the less privileged, Paula was successful in launching “Dafa Campaign”, one of the largest and most successful donation campaigns in Lebanon and the Middle East for the second year in a row. \"Dafa Campaign\" has reached 14,800 underprivileged families in Lebanon in November 2015, 43,000 families ", "Harimau! Harimau!\n Sanip is a married twenty-five-year-old student of Wak Katok. He is optimistic and enjoys joking. Together with Sutan and Talib, he stole four water buffaloes from a neighboring village. He also frequented prostitutes and once kicked a copy of the Quran to the middle of the street. Sanip is eventually able to return home to Air Jernih." ]
In what country is Ločenice?
[ "Czech Republic", "CZR", "cz", "Česko", "Česká republika", "ČR", "cze", "CZE", "Czechia" ]
country
Ločenice
1,430,021
46
[ { "id": "15303606", "title": "Ločenice", "text": " Ločenice is a municipality and village in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 700 inhabitants. Ločenice lies approximately 18 km south of České Budějovice and 141 km south of Prague.", "score": "1.7005593" }, { "id": "15303607", "title": "Ločenice", "text": " The village of Nesměň is an administrative part of Ločenice.", "score": "1.5467435" }, { "id": "29166129", "title": "Loděnice (Beroun District)", "text": " Loděnice is a municipality and village in Beroun District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 2,000 inhabitants.", "score": "1.4477112" }, { "id": "29166131", "title": "Loděnice (Beroun District)", "text": " In Loděnice is located the world's largest vinyl records manufacturer GZ Media.", "score": "1.442198" }, { "id": "29166130", "title": "Loděnice (Beroun District)", "text": " The village of Jánská is an administrative part of Loděnice.", "score": "1.4186611" }, { "id": "15159937", "title": "Číčenice", "text": " Číčenice is a municipality and village in Strakonice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 500 inhabitants. Číčenice lies approximately 27 km south-east of Strakonice, 28 km north-west of České Budějovice, and 105 km south of Prague.", "score": "1.4154973" }, { "id": "14289783", "title": "Chocenice", "text": " Chocenice is a municipality and village in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 600 inhabitants. Chocenice lies approximately 25 km south-east of Plzeň and 89 km south-west of Prague.", "score": "1.4047332" }, { "id": "10400647", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " Lovosice (Lobositz) is a town in Litoměřice District in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 8,700 inhabitants.", "score": "1.3901783" }, { "id": "10400654", "title": "Lovosice", "text": "🇩🇪 Coswig, Germany Lovosice is twinned with:", "score": "1.3840027" }, { "id": "10400649", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " The region of Lovosice was inhabited already in the Bronze Age. Some evidence indicates that the first Czechs lived right here. The first mention of Lovosice is from 1143. Duke Vladislaus II gave this small village to the Strahov monastery. Emperor Rudolf II promoted the village to a town in 1600. Lovosice was 1756 the site of a major battle between Prussia and the Austrian empire, at the Battle of Lobositz. In 1850, the railroad was built, which supported the industrialization of the town and accelerated development. During World War II, due to the Munich Agreement, Lovosice fell within a German occupation zone, commonly called Sudetenland. Only 600 Czechs stayed in the town at that time. After the war, the German population was expelled as a result of the Beneš decrees.", "score": "1.3526309" }, { "id": "10400650", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " Lovosice is known as an industrial town with a long tradition of chemical and food-processing industries.", "score": "1.3272065" }, { "id": "10400648", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " Lovosice is located on the left bank of the Elbe river, at the northern border of the Elbe lowlands and at the southern foot of Bohemian Highlands. The capital Prague is about 60 km towards south.", "score": "1.3192593" }, { "id": "9306005", "title": "Villieu-Loyes-Mollon", "text": "Dobřichovice, Czech Republic ", "score": "1.2966033" }, { "id": "14870293", "title": "Loza (Plzeň-North District)", "text": " Loza is a village and municipality (obec) in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 3.72 km2, and has a population of 259 (as at 3 July 2006). Loza lies approximately 18 km north of Plzeň and 84 km west of Prague.", "score": "1.2949212" }, { "id": "10400651", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " Due to its strategic location, Lovosice is a significant transport junction. Besides a cargo port on the Elbe River, the town has a great connection to Prague and Germany via the D8 motorway and high speed railway Prague–Ústí nad Labem–Dresden.", "score": "1.2918273" }, { "id": "27759406", "title": "List of twin towns and sister cities in the Czech Republic", "text": "🇵🇱 Buczkowice, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Mucharz, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Ochodnica, Slovakia 🇸🇮 Brežice, Slovenia ; 🇨🇿 Dobřany, Czech Republic ; 🇩🇪 Obertraubling, Germany 🇸🇰 Zábiedovo, Slovakia 🇺🇸 Manhattan, United States ; 🇫🇷 Villieu-Loyes-Mollon, France Geldrop-Mierlo, Netherlands ; 🇫🇷 Tonnerre, France Bellmund, Switzerland 🇭🇺 Ábrahámhegy, Hungary ; 🇸🇰 Hnúšťa, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Miejska Górka, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Piława Górna, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Radków, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Veľký Meder, Slovakia 🇵🇱 Bolków, Poland ; 🇩🇪 Oybin, Germany 🇮🇹 Ledro, Italy 🇸🇰 Kamenec pod Vtáčnikom, Slovakia 🇸🇰 Rajecké Teplice, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Wilamowice, Poland Kallnach, Switzerland 🇵🇱 Dzierżoniów, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Liptovská Teplička, Slovakia 🇮🇹 Rovereto, Italy 🇵🇱 Strumień, Poland 🇫🇷 Azay-le-Brûlé, France ; 🇮🇹 Caprese Michelangelo, Italy 🇵🇱 Godów, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Gorzyce, Poland 🇸🇰 Myjava, Slovakia 🇩🇪 Sebnitz, Germany 🇦🇹 Furth bei Göttweig, Austria ; 🇩🇪 Furth im Wald, Germany ; 🇫🇷 Ludres, France ; 🇺🇸 Two Rivers, United States Dobrá Dobřany Dobratice Dobřichovice Dobříš Dobronín Dobruška Doksy (Česká Lípa District) Doksy (Kladno District) Dolní Bečva Dolní Benešov Dolní Bukovsko Dolní Čermná Dolní Dobrouč Dolní Domaslavice Dolní Kounice Dolní Lutyně Dolní Němčí Dolní Poustevna Domažlice ", "score": "1.2881222" }, { "id": "5394852", "title": "Loče, Brežice", "text": " Loče (in older sources also Loč, Lotsch ) is a village on the left bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Styria and the settlement was the southernmost settlement in the Duchy of Styria. It is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.", "score": "1.2815175" }, { "id": "10400652", "title": "Lovosice", "text": " The former town hall is one of the most valuable buildings in the town. It was built in 1906–1907 in the Art Nouveau style. Today it serves as a library and tourist information office. The Renaissance castle in Lovosice was built in the second half of the 16th century. After a fire in 1809, it was Baroquely modified and served as an archive and office. Today the building houses a secondary vocational school. The Baroque Church of Saint Wenceslaus was built in 1733–1748 on a place of former wooden church. It contains valuable frescoes and an altarpiece Saint Wenceslaus.", "score": "1.2808511" }, { "id": "29949803", "title": "Mšecké Žehrovice", "text": " The village of Lodenice is an administrative part of Mšecké Žehrovice", "score": "1.2784597" }, { "id": "5424662", "title": "Agrate Brianza", "text": "🇨🇿 Česká Třebová, Czech Republic ", "score": "1.2766733" } ]
[ "Ločenice\n Ločenice is a municipality and village in České Budějovice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 700 inhabitants. Ločenice lies approximately 18 km south of České Budějovice and 141 km south of Prague.", "Ločenice\n The village of Nesměň is an administrative part of Ločenice.", "Loděnice (Beroun District)\n Loděnice is a municipality and village in Beroun District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 2,000 inhabitants.", "Loděnice (Beroun District)\n In Loděnice is located the world's largest vinyl records manufacturer GZ Media.", "Loděnice (Beroun District)\n The village of Jánská is an administrative part of Loděnice.", "Číčenice\n Číčenice is a municipality and village in Strakonice District in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 500 inhabitants. Číčenice lies approximately 27 km south-east of Strakonice, 28 km north-west of České Budějovice, and 105 km south of Prague.", "Chocenice\n Chocenice is a municipality and village in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 600 inhabitants. Chocenice lies approximately 25 km south-east of Plzeň and 89 km south-west of Prague.", "Lovosice\n Lovosice (Lobositz) is a town in Litoměřice District in the Ústí nad Labem Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 8,700 inhabitants.", "Lovosice\n🇩🇪 Coswig, Germany Lovosice is twinned with:", "Lovosice\n The region of Lovosice was inhabited already in the Bronze Age. Some evidence indicates that the first Czechs lived right here. The first mention of Lovosice is from 1143. Duke Vladislaus II gave this small village to the Strahov monastery. Emperor Rudolf II promoted the village to a town in 1600. Lovosice was 1756 the site of a major battle between Prussia and the Austrian empire, at the Battle of Lobositz. In 1850, the railroad was built, which supported the industrialization of the town and accelerated development. During World War II, due to the Munich Agreement, Lovosice fell within a German occupation zone, commonly called Sudetenland. Only 600 Czechs stayed in the town at that time. After the war, the German population was expelled as a result of the Beneš decrees.", "Lovosice\n Lovosice is known as an industrial town with a long tradition of chemical and food-processing industries.", "Lovosice\n Lovosice is located on the left bank of the Elbe river, at the northern border of the Elbe lowlands and at the southern foot of Bohemian Highlands. The capital Prague is about 60 km towards south.", "Villieu-Loyes-Mollon\nDobřichovice, Czech Republic ", "Loza (Plzeň-North District)\n Loza is a village and municipality (obec) in Plzeň-North District in the Plzeň Region of the Czech Republic. The municipality covers an area of 3.72 km2, and has a population of 259 (as at 3 July 2006). Loza lies approximately 18 km north of Plzeň and 84 km west of Prague.", "Lovosice\n Due to its strategic location, Lovosice is a significant transport junction. Besides a cargo port on the Elbe River, the town has a great connection to Prague and Germany via the D8 motorway and high speed railway Prague–Ústí nad Labem–Dresden.", "List of twin towns and sister cities in the Czech Republic\n🇵🇱 Buczkowice, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Mucharz, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Ochodnica, Slovakia 🇸🇮 Brežice, Slovenia ; 🇨🇿 Dobřany, Czech Republic ; 🇩🇪 Obertraubling, Germany 🇸🇰 Zábiedovo, Slovakia 🇺🇸 Manhattan, United States ; 🇫🇷 Villieu-Loyes-Mollon, France Geldrop-Mierlo, Netherlands ; 🇫🇷 Tonnerre, France Bellmund, Switzerland 🇭🇺 Ábrahámhegy, Hungary ; 🇸🇰 Hnúšťa, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Miejska Górka, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Piława Górna, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Radków, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Veľký Meder, Slovakia 🇵🇱 Bolków, Poland ; 🇩🇪 Oybin, Germany 🇮🇹 Ledro, Italy 🇸🇰 Kamenec pod Vtáčnikom, Slovakia 🇸🇰 Rajecké Teplice, Slovakia ; 🇵🇱 Wilamowice, Poland Kallnach, Switzerland 🇵🇱 Dzierżoniów, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Liptovská Teplička, Slovakia 🇮🇹 Rovereto, Italy 🇵🇱 Strumień, Poland 🇫🇷 Azay-le-Brûlé, France ; 🇮🇹 Caprese Michelangelo, Italy 🇵🇱 Godów, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Gorzyce, Poland 🇸🇰 Myjava, Slovakia 🇩🇪 Sebnitz, Germany 🇦🇹 Furth bei Göttweig, Austria ; 🇩🇪 Furth im Wald, Germany ; 🇫🇷 Ludres, France ; 🇺🇸 Two Rivers, United States Dobrá Dobřany Dobratice Dobřichovice Dobříš Dobronín Dobruška Doksy (Česká Lípa District) Doksy (Kladno District) Dolní Bečva Dolní Benešov Dolní Bukovsko Dolní Čermná Dolní Dobrouč Dolní Domaslavice Dolní Kounice Dolní Lutyně Dolní Němčí Dolní Poustevna Domažlice ", "Loče, Brežice\n Loče (in older sources also Loč, Lotsch ) is a village on the left bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Brežice in eastern Slovenia. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Styria and the settlement was the southernmost settlement in the Duchy of Styria. It is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.", "Lovosice\n The former town hall is one of the most valuable buildings in the town. It was built in 1906–1907 in the Art Nouveau style. Today it serves as a library and tourist information office. The Renaissance castle in Lovosice was built in the second half of the 16th century. After a fire in 1809, it was Baroquely modified and served as an archive and office. Today the building houses a secondary vocational school. The Baroque Church of Saint Wenceslaus was built in 1733–1748 on a place of former wooden church. It contains valuable frescoes and an altarpiece Saint Wenceslaus.", "Mšecké Žehrovice\n The village of Lodenice is an administrative part of Mšecké Žehrovice", "Agrate Brianza\n🇨🇿 Česká Třebová, Czech Republic " ]
In what country is Aki?
[ "Japan", "State of Japan", "Land of the Rising Sun", "Nihon", "Nippon", "JP", "Nippon-koku", "Nihon-koku", "JA", "JPN", "jp", "JAP", "Ja", "Jap" ]
country
Aki, Ōita
3,248,819
60
[ { "id": "27172888", "title": "Aki (name)", "text": " Aki (pronounced Ah-kee) is a surname, a given name and a nickname. Aki is a common Japanese, Finnish and Nigerian given name. Aki is also a Japanese surname, and also of one of the Vysya families in India. They mainly reside in Andhra Pradesh, India.", "score": "1.4805214" }, { "id": "3169262", "title": "JS Aki", "text": " JS Aki (AOS-5203) is a Hibiki-class ocean surveillance ship of Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.", "score": "1.4334543" }, { "id": "25172523", "title": "Aki District, Hiroshima", "text": " Aki (安芸郡) is a district located in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. It is the location of Mazda's automobile factory which has been on the site since the early 1930s. As of 1798 population data but counting decreases due to the March 20, 2005 merger, the district has an estimated population of 116,573 and a density of 1588 persons per km2. The total area is 73.41 km2.", "score": "1.4277313" }, { "id": "9803670", "title": "Aki Takase", "text": " Sources:", "score": "1.3938694" }, { "id": "15140559", "title": "Aki River", "text": " The river's gorge is a popular recreation area.", "score": "1.3880483" }, { "id": "27172894", "title": "Aki (name)", "text": "Angela Aki (アンジェラ・アキ) (born 1977), Japanese singer-songwriter ; Bundee Aki (born 1990), New Zealand-Irish rugby union player ; Izumi Aki (亜希 いずみ) (born 1960), Japanese pink film actress ; Keiiti Aki (安芸 敬一) (1930–2005), Japanese-American geophysicist and professor ; Tong Kee or T. Aki (died 1887), Chinese immigrant businessman in the Kingdom of Hawaii involved in the Aki opium scandal ; Yoko Aki (阿木 燿子) (born 1945), Japanese songwriter, actress, novelist and essayist ", "score": "1.3859878" }, { "id": "3006545", "title": "Tapestry of Songs: The Best of Angela Aki", "text": " To promote the release, Aki recorded a new music video for her song \"Tegami (Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e)\", with director Toshiyuki Suzuki. On March 22, NHK Educational TV aired a documentary, Haikei Nijū no Kimi e: Angela Aki to Chūgakusei-tachi, Saikai Soshite Mirai e (拝啓 二十歳の君へ ~アンジェラ・アキと中学生たち 再会そして未来へ~). It featured Aki travelling to the Gotō Islands, to meet the people she had first met in the 2008 documentary Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e: Angela Aki to Chūgakusei-tachi a second time. On April 11, Aki performed \"Tegami (Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e)\" at Music Station. Aki embarked on Angela Aki Concert Tour 2014 Tapestry of Songs: The Best of Angela Aki, a 44 date farewell tour to support the album. The tour began in Chiba on April 5, and will end on August 4 at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo. She managed to tour 37 of the 47 Prefectures of Japan: stopping three times in Hokkaido (Asahikawa, Sapporo and Nakashibetsu), twice in Hyōgo (Tatsuno and Kobe), twice in Gifu (Tajimi and Takayama, twice in Aichi (Kariya and Nagoya) and three times in Osaka.", "score": "1.3853385" }, { "id": "32764842", "title": "Akiyoshidai Quasi-National Park", "text": " Akiyoshidai Kokutei Kōen (秋吉台国定公園) is a Quasi-National Park in Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. It was founded on 1 November 1955 and has an area of 45.02 km². It includes part of the Akiyoshi plateau (秋吉台), a 130 square kilometre area of karst topography, as well as over 400 limestone caves, including Japan’s longest cave, the Akiyoshidō (秋芳洞), which has the additional status of a Special Natural Monument. The area is rated a protected landscape (category V) according to the IUCN. Like all Quasi-National Parks in Japan, the park is managed by the local prefectural government. The Akiyoshidai Groundwater System is a Ramsar Site and wetland of international importance.", "score": "1.384552" }, { "id": "7754095", "title": "Aki Kiti", "text": " Aki Kiti is a semi-contact combat sport characterized by kicking and blocking solely using the soles of the feet. It is a traditional sport originating from and was practiced by the headhunter Sümi Naga tribe of Nagaland, India. It is played inside a circular ring on the ground and normally includes two fighters, the objective of the game is to either make the opponent fell on knee, touch the ground with hand, or step outside the playing zone.", "score": "1.3843756" }, { "id": "25506233", "title": "Night World (web series)", "text": "Aki (暁) ", "score": "1.3824747" }, { "id": "13400675", "title": "Aki Ra", "text": " Aki Ra (sometimes written Akira, born c. 1970) is a former Khmer Rouge conscripted child soldier who works as a deminer and museum curator in Siem Reap, Cambodia. He has devoted his life to removing landmines in Cambodia and to caring for young landmine victims. Aki Ra states that since 1992 he has personally removed and destroyed as many as 50,000 landmines, and is the founder of the Cambodian Landmine Museum.", "score": "1.3814723" }, { "id": "28735919", "title": "Iri station", "text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Akō Line ", "score": "1.3780038" }, { "id": "30148962", "title": "Akkeshi Maritime Affairs Memorial Museum", "text": " Akkeshi Maritime Affairs Memorial Museum (厚岸町海事記念館) is a registered museum that opened in Akkeshi, Hokkaidō, Japan in 1988. The displays document the relationship between the town and the sea, with a particular focus on the fishing industry, and there is also a planetarium.", "score": "1.366118" }, { "id": "15140556", "title": "Aki River", "text": " The Aki River (also, the Akikawa River) is a river in Japan. The Aki River flows west of Tokyo Metropolitan Area. It is a major tributary of the Tama River, The Japanese name, 秋川, means \"Autumn River.\" The words Akigawa River sound a bit odd, as kawa and gawa, 川, are Japanese words for river, so Aki River makes more sense, or simply Akigawa, perhaps Akikawa.", "score": "1.3650136" }, { "id": "27172893", "title": "Aki (name)", "text": "Aki Aleong (born 1934), American actor, singer and songwriter ; Akihiro Ienaga (家長 昭博) (born 1986), Japanese football player commonly referred to as \"Aki\" ; Akinori Iwamura (岩村 明憲) (born 1979), Japanese baseball player and manager referred to as \"Aki\" while playing in Major League Baseball ; Aki Kumar (born 1980), Indian-born American blues musician ; Akihiko Aki Kuroda (黒田 アキ) (born 1944), Japanese painter ; Aki Nawaz, British rapper and musician born Haq Nawaz Qureshi ; Alfred Schmidt (footballer) (1935-2016), German football player and manager ; Aki (rapper), real name Aleksi Swallow, Swedish rapper with Swedish hip hop band Labyrint ; Akarsha ", "score": "1.3644843" }, { "id": "25696005", "title": "Kenai, Alaska", "text": "🇯🇵 Akita, Japan ", "score": "1.3641894" }, { "id": "9374165", "title": "Aki-Matilda Høegh-Dam", "text": " Aki-Matilda Tilia Ditte Høegh-Dam (born 17 October 1996 in Hillerød) is a Danish-Greenlandic politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Siumut political party. She was elected into parliament at the 2019 Danish general election, entering parliament at 22 years old, becoming its youngest member.", "score": "1.3633413" }, { "id": "29592451", "title": "AKB48", "text": " AKB48 (pronounced A.K.B. Forty-Eight) is a Japanese idol group named after the Akihabara (Akiba for short) area in Tokyo, where the group's theater is located. AKB48's producer, Yasushi Akimoto, wanted to form a girl group with its own theater and performing daily so fans could always see them live (which is not the case with usual pop groups giving occasional concerts and seen on television). This \"idols you can meet\" concept includes teams which can rotate performances and perform simultaneously at several events and \"handshake\" events, where fans can meet group members. Akimoto has expanded the AKB48 concept to several girl groups in China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan, Philippines, and Vietnam. AKB48 have been characterized as a social phenomenon. They are among the highest-earning ", "score": "1.3598025" }, { "id": "27172891", "title": "Aki (name)", "text": " Aki Maeda (MAX), a member of the J-pop group MAX from 2002 to 2008 ; Aki Misato (美郷 あき) (born 1981), Japanese singer ; Aki Narita (成田 亜希), Japanese speed skater ; Aki Ollikainen (born 1973), Finnish novelist ; Aki Orr (1931-2013), Israeli writer and political activist ; Aki Parviainen (born 1974), Finnish javelin thrower ; Aki Ra (born c. 1973), Cambodian landmine disposal expert and former Khmer Rouge conscripted child soldier ; Aki Riihilahti (born 1976), Finnish retired footballer ; Aki Sasamoto (笹本 晃) (born 1980), Japanese artist based in New York ; Aki Sawada (澤田 亜紀) (born 1988), Japanese former figure skater ; Aki Seiuli (born 1992), New Zealand rugby union player ; Aki Shibahara, Japanese musician, member of the British indie pop band Warm Jets (1997-?) ; Aki ", "score": "1.3575752" }, { "id": "7605537", "title": "Akō Castle", "text": " Akō Castle (赤穂城) is a flatland castle located in Akō, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. The castle is a nationally designated Historic Site and its gardens a Place of Scenic Beauty.", "score": "1.3515759" } ]
[ "Aki (name)\n Aki (pronounced Ah-kee) is a surname, a given name and a nickname. Aki is a common Japanese, Finnish and Nigerian given name. Aki is also a Japanese surname, and also of one of the Vysya families in India. They mainly reside in Andhra Pradesh, India.", "JS Aki\n JS Aki (AOS-5203) is a Hibiki-class ocean surveillance ship of Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.", "Aki District, Hiroshima\n Aki (安芸郡) is a district located in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. It is the location of Mazda's automobile factory which has been on the site since the early 1930s. As of 1798 population data but counting decreases due to the March 20, 2005 merger, the district has an estimated population of 116,573 and a density of 1588 persons per km2. The total area is 73.41 km2.", "Aki Takase\n Sources:", "Aki River\n The river's gorge is a popular recreation area.", "Aki (name)\nAngela Aki (アンジェラ・アキ) (born 1977), Japanese singer-songwriter ; Bundee Aki (born 1990), New Zealand-Irish rugby union player ; Izumi Aki (亜希 いずみ) (born 1960), Japanese pink film actress ; Keiiti Aki (安芸 敬一) (1930–2005), Japanese-American geophysicist and professor ; Tong Kee or T. Aki (died 1887), Chinese immigrant businessman in the Kingdom of Hawaii involved in the Aki opium scandal ; Yoko Aki (阿木 燿子) (born 1945), Japanese songwriter, actress, novelist and essayist ", "Tapestry of Songs: The Best of Angela Aki\n To promote the release, Aki recorded a new music video for her song \"Tegami (Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e)\", with director Toshiyuki Suzuki. On March 22, NHK Educational TV aired a documentary, Haikei Nijū no Kimi e: Angela Aki to Chūgakusei-tachi, Saikai Soshite Mirai e (拝啓 二十歳の君へ ~アンジェラ・アキと中学生たち 再会そして未来へ~). It featured Aki travelling to the Gotō Islands, to meet the people she had first met in the 2008 documentary Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e: Angela Aki to Chūgakusei-tachi a second time. On April 11, Aki performed \"Tegami (Haikei Jūgo no Kimi e)\" at Music Station. Aki embarked on Angela Aki Concert Tour 2014 Tapestry of Songs: The Best of Angela Aki, a 44 date farewell tour to support the album. The tour began in Chiba on April 5, and will end on August 4 at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo. She managed to tour 37 of the 47 Prefectures of Japan: stopping three times in Hokkaido (Asahikawa, Sapporo and Nakashibetsu), twice in Hyōgo (Tatsuno and Kobe), twice in Gifu (Tajimi and Takayama, twice in Aichi (Kariya and Nagoya) and three times in Osaka.", "Akiyoshidai Quasi-National Park\n Akiyoshidai Kokutei Kōen (秋吉台国定公園) is a Quasi-National Park in Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. It was founded on 1 November 1955 and has an area of 45.02 km². It includes part of the Akiyoshi plateau (秋吉台), a 130 square kilometre area of karst topography, as well as over 400 limestone caves, including Japan’s longest cave, the Akiyoshidō (秋芳洞), which has the additional status of a Special Natural Monument. The area is rated a protected landscape (category V) according to the IUCN. Like all Quasi-National Parks in Japan, the park is managed by the local prefectural government. The Akiyoshidai Groundwater System is a Ramsar Site and wetland of international importance.", "Aki Kiti\n Aki Kiti is a semi-contact combat sport characterized by kicking and blocking solely using the soles of the feet. It is a traditional sport originating from and was practiced by the headhunter Sümi Naga tribe of Nagaland, India. It is played inside a circular ring on the ground and normally includes two fighters, the objective of the game is to either make the opponent fell on knee, touch the ground with hand, or step outside the playing zone.", "Night World (web series)\nAki (暁) ", "Aki Ra\n Aki Ra (sometimes written Akira, born c. 1970) is a former Khmer Rouge conscripted child soldier who works as a deminer and museum curator in Siem Reap, Cambodia. He has devoted his life to removing landmines in Cambodia and to caring for young landmine victims. Aki Ra states that since 1992 he has personally removed and destroyed as many as 50,000 landmines, and is the founder of the Cambodian Landmine Museum.", "Iri station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Akō Line ", "Akkeshi Maritime Affairs Memorial Museum\n Akkeshi Maritime Affairs Memorial Museum (厚岸町海事記念館) is a registered museum that opened in Akkeshi, Hokkaidō, Japan in 1988. The displays document the relationship between the town and the sea, with a particular focus on the fishing industry, and there is also a planetarium.", "Aki River\n The Aki River (also, the Akikawa River) is a river in Japan. The Aki River flows west of Tokyo Metropolitan Area. It is a major tributary of the Tama River, The Japanese name, 秋川, means \"Autumn River.\" The words Akigawa River sound a bit odd, as kawa and gawa, 川, are Japanese words for river, so Aki River makes more sense, or simply Akigawa, perhaps Akikawa.", "Aki (name)\nAki Aleong (born 1934), American actor, singer and songwriter ; Akihiro Ienaga (家長 昭博) (born 1986), Japanese football player commonly referred to as \"Aki\" ; Akinori Iwamura (岩村 明憲) (born 1979), Japanese baseball player and manager referred to as \"Aki\" while playing in Major League Baseball ; Aki Kumar (born 1980), Indian-born American blues musician ; Akihiko Aki Kuroda (黒田 アキ) (born 1944), Japanese painter ; Aki Nawaz, British rapper and musician born Haq Nawaz Qureshi ; Alfred Schmidt (footballer) (1935-2016), German football player and manager ; Aki (rapper), real name Aleksi Swallow, Swedish rapper with Swedish hip hop band Labyrint ; Akarsha ", "Kenai, Alaska\n🇯🇵 Akita, Japan ", "Aki-Matilda Høegh-Dam\n Aki-Matilda Tilia Ditte Høegh-Dam (born 17 October 1996 in Hillerød) is a Danish-Greenlandic politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Siumut political party. She was elected into parliament at the 2019 Danish general election, entering parliament at 22 years old, becoming its youngest member.", "AKB48\n AKB48 (pronounced A.K.B. Forty-Eight) is a Japanese idol group named after the Akihabara (Akiba for short) area in Tokyo, where the group's theater is located. AKB48's producer, Yasushi Akimoto, wanted to form a girl group with its own theater and performing daily so fans could always see them live (which is not the case with usual pop groups giving occasional concerts and seen on television). This \"idols you can meet\" concept includes teams which can rotate performances and perform simultaneously at several events and \"handshake\" events, where fans can meet group members. Akimoto has expanded the AKB48 concept to several girl groups in China, Japan, India, Indonesia, Thailand, Taiwan, Philippines, and Vietnam. AKB48 have been characterized as a social phenomenon. They are among the highest-earning ", "Aki (name)\n Aki Maeda (MAX), a member of the J-pop group MAX from 2002 to 2008 ; Aki Misato (美郷 あき) (born 1981), Japanese singer ; Aki Narita (成田 亜希), Japanese speed skater ; Aki Ollikainen (born 1973), Finnish novelist ; Aki Orr (1931-2013), Israeli writer and political activist ; Aki Parviainen (born 1974), Finnish javelin thrower ; Aki Ra (born c. 1973), Cambodian landmine disposal expert and former Khmer Rouge conscripted child soldier ; Aki Riihilahti (born 1976), Finnish retired footballer ; Aki Sasamoto (笹本 晃) (born 1980), Japanese artist based in New York ; Aki Sawada (澤田 亜紀) (born 1988), Japanese former figure skater ; Aki Seiuli (born 1992), New Zealand rugby union player ; Aki Shibahara, Japanese musician, member of the British indie pop band Warm Jets (1997-?) ; Aki ", "Akō Castle\n Akō Castle (赤穂城) is a flatland castle located in Akō, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan. The castle is a nationally designated Historic Site and its gardens a Place of Scenic Beauty." ]
In what country is Taia River?
[ "Romania", "Roumania", "Rumania", "România", "ro", "🇷🇴" ]
country
Taia (river)
5,875,403
34
[ { "id": "11163299", "title": "Taia (river)", "text": " The Taia is a right tributary of the river Jiul de Est in Romania. It discharges into the Jiul de Est in the town Petrila. Its length is 21 km and its basin size is 88 km2.", "score": "1.6557217" }, { "id": "10127911", "title": "Jong River", "text": " The Jong or Taia river is a river flowing through Sierra Leone. It passes by the city of Mattru Jong, and flows into the Atlantic Ocean via some deltas.", "score": "1.497371" }, { "id": "31330121", "title": "Taieri River", "text": " The Taieri River is the fourth-longest river in New Zealand and is in Otago in the South Island. Rising in the Lammerlaw Range, it initially flows north, then east around the Rock and Pillar range before turning southeast, reaching the sea 30 km south of Dunedin. The upper reaches meander in a series of convoluted loops across a floodplain above Paerau, close to the aptly named locality of Serpentine; the river has created many small oxbow lakes in this area, some of which have been converted into water meadows. From here the river runs through two small hydroelectric power stations before reaching Patearoa in the Maniototo. The Taieri then arcs through almost 180 degrees, entering a broad glacial valley (the Strath-Taieri) ", "score": "1.4711509" }, { "id": "8774517", "title": "Tairua River", "text": " “Tairua River.” Nzfishing.com, nzfishing.com/auckland-waikato/where-to-fish/tairua-river/. Accessed 18 Oct. 2021.", "score": "1.458607" }, { "id": "27055445", "title": "Taița", "text": " The Taița is a river in Tulcea County, Romania. North of the town Babadag it discharges into Lake Babadag, which is connected with Lake Razim, a former lagoon of the Black Sea. Its length is 57 km and its basin size is 591 km2.", "score": "1.4544928" }, { "id": "29707866", "title": "Taihiki River", "text": " The Taihiki River is a river of the Auckland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows generally northeast from its sources north of Patumahoe to reach the Waiuku River shortly before the latter's outflow into the Manukau Harbour. As with the Waiuku River, much of the Taihiki's length is as a wide silty estuary.", "score": "1.4399714" }, { "id": "8774514", "title": "Tairua River", "text": " The Tairua River is located on the Coromandel Peninsula in the North Island of New Zealand. It flows north and then northeast for a total of 35 km from its source in the Coromandel Range to the west of Whangamata, passing through the town of Hikuai before reaching the Pacific Ocean at Tairua on the peninsula's east coast. The small Shoe Island lies directly opposite the river's mouth, 2 km into the Pacific.", "score": "1.4386675" }, { "id": "30966584", "title": "Tain River", "text": " Tain River is a river, which flows through Jaman North District of the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana. It is a tributary of the Black Volta, and empties into the Atlantic Ocean.", "score": "1.4247348" }, { "id": "591148", "title": "Taï", "text": " The local economy is based primarily on agriculture and livestock. Agriculture: Hevea, Cocoa, Coffee, Colatier, Rice, Corn, Cassava, Plantain Bananas, Sweet Bananas, Yam, Taro, Potato, Eggplant, Chili, Okra, Lettuce and Bean. Traditional breeding: Cattle, Sheep, Goat, Pig, Poultry. Traditional fishing and fish farming.", "score": "1.4244843" }, { "id": "8774515", "title": "Tairua River", "text": " The Tairua River is a clean and clear freshwater river that flows into the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsular at Tairua Harbour. The river is equipped with a large rock bed and has beautiful scenery for all fishermen. There are several big fish to be caught from the Tairua, but rainbow trout is the most popular. Most fisherman will access the river from the middle that is easily accessed. For more exclusive fishing fishermen may access the river from the north or south but must be accessed by foot.", "score": "1.4173582" }, { "id": "32755125", "title": "Taieri Mouth", "text": " Taieri Mouth is a small fishing village at the mouth of the Taieri River, New Zealand. Taieri Island (Moturata) lies in the ocean several hundred metres off the river's mouth. It has a white sand beach for swimming and several picnic areas. Moturata is a distinctive landmark which can be walked to at low-tide. Caution is advised as the tides can change quickly. Another feature is the millennium walking track that follows the Taieri River from the mouth through the lower gorge to Henley. The village is located 40 km southwest of central Dunedin on the Southern Scenic Route. It is located in the Clutha District on the boundary of Dunedin City and 10 km east of Lake Waihola. Immediately to its south is the smaller settlement of Taieri Beach, and the two are often considered parts of the same settlement. It gained a little notoriety or sadness in the 1990s as the place where the father of murder suspect David Bain worked.", "score": "1.4076712" }, { "id": "31330123", "title": "Taieri River", "text": " the Taieri near Henley on the Taieri Plains. Google Maps erroneously shows the stretch of the river from the confluence to the mouth as Waipori River. The correct name is shown on the New Zealand government's official NZ Topo Map. There are several possible conjectured derivations for the name Taieri. It may derive from Tai-ari, “to smash or pound up, to pulp”., though some sources suggest that not may come from the Māori word taiari meaning \"spring tide\" or \"shining water\". A further possibility is that it refers to the makotaieri, an edible shark once regarded as a delicacy along the Otago coast. It may be, however, that the shark took its name from the river rather than vice versa.", "score": "1.3999093" }, { "id": "29707867", "title": "Taipa River", "text": " The Taipa River is a river of the northern Northland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows west then north, reaching the south of Doubtless Bay at the township of Taipa.", "score": "1.3855683" }, { "id": "9050796", "title": "Taió River", "text": " The Taió River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "score": "1.3834244" }, { "id": "13387612", "title": "Taï National Park", "text": " Taï National Park (Parc National de Taï) is a national park in Côte d'Ivoire that contains one of the last areas of primary rainforest in West Africa. It was inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1982 due to the diversity of its flora and fauna. Five mammal species of the Taï National Park are on the Red List of Threatened Species: pygmy hippopotamus, olive colobus monkeys, leopards, chimpanzees and Jentink's duiker. Taï National Park is approximately 100 km from the Ivoirian coast on the border with Liberia between the Cavally and Sassandra Rivers. It covers an area of 3,300 km2 with a 200 km2 buffer zone up to 396 m. The Tai Forest reserve was created in 1926, and promoted to national park status in 1972. It was recognized as a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1978, and added to the list of Natural World Heritage Sites in 1982. The Tai Forest is a natural reservoir of the Ebola virus. The World Health Organization has expressed concern over the proximity of this reservoir to the International Airport at Abidjan.", "score": "1.3774416" }, { "id": "29707868", "title": "Taipoiti River", "text": " The Taipoiti River is a short river of the Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island. One of the headwaters of the Waimakariri River, it flows southeast from the Shaler Range to reach the White River.", "score": "1.3651018" }, { "id": "3988483", "title": "Tai, Rivers", "text": " Tai is a Local Government Area (LGA) of Rivers State in Nigeria. It covers an area of 159 km2 and at the 2006 Census it had a population of 117,797. It is part of the Okrika/Oyigbo/Tai/Eleme constituency of the Nigerian Senate, represented since April 2007 by George Thompson Sekibo. In the April 2007 elections the Tai LGA recorded an implausible 99.6% turnout for the Governorship election. Celestine Omehia of the Rivers State People's Democratic Party was at first declared winner, but his election was later annulled and Rotimi Amaechi, also of the PDP, was declared governor. In February 2009, the Chairman of Tai Local Government Area was Barry Mpigi. Most of ", "score": "1.3587037" }, { "id": "27537810", "title": "Tera River", "text": " The Tera is a river in the north of Spain, a tributary of the River Esla. It is of ecological importance, being the home of 24 species of the European Union Nature Directives. Riberas del Río Tera y afluentes was designated a Special Area of Conservation in 2015.", "score": "1.3564808" }, { "id": "591156", "title": "Taï", "text": "Tempo (west) ", "score": "1.3562256" }, { "id": "13664856", "title": "Clevedon, New Zealand", "text": "Otau and Tuawa near present-day Clevedon, in Te Wairoa River valley ; At Tararua near the mouth of the Rautawhiti Stream, in Te Wairoa River valley ; At Takatekauere, Te Totara, Te Ruato and Pehuwai on the western side of Te Wairoa River ; Te Oue, Mawherawhera, Te Kuiti and Umupuia, on the Whakakaiwhara Peninsula Prior to human settlement, the area was swampy, and Bush moa, Mantell's moa and North Island giant moa bones have been found in the vicinity. Clevedon and surrounding area is traditionally the territory of the Ngāi Tai or Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki people, who are descendants of the Tainui waka. They call the area Te Wairoa (the Long River). Ngāi Tai traversed their tribal domain, including the inner islands of the Hauraki Gulf, in a seasonal cycle of harvesting, gathering and fishing. Ngā Tai maintained settlements in several places, including: Between the 1830s and 1863, the Te Hingawaka hapū of Ngāti Pāoa lived at the base of Te Oue pā.", "score": "1.3506358" } ]
[ "Taia (river)\n The Taia is a right tributary of the river Jiul de Est in Romania. It discharges into the Jiul de Est in the town Petrila. Its length is 21 km and its basin size is 88 km2.", "Jong River\n The Jong or Taia river is a river flowing through Sierra Leone. It passes by the city of Mattru Jong, and flows into the Atlantic Ocean via some deltas.", "Taieri River\n The Taieri River is the fourth-longest river in New Zealand and is in Otago in the South Island. Rising in the Lammerlaw Range, it initially flows north, then east around the Rock and Pillar range before turning southeast, reaching the sea 30 km south of Dunedin. The upper reaches meander in a series of convoluted loops across a floodplain above Paerau, close to the aptly named locality of Serpentine; the river has created many small oxbow lakes in this area, some of which have been converted into water meadows. From here the river runs through two small hydroelectric power stations before reaching Patearoa in the Maniototo. The Taieri then arcs through almost 180 degrees, entering a broad glacial valley (the Strath-Taieri) ", "Tairua River\n “Tairua River.” Nzfishing.com, nzfishing.com/auckland-waikato/where-to-fish/tairua-river/. Accessed 18 Oct. 2021.", "Taița\n The Taița is a river in Tulcea County, Romania. North of the town Babadag it discharges into Lake Babadag, which is connected with Lake Razim, a former lagoon of the Black Sea. Its length is 57 km and its basin size is 591 km2.", "Taihiki River\n The Taihiki River is a river of the Auckland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows generally northeast from its sources north of Patumahoe to reach the Waiuku River shortly before the latter's outflow into the Manukau Harbour. As with the Waiuku River, much of the Taihiki's length is as a wide silty estuary.", "Tairua River\n The Tairua River is located on the Coromandel Peninsula in the North Island of New Zealand. It flows north and then northeast for a total of 35 km from its source in the Coromandel Range to the west of Whangamata, passing through the town of Hikuai before reaching the Pacific Ocean at Tairua on the peninsula's east coast. The small Shoe Island lies directly opposite the river's mouth, 2 km into the Pacific.", "Tain River\n Tain River is a river, which flows through Jaman North District of the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana. It is a tributary of the Black Volta, and empties into the Atlantic Ocean.", "Taï\n The local economy is based primarily on agriculture and livestock. Agriculture: Hevea, Cocoa, Coffee, Colatier, Rice, Corn, Cassava, Plantain Bananas, Sweet Bananas, Yam, Taro, Potato, Eggplant, Chili, Okra, Lettuce and Bean. Traditional breeding: Cattle, Sheep, Goat, Pig, Poultry. Traditional fishing and fish farming.", "Tairua River\n The Tairua River is a clean and clear freshwater river that flows into the east coast of the Coromandel Peninsular at Tairua Harbour. The river is equipped with a large rock bed and has beautiful scenery for all fishermen. There are several big fish to be caught from the Tairua, but rainbow trout is the most popular. Most fisherman will access the river from the middle that is easily accessed. For more exclusive fishing fishermen may access the river from the north or south but must be accessed by foot.", "Taieri Mouth\n Taieri Mouth is a small fishing village at the mouth of the Taieri River, New Zealand. Taieri Island (Moturata) lies in the ocean several hundred metres off the river's mouth. It has a white sand beach for swimming and several picnic areas. Moturata is a distinctive landmark which can be walked to at low-tide. Caution is advised as the tides can change quickly. Another feature is the millennium walking track that follows the Taieri River from the mouth through the lower gorge to Henley. The village is located 40 km southwest of central Dunedin on the Southern Scenic Route. It is located in the Clutha District on the boundary of Dunedin City and 10 km east of Lake Waihola. Immediately to its south is the smaller settlement of Taieri Beach, and the two are often considered parts of the same settlement. It gained a little notoriety or sadness in the 1990s as the place where the father of murder suspect David Bain worked.", "Taieri River\n the Taieri near Henley on the Taieri Plains. Google Maps erroneously shows the stretch of the river from the confluence to the mouth as Waipori River. The correct name is shown on the New Zealand government's official NZ Topo Map. There are several possible conjectured derivations for the name Taieri. It may derive from Tai-ari, “to smash or pound up, to pulp”., though some sources suggest that not may come from the Māori word taiari meaning \"spring tide\" or \"shining water\". A further possibility is that it refers to the makotaieri, an edible shark once regarded as a delicacy along the Otago coast. It may be, however, that the shark took its name from the river rather than vice versa.", "Taipa River\n The Taipa River is a river of the northern Northland Region of New Zealand's North Island. It flows west then north, reaching the south of Doubtless Bay at the township of Taipa.", "Taió River\n The Taió River is a river of Santa Catarina state in southeastern Brazil.", "Taï National Park\n Taï National Park (Parc National de Taï) is a national park in Côte d'Ivoire that contains one of the last areas of primary rainforest in West Africa. It was inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1982 due to the diversity of its flora and fauna. Five mammal species of the Taï National Park are on the Red List of Threatened Species: pygmy hippopotamus, olive colobus monkeys, leopards, chimpanzees and Jentink's duiker. Taï National Park is approximately 100 km from the Ivoirian coast on the border with Liberia between the Cavally and Sassandra Rivers. It covers an area of 3,300 km2 with a 200 km2 buffer zone up to 396 m. The Tai Forest reserve was created in 1926, and promoted to national park status in 1972. It was recognized as a UNESCO biosphere reserve in 1978, and added to the list of Natural World Heritage Sites in 1982. The Tai Forest is a natural reservoir of the Ebola virus. The World Health Organization has expressed concern over the proximity of this reservoir to the International Airport at Abidjan.", "Taipoiti River\n The Taipoiti River is a short river of the Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island. One of the headwaters of the Waimakariri River, it flows southeast from the Shaler Range to reach the White River.", "Tai, Rivers\n Tai is a Local Government Area (LGA) of Rivers State in Nigeria. It covers an area of 159 km2 and at the 2006 Census it had a population of 117,797. It is part of the Okrika/Oyigbo/Tai/Eleme constituency of the Nigerian Senate, represented since April 2007 by George Thompson Sekibo. In the April 2007 elections the Tai LGA recorded an implausible 99.6% turnout for the Governorship election. Celestine Omehia of the Rivers State People's Democratic Party was at first declared winner, but his election was later annulled and Rotimi Amaechi, also of the PDP, was declared governor. In February 2009, the Chairman of Tai Local Government Area was Barry Mpigi. Most of ", "Tera River\n The Tera is a river in the north of Spain, a tributary of the River Esla. It is of ecological importance, being the home of 24 species of the European Union Nature Directives. Riberas del Río Tera y afluentes was designated a Special Area of Conservation in 2015.", "Taï\nTempo (west) ", "Clevedon, New Zealand\nOtau and Tuawa near present-day Clevedon, in Te Wairoa River valley ; At Tararua near the mouth of the Rautawhiti Stream, in Te Wairoa River valley ; At Takatekauere, Te Totara, Te Ruato and Pehuwai on the western side of Te Wairoa River ; Te Oue, Mawherawhera, Te Kuiti and Umupuia, on the Whakakaiwhara Peninsula Prior to human settlement, the area was swampy, and Bush moa, Mantell's moa and North Island giant moa bones have been found in the vicinity. Clevedon and surrounding area is traditionally the territory of the Ngāi Tai or Ngāi Tai ki Tāmaki people, who are descendants of the Tainui waka. They call the area Te Wairoa (the Long River). Ngāi Tai traversed their tribal domain, including the inner islands of the Hauraki Gulf, in a seasonal cycle of harvesting, gathering and fishing. Ngā Tai maintained settlements in several places, including: Between the 1830s and 1863, the Te Hingawaka hapū of Ngāti Pāoa lived at the base of Te Oue pā." ]
In what country is Sjösa?
[ "Sweden", "Kingdom of Sweden", "SE", "se", "SWE", "🇸🇪" ]
country
Sjösa
1,758,360
65
[ { "id": "31580686", "title": "Sjösa", "text": " Sjösa is the sole locality in the otherwise rural Svärta electoral ward that covers the area around Svärta Church a few miles to its northwest.", "score": "1.8112023" }, { "id": "31580685", "title": "Sjösa", "text": " Sjösa is a locality situated in Nyköping Municipality, Södermanland County, Sweden with 483 inhabitants in 2010.", "score": "1.7471229" }, { "id": "6395316", "title": "Ljósá", "text": " Ljósá (Lyså) is a village located on Eysturoy in the Faroe Islands, in Eiði Municipality. It is located 4 km south of Eiði and 4 km north of Svínáir. The village was founded around 1840.", "score": "1.4875925" }, { "id": "726884", "title": "Laxá í Kjós", "text": " Laxá í Kjós (Laxá in Kjós) is a river in the Kjósarhreppur municipality of southwestern Iceland. It flows about 20 km from the Stíflisdalsvatn, a small lake northwest of the Þingvallavatn, into the Laxárvogur, a cove on the Hvalfjörður fjord. It is known for its salmon fishing, particularly where the salmon must traverse up several waterfalls. Brown trout and sea trout are also caught in the river. The first salmon hatchery in Iceland, established in 1884 by Danish scientist Arthur Feddersen in the village of Reynivellir, was stocked with 31 spawning salmon captured in the Laxá í Kjós and its main tributary, the Bugða. Other tributaries include the smaller Svínadalsá, Hálsá, and Þverá, all of which flow into the upper section of the river below the Þórufoss.", "score": "1.3896798" }, { "id": "27334420", "title": "Sajos", "text": " Sajos is a Sámi cultural and administrative centre, located on the banks of the Juutuanjoki in Inari, Finland and is the largest convention and event venue in northern Lapland. It houses the Sámi Parliament of Finland, the Sámi Education Centre, the Sámi Archives, the State Provincial Office of Lapland, and a number of other associations. The building was designed by HALO Architects in Oulu and built by Senate Properties at a cost of 15 million euros. Construction was completed in January 2012 and the building inaugurated in April 2012. Dark wood on the outside, the three-storey building is covered in white pine. The design of the building was inspired by Sámi traditions, as stipulated in the competition program. The word Sajos comes from the Inari Sámi language and means 'the base' or 'the position of a place'; it was suggested by Matti Morottaja. The project was finally launched in 1996 with the establishment of the Sámi Parliament of Finland.", "score": "1.3657575" }, { "id": "643346", "title": "Kjósarhreppur", "text": " Kjósarhreppur, also known as Kjós , is a municipality in Iceland. It is the most northern part of the Capital Region and is adjacent to Reykjavík, Bláskógabyggð, and Hvalfjarðarsveit. Kjós is sometimes referred to as \"a countryside in a city\" (sveit í borg) due to its proximity to Reykjavík. The primary industry in Kjós is agriculture. It is home to a number of lakes and rivers, including the Laxá í Kjós, one of the most popular sites for salmon fishing in the country.", "score": "1.3546188" }, { "id": "31088642", "title": "Kjose Station", "text": " Kjose Station (Kjose stasjon) is a railway station on the Vestfold Line in the village of Kjose in Larvik, Norway. The station is served with InterCity Express trains operated by Norwegian State Railways and opened as part of the Vestfold Line in 1882.", "score": "1.3452756" }, { "id": "28421841", "title": "Sjoa Chapel", "text": " Sjoa Chapel (Sjoa kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Sel Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sjoa. It is the annex chapel for the Sel parish which is part of the Nord-Gudbrandsdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar. The brown, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1978 using plans drawn up by the architect Jon Rukin. The church seats about 70 people.", "score": "1.3390052" }, { "id": "31631401", "title": "Kari Kjønaas Kjos", "text": " Kari Kjønaas Kjos (born 25 January 1962 in Oslo) is a Norwegian politician representing the Progress Party. She is a representative of Akershus in the Storting since 2005 where she since 2013 has chairs the Standing Committee on Health and Care Services. She has worked as assistant in kindergartens and had administrative positions in business. She studied economics at BI Norwegian Business School 1993–95. She worked for the Progress Party at district level between 2000 and 2005.", "score": "1.3239634" }, { "id": "11139786", "title": "Socialist Youth Austria", "text": " The Socialist Youth Austria (Sozialistische Jugend Österreich, SJÖ) is a socialist youth organisation in Austria. While not part of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ), there is a close relationship between the two organisations. The basic program of the organisation adopted in 2004 is based on scientific socialism and Marxism, which positions it to the left of its social democratic mother party. The SJÖ is member of the Young European Socialists and the International Union of Socialist Youth.", "score": "1.3098767" }, { "id": "28902537", "title": "Kjos (Kristiansand)", "text": " Kjos is a neighbourhood in the city of Kristiansand in Agder county, Norway. It is located in the Vågsbygd borough, south of Augland and east of Åsane.", "score": "1.3026435" }, { "id": "28746688", "title": "Sjenica", "text": "🇩🇰 Nakskov, Denmark ; 🇹🇷 Kartal, Turkey ", "score": "1.2944986" }, { "id": "29156817", "title": "Sjona Church", "text": " Sjona Church (Sjona kirke) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Rana Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Myklebustad. It is the church for the Sjona parish which is part of the Indre Helgeland prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1896 using plans drawn up by an unknown architect. The church seats about 170 people.", "score": "1.2921346" }, { "id": "5344268", "title": "Ojós", "text": " Ojós is a municipality in the autonomous community of Murcia in southeastern Spain. It is located in the south-west of the north-eastern quarter of the region and has an area of 45.3 km 2 and shares borders with Blanca at its north, Ulea at its north-east, Villanueva del Río Segura at its East, Campos del Río at is south-west and Ricote at its north-west. The municipality was inhabited by 500 people in 2019.", "score": "1.2844236" }, { "id": "864910", "title": "Mjösa Limestone", "text": " The Mjösa Limestone is a geologic formation in Norway. It preserves fossils dating back to the Ordovician period.", "score": "1.2787951" }, { "id": "9292894", "title": "Sjösala vals", "text": " Sjösala vals (\"Waltz of Sjösala\") is a Swedish waltz written in 1941 at Rejmyre by Evert Taube. It was recorded by Sven-Olof Sandberg in 1941 as B-side to his single Flicka från Backafall. It was published in Sjösalaboken in 1942 during the World War II, Taube wanted to \"besjunga skönheten och glädjen som kriget hotar att förgöra\" (\"sing about the beauty and happiness which the war threatens to destroy\"). It is a famous sing-along song in Sweden. Sjösala is the name of the summer house of the family Taube, located in Stavsnäs in the Stockholm archipelago. The description of the family's life at the archipelago has been as a picture of the Swedish summer holiday. The lyrics, which starts with \"Rönnerdahl han skuttar med ett skratt ur sin säng...\", is about Rönnerdahl's summer happiness. In 1969 Sjösala was burnt by Mona Wallén-Hjerpe. Evert Taube sang the song first in the film Gatans serenad, but Sven-Olof Sandberg, Harry Brandelius, De tre hallåmännen and Gustaf Torreblad recorded it before Taube. Even Chilean singer Rosita Serrano, who couldn't speak Swedish, recorded a version of the song in 1943.", "score": "1.2782279" }, { "id": "31580763", "title": "Sjörröd", "text": " Sjörröd is a locality situated in Hässleholm Municipality, Scania County, Sweden with 1,077 inhabitants in 2010.", "score": "1.2754722" }, { "id": "6369974", "title": "Sjambok", "text": " The sjambok or litupa is a heavy leather whip. It is traditionally made from an adult hippopotamus or rhinoceros hide, but is also commonly made out of plastic. A strip of the animal's hide is cut and carved into a strip 0.9 to 1.5 m long, tapering from about 1 in thick at the handle to about 3/8 in at the tip. This strip is then rolled until reaching a tapered-cylindrical form. The resulting whip is both flexible and durable. A plastic version was made for the apartheid era South African Police, and used for riot control. The sjambok was heavily used by the Voortrekkers driving their oxen while migrating from the Cape of Good Hope, and remains in use by herdsmen to drive cattle. They are widely available in South Africa from informal traders to regular stores from a variety of materials, lengths and thicknesses. They are an effective weapon to kill snakes and ward off dogs and other attackers and are still carried in public by many South Africans for self-defense.", "score": "1.2677553" }, { "id": "26205335", "title": "Sørkjosen", "text": " Sørkjosen is a village in Nordreisa Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. The village is located along the shores of the Reisafjorden about 5 km northwest of the municipal center of Storslett. Sørkjosen has many industries including fishing, dairy production, and a sawmill. The 0.79 km2 village has a population (2017) of 864 which gives the village a population density of 1092 PD/km2.", "score": "1.2673166" }, { "id": "27314411", "title": "Sjöbo", "text": " Sjöbo started growing when it became a stop on the railway between Malmö (to the west) and Simrishamn (to the east) in the early 20th century. Today the town of Sjöbo cannot be reached by rail, but a road through central Scania crosses the municipality and town, while another large road from east to west also crosses it. Sjöbo holds the Guinness World Record for the biggest \"spettekaka\" ever made. \"Spettekaka\" (\"spit cake\") is a cake made out of flour, sugar and eggs and baked on a type of rotisserie, or 'spit'. The town is also associated with many cases of opposition to immigration (see Refugee controversy in Sjöbo). In the 2010 election, the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats received 16% of the vote, the highest of any municipality. and also the highest results in the new elections of 2014 with 30% and 40% in 2018.", "score": "1.265693" } ]
[ "Sjösa\n Sjösa is the sole locality in the otherwise rural Svärta electoral ward that covers the area around Svärta Church a few miles to its northwest.", "Sjösa\n Sjösa is a locality situated in Nyköping Municipality, Södermanland County, Sweden with 483 inhabitants in 2010.", "Ljósá\n Ljósá (Lyså) is a village located on Eysturoy in the Faroe Islands, in Eiði Municipality. It is located 4 km south of Eiði and 4 km north of Svínáir. The village was founded around 1840.", "Laxá í Kjós\n Laxá í Kjós (Laxá in Kjós) is a river in the Kjósarhreppur municipality of southwestern Iceland. It flows about 20 km from the Stíflisdalsvatn, a small lake northwest of the Þingvallavatn, into the Laxárvogur, a cove on the Hvalfjörður fjord. It is known for its salmon fishing, particularly where the salmon must traverse up several waterfalls. Brown trout and sea trout are also caught in the river. The first salmon hatchery in Iceland, established in 1884 by Danish scientist Arthur Feddersen in the village of Reynivellir, was stocked with 31 spawning salmon captured in the Laxá í Kjós and its main tributary, the Bugða. Other tributaries include the smaller Svínadalsá, Hálsá, and Þverá, all of which flow into the upper section of the river below the Þórufoss.", "Sajos\n Sajos is a Sámi cultural and administrative centre, located on the banks of the Juutuanjoki in Inari, Finland and is the largest convention and event venue in northern Lapland. It houses the Sámi Parliament of Finland, the Sámi Education Centre, the Sámi Archives, the State Provincial Office of Lapland, and a number of other associations. The building was designed by HALO Architects in Oulu and built by Senate Properties at a cost of 15 million euros. Construction was completed in January 2012 and the building inaugurated in April 2012. Dark wood on the outside, the three-storey building is covered in white pine. The design of the building was inspired by Sámi traditions, as stipulated in the competition program. The word Sajos comes from the Inari Sámi language and means 'the base' or 'the position of a place'; it was suggested by Matti Morottaja. The project was finally launched in 1996 with the establishment of the Sámi Parliament of Finland.", "Kjósarhreppur\n Kjósarhreppur, also known as Kjós , is a municipality in Iceland. It is the most northern part of the Capital Region and is adjacent to Reykjavík, Bláskógabyggð, and Hvalfjarðarsveit. Kjós is sometimes referred to as \"a countryside in a city\" (sveit í borg) due to its proximity to Reykjavík. The primary industry in Kjós is agriculture. It is home to a number of lakes and rivers, including the Laxá í Kjós, one of the most popular sites for salmon fishing in the country.", "Kjose Station\n Kjose Station (Kjose stasjon) is a railway station on the Vestfold Line in the village of Kjose in Larvik, Norway. The station is served with InterCity Express trains operated by Norwegian State Railways and opened as part of the Vestfold Line in 1882.", "Sjoa Chapel\n Sjoa Chapel (Sjoa kapell) is a chapel of the Church of Norway in Sel Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway. It is located in the village of Sjoa. It is the annex chapel for the Sel parish which is part of the Nord-Gudbrandsdal prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Hamar. The brown, wooden church was built in a long church design in 1978 using plans drawn up by the architect Jon Rukin. The church seats about 70 people.", "Kari Kjønaas Kjos\n Kari Kjønaas Kjos (born 25 January 1962 in Oslo) is a Norwegian politician representing the Progress Party. She is a representative of Akershus in the Storting since 2005 where she since 2013 has chairs the Standing Committee on Health and Care Services. She has worked as assistant in kindergartens and had administrative positions in business. She studied economics at BI Norwegian Business School 1993–95. She worked for the Progress Party at district level between 2000 and 2005.", "Socialist Youth Austria\n The Socialist Youth Austria (Sozialistische Jugend Österreich, SJÖ) is a socialist youth organisation in Austria. While not part of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ), there is a close relationship between the two organisations. The basic program of the organisation adopted in 2004 is based on scientific socialism and Marxism, which positions it to the left of its social democratic mother party. The SJÖ is member of the Young European Socialists and the International Union of Socialist Youth.", "Kjos (Kristiansand)\n Kjos is a neighbourhood in the city of Kristiansand in Agder county, Norway. It is located in the Vågsbygd borough, south of Augland and east of Åsane.", "Sjenica\n🇩🇰 Nakskov, Denmark ; 🇹🇷 Kartal, Turkey ", "Sjona Church\n Sjona Church (Sjona kirke) is a parish church of the Church of Norway in Rana Municipality in Nordland county, Norway. It is located in the village of Myklebustad. It is the church for the Sjona parish which is part of the Indre Helgeland prosti (deanery) in the Diocese of Sør-Hålogaland. The white, wooden church was built in a long church style in 1896 using plans drawn up by an unknown architect. The church seats about 170 people.", "Ojós\n Ojós is a municipality in the autonomous community of Murcia in southeastern Spain. It is located in the south-west of the north-eastern quarter of the region and has an area of 45.3 km 2 and shares borders with Blanca at its north, Ulea at its north-east, Villanueva del Río Segura at its East, Campos del Río at is south-west and Ricote at its north-west. The municipality was inhabited by 500 people in 2019.", "Mjösa Limestone\n The Mjösa Limestone is a geologic formation in Norway. It preserves fossils dating back to the Ordovician period.", "Sjösala vals\n Sjösala vals (\"Waltz of Sjösala\") is a Swedish waltz written in 1941 at Rejmyre by Evert Taube. It was recorded by Sven-Olof Sandberg in 1941 as B-side to his single Flicka från Backafall. It was published in Sjösalaboken in 1942 during the World War II, Taube wanted to \"besjunga skönheten och glädjen som kriget hotar att förgöra\" (\"sing about the beauty and happiness which the war threatens to destroy\"). It is a famous sing-along song in Sweden. Sjösala is the name of the summer house of the family Taube, located in Stavsnäs in the Stockholm archipelago. The description of the family's life at the archipelago has been as a picture of the Swedish summer holiday. The lyrics, which starts with \"Rönnerdahl han skuttar med ett skratt ur sin säng...\", is about Rönnerdahl's summer happiness. In 1969 Sjösala was burnt by Mona Wallén-Hjerpe. Evert Taube sang the song first in the film Gatans serenad, but Sven-Olof Sandberg, Harry Brandelius, De tre hallåmännen and Gustaf Torreblad recorded it before Taube. Even Chilean singer Rosita Serrano, who couldn't speak Swedish, recorded a version of the song in 1943.", "Sjörröd\n Sjörröd is a locality situated in Hässleholm Municipality, Scania County, Sweden with 1,077 inhabitants in 2010.", "Sjambok\n The sjambok or litupa is a heavy leather whip. It is traditionally made from an adult hippopotamus or rhinoceros hide, but is also commonly made out of plastic. A strip of the animal's hide is cut and carved into a strip 0.9 to 1.5 m long, tapering from about 1 in thick at the handle to about 3/8 in at the tip. This strip is then rolled until reaching a tapered-cylindrical form. The resulting whip is both flexible and durable. A plastic version was made for the apartheid era South African Police, and used for riot control. The sjambok was heavily used by the Voortrekkers driving their oxen while migrating from the Cape of Good Hope, and remains in use by herdsmen to drive cattle. They are widely available in South Africa from informal traders to regular stores from a variety of materials, lengths and thicknesses. They are an effective weapon to kill snakes and ward off dogs and other attackers and are still carried in public by many South Africans for self-defense.", "Sørkjosen\n Sørkjosen is a village in Nordreisa Municipality in Troms og Finnmark county, Norway. The village is located along the shores of the Reisafjorden about 5 km northwest of the municipal center of Storslett. Sørkjosen has many industries including fishing, dairy production, and a sawmill. The 0.79 km2 village has a population (2017) of 864 which gives the village a population density of 1092 PD/km2.", "Sjöbo\n Sjöbo started growing when it became a stop on the railway between Malmö (to the west) and Simrishamn (to the east) in the early 20th century. Today the town of Sjöbo cannot be reached by rail, but a road through central Scania crosses the municipality and town, while another large road from east to west also crosses it. Sjöbo holds the Guinness World Record for the biggest \"spettekaka\" ever made. \"Spettekaka\" (\"spit cake\") is a cake made out of flour, sugar and eggs and baked on a type of rotisserie, or 'spit'. The town is also associated with many cases of opposition to immigration (see Refugee controversy in Sjöbo). In the 2010 election, the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats received 16% of the vote, the highest of any municipality. and also the highest results in the new elections of 2014 with 30% and 40% in 2018." ]
In what country is Morales de Campos?
[ "Spain", "España", "Kingdom of Spain", "ES", "ESP" ]
country
Morales de Campos
1,475,631
56
[ { "id": "26273089", "title": "Morales de Campos", "text": " Morales de Campos is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 179 inhabitants.", "score": "1.7221761" }, { "id": "25413314", "title": "Jhasmani Campos", "text": " Jhasmani Campos Dávalos (born 10 May 1988 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra) is a Bolivian football midfielder who plays for The Strongest. Campos is known for his long-distance shots, play-making, technique and high penalty kick conversion rate. In fact, he has never missed a penalty kick in his professional career to date.", "score": "1.5473963" }, { "id": "25147827", "title": "Daniel Campos Province", "text": " Daniel Campos is a province in the north-western parts of the Bolivian Potosí Department. It is named after the poet Daniel Campos who originated from this area. The capital of the province is Llica.", "score": "1.5035326" }, { "id": "14177639", "title": "Morales del Arcediano", "text": " Morales del Arcediano is a locality and minor local entity located in the municipality of Santiago Millas, in León province, Castile and León, Spain. As of 2020, it has a population of 51.", "score": "1.4886309" }, { "id": "4863063", "title": "General Campos", "text": " General Campos is a town in the center-east of the Province of Entre Ríos, Argentina.It is located about 35 km west of the Uruguay River and 220 km east from the provincial capital Paraná. The town was founded on June 8, 1913.", "score": "1.4874876" }, { "id": "25147828", "title": "Daniel Campos Province", "text": " Daniel Campos province is one of sixteen provinces in the Potosí Department. It is located between 19° 25' and 20° 50' South and between 66° 49' and 68° 47' West. It borders Oruro Department in the north, the Republic of Chile in the west, Nor Lípez Province in the south, and Antonio Quijarro Province in the east. The province extends over 240 km from east to west and 180 km from north to south.", "score": "1.4636893" }, { "id": "7041811", "title": "Campos, Spain", "text": "Aljub de la Font Santa, an historic building, housing a rainwater storage well, built in 1671–1673. ", "score": "1.4612532" }, { "id": "12661975", "title": "Matías Morales", "text": " .", "score": "1.4608271" }, { "id": "6027986", "title": "Roberto Morales Ojeda", "text": " Born in the province of Cienfuegos, Morales Ojeda completed a degree in medicine in 1991, with a specialization in comprehensive and general medicine. He later completed a master's degree in public health. He was elected to the National Assembly of People's Power in 2008. In 2014, he served as President of the sixty-seventh session of the WHO's World Health Assembly. On 19 April 2018, he was elected one of the six Vice-Presidents of Cuba. The National Assembly officially approved his, as well as other Cabinet nominations, in a vote of confidence on 21 July 2018.", "score": "1.4590735" }, { "id": "26107198", "title": "Morales de Toro", "text": " Morales de Toro is a municipality located in the province of Zamora, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 1,078 inhabitants.", "score": "1.4411117" }, { "id": "25662751", "title": "Pablo Campos", "text": " On April 30, 2015, Campos announced that he had become an American citizen.", "score": "1.4359627" }, { "id": "26902885", "title": "Carlos Campos (clothing brand)", "text": " The Carlos Campos Foundation in Honduras is responsible for assisting single mothers with resources from childcare to job training. The label also cooperates with “Aid for AIDS”, a non-profit organization committed to improving the quality of life of people living with HIV/AIDS in Latin America and the Caribbean. Carlos Campos is also a founder member of Honduras Global, an organization dedicated to link leading Hondurans abroad and their expertise to help share knowledge and experience for beneficial purposes to young local Hondurans.", "score": "1.433674" }, { "id": "26618321", "title": "Amildo Morales", "text": " Amildo de Jesús Morales Rodríguez (17 April 1938 – 10 October 2014) was a Guatemalan politician. He was elected as member of the Congress of Guatemala in 2011 then representing the Nationalist Change Union. In 2012 he affiliated to the Patriotic Party. In the morning of 10 October 2014 Morales was severely injured when a bull of his property attacked him in one of his farms in Jalapa. He died hours later.", "score": "1.43221" }, { "id": "6027985", "title": "Roberto Morales Ojeda", "text": " Roberto Tomás Morales Ojeda (born 15 June 1967) is a Cuban physician and politician who currently serves as a Vice President of Cuba. He is a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC) and, between 2010 and 2018, served in the Council of Ministers as Minister of Public Health.", "score": "1.4320679" }, { "id": "25413317", "title": "Jhasmani Campos", "text": " During 2007, Campos joined the Bolivia U-20 squad for the South American Youth Championship held in Paraguay, where he scored two goals in four games. He also received his first call-up to the senior Bolivia national team for a friendly match against South Africa on 28 March. In June of that year, he played for Bolivia in Copa América 2007, where he scored his first international goal against Peru. As of 1 June 2015, he has represented his country in 13 FIFA World Cup qualification matches.", "score": "1.4277123" }, { "id": "29398299", "title": "Wagner de Campos Rosário", "text": " Wagner de Campos Rosário (Juiz de Fora) is the current Brazilian Minister of Transparency, Supervision and Control, having temporarily assumed the post after the resignation of Torquato Jardim and the refusal of Osmar Serraglio, and became effective thereafter. On November 20, 2018, President-elect Jair Bolsonaro stated that Wagner Campos will remain in the ministry. Rosário served as a career servant at the Ministry of Transparency, Supervision and Control and, from August 2016 until March 2017, he was executive secretary of the pulp. He was also captain of the Army.", "score": "1.4262244" }, { "id": "11038121", "title": "Carlos Morales Troncoso", "text": " ; In Honduras the José Cecilio del Valle Order ; In Chile the Order of Excellence Doctor Honoris Causa – Technological University of Santiago (UTESA) (1979) ; Distinguished Graduate in the Business World Louisiana State University (1981) ; Free Enterprise Award – Best Cluster Company Gulf & Western Industries, Inc. (1982) ; Doctor Honoris Causa of Humanities Chicago State University (1987) ; Julián Barceló Award as Sports Promoter Asociación de Cronistas Deportivos & Barceló & Cia. (1989) Morales has received decorations from the governments of Taiwan, Italy, and Costa Rica He was decorated with: Furthermore he has received the follow awards:", "score": "1.422123" }, { "id": "26569510", "title": "Leonardo Morales Morales", "text": " Leonardo Morales Morales from Hatillo, San José, Costa Rica is the outgoing Regional Chair of the Interamerican Regional Scout Committee of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM). as well as a member of the International Catholic Conference of Scouting. Morales is the Executive Director at VIDA Volunteering and Environmental Organization in San José, Costa Rica, and previously worked for the Asociación de Guías y Scouts de Costa Rica and studied at COVOMOSA in Desamparados. He is married and lives in San Rafael de Heredia.", "score": "1.4212222" }, { "id": "28958105", "title": "Ángel Morales", "text": " Morales was born in Buenos Aires. In his extensive professional career, he represented six clubs in his country, including both Avellaneda giants, Club Atlético Independiente and Racing Club, starting his career at the former and having two spells with both. His first abroad experience came in June 1997, at the age of 22, as he played in Italy for U.C. Sampdoria for a few months, scoring against Juventus FC. In the ensuing transfer window, he signed with CP Mérida in Spain, but collected almost no La Liga appearances in a relegation-ending season. After returning to his country, with Racing, Morales moved abroad again, playing for Mexican sides Cruz Azul, Tiburones Rojos de Veracruz and Dorados de Sinaloa. At 33, he signed with Uruguay's Club Nacional de Football and, two years later, in 2010, returned to his country and joined Club Atlético Huracán.", "score": "1.4116511" }, { "id": "13797605", "title": "Rafael Campos (golfer)", "text": " Campos turned professional in 2011 and the following year finished third on the Tour de las Américas Order of Merit. In 2015 he finished third on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica Order of Merit, allowing him to become a Web.com Tour member in 2016. He finished 111th on the Web.com Tour money list in 2016 and did not retain membership. In March 2017, playing on a sponsor exemption, he tied for 10th at the Puerto Rico Open on the PGA Tour. This allowed him to compete in the following week's Shell Houston Open, where he finished 7th. In May he played the Web.com Tour's Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship on a sponsor exemption and tied ", "score": "1.4116378" } ]
[ "Morales de Campos\n Morales de Campos is a municipality located in the province of Valladolid, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 179 inhabitants.", "Jhasmani Campos\n Jhasmani Campos Dávalos (born 10 May 1988 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra) is a Bolivian football midfielder who plays for The Strongest. Campos is known for his long-distance shots, play-making, technique and high penalty kick conversion rate. In fact, he has never missed a penalty kick in his professional career to date.", "Daniel Campos Province\n Daniel Campos is a province in the north-western parts of the Bolivian Potosí Department. It is named after the poet Daniel Campos who originated from this area. The capital of the province is Llica.", "Morales del Arcediano\n Morales del Arcediano is a locality and minor local entity located in the municipality of Santiago Millas, in León province, Castile and León, Spain. As of 2020, it has a population of 51.", "General Campos\n General Campos is a town in the center-east of the Province of Entre Ríos, Argentina.It is located about 35 km west of the Uruguay River and 220 km east from the provincial capital Paraná. The town was founded on June 8, 1913.", "Daniel Campos Province\n Daniel Campos province is one of sixteen provinces in the Potosí Department. It is located between 19° 25' and 20° 50' South and between 66° 49' and 68° 47' West. It borders Oruro Department in the north, the Republic of Chile in the west, Nor Lípez Province in the south, and Antonio Quijarro Province in the east. The province extends over 240 km from east to west and 180 km from north to south.", "Campos, Spain\nAljub de la Font Santa, an historic building, housing a rainwater storage well, built in 1671–1673. ", "Matías Morales\n .", "Roberto Morales Ojeda\n Born in the province of Cienfuegos, Morales Ojeda completed a degree in medicine in 1991, with a specialization in comprehensive and general medicine. He later completed a master's degree in public health. He was elected to the National Assembly of People's Power in 2008. In 2014, he served as President of the sixty-seventh session of the WHO's World Health Assembly. On 19 April 2018, he was elected one of the six Vice-Presidents of Cuba. The National Assembly officially approved his, as well as other Cabinet nominations, in a vote of confidence on 21 July 2018.", "Morales de Toro\n Morales de Toro is a municipality located in the province of Zamora, Castile and León, Spain. According to the 2004 census (INE), the municipality has a population of 1,078 inhabitants.", "Pablo Campos\n On April 30, 2015, Campos announced that he had become an American citizen.", "Carlos Campos (clothing brand)\n The Carlos Campos Foundation in Honduras is responsible for assisting single mothers with resources from childcare to job training. The label also cooperates with “Aid for AIDS”, a non-profit organization committed to improving the quality of life of people living with HIV/AIDS in Latin America and the Caribbean. Carlos Campos is also a founder member of Honduras Global, an organization dedicated to link leading Hondurans abroad and their expertise to help share knowledge and experience for beneficial purposes to young local Hondurans.", "Amildo Morales\n Amildo de Jesús Morales Rodríguez (17 April 1938 – 10 October 2014) was a Guatemalan politician. He was elected as member of the Congress of Guatemala in 2011 then representing the Nationalist Change Union. In 2012 he affiliated to the Patriotic Party. In the morning of 10 October 2014 Morales was severely injured when a bull of his property attacked him in one of his farms in Jalapa. He died hours later.", "Roberto Morales Ojeda\n Roberto Tomás Morales Ojeda (born 15 June 1967) is a Cuban physician and politician who currently serves as a Vice President of Cuba. He is a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of Cuba (PCC) and, between 2010 and 2018, served in the Council of Ministers as Minister of Public Health.", "Jhasmani Campos\n During 2007, Campos joined the Bolivia U-20 squad for the South American Youth Championship held in Paraguay, where he scored two goals in four games. He also received his first call-up to the senior Bolivia national team for a friendly match against South Africa on 28 March. In June of that year, he played for Bolivia in Copa América 2007, where he scored his first international goal against Peru. As of 1 June 2015, he has represented his country in 13 FIFA World Cup qualification matches.", "Wagner de Campos Rosário\n Wagner de Campos Rosário (Juiz de Fora) is the current Brazilian Minister of Transparency, Supervision and Control, having temporarily assumed the post after the resignation of Torquato Jardim and the refusal of Osmar Serraglio, and became effective thereafter. On November 20, 2018, President-elect Jair Bolsonaro stated that Wagner Campos will remain in the ministry. Rosário served as a career servant at the Ministry of Transparency, Supervision and Control and, from August 2016 until March 2017, he was executive secretary of the pulp. He was also captain of the Army.", "Carlos Morales Troncoso\n ; In Honduras the José Cecilio del Valle Order ; In Chile the Order of Excellence Doctor Honoris Causa – Technological University of Santiago (UTESA) (1979) ; Distinguished Graduate in the Business World Louisiana State University (1981) ; Free Enterprise Award – Best Cluster Company Gulf & Western Industries, Inc. (1982) ; Doctor Honoris Causa of Humanities Chicago State University (1987) ; Julián Barceló Award as Sports Promoter Asociación de Cronistas Deportivos & Barceló & Cia. (1989) Morales has received decorations from the governments of Taiwan, Italy, and Costa Rica He was decorated with: Furthermore he has received the follow awards:", "Leonardo Morales Morales\n Leonardo Morales Morales from Hatillo, San José, Costa Rica is the outgoing Regional Chair of the Interamerican Regional Scout Committee of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM). as well as a member of the International Catholic Conference of Scouting. Morales is the Executive Director at VIDA Volunteering and Environmental Organization in San José, Costa Rica, and previously worked for the Asociación de Guías y Scouts de Costa Rica and studied at COVOMOSA in Desamparados. He is married and lives in San Rafael de Heredia.", "Ángel Morales\n Morales was born in Buenos Aires. In his extensive professional career, he represented six clubs in his country, including both Avellaneda giants, Club Atlético Independiente and Racing Club, starting his career at the former and having two spells with both. His first abroad experience came in June 1997, at the age of 22, as he played in Italy for U.C. Sampdoria for a few months, scoring against Juventus FC. In the ensuing transfer window, he signed with CP Mérida in Spain, but collected almost no La Liga appearances in a relegation-ending season. After returning to his country, with Racing, Morales moved abroad again, playing for Mexican sides Cruz Azul, Tiburones Rojos de Veracruz and Dorados de Sinaloa. At 33, he signed with Uruguay's Club Nacional de Football and, two years later, in 2010, returned to his country and joined Club Atlético Huracán.", "Rafael Campos (golfer)\n Campos turned professional in 2011 and the following year finished third on the Tour de las Américas Order of Merit. In 2015 he finished third on the PGA Tour Latinoamérica Order of Merit, allowing him to become a Web.com Tour member in 2016. He finished 111th on the Web.com Tour money list in 2016 and did not retain membership. In March 2017, playing on a sponsor exemption, he tied for 10th at the Puerto Rico Open on the PGA Tour. This allowed him to compete in the following week's Shell Houston Open, where he finished 7th. In May he played the Web.com Tour's Corales Puntacana Resort and Club Championship on a sponsor exemption and tied " ]
In what country is Dobra River?
[ "Romania", "Roumania", "Rumania", "România", "ro", "🇷🇴" ]
country
Dobra River (Lotru)
3,927,118
11
[ { "id": "25947220", "title": "Dobra (Sella)", "text": " The Dobra is a river in northern Spain flowing through the Autonomous Community of Asturias.", "score": "1.8183758" }, { "id": "30285907", "title": "Dobra (Kupa)", "text": " in test operation ), running in parallel to the Kupa and Mrežnica, and finally flows into the Kupa north of Karlovac. The Dobra river is rich in ichthyofauna and ornithofauna. The Upper and Lower Dobra river are abundant with fish species: brown and rainbow trout, grayling, chub, barbel, bleak, carp, and tench, all in Upper Dobra, while the Lower Dobra is one of the rare Croatian rivers that has fish species such as sprout, pike, chub, pomfret, and barbel. North of Ogulin, near Gojak, the water of Dobra is harvested for the Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant, a hydroelectric power plant built to utilize the rivers Dobra and Mrežnica. In 2010. the Lešće hydroelectric power plant started operating on the Lower Dobra section of the river. Two motorway bridges have been built over the Dobra: the Dobra Bridge (A1) and the Dobra Bridge (A6).", "score": "1.7833073" }, { "id": "30285906", "title": "Dobra (Kupa)", "text": " The Dobra is a river located mostly in the Karlovac County in the Republic of Croatia. It is 104.2 km long and its basin covers an area of 1428 km2. Its name is the feminine form of the Croatian adjective meaning \"good\" but it is over simplistic folk etymology. The river name probably comes from the Celtic, dubron meaning ‘water’, Illyrian δυβρις (dybris) ‘deep’ or Old Slavonic dъbrь (dubri, debra) also ‘deep’ or ‘valley’. Dobra rises in Gorski Kotar near Skrad and Ravna Gora, where it flows first to the north and then turns to the east. It flows past Vrbovsko, to the southeast into the city of Ogulin, where it becomes an underground stream. It takes a sharp northward turn and rises back to the surface north of Ogulin. It continues to the northeast, past the Lešće spa and a hydroelectric plant (built ", "score": "1.7814863" }, { "id": "30285908", "title": "Dobra (Kupa)", "text": " Upper Dobra or Ogulin Dobra (Ogulinska Dobra in Croatian) is a typical torrential water with sudden and big changes in volume flow, while the average slope decline is 1.4%. A smaller river Kamačnik flows into Dobra near Vrbovsko. Until 1957 Dobra was disappearing in Đula's pit, a huge pit in the center of Ogulin. The Upper Dobra river was diverted into the system of the Hydroelectric power plant Gojak some 1.5 km upstream of Đula's pit, and by doing that an artificial lake Bukovnik was created. From the dam down to Đula's pit the river bed is filled with water that is there only once in a while, whenever there's heavy rainfall which causes the river to overflow the dam.", "score": "1.7252126" }, { "id": "1957132", "title": "Dobra Bridge (A1)", "text": " The Dobra Bridge is located between Karlovac and Novigrad interchanges of the A1 motorway in Croatia, spanning Dobra River. It is 546 m long, and it comprises four traffic lanes and two emergency lanes. Construction work on the Dobra Bridge started in 1999 and was completed in 2001. Cost of the construction work was 57 million Croatian kuna (7.7 million euro). During the construction there was one major incident: on 1 July 2000, three girders plummeted from the main span piers into the river below. The incident did not cause any injury and damage was reported to be marginal.", "score": "1.6602854" }, { "id": "5190108", "title": "Dobra Bridge (A6)", "text": " Dobra Bridge is located between the Vrbovsko and Ravna Gora interchanges of the A6 motorway in Gorski Kotar, Croatia, spanning Dobra River. It is 246.95 m long and carries the motorway across five spans. The bridge consists of two parallel structures, both completed in 2003 by Primorje. The bridge is tolled within the A6 motorway ticket system and there are no separate toll plazas associated with use of the bridge. The bridge is located in a water protection area.", "score": "1.6460395" }, { "id": "3053442", "title": "Dobrá (Frýdek-Místek District)", "text": " Dobrá (Dobra, Dobrau) is a municipality and village in the Frýdek-Místek District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 3,200 inhabitants. It lies on the Morávka River, in the historical region of Cieszyn Silesia.", "score": "1.6456037" }, { "id": "3053445", "title": "Dobrá (Frýdek-Místek District)", "text": "🇵🇱 Buczkowice, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Mucharz, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Ochodnica, Slovakia Dobrá is twinned with:", "score": "1.607075" }, { "id": "12792360", "title": "Döbra, Namibia", "text": " Döbra is a settlement about 25 km north of the capital Windhoek. There is also a mountain with the same name which is 2023m above sea level. It is located near the Kürsteneck in the Eros Mountains and around 6 km west of Otjihase mine. Döbra houses a mission station of the Roman Catholic Church in Namibia, part of the Archdiocese of Windhoek. The mission station ran a teacher training centre, St Joseph's Teacher Training Centre since 1924, and a school, St Joseph's Roman Catholic High School. The high school is still active. The teacher training centre at Döbra was one of very few institutions in the territory of South-West Africa that offered tertiary education to the indigenous population. It graduated many students that after Namibian independence became high-profile people in society. It also developed into a centre of resistance. The Namibia National Students Organisation (NANSO) was founded here on 2 June 1984, and the 1988 student protests in Namibia started with a march from Döbra to the capital.", "score": "1.5945934" }, { "id": "6471577", "title": "Steindöbra", "text": " Steindöbra is a river of Saxony, Germany. Above from its junction with Steinbach, it also takes the name of Mühlbach. It is a right tributary of the Brunndöbra, which it joins in Klingenthal. Its spring is located roughly 850m above sea level near the top of Mühlleiten pass in the western Ore Mountains. It flows south, traversing Sachsenberg-Georgenthal, a district of Klingenthal. After approximately three kilometers, it unites with Brunndöbra and hence continues as Döbra, which in turn unites with the Zwota, its waters thus flowing via Ohře and Elbe into the North Sea. Before flowing into Brunndöbra, a large portion of its course runs side by side with the track of the former meter-gauge light rail.", "score": "1.5778365" }, { "id": "1957134", "title": "Dobra Bridge (A1)", "text": " Traffic is regularly counted and reported by Autocesta Rijeka – Zagreb, operator of the bridge and the part of the A1 motorway where the bridge is located, and published by Hrvatske ceste. Substantial variations between annual (AADT) and summer (ASDT) traffic volumes are attributed to the fact that the bridge carries substantial tourist traffic to the Dalmatian Adriatic resorts. The traffic count is performed using analysis of motorway toll ticket sales.", "score": "1.5634996" }, { "id": "26655945", "title": "Obertraubling", "text": "🇨🇿 Czech Republic, Dobřany ", "score": "1.561903" }, { "id": "30516177", "title": "Dobra Voda (Bar)", "text": " According to the 2011 census, its population was 1,046.", "score": "1.5609772" }, { "id": "11057655", "title": "Dobra Voda (mountain)", "text": " Dobra Voda (Macedonian Cyrillic: Добра Вода, Albanian Ujmir) is a mountain near the town of Kičevo in North Macedonia. It is the highest peak of the Čeloica mountain range, at 2062 metres above the sea level. Due to tectonic movements, the height of this peak and surrounding mountains continues to rise. This is actually why North Macedonia experiences moderate earthquakes around this region. The name translated literally means good water. From the top of this peak it is possible to view many surrounding towns - Gostivar, Kičevo, Tetovo - and nearby villages. The main sources of the Treska river are placed within the Čeloica mountain range.", "score": "1.5572813" }, { "id": "286447", "title": "Dobra, Łobez County", "text": " Dobra (Daber), also known as Dobra Nowogardzka, is a town in Łobez County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, with 2,046 inhabitants (2004).", "score": "1.5545816" }, { "id": "27665950", "title": "Dobrá, Trebišov District", "text": " The village is about 86% Hungarian, 9% Slovak and 5% Gypsy in ethnicity.", "score": "1.5309362" }, { "id": "26846454", "title": "Tebra River", "text": " The Tebra is a river in Aizpute and Pāvilosta municipalities of Latvia. It originates from Podnieki Lake Kalvene Parish. Most of the river flow is in the hills of western Latvia (Bandavas Hills and Apricot Plain). In the middle of the river there is a pronounced valley, which reaches depth of 10–20 m and has many ponds. A water reservoir (mill pond) Aizpute. The main tributaries are the rivers Aloxte (right) and Grabstes (left). Near settlement Saka river merges with Durbe, forming the Saka River. On the shores of the Tebra river there are several large populated areas: Aizpute, Štakeldanga, Apriki. River is crossed by a motorway P112.", "score": "1.523952" }, { "id": "33085875", "title": "Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant", "text": " Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant is a hydroelectric power plant on river Dobra, near the town of Ogulin, in Karlovac County, Croatia. Its total capacity is 55.5 MW. The Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant is a high pressure diversion plant which harnesses the river power of the Ogulinska Dobra and Zagorska Mrežnica rivers. It is operated by the Croatian state-owned electrical company, Hrvatska elektroprivreda.", "score": "1.5077462" }, { "id": "31986279", "title": "Rebra (river)", "text": " The Rebra is a right tributary of the river Someșul Mare in Romania. Its source is in the Rodna Mountains. It discharges into the Someșul Mare near Rebrișoara. Its length is 44 km and its basin size is 199 km2. The upper reach of the river, upstream from the confluence with the Gușatul Mare at Gura Rebra, is also known as Rebrișoara.", "score": "1.5071864" }, { "id": "286321", "title": "Dobra, Turek County", "text": " Dobra is a town in Turek County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, with 1,562 inhabitants (2004).", "score": "1.5063543" } ]
[ "Dobra (Sella)\n The Dobra is a river in northern Spain flowing through the Autonomous Community of Asturias.", "Dobra (Kupa)\n in test operation ), running in parallel to the Kupa and Mrežnica, and finally flows into the Kupa north of Karlovac. The Dobra river is rich in ichthyofauna and ornithofauna. The Upper and Lower Dobra river are abundant with fish species: brown and rainbow trout, grayling, chub, barbel, bleak, carp, and tench, all in Upper Dobra, while the Lower Dobra is one of the rare Croatian rivers that has fish species such as sprout, pike, chub, pomfret, and barbel. North of Ogulin, near Gojak, the water of Dobra is harvested for the Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant, a hydroelectric power plant built to utilize the rivers Dobra and Mrežnica. In 2010. the Lešće hydroelectric power plant started operating on the Lower Dobra section of the river. Two motorway bridges have been built over the Dobra: the Dobra Bridge (A1) and the Dobra Bridge (A6).", "Dobra (Kupa)\n The Dobra is a river located mostly in the Karlovac County in the Republic of Croatia. It is 104.2 km long and its basin covers an area of 1428 km2. Its name is the feminine form of the Croatian adjective meaning \"good\" but it is over simplistic folk etymology. The river name probably comes from the Celtic, dubron meaning ‘water’, Illyrian δυβρις (dybris) ‘deep’ or Old Slavonic dъbrь (dubri, debra) also ‘deep’ or ‘valley’. Dobra rises in Gorski Kotar near Skrad and Ravna Gora, where it flows first to the north and then turns to the east. It flows past Vrbovsko, to the southeast into the city of Ogulin, where it becomes an underground stream. It takes a sharp northward turn and rises back to the surface north of Ogulin. It continues to the northeast, past the Lešće spa and a hydroelectric plant (built ", "Dobra (Kupa)\n Upper Dobra or Ogulin Dobra (Ogulinska Dobra in Croatian) is a typical torrential water with sudden and big changes in volume flow, while the average slope decline is 1.4%. A smaller river Kamačnik flows into Dobra near Vrbovsko. Until 1957 Dobra was disappearing in Đula's pit, a huge pit in the center of Ogulin. The Upper Dobra river was diverted into the system of the Hydroelectric power plant Gojak some 1.5 km upstream of Đula's pit, and by doing that an artificial lake Bukovnik was created. From the dam down to Đula's pit the river bed is filled with water that is there only once in a while, whenever there's heavy rainfall which causes the river to overflow the dam.", "Dobra Bridge (A1)\n The Dobra Bridge is located between Karlovac and Novigrad interchanges of the A1 motorway in Croatia, spanning Dobra River. It is 546 m long, and it comprises four traffic lanes and two emergency lanes. Construction work on the Dobra Bridge started in 1999 and was completed in 2001. Cost of the construction work was 57 million Croatian kuna (7.7 million euro). During the construction there was one major incident: on 1 July 2000, three girders plummeted from the main span piers into the river below. The incident did not cause any injury and damage was reported to be marginal.", "Dobra Bridge (A6)\n Dobra Bridge is located between the Vrbovsko and Ravna Gora interchanges of the A6 motorway in Gorski Kotar, Croatia, spanning Dobra River. It is 246.95 m long and carries the motorway across five spans. The bridge consists of two parallel structures, both completed in 2003 by Primorje. The bridge is tolled within the A6 motorway ticket system and there are no separate toll plazas associated with use of the bridge. The bridge is located in a water protection area.", "Dobrá (Frýdek-Místek District)\n Dobrá (Dobra, Dobrau) is a municipality and village in the Frýdek-Místek District in the Moravian-Silesian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 3,200 inhabitants. It lies on the Morávka River, in the historical region of Cieszyn Silesia.", "Dobrá (Frýdek-Místek District)\n🇵🇱 Buczkowice, Poland ; 🇵🇱 Mucharz, Poland ; 🇸🇰 Ochodnica, Slovakia Dobrá is twinned with:", "Döbra, Namibia\n Döbra is a settlement about 25 km north of the capital Windhoek. There is also a mountain with the same name which is 2023m above sea level. It is located near the Kürsteneck in the Eros Mountains and around 6 km west of Otjihase mine. Döbra houses a mission station of the Roman Catholic Church in Namibia, part of the Archdiocese of Windhoek. The mission station ran a teacher training centre, St Joseph's Teacher Training Centre since 1924, and a school, St Joseph's Roman Catholic High School. The high school is still active. The teacher training centre at Döbra was one of very few institutions in the territory of South-West Africa that offered tertiary education to the indigenous population. It graduated many students that after Namibian independence became high-profile people in society. It also developed into a centre of resistance. The Namibia National Students Organisation (NANSO) was founded here on 2 June 1984, and the 1988 student protests in Namibia started with a march from Döbra to the capital.", "Steindöbra\n Steindöbra is a river of Saxony, Germany. Above from its junction with Steinbach, it also takes the name of Mühlbach. It is a right tributary of the Brunndöbra, which it joins in Klingenthal. Its spring is located roughly 850m above sea level near the top of Mühlleiten pass in the western Ore Mountains. It flows south, traversing Sachsenberg-Georgenthal, a district of Klingenthal. After approximately three kilometers, it unites with Brunndöbra and hence continues as Döbra, which in turn unites with the Zwota, its waters thus flowing via Ohře and Elbe into the North Sea. Before flowing into Brunndöbra, a large portion of its course runs side by side with the track of the former meter-gauge light rail.", "Dobra Bridge (A1)\n Traffic is regularly counted and reported by Autocesta Rijeka – Zagreb, operator of the bridge and the part of the A1 motorway where the bridge is located, and published by Hrvatske ceste. Substantial variations between annual (AADT) and summer (ASDT) traffic volumes are attributed to the fact that the bridge carries substantial tourist traffic to the Dalmatian Adriatic resorts. The traffic count is performed using analysis of motorway toll ticket sales.", "Obertraubling\n🇨🇿 Czech Republic, Dobřany ", "Dobra Voda (Bar)\n According to the 2011 census, its population was 1,046.", "Dobra Voda (mountain)\n Dobra Voda (Macedonian Cyrillic: Добра Вода, Albanian Ujmir) is a mountain near the town of Kičevo in North Macedonia. It is the highest peak of the Čeloica mountain range, at 2062 metres above the sea level. Due to tectonic movements, the height of this peak and surrounding mountains continues to rise. This is actually why North Macedonia experiences moderate earthquakes around this region. The name translated literally means good water. From the top of this peak it is possible to view many surrounding towns - Gostivar, Kičevo, Tetovo - and nearby villages. The main sources of the Treska river are placed within the Čeloica mountain range.", "Dobra, Łobez County\n Dobra (Daber), also known as Dobra Nowogardzka, is a town in Łobez County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland, with 2,046 inhabitants (2004).", "Dobrá, Trebišov District\n The village is about 86% Hungarian, 9% Slovak and 5% Gypsy in ethnicity.", "Tebra River\n The Tebra is a river in Aizpute and Pāvilosta municipalities of Latvia. It originates from Podnieki Lake Kalvene Parish. Most of the river flow is in the hills of western Latvia (Bandavas Hills and Apricot Plain). In the middle of the river there is a pronounced valley, which reaches depth of 10–20 m and has many ponds. A water reservoir (mill pond) Aizpute. The main tributaries are the rivers Aloxte (right) and Grabstes (left). Near settlement Saka river merges with Durbe, forming the Saka River. On the shores of the Tebra river there are several large populated areas: Aizpute, Štakeldanga, Apriki. River is crossed by a motorway P112.", "Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant\n Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant is a hydroelectric power plant on river Dobra, near the town of Ogulin, in Karlovac County, Croatia. Its total capacity is 55.5 MW. The Gojak Hydroelectric Power Plant is a high pressure diversion plant which harnesses the river power of the Ogulinska Dobra and Zagorska Mrežnica rivers. It is operated by the Croatian state-owned electrical company, Hrvatska elektroprivreda.", "Rebra (river)\n The Rebra is a right tributary of the river Someșul Mare in Romania. Its source is in the Rodna Mountains. It discharges into the Someșul Mare near Rebrișoara. Its length is 44 km and its basin size is 199 km2. The upper reach of the river, upstream from the confluence with the Gușatul Mare at Gura Rebra, is also known as Rebrișoara.", "Dobra, Turek County\n Dobra is a town in Turek County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland, with 1,562 inhabitants (2004)." ]
In what country is Karahasanlı?
[ "Turkey", "Republic of Turkey", "🇹🇷", "TUR", "TR" ]
country
Karahasanlı, Karaisalı
4,811,648
27
[ { "id": "15998395", "title": "Karahasan, Ulus", "text": " Karahasan is a village in the District of Ulus, Bartın Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 189 people.", "score": "1.7864913" }, { "id": "29090978", "title": "Karakol", "text": "🇺🇸 Asheville, North Carolina, United States ; 🇹🇷 Gebze, Kocaeli, Turkey ", "score": "1.708089" }, { "id": "33140050", "title": "Dževad Karahasan", "text": " Since 1993 Karahasan works as a dramatist for ARBOS – Company for Music and Theatre. His plays have been performed in Austria (Vienna, Krems, Hallein, Eisenstadt, Salzburg, Villach, Klagenfurt), Germany (Gera, Erfurt, Berlin, Leipzig), Bosnia-Herzegovina (Sarajevo), Ukraine (Odessa), Czech Republic (Prague, Hradec Králové, Brno), Kosovo (Pristina), Poland (Szczecin), Singapore (Singapore Arts Festival) and USA (Washington DC).", "score": "1.6944816" }, { "id": "530593", "title": "Karahisar", "text": " Karahisar (former Karaasar) is a town in Tavas district of Denizli Province, Turkey. It is situated at 37.61667°N, 28.95°W along the Akçay creek, a tributary of Büyükmenderes River (historical Maeander). The distance to Tavas is 10 km. The population of Karahisar was 3403 as of 2012. The settlement was founded in 1530s by [Armenians]. The earlier name of the settlement Karaasar probably refers to Kara Fatma, the wife of the tribe. Gülfem one of the concubines of Suleyman I, the Ottoman sultan (also called the Magnificent) commissioned a mosque and a fountain in the settlement. In 1954 the settlement was declared a seat of township.", "score": "1.6667042" }, { "id": "12128935", "title": "Kösehasan, Karayazı", "text": " Kösehasan is a neighbourhood in the Karayazı District of Erzurum Province in Turkey.", "score": "1.6323829" }, { "id": "32066117", "title": "Karayavşan, Polatlı", "text": " Karayavşan, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.6242366" }, { "id": "10574939", "title": "Karaburun, Arnavutköy", "text": " With its long and wide sand beach, Karaburun is a popular tourist destination being the second-most visited Black Sea seaside resort in the European part of Istanbul Province after Kilyos. The village covers an area of 7.522799 km2. As of 2020, the population of the village is 1,730. The population, being 1,354 in 2013, has been in steady increase since then. The headman of the village is Mustafa Karaali.", "score": "1.6057283" }, { "id": "2457759", "title": "Hacı Karay", "text": " Hacı Karay (1950 – June 1994) was a Turkish person of Kurdish descent. He was born in Yüksekova, Hakkari, to Fehim Karay (father). On 13 February 1993, he participated in the action of closing shops in Yüksekova in support of the hunger strikes staged at Diyarbakır Prison. He had connections to Savaş Buldan. Along with fellow businessmen Savaş Buldan and Adnan Yıldırım, he was abducted by armed persons from Çınar Hotel in Yeşilyurt, İstanbul, on 3 June 1994. The abducted persons were found dead on 4 June 1994 on the road of Yukarıkaraş village of Yığılca district in Bolu. In March 1995, his sisters Gülcan and Gülsen Karay went to rural area in southeastern Turkey to join the PKK.", "score": "1.5965836" }, { "id": "10786025", "title": "Karahüseyin, Tercan", "text": " Karahüseyin is a village in the Tercan District of Erzincan Province in Turkey.", "score": "1.5953423" }, { "id": "32066039", "title": "Karahisar, Nallıhan", "text": " Karahisar, Nallıhan is a village in the District of Nallıhan, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5925012" }, { "id": "32066111", "title": "Karacaahmet, Polatlı", "text": " Karacaahmet, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5919755" }, { "id": "32066112", "title": "Karahamzalı, Polatlı", "text": " Karahamzalı, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5893344" }, { "id": "7170571", "title": "Karaköprü", "text": " Karaköprü (Pira Reş) is a district and second level municipality in Şanlıurfa Province, Turkey. Its eponymous city center is slightly north from central Urfa. In the local elections of March 2019, Metin Baydilli was elected Mayor of Karaköprü. The current Kaymakam is Ufuk Akıl. According to the 2012 Metropolitan Municipalities Law (Law No. 6360), all Turkish provinces with a population of more than 750,000, will become metropolitan municipalities and the districts within the metropolitan municipalities will be second level municipalities. The law also creates new districts within the provinces in addition to present districts. Therefore, in 2014, the Şanlıurfa (Urfa) central district was split into three sections. The northern quarters of the city are named Karaköprü and the name Şanlıurfa are reserved for the metropolitan municipality.", "score": "1.5859427" }, { "id": "32066114", "title": "Karakaya, Polatlı", "text": " Karakaya, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5781045" }, { "id": "7380483", "title": "Karamandere", "text": " Karamandere is a neighborhood in the northwest in Çatalca of Istanbul, founded in 1879 by communities immigrating from the Balkan Peninsula. There is the Black Sea in the northeast, Çilingoz Nature Park in the northwest, D 020 in the south, the state forest in the southeast, Danamandıra Nature Park in the southwest and Durugöl in the east. In the geography there are terraces, gravel, alluvium, stone chips, marble and gneiss, garden agriculture is done. Ferah Hill, Harman Hill and Bostantarla Hill are important peaks. Karamandere Bridge-Karamandere Square and 34-82 highways are important roads. Karamandere Creek, Binkılıç Creek, Mandıra Creek, Yaylacık Creek ", "score": "1.5757596" }, { "id": "1020969", "title": "Kara Para Aşk", "text": " Episode 164, which is the final episode in the series, was filmed in the small fishing town of Gölyazı in Lake Uluabat. The Gölyazı Old Mosque, which is visible in some scenes, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.", "score": "1.5725114" }, { "id": "13435833", "title": "Cilicia", "text": " While the region has a long coastline, international tourism is not at the level of the neighbouring Antalya Province. There are a small number of hotels between Erdemli and Anamur that attracts tourists. Cilicia tourism is mostly cottage tourism serving the Cilicia locals as well as residents of Kayseri, Gaziantep and surrounding areas. Between Silifke and Mersin, high-rise and low-rise cottages line the coast, leaving almost no vacant land. The coastline from Mersin to Karataş is mostly farmland. This area is zoned for resort tourism and is expected to have a rapid development within the next 20 years. Karataş and Yumurtalık ", "score": "1.5712173" }, { "id": "28649889", "title": "Karaoğlan, Gölbaşı", "text": " Karaoğlan is a village in the District of Gölbaşı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5709133" }, { "id": "13831182", "title": "List of palindromic places", "text": " Iran ; Kalak, Gilan, Iran ; Kalak, Ramsar, Mazandaran, Iran ; Kamak, Kermanshah, Iran ; Kapak, Kurdistan, Iran ; Karak, Iran ; Karak, Malaysia ; Karak, Jordan ; Karak, Pakistan ; Kasak, Bulgaria ; Kavak, Mersin, Turkey ; Kelek, Republic of Azerbaijan (variant of Kələk) ; Kesek, Kyrgyzstan ; Kınık, Izmir, Turkey ; Kırık, Kastamonu, Turkey ; Kivik, Sweden ; Kıyık, Kastamonu, Turkey ; Kızık, Akyurt, Ankara, Turkey ; Kızık, Gümüşhacıköy, Amasya, Turkey ; Kızık, Kızılcahamam, Ankara, Turkey ; Kızık, Sandıklı, Afyonkarahisar, Turkey ; Kodok, Western Nile, South Sudan ; Kuruk, Golestan, Iran ; La Sal, Utah, United States ; Laval, Quebec, Canada ; Laval, France ; Level, Maryland, United States ; Level, Ohio, United States ; Lolol, Chile ", "score": "1.5705456" }, { "id": "15972456", "title": "Karasandıklı, Sandıklı", "text": " Karasandıklı is a village in the District of Sandıklı, Afyonkarahisar Province, Turkey.", "score": "1.5636549" } ]
[ "Karahasan, Ulus\n Karahasan is a village in the District of Ulus, Bartın Province, Turkey. As of 2010 it had a population of 189 people.", "Karakol\n🇺🇸 Asheville, North Carolina, United States ; 🇹🇷 Gebze, Kocaeli, Turkey ", "Dževad Karahasan\n Since 1993 Karahasan works as a dramatist for ARBOS – Company for Music and Theatre. His plays have been performed in Austria (Vienna, Krems, Hallein, Eisenstadt, Salzburg, Villach, Klagenfurt), Germany (Gera, Erfurt, Berlin, Leipzig), Bosnia-Herzegovina (Sarajevo), Ukraine (Odessa), Czech Republic (Prague, Hradec Králové, Brno), Kosovo (Pristina), Poland (Szczecin), Singapore (Singapore Arts Festival) and USA (Washington DC).", "Karahisar\n Karahisar (former Karaasar) is a town in Tavas district of Denizli Province, Turkey. It is situated at 37.61667°N, 28.95°W along the Akçay creek, a tributary of Büyükmenderes River (historical Maeander). The distance to Tavas is 10 km. The population of Karahisar was 3403 as of 2012. The settlement was founded in 1530s by [Armenians]. The earlier name of the settlement Karaasar probably refers to Kara Fatma, the wife of the tribe. Gülfem one of the concubines of Suleyman I, the Ottoman sultan (also called the Magnificent) commissioned a mosque and a fountain in the settlement. In 1954 the settlement was declared a seat of township.", "Kösehasan, Karayazı\n Kösehasan is a neighbourhood in the Karayazı District of Erzurum Province in Turkey.", "Karayavşan, Polatlı\n Karayavşan, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "Karaburun, Arnavutköy\n With its long and wide sand beach, Karaburun is a popular tourist destination being the second-most visited Black Sea seaside resort in the European part of Istanbul Province after Kilyos. The village covers an area of 7.522799 km2. As of 2020, the population of the village is 1,730. The population, being 1,354 in 2013, has been in steady increase since then. The headman of the village is Mustafa Karaali.", "Hacı Karay\n Hacı Karay (1950 – June 1994) was a Turkish person of Kurdish descent. He was born in Yüksekova, Hakkari, to Fehim Karay (father). On 13 February 1993, he participated in the action of closing shops in Yüksekova in support of the hunger strikes staged at Diyarbakır Prison. He had connections to Savaş Buldan. Along with fellow businessmen Savaş Buldan and Adnan Yıldırım, he was abducted by armed persons from Çınar Hotel in Yeşilyurt, İstanbul, on 3 June 1994. The abducted persons were found dead on 4 June 1994 on the road of Yukarıkaraş village of Yığılca district in Bolu. In March 1995, his sisters Gülcan and Gülsen Karay went to rural area in southeastern Turkey to join the PKK.", "Karahüseyin, Tercan\n Karahüseyin is a village in the Tercan District of Erzincan Province in Turkey.", "Karahisar, Nallıhan\n Karahisar, Nallıhan is a village in the District of Nallıhan, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "Karacaahmet, Polatlı\n Karacaahmet, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "Karahamzalı, Polatlı\n Karahamzalı, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "Karaköprü\n Karaköprü (Pira Reş) is a district and second level municipality in Şanlıurfa Province, Turkey. Its eponymous city center is slightly north from central Urfa. In the local elections of March 2019, Metin Baydilli was elected Mayor of Karaköprü. The current Kaymakam is Ufuk Akıl. According to the 2012 Metropolitan Municipalities Law (Law No. 6360), all Turkish provinces with a population of more than 750,000, will become metropolitan municipalities and the districts within the metropolitan municipalities will be second level municipalities. The law also creates new districts within the provinces in addition to present districts. Therefore, in 2014, the Şanlıurfa (Urfa) central district was split into three sections. The northern quarters of the city are named Karaköprü and the name Şanlıurfa are reserved for the metropolitan municipality.", "Karakaya, Polatlı\n Karakaya, Polatlı is a village in the District of Polatlı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "Karamandere\n Karamandere is a neighborhood in the northwest in Çatalca of Istanbul, founded in 1879 by communities immigrating from the Balkan Peninsula. There is the Black Sea in the northeast, Çilingoz Nature Park in the northwest, D 020 in the south, the state forest in the southeast, Danamandıra Nature Park in the southwest and Durugöl in the east. In the geography there are terraces, gravel, alluvium, stone chips, marble and gneiss, garden agriculture is done. Ferah Hill, Harman Hill and Bostantarla Hill are important peaks. Karamandere Bridge-Karamandere Square and 34-82 highways are important roads. Karamandere Creek, Binkılıç Creek, Mandıra Creek, Yaylacık Creek ", "Kara Para Aşk\n Episode 164, which is the final episode in the series, was filmed in the small fishing town of Gölyazı in Lake Uluabat. The Gölyazı Old Mosque, which is visible in some scenes, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.", "Cilicia\n While the region has a long coastline, international tourism is not at the level of the neighbouring Antalya Province. There are a small number of hotels between Erdemli and Anamur that attracts tourists. Cilicia tourism is mostly cottage tourism serving the Cilicia locals as well as residents of Kayseri, Gaziantep and surrounding areas. Between Silifke and Mersin, high-rise and low-rise cottages line the coast, leaving almost no vacant land. The coastline from Mersin to Karataş is mostly farmland. This area is zoned for resort tourism and is expected to have a rapid development within the next 20 years. Karataş and Yumurtalık ", "Karaoğlan, Gölbaşı\n Karaoğlan is a village in the District of Gölbaşı, Ankara Province, Turkey.", "List of palindromic places\n Iran ; Kalak, Gilan, Iran ; Kalak, Ramsar, Mazandaran, Iran ; Kamak, Kermanshah, Iran ; Kapak, Kurdistan, Iran ; Karak, Iran ; Karak, Malaysia ; Karak, Jordan ; Karak, Pakistan ; Kasak, Bulgaria ; Kavak, Mersin, Turkey ; Kelek, Republic of Azerbaijan (variant of Kələk) ; Kesek, Kyrgyzstan ; Kınık, Izmir, Turkey ; Kırık, Kastamonu, Turkey ; Kivik, Sweden ; Kıyık, Kastamonu, Turkey ; Kızık, Akyurt, Ankara, Turkey ; Kızık, Gümüşhacıköy, Amasya, Turkey ; Kızık, Kızılcahamam, Ankara, Turkey ; Kızık, Sandıklı, Afyonkarahisar, Turkey ; Kodok, Western Nile, South Sudan ; Kuruk, Golestan, Iran ; La Sal, Utah, United States ; Laval, Quebec, Canada ; Laval, France ; Level, Maryland, United States ; Level, Ohio, United States ; Lolol, Chile ", "Karasandıklı, Sandıklı\n Karasandıklı is a village in the District of Sandıklı, Afyonkarahisar Province, Turkey." ]
In what country is Ackerman-Dewsnap House?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Ackerman-Dewsnap House
3,218,697
62
[ { "id": "31638411", "title": "Ackerman-Dewsnap House", "text": " Ackerman—Dewsnap House is a historic house at 176 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1837 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "score": "2.0419345" }, { "id": "6600431", "title": "Garret Augustus Ackerman House", "text": " The Garret Augustus Ackerman House is a historic house at 212 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1832 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986. It has apparently been demolished.", "score": "1.6055686" }, { "id": "31638410", "title": "David Ackerman House", "text": " David Ackerman House is a historic house at 415 E. Saddle River in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1750 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "score": "1.596659" }, { "id": "30369335", "title": "Ackerman House (Saddle River, New Jersey)", "text": " Ackerman House, is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1811 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.5850058" }, { "id": "16056904", "title": "Ackerman-Smith House", "text": " The Ackerman-Smith House is a historic house located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, built in 1760. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "score": "1.577421" }, { "id": "6600412", "title": "Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey)", "text": " Ackerman House, is located in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.5699146" }, { "id": "3481187", "title": "Wyckoff, New Jersey", "text": " to the house over the years. ; Van Houten-Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey) - 480 Sicomac Avenue (added 1983), known by the name \"Wellsweep\", the original portion of the home dates back to the 1700s. ; Van Voorhees-Quackenbush House - 421 Franklin Avenue (added 1983). Dating to an original structure built c. 1740, the house is believed to be the oldest in the township and was contributed to the township in 1973 following the death of Grace Quackenbush Zabriskie. ; Van Voorhis-Quackenbush House - 625 Wyckoff Avenue (added 1984) Wyckoff is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places: ", "score": "1.5422399" }, { "id": "196619", "title": "Abram Ackerman House", "text": " The Abram Ackerman House is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. Town folklore states that President George Washington slept overnight in this house during the Revolutionary War.", "score": "1.5313052" }, { "id": "16056945", "title": "Ackerman-Boyd House", "text": " Ackerman-Boyd House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1785 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "score": "1.5283523" }, { "id": "16056905", "title": "Ackerman-Smith House", "text": " The wood-frame building was originally constructed as a single room in 1760. A later addition doubled its size. The house is now a four-bay unit with a gabled roof. Western wings, porch and dormers were also added.", "score": "1.5238976" }, { "id": "31823513", "title": "Ridgewood, New Jersey", "text": "Ackerman House (222 Doremus Avenue) - 222 Doremus Avenue (added 1983) was constructed by Johannes and Jemima Ackerman c. 1787 on their 72 acres property and remained in the Ackerman family until the 1920s. ; Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue) - 252 Lincoln Avenue (added 1983) is a stone house constructed c. 1810 and named for either David or John Ackerman. ; David Ackerman House - 415 East Saddle River Road (added 1983). ; Ackerman-Van Emburgh House - 789 East Glen Avenue (added 1983) was built c. 1785 by John Ackerman and purchased by the Van Embergh family in 1816. ; Archibald-Vroom House - 160 East Ridgewood Avenue (added 1984). ; Beech Street School - 49 Cottage Place (added 1998). ; Paramus Reformed Church Historic District - Bounded by Franklin Turnpike, Route 17, Saddle River, south ", "score": "1.5210664" }, { "id": "12567435", "title": "Francis J. Dewes House", "text": " The Francis J. Dewes House is a house located at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The house was built in 1896 by Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz for brewer Francis J. Dewes. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on June 12, 1974. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 1973 Wealthy German immigrants, including Wacker, Leight, Gaetner, Deever, and Schlosser, constructed luxurious mansions east of Clark Street in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Francis Dewes, a Chicago brewer and millionaire, built the most elaborate home in the Lincoln Park still standing - Dewes Mansion at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue. Architects Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz designed the ", "score": "1.5134666" }, { "id": "3504114", "title": "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey)", "text": " Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "score": "1.4947435" }, { "id": "25212001", "title": "Ackerson Mead Clark House", "text": " Located at 183 Mountain Ave in Pequannock, NJ, the Ackerson Mead Clark House is a 21 room Greek Revival mansion built in the mid-1800s. With a history spanning three centuries, the mansion was only added to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Register of Historic Places by a decision rendered on July 29, 1981. Despite extensive renovation in the early 2000s the front exterior Greek Revival colonnade, original staircase, 1870s fireplaces, and a wide variety of architectural details and moldings remain intact. Originally a plantation style structure located in an agrarian community, the property surrounding the private residence has been reduced to 1.37acres over decades of nearby development. Currently known as \"Willow Manor,\" the mansion was listed for sale in 2011 at a list price of $1.4 million. The property is also considered a New Jersey Highlands Region Cultural Resource.", "score": "1.4864386" }, { "id": "477040", "title": "Van Horn-Ackerman House", "text": " The Van Horn-Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. The house was built in 1745 by Barent Van Horn and is referred to as a telescope house because of the way it starts as a small house and larger additions were built later.", "score": "1.4781405" }, { "id": "31823671", "title": "Saddle River, New Jersey", "text": "Achenbach House – 184 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1979, burned down in 2004) ; Ackerman House – 136 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1983) ; Abram Ackerman House – 199 East Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; Garret and Maria Ackerman House – 150 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Garret Augustus Ackerman House – 212 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dewsnap House – 176 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Smith House – 171 East Allendale Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dater House – 109 West Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; J. J. Carlock House – 2 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1986) ; Evangelical ", "score": "1.4766951" }, { "id": "3792465", "title": "Westervelt–Ackerson House", "text": " The Westervelt–Ackerson House is located in Ramsey, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 20, 1977.", "score": "1.4710225" }, { "id": "27212460", "title": "Bogardus-DeWindt House", "text": " The Bogardus-DeWindt House is located on Tompkins Avenue, a short distance west of NY 9D, in Beacon, New York, United States. It typifies the houses built in the region between 1750 and 1830, and has largely remained in its original form even as newer housing has been built in the neighborhood. During that time, the Hudson Valley was experiencing a new wave of settlement by New Englanders moving west. Their houses in the region combined their English-derived building traditions with Dutch ones dating to the late 17th century to create a new vernacular architecture unique to the place and time. The Bogardus-DeWindt house, a 1 1⁄2-story, five-by-two-bay rectangular building with heavy timber framing, epitomizes this style. It was originally ", "score": "1.4663177" }, { "id": "30369375", "title": "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Franklin Lakes, New Jersey)", "text": " Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1768 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "score": "1.4459288" }, { "id": "32352032", "title": "Casa del Herrero", "text": " Casa del Herrero (also known as the Steedman Estate) is a home and gardens located in Montecito near Santa Barbara, California. It was designed by George Washington Smith, and is considered one of the finest examples of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and made a National Historic Landmark on January 16, 2009. Today the entire 11 acre site is owned and operated as a historic house museum and garden by the non-profit Casa del Herrero Foundation, with the goal of restoring and preserving the house and grounds.", "score": "1.4436418" } ]
[ "Ackerman-Dewsnap House\n Ackerman—Dewsnap House is a historic house at 176 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1837 and added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "Garret Augustus Ackerman House\n The Garret Augustus Ackerman House is a historic house at 212 East Saddle River Road in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1832 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986. It has apparently been demolished.", "David Ackerman House\n David Ackerman House is a historic house at 415 E. Saddle River in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. It was built in 1750 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.", "Ackerman House (Saddle River, New Jersey)\n Ackerman House, is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1811 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Ackerman-Smith House\n The Ackerman-Smith House is a historic house located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States, built in 1760. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 29, 1986.", "Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey)\n Ackerman House, is located in Ridgewood, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Wyckoff, New Jersey\n to the house over the years. ; Van Houten-Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey) - 480 Sicomac Avenue (added 1983), known by the name \"Wellsweep\", the original portion of the home dates back to the 1700s. ; Van Voorhees-Quackenbush House - 421 Franklin Avenue (added 1983). Dating to an original structure built c. 1740, the house is believed to be the oldest in the township and was contributed to the township in 1973 following the death of Grace Quackenbush Zabriskie. ; Van Voorhis-Quackenbush House - 625 Wyckoff Avenue (added 1984) Wyckoff is home to the following locations on the National Register of Historic Places: ", "Abram Ackerman House\n The Abram Ackerman House is located in Saddle River, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. Town folklore states that President George Washington slept overnight in this house during the Revolutionary War.", "Ackerman-Boyd House\n Ackerman-Boyd House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1785 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "Ackerman-Smith House\n The wood-frame building was originally constructed as a single room in 1760. A later addition doubled its size. The house is now a four-bay unit with a gabled roof. Western wings, porch and dormers were also added.", "Ridgewood, New Jersey\nAckerman House (222 Doremus Avenue) - 222 Doremus Avenue (added 1983) was constructed by Johannes and Jemima Ackerman c. 1787 on their 72 acres property and remained in the Ackerman family until the 1920s. ; Ackerman House (252 Lincoln Avenue) - 252 Lincoln Avenue (added 1983) is a stone house constructed c. 1810 and named for either David or John Ackerman. ; David Ackerman House - 415 East Saddle River Road (added 1983). ; Ackerman-Van Emburgh House - 789 East Glen Avenue (added 1983) was built c. 1785 by John Ackerman and purchased by the Van Embergh family in 1816. ; Archibald-Vroom House - 160 East Ridgewood Avenue (added 1984). ; Beech Street School - 49 Cottage Place (added 1998). ; Paramus Reformed Church Historic District - Bounded by Franklin Turnpike, Route 17, Saddle River, south ", "Francis J. Dewes House\n The Francis J. Dewes House is a house located at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue in Chicago, Illinois, United States. The house was built in 1896 by Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz for brewer Francis J. Dewes. It was designated a Chicago Landmark on June 12, 1974. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 14, 1973 Wealthy German immigrants, including Wacker, Leight, Gaetner, Deever, and Schlosser, constructed luxurious mansions east of Clark Street in Chicago's Lincoln Park. Francis Dewes, a Chicago brewer and millionaire, built the most elaborate home in the Lincoln Park still standing - Dewes Mansion at 503 West Wrightwood Avenue. Architects Adolph Cudell and Arthur Hercz designed the ", "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Wyckoff, New Jersey)\n Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983.", "Ackerson Mead Clark House\n Located at 183 Mountain Ave in Pequannock, NJ, the Ackerson Mead Clark House is a 21 room Greek Revival mansion built in the mid-1800s. With a history spanning three centuries, the mansion was only added to the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection's Register of Historic Places by a decision rendered on July 29, 1981. Despite extensive renovation in the early 2000s the front exterior Greek Revival colonnade, original staircase, 1870s fireplaces, and a wide variety of architectural details and moldings remain intact. Originally a plantation style structure located in an agrarian community, the property surrounding the private residence has been reduced to 1.37acres over decades of nearby development. Currently known as \"Willow Manor,\" the mansion was listed for sale in 2011 at a list price of $1.4 million. The property is also considered a New Jersey Highlands Region Cultural Resource.", "Van Horn-Ackerman House\n The Van Horn-Ackerman House, is located in Wyckoff, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 10, 1983. The house was built in 1745 by Barent Van Horn and is referred to as a telescope house because of the way it starts as a small house and larger additions were built later.", "Saddle River, New Jersey\nAchenbach House – 184 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1979, burned down in 2004) ; Ackerman House – 136 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1983) ; Abram Ackerman House – 199 East Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; Garret and Maria Ackerman House – 150 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Garret Augustus Ackerman House – 212 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dewsnap House – 176 East Saddle River Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Smith House – 171 East Allendale Road (added 1986) ; Ackerman-Dater House – 109 West Saddle River Road (added 1983) ; J. J. Carlock House – 2 Chestnut Ridge Road (added 1986) ; Evangelical ", "Westervelt–Ackerson House\n The Westervelt–Ackerson House is located in Ramsey, in Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on July 20, 1977.", "Bogardus-DeWindt House\n The Bogardus-DeWindt House is located on Tompkins Avenue, a short distance west of NY 9D, in Beacon, New York, United States. It typifies the houses built in the region between 1750 and 1830, and has largely remained in its original form even as newer housing has been built in the neighborhood. During that time, the Hudson Valley was experiencing a new wave of settlement by New Englanders moving west. Their houses in the region combined their English-derived building traditions with Dutch ones dating to the late 17th century to create a new vernacular architecture unique to the place and time. The Bogardus-DeWindt house, a 1 1⁄2-story, five-by-two-bay rectangular building with heavy timber framing, epitomizes this style. It was originally ", "Van Houten–Ackerman House (Franklin Lakes, New Jersey)\n Van Houten–Ackerman House, is located in Franklin Lakes, Bergen County, New Jersey, United States. The house was built in 1768 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 9, 1983.", "Casa del Herrero\n Casa del Herrero (also known as the Steedman Estate) is a home and gardens located in Montecito near Santa Barbara, California. It was designed by George Washington Smith, and is considered one of the finest examples of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture. It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and made a National Historic Landmark on January 16, 2009. Today the entire 11 acre site is owned and operated as a historic house museum and garden by the non-profit Casa del Herrero Foundation, with the goal of restoring and preserving the house and grounds." ]
In what country is Wilcza Jama, Sokółka County?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Wilcza Jama, Sokółka County
4,402,885
50
[ { "id": "32186028", "title": "Wilcza Jama, Sokółka County", "text": " Wilcza Jama is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "2.0220628" }, { "id": "31366929", "title": "Wilcza Jama, Białystok County", "text": " Wilcza Jama is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Czarna Białostocka, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north of Czarna Białostocka and 28 km north of the regional capital Białystok.", "score": "1.7627969" }, { "id": "5058383", "title": "Wilcza Wola, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Wilcza Wola is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szydłowiec, within Szydłowiec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km north of Szydłowiec and 101 km south of Warsaw. The village has a population of 135.", "score": "1.5275948" }, { "id": "32270426", "title": "Jamiołki-Piotrowięta", "text": " Jamiołki-Piotrowięta is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km west of Sokoły, 13 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 120.", "score": "1.5197746" }, { "id": "32186053", "title": "Zawistowszczyzna", "text": " Zawistowszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Sokółka and 36 km north-east of the regional capital Białystok. Since March 2007, the sołtys (village chief) is Dr. Mohamed Ali Al-Hameri, a gynaecologist born in Yemen who came to Poland in 1983 to study medicine.", "score": "1.5135622" }, { "id": "31643128", "title": "Sokoły, Grajewo County", "text": " Sokoły is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczuczyn, within Grajewo County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. The village has an approximate population of 60.", "score": "1.5119216" }, { "id": "13279143", "title": "Wilcza Wola, Podkarpackie Voivodeship", "text": " Wilcza Wola is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dzikowiec, within Kolbuszowa County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 16 km north-east of Kolbuszowa and 37 km north of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has an approximate population of 2,000.", "score": "1.5089477" }, { "id": "4935931", "title": "Wilczogóra, Sierpc County", "text": " Wilczogóra is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierpc, within Sierpc County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "score": "1.5003296" }, { "id": "26703899", "title": "Sucha Beskidzka", "text": " Sucha Beskidzka (before 1961 called only Sucha) is a town in the Beskid Żywiecki mountain range in southern Poland, on the Skawa river. It is the county seat of Sucha County. It has been in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship since 1999; previously it was in Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship (1975–1998).", "score": "1.485788" }, { "id": "32270424", "title": "Jamiołki-Godzieby", "text": " Jamiołki-Godzieby is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Sokoły, 15 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 50.", "score": "1.4827859" }, { "id": "32231547", "title": "Olszanka, Sokółka County", "text": " Olszanka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Suchowola, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland. It lies approximately 9 km east of Suchowola, 26 km north-west of Sokółka, and 49 km north of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 85.", "score": "1.4742336" }, { "id": "32270427", "title": "Jamiołki-Świetliki", "text": " Jamiołki-Świetliki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km west of Sokoły, 12 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 38 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 25.", "score": "1.4715596" }, { "id": "32270425", "title": "Jamiołki-Kowale", "text": " Jamiołki-Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Sokoły, 15 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 80.", "score": "1.4681883" }, { "id": "9892820", "title": "Sucha County", "text": " Sucha County (powiat suski) is a unit of territorial administration and local government (powiat) in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, southern Poland, on the Slovak border. Its administrative seat and largest town is Sucha Beskidzka, which lies 44 km south-west of the voivodeship capital Kraków. The county also contains the towns of Maków Podhalański, lying 7 km east of Sucha Beskidzka, and Jordanów, 20 km south-east of Sucha Beskidzka. The county covers an area of 685.75 km2. As of 2006 its total population is 82,045, out of which the population of Sucha Beskidzka is 9,726, that of Maków Podhalański is 5,738, that of Jordanów is 5,112, and the rural population is 61,469.", "score": "1.4480591" }, { "id": "32186306", "title": "Jamasze", "text": " Jamasze is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Krynki, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "1.447186" }, { "id": "32185999", "title": "Stara Moczalnia", "text": " Stara Moczalnia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "1.4418552" }, { "id": "13278701", "title": "Sowina, Jasło County", "text": " Sowina is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kołaczyce, within Jasło County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Kołaczyce, 9 km north of Jasło, and 45 km south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 1,000.", "score": "1.4400797" }, { "id": "32186025", "title": "Tatarszczyzna", "text": " Tatarszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "1.4391446" }, { "id": "32185970", "title": "Podjanowszczyzna", "text": " Podjanowszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "score": "1.430388" }, { "id": "27426799", "title": "Sokołówka, Lublin Voivodeship", "text": " Sokołówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Frampol, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-east of Frampol, 12 km north of Biłgoraj, and 67 km south of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 309.", "score": "1.4291384" } ]
[ "Wilcza Jama, Sokółka County\n Wilcza Jama is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Wilcza Jama, Białystok County\n Wilcza Jama is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Czarna Białostocka, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north of Czarna Białostocka and 28 km north of the regional capital Białystok.", "Wilcza Wola, Masovian Voivodeship\n Wilcza Wola is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szydłowiec, within Szydłowiec County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km north of Szydłowiec and 101 km south of Warsaw. The village has a population of 135.", "Jamiołki-Piotrowięta\n Jamiołki-Piotrowięta is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km west of Sokoły, 13 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 120.", "Zawistowszczyzna\n Zawistowszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus. It lies approximately 3 km south-west of Sokółka and 36 km north-east of the regional capital Białystok. Since March 2007, the sołtys (village chief) is Dr. Mohamed Ali Al-Hameri, a gynaecologist born in Yemen who came to Poland in 1983 to study medicine.", "Sokoły, Grajewo County\n Sokoły is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Szczuczyn, within Grajewo County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. The village has an approximate population of 60.", "Wilcza Wola, Podkarpackie Voivodeship\n Wilcza Wola is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dzikowiec, within Kolbuszowa County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 16 km north-east of Kolbuszowa and 37 km north of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has an approximate population of 2,000.", "Wilczogóra, Sierpc County\n Wilczogóra is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sierpc, within Sierpc County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland.", "Sucha Beskidzka\n Sucha Beskidzka (before 1961 called only Sucha) is a town in the Beskid Żywiecki mountain range in southern Poland, on the Skawa river. It is the county seat of Sucha County. It has been in the Lesser Poland Voivodeship since 1999; previously it was in Bielsko-Biała Voivodeship (1975–1998).", "Jamiołki-Godzieby\n Jamiołki-Godzieby is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Sokoły, 15 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 50.", "Olszanka, Sokółka County\n Olszanka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Suchowola, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland. It lies approximately 9 km east of Suchowola, 26 km north-west of Sokółka, and 49 km north of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 85.", "Jamiołki-Świetliki\n Jamiołki-Świetliki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km west of Sokoły, 12 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 38 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 25.", "Jamiołki-Kowale\n Jamiołki-Kowale is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokoły, within Wysokie Mazowieckie County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-west of Sokoły, 15 km north-east of Wysokie Mazowieckie, and 37 km west of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 80.", "Sucha County\n Sucha County (powiat suski) is a unit of territorial administration and local government (powiat) in Lesser Poland Voivodeship, southern Poland, on the Slovak border. Its administrative seat and largest town is Sucha Beskidzka, which lies 44 km south-west of the voivodeship capital Kraków. The county also contains the towns of Maków Podhalański, lying 7 km east of Sucha Beskidzka, and Jordanów, 20 km south-east of Sucha Beskidzka. The county covers an area of 685.75 km2. As of 2006 its total population is 82,045, out of which the population of Sucha Beskidzka is 9,726, that of Maków Podhalański is 5,738, that of Jordanów is 5,112, and the rural population is 61,469.", "Jamasze\n Jamasze is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Krynki, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Stara Moczalnia\n Stara Moczalnia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Sowina, Jasło County\n Sowina is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kołaczyce, within Jasło County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Kołaczyce, 9 km north of Jasło, and 45 km south-west of the regional capital Rzeszów. The village has a population of 1,000.", "Tatarszczyzna\n Tatarszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Podjanowszczyzna\n Podjanowszczyzna is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sokółka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus.", "Sokołówka, Lublin Voivodeship\n Sokołówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Frampol, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south-east of Frampol, 12 km north of Biłgoraj, and 67 km south of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 309." ]
In what country is Givron?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Givron
21,770
91
[ { "id": "31982360", "title": "Givron", "text": " Givron is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.", "score": "1.6739154" }, { "id": "4831324", "title": "Givova", "text": "🇻🇪 Venezuela ", "score": "1.449259" }, { "id": "13650639", "title": "Assaf Gavron", "text": " Assaf Gavron was born in the town of Arad in 1968 and grew up in Motza Illit near Jerusalem. Studied BA in Media and Communication in Goldsmiths' College in London, UK (1991–1994), and New Media in Vancouver, Canada (1997). In the 1990s he worked as a journalist for several Israeli newspapers. Between 2000–2004 he was a creative director for Israeli high-tech company Valis. He has been teaching creative writing in Israel (Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School in Jerusalem, and Sapir Academic College in Sderot) and the United States (University of Nebraska Omaha and San Diego State University). Gavron has worked creating video games and as a rock musician; he has also translated American novels (Portnoy's Complaint among them) into Hebrew. He lives in Tel Aviv with his wife and two daughters.", "score": "1.4463592" }, { "id": "9951707", "title": "Zavron", "text": " Zavron (Russian and Tajik: Заврон}}) is a village in Sughd Region, northern Tajikistan. It is part of the jamoat Loiq Sherali in the city of Panjakent.", "score": "1.4178488" }, { "id": "32521427", "title": "Nicky Gavron", "text": " Gavron is internationally recognised for her environmental expertise. She was a key figure in the establishment of the London Climate Change Agency and the C40 – a worldwide climate change action group made up of the world's largest cities. In 2006, Business Week Magazine cited her, along with Ken Livingstone, as one of the twenty most important people in the world in the battle against greenhouse gas emissions. The magazine said that \"[She aims] to turn London into a model of a sustainable future for all the world's great cities.\" In the same year she called for a new Clean Air Act – a Low Carbon Act to fight climate change. She envisioned low carbon zones being rolled out across the country in the same way that smokeless zones were in the 1950s. Gavron has criticised patio heaters, calling them \"an indulgence too far\". In an article for the Guardian's Comment is Free site she asked, \"Why not wear a jumper and enjoy fresh air, not a cocktail of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and goodness knows what else.\"", "score": "1.3918691" }, { "id": "28824680", "title": "Gispert", "text": " Gispert is the name of two brands of premium cigars, one formerly produced in Cuba for Habanos S.A., the Cuban state-owned tobacco company, and the other produced in Honduras for the Franco-Spanish tobacco monopoly Altadis S.A., a division of Imperial Tobacco.", "score": "1.3873739" }, { "id": "4831326", "title": "Givova", "text": "🇲🇹 Malta (Contract Ends 2021) ; 🇻🇪 Venezuela ", "score": "1.3394208" }, { "id": "13317535", "title": "Chevron Corporation", "text": " Chevron Corporation is an American multinational energy corporation. One of the successor companies of Standard Oil, it is headquartered in San Ramon, California, and active in more than 180 countries. Chevron is engaged in every aspect of the oil and natural gas industries, including hydrocarbon exploration and production; refining, marketing and transport; chemicals manufacturing and sales; and power generation. It was also one of the Seven Sisters that dominated the global petroleum industry from the mid-1940s to the 1970s. Chevron is one of the largest companies in the world and the second largest oil company in the United States, only behind ExxonMobil. As of August 2021, Chevron ranked 27th in the Fortune 500 with a yearly revenue of $94.7 billion and market valuation of $190 billion. In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000, Chevron was ranked as the 61st-largest public company in the world. Chevron's downstream operations manufacture and sell products such as fuels, lubricants, additives, and petrochemicals. The company's most significant areas of operations are the west coast of North America, the U.S. Gulf Coast, Southeast Asia, South Korea and Australia. In 2018, the company produced an average of 791,000 barrels of net oil-equivalent per day in United States.", "score": "1.3134098" }, { "id": "30685014", "title": "Lago Agrio oil field", "text": " Since Chevron Corporation has no substantive assets in Ecuador, plaintiffs filed actions to enforce the judgment against Chevron Corporation subsidiaries in Brazil, Argentina and Canada. In 2009, Chevron had filed a complaint against Ecuador at the international Permanent Court of Arbitration under the 1997 bilateral investment treaty between the United States and Ecuador, charging that Ecuador had failed to ensure a fair trial and had reneged on a 1998 contract absolving Texaco of any compensation claims. The three-person tribunal, acting under The Hague's Permanent Court of Arbitration, ruled in 2011 that Ecuador should halt all enforcement efforts of the Ecuadorian judgment against Chevron, both within and without Ecuador. In February 2013, the tribunal said ", "score": "1.3133571" }, { "id": "5824321", "title": "Navrongo", "text": " Navrongo is a town and the capital of Kassena-Nankana District in the Upper East Region of northern Ghana, adjacent to the border with Burkina Faso. Navrongo is the capital of Kassena-Nankana District – which is within the Upper East Region of northern Ghana. Navrongo has a 2012 settlement population of 27,306 people. Navrongo is an important market town, known for its cathedral and its grotto. Navrongo is located at 10.88472°N, -1.09028°W. Navrongo's population in 2005 was estimated to be 25,470, and its population in 2012 was estimated to be 27,306. The terrain is flat and the ecology is typical of the Sahel – arid grassland with occasional shrubbery. The first ever Solar Plant with a capacity of 2 Megawatts in Ghana is located at Navrongo: Navrongo Solar Power Station.", "score": "1.3125648" }, { "id": "3332879", "title": "Fierro Group", "text": " Alpamayo, Filtros del Perú, Destilería Peruana, Tabacalera del Sur, Industrial Cartavio, Verona Trading and Fosforera La Llama, employing around 5,000 staff between them. In 1991 in Venezuela, the group owned Tabacalera Nacional (TANASA), today owned by Philip Morris, Fosforera Suramericana, C.A., Alimentos La Giralda, and Banco Exterior. Nowadays, Fierro Group in Venezuela (also known as Grupo Industrial Farallón de Venezuela: GIFVEN) has the first place of share market on match industry sales being also owners of different companies such as FOSUCA and DIFSA. Fierro Group companies had Factories such as Lander & Vera and Alimentos La Giralda which produce and distribute different manufactured goods related to liquors and canned food. Its most recognized brands are Fosforos el Sol, La Giralda, Ponche ", "score": "1.3118988" }, { "id": "32728960", "title": "The Adults", "text": "Gisma ", "score": "1.306488" }, { "id": "32521421", "title": "Nicky Gavron", "text": " Felicia Nicolette C. Gavron is a British politician who served as Deputy Mayor of London to Ken Livingstone from 2000 to 2003 and 2004 to 2008. She was a member of the London Assembly from 2000 to 2021 and was the former Labour candidate for the 2004 Mayor of London elections.", "score": "1.3054867" }, { "id": "14232564", "title": "Chevron House", "text": " Chevron House was designed by Murphy/Jahn, Inc. Architects and Architects 61, and was completed in 1993, just one year after its next-door neighbour, 16 Collyer Quay. The other firms involved in the development are CapitaLand Commercial Limited, Savu Investments Private Limited, CapitaLand, Obayashi Gumi Corporation, Sendai Eversendai Engineering Group, Steen Consultants Private Limited, PCR Engineers Private Limited, Chevalier Group, PCR Engineers Private Limited, Rider Hunt Levett & Bailey, and Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corporation.", "score": "1.302856" }, { "id": "30685015", "title": "Lago Agrio oil field", "text": " Ecuador government should have stopped plaintiffs in the case from going to courts in Brazil, Argentina and Canada to try to collect the judgment handed down by an Ecuadorean court in 2011. A spokesperson for the plaintiffs said the \"courts hearing enforcement actions would likely pay little attention to the tribunal since it was not binding on the rain-forest communities\". Argentina: In June 2013, Argentina's Supreme Court revoked an embargo on the assets and future income of Chevron's Argentina subsidiary. Netherlands: In September 2013, The Hague arbitration panel ruled in favor of Chevron, finding that an agreement signed in 1995 by the government of Ecuador released Texaco Corporation from financial responsibility from any ", "score": "1.3012854" }, { "id": "967225", "title": "Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.", "text": " Some of the Aguinda plaintiffs and other indigenous advocates re-filed in Ecuadorian court in 2003. This case, called Moi Vicente Enomenga Mantohue v. Chevron Corporation and Texaco Petroleum Company (also called Tena because it was filed in Tena court), forced Ecuadorian courts and settlers to view indigenous peoples beyond the stereotypes of eco-primitivism and illegibility. \"In the Tena case, the president of the court refused to process the complaint for arbitrary reasons: (1) because the complaint had not been translated into English and defendant ChevronTexaco resides in the United States; and (2) for jurisdictional reasons because the affected lands owned by the plaintiffs' communities include lands beyond the geographic boundaries of the provinces where the court is ", "score": "1.2990049" }, { "id": "27813108", "title": "Guido Girardi", "text": " being to force the industry to incorporate icons Black octagonal in the packaging of processed food products that indicate if this food contains sugar, saturated fat, salt and / or calories above those recommended by a technical table of experts. Various countries have expressed their interest in Chilean regulations, considering its content in the development of its own regulatory projects on labeling, including Uruguay, Brazil, Ecuador, Argentina, Peru, Mexico, the member countries of the Caribbean Community, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Panama, El Salvador, Honduras, Israel, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. For 2013, the \"Law that Sanctions the Marketing of cured thread\" was ", "score": "1.2974343" }, { "id": "13317556", "title": "Chevron Corporation", "text": " Chevron's downstream operations manufacture and sell products such as fuels, lubricants, additives and petrochemicals. The company's most significant areas of operations are the west coast of North America, the U.S. Gulf Coast, Southeast Asia, South Korea, Australia and South Africa. In 2010, Chevron sold an average of 3.1 Moilbbl/d of refined products like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. The company operates approximately 19,550 retail sites in 84 countries. The company also has interests in 13 power generating assets in the United States and Asia and has gas stations in Western Canada. Chevron owns the trademark rights to Texaco and Caltex fuel and lubricant products. In 2010, Chevron processed 1.9 Moilbbl/d of crude oil. It owns and operates Five active refineries in the United States ", "score": "1.2970614" }, { "id": "7093253", "title": "Robert Gavron, Baron Gavron", "text": " Gavron was active in the Labour Party and a financial contributor to the Labour Leader's Office Fund, run by Lord Levy, which financed Tony Blair's private office before the 1997 General Election. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1990 Birthday Honours, and received a life peerage as Baron Gavron, of Highgate in the London Borough of Camden, on 6 August 1999. Gavron served on House of Lords, UK Parliament, Works of Art Committee from 1999 to 2003 and 2005 – 2009. Gavron was a member of the Groucho and the MCC.", "score": "1.2966828" }, { "id": "13365336", "title": "Rowland Rivron", "text": " Rivron was born in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, and brought up in Hillingdon, and attended Abbotsfield Secondary School. He has two brothers, Richard and Raymond. He and his wife Monica (née Appleby), have three children and two dogs. The couple are avid caravanners, and Monica is the author of The Caravan Cookbook.", "score": "1.293064" } ]
[ "Givron\n Givron is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.", "Givova\n🇻🇪 Venezuela ", "Assaf Gavron\n Assaf Gavron was born in the town of Arad in 1968 and grew up in Motza Illit near Jerusalem. Studied BA in Media and Communication in Goldsmiths' College in London, UK (1991–1994), and New Media in Vancouver, Canada (1997). In the 1990s he worked as a journalist for several Israeli newspapers. Between 2000–2004 he was a creative director for Israeli high-tech company Valis. He has been teaching creative writing in Israel (Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, the Sam Spiegel Film and Television School in Jerusalem, and Sapir Academic College in Sderot) and the United States (University of Nebraska Omaha and San Diego State University). Gavron has worked creating video games and as a rock musician; he has also translated American novels (Portnoy's Complaint among them) into Hebrew. He lives in Tel Aviv with his wife and two daughters.", "Zavron\n Zavron (Russian and Tajik: Заврон}}) is a village in Sughd Region, northern Tajikistan. It is part of the jamoat Loiq Sherali in the city of Panjakent.", "Nicky Gavron\n Gavron is internationally recognised for her environmental expertise. She was a key figure in the establishment of the London Climate Change Agency and the C40 – a worldwide climate change action group made up of the world's largest cities. In 2006, Business Week Magazine cited her, along with Ken Livingstone, as one of the twenty most important people in the world in the battle against greenhouse gas emissions. The magazine said that \"[She aims] to turn London into a model of a sustainable future for all the world's great cities.\" In the same year she called for a new Clean Air Act – a Low Carbon Act to fight climate change. She envisioned low carbon zones being rolled out across the country in the same way that smokeless zones were in the 1950s. Gavron has criticised patio heaters, calling them \"an indulgence too far\". In an article for the Guardian's Comment is Free site she asked, \"Why not wear a jumper and enjoy fresh air, not a cocktail of carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and goodness knows what else.\"", "Gispert\n Gispert is the name of two brands of premium cigars, one formerly produced in Cuba for Habanos S.A., the Cuban state-owned tobacco company, and the other produced in Honduras for the Franco-Spanish tobacco monopoly Altadis S.A., a division of Imperial Tobacco.", "Givova\n🇲🇹 Malta (Contract Ends 2021) ; 🇻🇪 Venezuela ", "Chevron Corporation\n Chevron Corporation is an American multinational energy corporation. One of the successor companies of Standard Oil, it is headquartered in San Ramon, California, and active in more than 180 countries. Chevron is engaged in every aspect of the oil and natural gas industries, including hydrocarbon exploration and production; refining, marketing and transport; chemicals manufacturing and sales; and power generation. It was also one of the Seven Sisters that dominated the global petroleum industry from the mid-1940s to the 1970s. Chevron is one of the largest companies in the world and the second largest oil company in the United States, only behind ExxonMobil. As of August 2021, Chevron ranked 27th in the Fortune 500 with a yearly revenue of $94.7 billion and market valuation of $190 billion. In the 2020 Forbes Global 2000, Chevron was ranked as the 61st-largest public company in the world. Chevron's downstream operations manufacture and sell products such as fuels, lubricants, additives, and petrochemicals. The company's most significant areas of operations are the west coast of North America, the U.S. Gulf Coast, Southeast Asia, South Korea and Australia. In 2018, the company produced an average of 791,000 barrels of net oil-equivalent per day in United States.", "Lago Agrio oil field\n Since Chevron Corporation has no substantive assets in Ecuador, plaintiffs filed actions to enforce the judgment against Chevron Corporation subsidiaries in Brazil, Argentina and Canada. In 2009, Chevron had filed a complaint against Ecuador at the international Permanent Court of Arbitration under the 1997 bilateral investment treaty between the United States and Ecuador, charging that Ecuador had failed to ensure a fair trial and had reneged on a 1998 contract absolving Texaco of any compensation claims. The three-person tribunal, acting under The Hague's Permanent Court of Arbitration, ruled in 2011 that Ecuador should halt all enforcement efforts of the Ecuadorian judgment against Chevron, both within and without Ecuador. In February 2013, the tribunal said ", "Navrongo\n Navrongo is a town and the capital of Kassena-Nankana District in the Upper East Region of northern Ghana, adjacent to the border with Burkina Faso. Navrongo is the capital of Kassena-Nankana District – which is within the Upper East Region of northern Ghana. Navrongo has a 2012 settlement population of 27,306 people. Navrongo is an important market town, known for its cathedral and its grotto. Navrongo is located at 10.88472°N, -1.09028°W. Navrongo's population in 2005 was estimated to be 25,470, and its population in 2012 was estimated to be 27,306. The terrain is flat and the ecology is typical of the Sahel – arid grassland with occasional shrubbery. The first ever Solar Plant with a capacity of 2 Megawatts in Ghana is located at Navrongo: Navrongo Solar Power Station.", "Fierro Group\n Alpamayo, Filtros del Perú, Destilería Peruana, Tabacalera del Sur, Industrial Cartavio, Verona Trading and Fosforera La Llama, employing around 5,000 staff between them. In 1991 in Venezuela, the group owned Tabacalera Nacional (TANASA), today owned by Philip Morris, Fosforera Suramericana, C.A., Alimentos La Giralda, and Banco Exterior. Nowadays, Fierro Group in Venezuela (also known as Grupo Industrial Farallón de Venezuela: GIFVEN) has the first place of share market on match industry sales being also owners of different companies such as FOSUCA and DIFSA. Fierro Group companies had Factories such as Lander & Vera and Alimentos La Giralda which produce and distribute different manufactured goods related to liquors and canned food. Its most recognized brands are Fosforos el Sol, La Giralda, Ponche ", "The Adults\nGisma ", "Nicky Gavron\n Felicia Nicolette C. Gavron is a British politician who served as Deputy Mayor of London to Ken Livingstone from 2000 to 2003 and 2004 to 2008. She was a member of the London Assembly from 2000 to 2021 and was the former Labour candidate for the 2004 Mayor of London elections.", "Chevron House\n Chevron House was designed by Murphy/Jahn, Inc. Architects and Architects 61, and was completed in 1993, just one year after its next-door neighbour, 16 Collyer Quay. The other firms involved in the development are CapitaLand Commercial Limited, Savu Investments Private Limited, CapitaLand, Obayashi Gumi Corporation, Sendai Eversendai Engineering Group, Steen Consultants Private Limited, PCR Engineers Private Limited, Chevalier Group, PCR Engineers Private Limited, Rider Hunt Levett & Bailey, and Toshiba Elevator and Building Systems Corporation.", "Lago Agrio oil field\n Ecuador government should have stopped plaintiffs in the case from going to courts in Brazil, Argentina and Canada to try to collect the judgment handed down by an Ecuadorean court in 2011. A spokesperson for the plaintiffs said the \"courts hearing enforcement actions would likely pay little attention to the tribunal since it was not binding on the rain-forest communities\". Argentina: In June 2013, Argentina's Supreme Court revoked an embargo on the assets and future income of Chevron's Argentina subsidiary. Netherlands: In September 2013, The Hague arbitration panel ruled in favor of Chevron, finding that an agreement signed in 1995 by the government of Ecuador released Texaco Corporation from financial responsibility from any ", "Aguinda v. Texaco, Inc.\n Some of the Aguinda plaintiffs and other indigenous advocates re-filed in Ecuadorian court in 2003. This case, called Moi Vicente Enomenga Mantohue v. Chevron Corporation and Texaco Petroleum Company (also called Tena because it was filed in Tena court), forced Ecuadorian courts and settlers to view indigenous peoples beyond the stereotypes of eco-primitivism and illegibility. \"In the Tena case, the president of the court refused to process the complaint for arbitrary reasons: (1) because the complaint had not been translated into English and defendant ChevronTexaco resides in the United States; and (2) for jurisdictional reasons because the affected lands owned by the plaintiffs' communities include lands beyond the geographic boundaries of the provinces where the court is ", "Guido Girardi\n being to force the industry to incorporate icons Black octagonal in the packaging of processed food products that indicate if this food contains sugar, saturated fat, salt and / or calories above those recommended by a technical table of experts. Various countries have expressed their interest in Chilean regulations, considering its content in the development of its own regulatory projects on labeling, including Uruguay, Brazil, Ecuador, Argentina, Peru, Mexico, the member countries of the Caribbean Community, Nicaragua, Guatemala, Panama, El Salvador, Honduras, Israel, Canada, Australia and New Zealand. For 2013, the \"Law that Sanctions the Marketing of cured thread\" was ", "Chevron Corporation\n Chevron's downstream operations manufacture and sell products such as fuels, lubricants, additives and petrochemicals. The company's most significant areas of operations are the west coast of North America, the U.S. Gulf Coast, Southeast Asia, South Korea, Australia and South Africa. In 2010, Chevron sold an average of 3.1 Moilbbl/d of refined products like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. The company operates approximately 19,550 retail sites in 84 countries. The company also has interests in 13 power generating assets in the United States and Asia and has gas stations in Western Canada. Chevron owns the trademark rights to Texaco and Caltex fuel and lubricant products. In 2010, Chevron processed 1.9 Moilbbl/d of crude oil. It owns and operates Five active refineries in the United States ", "Robert Gavron, Baron Gavron\n Gavron was active in the Labour Party and a financial contributor to the Labour Leader's Office Fund, run by Lord Levy, which financed Tony Blair's private office before the 1997 General Election. He was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1990 Birthday Honours, and received a life peerage as Baron Gavron, of Highgate in the London Borough of Camden, on 6 August 1999. Gavron served on House of Lords, UK Parliament, Works of Art Committee from 1999 to 2003 and 2005 – 2009. Gavron was a member of the Groucho and the MCC.", "Rowland Rivron\n Rivron was born in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, and brought up in Hillingdon, and attended Abbotsfield Secondary School. He has two brothers, Richard and Raymond. He and his wife Monica (née Appleby), have three children and two dogs. The couple are avid caravanners, and Monica is the author of The Caravan Cookbook." ]
In what country is Humane Heritage Museum?
[ "Saudi Arabia", "Kingdom of Saudi Arabia", "🇸🇦", "KSA", "sa" ]
country
Humane Heritage Museum
4,514,687
87
[ { "id": "25589770", "title": "Humane Heritage Museum", "text": " Humane Heritage Museum is located in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The museum displays many historical pieces from different ancient periods. Such pieces include, cutlery, outfits and weapons. Moreover, a great amount of manuscripts and books can be found.", "score": "1.9146622" }, { "id": "10591324", "title": "Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World", "text": " top of each other a tabletop with a see-through dome. The museum cited “explicit and repeated threats of violence” as a reason to remove these artworks. Protesters demonstrated outside the museum, and both People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) issued statements condemning the inclusion of the above controversial works. ASPCA stated that they support artistic expression but oppose any use of animals which results in pain or distress to the animals. When the exhibition traveled to Bilbao in 2018, it included two of the three artworks in question.", "score": "1.4572446" }, { "id": "5291485", "title": "Norfolk, Virginia", "text": " a museum and a vast research library, personal belongings (including his famous corncob pipe) and a short film that chronicles his life. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is based in Norfolk. The Hermitage Foundation Museum, located in an early 20th-century Tudor-style home on a 12 acre estate fronting the Lafayette River, features an eclectic collection of Asian and Western art, including Chinese bronze and ceramics, Persian rugs, and ivory carvings. Norfolk has a variety of performing groups with regular seasons. The Virginia Opera was founded in Norfolk in 1974. Its artistic director since its inception has been Peter Mark, who conducted his 100th opera production for the VOA in 2008. Though performances are staged statewide, ", "score": "1.45364" }, { "id": "25126903", "title": "Shit Museum", "text": " Sulabh International Museum of Toilets in Delhi, which antedates this museum, opening in 1992. The National Poo Museum, which is ensconced within the Isle of Wight Zoo, features 20 examples of animal faeces, prepared by the Ecclestone George collective of artists and social entrepreneurs: Daniel Roberts, Nigel George, and Dave Badman. The specimens are desiccated and preserved in plexiglas. \"The museum will feature relics such as freeze-dried poo, poop hanging from the ceiling and poop from various different species such as meerkats, foxes, cows, owls and even human babies.\" Poop is dried on a specially built machine. Viewers can illuminate each preserved exhibit at the touch of a button. It is ", "score": "1.4482203" }, { "id": "3102758", "title": "Action for Dolphins", "text": " In January 2014, Angel the albino dolphin calf was captured in the Taiji drive hunts in Japan and sent to the Taiji Whale Museum. A month later, Sarah Lucas and other dolphin advocates attempted to enter the museum to check on Angel's well-being, but they were refused entry. In May 2014, AFD filed legal action against the Taiji government in the Wakayama District Court. The Action for Angel lawsuit asserted that, as the owner and operator of the whale museum, the town of Taiji was illegally refusing entry to law-abiding people based on their appearance. AFD argued the conduct by the museum was contrary to Japan's Constitution, which states ‘there shall be no discrimination in political, economic or social relations because of race'. In November 2015, Sarah Lucas took the stand in Wakayama District Court and gave evidence against the Taiji Whale Museum. In March 2016, the judges ruled in AFD's favour. Following the lawsuit animal welfare observers have now been granted access to the museum.", "score": "1.4306786" }, { "id": "11204336", "title": "Darabad, Tehran", "text": " clinic next to the museum to examine and treat various pets. The clinic also sells a variety of pets, including birds, squirrels, rabbits, dogs and cats, turtles, and a specialist veterinarian. One of the special features of this museum is having live animal parts such as birds, reptiles and amphibians, aquatic animals, mammals, especially large cats, and in the non-living part, the rare species of Mazandaran tiger skin that has become extinct and its skin specimens in accordance with CITES regulations. Also, two examples of the rarest and most beautiful endangered mammals, with the names of Persian zebra and Asiatic cheetah, are displayed in it.", "score": "1.423697" }, { "id": "31810373", "title": "Canada Agriculture and Food Museum", "text": " a herd of 50-head dairy herd, as well as horses, beef cattle, pigs, goats, poultry and sheep. In addition to exhibitions on the history of agriculture, the museum also holds a historical collection of tractors. The museum is affiliated with the Canadian Museums Association, the Canadian Heritage Information Network, and the Virtual Museum of Canada. The museum also creates traveling exhibits which are brought to smaller museums throughout Canada. It has an outdoor \"energy park\" which showcases renewable energy sources. In addition to museum exhibits and other public programs, the museum also provides facility rentals for special events, and live demonstrations.", "score": "1.4122865" }, { "id": "25622997", "title": "List of museums in Central Texas", "text": "Central Texas Museum of Automotive History, Rosanky, closed in 2012, collections moved to Dick's Classic Garage in San Marcos, Texas ; Dog Museum, Waco, private collection of dog memorabilia located in Antiquibles Antique Mall, reported closed in 2014 ; Fort Graham Museum ; Goodwill Computer Museum, Goodwill computer museum.jpg, Austin, closed in 2015 ; Hertzberg Circus Collection and Museum, San Antonio, closed in 2001, collections now at the Witte Museum ; Henkel Square Museum Village, Round Top, authentic restoration of Anglo-American and German-American 19th century homes, now the Henkel Square Market shopping village since 2010 ; Hill Country Wildlife Museum, ", "score": "1.4116848" }, { "id": "11598921", "title": "Museum of Life and Science", "text": " Explore the Wild is home to American black bears, red wolves, lemurs, and radiated tortoises. It features a 900 ft boardwalk over a preserved 6 acre natural space, plus many multimedia exhibits. The exhibit opened in May 2006. The museum is part of preservation efforts for the red wolves and radiated tortoises. In spring 2017 the red wolf pair housed at the museum had a litter of 4 pups. These pups accounted for 2% of the entire red wolf population at the time. As part of the red wolf Specific Survival Plan the museum participates in, the family of wolves was moved to another facility in New York and a new pair of wolves came to the museum. Spring 2018 brought a litter of 2 pups to the new red wolf pair. The four wolves remain at the museum for the time being. In 2018 the museum joined efforts for radiated tortoise conservation after the April 20, 2018 discovery of 10,000 housed illegally in Madagascar. The museum hosted a fundraiser to raise money for the tortoises at the museum and a conservation group in August 2018.", "score": "1.4098244" }, { "id": "15267217", "title": "Stamford Museum & Nature Center", "text": " Farm and wildlife were introduced to SM&NC while still at its Courtland Park location. A small farmyard containing a miniature barn was home to a lamb, a young goat, bantams, a hen and rooster, and numerous rabbits. Many orphaned or injured animals were brought to the museum where they were cared for by Junior Curators, a group of students who were studying in the nature and wildlife conservation classes. Before long, they developed a small wildlife area including an American bald eagle, a golden eagle, a fox, opossum, skunks, squirrels, and woodchucks. The Junior Curators program still exists at the SM&NC. The move to the Museum's Scofieldtown ", "score": "1.3940303" }, { "id": "15079769", "title": "National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum", "text": " The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is a museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, with more than 28,000 Western and American Indian art works and artifacts. The facility also has the world's most extensive collection of American rodeo photographs, barbed wire, saddlery, and early rodeo trophies. Museum collections focus on preserving and interpreting the heritage of the American West. The museum becomes an art gallery during the annual Prix de West Invitational Art Exhibition and Sale each June. The Prix de West Artists sell original works of art as a fund raiser for the Museum. The expansion and renovation was designed by Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects.", "score": "1.3936028" }, { "id": "1986582", "title": "Animal Welfare Act of 1966", "text": " In 2012, in the case of 907 Whitehead Street, Inc. vs U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (USDA), the plaintiff challenged the jurisdiction of the USDA and its Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to regulate the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum as an animal exhibitor. The museum is home to dozens of polydactyl cats, the progeny of a cat that Ernest Hemingway was given as a pet when he lived there during the 1930s. Following a complaint by a museum visitor, the USDA visited the museum and in October 2003, determined that the Museum was an animal exhibitor subject to regulation under the AWA because the Museum exhibited the cats for the cost ", "score": "1.3916402" }, { "id": "32196419", "title": "Las Cruces, New Mexico", "text": " The New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum is state-operated and shows the history of farming and ranching in New Mexico. It is located just east of New Mexico State University. The New Mexico State University Arthropod Museum and Collection contains approximately 500,000 arthropod specimens. The University Museum (Kent Hall) at New Mexico State University focuses on archeological and ethnographic collections and also has some history and natural science collections. The Zuhl Museum (located in the Alumni and Visitors' Center) at New Mexico State University focuses on geologic collections, including the finest collection of petrified wood on display and a large fossil and mineral collection. There are four city-owned museums. The Branigan Cultural Center examines local history through photographs, sculpture, paintings, and poetry. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. The Las Cruces Museum of Art offers art exhibits and classes. The Las Cruces Museum of Natural History makes science and natural history more accessible to the general public and has an emphasis on local animals and plants. The Las Cruces Railroad Museum is in the historic Santa Fe Railroad station. It exhibits the impact of the railroads on the local area.", "score": "1.3911963" }, { "id": "16440112", "title": "International Wildlife Museum", "text": " The museum is a covered 40,000 square foot area and features more than 400 species of birds, insects and mammals. Some of the collection of the museum is more than 100 years old and were donated by government agencies, rehabilitation centers and captive breeding programs. The taxidermy displays include dioramas and mounted heads. The museum also features the “Big Terror”, a tiger killed in India in 1969, a rhinoceros taken by President Theodore Roosevelt, the Irish elk with 13 foot antlers, penguins from Richard E. Byrd’s South Pole discovery trip, a passenger pigeon and a wooly mammoth. The museum has been criticized for its amateurishness and out-of-date International Union for Conservation of Nature conservation status ratings.", "score": "1.389171" }, { "id": "4826195", "title": "Red River Valley Museum", "text": " Lions, tigers, bears and more await visitors to this incredible animal collection! This one of a kind collection features animals ranging from the tiny Dik Dik, an antelope that populates the savannahs of eastern Africa, to the mighty Polar Bear that inhabits the frigid Arctic Circle. Learn about these animals and their native habitats as you explore the gallery. This collection of animals from around the world was donated by William “Bill” Bond, a successful rancher who was instrumental in the establishment of the Red River Valley Museum. Newly remodeled in the fall of 2020, The Bond Gallery teaches visitors the importance of conservation. Discover facts about all 130+ animals in this collection and learn how smart human impact can help endangered animals regrow their population!", "score": "1.3882446" }, { "id": "15923541", "title": "Museum of the Dog", "text": " Museum of the Dog is a nonprofit canine museum at 101 Park Avenue in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. The museum features exhibits that include: Dogs in film, dogs of presidents, war dogs, dogs in exploration. The museum features one of the largest collections of dog-related art.", "score": "1.388134" }, { "id": "25321151", "title": "Animal welfare and rights in Mexico", "text": " The international animal nonprofit AnimaNaturalis protests against bullfighting in Mexico. Humane Society International has a major chapter in Mexico, whose activities involve campaigns against dog-fighting, pet abuse, and advocacy for a vegan diet. The Humane Society International applauded Mexico's 2017 ban on dog-fighting. Bordertown Animal Rescue located at the US/Mex Border in Tijuana investigates acts of cruelty, illegal activity and has a facility that houses abused, abandoned and unwanted animals & wildlife.", "score": "1.3875562" }, { "id": "5076843", "title": "National Museum of Rural Life", "text": " The National Museum of Rural Life, previously known as the Museum of Scottish Country Life, is based at Wester Kittochside farm, lying between East Kilbride in South Lanarkshire and Carmunnock in Glasgow. It is run by National Museums Scotland.", "score": "1.3849989" }, { "id": "4109064", "title": "Ali Demirsoy Natural History Museum", "text": " Ali Demirsoy Natural History Museum (Ali Demirsoy Doğa Tarihi Müzesi) is a museum in Kemaliye, Turkey The museum is in the campus of Hacı Ali Akın Multi-Program Highschool in Kemaliye ilçe (district), of Erzincan Province. Its founder is Professor Ali Demirsoy of Hacettepe University. It is supported by Tubitak (Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey).", "score": "1.3849828" }, { "id": "8452591", "title": "Guillermo Vargas", "text": " by the news media in the presence of police, firefighters, and security guards. Upon conducting a probe, the Humane Society of the United States was informed that the dog was in a state of starvation when it was captured and escaped after one day of captivity; however, the organization also categorically condemned \"the use of live animals in exhibits such as this.\" The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) also investigated the exhibit. WSPA found the information regarding the issue to be \"inconsistent\" and met with sponsors of the Honduras Bienal to ensure that no animals would be abused at the 2008 exhibition in that country.", "score": "1.3848944" } ]
[ "Humane Heritage Museum\n Humane Heritage Museum is located in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The museum displays many historical pieces from different ancient periods. Such pieces include, cutlery, outfits and weapons. Moreover, a great amount of manuscripts and books can be found.", "Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World\n top of each other a tabletop with a see-through dome. The museum cited “explicit and repeated threats of violence” as a reason to remove these artworks. Protesters demonstrated outside the museum, and both People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) and the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) issued statements condemning the inclusion of the above controversial works. ASPCA stated that they support artistic expression but oppose any use of animals which results in pain or distress to the animals. When the exhibition traveled to Bilbao in 2018, it included two of the three artworks in question.", "Norfolk, Virginia\n a museum and a vast research library, personal belongings (including his famous corncob pipe) and a short film that chronicles his life. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is based in Norfolk. The Hermitage Foundation Museum, located in an early 20th-century Tudor-style home on a 12 acre estate fronting the Lafayette River, features an eclectic collection of Asian and Western art, including Chinese bronze and ceramics, Persian rugs, and ivory carvings. Norfolk has a variety of performing groups with regular seasons. The Virginia Opera was founded in Norfolk in 1974. Its artistic director since its inception has been Peter Mark, who conducted his 100th opera production for the VOA in 2008. Though performances are staged statewide, ", "Shit Museum\n Sulabh International Museum of Toilets in Delhi, which antedates this museum, opening in 1992. The National Poo Museum, which is ensconced within the Isle of Wight Zoo, features 20 examples of animal faeces, prepared by the Ecclestone George collective of artists and social entrepreneurs: Daniel Roberts, Nigel George, and Dave Badman. The specimens are desiccated and preserved in plexiglas. \"The museum will feature relics such as freeze-dried poo, poop hanging from the ceiling and poop from various different species such as meerkats, foxes, cows, owls and even human babies.\" Poop is dried on a specially built machine. Viewers can illuminate each preserved exhibit at the touch of a button. It is ", "Action for Dolphins\n In January 2014, Angel the albino dolphin calf was captured in the Taiji drive hunts in Japan and sent to the Taiji Whale Museum. A month later, Sarah Lucas and other dolphin advocates attempted to enter the museum to check on Angel's well-being, but they were refused entry. In May 2014, AFD filed legal action against the Taiji government in the Wakayama District Court. The Action for Angel lawsuit asserted that, as the owner and operator of the whale museum, the town of Taiji was illegally refusing entry to law-abiding people based on their appearance. AFD argued the conduct by the museum was contrary to Japan's Constitution, which states ‘there shall be no discrimination in political, economic or social relations because of race'. In November 2015, Sarah Lucas took the stand in Wakayama District Court and gave evidence against the Taiji Whale Museum. In March 2016, the judges ruled in AFD's favour. Following the lawsuit animal welfare observers have now been granted access to the museum.", "Darabad, Tehran\n clinic next to the museum to examine and treat various pets. The clinic also sells a variety of pets, including birds, squirrels, rabbits, dogs and cats, turtles, and a specialist veterinarian. One of the special features of this museum is having live animal parts such as birds, reptiles and amphibians, aquatic animals, mammals, especially large cats, and in the non-living part, the rare species of Mazandaran tiger skin that has become extinct and its skin specimens in accordance with CITES regulations. Also, two examples of the rarest and most beautiful endangered mammals, with the names of Persian zebra and Asiatic cheetah, are displayed in it.", "Canada Agriculture and Food Museum\n a herd of 50-head dairy herd, as well as horses, beef cattle, pigs, goats, poultry and sheep. In addition to exhibitions on the history of agriculture, the museum also holds a historical collection of tractors. The museum is affiliated with the Canadian Museums Association, the Canadian Heritage Information Network, and the Virtual Museum of Canada. The museum also creates traveling exhibits which are brought to smaller museums throughout Canada. It has an outdoor \"energy park\" which showcases renewable energy sources. In addition to museum exhibits and other public programs, the museum also provides facility rentals for special events, and live demonstrations.", "List of museums in Central Texas\nCentral Texas Museum of Automotive History, Rosanky, closed in 2012, collections moved to Dick's Classic Garage in San Marcos, Texas ; Dog Museum, Waco, private collection of dog memorabilia located in Antiquibles Antique Mall, reported closed in 2014 ; Fort Graham Museum ; Goodwill Computer Museum, Goodwill computer museum.jpg, Austin, closed in 2015 ; Hertzberg Circus Collection and Museum, San Antonio, closed in 2001, collections now at the Witte Museum ; Henkel Square Museum Village, Round Top, authentic restoration of Anglo-American and German-American 19th century homes, now the Henkel Square Market shopping village since 2010 ; Hill Country Wildlife Museum, ", "Museum of Life and Science\n Explore the Wild is home to American black bears, red wolves, lemurs, and radiated tortoises. It features a 900 ft boardwalk over a preserved 6 acre natural space, plus many multimedia exhibits. The exhibit opened in May 2006. The museum is part of preservation efforts for the red wolves and radiated tortoises. In spring 2017 the red wolf pair housed at the museum had a litter of 4 pups. These pups accounted for 2% of the entire red wolf population at the time. As part of the red wolf Specific Survival Plan the museum participates in, the family of wolves was moved to another facility in New York and a new pair of wolves came to the museum. Spring 2018 brought a litter of 2 pups to the new red wolf pair. The four wolves remain at the museum for the time being. In 2018 the museum joined efforts for radiated tortoise conservation after the April 20, 2018 discovery of 10,000 housed illegally in Madagascar. The museum hosted a fundraiser to raise money for the tortoises at the museum and a conservation group in August 2018.", "Stamford Museum & Nature Center\n Farm and wildlife were introduced to SM&NC while still at its Courtland Park location. A small farmyard containing a miniature barn was home to a lamb, a young goat, bantams, a hen and rooster, and numerous rabbits. Many orphaned or injured animals were brought to the museum where they were cared for by Junior Curators, a group of students who were studying in the nature and wildlife conservation classes. Before long, they developed a small wildlife area including an American bald eagle, a golden eagle, a fox, opossum, skunks, squirrels, and woodchucks. The Junior Curators program still exists at the SM&NC. The move to the Museum's Scofieldtown ", "National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum\n The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum is a museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States, with more than 28,000 Western and American Indian art works and artifacts. The facility also has the world's most extensive collection of American rodeo photographs, barbed wire, saddlery, and early rodeo trophies. Museum collections focus on preserving and interpreting the heritage of the American West. The museum becomes an art gallery during the annual Prix de West Invitational Art Exhibition and Sale each June. The Prix de West Artists sell original works of art as a fund raiser for the Museum. The expansion and renovation was designed by Curtis W. Fentress, FAIA, RIBA of Fentress Architects.", "Animal Welfare Act of 1966\n In 2012, in the case of 907 Whitehead Street, Inc. vs U.S. Secretary of Agriculture (USDA), the plaintiff challenged the jurisdiction of the USDA and its Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to regulate the Ernest Hemingway Home and Museum as an animal exhibitor. The museum is home to dozens of polydactyl cats, the progeny of a cat that Ernest Hemingway was given as a pet when he lived there during the 1930s. Following a complaint by a museum visitor, the USDA visited the museum and in October 2003, determined that the Museum was an animal exhibitor subject to regulation under the AWA because the Museum exhibited the cats for the cost ", "Las Cruces, New Mexico\n The New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum is state-operated and shows the history of farming and ranching in New Mexico. It is located just east of New Mexico State University. The New Mexico State University Arthropod Museum and Collection contains approximately 500,000 arthropod specimens. The University Museum (Kent Hall) at New Mexico State University focuses on archeological and ethnographic collections and also has some history and natural science collections. The Zuhl Museum (located in the Alumni and Visitors' Center) at New Mexico State University focuses on geologic collections, including the finest collection of petrified wood on display and a large fossil and mineral collection. There are four city-owned museums. The Branigan Cultural Center examines local history through photographs, sculpture, paintings, and poetry. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places. The Las Cruces Museum of Art offers art exhibits and classes. The Las Cruces Museum of Natural History makes science and natural history more accessible to the general public and has an emphasis on local animals and plants. The Las Cruces Railroad Museum is in the historic Santa Fe Railroad station. It exhibits the impact of the railroads on the local area.", "International Wildlife Museum\n The museum is a covered 40,000 square foot area and features more than 400 species of birds, insects and mammals. Some of the collection of the museum is more than 100 years old and were donated by government agencies, rehabilitation centers and captive breeding programs. The taxidermy displays include dioramas and mounted heads. The museum also features the “Big Terror”, a tiger killed in India in 1969, a rhinoceros taken by President Theodore Roosevelt, the Irish elk with 13 foot antlers, penguins from Richard E. Byrd’s South Pole discovery trip, a passenger pigeon and a wooly mammoth. The museum has been criticized for its amateurishness and out-of-date International Union for Conservation of Nature conservation status ratings.", "Red River Valley Museum\n Lions, tigers, bears and more await visitors to this incredible animal collection! This one of a kind collection features animals ranging from the tiny Dik Dik, an antelope that populates the savannahs of eastern Africa, to the mighty Polar Bear that inhabits the frigid Arctic Circle. Learn about these animals and their native habitats as you explore the gallery. This collection of animals from around the world was donated by William “Bill” Bond, a successful rancher who was instrumental in the establishment of the Red River Valley Museum. Newly remodeled in the fall of 2020, The Bond Gallery teaches visitors the importance of conservation. Discover facts about all 130+ animals in this collection and learn how smart human impact can help endangered animals regrow their population!", "Museum of the Dog\n Museum of the Dog is a nonprofit canine museum at 101 Park Avenue in the Murray Hill neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. The museum features exhibits that include: Dogs in film, dogs of presidents, war dogs, dogs in exploration. The museum features one of the largest collections of dog-related art.", "Animal welfare and rights in Mexico\n The international animal nonprofit AnimaNaturalis protests against bullfighting in Mexico. Humane Society International has a major chapter in Mexico, whose activities involve campaigns against dog-fighting, pet abuse, and advocacy for a vegan diet. The Humane Society International applauded Mexico's 2017 ban on dog-fighting. Bordertown Animal Rescue located at the US/Mex Border in Tijuana investigates acts of cruelty, illegal activity and has a facility that houses abused, abandoned and unwanted animals & wildlife.", "National Museum of Rural Life\n The National Museum of Rural Life, previously known as the Museum of Scottish Country Life, is based at Wester Kittochside farm, lying between East Kilbride in South Lanarkshire and Carmunnock in Glasgow. It is run by National Museums Scotland.", "Ali Demirsoy Natural History Museum\n Ali Demirsoy Natural History Museum (Ali Demirsoy Doğa Tarihi Müzesi) is a museum in Kemaliye, Turkey The museum is in the campus of Hacı Ali Akın Multi-Program Highschool in Kemaliye ilçe (district), of Erzincan Province. Its founder is Professor Ali Demirsoy of Hacettepe University. It is supported by Tubitak (Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey).", "Guillermo Vargas\n by the news media in the presence of police, firefighters, and security guards. Upon conducting a probe, the Humane Society of the United States was informed that the dog was in a state of starvation when it was captured and escaped after one day of captivity; however, the organization also categorically condemned \"the use of live animals in exhibits such as this.\" The World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) also investigated the exhibit. WSPA found the information regarding the issue to be \"inconsistent\" and met with sponsors of the Honduras Bienal to ensure that no animals would be abused at the 2008 exhibition in that country." ]
In what country is Arlington?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Arlington, Harrison County, West Virginia
3,375,127
87
[ { "id": "13902266", "title": "Arlington (CDP), Vermont", "text": " Arlington is a census-designated place (CDP) in the towns of Arlington and Sunderland, Bennington County, Vermont, United States. The population was 1,213 at the 2010 census. In 1989, the Arlington Village Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The district covers an area of 180 acre and includes 190 contributing buildings and sites in the village center. In addition to historical and architectural significance, the district is also noted for being the place where composer Carl Ruggles spent the later years of his life. The buildings in the district provide examples of Colonial Revival, Greek Revival, and Federal styles. The St. James Episcopal Church (1829–30), the second oldest Gothic Revival church in Vermont, is located in Arlington village. In the early 20th century, the village was an important industrial center with several mills and factories, many of which were washed away by flooding in 1927. The village also has unusual sections of marble sidewalks, laid using stone from nearby quarries.", "score": "1.4724984" }, { "id": "28910470", "title": "Arlington (band)", "text": " Arlington is an American alternative rock band formed in Southern California in 2016. The band consists of vocalist and guitarist Tyler Benko, bass guitarist and vocalist Channing Peake, and percussionist Grant Whitson. The band signed to Rise Records, released their debut full-length studio album, Walk Through Jackson County, on October 26, 2018.", "score": "1.447887" }, { "id": "4193775", "title": "Arlington, Washington", "text": " Arlington is part of the Snohomish Public Hospital District No. 3, which operates the Cascade Valley Hospital, a 48-bed general hospital. The hospital was established in 1909 and was the last independent hospital in Snohomish County at the time of its acquisition in 2016. The city is also served by community clinics operated by Cascade Valley (and Skagit Regional Health) as well as The Everett Clinic and the Community Health Center of Snohomish County.", "score": "1.4408729" }, { "id": "1677829", "title": "Arlington, Devon", "text": " Arlington was a manor, and is a village and civil parish in the North Devon district of Devon in England. The parish includes the villages of Arlington and Arlington Beccott. The population of the parish is 98 (2001 census). Arlington Court, long owned by the Chichester family, lords of the manor since the 14th century, is now owned by the National Trust and home to the Trust's collection of over 50 historic horse-drawn carriages. Victoria Cross holder Sir Mark Walker lived in Arlington, dying there in 1902.", "score": "1.435942" }, { "id": "29674440", "title": "Arlington, Kentucky", "text": " Arlington is a home rule-class city in Carlisle County, Kentucky, in the United States. The population was 324 at the 2010 census, a drop from 395 in 2000. It was formally incorporated by the state assembly in 1876.", "score": "1.4322542" }, { "id": "4193755", "title": "Arlington, Washington", "text": " Glasair Aviation is based in Arlington, and Eviation Aircraft uses its Arlington hangars for assembly and testing of the Eviation Alice, an electric prototype model. The city of Arlington plans to increase the number of jobs within the city to over 20,000 by 2035, bolstered by the designation of the Cascade Industrial Center by the Puget Sound Regional Council in 2019. The industrial center, located between the two cities near Smokey Point, already included major distribution centers and other light industry in the 2000s. A five-story Amazon distribution center is planned to be constructed near the airport in 2021 at a cost of $355 million.", "score": "1.4253078" }, { "id": "2700707", "title": "Arlington, Tennessee", "text": " As of the 2020 United States census, there were 14,549 people, 3,560 households, and 3,046 families residing in the town.", "score": "1.4201016" }, { "id": "28024643", "title": "Arlington, Illinois", "text": " Arlington is a village in Bureau County, Illinois, United States. The population was 193 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Ottawa Micropolitan Statistical Area, located east of the Quad Cities, north of Peoria and Galesburg, west of LaSalle and Peru, and southwest of Rockford and Chicago.", "score": "1.4200175" }, { "id": "4193729", "title": "Arlington, Washington", "text": " Arlington is a city in northern Snohomish County, Washington, United States, part of the Seattle metropolitan area. The city lies on the Stillaguamish River in the western foothills of the Cascade Range, adjacent to the city of Marysville. It is approximately 10 mi north of Everett, the county seat, and 40 mi north of Seattle, the state's largest city. As of the 2010 U.S. census, Arlington has a population of 17,926. Arlington was established in the 1880s by settlers and the area was platted as two towns, Arlington and Haller City. Haller City was absorbed by the larger Arlington, which was incorporated as a city in 1903. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Arlington area was the site of major projects undertaken for employment under ", "score": "1.4189143" }, { "id": "25774461", "title": "Arlington, California", "text": " Arlington is a community about seven miles southwest of Riverside, California that is part of the Inland Empire, which is east of the Los Angeles and Orange County metropolitan areas. With a population of about 12,300, the major commercial hub of Arlington is centered on Magnolia Avenue, a major east-west thoroughfare that connects the community with Downtown Riverside to the east and the Corona area to the west. Arlington is common as a place name in the United States, with other significant communities bearing the same name in Virginia (near Washington D.C.) and Texas. The Southern California location was apparently so named in an 1877 meeting of early residents. At the time, the nation's union Civil War dead were being commemorated through frequent use of the place name, in honor of Arlington National Cemetery.", "score": "1.4139061" }, { "id": "8167952", "title": "Arlington, Vermont", "text": " Arlington lies in the Valley of Vermont between the Taconic Range to the west and the Green Mountains to the east, with most of Arlington's land mass lying in the Taconic Range. Five prominent peaks are located within the town: Grass Mountain, Spruce Peak, The Ball (also locally referred to as West Mountain), Red Mountain, and Big Spruce Mountain. The highest peak is Grass Mountain at elevation 3109 ft. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 109.9 sqkm, of which 109.4 sqkm is land and 0.5 sqkm, or 0.45%, is water. The Battenkill, famous for trout fishing, flows through the center of town.", "score": "1.4046202" }, { "id": "8698045", "title": "Arlington, South Dakota", "text": " The city was platted by the Western Town Lot Company in 1880, and originally named Nordland, with the platted streets given Norwegian names. The city was renamed a few years later, and in 1885 given the name of Arlington, after the colonial center in Virginia. (It was briefly named Denver in the interlude, but postal authorities did not approve of the name.) The streets were not renamed until several decades passed, with Olaf Street eventually changed to Main Street, Kanut Street to Third Street, etc.", "score": "1.4001793" }, { "id": "25358263", "title": "Arlington, Northampton County, Virginia", "text": " Arlington is an unincorporated community south of Cape Charles in Northampton County, Virginia, United States.", "score": "1.3978105" }, { "id": "32712565", "title": "Arlington, North Carolina", "text": " Arlington is located at 36.2275°N, -80.83194°W (36.227481, -80.831861). According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 0.8 sqmi, all land.", "score": "1.397247" }, { "id": "16435795", "title": "Arlington, Baltimore", "text": " Arlington, along nearby Pikesville, is home to a large Russian-American population. As of the late 1990s, Arlington was home to a population of 6,000 Russian-speaking Jews from Russia, Ukraine, and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. By 2003, some 20,000 Jews of Russian origin lived in the Baltimore region, predominantly in Northwest Baltimore and nearby neighborhoods of Baltimore County.", "score": "1.3963567" }, { "id": "31561958", "title": "Arlington, Nebraska", "text": " Arlington is located at 41.45417°N, -96.35722°W (41.454244, -96.357246). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.60 sqmi, all land.", "score": "1.3957978" }, { "id": "31561956", "title": "Arlington, Nebraska", "text": " Arlington is a village in Washington County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 1,243 at the 2010 census. Arlington is named after Arlington, Virginia.", "score": "1.3938386" }, { "id": "8167948", "title": "Arlington, Vermont", "text": " Arlington is a town in Bennington County, Vermont, United States. The population was 2,317 at the 2010 census.", "score": "1.393296" }, { "id": "9437510", "title": "Arlington, Gloucestershire", "text": " Arlington Row is a nationally notable architectural conservation area depicted on the inside cover of all United Kingdom passports. The cottages were built in 1380 as a monastic wool store. This was converted into a row of cottages for weavers in the seventeenth century. It has been used as a film and television location, most notably for the films Stardust and Bridget Jones's Diary. Arlington Manor was built in the 17th century. It has an adjoining 18th century barn.", "score": "1.3929005" }, { "id": "29065856", "title": "Arlington, Colorado", "text": " Arlington is located at 38.33556°N, -103.3425°W (38.335597,-103.342552).", "score": "1.3898355" } ]
[ "Arlington (CDP), Vermont\n Arlington is a census-designated place (CDP) in the towns of Arlington and Sunderland, Bennington County, Vermont, United States. The population was 1,213 at the 2010 census. In 1989, the Arlington Village Historic District was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The district covers an area of 180 acre and includes 190 contributing buildings and sites in the village center. In addition to historical and architectural significance, the district is also noted for being the place where composer Carl Ruggles spent the later years of his life. The buildings in the district provide examples of Colonial Revival, Greek Revival, and Federal styles. The St. James Episcopal Church (1829–30), the second oldest Gothic Revival church in Vermont, is located in Arlington village. In the early 20th century, the village was an important industrial center with several mills and factories, many of which were washed away by flooding in 1927. The village also has unusual sections of marble sidewalks, laid using stone from nearby quarries.", "Arlington (band)\n Arlington is an American alternative rock band formed in Southern California in 2016. The band consists of vocalist and guitarist Tyler Benko, bass guitarist and vocalist Channing Peake, and percussionist Grant Whitson. The band signed to Rise Records, released their debut full-length studio album, Walk Through Jackson County, on October 26, 2018.", "Arlington, Washington\n Arlington is part of the Snohomish Public Hospital District No. 3, which operates the Cascade Valley Hospital, a 48-bed general hospital. The hospital was established in 1909 and was the last independent hospital in Snohomish County at the time of its acquisition in 2016. The city is also served by community clinics operated by Cascade Valley (and Skagit Regional Health) as well as The Everett Clinic and the Community Health Center of Snohomish County.", "Arlington, Devon\n Arlington was a manor, and is a village and civil parish in the North Devon district of Devon in England. The parish includes the villages of Arlington and Arlington Beccott. The population of the parish is 98 (2001 census). Arlington Court, long owned by the Chichester family, lords of the manor since the 14th century, is now owned by the National Trust and home to the Trust's collection of over 50 historic horse-drawn carriages. Victoria Cross holder Sir Mark Walker lived in Arlington, dying there in 1902.", "Arlington, Kentucky\n Arlington is a home rule-class city in Carlisle County, Kentucky, in the United States. The population was 324 at the 2010 census, a drop from 395 in 2000. It was formally incorporated by the state assembly in 1876.", "Arlington, Washington\n Glasair Aviation is based in Arlington, and Eviation Aircraft uses its Arlington hangars for assembly and testing of the Eviation Alice, an electric prototype model. The city of Arlington plans to increase the number of jobs within the city to over 20,000 by 2035, bolstered by the designation of the Cascade Industrial Center by the Puget Sound Regional Council in 2019. The industrial center, located between the two cities near Smokey Point, already included major distribution centers and other light industry in the 2000s. A five-story Amazon distribution center is planned to be constructed near the airport in 2021 at a cost of $355 million.", "Arlington, Tennessee\n As of the 2020 United States census, there were 14,549 people, 3,560 households, and 3,046 families residing in the town.", "Arlington, Illinois\n Arlington is a village in Bureau County, Illinois, United States. The population was 193 at the 2010 census. It is part of the Ottawa Micropolitan Statistical Area, located east of the Quad Cities, north of Peoria and Galesburg, west of LaSalle and Peru, and southwest of Rockford and Chicago.", "Arlington, Washington\n Arlington is a city in northern Snohomish County, Washington, United States, part of the Seattle metropolitan area. The city lies on the Stillaguamish River in the western foothills of the Cascade Range, adjacent to the city of Marysville. It is approximately 10 mi north of Everett, the county seat, and 40 mi north of Seattle, the state's largest city. As of the 2010 U.S. census, Arlington has a population of 17,926. Arlington was established in the 1880s by settlers and the area was platted as two towns, Arlington and Haller City. Haller City was absorbed by the larger Arlington, which was incorporated as a city in 1903. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Arlington area was the site of major projects undertaken for employment under ", "Arlington, California\n Arlington is a community about seven miles southwest of Riverside, California that is part of the Inland Empire, which is east of the Los Angeles and Orange County metropolitan areas. With a population of about 12,300, the major commercial hub of Arlington is centered on Magnolia Avenue, a major east-west thoroughfare that connects the community with Downtown Riverside to the east and the Corona area to the west. Arlington is common as a place name in the United States, with other significant communities bearing the same name in Virginia (near Washington D.C.) and Texas. The Southern California location was apparently so named in an 1877 meeting of early residents. At the time, the nation's union Civil War dead were being commemorated through frequent use of the place name, in honor of Arlington National Cemetery.", "Arlington, Vermont\n Arlington lies in the Valley of Vermont between the Taconic Range to the west and the Green Mountains to the east, with most of Arlington's land mass lying in the Taconic Range. Five prominent peaks are located within the town: Grass Mountain, Spruce Peak, The Ball (also locally referred to as West Mountain), Red Mountain, and Big Spruce Mountain. The highest peak is Grass Mountain at elevation 3109 ft. According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 109.9 sqkm, of which 109.4 sqkm is land and 0.5 sqkm, or 0.45%, is water. The Battenkill, famous for trout fishing, flows through the center of town.", "Arlington, South Dakota\n The city was platted by the Western Town Lot Company in 1880, and originally named Nordland, with the platted streets given Norwegian names. The city was renamed a few years later, and in 1885 given the name of Arlington, after the colonial center in Virginia. (It was briefly named Denver in the interlude, but postal authorities did not approve of the name.) The streets were not renamed until several decades passed, with Olaf Street eventually changed to Main Street, Kanut Street to Third Street, etc.", "Arlington, Northampton County, Virginia\n Arlington is an unincorporated community south of Cape Charles in Northampton County, Virginia, United States.", "Arlington, North Carolina\n Arlington is located at 36.2275°N, -80.83194°W (36.227481, -80.831861). According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 0.8 sqmi, all land.", "Arlington, Baltimore\n Arlington, along nearby Pikesville, is home to a large Russian-American population. As of the late 1990s, Arlington was home to a population of 6,000 Russian-speaking Jews from Russia, Ukraine, and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. By 2003, some 20,000 Jews of Russian origin lived in the Baltimore region, predominantly in Northwest Baltimore and nearby neighborhoods of Baltimore County.", "Arlington, Nebraska\n Arlington is located at 41.45417°N, -96.35722°W (41.454244, -96.357246). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.60 sqmi, all land.", "Arlington, Nebraska\n Arlington is a village in Washington County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 1,243 at the 2010 census. Arlington is named after Arlington, Virginia.", "Arlington, Vermont\n Arlington is a town in Bennington County, Vermont, United States. The population was 2,317 at the 2010 census.", "Arlington, Gloucestershire\n Arlington Row is a nationally notable architectural conservation area depicted on the inside cover of all United Kingdom passports. The cottages were built in 1380 as a monastic wool store. This was converted into a row of cottages for weavers in the seventeenth century. It has been used as a film and television location, most notably for the films Stardust and Bridget Jones's Diary. Arlington Manor was built in the 17th century. It has an adjoining 18th century barn.", "Arlington, Colorado\n Arlington is located at 38.33556°N, -103.3425°W (38.335597,-103.342552)." ]
In what country is Adams?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Adams, New Jersey
1,506,440
99
[ { "id": "5140195", "title": "Henry Adams (farmer)", "text": " John Adams, the second president of the United States of America, erected a monument to his memory in the old church yard at Quincy with the following inscription: \"In memory of Henry Adams who took his flight from the Dragon persecution in Devonshire, England and alighted with eight sons, near Mount Wollaston. One of the sons returned to England, and after taking time to explore the country, four removed to Medfield and the neighboring towns; two to Chelmsford. One only, Joseph, who lies here at his left hand, remained here, who was an original proprietor in the township of Braintree, incorporated in 1639. This stone and several others ", "score": "1.4671965" }, { "id": "1498199", "title": "Adams v. Howerton", "text": " Adams was born in Manila in the Philippines. His family moved to the United States when he was 12, and he grew up in Long Prairie, Minnesota. He studied liberal arts at the University of Minnesota. Adams became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1968 and was living in Los Angeles, California, in 1971 when he met Anthony Corbett \"Tony\" Sullivan, an Australian citizen who was visiting the U.S. on a tourist visa. They were one of six gay couples granted marriage licenses by County Clerk Clela Rorex in Boulder, Colorado on April 21, 1975. They exchanged vows in a religious ceremony as well. To publicize their lawsuit, they appeared on the Phil Donahue Show where, according to their ", "score": "1.447304" }, { "id": "30860491", "title": "Charles C. Adams Jr.", "text": " Adams began practicing international law in Washington, D.C., and moved to Paris before establishing residence in Geneva in 1986. Currently, Adams is partner at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, an international law firm based in the United States. He leads the firm's international arbitration practice, with a focus on high-value disputes, and serves as head of the firm's Geneva office. His practice includes major infrastructure and construction projects, joint venture agreements, intellectual property, insurance, energy, manufacturing, telecommunications and transportation industries. He occasionally serves on international arbitration panels, and appears frequently on various news media outlets, commenting on U.S. political issues. Notable publications include English Supreme Court Upholds Party Autonomy in International Arbitration, which examined a 2011 British ", "score": "1.4388816" }, { "id": "27335966", "title": "Peter Adams (politician)", "text": " Adams was born in Ellesmere Port, United Kingdom and educated at the University of Sheffield and McGill University. He served as director of the subarctic research laboratory in Schefferville, Quebec, and was a member of the Geography department and coordinator of Northern Studies at Trent University in Peterborough, where he was later Emeritus Professor. Adams also served as Vice President – Academic while at Trent. Adams has authored many books and articles, and co-edited the regional history Peterborough and the Kawarthas. In 1981, he was named as Peterborough's Citizen of the Year.", "score": "1.4330629" }, { "id": "12554519", "title": "Adams National Historical Park", "text": " Adams National Historical Park, formerly Adams National Historic Site, in Quincy, Massachusetts, preserves the home of United States presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams, of U.S. envoy to Great Britain Charles Francis Adams, and of writers and historians Henry Adams and Brooks Adams. The national historical park's eleven buildings tell the story of five generations of the Adams family (from 1720 to 1927) including presidents, first ladies, envoys, historians, writers, and family members who supported and contributed to their success. In addition to Peacefield, home to four generations of the Adams family, the park's main historic features include the John Adams Birthplace (October 30, 1735), the nearby John Quincy Adams Birthplace ", "score": "1.420912" }, { "id": "1351713", "title": "Adams-Ryan House", "text": " Adams-Ryan House is a historic inn located at Adams Basin in the town of Ogden in Monroe County, New York. It was constructed about 1825 and is a rare surviving example of an inn that operated along the towpath of the Erie Canal. The original structure reflects a vernacular Federal style. Later alterations added vernacular Greek Revival style details. Throughout the 19th century there were several additions to the original structure and in 1912 it underwent further alterations and remodeling. It ceased operating as an inn in 1916 and was virtually abandoned between 1939 and 1972. Also on the property are a contributing barn and privy. It is now operated as a bed and breakfast. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 5, 1985.", "score": "1.4206345" }, { "id": "7973209", "title": "Adams, New York", "text": " Adams is a town in Jefferson County, New York, United States. Named after President John Adams, the town had a population of 5,143 at the 2010 census. The town contains a village also named Adams. The village and town are south of Watertown.", "score": "1.4196188" }, { "id": "5263743", "title": "Adams County, North Dakota", "text": " Adams County is a county in the U.S. state of North Dakota. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 2,200. The county seat is Hettinger. The county was created on April 17, 1907, and organized one week later. It was named for John Quincy Adams (1848–1919), a railroad official for the Milwaukee Road Railroad and distant relative of sixth U.S. President John Quincy Adams (1767–1848).", "score": "1.4070635" }, { "id": "31062096", "title": "Adamstown Church", "text": " The Adamstown Church, or alternatively Adamstown Adventist Church, is a religious building affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, located in the town of Adamstown in the Pitcairn Islands, a dependent territory of the United Kingdom in Oceania, at an isolated end of the Pacific Ocean. The building is located on the main street called \"The Square\". The church is unique in the entire island of Pitcairn (the only inhabited island of the archipelago) and is the product of a mission sent by Adventists who converted almost all of the small number of inhabitants of the island to that Protestant denomination.", "score": "1.4036987" }, { "id": "7973203", "title": "Adams (village), New York", "text": " Adams is a village in the town of Adams in Jefferson County, New York, United States. The population was 1,775 at the 2010 census. The village is named after President John Adams.", "score": "1.4015374" }, { "id": "11845150", "title": "Sylvan Adams", "text": " Adams was born and raised in Canada. He served for close to 25 years as president and CEO of Iberville Developments, one of Canada's largest real-estate development companies founded by his father, Marcel. At the end of 2015, he immigrated to Israel (made Aliyah) and settled in Tel Aviv. Adams has a passion for cycling, taking it up only in his 40s. In November 2017, he won the World Masters Championship in Manchester, England and has been a world time-trial champion many times. He is co-owner of the Israel Cycling Academy (ICA). The team was founded in 2015 as a UCI Pro Continental team and made the jump up to UCI World Tour level in 2020. The team is now known as Israel Start-Up Nation. In 2017 ", "score": "1.3974001" }, { "id": "31792820", "title": "Patch Adams", "text": " Hunter Doherty \"Patch\" Adams (born May 28, 1945) is an American physician, comedian, social activist, clown, and author. He founded the Gesundheit! Institute in 1971. Each year he also organizes volunteers from around the world to travel to various countries where they dress as clowns to bring humor to orphans, patients, and other people. Adams is currently based in Urbana, Illinois. In collaboration with the institute, he promotes an alternative health care model not funded by insurance policies.", "score": "1.3970912" }, { "id": "31460177", "title": "Adams, Nebraska", "text": " Adams is a village in Gage County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 573 at the 2010 census.", "score": "1.3964657" }, { "id": "7973210", "title": "Adams, New York", "text": " Settlement began around 1800 at Adams village. David Smith built a sawmill at the present site of Adams in 1801. Renamed for John Adams in 1802 (the year after his presidency ended), the town of Adams was created from the survey townships of Aleppo and Orpheus. The eastern part of Adams was taken in 1804 to form the town of Rodman. During the War of 1812, the town of Adams formed a local militia for home defense. The Talcott Falls Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.", "score": "1.3964298" }, { "id": "3300120", "title": "Adams, Illinois", "text": " Adams is an unincorporated community in Burton Township, Adams County, Illinois, United States. Adams is about 13 mi southeast of Quincy. Adams was laid out in 1838.", "score": "1.3937402" }, { "id": "2441990", "title": "Adams-Magoun House", "text": " The Adams-Magoun House stands on Winter Hill in central Somerville, roughly midway between Magoun Square and the Winter Hill commercial district. It is set facing east on the south side of Broadway, between Bartlett Street and Glenwood Road. It is a 2½-story wood frame structure, with a gabled roof, two interior chimneys, and a clapboarded exterior. The main facade is five bays wide, with its entrance at the center, framed by pilasters and topped by a half-round transom window and gabled pediment. The interior follows a typical center hall plan, and has retained a number of original features, including particularly ornate turned balusters on the main staircase. The house was built by Joseph Adams in 1783, and was the farmstead house for a farm of 71 acre. It ", "score": "1.3875" }, { "id": "11643897", "title": "Zabdiel Adams", "text": " Zabdiel Adams (November 5, 1739 – March 1, 1801), minister of Lunenburg, Massachusetts, was born in Braintree, now Quincy. His father was the uncle of John Adams, second President of the United States. He graduated from Harvard University in 1759. He was ordained September 5, 1764.", "score": "1.3872912" }, { "id": "31460184", "title": "Adams, Nebraska", "text": " The village of Adams is the location of three churches, all of which pertaining to denominations of traditional Protestantism. Of the three, the American Lutheran Church is the only non-Methodist church within the village's borders. A chapel is also located within the Gold Crest Retirement Center, which is also located within the boundaries of Adams.", "score": "1.3863833" }, { "id": "31132869", "title": "West-Indisch Huis (Amsterdam)", "text": " The John Adams Institute (Dutch: Stichting John Adams Instituut),, which aims to further cultural exchange between The Netherlands and the U.S., is housed in the building. Founded in April 1987, it survives without Dutch government subsidy, relying on contributions, entrance fees, private donations, and Dutch and American corporate sponsors, and American Embassy Small Grants. The live event series American Literature Today interviews familiar authors, while American Focus present lecturers, scientists and other speakers who explore the broader aspects of American culture.", "score": "1.3853368" }, { "id": "30860489", "title": "Charles C. Adams Jr.", "text": " Charles C. Adams Jr. (born August 25, 1947) is the former United States Ambassador to Finland. Previously, he was an American international arbitration expert and American political and social activist. Based in Geneva, Switzerland, he served as co-chair of Americans Abroad for Obama, a Democratic Party fundraising and networking organization of Americans living overseas. and raised money for Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg He also served as a member of the National Finance Committee of the 2012 Barack Obama presidential campaign, a position he also held during the 2008 Obama campaign. He was nominated Ambassador to Finland by President Barack Obama in July 2014 and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on June 24, 2015.", "score": "1.3848414" } ]
[ "Henry Adams (farmer)\n John Adams, the second president of the United States of America, erected a monument to his memory in the old church yard at Quincy with the following inscription: \"In memory of Henry Adams who took his flight from the Dragon persecution in Devonshire, England and alighted with eight sons, near Mount Wollaston. One of the sons returned to England, and after taking time to explore the country, four removed to Medfield and the neighboring towns; two to Chelmsford. One only, Joseph, who lies here at his left hand, remained here, who was an original proprietor in the township of Braintree, incorporated in 1639. This stone and several others ", "Adams v. Howerton\n Adams was born in Manila in the Philippines. His family moved to the United States when he was 12, and he grew up in Long Prairie, Minnesota. He studied liberal arts at the University of Minnesota. Adams became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1968 and was living in Los Angeles, California, in 1971 when he met Anthony Corbett \"Tony\" Sullivan, an Australian citizen who was visiting the U.S. on a tourist visa. They were one of six gay couples granted marriage licenses by County Clerk Clela Rorex in Boulder, Colorado on April 21, 1975. They exchanged vows in a religious ceremony as well. To publicize their lawsuit, they appeared on the Phil Donahue Show where, according to their ", "Charles C. Adams Jr.\n Adams began practicing international law in Washington, D.C., and moved to Paris before establishing residence in Geneva in 1986. Currently, Adams is partner at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, an international law firm based in the United States. He leads the firm's international arbitration practice, with a focus on high-value disputes, and serves as head of the firm's Geneva office. His practice includes major infrastructure and construction projects, joint venture agreements, intellectual property, insurance, energy, manufacturing, telecommunications and transportation industries. He occasionally serves on international arbitration panels, and appears frequently on various news media outlets, commenting on U.S. political issues. Notable publications include English Supreme Court Upholds Party Autonomy in International Arbitration, which examined a 2011 British ", "Peter Adams (politician)\n Adams was born in Ellesmere Port, United Kingdom and educated at the University of Sheffield and McGill University. He served as director of the subarctic research laboratory in Schefferville, Quebec, and was a member of the Geography department and coordinator of Northern Studies at Trent University in Peterborough, where he was later Emeritus Professor. Adams also served as Vice President – Academic while at Trent. Adams has authored many books and articles, and co-edited the regional history Peterborough and the Kawarthas. In 1981, he was named as Peterborough's Citizen of the Year.", "Adams National Historical Park\n Adams National Historical Park, formerly Adams National Historic Site, in Quincy, Massachusetts, preserves the home of United States presidents John Adams and John Quincy Adams, of U.S. envoy to Great Britain Charles Francis Adams, and of writers and historians Henry Adams and Brooks Adams. The national historical park's eleven buildings tell the story of five generations of the Adams family (from 1720 to 1927) including presidents, first ladies, envoys, historians, writers, and family members who supported and contributed to their success. In addition to Peacefield, home to four generations of the Adams family, the park's main historic features include the John Adams Birthplace (October 30, 1735), the nearby John Quincy Adams Birthplace ", "Adams-Ryan House\n Adams-Ryan House is a historic inn located at Adams Basin in the town of Ogden in Monroe County, New York. It was constructed about 1825 and is a rare surviving example of an inn that operated along the towpath of the Erie Canal. The original structure reflects a vernacular Federal style. Later alterations added vernacular Greek Revival style details. Throughout the 19th century there were several additions to the original structure and in 1912 it underwent further alterations and remodeling. It ceased operating as an inn in 1916 and was virtually abandoned between 1939 and 1972. Also on the property are a contributing barn and privy. It is now operated as a bed and breakfast. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 5, 1985.", "Adams, New York\n Adams is a town in Jefferson County, New York, United States. Named after President John Adams, the town had a population of 5,143 at the 2010 census. The town contains a village also named Adams. The village and town are south of Watertown.", "Adams County, North Dakota\n Adams County is a county in the U.S. state of North Dakota. As of the 2020 United States Census, the population was 2,200. The county seat is Hettinger. The county was created on April 17, 1907, and organized one week later. It was named for John Quincy Adams (1848–1919), a railroad official for the Milwaukee Road Railroad and distant relative of sixth U.S. President John Quincy Adams (1767–1848).", "Adamstown Church\n The Adamstown Church, or alternatively Adamstown Adventist Church, is a religious building affiliated with the Seventh-day Adventist Church, located in the town of Adamstown in the Pitcairn Islands, a dependent territory of the United Kingdom in Oceania, at an isolated end of the Pacific Ocean. The building is located on the main street called \"The Square\". The church is unique in the entire island of Pitcairn (the only inhabited island of the archipelago) and is the product of a mission sent by Adventists who converted almost all of the small number of inhabitants of the island to that Protestant denomination.", "Adams (village), New York\n Adams is a village in the town of Adams in Jefferson County, New York, United States. The population was 1,775 at the 2010 census. The village is named after President John Adams.", "Sylvan Adams\n Adams was born and raised in Canada. He served for close to 25 years as president and CEO of Iberville Developments, one of Canada's largest real-estate development companies founded by his father, Marcel. At the end of 2015, he immigrated to Israel (made Aliyah) and settled in Tel Aviv. Adams has a passion for cycling, taking it up only in his 40s. In November 2017, he won the World Masters Championship in Manchester, England and has been a world time-trial champion many times. He is co-owner of the Israel Cycling Academy (ICA). The team was founded in 2015 as a UCI Pro Continental team and made the jump up to UCI World Tour level in 2020. The team is now known as Israel Start-Up Nation. In 2017 ", "Patch Adams\n Hunter Doherty \"Patch\" Adams (born May 28, 1945) is an American physician, comedian, social activist, clown, and author. He founded the Gesundheit! Institute in 1971. Each year he also organizes volunteers from around the world to travel to various countries where they dress as clowns to bring humor to orphans, patients, and other people. Adams is currently based in Urbana, Illinois. In collaboration with the institute, he promotes an alternative health care model not funded by insurance policies.", "Adams, Nebraska\n Adams is a village in Gage County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 573 at the 2010 census.", "Adams, New York\n Settlement began around 1800 at Adams village. David Smith built a sawmill at the present site of Adams in 1801. Renamed for John Adams in 1802 (the year after his presidency ended), the town of Adams was created from the survey townships of Aleppo and Orpheus. The eastern part of Adams was taken in 1804 to form the town of Rodman. During the War of 1812, the town of Adams formed a local militia for home defense. The Talcott Falls Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.", "Adams, Illinois\n Adams is an unincorporated community in Burton Township, Adams County, Illinois, United States. Adams is about 13 mi southeast of Quincy. Adams was laid out in 1838.", "Adams-Magoun House\n The Adams-Magoun House stands on Winter Hill in central Somerville, roughly midway between Magoun Square and the Winter Hill commercial district. It is set facing east on the south side of Broadway, between Bartlett Street and Glenwood Road. It is a 2½-story wood frame structure, with a gabled roof, two interior chimneys, and a clapboarded exterior. The main facade is five bays wide, with its entrance at the center, framed by pilasters and topped by a half-round transom window and gabled pediment. The interior follows a typical center hall plan, and has retained a number of original features, including particularly ornate turned balusters on the main staircase. The house was built by Joseph Adams in 1783, and was the farmstead house for a farm of 71 acre. It ", "Zabdiel Adams\n Zabdiel Adams (November 5, 1739 – March 1, 1801), minister of Lunenburg, Massachusetts, was born in Braintree, now Quincy. His father was the uncle of John Adams, second President of the United States. He graduated from Harvard University in 1759. He was ordained September 5, 1764.", "Adams, Nebraska\n The village of Adams is the location of three churches, all of which pertaining to denominations of traditional Protestantism. Of the three, the American Lutheran Church is the only non-Methodist church within the village's borders. A chapel is also located within the Gold Crest Retirement Center, which is also located within the boundaries of Adams.", "West-Indisch Huis (Amsterdam)\n The John Adams Institute (Dutch: Stichting John Adams Instituut),, which aims to further cultural exchange between The Netherlands and the U.S., is housed in the building. Founded in April 1987, it survives without Dutch government subsidy, relying on contributions, entrance fees, private donations, and Dutch and American corporate sponsors, and American Embassy Small Grants. The live event series American Literature Today interviews familiar authors, while American Focus present lecturers, scientists and other speakers who explore the broader aspects of American culture.", "Charles C. Adams Jr.\n Charles C. Adams Jr. (born August 25, 1947) is the former United States Ambassador to Finland. Previously, he was an American international arbitration expert and American political and social activist. Based in Geneva, Switzerland, he served as co-chair of Americans Abroad for Obama, a Democratic Party fundraising and networking organization of Americans living overseas. and raised money for Democratic candidate Pete Buttigieg He also served as a member of the National Finance Committee of the 2012 Barack Obama presidential campaign, a position he also held during the 2008 Obama campaign. He was nominated Ambassador to Finland by President Barack Obama in July 2014 and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on June 24, 2015." ]
In what country is Pira?
[ "Spain", "España", "Kingdom of Spain", "ES", "ESP" ]
country
Pira, Tarragona
344,660
82
[ { "id": "9688556", "title": "Linda Pira", "text": "2013: Matriarken ", "score": "1.4948571" }, { "id": "13354529", "title": "Pira, Victoria", "text": " Pira is a locality in Victoria, Australia, located approximately 23 km from Swan Hill. Pira Post Office opened on 14 July 1924 and closed in 1975. In December 2017 Amanda Maher, a farmer from Pira and member of the Australian Alpaca Association, was awarded a Victorian Young Farmer's Scholarship.", "score": "1.4836032" }, { "id": "9688557", "title": "Linda Pira", "text": " Featured on", "score": "1.4736791" }, { "id": "6197565", "title": "Pira Sudham", "text": " is the People: of Thailand and Other Countries, an ebook of an anthology of Pira Sudham's short stories, was published by Proglen, Bangkok, in 2014, for amazon.com, apple, dco thai and other ebook retailers. The collection includes a little monk's lament, a confession of a transvestite, a reflection of an Englishman's wife, tales of surviving in Bangkok by a little guttersnipe and a street food seller, a revelation of a prostitute, a recollection of a British prisoner of war, working on the Death Railway, a tale of a young Thai girl in search of love in Germany, a narrative on life of a child prostitute and an Italian's Asian adventure. ", "score": "1.4110034" }, { "id": "6197562", "title": "Pira Sudham", "text": " Pira Sudham (Pira Canning Sudham) has lived over twenty years in New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong and in the UK, writing short stories, poems, and his first novel, Monsoon Country. Now he lives in his home village in Isan, Northeastern Thailand.", "score": "1.4015919" }, { "id": "27253981", "title": "Pira District", "text": " The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (83.20%) learnt to speak in childhood, 16.63% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "score": "1.3829007" }, { "id": "13678372", "title": "Piraera", "text": "Population:The population in 2001 was 11,420, and according to estimates by the INE Honduras, 14,124 is expected for 2015. ; Villages: 10 ; Settlements: 105 The majority of the population is Mestizo.", "score": "1.3783524" }, { "id": "31391277", "title": "Piran", "text": "Vis, Croatia (since 1973) ; 🇮🇹 Aquileia, Italy (since 1977) ; Ohrid, North Macedonia (since 1981) ; 🇳🇴 Bjugn, Norway (since 1985) ; 🇮🇹 Castel Goffredo, Italy (since 1993) ; 🇺🇸 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States (since 2001) ; 🇲🇹 Valletta, Malta (since 2002) ; 🇮🇹 Acqualagna, Italy (since 2003) ; Mangalia, Romania (since 2012) ; 🇮🇹 Porano, Italy (since 2012) ; 🇹🇷 Karsiyaka, Turkey (since 2013) ; 🇦🇹 Sittersdorf, Austria (since 2017) ; 🇲🇪 Tivat, Montenegro (since 2018) Piran is twinned with: ", "score": "1.3755556" }, { "id": "28416138", "title": "Pirae", "text": " Pirae is a commune in the suburbs of Papeete in French Polynesia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean. Pirae is located on the island of Tahiti, in the administrative subdivision of the Windward Islands, themselves part of the Society Islands. It borders Papeete in the west and Arue in the east. At the 2017 census it had a population of 14,209. The Stade Pater Te Hono Nui is a stadium located in the commune.", "score": "1.3660612" }, { "id": "13678367", "title": "Piraera", "text": " Piraera is one of the municipalities of Lempira department in Honduras. It is located on one of the branches of \"Congolón\" mountain, it is 105 km away from the city of Gracias.", "score": "1.3640873" }, { "id": "13678369", "title": "Piraera", "text": " Since it is located on the mountains, the main forests are Pines and Oaks. Its elevation above sea level is the proper one for coffee plantations. Its mountains and hills are very high and steep. It has several water springs running down the steep hills. One curiosity is a huge rock monolith on the way to the departmental capital, which proves the volcanic origins of the rocks in this municipality and the rest of the department.", "score": "1.3633657" }, { "id": "13678368", "title": "Piraera", "text": " Its first inhabitants came from San Antonio, Santa Lucia and Magdalena in Intibuca department. In the population record of 1702 there were some people booked. In the census of 1791, it is a town part of \"Curato\" de Cerquin and in 1889 it was a municipality of Candelaria. It is supposed that Lempira, the national hero, received the power from \"Etempic\" chief when the Spanish arrived, lived in this municipality.", "score": "1.360461" }, { "id": "7922374", "title": "Pira, Benin", "text": " Pira is a town and arrondissement in the Collines department of Benin. It is an administrative division under the jurisdiction of the commune of Bantè. According to the population census conducted by the Institut National de la Statistique Benin on February 15, 2002, the arrondissement had a total population of 12,337.", "score": "1.3548174" }, { "id": "8260937", "title": "Piškera", "text": " Piškera (also called Jadra ) is a small uninhabited island in the Croatian part of the Adriatic Sea. It is one of the Kornati Islands in central Dalmatia and its area is 2.66 km2. Its coastline is 10.64 km long. A fishing settlement of the same name, established on the island in the 16th century, was gradually abandoned after the demise of the Republic of Venice in the late 18th century. The island's name is derived from peschiera, Italian for \"fish farm\". A marina with 118 berths operated by ACI Club, located off the coast of an adjacent isle of Panitula Vela, is open between April and October every year.", "score": "1.3502135" }, { "id": "4799670", "title": "Partnership for Peace Information Management System", "text": " As of July 2010, the following PfP countries participate in the PIMS program: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Republic of Macedonia, Moldova, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan. Participating countries in the past include Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkmenistan. All of these, but Turkmenistan, have eventually joined NATO.", "score": "1.3467673" }, { "id": "2967861", "title": "Pira-pirasong Pangarap", "text": " Pira-pirasong Pangarap is a Philippine television drama anthology broadcast by GMA Network and Super Radyo DZBB. Hosted by Gina de Venecia, it premiered on August 18, 1997. The show concluded on February 21, 2003. It was replaced by Nagmamahal, Manay Gina in its timeslot.", "score": "1.33787" }, { "id": "12811893", "title": "Pacific Islands Rugby Alliance", "text": " The Pacific Islands Rugby Alliance (PIRA) was set up in 2002 as a basis of co-operation between the Fiji, Samoa and Tonga Rugby Unions. Niue and the Cook Islands also became members of the Alliance and supplied players to the Pacific Islanders team.", "score": "1.3209512" }, { "id": "13678371", "title": "Piraera", "text": " Coffee is the main product up in Piraera, followed by cattle, milk derivates, corn, beans, and commerce. The trees are plenty and yield some income. It also has several water springs, for people and cattle and for the crops. As the rest of the department it has electricity, Internet access in the Mayor's and with mobile communication services. A few people sell fuels in their houses.", "score": "1.3192725" }, { "id": "8596962", "title": "Pirəsora", "text": " Pirasora (also, Pirasora) is a village and the most populous municipality, other than the capital Lerik, in the Lerik Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 2,298.", "score": "1.3173351" }, { "id": "29082588", "title": "Mura language", "text": " Mura is a language of Amazonas, Brazil. It is most famous for Pirahã, its sole surviving dialect. Linguistically, it is typified by agglutinativity, a very small phoneme inventory (around 11 compared to around 44 in English), whistled speech, and the use of tone. In the 19th century, there were an estimated 30,000–60,000 Mura. It is now spoken by only 300 Pirahã people in eight villages.", "score": "1.3154966" } ]
[ "Linda Pira\n2013: Matriarken ", "Pira, Victoria\n Pira is a locality in Victoria, Australia, located approximately 23 km from Swan Hill. Pira Post Office opened on 14 July 1924 and closed in 1975. In December 2017 Amanda Maher, a farmer from Pira and member of the Australian Alpaca Association, was awarded a Victorian Young Farmer's Scholarship.", "Linda Pira\n Featured on", "Pira Sudham\n is the People: of Thailand and Other Countries, an ebook of an anthology of Pira Sudham's short stories, was published by Proglen, Bangkok, in 2014, for amazon.com, apple, dco thai and other ebook retailers. The collection includes a little monk's lament, a confession of a transvestite, a reflection of an Englishman's wife, tales of surviving in Bangkok by a little guttersnipe and a street food seller, a revelation of a prostitute, a recollection of a British prisoner of war, working on the Death Railway, a tale of a young Thai girl in search of love in Germany, a narrative on life of a child prostitute and an Italian's Asian adventure. ", "Pira Sudham\n Pira Sudham (Pira Canning Sudham) has lived over twenty years in New Zealand, Australia, Hong Kong and in the UK, writing short stories, poems, and his first novel, Monsoon Country. Now he lives in his home village in Isan, Northeastern Thailand.", "Pira District\n The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (83.20%) learnt to speak in childhood, 16.63% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).", "Piraera\nPopulation:The population in 2001 was 11,420, and according to estimates by the INE Honduras, 14,124 is expected for 2015. ; Villages: 10 ; Settlements: 105 The majority of the population is Mestizo.", "Piran\nVis, Croatia (since 1973) ; 🇮🇹 Aquileia, Italy (since 1977) ; Ohrid, North Macedonia (since 1981) ; 🇳🇴 Bjugn, Norway (since 1985) ; 🇮🇹 Castel Goffredo, Italy (since 1993) ; 🇺🇸 Indianapolis, Indiana, United States (since 2001) ; 🇲🇹 Valletta, Malta (since 2002) ; 🇮🇹 Acqualagna, Italy (since 2003) ; Mangalia, Romania (since 2012) ; 🇮🇹 Porano, Italy (since 2012) ; 🇹🇷 Karsiyaka, Turkey (since 2013) ; 🇦🇹 Sittersdorf, Austria (since 2017) ; 🇲🇪 Tivat, Montenegro (since 2018) Piran is twinned with: ", "Pirae\n Pirae is a commune in the suburbs of Papeete in French Polynesia, an overseas territory of France in the Pacific Ocean. Pirae is located on the island of Tahiti, in the administrative subdivision of the Windward Islands, themselves part of the Society Islands. It borders Papeete in the west and Arue in the east. At the 2017 census it had a population of 14,209. The Stade Pater Te Hono Nui is a stadium located in the commune.", "Piraera\n Piraera is one of the municipalities of Lempira department in Honduras. It is located on one of the branches of \"Congolón\" mountain, it is 105 km away from the city of Gracias.", "Piraera\n Since it is located on the mountains, the main forests are Pines and Oaks. Its elevation above sea level is the proper one for coffee plantations. Its mountains and hills are very high and steep. It has several water springs running down the steep hills. One curiosity is a huge rock monolith on the way to the departmental capital, which proves the volcanic origins of the rocks in this municipality and the rest of the department.", "Piraera\n Its first inhabitants came from San Antonio, Santa Lucia and Magdalena in Intibuca department. In the population record of 1702 there were some people booked. In the census of 1791, it is a town part of \"Curato\" de Cerquin and in 1889 it was a municipality of Candelaria. It is supposed that Lempira, the national hero, received the power from \"Etempic\" chief when the Spanish arrived, lived in this municipality.", "Pira, Benin\n Pira is a town and arrondissement in the Collines department of Benin. It is an administrative division under the jurisdiction of the commune of Bantè. According to the population census conducted by the Institut National de la Statistique Benin on February 15, 2002, the arrondissement had a total population of 12,337.", "Piškera\n Piškera (also called Jadra ) is a small uninhabited island in the Croatian part of the Adriatic Sea. It is one of the Kornati Islands in central Dalmatia and its area is 2.66 km2. Its coastline is 10.64 km long. A fishing settlement of the same name, established on the island in the 16th century, was gradually abandoned after the demise of the Republic of Venice in the late 18th century. The island's name is derived from peschiera, Italian for \"fish farm\". A marina with 118 berths operated by ACI Club, located off the coast of an adjacent isle of Panitula Vela, is open between April and October every year.", "Partnership for Peace Information Management System\n As of July 2010, the following PfP countries participate in the PIMS program: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Republic of Macedonia, Moldova, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan. Participating countries in the past include Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Turkmenistan. All of these, but Turkmenistan, have eventually joined NATO.", "Pira-pirasong Pangarap\n Pira-pirasong Pangarap is a Philippine television drama anthology broadcast by GMA Network and Super Radyo DZBB. Hosted by Gina de Venecia, it premiered on August 18, 1997. The show concluded on February 21, 2003. It was replaced by Nagmamahal, Manay Gina in its timeslot.", "Pacific Islands Rugby Alliance\n The Pacific Islands Rugby Alliance (PIRA) was set up in 2002 as a basis of co-operation between the Fiji, Samoa and Tonga Rugby Unions. Niue and the Cook Islands also became members of the Alliance and supplied players to the Pacific Islanders team.", "Piraera\n Coffee is the main product up in Piraera, followed by cattle, milk derivates, corn, beans, and commerce. The trees are plenty and yield some income. It also has several water springs, for people and cattle and for the crops. As the rest of the department it has electricity, Internet access in the Mayor's and with mobile communication services. A few people sell fuels in their houses.", "Pirəsora\n Pirasora (also, Pirasora) is a village and the most populous municipality, other than the capital Lerik, in the Lerik Rayon of Azerbaijan. It has a population of 2,298.", "Mura language\n Mura is a language of Amazonas, Brazil. It is most famous for Pirahã, its sole surviving dialect. Linguistically, it is typified by agglutinativity, a very small phoneme inventory (around 11 compared to around 44 in English), whistled speech, and the use of tone. In the 19th century, there were an estimated 30,000–60,000 Mura. It is now spoken by only 300 Pirahã people in eight villages." ]
In what country is Tōhoku History Museum?
[ "Japan", "State of Japan", "Land of the Rising Sun", "Nihon", "Nippon", "JP", "Nippon-koku", "Nihon-koku", "JA", "JPN", "jp", "JAP", "Ja", "Jap" ]
country
Tōhoku History Museum
2,464,337
80
[ { "id": "29167455", "title": "Tōhoku History Museum", "text": " The Tōhoku History Museum (東北歴史博物館) is a museum in Tagajō, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. It houses finds from excavations at the site of Tagajō as well as from other archaeological sites in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. These include a Jōmon period jade axe excavated in Kizukuri, Aomori Prefecture, and designated an Important Cultural Property; and another Jōmon jade, excavated in Niisato, Iwate Prefecture, also designated an Important Cultural Property.", "score": "1.8580377" }, { "id": "11620845", "title": "National Museum of Japanese History", "text": " The National Museum of Japanese History (国立歴史民俗博物館), commonly known in Japanese as Rekihaku, is a history museum in Sakura, Chiba, Japan. The museum was founded in 1981 as an inter-university research consortium, and opened in 1983. The collections of museum focus on the history, archaeology, and folk culture of Japan.", "score": "1.5873303" }, { "id": "14696978", "title": "Kōchi Prefectural Museum of History", "text": " Kōchi Prefectural Museum of History (高知県立歴史民俗資料館) opened in Nankoku, Kōchi Prefecture, Japan, in 1991. Located on the site of Okō Castle and the Chōsokabe clan residence, the collection relates to the archaeology, history, and folk customs of the area.", "score": "1.5800008" }, { "id": "29081438", "title": "Taga Castle", "text": " The Tōhoku History Museum (東北歴史博物館), on the grounds of the Taga Castle, has finds from the excavations as well as from other sites in Tōhoku.", "score": "1.5786213" }, { "id": "10735869", "title": "List of museums in Japan", "text": "Aoba Castle Museum ; Fukushima Art Museum ; The Miyagi Museum of Art ; Ōsaki City Matsuyama Furusato History Museum ; Rias Ark Museum of Art ; Rikuzentakata City Museum ; Sendai City Museum ; Kami Town Serisawa Chōsuke Tōhoku Ceramic Culture Museum ; Tōhoku Gakuin University Museum ; Tōhoku History Museum ; Tōhoku Fukushi University Serizawa Keisuke Art and Craft Museum ; Zuigan-ji Treasure Hall Seiryūden ", "score": "1.5728682" }, { "id": "2074154", "title": "Takikawa Local History Museum", "text": " Takikawa Local History Museum (滝川市郷土館) opened in Takikawa, Hokkaidō, Japan in 1977. It is dedicated to the history and ways of life of the area and includes exhibits on Takabatake Toshiyoshi (高畑利宜), the Prefectural Cultural Property Documents of the Takikawa tondenhei, and an annex comprising a tondenhei house.", "score": "1.5682188" }, { "id": "14775057", "title": "Kamiyodo Hakuhō-no-Oka Exhibition Hall", "text": " Kamiyodo Hakuhō-no-Oka Exhibition Hall (上淀白鳳の丘展示館) opened in Yonago, Tottori Prefecture, Japan in 2011. It replaced the Yonago Yodoe Folk History Museum (米子市淀江歴史民俗資料館), which closed in 2009. The three rooms of the exhibition hall display Yayoi decorated pottery, haniwa statues, fragments of early Buddhist wall painting from Kamiyodo Haiji, and a reconstruction of the temple kondō, with its paintings and sculptures.", "score": "1.5600169" }, { "id": "14800164", "title": "Kitano Museum of Art", "text": " The Kitano Museum of Art (北野美術館), which opened in 1968 as the first private art museum in Nagano Prefecture, is today run by a public interest incorporated foundation, in the Wakaho district, in the southeastern section of Nagano in Nagano Prefecture. The museum is located next to the Yushimatenmangu Shrine, a branch of Yushima Tenman-gū which was founded in 458 in Bunkyō in Tokyo. The entrance to the museum is through the Yushimatenmangu Shrine. The museum includes a Japanese garden by Mirei Shigemori, a notable 20th century modern landscape architect, that was completed in 1965. In addition to the museum in Wakaho, there is an annex, the Kitano Cultural Center, which is located in downtown Nagano on Chuo Dori near the Gocho Campus of the University of Nagano and Zenkō-ji Temple; and the Togakushi Branch Museum of Kitano Museum of Art, which is located in the mountainous Togakushi district of Nagano City near the entrance to Togakushi Shrine. The Togakushi building received a Nagano City Landscape Award.", "score": "1.5570302" }, { "id": "10735920", "title": "List of museums in Japan", "text": "Akagane Museum ; Besshi Copper Mine Memorial Museum ; Ehime Prefectural Lifelong Learning Center ; Ehime University Museum ; Higurashi Villa Memorial Museum ; Ikazaki Kite Museum ; Imabari City Kōno Museum of Art ; Itō Toyoo Museum of Architecture, Imabari ; Kaimei School ; Kawara-kan ; Kubota Palm Garden ; Matsuyama Archaeological Museum ; Murakami Santō Memorial Museum ; Omogo Mountain Museum ; Paper Museum ; Railway History Park, Saijō ; Shikokuchūō City Museum of History and Archaeology ; Tamagawa Museum of Modern Art, Imabari ; Tobe Ware Traditional Industry Hall ; Towel Museum Ichihiro ; Uwajima City Historical Museum ", "score": "1.5478392" }, { "id": "9983316", "title": "Togariishi Museum of Jōmon Archaeology", "text": " The Togariishi Museum of Jōmon Archaeology (茅野市尖石縄文考古館) is a municipal museum located in the city of Chino, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, specializing in artifacts of the Jōmon period (between 14,000 and 1000 BCE).", "score": "1.5440931" }, { "id": "28870015", "title": "Tokushima Prefectural Museum", "text": " Tokushima Prefectural Museum (徳島県立博物館) is a prefectural museum in Tokushima, Japan, dedicated to the nature, archaeology, history, folklore, and art of Tokushima Prefecture. It first opened in 1959 and reopened in new premises in 1990.", "score": "1.5405988" }, { "id": "5437813", "title": "Aomori Museum of History", "text": " Aomori Museum of History (あおもり北のまほろば歴史館) opened in Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Japan, in 2015. Formerly the Michinoku Traditional Wooden Boat Museum (みちのく北方漁船博物館), the collection introduces the history and folk culture of Aomori City and includes the Important Tangible Folk Cultural Property Collection of mudamahagi-type fishing boats from Tsugaru Strait and surrounding areas.", "score": "1.5251594" }, { "id": "14908818", "title": "Tottori City Historical Museum", "text": " The Tottori City Historical Museum (鳥取市歴史博物館) opened in Tottori, Japan, in 2000 and is dedicated to the history of the city.", "score": "1.5236304" }, { "id": "2124017", "title": "Ōita Prefectural Museum of History", "text": " The Ōita Prefectural Museum of History (大分県立歴史博物館) opened in Usa, Ōita Prefecture, Japan in 1998, replacing the Usa Fudoki-no-Oka (宇佐風土記の丘) of 1981. It is one of Japan's many museums which are supported by a prefecture. The collection is organised around themes including life and ancient Buddhism in Toyo no kuni and the Kunisaki peninsula, and the culture of Usa Hachiman-gū and Fuki-ji.", "score": "1.5229143" }, { "id": "6245528", "title": "Akihiro Maeta", "text": "British Museum, London, United Kingdom ; Tottori Prefectural Museum, Tottori Prefecture, Japan ", "score": "1.5110562" }, { "id": "14697023", "title": "Kōchi Castle Museum of History", "text": " Kōchi Castle Museum of History (高知県立高知城歴史博物館) opened in Kōchi, Kōchi Prefecture, Japan, in 2017. Located beside the main gate of Kōchi Castle, the collection tells the history of the Tosa Domain and of the Prefecture, and comprises the 67,000 items formerly preserved, researched, and exhibited at the Tosa Yamauchi Family Treasury and Archives.", "score": "1.5099127" }, { "id": "10037657", "title": "National Museum of Art, Osaka", "text": " The National Museum of Art, Osaka (国立国際美術館) is a subterranean Japanese art museum located on the island of Nakanoshima, located between the Dōjima River and the Tosabori River, about 10 minutes west of Higobashi Station in central Osaka. The official Japanese title of the museum translates as the \"National Museum of International Art\". The museum is also known by the English acronym NMAO (National Museum of Art, Osaka).", "score": "1.5093035" }, { "id": "10735903", "title": "List of museums in Japan", "text": " Museum ; Mount Oshiroyama Observation Deck Kawahara Castle ; Nagashibina Doll Museum ; Nichinan Town Art Museum ; Nishikawa Katsumi Film Museum ; Saji Astro Park ; Mitokusan Sanbutsu-ji Treasure Hall ; Sand Museum ; San'in Kaigan Geopark Museum of the Earth and Sea ; Shiotani Teikō Memorial Photo Gallery ; Tottori College Kasuri Museum ; Tottori Hanakairō Flower Park ; Tottori Nijisseiki Pear Museum ; Tottori Prefectural Buried Cultural Property Center ; Tottori Prefectural Muki Banda Historic Site Park ; Ueda Shōji Museum of Photography ; Umi to Kurashi no Shiryōkan ; Wakasa Kyōdo Bunka-no-Sato ; Warabekan ; Yonago City Fukuichi Archaeology Museum ; Municipal Yonago Historical Museum ; Yonago San'in Historical Museum ; Yonago Waterbirds Sanctuary ; Yukamuri Gallery - Osaki Midori Museum ; Yumeminato Tower ; Yurihama Town Hawai History and Folklore Museum ; Yūsei Museum ", "score": "1.5089643" }, { "id": "29426057", "title": "Fukui Prefectural Museum of Cultural History", "text": " Fukui Prefectural Museum of Cultural History (福井県立歴史博物館) is a prefectural museum in Fukui, Japan, dedicated to the history and culture of Fukui Prefecture. The museum opened in 1984 and reopened after refurbishment in 2003.", "score": "1.5087076" }, { "id": "3105198", "title": "Chidō Museum", "text": " Tsuruoka Police Station from 1884, relocated in 1957. A large minka three-story farmhouse with thatched roof known as the Former Shibuya Family Home, built in 1822 in Tamugimata, Asahi village was relocated to the museum in 1965. In 1981 a new building, the National Important Folklore Cultural Assets Storage was established. The museum houses a number of Cultural Properties of Japan: two National Treasure tachi, a painting Wang Zhaojun (Important Cultural Property) and seven Important Tangible Folk Cultural Properties: Mogami River fishing implements, Collection of transport implements used by porters along the Himekawa river valley of Echigo Province, Collection of Kurimono and related tools from Shōnai and surrounding areas, Shōnai collection of work clothes, Shōnai collection of wooden drinking vessels, Collection of Daihō-ji pottery and Collection of Bandori from Shōnai.", "score": "1.5084105" } ]
[ "Tōhoku History Museum\n The Tōhoku History Museum (東北歴史博物館) is a museum in Tagajō, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. It houses finds from excavations at the site of Tagajō as well as from other archaeological sites in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. These include a Jōmon period jade axe excavated in Kizukuri, Aomori Prefecture, and designated an Important Cultural Property; and another Jōmon jade, excavated in Niisato, Iwate Prefecture, also designated an Important Cultural Property.", "National Museum of Japanese History\n The National Museum of Japanese History (国立歴史民俗博物館), commonly known in Japanese as Rekihaku, is a history museum in Sakura, Chiba, Japan. The museum was founded in 1981 as an inter-university research consortium, and opened in 1983. The collections of museum focus on the history, archaeology, and folk culture of Japan.", "Kōchi Prefectural Museum of History\n Kōchi Prefectural Museum of History (高知県立歴史民俗資料館) opened in Nankoku, Kōchi Prefecture, Japan, in 1991. Located on the site of Okō Castle and the Chōsokabe clan residence, the collection relates to the archaeology, history, and folk customs of the area.", "Taga Castle\n The Tōhoku History Museum (東北歴史博物館), on the grounds of the Taga Castle, has finds from the excavations as well as from other sites in Tōhoku.", "List of museums in Japan\nAoba Castle Museum ; Fukushima Art Museum ; The Miyagi Museum of Art ; Ōsaki City Matsuyama Furusato History Museum ; Rias Ark Museum of Art ; Rikuzentakata City Museum ; Sendai City Museum ; Kami Town Serisawa Chōsuke Tōhoku Ceramic Culture Museum ; Tōhoku Gakuin University Museum ; Tōhoku History Museum ; Tōhoku Fukushi University Serizawa Keisuke Art and Craft Museum ; Zuigan-ji Treasure Hall Seiryūden ", "Takikawa Local History Museum\n Takikawa Local History Museum (滝川市郷土館) opened in Takikawa, Hokkaidō, Japan in 1977. It is dedicated to the history and ways of life of the area and includes exhibits on Takabatake Toshiyoshi (高畑利宜), the Prefectural Cultural Property Documents of the Takikawa tondenhei, and an annex comprising a tondenhei house.", "Kamiyodo Hakuhō-no-Oka Exhibition Hall\n Kamiyodo Hakuhō-no-Oka Exhibition Hall (上淀白鳳の丘展示館) opened in Yonago, Tottori Prefecture, Japan in 2011. It replaced the Yonago Yodoe Folk History Museum (米子市淀江歴史民俗資料館), which closed in 2009. The three rooms of the exhibition hall display Yayoi decorated pottery, haniwa statues, fragments of early Buddhist wall painting from Kamiyodo Haiji, and a reconstruction of the temple kondō, with its paintings and sculptures.", "Kitano Museum of Art\n The Kitano Museum of Art (北野美術館), which opened in 1968 as the first private art museum in Nagano Prefecture, is today run by a public interest incorporated foundation, in the Wakaho district, in the southeastern section of Nagano in Nagano Prefecture. The museum is located next to the Yushimatenmangu Shrine, a branch of Yushima Tenman-gū which was founded in 458 in Bunkyō in Tokyo. The entrance to the museum is through the Yushimatenmangu Shrine. The museum includes a Japanese garden by Mirei Shigemori, a notable 20th century modern landscape architect, that was completed in 1965. In addition to the museum in Wakaho, there is an annex, the Kitano Cultural Center, which is located in downtown Nagano on Chuo Dori near the Gocho Campus of the University of Nagano and Zenkō-ji Temple; and the Togakushi Branch Museum of Kitano Museum of Art, which is located in the mountainous Togakushi district of Nagano City near the entrance to Togakushi Shrine. The Togakushi building received a Nagano City Landscape Award.", "List of museums in Japan\nAkagane Museum ; Besshi Copper Mine Memorial Museum ; Ehime Prefectural Lifelong Learning Center ; Ehime University Museum ; Higurashi Villa Memorial Museum ; Ikazaki Kite Museum ; Imabari City Kōno Museum of Art ; Itō Toyoo Museum of Architecture, Imabari ; Kaimei School ; Kawara-kan ; Kubota Palm Garden ; Matsuyama Archaeological Museum ; Murakami Santō Memorial Museum ; Omogo Mountain Museum ; Paper Museum ; Railway History Park, Saijō ; Shikokuchūō City Museum of History and Archaeology ; Tamagawa Museum of Modern Art, Imabari ; Tobe Ware Traditional Industry Hall ; Towel Museum Ichihiro ; Uwajima City Historical Museum ", "Togariishi Museum of Jōmon Archaeology\n The Togariishi Museum of Jōmon Archaeology (茅野市尖石縄文考古館) is a municipal museum located in the city of Chino, Nagano Prefecture, Japan, specializing in artifacts of the Jōmon period (between 14,000 and 1000 BCE).", "Tokushima Prefectural Museum\n Tokushima Prefectural Museum (徳島県立博物館) is a prefectural museum in Tokushima, Japan, dedicated to the nature, archaeology, history, folklore, and art of Tokushima Prefecture. It first opened in 1959 and reopened in new premises in 1990.", "Aomori Museum of History\n Aomori Museum of History (あおもり北のまほろば歴史館) opened in Aomori, Aomori Prefecture, Japan, in 2015. Formerly the Michinoku Traditional Wooden Boat Museum (みちのく北方漁船博物館), the collection introduces the history and folk culture of Aomori City and includes the Important Tangible Folk Cultural Property Collection of mudamahagi-type fishing boats from Tsugaru Strait and surrounding areas.", "Tottori City Historical Museum\n The Tottori City Historical Museum (鳥取市歴史博物館) opened in Tottori, Japan, in 2000 and is dedicated to the history of the city.", "Ōita Prefectural Museum of History\n The Ōita Prefectural Museum of History (大分県立歴史博物館) opened in Usa, Ōita Prefecture, Japan in 1998, replacing the Usa Fudoki-no-Oka (宇佐風土記の丘) of 1981. It is one of Japan's many museums which are supported by a prefecture. The collection is organised around themes including life and ancient Buddhism in Toyo no kuni and the Kunisaki peninsula, and the culture of Usa Hachiman-gū and Fuki-ji.", "Akihiro Maeta\nBritish Museum, London, United Kingdom ; Tottori Prefectural Museum, Tottori Prefecture, Japan ", "Kōchi Castle Museum of History\n Kōchi Castle Museum of History (高知県立高知城歴史博物館) opened in Kōchi, Kōchi Prefecture, Japan, in 2017. Located beside the main gate of Kōchi Castle, the collection tells the history of the Tosa Domain and of the Prefecture, and comprises the 67,000 items formerly preserved, researched, and exhibited at the Tosa Yamauchi Family Treasury and Archives.", "National Museum of Art, Osaka\n The National Museum of Art, Osaka (国立国際美術館) is a subterranean Japanese art museum located on the island of Nakanoshima, located between the Dōjima River and the Tosabori River, about 10 minutes west of Higobashi Station in central Osaka. The official Japanese title of the museum translates as the \"National Museum of International Art\". The museum is also known by the English acronym NMAO (National Museum of Art, Osaka).", "List of museums in Japan\n Museum ; Mount Oshiroyama Observation Deck Kawahara Castle ; Nagashibina Doll Museum ; Nichinan Town Art Museum ; Nishikawa Katsumi Film Museum ; Saji Astro Park ; Mitokusan Sanbutsu-ji Treasure Hall ; Sand Museum ; San'in Kaigan Geopark Museum of the Earth and Sea ; Shiotani Teikō Memorial Photo Gallery ; Tottori College Kasuri Museum ; Tottori Hanakairō Flower Park ; Tottori Nijisseiki Pear Museum ; Tottori Prefectural Buried Cultural Property Center ; Tottori Prefectural Muki Banda Historic Site Park ; Ueda Shōji Museum of Photography ; Umi to Kurashi no Shiryōkan ; Wakasa Kyōdo Bunka-no-Sato ; Warabekan ; Yonago City Fukuichi Archaeology Museum ; Municipal Yonago Historical Museum ; Yonago San'in Historical Museum ; Yonago Waterbirds Sanctuary ; Yukamuri Gallery - Osaki Midori Museum ; Yumeminato Tower ; Yurihama Town Hawai History and Folklore Museum ; Yūsei Museum ", "Fukui Prefectural Museum of Cultural History\n Fukui Prefectural Museum of Cultural History (福井県立歴史博物館) is a prefectural museum in Fukui, Japan, dedicated to the history and culture of Fukui Prefecture. The museum opened in 1984 and reopened after refurbishment in 2003.", "Chidō Museum\n Tsuruoka Police Station from 1884, relocated in 1957. A large minka three-story farmhouse with thatched roof known as the Former Shibuya Family Home, built in 1822 in Tamugimata, Asahi village was relocated to the museum in 1965. In 1981 a new building, the National Important Folklore Cultural Assets Storage was established. The museum houses a number of Cultural Properties of Japan: two National Treasure tachi, a painting Wang Zhaojun (Important Cultural Property) and seven Important Tangible Folk Cultural Properties: Mogami River fishing implements, Collection of transport implements used by porters along the Himekawa river valley of Echigo Province, Collection of Kurimono and related tools from Shōnai and surrounding areas, Shōnai collection of work clothes, Shōnai collection of wooden drinking vessels, Collection of Daihō-ji pottery and Collection of Bandori from Shōnai." ]
In what country is Neal?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Neal, Illinois
5,264,183
40
[ { "id": "9508067", "title": "Rajion Neal", "text": " Rajion Lashad Neal (born March 28, 1992) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent. He played college football at Tennessee. Neal was signed by the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent in 2014, and has also been a member of the Miami Dolphins, Oakland Raiders, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Cleveland Browns of the National Football League. Neal has also been a member of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League, as well as the Memphis Express of the Alliance of American Football.", "score": "1.5557876" }, { "id": "13676074", "title": "David Dalhoff Neal", "text": " Neal, his wife and sons stayed in Munich, but he traveled extensively to sell and exhibit his works, as he maintained his U.S. citizenship, and divided his time between the two countries with his address of Auen Strasse 74 & later Frauen Strasse 7, in Munich, Bavaria, as well as staying in Albert Bierstadt's house at 1111 Carnegie Hall, New York City. He was a member of the National Academy of Design in New York, as well as the Boston Art Club, 1886, and the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art. In the publication, Modern Art and Artists, in 1888, art critic Wilfrid Meynell comments on Neal's works. Neal continued to paint portraits when in the States, including the daughters of Ogden Mills, Beatrice Mills and Gladys Mills Phipps.", "score": "1.5169141" }, { "id": "4657011", "title": "Neal, Georgia", "text": " Neal is an unincorporated community in Pike County, in the U.S. state of Georgia.", "score": "1.4811101" }, { "id": "10113038", "title": "Brian Neal", "text": " Brian Neal (born 14 May 1948) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with North Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "score": "1.47808" }, { "id": "2633127", "title": "Micah Neal", "text": " Neal graduated from Fayetteville Christian School in Fayetteville in Washington County. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Marketing Management from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. Since 1997, he has operated Neal's Café in a landmark pink building in Springdale, a company launched in 1944 by his great-grandparents, Toy and Bertha Neal and later run by his father, Don Neal. He is married to Cindy Neal. He has two sons, Reagan and Bodie Neal and one daughter, London Neal. He is a member of Cross Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Springdale.", "score": "1.4748785" }, { "id": "2178027", "title": "Gary Neal", "text": " Gary Neal (born October 3, 1984) is an American professional basketball coach and former player. Neal attended Aberdeen High School and Calvert Hall College High School in Maryland before playing college basketball at La Salle University and Towson University. He began his professional career abroad with teams in Turkey, Spain and Italy before signing with the San Antonio Spurs in 2010. At 6 ft tall, Neal mostly played the shooting guard position, but filled in at the point guard spot on occasion.", "score": "1.4735" }, { "id": "30520821", "title": "Nickolas Neal", "text": " Nickolas Ralpheal Neal (born November 17, 1988) is an American professional basketball player for Vojvodina of the Basketball League of Serbia. He played college basketball at Purdue North Central from 2010 to 2012.", "score": "1.471045" }, { "id": "13540448", "title": "Geoff Neal", "text": " Neal was born in Austin, Texas, United States. He played football at private university Texas Lutheran. However, he did not like the football program there and transitioned to compete in MMA, coached under Sayif Saud.", "score": "1.4666307" }, { "id": "8616637", "title": "Neal Communities", "text": " Neal Communities is a privately held, Lakewood Ranch, Florida-based, land development and home building company founded in 1970. The company has built homes in the Hillsborough, Manatee, Sarasota, Lee, and Collier counties.", "score": "1.4623264" }, { "id": "9554125", "title": "John Neal (footballer, born 1966)", "text": " John James Neal (born 11 March 1966) is a former professional footballer who played as a forward in the Football League for Millwall. Neal was born in Hornsey, in the London Borough of Haringey, and played football for England Schoolboys. He then played for the Republic of Ireland in two European Championships at U18 level. He finished top scorer in the competition and went on to play in the 1985 FIFA World Youth Championship. At club level, he made six appearances in the 1983–84 Football League Third Division for Millwall. He moved on to Barnet, for whom he scored once from eight appearances in the 1985–86 Alliance Premier League. He went on to play non-league football for clubs including Hitchin Town, Walthamstow Avenue, Basildon United, Harlow Town, Dagenham, Barking, Bishops Stortford and Saffron Walden Town. He finished top scorer in the Vauxhall Opel scoring 23 league goals.", "score": "1.4603825" }, { "id": "1089547", "title": "Chris Neal (footballer, born 1947)", "text": " Christopher Neal (born 27 June 1947) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Darlington. Neal was born in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire. He joined Darlington as an amateur from Crook Town in June 1967, and made five first-team appearances for the club, all in the Fourth Division. He made his debut on 4 March 1968, in a 2–0 home win against Swansea Town, and started four of the next six league fixtures. He then returned to non-league football.", "score": "1.4480789" }, { "id": "25211007", "title": "Neal, West Virginia", "text": " Neal is an unincorporated community located in Wayne County, West Virginia, United States.", "score": "1.4457285" }, { "id": "134975", "title": "Simon Neal", "text": " Simon Nicholas Neal (born 2 January 1972) is a former English cricketer. Neal was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace and who occasionally played as a wicketkeeper. He was born in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire. Neal represented the Nottinghamshire Cricket Board in a single List A match against Scotland in the 1st round of the 1999 NatWest Trophy. In his only List A match he scored 7 runs.", "score": "1.431031" }, { "id": "9508074", "title": "Rajion Neal", "text": " On August 4, 2016, Neal was signed by the Cleveland Browns. He was later released by the team.", "score": "1.4284985" }, { "id": "12192689", "title": "Neal I. Rosenthal", "text": " Neal is the author of Reflections of a Wine Merchant, published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in 2008. He is featured in the documentary film Mondovino that debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004. In 2012, Neal was nominated for an Outstanding Wine & Spirits Professional Award by the James Beard Foundation Award. In 2019, Neal was awarded honorary citizenship in the village of Carema in northwestern Piedmont in Italy in recognition of his efforts to promote the rare wines of that region.", "score": "1.4284246" }, { "id": "9508076", "title": "Rajion Neal", "text": " On September 27, 2018, Neal signed with the Memphis Express of the Alliance of American Football for the 2019 season. He was waived on February 21, 2019. During two games played, Neal had 8 rushes for 15 yards, and 4 catches for 10 yards.", "score": "1.4237604" }, { "id": "15947408", "title": "Yasmin Neal", "text": " Yasmin Mikila Neal (born February 10, 1985) is an American politician who has served in the Georgia House of Representatives from the 74th district since 2021. She previously served in the Georgia House of Representatives from the 75th district from 2011 to 2013.", "score": "1.4233745" }, { "id": "6492817", "title": "Adrienne S. O'Neal", "text": " O'Neal was born in Durham, North Carolina, and raised in New Orleans. She is a resident of Michigan, and formerly served as Diplomat in Residence at the University of Michigan from 2007 to 2009. O'Neal received a B.A. in business administration and Spanish from Spelman College. She also earned an M.M.L. in Spanish language and literature from Middlebury College in Vermont.", "score": "1.4224813" }, { "id": "8260945", "title": "Frankie Neal", "text": " Frankie Leon Neal (born October 1, 1965) is an American former college and professional football player who was a wide receiver in the National Football League (NFL) for a single season in 1987. Neal played college football for the University of Florida and Fort Hays State University, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Green Bay Packers of the NFL. He is currently serving a 30 year prison sentence in the Florida Department of Corrections for numerous drug charges.", "score": "1.4132605" }, { "id": "9508075", "title": "Rajion Neal", "text": " In December 2017, Neal signed with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League for the 2018 season, but was released in February 2018, prior to training camp.", "score": "1.4114085" } ]
[ "Rajion Neal\n Rajion Lashad Neal (born March 28, 1992) is an American football running back who is currently a free agent. He played college football at Tennessee. Neal was signed by the Green Bay Packers as an undrafted free agent in 2014, and has also been a member of the Miami Dolphins, Oakland Raiders, Pittsburgh Steelers, and Cleveland Browns of the National Football League. Neal has also been a member of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League, as well as the Memphis Express of the Alliance of American Football.", "David Dalhoff Neal\n Neal, his wife and sons stayed in Munich, but he traveled extensively to sell and exhibit his works, as he maintained his U.S. citizenship, and divided his time between the two countries with his address of Auen Strasse 74 & later Frauen Strasse 7, in Munich, Bavaria, as well as staying in Albert Bierstadt's house at 1111 Carnegie Hall, New York City. He was a member of the National Academy of Design in New York, as well as the Boston Art Club, 1886, and the Mark Hopkins Institute of Art. In the publication, Modern Art and Artists, in 1888, art critic Wilfrid Meynell comments on Neal's works. Neal continued to paint portraits when in the States, including the daughters of Ogden Mills, Beatrice Mills and Gladys Mills Phipps.", "Neal, Georgia\n Neal is an unincorporated community in Pike County, in the U.S. state of Georgia.", "Brian Neal\n Brian Neal (born 14 May 1948) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with North Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "Micah Neal\n Neal graduated from Fayetteville Christian School in Fayetteville in Washington County. He holds a Bachelor of Science in Marketing Management from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. Since 1997, he has operated Neal's Café in a landmark pink building in Springdale, a company launched in 1944 by his great-grandparents, Toy and Bertha Neal and later run by his father, Don Neal. He is married to Cindy Neal. He has two sons, Reagan and Bodie Neal and one daughter, London Neal. He is a member of Cross Church, a Southern Baptist congregation in Springdale.", "Gary Neal\n Gary Neal (born October 3, 1984) is an American professional basketball coach and former player. Neal attended Aberdeen High School and Calvert Hall College High School in Maryland before playing college basketball at La Salle University and Towson University. He began his professional career abroad with teams in Turkey, Spain and Italy before signing with the San Antonio Spurs in 2010. At 6 ft tall, Neal mostly played the shooting guard position, but filled in at the point guard spot on occasion.", "Nickolas Neal\n Nickolas Ralpheal Neal (born November 17, 1988) is an American professional basketball player for Vojvodina of the Basketball League of Serbia. He played college basketball at Purdue North Central from 2010 to 2012.", "Geoff Neal\n Neal was born in Austin, Texas, United States. He played football at private university Texas Lutheran. However, he did not like the football program there and transitioned to compete in MMA, coached under Sayif Saud.", "Neal Communities\n Neal Communities is a privately held, Lakewood Ranch, Florida-based, land development and home building company founded in 1970. The company has built homes in the Hillsborough, Manatee, Sarasota, Lee, and Collier counties.", "John Neal (footballer, born 1966)\n John James Neal (born 11 March 1966) is a former professional footballer who played as a forward in the Football League for Millwall. Neal was born in Hornsey, in the London Borough of Haringey, and played football for England Schoolboys. He then played for the Republic of Ireland in two European Championships at U18 level. He finished top scorer in the competition and went on to play in the 1985 FIFA World Youth Championship. At club level, he made six appearances in the 1983–84 Football League Third Division for Millwall. He moved on to Barnet, for whom he scored once from eight appearances in the 1985–86 Alliance Premier League. He went on to play non-league football for clubs including Hitchin Town, Walthamstow Avenue, Basildon United, Harlow Town, Dagenham, Barking, Bishops Stortford and Saffron Walden Town. He finished top scorer in the Vauxhall Opel scoring 23 league goals.", "Chris Neal (footballer, born 1947)\n Christopher Neal (born 27 June 1947) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Darlington. Neal was born in Kirkby-in-Ashfield, Nottinghamshire. He joined Darlington as an amateur from Crook Town in June 1967, and made five first-team appearances for the club, all in the Fourth Division. He made his debut on 4 March 1968, in a 2–0 home win against Swansea Town, and started four of the next six league fixtures. He then returned to non-league football.", "Neal, West Virginia\n Neal is an unincorporated community located in Wayne County, West Virginia, United States.", "Simon Neal\n Simon Nicholas Neal (born 2 January 1972) is a former English cricketer. Neal was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm medium pace and who occasionally played as a wicketkeeper. He was born in Nottingham, Nottinghamshire. Neal represented the Nottinghamshire Cricket Board in a single List A match against Scotland in the 1st round of the 1999 NatWest Trophy. In his only List A match he scored 7 runs.", "Rajion Neal\n On August 4, 2016, Neal was signed by the Cleveland Browns. He was later released by the team.", "Neal I. Rosenthal\n Neal is the author of Reflections of a Wine Merchant, published by Farrar, Straus & Giroux in 2008. He is featured in the documentary film Mondovino that debuted at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004. In 2012, Neal was nominated for an Outstanding Wine & Spirits Professional Award by the James Beard Foundation Award. In 2019, Neal was awarded honorary citizenship in the village of Carema in northwestern Piedmont in Italy in recognition of his efforts to promote the rare wines of that region.", "Rajion Neal\n On September 27, 2018, Neal signed with the Memphis Express of the Alliance of American Football for the 2019 season. He was waived on February 21, 2019. During two games played, Neal had 8 rushes for 15 yards, and 4 catches for 10 yards.", "Yasmin Neal\n Yasmin Mikila Neal (born February 10, 1985) is an American politician who has served in the Georgia House of Representatives from the 74th district since 2021. She previously served in the Georgia House of Representatives from the 75th district from 2011 to 2013.", "Adrienne S. O'Neal\n O'Neal was born in Durham, North Carolina, and raised in New Orleans. She is a resident of Michigan, and formerly served as Diplomat in Residence at the University of Michigan from 2007 to 2009. O'Neal received a B.A. in business administration and Spanish from Spelman College. She also earned an M.M.L. in Spanish language and literature from Middlebury College in Vermont.", "Frankie Neal\n Frankie Leon Neal (born October 1, 1965) is an American former college and professional football player who was a wide receiver in the National Football League (NFL) for a single season in 1987. Neal played college football for the University of Florida and Fort Hays State University, and thereafter, he played professionally for the Green Bay Packers of the NFL. He is currently serving a 30 year prison sentence in the Florida Department of Corrections for numerous drug charges.", "Rajion Neal\n In December 2017, Neal signed with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League for the 2018 season, but was released in February 2018, prior to training camp." ]
In what country is Korean Magazine Museum?
[ "South Korea", "Republic of Korea", "ROK", "kr", "Rep. Korea", "S. Korea", "Korea Republic", "🇰🇷", "KOR" ]
country
Korean Magazine Museum
4,880,111
32
[ { "id": "11620944", "title": "Korean Magazine Museum", "text": " The Korean Magazine Museum is a museum in the district of Yeouido in Seoul, South Korea. It was established on March 21, 2002 to promote Korean magazines in the competitive global arena. The museum consists of three underground floors and seven upperground floors for a total floor space of 1703 pyeong (app. 5,623 m²). Admission is free with opening hours from Monday to Saturday (10:00-18:00). The museum is closed on Sundays and national holidays.", "score": "2.0494537" }, { "id": "11620945", "title": "Korean Magazine Museum", "text": "Magazine exhibition space (exhibit of modern magazines) ; Magazine museum (exhibit of rare magazines) ; Internet zone ; Reading space ; Storage ", "score": "1.8865957" }, { "id": "32323887", "title": "National Museum of Korea", "text": " The National Museum of Korea is the flagship museum of Korean history and art in South Korea and is the cultural organization that represents Korea. Since its establishment in 1945, the museum has been committed to various studies and research activities in the fields of archaeology, history, and art, continuously developing a variety of exhibitions and education programs. In 2012, it was reported that since its relocation to Yongsan District in 2005, the museum had attracted an attendance of 20 million visitors, or over 3 million annually which makes it one of the most visited museums in the world and Asia and the most visited in South Korea. A poll of nearly 2,000 foreign visitors, conducted by the Seoul Metropolitan Government in November 2011, stated that visiting the museum is one of their favorite activities in Seoul. It is one of the largest museums in Asia. On June 24, 2021, the National Museum of Korea opened a new branch inside Incheon International Airport. Located in the boarding area of the airport in front of Gate No.22, the branch was opened in celebration of the museum's 20th anniversary.", "score": "1.7025197" }, { "id": "27903440", "title": "Yu Yeon Kim (curator)", "text": " and the Coreana Museum of Art in Seoul as well as venues in Poznan, Poland. ; 2006 \"Pyongyang Report\" at Paju Book City, Publication Culture Center, Heyri Art Village and Press Center, Seoul, S. Korea. ; 2005 \"DMZ-2005\" at Paju Book City, Publication Culture Center, Heyri Art Village and Press Center, Seoul, S. Korea. ; 2003 - 2001, \"Translated Acts\" - Performance and Body Art from China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan and their Diasporas, a controversial exhibition initially presented at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2001) and then traveled to the Queens Museum of Art, New York (2001-2002) and the Museo de Carrillo Gil in Mexico City (2002-2003). ; 1998 \"Fragmented Histories\", (Asia-Pacific ", "score": "1.6749475" }, { "id": "14030368", "title": "National Museum of Korean Contemporary History", "text": " The National Museum of Korean Contemporary History (대한민국역사박물관), which opened on December 26, 2012, is dedicated to researching, preserving, and exhibiting the modern and contemporary history of the Republic of Korea. The museum features four permanent exhibition halls which cover the period from the late 19th century to the present, with the themes of \"Prelude to the Republic of Korea\", \"Foundation of the Republic of Korea\", \"Development of the Republic of Korea\", and \"Modernization and Korea's Vision of Future\". The museum includes a children’s museum and a special exhibition gallery which enables visitors to explore modern and contemporary Korean history through various themes and topics. It also offers education programs and cultural events. The museum is located near Gyeongbok Palace in what was formerly the north building for USAID. Admission is free.", "score": "1.6662403" }, { "id": "11620973", "title": "Museum of Korean Modern Literature", "text": " The Museum of Korean Modern Literature is a literature museum in Jangchung-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea. There are numerous Xylophone exhibits.", "score": "1.6651237" }, { "id": "11620946", "title": "Korean Magazine Museum", "text": " Situated near Yeouido Station of Line 5 on the Seoul Metro system, bus stop for intercity buses is Yeouido Full Gospel Church.", "score": "1.6592953" }, { "id": "11621121", "title": "National Science Museum, South Korea", "text": " The National Science Museum is a national science museum in Daejeon, South Korea. It first opened in Seoul in 1926 and became a national museum in 1949. It moved to its current location in 1990 which is across the street from Expo Park which housed the Daejeon Expo in 1993. It received 1,795,076 visitors in 2017.", "score": "1.6555407" }, { "id": "13358093", "title": "National Hangeul Museum", "text": " The National Hangeul Museum (국립한글박물관) was established in 2014 in the Yongsan District of Seoul (South Korea) near the National Museum of Korea. Occupying over 11,322 m2, it showcases the cultural and political context, linguistic structure and evolution of the Korean alphabetical character system known as Hangul (Hangeul) through exhibitions, research activities, and education. The museum has a basement level with an auditorium and three ground levels with lecture rooms, a library, a permanent exhibition hall, a special exhibition hall as well as a Hangeul Learning Center and a Children's Museum with a Hangeul playground. There is plenty of text in English for non-Korean speakers, along with interactive games and audio-visual displays highlighting elements of Hangeul and providing basic reading and writing skills.", "score": "1.6493894" }, { "id": "4980359", "title": "Museum of Korean Culture", "text": "The Great Dharani Sutra of Immaculate and Pure Light (Hyakumantō Darani), the oldest known wooden slab print in the world dating back to the eighth century, discovered in 1966 ; A replica of Jikji, the world’s oldest existing book published by movable metal type, create during the Goryeo Dynasty in 1377 ; Yongbieocheonga (Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven) and Worin cheongangjigok (Songs of the Moon's Reflection on a Thousand Rivers), two of the earliest works printed in Hangul ; Janggu (a double-headed drum pinched at the middle), Daegeum (a large transverse bamboo flute), and Buk (a drum), via a media arts system The Museum of Korean Culture is located in Concourse 4F in Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea. It houses artifacts and art of cultural significance to Korea. Displays include royal culture, traditional arts, printing, and Hangul (the Korean alphabet), traditional music, Buddhist and Confucian artifacts, garments from the Joseon Dynasty, and items and clothing from daily Korean life. Several artifacts at the museum are recognized by the UNESCO World Heritage. The exhibits include: ", "score": "1.6446954" }, { "id": "15072071", "title": "Korean Folklore Museum", "text": " The Korean Folklore Museum is a museum in North Korea, located north to the Korean Central History Museum next to the Taedong Gate. It was opened in February 1956. The museum has seven rooms comprising 1,800 square meters of space, with 2,100 exhibits.", "score": "1.640174" }, { "id": "28330950", "title": "British Museum Department of Asia", "text": " The Korea Foundation Gallery houses the museum's collection of Korean art and archaeology. Objects from pre-history to the present day include stone sculpture, paintings, printed books, screens and folk art, as well as ceramics, lacquerware, gold and bronze. Highlights of the exhibition include a reconstruction of a traditional Korean sarangbang (a study in a Korean home) and fine examples of 15th century Korean script.", "score": "1.6345766" }, { "id": "14592123", "title": "National Folk Museum of Korea", "text": " The museum has over 98,000 artifacts and three main exhibition halls: \"History of Korean People\" features materials of everyday life in Korea from prehistoric times to the end of the Joseon Dynasty in 1910; \"Korean Way of Life\", which illustrates Korean villagers in ancient times; and \"Life Cycle of the Koreans\", which depicts the deep roots of Confucianism in Korean culture and how this ideology gave rise to most of the culture's customs. The museum also features open-air exhibits, such as replicas of spirit posts where villagers used to pray, stone piles for worship, grinding mills, rice storage shelters and pits for kimchi pots. In March 2021, the National Folk Museum reopened an exhibition showcasing 20th century items from both the Joseon era as well as items from modern and contemporary Korea. The items are on display in Permanent Exhibition Hall 2, which reopened March 20th, 2021, after undergoing renovation.", "score": "1.6342762" }, { "id": "11621005", "title": "Samseong Museum of Publishing", "text": " The Samseong Museum of Publishing is a museum in Seoul, South Korea.", "score": "1.6284696" }, { "id": "5125881", "title": "List of magazines in North Korea", "text": "History ", "score": "1.6268201" }, { "id": "14592122", "title": "National Folk Museum of Korea", "text": " The museum was established on 8 November 1945 by the U.S. Government and opened on 25 April 1946 at the City Administration Memorial Hall. When the museum was merged with National Museum of Korea, its collection of 4,555 artifacts was moved to the latter's Mt Namsan site. In 1975, when the National Museum moved onto the grounds of Gyeongbokgung Palace, it moved along with it into the Modern Art Museum Building. In 1993 it opened in its present site, which was the former site of the National Museum of Korea. The building's design is based on various historical buildings around South Korea.", "score": "1.6200486" }, { "id": "14592121", "title": "National Folk Museum of Korea", "text": " National Folk Museum of Korea is a national museum of South Korea, located within the grounds of the Gyeongbokgung Palace in Jongno-gu, Seoul. It uses replicas of historical objects to illustrate the history of traditional life of the Korean people.", "score": "1.6112945" }, { "id": "16247910", "title": "Gansong Art Museum", "text": " The Gansong Art Museum, located in Seongbuk-dong, Seongbuk District, Seoul, South Korea, is the first modern private museum of Korea and was founded by Jeon Hyeongpil (전형필 全鎣弼) in 1938. The museum was named after the pen name of the founder, Gansong (간송 澗松). The aim of the foundation was to prevent Japanese removal of Korean cultural properties, during the Japanese occupation. At times, numerous Korean cultural properties were taken to Japan, such as Goryeo porcelains, statues of Buddha made in Silla kingdom, documents and books made in Joseon dynasty. Jeon Hyeongpil contributed at his own expense to protect Korean culture and art. The museum holds many top-rated antique pieces of art such as Hunmin jeongeum (No. 70 National Treasure), Donggukjeongun Book 1, 2 (No. 71 National Treasure), Geumdong gyemimyeong samjonbul (No. 72 National Treasure), Hyewon pungsokdo.", "score": "1.6036501" }, { "id": "32323888", "title": "National Museum of Korea", "text": " Emperor Sunjong established Korea's first museum, the Imperial Household Museum, in 1909. The collections of the Imperial Household Museum at Changgyeonggung and the Japanese Government General Museum administered during Japanese rule of Korea became the nucleus of the National Museum's collection, which was established when South Korea regained independence in 1945. During the Korean War, the museum's 20,000 pieces were safely moved to Busan to avoid destruction. When the museum returned to Seoul after the war, it was housed at both Gyeongbokgung and Deoksugung Palace. In 1972, the museum moved again to a new building on the grounds of the Gyeonbokgung Palace. The museum was ", "score": "1.6008795" }, { "id": "15682171", "title": "Lee Hun-chung", "text": " Center, Seoul, Korea ; 2000 Tokonoma Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland ; 2000 U-Ri-Gu-Rut RYU, Seoul, Korea ; 1998 Total Museum, Jangheung, Korea ; 1997 Tho-Dorang, Seoul, Korea ; 1996 Tho-Art Space, Seoul, Korea ; SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITION ; 2015 Korea now! Design, Craft, Fashion and Graphic Design in Korea exhibition, Musée des Arts décoratifs, Paris, France ; 2015 Living In Art II, Connect, Seomi International, Los Angeles, CA, USA ; 2015 Living In Art, Seomi International, Los Angeles, CA, USA. ; 2014 Korean Contemporary Design: EDWARD TYLER NAHEM FINE ART/ NEW YORK, NY, USA ; 2011 Poetry in Clay: Korean Buncheong ", "score": "1.5993361" } ]
[ "Korean Magazine Museum\n The Korean Magazine Museum is a museum in the district of Yeouido in Seoul, South Korea. It was established on March 21, 2002 to promote Korean magazines in the competitive global arena. The museum consists of three underground floors and seven upperground floors for a total floor space of 1703 pyeong (app. 5,623 m²). Admission is free with opening hours from Monday to Saturday (10:00-18:00). The museum is closed on Sundays and national holidays.", "Korean Magazine Museum\nMagazine exhibition space (exhibit of modern magazines) ; Magazine museum (exhibit of rare magazines) ; Internet zone ; Reading space ; Storage ", "National Museum of Korea\n The National Museum of Korea is the flagship museum of Korean history and art in South Korea and is the cultural organization that represents Korea. Since its establishment in 1945, the museum has been committed to various studies and research activities in the fields of archaeology, history, and art, continuously developing a variety of exhibitions and education programs. In 2012, it was reported that since its relocation to Yongsan District in 2005, the museum had attracted an attendance of 20 million visitors, or over 3 million annually which makes it one of the most visited museums in the world and Asia and the most visited in South Korea. A poll of nearly 2,000 foreign visitors, conducted by the Seoul Metropolitan Government in November 2011, stated that visiting the museum is one of their favorite activities in Seoul. It is one of the largest museums in Asia. On June 24, 2021, the National Museum of Korea opened a new branch inside Incheon International Airport. Located in the boarding area of the airport in front of Gate No.22, the branch was opened in celebration of the museum's 20th anniversary.", "Yu Yeon Kim (curator)\n and the Coreana Museum of Art in Seoul as well as venues in Poznan, Poland. ; 2006 \"Pyongyang Report\" at Paju Book City, Publication Culture Center, Heyri Art Village and Press Center, Seoul, S. Korea. ; 2005 \"DMZ-2005\" at Paju Book City, Publication Culture Center, Heyri Art Village and Press Center, Seoul, S. Korea. ; 2003 - 2001, \"Translated Acts\" - Performance and Body Art from China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan and their Diasporas, a controversial exhibition initially presented at the Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin (2001) and then traveled to the Queens Museum of Art, New York (2001-2002) and the Museo de Carrillo Gil in Mexico City (2002-2003). ; 1998 \"Fragmented Histories\", (Asia-Pacific ", "National Museum of Korean Contemporary History\n The National Museum of Korean Contemporary History (대한민국역사박물관), which opened on December 26, 2012, is dedicated to researching, preserving, and exhibiting the modern and contemporary history of the Republic of Korea. The museum features four permanent exhibition halls which cover the period from the late 19th century to the present, with the themes of \"Prelude to the Republic of Korea\", \"Foundation of the Republic of Korea\", \"Development of the Republic of Korea\", and \"Modernization and Korea's Vision of Future\". The museum includes a children’s museum and a special exhibition gallery which enables visitors to explore modern and contemporary Korean history through various themes and topics. It also offers education programs and cultural events. The museum is located near Gyeongbok Palace in what was formerly the north building for USAID. Admission is free.", "Museum of Korean Modern Literature\n The Museum of Korean Modern Literature is a literature museum in Jangchung-dong, Jung-gu, Seoul, South Korea. There are numerous Xylophone exhibits.", "Korean Magazine Museum\n Situated near Yeouido Station of Line 5 on the Seoul Metro system, bus stop for intercity buses is Yeouido Full Gospel Church.", "National Science Museum, South Korea\n The National Science Museum is a national science museum in Daejeon, South Korea. It first opened in Seoul in 1926 and became a national museum in 1949. It moved to its current location in 1990 which is across the street from Expo Park which housed the Daejeon Expo in 1993. It received 1,795,076 visitors in 2017.", "National Hangeul Museum\n The National Hangeul Museum (국립한글박물관) was established in 2014 in the Yongsan District of Seoul (South Korea) near the National Museum of Korea. Occupying over 11,322 m2, it showcases the cultural and political context, linguistic structure and evolution of the Korean alphabetical character system known as Hangul (Hangeul) through exhibitions, research activities, and education. The museum has a basement level with an auditorium and three ground levels with lecture rooms, a library, a permanent exhibition hall, a special exhibition hall as well as a Hangeul Learning Center and a Children's Museum with a Hangeul playground. There is plenty of text in English for non-Korean speakers, along with interactive games and audio-visual displays highlighting elements of Hangeul and providing basic reading and writing skills.", "Museum of Korean Culture\nThe Great Dharani Sutra of Immaculate and Pure Light (Hyakumantō Darani), the oldest known wooden slab print in the world dating back to the eighth century, discovered in 1966 ; A replica of Jikji, the world’s oldest existing book published by movable metal type, create during the Goryeo Dynasty in 1377 ; Yongbieocheonga (Songs of the Dragons Flying to Heaven) and Worin cheongangjigok (Songs of the Moon's Reflection on a Thousand Rivers), two of the earliest works printed in Hangul ; Janggu (a double-headed drum pinched at the middle), Daegeum (a large transverse bamboo flute), and Buk (a drum), via a media arts system The Museum of Korean Culture is located in Concourse 4F in Incheon International Airport in Incheon, South Korea. It houses artifacts and art of cultural significance to Korea. Displays include royal culture, traditional arts, printing, and Hangul (the Korean alphabet), traditional music, Buddhist and Confucian artifacts, garments from the Joseon Dynasty, and items and clothing from daily Korean life. Several artifacts at the museum are recognized by the UNESCO World Heritage. The exhibits include: ", "Korean Folklore Museum\n The Korean Folklore Museum is a museum in North Korea, located north to the Korean Central History Museum next to the Taedong Gate. It was opened in February 1956. The museum has seven rooms comprising 1,800 square meters of space, with 2,100 exhibits.", "British Museum Department of Asia\n The Korea Foundation Gallery houses the museum's collection of Korean art and archaeology. Objects from pre-history to the present day include stone sculpture, paintings, printed books, screens and folk art, as well as ceramics, lacquerware, gold and bronze. Highlights of the exhibition include a reconstruction of a traditional Korean sarangbang (a study in a Korean home) and fine examples of 15th century Korean script.", "National Folk Museum of Korea\n The museum has over 98,000 artifacts and three main exhibition halls: \"History of Korean People\" features materials of everyday life in Korea from prehistoric times to the end of the Joseon Dynasty in 1910; \"Korean Way of Life\", which illustrates Korean villagers in ancient times; and \"Life Cycle of the Koreans\", which depicts the deep roots of Confucianism in Korean culture and how this ideology gave rise to most of the culture's customs. The museum also features open-air exhibits, such as replicas of spirit posts where villagers used to pray, stone piles for worship, grinding mills, rice storage shelters and pits for kimchi pots. In March 2021, the National Folk Museum reopened an exhibition showcasing 20th century items from both the Joseon era as well as items from modern and contemporary Korea. The items are on display in Permanent Exhibition Hall 2, which reopened March 20th, 2021, after undergoing renovation.", "Samseong Museum of Publishing\n The Samseong Museum of Publishing is a museum in Seoul, South Korea.", "List of magazines in North Korea\nHistory ", "National Folk Museum of Korea\n The museum was established on 8 November 1945 by the U.S. Government and opened on 25 April 1946 at the City Administration Memorial Hall. When the museum was merged with National Museum of Korea, its collection of 4,555 artifacts was moved to the latter's Mt Namsan site. In 1975, when the National Museum moved onto the grounds of Gyeongbokgung Palace, it moved along with it into the Modern Art Museum Building. In 1993 it opened in its present site, which was the former site of the National Museum of Korea. The building's design is based on various historical buildings around South Korea.", "National Folk Museum of Korea\n National Folk Museum of Korea is a national museum of South Korea, located within the grounds of the Gyeongbokgung Palace in Jongno-gu, Seoul. It uses replicas of historical objects to illustrate the history of traditional life of the Korean people.", "Gansong Art Museum\n The Gansong Art Museum, located in Seongbuk-dong, Seongbuk District, Seoul, South Korea, is the first modern private museum of Korea and was founded by Jeon Hyeongpil (전형필 全鎣弼) in 1938. The museum was named after the pen name of the founder, Gansong (간송 澗松). The aim of the foundation was to prevent Japanese removal of Korean cultural properties, during the Japanese occupation. At times, numerous Korean cultural properties were taken to Japan, such as Goryeo porcelains, statues of Buddha made in Silla kingdom, documents and books made in Joseon dynasty. Jeon Hyeongpil contributed at his own expense to protect Korean culture and art. The museum holds many top-rated antique pieces of art such as Hunmin jeongeum (No. 70 National Treasure), Donggukjeongun Book 1, 2 (No. 71 National Treasure), Geumdong gyemimyeong samjonbul (No. 72 National Treasure), Hyewon pungsokdo.", "National Museum of Korea\n Emperor Sunjong established Korea's first museum, the Imperial Household Museum, in 1909. The collections of the Imperial Household Museum at Changgyeonggung and the Japanese Government General Museum administered during Japanese rule of Korea became the nucleus of the National Museum's collection, which was established when South Korea regained independence in 1945. During the Korean War, the museum's 20,000 pieces were safely moved to Busan to avoid destruction. When the museum returned to Seoul after the war, it was housed at both Gyeongbokgung and Deoksugung Palace. In 1972, the museum moved again to a new building on the grounds of the Gyeonbokgung Palace. The museum was ", "Lee Hun-chung\n Center, Seoul, Korea ; 2000 Tokonoma Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland ; 2000 U-Ri-Gu-Rut RYU, Seoul, Korea ; 1998 Total Museum, Jangheung, Korea ; 1997 Tho-Dorang, Seoul, Korea ; 1996 Tho-Art Space, Seoul, Korea ; SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITION ; 2015 Korea now! Design, Craft, Fashion and Graphic Design in Korea exhibition, Musée des Arts décoratifs, Paris, France ; 2015 Living In Art II, Connect, Seomi International, Los Angeles, CA, USA ; 2015 Living In Art, Seomi International, Los Angeles, CA, USA. ; 2014 Korean Contemporary Design: EDWARD TYLER NAHEM FINE ART/ NEW YORK, NY, USA ; 2011 Poetry in Clay: Korean Buncheong " ]
In what country is Francheville Aerodrome?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Francheville Aerodrome
701,197
52
[ { "id": "7324474", "title": "Francheville Aerodrome", "text": " Francheville Aerodrome was a temporary World War I airfield in France. It was located 3.0 mi north of Coulommiers, in the Île-de-France region in north-central France.", "score": "1.8730819" }, { "id": "7324476", "title": "Francheville Aerodrome", "text": " the Vesle Sector to perform reconnaissance prior to the St. Mihiel Offensive: the 1st and 12th squadrons left on 22 July, followed by HQ on 30 July, while 88th had transferred to III Corps Observation Group on 25 July, staying at Francheville until 4 August. French BR 237 stayed 30 July - 11 August, working for the French 6th Army then, as the battle front was fast moving away from the area, the airfield was abandoned and soon returned to agricultural use. Today it is a series of cultivated fields located to the northwest of Coulommiers, at the crossroad of D 44 and a small road near the farm called \"Les Fermiers\", as shown on the photograph, with no indication of this short aviation activity.", "score": "1.6762676" }, { "id": "7324475", "title": "Francheville Aerodrome", "text": "1st Aero Squadron 6–22 July 1918 ; 12th Aero Squadron 6–22 July 1918 ; 88th Aero Squadron 7–4 August 1918 The airfield was built in June 1918 in some haste as the German armies where were pushing through Allied forces towards Paris, on the River Marne. One French escadrille (SPA 124) was stationed as early as June 4, giving way to the I Corps Observation Group, with headquarter and three squadrons, providing aerial reconnaissance and artillery observation over the lines northwest of Château-Thierry: It was a very active sector with many enemy aircraft. The aircraft flew reconnaissance from 3am to 8pm and nearly every sortie meant combat with the enemy. At the end of July, as the German forces began their retreat, the group again moved ", "score": "1.5867168" }, { "id": "1118112", "title": "I Corps Observation Group", "text": "Ourches Aerodrome, France, 21 April 1918 ; Saints Aerodrome, France, 29 June 1918 ; Francheville Aerodrome, 6 July 1918 ; Ferme de Moras Aerodrome (near La Ferté-sous-Jouarre) France, 30 July 1918 ; May-en-Multien Aerodrome, France, 5 August 1918 Coincy Aerodrome, France, 10 August 1918 ; Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome, France, 12 August 1918 ; Croix de Metz Aerodrome (Toul), France, 22 August 1918 ; Remicourt Aerodrome, France, 20 September 1918 ; Julvecourt Aerodrome, France, 5 November 1918 – 15 April 1919 ", "score": "1.5691824" }, { "id": "4623878", "title": "Saints Aerodrome", "text": " The airfield was one of the many built to cope with the German offensive towards the river Marne which started in late May 1918. The first units to fly from the airfield were French \"escadrilles\", flying missions for the resisting French troops. The newly operational American I Corps Observation Group arrived on 29 June with 1st Aero Squadron and 12th Aero Squadron, while 88th Aero Squadron stayed at Ourches, joining the Group later at Francheville. The stay was brief as the whole Group already moved and met together at Francheville Aerodrome, north of Coulommiers, on 6 July. The 1st Pursuit Group moved into Saints shortly afterwards (9 July) with its four pursuit (fighter) squadrons and began flying offensive combat patrols over the Aisne-Marne Sector. From Saints, the group engaged in combat at the ", "score": "1.512666" }, { "id": "296965", "title": "Loano", "text": "🇫🇷 Francheville, France, since 1998 ", "score": "1.4930755" }, { "id": "31206078", "title": "Montbéliard – Courcelles Aerodrome", "text": " Montbéliard – Courcelles Aerodrome (Aérodrome de Montbéliard - Courcelles) is an airport serving Montbéliard, a commune in the Doubs department in the Franche-Comté region in eastern France. The airport is located 2 km south of Montbéliard, near Courcelles-lès-Montbéliard.", "score": "1.4886031" }, { "id": "12298857", "title": "12th Aero Squadron", "text": " By 29 June, the squadron had relocated to Saints Aerodrome in the Marne Sector to participate in the Battle of Château-Thierry. The 12th encountered intense opposition in the air from a concentration of German squadrons equipped with the most advanced Fokker aircraft. Encounters with up to 20 enemy aircraft on a patrol was a daily occurrence. On 5 July, the squadron moved again to a neighboring field at Francheville in support of the 26th Division, but because of its distance from the front, what would later be known as a \"forward operating location,\" or FOL, was established at Ferme de Moras Aerodrome. Two 12th Squadron aircraft and two from the 88th Aero Squadron were flown to it at daybreak each day and held ready for developing requirements. The Allied counteroffensive was launched on 18 July and ", "score": "1.4641075" }, { "id": "11929629", "title": "88th Aero Squadron", "text": " The effect or this preliminary work was to make the squadron a fighting unit. From then until the end or the war, its service was constant and constantly growing in importance. This continuous service began with the move of the squadron to a different sector 150 miles to the west. On 7 July it moved to Francheville Aerodrome on the Château-Thierry front, near Belleau Woods where the United States Marine Corps was on the front. The main purpose of operations undertaken was a thorough reconnaissance and surveillance of the enemy opposite the Marne Sector in order to keep the command informed of movements and dispositions. On ", "score": "1.4583673" }, { "id": "1847526", "title": "List of Air Service American Expeditionary Force aerodromes in France", "text": " (Pursuit), 6 November 1918 – 15 February 1919 ; 93d Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November – 15 December 1918 ; 103d Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November 1918 – 5 January 1919 ; 213th Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November – 29 January 1919 Francheville Aerodrome\t48.85278°N, 3.04222°W ; Located 1.9 mi N of Mouroux, Seine et Marne ; French and American Air Service airfield ; Headquarters, I Corps Observation Group, 6–30 July 1918 ; 1st Aero Squadron (Observation) 6–22 July 1918 ; 12th Aero Squadron (Observation) 6–22 July 1918 ; 88th Aero Squadron (Observation) 7 July-4 August 1918 Gondreville-sur-Moselle Aerodrome 48.68389°N, ", "score": "1.4567391" }, { "id": "25347488", "title": "Belfort Chaux Airport", "text": " Belfort Chaux Airport (Aérodrome de Belfort - Chaux, ) is a small aerodrome in Chaux, a commune in the Territoire de Belfort department in Franche-Comté in north eastern France. It is located 7 km north of Belfort. There is an aeroclub based here. The airport is served by only one regular bus link, provided by Optymo. This is bus line number 37, which runs from Belfort town centre every hour. A restaurant with excellent views across the airfield is open all year. Parking is available on site. This is the only airport in Belfort, after the closure of Belfort's other airport in the 1970s.", "score": "1.44723" }, { "id": "28613053", "title": "Auxerre – Branches Aerodrome", "text": " Auxerre – Branches Aerodrome (Aérodrome d'Auxerre - Branches ) is an airport serving Auxerre and Branches, both communes of the Yonne department in the Bourgogne region of France. The airport is located 8.5 km northwest of Auxerre and approximately 4 km southeast of Branches.", "score": "1.4372503" }, { "id": "14378641", "title": "Ferme de Moras Aerodrome", "text": " The airfield was a temporary facility created by the French Aeronautique Militaire in late 1917, operational until December 1918, which means that it probably consisted of several wood-and-fabric \"Bessonneau\" hangars, plus wooden huts. It was used for a short spell during summer 1918 by the I Corps Observation Group, during the Aisne-Marne Offensive Campaign. The two group's squadrons, 1st and 12th Aero Squadron operated from the field until moving out at the beginning of August to May-en-Multien Aerodrome, as did the group's HQ. The last French \"escadrille\" left on 1 December 1918, and the airfield was soon cleared of all its building and returned to agricultural use. Today it is a series of cultivated fields located on the plateau 2 miles east of La Ferté sous Jouarre, north of D 407.", "score": "1.4255579" }, { "id": "7324482", "title": "Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome", "text": " Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome was a temporary World War I airfield in France. It was located 1.3 mi East of Chailly-en-Brie, in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region near Paris.", "score": "1.4212415" }, { "id": "14731251", "title": "Airexpo", "text": " The 22nd edition was organized at the Base aérienne 101 Toulouse-Francazal (Francazal airport) on 25 May 2008. The aircraft Douglas DC-3, Noratlas, Dassault Rafale, Airbus A300-600ST Beluga and A380 were at the airshow.", "score": "1.4185281" }, { "id": "27573712", "title": "Saint-Ghislain Airfield", "text": " Saint-Ghislain Airfield (Aérodrome de Saint-Ghislain) is a small airfield located in the Walloon municipality of Saint-Ghislain, province of Hainaut, Belgium. Privately managed, the airport is home to an active flight school (Aéroclub Mons-Borinage), but also to other aeronautical oriented leisure activities, such as old aircraft restoration, or amateur aircraft building. There is no scheduled air service. A modernization of the airport was completed in 1992, including a hard-surfacing of the single runway.", "score": "1.4181348" }, { "id": "11929631", "title": "88th Aero Squadron", "text": " were exceedingly effective and very satisfactory. They were equipped with wireless accessories. three machine guns and ammunition, two Very pistols, assorted star shells, and several dropping tubes. The 88th continued operations from Francheville while the American infantry advanced northward. On 25 July, the squadron was assigned to the III Corps Observation Group and moved on 4 August to Ferme des Greves Aerodrome, France. The squadron started operating on the day of its arrival, making reconnaissance missions over the Corps front and giving protection to French photographic aircraft. As the infantry was constantly on the offensive, the squadron was constantly flying infantry liaison and artillery adjustments sorties.", "score": "1.4172014" }, { "id": "1117909", "title": "22nd Aero Squadron", "text": " ; A, B, and C flights in Picardy Region Guînes Aerodrome, France, 24 June 1918 ; Issoudun Aerodrome, France, 26 June 1918 ; Orly Airport, Paris, France, 7 July 1918 ; Croix de Metz Aerodrome, France, 16 August 1918 ; Belrain Aerodrome, France, 22 September 1918 ; Souilly Aerodrome, France, 7 November 1918 ; Grand Aerodrome, France, c. 29 January 1919 ; Colombey-les-Belles Airdrome, France, 10 April 1919 ; Le Mans, France, 2 May 1919 ; Port of Brest, France, 20 May 1919 ; Return transport, SS Louisville, 22 May −15 June 1919 ; Hazelhurst Field, New York, 15–17 June 1919 ", "score": "1.414403" }, { "id": "28613185", "title": "Besançon – La Vèze Aerodrome", "text": " Besançon – La Vèze Aerodrome (Aérodrome de Besançon - La Vèze ) is an airport located 5.5 km southeast of Besançon in La Vèze, both communes of the Doubs department in the Franche-Comté region of France.", "score": "1.411756" }, { "id": "15285973", "title": "Aérodrome Saint-Louis", "text": " The Aérodrome Saint-Louis, also called Aérodrome du Bois Gomin or Canadian Transcontinental Airways Airport, was the first airfield of the Quebec City area of Quebec, Canada. It was located in the suburb of Sainte-Foy. It was established by Canadian Transcontinental Airways (1927–38) (Compagnie Aérienne Transcontinentale) in 1928 in the fields between Cap-Rouge Road (now called Chemin Saint-Louis) and Gomin Road (Chemin Gomin), east of the Route de l'Église where the Laurier Québec and Place Sainte-Foy shopping centres are currently located. It was used during winter to transport mail between Montreal and Rimouski. It was closed in 1938, when Canadian Transcontinental Airways ceased operations, and in 1939 a new airfield was established in Quebec City; Aéroport de l'Ancienne Lorette, today known as Québec City Jean Lesage International Airport.", "score": "1.4081497" } ]
[ "Francheville Aerodrome\n Francheville Aerodrome was a temporary World War I airfield in France. It was located 3.0 mi north of Coulommiers, in the Île-de-France region in north-central France.", "Francheville Aerodrome\n the Vesle Sector to perform reconnaissance prior to the St. Mihiel Offensive: the 1st and 12th squadrons left on 22 July, followed by HQ on 30 July, while 88th had transferred to III Corps Observation Group on 25 July, staying at Francheville until 4 August. French BR 237 stayed 30 July - 11 August, working for the French 6th Army then, as the battle front was fast moving away from the area, the airfield was abandoned and soon returned to agricultural use. Today it is a series of cultivated fields located to the northwest of Coulommiers, at the crossroad of D 44 and a small road near the farm called \"Les Fermiers\", as shown on the photograph, with no indication of this short aviation activity.", "Francheville Aerodrome\n1st Aero Squadron 6–22 July 1918 ; 12th Aero Squadron 6–22 July 1918 ; 88th Aero Squadron 7–4 August 1918 The airfield was built in June 1918 in some haste as the German armies where were pushing through Allied forces towards Paris, on the River Marne. One French escadrille (SPA 124) was stationed as early as June 4, giving way to the I Corps Observation Group, with headquarter and three squadrons, providing aerial reconnaissance and artillery observation over the lines northwest of Château-Thierry: It was a very active sector with many enemy aircraft. The aircraft flew reconnaissance from 3am to 8pm and nearly every sortie meant combat with the enemy. At the end of July, as the German forces began their retreat, the group again moved ", "I Corps Observation Group\nOurches Aerodrome, France, 21 April 1918 ; Saints Aerodrome, France, 29 June 1918 ; Francheville Aerodrome, 6 July 1918 ; Ferme de Moras Aerodrome (near La Ferté-sous-Jouarre) France, 30 July 1918 ; May-en-Multien Aerodrome, France, 5 August 1918 Coincy Aerodrome, France, 10 August 1918 ; Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome, France, 12 August 1918 ; Croix de Metz Aerodrome (Toul), France, 22 August 1918 ; Remicourt Aerodrome, France, 20 September 1918 ; Julvecourt Aerodrome, France, 5 November 1918 – 15 April 1919 ", "Saints Aerodrome\n The airfield was one of the many built to cope with the German offensive towards the river Marne which started in late May 1918. The first units to fly from the airfield were French \"escadrilles\", flying missions for the resisting French troops. The newly operational American I Corps Observation Group arrived on 29 June with 1st Aero Squadron and 12th Aero Squadron, while 88th Aero Squadron stayed at Ourches, joining the Group later at Francheville. The stay was brief as the whole Group already moved and met together at Francheville Aerodrome, north of Coulommiers, on 6 July. The 1st Pursuit Group moved into Saints shortly afterwards (9 July) with its four pursuit (fighter) squadrons and began flying offensive combat patrols over the Aisne-Marne Sector. From Saints, the group engaged in combat at the ", "Loano\n🇫🇷 Francheville, France, since 1998 ", "Montbéliard – Courcelles Aerodrome\n Montbéliard – Courcelles Aerodrome (Aérodrome de Montbéliard - Courcelles) is an airport serving Montbéliard, a commune in the Doubs department in the Franche-Comté region in eastern France. The airport is located 2 km south of Montbéliard, near Courcelles-lès-Montbéliard.", "12th Aero Squadron\n By 29 June, the squadron had relocated to Saints Aerodrome in the Marne Sector to participate in the Battle of Château-Thierry. The 12th encountered intense opposition in the air from a concentration of German squadrons equipped with the most advanced Fokker aircraft. Encounters with up to 20 enemy aircraft on a patrol was a daily occurrence. On 5 July, the squadron moved again to a neighboring field at Francheville in support of the 26th Division, but because of its distance from the front, what would later be known as a \"forward operating location,\" or FOL, was established at Ferme de Moras Aerodrome. Two 12th Squadron aircraft and two from the 88th Aero Squadron were flown to it at daybreak each day and held ready for developing requirements. The Allied counteroffensive was launched on 18 July and ", "88th Aero Squadron\n The effect or this preliminary work was to make the squadron a fighting unit. From then until the end or the war, its service was constant and constantly growing in importance. This continuous service began with the move of the squadron to a different sector 150 miles to the west. On 7 July it moved to Francheville Aerodrome on the Château-Thierry front, near Belleau Woods where the United States Marine Corps was on the front. The main purpose of operations undertaken was a thorough reconnaissance and surveillance of the enemy opposite the Marne Sector in order to keep the command informed of movements and dispositions. On ", "List of Air Service American Expeditionary Force aerodromes in France\n (Pursuit), 6 November 1918 – 15 February 1919 ; 93d Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November – 15 December 1918 ; 103d Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November 1918 – 5 January 1919 ; 213th Aero Squadron (Pursuit), 6 November – 29 January 1919 Francheville Aerodrome\t48.85278°N, 3.04222°W ; Located 1.9 mi N of Mouroux, Seine et Marne ; French and American Air Service airfield ; Headquarters, I Corps Observation Group, 6–30 July 1918 ; 1st Aero Squadron (Observation) 6–22 July 1918 ; 12th Aero Squadron (Observation) 6–22 July 1918 ; 88th Aero Squadron (Observation) 7 July-4 August 1918 Gondreville-sur-Moselle Aerodrome 48.68389°N, ", "Belfort Chaux Airport\n Belfort Chaux Airport (Aérodrome de Belfort - Chaux, ) is a small aerodrome in Chaux, a commune in the Territoire de Belfort department in Franche-Comté in north eastern France. It is located 7 km north of Belfort. There is an aeroclub based here. The airport is served by only one regular bus link, provided by Optymo. This is bus line number 37, which runs from Belfort town centre every hour. A restaurant with excellent views across the airfield is open all year. Parking is available on site. This is the only airport in Belfort, after the closure of Belfort's other airport in the 1970s.", "Auxerre – Branches Aerodrome\n Auxerre – Branches Aerodrome (Aérodrome d'Auxerre - Branches ) is an airport serving Auxerre and Branches, both communes of the Yonne department in the Bourgogne region of France. The airport is located 8.5 km northwest of Auxerre and approximately 4 km southeast of Branches.", "Ferme de Moras Aerodrome\n The airfield was a temporary facility created by the French Aeronautique Militaire in late 1917, operational until December 1918, which means that it probably consisted of several wood-and-fabric \"Bessonneau\" hangars, plus wooden huts. It was used for a short spell during summer 1918 by the I Corps Observation Group, during the Aisne-Marne Offensive Campaign. The two group's squadrons, 1st and 12th Aero Squadron operated from the field until moving out at the beginning of August to May-en-Multien Aerodrome, as did the group's HQ. The last French \"escadrille\" left on 1 December 1918, and the airfield was soon cleared of all its building and returned to agricultural use. Today it is a series of cultivated fields located on the plateau 2 miles east of La Ferté sous Jouarre, north of D 407.", "Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome\n Chailly-en-Brie Aerodrome was a temporary World War I airfield in France. It was located 1.3 mi East of Chailly-en-Brie, in the Seine-et-Marne department in the Île-de-France region near Paris.", "Airexpo\n The 22nd edition was organized at the Base aérienne 101 Toulouse-Francazal (Francazal airport) on 25 May 2008. The aircraft Douglas DC-3, Noratlas, Dassault Rafale, Airbus A300-600ST Beluga and A380 were at the airshow.", "Saint-Ghislain Airfield\n Saint-Ghislain Airfield (Aérodrome de Saint-Ghislain) is a small airfield located in the Walloon municipality of Saint-Ghislain, province of Hainaut, Belgium. Privately managed, the airport is home to an active flight school (Aéroclub Mons-Borinage), but also to other aeronautical oriented leisure activities, such as old aircraft restoration, or amateur aircraft building. There is no scheduled air service. A modernization of the airport was completed in 1992, including a hard-surfacing of the single runway.", "88th Aero Squadron\n were exceedingly effective and very satisfactory. They were equipped with wireless accessories. three machine guns and ammunition, two Very pistols, assorted star shells, and several dropping tubes. The 88th continued operations from Francheville while the American infantry advanced northward. On 25 July, the squadron was assigned to the III Corps Observation Group and moved on 4 August to Ferme des Greves Aerodrome, France. The squadron started operating on the day of its arrival, making reconnaissance missions over the Corps front and giving protection to French photographic aircraft. As the infantry was constantly on the offensive, the squadron was constantly flying infantry liaison and artillery adjustments sorties.", "22nd Aero Squadron\n ; A, B, and C flights in Picardy Region Guînes Aerodrome, France, 24 June 1918 ; Issoudun Aerodrome, France, 26 June 1918 ; Orly Airport, Paris, France, 7 July 1918 ; Croix de Metz Aerodrome, France, 16 August 1918 ; Belrain Aerodrome, France, 22 September 1918 ; Souilly Aerodrome, France, 7 November 1918 ; Grand Aerodrome, France, c. 29 January 1919 ; Colombey-les-Belles Airdrome, France, 10 April 1919 ; Le Mans, France, 2 May 1919 ; Port of Brest, France, 20 May 1919 ; Return transport, SS Louisville, 22 May −15 June 1919 ; Hazelhurst Field, New York, 15–17 June 1919 ", "Besançon – La Vèze Aerodrome\n Besançon – La Vèze Aerodrome (Aérodrome de Besançon - La Vèze ) is an airport located 5.5 km southeast of Besançon in La Vèze, both communes of the Doubs department in the Franche-Comté region of France.", "Aérodrome Saint-Louis\n The Aérodrome Saint-Louis, also called Aérodrome du Bois Gomin or Canadian Transcontinental Airways Airport, was the first airfield of the Quebec City area of Quebec, Canada. It was located in the suburb of Sainte-Foy. It was established by Canadian Transcontinental Airways (1927–38) (Compagnie Aérienne Transcontinentale) in 1928 in the fields between Cap-Rouge Road (now called Chemin Saint-Louis) and Gomin Road (Chemin Gomin), east of the Route de l'Église where the Laurier Québec and Place Sainte-Foy shopping centres are currently located. It was used during winter to transport mail between Montreal and Rimouski. It was closed in 1938, when Canadian Transcontinental Airways ceased operations, and in 1939 a new airfield was established in Quebec City; Aéroport de l'Ancienne Lorette, today known as Québec City Jean Lesage International Airport." ]
In what country is Kijevac?
[ "Serbia", "🇷🇸", "Republic of Serbia", "Republika Srbija", "rs", "Srbija", "SRB", "RS" ]
country
Kijevac (Surdulica)
2,347,689
47
[ { "id": "2303676", "title": "Kijevac (Surdulica)", "text": " Kijevac is a village in the municipality of Surdulica, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 183 people.", "score": "1.5930241" }, { "id": "1294145", "title": "Kijevo, Trnovo", "text": " Kijevo is a village in Trnovo municipality, Istočno Sarajevo, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Kijevo is south of Sarajevo on the road M-18 Sarajevo-Trnovo-Foča-Trebinje. The closest airport is Sarajevo International Airport, located 9.7 km north west of Kijevo. The Željeznica river is one of the Kijevo's chief geographic features. It flows through the town and municipality from south through the center of Trnovo, Kijevo and Istočno (East) Sarajevo to west part of Sarajevo eventually meets up with the Bosna river.", "score": "1.4739432" }, { "id": "15654233", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Kijevo (Кијево) is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Rakovica.", "score": "1.4611499" }, { "id": "15654249", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Kijevo was a separate village until 1959 when it was incorporated into Kneževac, which in turn was incorporated into Belgrade in 1972. Kijevo is today organized as \"local community\", a sub-municipal administrative unit. In 2010 the western section of the local community was detached and became part of the newly formed local community Petlovo Brdo.", "score": "1.4577093" }, { "id": "27806368", "title": "Kijevac, Babušnica", "text": " Kijevac is a village in the municipality of Babušnica, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 54 people.", "score": "1.4486914" }, { "id": "15654236", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Lake Kijevo is a former artificial lake which existed for 46 years. Kijevski Potok, which originates under the hillock of Mačkov kamen, between Kneževac and Rušanj, cut through the Kijevo valley and often flooded it. In order to prevent damage by floodings to his factory, Stefanović built a sluice in 1901, forming the Lake Kijevo. Soon, the lake, surrounded by the thick forest, became an excursion site for the wealthier Belgraders. As Kijevo has its own railway station, a special excursion trains connected it to downtown Belgrade. There was an ada, small island in the lake which visitors could reached only by boats. Custom of the day was for the ladies ", "score": "1.4410447" }, { "id": "15654234", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Kijevo is located between the southwestern slopes of the 209 m Straževica hill on the east, and the southeastern slopes of the 205 m Petlovo Brdo on the west. The neighborhood is situated in the central part of the municipality, on the mouth of the stream of Kijevski Potok into the Topčiderka river. It is bordered by the neighborhoods of Petlovo Brdo on the west, Labudovo Brdo and Kneževac on the north and Resnik on the southeast. The neighborhood Sunčani Breg is located east of the Straževica hill and the quarry. Area south of Kijevo, the \"Klik\"' and \"Šabinac\" meadows, is still not urbanized. The neighborhood is situated in the valley of the Topčiderka, 14 km south of downtown Belgrade, near the crossroad of the Ibar highway and the Kružni put, and the future, parallel, Belgrade beltway.", "score": "1.4246902" }, { "id": "32473075", "title": "Kiskunmajsa", "text": "🇷🇸 Bačka Topola, Serbia ; 🇩🇪 Bad Schönborn, Germany ; 🇨🇳 Baiyin, China ; 🇷🇴 Gheorgheni, Romania ; 🇩🇪 Lommatzsch, Germany ; 🇵🇱 Lubliniec, Poland ; 🇱🇹 Ukmergė, Lithuania Kiskunmajsa is twinned with: ", "score": "1.4190547" }, { "id": "27806920", "title": "Kijevo, Batočina", "text": " Kijevo (Кијево) is a village in the municipality of Batočina, Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the village has a population of 482 people.", "score": "1.4166031" }, { "id": "12903959", "title": "Kikinda", "text": " The Suvača is a horse-powered dry mill. Kikinda has one of the three remaining such mills in Europe (the other two being in Szarvas, Hungary and Otok). There were many mills like this in the city, the largest recorded number being 51 in 1847. The only remaining mill was built in 1899 and was operational until 1945. Located in the center of the square, the Serbian Orthodox church was built in 1769. The icons of the iconostasis were done by Jakov Orfelin (nephew of Zacharius Orfelin) in 1773. Teodor Ilić Češljar is the author of the two large wall paintings \"The Last Supper\" and \"Ascension of Jesus Christ\" (1790). Both, ", "score": "1.4152341" }, { "id": "15654243", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Until 1941, some 200 people settled in Kijevo, with additional 80 who refuged during the World War II. After the war, a huge number of rural population moved to Belgrade, especially from the war thorn and poor regions, but also because of the deficit of the workforce in the city. Many worked in Kijevo because of the railroad and tunnel construction, so the temporary barracks for the workers and their families were placed all over the Belgrade suburbia, including Kijevo. Some of them still stand. The 1950 Belgrade general plan (GUP) envisioned the entire area stretching from the Zmajevac Hill, below Miljakovac, over Kneževac, to Kijevo, as the green, un-urbanized, excursion area. Next wave of settlement in Kijevo began in 1953, coinciding with the massive shift of the local agricultural population which was settling in Belgrade. As Kijevo was at the time designated as the ", "score": "1.4084992" }, { "id": "15654240", "title": "Kijevo, Belgrade", "text": " Until the early 20th century, Kijevo was an uninhabited section of the Rakovica's rural area. Svetozar Stefanović, industrialist who founded the first canning factory in Serbia, in Kragujevac, moved to Belgrade and bought the land at the mouth of the Kijevski Potok into the Topčiderka and planted fruits and vegetables, including the large fruit plantation on the slopes of the west bank of Kijevski Potok. Later, in 1901 he also transferred his factory from Kragujevac to Kijevo. The factory was nationalized after the World War II by the new Communist authorities, renamed to \"Prvi Maj\" and moved to Čukarica in the late 1950s. The factory ", "score": "1.4040127" }, { "id": "2379598", "title": "Kijevo, Sanski Most", "text": " Kijevo is a village in the municipality of Sanski Most, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.4029227" }, { "id": "10959119", "title": "Kije, Sieradz County", "text": " Kije is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Błaszki, within Sieradz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 11 km south of Błaszki, 25 km west of Sieradz, and 78 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.4003971" }, { "id": "28861721", "title": "Kijev Do", "text": " According to the 2013 census, its population was 66.", "score": "1.3925135" }, { "id": "25267191", "title": "Kičava", "text": " Kičava is a village in the municipality of Bijelo Polje, Montenegro.", "score": "1.392056" }, { "id": "26683854", "title": "Kije, Lubusz Voivodeship", "text": " Kije (Kay) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sulechów, within Zielona Góra County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Sulechów and 18 km north of Zielona Góra. During the Seven Years' War on 23 July 1759 it was the site of the Battle of Kay, where Prussian Army forces under Lieutenant General Carl Heinrich von Wedel fought against the Imperial Russian Army led by Pyotr Saltykov.", "score": "1.3858993" }, { "id": "26454428", "title": "Kiskunlacháza", "text": "🇭🇺 Szigetszentmárton, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Aknaszlatina, Ukraine ; 🇬🇧 Manchester, United Kingdom ; 🇲🇰 Vinica, North Macedonia ", "score": "1.384556" }, { "id": "32625068", "title": "Zmajevac", "text": " Zmajevac (Vörösmart; ; Ad Novas) is a settlement in the region of Baranja, Croatia. Administratively, it is located in the Kneževi Vinogradi municipality within the Osijek-Baranja County. The population is 974 people. Zmajevac lies within the disputed border area with Serbia. It is located adjacent to the micronation of Liberland, which was proclaimed in 2015. Currently there is no operational border crossing point.", "score": "1.3815713" }, { "id": "28766424", "title": "Jehovac", "text": " Jehovac is a village in the municipality of Kiseljak, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.3793137" } ]
[ "Kijevac (Surdulica)\n Kijevac is a village in the municipality of Surdulica, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 183 people.", "Kijevo, Trnovo\n Kijevo is a village in Trnovo municipality, Istočno Sarajevo, Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Kijevo is south of Sarajevo on the road M-18 Sarajevo-Trnovo-Foča-Trebinje. The closest airport is Sarajevo International Airport, located 9.7 km north west of Kijevo. The Željeznica river is one of the Kijevo's chief geographic features. It flows through the town and municipality from south through the center of Trnovo, Kijevo and Istočno (East) Sarajevo to west part of Sarajevo eventually meets up with the Bosna river.", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Kijevo (Кијево) is an urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Rakovica.", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Kijevo was a separate village until 1959 when it was incorporated into Kneževac, which in turn was incorporated into Belgrade in 1972. Kijevo is today organized as \"local community\", a sub-municipal administrative unit. In 2010 the western section of the local community was detached and became part of the newly formed local community Petlovo Brdo.", "Kijevac, Babušnica\n Kijevac is a village in the municipality of Babušnica, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 54 people.", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Lake Kijevo is a former artificial lake which existed for 46 years. Kijevski Potok, which originates under the hillock of Mačkov kamen, between Kneževac and Rušanj, cut through the Kijevo valley and often flooded it. In order to prevent damage by floodings to his factory, Stefanović built a sluice in 1901, forming the Lake Kijevo. Soon, the lake, surrounded by the thick forest, became an excursion site for the wealthier Belgraders. As Kijevo has its own railway station, a special excursion trains connected it to downtown Belgrade. There was an ada, small island in the lake which visitors could reached only by boats. Custom of the day was for the ladies ", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Kijevo is located between the southwestern slopes of the 209 m Straževica hill on the east, and the southeastern slopes of the 205 m Petlovo Brdo on the west. The neighborhood is situated in the central part of the municipality, on the mouth of the stream of Kijevski Potok into the Topčiderka river. It is bordered by the neighborhoods of Petlovo Brdo on the west, Labudovo Brdo and Kneževac on the north and Resnik on the southeast. The neighborhood Sunčani Breg is located east of the Straževica hill and the quarry. Area south of Kijevo, the \"Klik\"' and \"Šabinac\" meadows, is still not urbanized. The neighborhood is situated in the valley of the Topčiderka, 14 km south of downtown Belgrade, near the crossroad of the Ibar highway and the Kružni put, and the future, parallel, Belgrade beltway.", "Kiskunmajsa\n🇷🇸 Bačka Topola, Serbia ; 🇩🇪 Bad Schönborn, Germany ; 🇨🇳 Baiyin, China ; 🇷🇴 Gheorgheni, Romania ; 🇩🇪 Lommatzsch, Germany ; 🇵🇱 Lubliniec, Poland ; 🇱🇹 Ukmergė, Lithuania Kiskunmajsa is twinned with: ", "Kijevo, Batočina\n Kijevo (Кијево) is a village in the municipality of Batočina, Serbia. According to the 2011 census, the village has a population of 482 people.", "Kikinda\n The Suvača is a horse-powered dry mill. Kikinda has one of the three remaining such mills in Europe (the other two being in Szarvas, Hungary and Otok). There were many mills like this in the city, the largest recorded number being 51 in 1847. The only remaining mill was built in 1899 and was operational until 1945. Located in the center of the square, the Serbian Orthodox church was built in 1769. The icons of the iconostasis were done by Jakov Orfelin (nephew of Zacharius Orfelin) in 1773. Teodor Ilić Češljar is the author of the two large wall paintings \"The Last Supper\" and \"Ascension of Jesus Christ\" (1790). Both, ", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Until 1941, some 200 people settled in Kijevo, with additional 80 who refuged during the World War II. After the war, a huge number of rural population moved to Belgrade, especially from the war thorn and poor regions, but also because of the deficit of the workforce in the city. Many worked in Kijevo because of the railroad and tunnel construction, so the temporary barracks for the workers and their families were placed all over the Belgrade suburbia, including Kijevo. Some of them still stand. The 1950 Belgrade general plan (GUP) envisioned the entire area stretching from the Zmajevac Hill, below Miljakovac, over Kneževac, to Kijevo, as the green, un-urbanized, excursion area. Next wave of settlement in Kijevo began in 1953, coinciding with the massive shift of the local agricultural population which was settling in Belgrade. As Kijevo was at the time designated as the ", "Kijevo, Belgrade\n Until the early 20th century, Kijevo was an uninhabited section of the Rakovica's rural area. Svetozar Stefanović, industrialist who founded the first canning factory in Serbia, in Kragujevac, moved to Belgrade and bought the land at the mouth of the Kijevski Potok into the Topčiderka and planted fruits and vegetables, including the large fruit plantation on the slopes of the west bank of Kijevski Potok. Later, in 1901 he also transferred his factory from Kragujevac to Kijevo. The factory was nationalized after the World War II by the new Communist authorities, renamed to \"Prvi Maj\" and moved to Čukarica in the late 1950s. The factory ", "Kijevo, Sanski Most\n Kijevo is a village in the municipality of Sanski Most, Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "Kije, Sieradz County\n Kije is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Błaszki, within Sieradz County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 11 km south of Błaszki, 25 km west of Sieradz, and 78 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Kijev Do\n According to the 2013 census, its population was 66.", "Kičava\n Kičava is a village in the municipality of Bijelo Polje, Montenegro.", "Kije, Lubusz Voivodeship\n Kije (Kay) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Sulechów, within Zielona Góra County, Lubusz Voivodeship, in western Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Sulechów and 18 km north of Zielona Góra. During the Seven Years' War on 23 July 1759 it was the site of the Battle of Kay, where Prussian Army forces under Lieutenant General Carl Heinrich von Wedel fought against the Imperial Russian Army led by Pyotr Saltykov.", "Kiskunlacháza\n🇭🇺 Szigetszentmárton, Hungary ; 🇺🇦 Aknaszlatina, Ukraine ; 🇬🇧 Manchester, United Kingdom ; 🇲🇰 Vinica, North Macedonia ", "Zmajevac\n Zmajevac (Vörösmart; ; Ad Novas) is a settlement in the region of Baranja, Croatia. Administratively, it is located in the Kneževi Vinogradi municipality within the Osijek-Baranja County. The population is 974 people. Zmajevac lies within the disputed border area with Serbia. It is located adjacent to the micronation of Liberland, which was proclaimed in 2015. Currently there is no operational border crossing point.", "Jehovac\n Jehovac is a village in the municipality of Kiseljak, Bosnia and Herzegovina." ]
In what country is Iron River (CDP), Wisconsin?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Iron River (CDP), Wisconsin
243,602
47
[ { "id": "5595583", "title": "Iron River (CDP), Wisconsin", "text": " Iron River is an unincorporated, census-designated place located in the town of Iron River, Bayfield County, Wisconsin, United States. U.S. Highway 2 serves as a main route in the community. Other routes include County Highways A and H. Iron River is 27 mi west of the city of Ashland and 37 mi east of the city of Superior. Iron River has a post office with ZIP code 54847. As of the 2010 census, its population was 761. Iron River is the home of the Bayfield County Fair. The Fair takes place annually in August.", "score": "1.9562378" }, { "id": "4384361", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " Iron River is a town in Bayfield County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 1,123 at the 2010 census. The census-designated place of Iron River is located in the town. The unincorporated community of Topside is also located in the town.", "score": "1.898654" }, { "id": "4384362", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 90.4 sqkm, of which 81.6 sqkm is land and 8.8 sqkm, or 9.73%, is water. Iron River is located 27 mi west of the city of Ashland and 37 mi east of the city of Superior.", "score": "1.8312304" }, { "id": "4384368", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " U.S. Highway 2 serves as a main route in the community. Other routes include County Highways A and H.", "score": "1.7983122" }, { "id": "4384363", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " At the 2000 census, there were 1,059 people, 485 households and 311 families residing in the town. The population density was 33.7 /sqmi. There were 973 housing units at an average density of 31.0 /sqmi. The racial make-up was 96.79% White, 1.32% Native American, 0.57% Asian, and 1.32% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.38% of the population. There were 485 households, of which 23.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 51.3% were married couples living together, 6.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.7% were non-families. 30.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 16.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size ", "score": "1.7521038" }, { "id": "30425884", "title": "Iron River, Michigan", "text": " Iron River is a city in Iron County in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 3,029. The city is situated at the southeast corner of Iron River Township, but is administratively autonomous.", "score": "1.6752648" }, { "id": "8571910", "title": "Ironton (town), Wisconsin", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 35.2 square miles (91.1 km2), of which, 35.2 square miles (91.1 km2) of it is land and 0.03% is water.", "score": "1.6712799" }, { "id": "29780999", "title": "Iron River (Marquette County, Michigan)", "text": " The Iron River is a 2.7 mi river in Marquette County on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the United States. It is a short stream flowing from the outlet of Lake Independence east to Lake Superior.", "score": "1.6652029" }, { "id": "4387260", "title": "Iron Ridge, Wisconsin", "text": " Iron Ridge is located at 43.39917°N, -88.53111°W (43.399155, -88.530996). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.69 sqmi, of which, 0.68 sqmi of it is land and 0.01 sqmi is water.", "score": "1.6513429" }, { "id": "26881935", "title": "Gogebic Range", "text": " on the east fork of the Montreal River that forms the Michigan–Wisconsin border northwest of Ironwood and Hurley include Superior Falls (which is bordered by 100 ft cliffs), Saxon Falls, Interstate Falls, and Peterson Falls. Major waterfalls in Iron County, Wisconsin include Rock Cut, Gile, Kimball, and Spring Camp Falls on the west fork of the Montreal River, Foster, Upson, and Potato River Falls on the Potato River, and Wren Falls on the Tyler Forks River. Major waterfalls in Ashland County, Wisconsin include Copper Falls and Brownstone Falls on the Bad River in Copper Falls State Park. With metals trading at unprecedented prices during the early 2010s commodity bubble, companies again explored ", "score": "1.6463342" }, { "id": "4387259", "title": "Iron Ridge, Wisconsin", "text": " Iron Ridge is a village in Dodge County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 929 at the 2010 census. The village was founded on a railroad line, named for the iron mined in the area. Its ZIP code is 53035.", "score": "1.6442807" }, { "id": "4384364", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " 2.18 and the average family size was 2.68. 19.9% of the population were under the age of 18, 6.0% from 18 to 24, 22.9% from 25 to 44, 28.0% from 45 to 64, and 23.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 46 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.8 males. The median household income was $28,796 and the median family income was $36,597. Males had a median income of $30,060 and females $18,125. The per capita income was $16,449. About 10.2% of families and 15.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 28.2% of those under age 18 and 12.4% of those age 65 or over.", "score": "1.6431346" }, { "id": "8571896", "title": "Ironton, Wisconsin", "text": " Ironton is a village in Sauk County, Wisconsin, United States, along the Little Baraboo River. The population was 253 at the 2010 census. The village is located within the Town of Ironton. Like the Town of Ironton, the village was named for deposits of iron ore in the area.", "score": "1.6286246" }, { "id": "4384367", "title": "Iron River, Wisconsin", "text": " Iron River Public Schools belong to the Maple School District. There are two elementary schools, a middle school and a high school in the district. Students attend Northwestern High School.", "score": "1.6274008" }, { "id": "30425891", "title": "Iron River, Michigan", "text": "courses west to Ironwood and southeast to Crystal Falls and Iron Mountain. ; travels southwest to Wisconsin. ; runs near Caspian before continuing on to Wisconsin. ", "score": "1.6243213" }, { "id": "8571897", "title": "Ironton, Wisconsin", "text": " Ironton is located at 43.54472°N, -90.14028°W (43.544725, -90.140442). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.33 sqmi, all of it land.", "score": "1.6219707" }, { "id": "4403933", "title": "Iron County MRA", "text": " form a larger city. The city still contains many buildings from the boom times of 1900–1920. There are 24 structures and historic districts on this MRA within the pre-2000 boundaries of Iron River. They are summarized below. Two additional structures in Iron River, the Chicago, Milwaukee and Saint Paul Railway Iron River Depot and Central School, were placed on the NRHP separate from this MRA and is not included in the list below, although Central School was included in the original nomination form. There are fourteen more structures now within the boundaries of Iron River which are located in what were once the separate municipalities of Stambaugh and Mineral Hills; these are covered separately.", "score": "1.6216254" }, { "id": "30425886", "title": "Iron River, Michigan", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 6.76 sqmi, of which 6.74 sqmi is land and 0.02 sqmi is water. The area is noted for its vast forest land, scenic lakes, and winter sports. Iron River and the surrounding area is home of many lakes, and is not far from Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes. In the summer, many people frequent the beaches, in the winter, there are often tents for ice fishing on the frozen lakes.", "score": "1.6215432" }, { "id": "2769339", "title": "Iron River station (Michigan)", "text": " The Iron River depot was built by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad—better known as the Milwaukee Road—in 1913. Located in Iron River, Michigan, the brick depot has a modified Neoclassical design and is rectangular in shape. The depot has a covered porch on one end that connected to the waiting room. The station agent's office was located in the middle of the building, and a freight room was on the other end. The CNW railroad came to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to serve the local iron mines and timber industry, and built a branch line that terminated in Iron River in 1913. Passenger service connected to the main line at Channing, Michigan until it ended in 1945; the railroad provided bus service between Sagola, Michigan ", "score": "1.6213328" }, { "id": "4403900", "title": "Iron County MRA", "text": " Iron County, originally part of Marquette County, was first surveyed in 1851. At that time, the area was populated almost exclusively by Native Americans from the Menominee and Ojibwe tribes. Although the original 1851 survey of the county noted the presence of iron ore, European settlers began arriving in numbers in 1875, prospecting for iron ore. In 1880, two important ore strikes were made: the first was by John Armstrong, who opened the Crystal Falls Mine along the Paint River, and the second was by Donald C. MacKinnon, who opened the Iron River (or Riverton) Mine along the Iron River. These two mines ", "score": "1.609132" } ]
[ "Iron River (CDP), Wisconsin\n Iron River is an unincorporated, census-designated place located in the town of Iron River, Bayfield County, Wisconsin, United States. U.S. Highway 2 serves as a main route in the community. Other routes include County Highways A and H. Iron River is 27 mi west of the city of Ashland and 37 mi east of the city of Superior. Iron River has a post office with ZIP code 54847. As of the 2010 census, its population was 761. Iron River is the home of the Bayfield County Fair. The Fair takes place annually in August.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n Iron River is a town in Bayfield County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 1,123 at the 2010 census. The census-designated place of Iron River is located in the town. The unincorporated community of Topside is also located in the town.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 90.4 sqkm, of which 81.6 sqkm is land and 8.8 sqkm, or 9.73%, is water. Iron River is located 27 mi west of the city of Ashland and 37 mi east of the city of Superior.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n U.S. Highway 2 serves as a main route in the community. Other routes include County Highways A and H.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n At the 2000 census, there were 1,059 people, 485 households and 311 families residing in the town. The population density was 33.7 /sqmi. There were 973 housing units at an average density of 31.0 /sqmi. The racial make-up was 96.79% White, 1.32% Native American, 0.57% Asian, and 1.32% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 0.38% of the population. There were 485 households, of which 23.1% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 51.3% were married couples living together, 6.8% had a female householder with no husband present, and 35.7% were non-families. 30.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 16.5% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size ", "Iron River, Michigan\n Iron River is a city in Iron County in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 3,029. The city is situated at the southeast corner of Iron River Township, but is administratively autonomous.", "Ironton (town), Wisconsin\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 35.2 square miles (91.1 km2), of which, 35.2 square miles (91.1 km2) of it is land and 0.03% is water.", "Iron River (Marquette County, Michigan)\n The Iron River is a 2.7 mi river in Marquette County on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the United States. It is a short stream flowing from the outlet of Lake Independence east to Lake Superior.", "Iron Ridge, Wisconsin\n Iron Ridge is located at 43.39917°N, -88.53111°W (43.399155, -88.530996). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.69 sqmi, of which, 0.68 sqmi of it is land and 0.01 sqmi is water.", "Gogebic Range\n on the east fork of the Montreal River that forms the Michigan–Wisconsin border northwest of Ironwood and Hurley include Superior Falls (which is bordered by 100 ft cliffs), Saxon Falls, Interstate Falls, and Peterson Falls. Major waterfalls in Iron County, Wisconsin include Rock Cut, Gile, Kimball, and Spring Camp Falls on the west fork of the Montreal River, Foster, Upson, and Potato River Falls on the Potato River, and Wren Falls on the Tyler Forks River. Major waterfalls in Ashland County, Wisconsin include Copper Falls and Brownstone Falls on the Bad River in Copper Falls State Park. With metals trading at unprecedented prices during the early 2010s commodity bubble, companies again explored ", "Iron Ridge, Wisconsin\n Iron Ridge is a village in Dodge County, Wisconsin, United States. The population was 929 at the 2010 census. The village was founded on a railroad line, named for the iron mined in the area. Its ZIP code is 53035.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n 2.18 and the average family size was 2.68. 19.9% of the population were under the age of 18, 6.0% from 18 to 24, 22.9% from 25 to 44, 28.0% from 45 to 64, and 23.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 46 years. For every 100 females, there were 98.7 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 95.8 males. The median household income was $28,796 and the median family income was $36,597. Males had a median income of $30,060 and females $18,125. The per capita income was $16,449. About 10.2% of families and 15.4% of the population were below the poverty line, including 28.2% of those under age 18 and 12.4% of those age 65 or over.", "Ironton, Wisconsin\n Ironton is a village in Sauk County, Wisconsin, United States, along the Little Baraboo River. The population was 253 at the 2010 census. The village is located within the Town of Ironton. Like the Town of Ironton, the village was named for deposits of iron ore in the area.", "Iron River, Wisconsin\n Iron River Public Schools belong to the Maple School District. There are two elementary schools, a middle school and a high school in the district. Students attend Northwestern High School.", "Iron River, Michigan\ncourses west to Ironwood and southeast to Crystal Falls and Iron Mountain. ; travels southwest to Wisconsin. ; runs near Caspian before continuing on to Wisconsin. ", "Ironton, Wisconsin\n Ironton is located at 43.54472°N, -90.14028°W (43.544725, -90.140442). According to the United States Census Bureau, the village has a total area of 0.33 sqmi, all of it land.", "Iron County MRA\n form a larger city. The city still contains many buildings from the boom times of 1900–1920. There are 24 structures and historic districts on this MRA within the pre-2000 boundaries of Iron River. They are summarized below. Two additional structures in Iron River, the Chicago, Milwaukee and Saint Paul Railway Iron River Depot and Central School, were placed on the NRHP separate from this MRA and is not included in the list below, although Central School was included in the original nomination form. There are fourteen more structures now within the boundaries of Iron River which are located in what were once the separate municipalities of Stambaugh and Mineral Hills; these are covered separately.", "Iron River, Michigan\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 6.76 sqmi, of which 6.74 sqmi is land and 0.02 sqmi is water. The area is noted for its vast forest land, scenic lakes, and winter sports. Iron River and the surrounding area is home of many lakes, and is not far from Lake Superior, the largest of the Great Lakes. In the summer, many people frequent the beaches, in the winter, there are often tents for ice fishing on the frozen lakes.", "Iron River station (Michigan)\n The Iron River depot was built by the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad—better known as the Milwaukee Road—in 1913. Located in Iron River, Michigan, the brick depot has a modified Neoclassical design and is rectangular in shape. The depot has a covered porch on one end that connected to the waiting room. The station agent's office was located in the middle of the building, and a freight room was on the other end. The CNW railroad came to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to serve the local iron mines and timber industry, and built a branch line that terminated in Iron River in 1913. Passenger service connected to the main line at Channing, Michigan until it ended in 1945; the railroad provided bus service between Sagola, Michigan ", "Iron County MRA\n Iron County, originally part of Marquette County, was first surveyed in 1851. At that time, the area was populated almost exclusively by Native Americans from the Menominee and Ojibwe tribes. Although the original 1851 survey of the county noted the presence of iron ore, European settlers began arriving in numbers in 1875, prospecting for iron ore. In 1880, two important ore strikes were made: the first was by John Armstrong, who opened the Crystal Falls Mine along the Paint River, and the second was by Donald C. MacKinnon, who opened the Iron River (or Riverton) Mine along the Iron River. These two mines " ]
In what country is Lätäseno?
[ "Finland", "Republic of Finland", "Finnia", "Land of Thousand Lakes", "fi", "Suomi", "Suomen tasavalta", "Republiken Finland", "🇫🇮", "FIN" ]
country
Lätäseno
1,739,387
88
[ { "id": "28555236", "title": "Lätäseno", "text": " Lätäseno Leahttáseatnu (Northern Sami), is a river of Finland in Finnish Lapland. It is a tributary of Muonio River, which itself is a tributary of Torne River. The river is a popular fishing destination. It flows through the Lätäseno-Hietajoki wetland protection area. It is also part of the Poroeno-Lätäseno canoe route (which begins in the Käsivarsi Wilderness Area), and offers lean-to shelter and wilderness hut accommodation.", "score": "1.5307052" }, { "id": "8125774", "title": "Montelanico", "text": "🇫🇷 Lagnes, France ", "score": "1.4068358" }, { "id": "6807580", "title": "Albano Laziale", "text": "🇵🇱 Białogard, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇵🇱 Koszalin, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇱🇹 Alytus, Lithuania, since 2004 ; 🇮🇹 Savelli, Italy ; 🇩🇪 Teterow, Germany ", "score": "1.3660169" }, { "id": "27344880", "title": "La Serenísima", "text": " brand name La Martona, which having been established in 1889, was the first dairy company of Argentina. La Martona had ceased operations in 1978, after it was declared bankruptcy due to its debts. Nevertheless, Mastellone Hnos. did not market La Martona products until 2019, when it released an economic line of milk. The company pioneered the sale of lactose-free milk in Argentina in 1984, became the market leader in the sale of yogurt (whose local consumption more than doubled between 1983 and 1988) and introduced cultured milk locally, in 1988. La Serenísima also introduced large-scale organic dairy farming in Argentina, in 1994, and became the first to fortify its products with iron sulfate.", "score": "1.3552711" }, { "id": "1173441", "title": "Lahnstein", "text": "🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Kettering, England, since 1956 ; 🇫🇷 Vence, France, since 1967 ; 🇧🇫 Ouahigouya, Burkina Faso, since 1978 ; Hermsdorf, Thuringia, Germany, since December 1990 ; 🇮🇹 Montesilvano, Italy, since May 2016 ", "score": "1.3450403" }, { "id": "9509609", "title": "Crecchio", "text": "🇮🇹 Lariano, Italy ", "score": "1.3415301" }, { "id": "8126080", "title": "Lariano", "text": "🇷🇴 Victoria, since April 2007 ; 🇫🇷 Sausset-les-Pins, France ; 🇮🇹 Crecchio, Italy ; 🇮🇹 San Ferdinando di Puglia, Italy ", "score": "1.3297937" }, { "id": "4428422", "title": "Lago di Tenno", "text": " Lago di Tenno is a lake at Tenno in Trentino, Italy. At an elevation of 550 m, its surface area is 2.5 km². The lake was formed around the year 1100 following a large landslide that blocked the course of the river Rì Sec, which is currently the main tributary of the lake. In the southern portion of the lake there is a small island. The level of the lake varies over the years depending on the flow rate of the tributaries. In the years when the level is low this island becomes a kind of promontory. This area is protected by the Autonomous Province of Trento as a biotope.", "score": "1.3297695" }, { "id": "10393415", "title": "La Strada International Association", "text": " La Strada International (LSI) is an international NGO network addressing the trafficking of persons in Europe. The organisation was established in October 2004 and includes members from Belarus, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Moldova, the Netherlands, Poland, and Ukraine and an International Secretariat based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. In each of the eight member countries the programme is implemented by independent human rights non-governmental organizations, working within the La Strada philosophy. Cooperation among the members dates back to 1995, when the first La Strada project started. LSI develops activities in three interrelated areas: Information & Lobbying; Prevention & Education; and Social Assistance to trafficked persons. LSI's work ", "score": "1.3220469" }, { "id": "9890601", "title": "Lepe", "text": "Lagoa, Portugal ; 🇪🇸 Tomelloso, Spain ; 🇷🇴 Fetești, România ", "score": "1.3186468" }, { "id": "2996048", "title": "Lataro", "text": " Lataro (alternate names: Litaro or Pilot Island) is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. The island is now privately owned. The Shark Bay language is spoken in the regions surrounding the island.", "score": "1.3127952" }, { "id": "32714957", "title": "Lathraea clandestina", "text": " Purple toothwort grows mainly in the West and South of Europe, especially Western and Central France, from Western Belgium, where it is locally abundant in the Flemish Ardennes, as far as Northern Spain, with localised populations in Central Italy. In France, it is found almost exclusively southwest of the Loire river to the Pyrenees, with an extension north of the Loire to the south-east of Brittany and the departments of Mayenne, Orne and Sarthe. It is protected in some departments, but is relatively common in the wetlands of the department of Charente and Charente-Maritime where it is not protected. In Spain, it occurs mainly ", "score": "1.3116398" }, { "id": "5211713", "title": "Lenola, Lazio", "text": "🇮🇹 Grotte, Italy ; 🇫🇷 Mondragon, France ; 🇪🇸 Marmolejo, Spain ", "score": "1.3105817" }, { "id": "911882", "title": "La Carlota, Miranda", "text": " La Carlota is a town of Venezuela located in Miranda. Located outside of Caracas, the town is one of the areas that most represents the Italian spirit in the capital and throughout Venezuela. Italian infrastructures of more than 50 years of creation are seen in this area of the Venezuelan capital, especially in the urbanization that surrounds La Casona, its architecture is typical of the towns and cities of Italy with wide sidewalks and outdoor café.", "score": "1.306481" }, { "id": "12438439", "title": "Conservative Laestadianism", "text": " Conservative Laestadianism is located mainly in northern Europe and North America. Small congregations can be found in Africa, southern Europe and South America. There are about 115.000 Conservative Laestadians, most of them in Finland, United States and Sweden. Most (80,000-150,000) are in Finland. Conservative Laestadians organize big summer services every year. It is the biggest religious event in Nordic countries. About 70,000 guests come from all over the world. Conservative Laestadianism does mission work in 16 countries: Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Canada, Kenya, Latvia, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo and the United States. Congregations in North America are located in the following provinces and states: Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Saskatchewan. USA: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.", "score": "1.3049295" }, { "id": "15313821", "title": "La Rinascente", "text": " (La) Rinascente is a collection of high-end stores with Italian and international brands in fashion, accessories, beauty, homeware, design and food. It operates eleven stores in Italy, including its general headquarters in Milan and two flagship stores in Rome. It was a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1959 to 2008, with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.", "score": "1.3034432" }, { "id": "1837365", "title": "Latiano", "text": "🇮🇹 Pompei, Italy, since 1980 ", "score": "1.3033268" }, { "id": "3463753", "title": "Lataroa", "text": " Lataroa is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. International company Singraphus in co-operation with Radisson Hotel Group has announced the development of a large resort – Radisson Lataroa Island.", "score": "1.2984339" }, { "id": "6721621", "title": "La Martona", "text": " La Martona is an Argentine dairy brand, currently owned by La Serenísima. La Martona was originally the first dairy company of Argentina, established in 1889 by Vicente Lorenzo Casares in Cañuelas Partido. La Martona was a pionner in the local industry due to it controlled not only products manufacturing but distribution and commercialization. Thee company is regarded for its technological advancement in the pasteurization and other milk processing, with the acquisition of modern machinery from Europe and the U.S. and the development of rail lines for goods transport. La Martona operated until 1978, when it fell into bankruptcy and the brand name was acquired by rival company La Serenísima (legal name: \"Mastellone Hnos.\") in a judicial sale. Since then, the company has owned exclusive rights to La Martona brand name.", "score": "1.2962406" }, { "id": "3782784", "title": "Latin American Travel Association", "text": " The LATA Foundation (Registered Charity number 1123580) is dedicated to promoting responsible business practices in the tourism industry as well as sustainable development, conservation and poverty relief in Latin America by funding, supporting and developing charitable projects throughout the region.", "score": "1.2941991" } ]
[ "Lätäseno\n Lätäseno Leahttáseatnu (Northern Sami), is a river of Finland in Finnish Lapland. It is a tributary of Muonio River, which itself is a tributary of Torne River. The river is a popular fishing destination. It flows through the Lätäseno-Hietajoki wetland protection area. It is also part of the Poroeno-Lätäseno canoe route (which begins in the Käsivarsi Wilderness Area), and offers lean-to shelter and wilderness hut accommodation.", "Montelanico\n🇫🇷 Lagnes, France ", "Albano Laziale\n🇵🇱 Białogard, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇵🇱 Koszalin, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇱🇹 Alytus, Lithuania, since 2004 ; 🇮🇹 Savelli, Italy ; 🇩🇪 Teterow, Germany ", "La Serenísima\n brand name La Martona, which having been established in 1889, was the first dairy company of Argentina. La Martona had ceased operations in 1978, after it was declared bankruptcy due to its debts. Nevertheless, Mastellone Hnos. did not market La Martona products until 2019, when it released an economic line of milk. The company pioneered the sale of lactose-free milk in Argentina in 1984, became the market leader in the sale of yogurt (whose local consumption more than doubled between 1983 and 1988) and introduced cultured milk locally, in 1988. La Serenísima also introduced large-scale organic dairy farming in Argentina, in 1994, and became the first to fortify its products with iron sulfate.", "Lahnstein\n🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Kettering, England, since 1956 ; 🇫🇷 Vence, France, since 1967 ; 🇧🇫 Ouahigouya, Burkina Faso, since 1978 ; Hermsdorf, Thuringia, Germany, since December 1990 ; 🇮🇹 Montesilvano, Italy, since May 2016 ", "Crecchio\n🇮🇹 Lariano, Italy ", "Lariano\n🇷🇴 Victoria, since April 2007 ; 🇫🇷 Sausset-les-Pins, France ; 🇮🇹 Crecchio, Italy ; 🇮🇹 San Ferdinando di Puglia, Italy ", "Lago di Tenno\n Lago di Tenno is a lake at Tenno in Trentino, Italy. At an elevation of 550 m, its surface area is 2.5 km². The lake was formed around the year 1100 following a large landslide that blocked the course of the river Rì Sec, which is currently the main tributary of the lake. In the southern portion of the lake there is a small island. The level of the lake varies over the years depending on the flow rate of the tributaries. In the years when the level is low this island becomes a kind of promontory. This area is protected by the Autonomous Province of Trento as a biotope.", "La Strada International Association\n La Strada International (LSI) is an international NGO network addressing the trafficking of persons in Europe. The organisation was established in October 2004 and includes members from Belarus, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Moldova, the Netherlands, Poland, and Ukraine and an International Secretariat based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. In each of the eight member countries the programme is implemented by independent human rights non-governmental organizations, working within the La Strada philosophy. Cooperation among the members dates back to 1995, when the first La Strada project started. LSI develops activities in three interrelated areas: Information & Lobbying; Prevention & Education; and Social Assistance to trafficked persons. LSI's work ", "Lepe\nLagoa, Portugal ; 🇪🇸 Tomelloso, Spain ; 🇷🇴 Fetești, România ", "Lataro\n Lataro (alternate names: Litaro or Pilot Island) is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. The island is now privately owned. The Shark Bay language is spoken in the regions surrounding the island.", "Lathraea clandestina\n Purple toothwort grows mainly in the West and South of Europe, especially Western and Central France, from Western Belgium, where it is locally abundant in the Flemish Ardennes, as far as Northern Spain, with localised populations in Central Italy. In France, it is found almost exclusively southwest of the Loire river to the Pyrenees, with an extension north of the Loire to the south-east of Brittany and the departments of Mayenne, Orne and Sarthe. It is protected in some departments, but is relatively common in the wetlands of the department of Charente and Charente-Maritime where it is not protected. In Spain, it occurs mainly ", "Lenola, Lazio\n🇮🇹 Grotte, Italy ; 🇫🇷 Mondragon, France ; 🇪🇸 Marmolejo, Spain ", "La Carlota, Miranda\n La Carlota is a town of Venezuela located in Miranda. Located outside of Caracas, the town is one of the areas that most represents the Italian spirit in the capital and throughout Venezuela. Italian infrastructures of more than 50 years of creation are seen in this area of the Venezuelan capital, especially in the urbanization that surrounds La Casona, its architecture is typical of the towns and cities of Italy with wide sidewalks and outdoor café.", "Conservative Laestadianism\n Conservative Laestadianism is located mainly in northern Europe and North America. Small congregations can be found in Africa, southern Europe and South America. There are about 115.000 Conservative Laestadians, most of them in Finland, United States and Sweden. Most (80,000-150,000) are in Finland. Conservative Laestadians organize big summer services every year. It is the biggest religious event in Nordic countries. About 70,000 guests come from all over the world. Conservative Laestadianism does mission work in 16 countries: Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Canada, Kenya, Latvia, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo and the United States. Congregations in North America are located in the following provinces and states: Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Saskatchewan. USA: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.", "La Rinascente\n (La) Rinascente is a collection of high-end stores with Italian and international brands in fashion, accessories, beauty, homeware, design and food. It operates eleven stores in Italy, including its general headquarters in Milan and two flagship stores in Rome. It was a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1959 to 2008, with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.", "Latiano\n🇮🇹 Pompei, Italy, since 1980 ", "Lataroa\n Lataroa is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. International company Singraphus in co-operation with Radisson Hotel Group has announced the development of a large resort – Radisson Lataroa Island.", "La Martona\n La Martona is an Argentine dairy brand, currently owned by La Serenísima. La Martona was originally the first dairy company of Argentina, established in 1889 by Vicente Lorenzo Casares in Cañuelas Partido. La Martona was a pionner in the local industry due to it controlled not only products manufacturing but distribution and commercialization. Thee company is regarded for its technological advancement in the pasteurization and other milk processing, with the acquisition of modern machinery from Europe and the U.S. and the development of rail lines for goods transport. La Martona operated until 1978, when it fell into bankruptcy and the brand name was acquired by rival company La Serenísima (legal name: \"Mastellone Hnos.\") in a judicial sale. Since then, the company has owned exclusive rights to La Martona brand name.", "Latin American Travel Association\n The LATA Foundation (Registered Charity number 1123580) is dedicated to promoting responsible business practices in the tourism industry as well as sustainable development, conservation and poverty relief in Latin America by funding, supporting and developing charitable projects throughout the region." ]
In what country is Mount Shinten?
[ "Japan", "State of Japan", "Land of the Rising Sun", "Nihon", "Nippon", "JP", "Nippon-koku", "Nihon-koku", "JA", "JPN", "jp", "JAP", "Ja", "Jap" ]
country
Mount Shinten
2,759,467
35
[ { "id": "30111285", "title": "Mount Shinten", "text": " Mount Shinten (信天山) is a mountain located on Kuba-jima of Senkaku Islands in Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan. It is the second highest point of the island, after Mount Chitose.", "score": "1.625518" }, { "id": "29288841", "title": "Mount Mitake (Tokyo)", "text": " Mount Mitake (御岳山) is a mountain in the Chichibu Tama Kai National Park near Tokyo, Japan. It stands 929 m tall. On the mountain is a Shinto shrine where practices such as Futomani divination take place. It is one of the many highlights of the Chichibu Tama Kai National Park, which covers more than 1250 km2 of forested mountains, hills, gorges and some rural towns in the prefectures of Yamanashi, Saitama, Nagano and Tokyo. The trip from Tokyo's Shinjuku Station to Mitake Station on the Ōme Line takes about 95 minutes. A shuttle bus, located 50 meters to the left ", "score": "1.5425124" }, { "id": "14208942", "title": "Glossary of Shinto", "text": " (立山, lit. \"Upright Mountain\") (the mountains Fuji, Haku and Tate are also known as the Sanreizan, mentioned below), Mount Ōmine (大峰山, lit. \"Great Peak Mountain\"), Mount Shakka (釈迦ヶ岳, lit. \"Sakyamuni's Great Mountain\"), Mount Daisen (大山, lit. \"Great Mountain\"), and Mount Ishizuchi (石鎚山, lit. \"Stone Hammer Mountain\") ; Naraku (奈落, lit. \"Fall [from] Grace\") – The Hell realm of incarnation, the lowest and worst realm on the Wheel of Re-incarnation. See Rinne (below). ; Nenju / Nenzu / Juzu / Zuzu (念珠 / 数珠, lit. \"Thought Beads\"; \"Garland\") – Shinto-Buddhist Rosary; a string or necklace of beads used for prayers. ; Ne-no-kuni (根の国, lit. \"Land of Roots\" or \"Land of Origin\") – ", "score": "1.450256" }, { "id": "77362", "title": "Mount Yōtei", "text": " Mount Yōtei (羊蹄山) is an active stratovolcano located in Shikotsu-Toya National Park, Hokkaidō, Japan. It is also called Yezo Fuji or Ezo Fuji (蝦夷富士), \"Ezo\" being an old name for the island of Hokkaido, because it resembles Mount Fuji. The mountain is also known as Makkari Nupuri (マッカリヌプリ) and Mount Shiribeshi (後方羊蹄山). It is one of the 100 famous mountains in Japan.", "score": "1.4481052" }, { "id": "11949989", "title": "Mount Nantai", "text": " Mount Nantai (男体山) literally \"man's body mountain\", also called Futara-san (二荒山) is a stratovolcano in the Nikkō National Park in Tochigi Prefecture, on central Honshū, the main island of Japan. It stands at 2,486 m high. A prominent landmark, it can be seen on clear days from as far as the Pacific coast, 100 km away.", "score": "1.4316456" }, { "id": "3767584", "title": "Mount Jōnen", "text": " Mount Jōnen (常念岳) is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains, reaching the height of 2857 m. It is situated in Japan's Hida Mountains in Nagano Prefecture and in Chūbu-Sangaku National Park. The shape of the mountain looks like the triangle. It can be seen from Azumi Basin.", "score": "1.4311237" }, { "id": "31601668", "title": "Mount Mitake (Hyōgo)", "text": " Mount Mitake is the highest mountain in the Taki Mountains, including Mount Nishigatake and Mount Koganegadake. The Taki Mountains were one of the most holiest places for shugendō from Kamakura period to Muromachi period. However, Tanba Shugendō, a sect of Shugendo in Tanba Province, lost against Yamato Shugendō, another Shugendo sect of Yamato Province including Mount Ōmine, all of the temples in the Taki Mountains were burned in 1482.", "score": "1.4260213" }, { "id": "4778785", "title": "Mount Shindainichi", "text": " Mount Shindainichi (新大日) is a peak of the Tanzawa Mountains with an elevation of 1340 m, and is located due east of Mount Tō. It is located within the boundary of the Tanzawa-Ōyama Quasi-National Park. The mountain is easily accessible by a hiking trail from Yabitsu Pass, which intersects with the Nagaone Trail from the village of Kiyokawa, and with the trail leading directly to Mount Tō which is approximately a 40-minute hike.", "score": "1.4258677" }, { "id": "31601667", "title": "Mount Mitake (Hyōgo)", "text": " Mount Mitake (御嶽) is a 793 m high Japanese mountain located around 50 km north of Kobe in Hyōgo Prefecture. It should not be confused with Mount Mitake, a mountain in Tokyo, or Mount Ontake in Nagano Prefecture written with the same characters. This mountain is one of the 50 famous mountains in Hyōgo Prefecture.", "score": "1.4194854" }, { "id": "11661685", "title": "Historic Villages of Shirakawa-gō and Gokayama", "text": " Mt Hakusan is the principal mountain in this area, and has been regarded as a sacred summit since ancient times. In the 8th century the Shirakawa-gō and Gokayama area became a location for ascetic religious practices, and mountain worship centred on Mt Hakusan. For a long time afterwards, the region was under the control of the Tendai sect of Buddhist Japan. The tradition of Ochi-udo Densetsu (legend of defeated warriors who flee to the remote areas) remains today, no doubt as a result of its remote, isolated and mountainous nature. Tendai sect religion was replaced in the 13th century by the Jodo Shin sect and remains the main religious influence to the present day. Nowadays all three villages within the world heritage site belong to the modern-day administrative organisation of the Mura system.", "score": "1.4067932" }, { "id": "10866370", "title": "Shugendō", "text": " the Ōmine mountain range is Mount Hakkyō at an altitude of 1915 m, and there are 75 places for ascetic practices along the mountain trail, and Ōminesan-ji Temple at the top of Mount Ōmine at an altitude of 1719 m is considered to be the highest sacred site of Shugendō. At present, the Ōmine mountain range is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site \"Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range\" and Yoshino-Kumano National Park. In modern times, Shugendō is practiced mainly through Tendai and Shingon temples. Some temples include Kimpusen-ji in Yoshino (Tendai), Ideha Shrine in the Three Mountains of Dewa and Daigo-ji in Kyoto (Shingon).", "score": "1.4064584" }, { "id": "2646795", "title": "Mount Higashidate", "text": " Mount Higashidate (東館山) is a mountain in Japan located in Yamanouchi, Nagano. For the 1998 Winter Olympics, it hosted the alpine skiing giant slalom events.", "score": "1.4032354" }, { "id": "7682735", "title": "Mount Funagata", "text": " Mount Funagata (船形山) is a mountain within the Ōu Mountains on the border of Miyagi Prefecture and Yamagata Prefecture in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. It is listed as one of the \"200 famous mountains of Japan\" and has a height of 1500.34 m. The mountain is also known as Mount Goshō (御所山) when viewed from Yamagata prefecture.", "score": "1.3990717" }, { "id": "3767588", "title": "Mount Jōnen", "text": "Jōnen Hut (常念小屋) - On the pass of Jōnen Pass (常念乗越) between Mount Jōnen and Mount Yokotooshi. It is one of the oldest hut in Japan. ; Mount Chō Hut (蝶ヶ岳ヒュッテ) - Near the top of Mount Chō. ; Yokoo Mountain Cottage (横尾山荘) - In Yokoo most in the north of Kamikochi. ; Daiten Cottage (大天荘) - Near the top of Mount Otensyo. Thera are several Mountain hut around Mount Jōnen. There is the Campsite on each hut.", "score": "1.395643" }, { "id": "15007123", "title": "Xindian District", "text": " In 1920, during the period of Japanese rule, the area was established as Shinten Town (新店街), Bunsan District, Taihoku Prefecture.", "score": "1.3946328" }, { "id": "27617123", "title": "Nyonin Kinsei", "text": "Mount Fuji (Yamanashi Prefecture and Shizuoka Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in the late Edo period. ; Tateyama (Toyama Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in 1872 (1872). ; Hakusan (Ishikawa Prefecture and Gifu Prefecture) - Same as above. ; Hiei (Shiga Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture) - same as above. ; Mount Ontake (Nagano Prefecture, Gifu Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted around 1877 (10th year of Meiji). ; Mount Kōya (Wakayama Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in 1904 (37th year of Meiji). ; Three Mountains of Dewa (Yamagata Prefecture) - The ban was lifted in 1997 (Heisei 9). However, there are separate training periods for men and ", "score": "1.3911247" }, { "id": "26104882", "title": "Mountain worship", "text": " Mountain worship originally evolved from Animism of Nature worship, and took the form of Shinbutsu-shūgō until the end of the Edo period, when Shinbutsu-shūgō was banned by the Separation of Buddhism and Shintoism after the Meiji (era), temples and shrines have been separated, including in the Three Mountains of Dewa, where Shugen of the Shingon esoteric Buddhism type was originally strong, and many of the main bodies of faith have taken the form of shrines. Many of the main body of beliefs survived in the form of shrines. While the mountains were the object of worship as the divine realm, they also developed as the other realm where the spirits of the dead gathered, and where offerings to ancestral spirits such as Itako's Kuchiyose were made. In addition, it is customary for people to climb mountains as a manifestation of their faith, and even today, many people climb mountains, including those that are considered sacred sites.", "score": "1.3866724" }, { "id": "27354304", "title": "Mount Kirishima", "text": " Kirishima Mountains (霧島山) are a 1700 meter high active volcano group in Kagoshima Prefecture and Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. Numerous eruptions have been recorded since 742. Very strong eruptions happened in 788, 1716 and 1717. Augite-hypersthene andesite is the dominant rock type. The highest peak is Karakuni-dake (韓国岳) (1700 m). Its name literally means \"Korea Peak\"; it was once believed to be so high that the Korean Peninsula could be seen from its summit. Other peaks include the sacred and often fabled in national foundation mythology, Takachiho-no-mine (高千穂峰) (1573 m) as well as Shinmoedake (新燃岳), both active volcanoes. They are part of Kirishima-Yaku National Park near Kirishima City. Legend via oldest extant texts state the summit of Takachiho was stuck the mysterious spear ", "score": "1.3841747" }, { "id": "2884961", "title": "Ogawayama", "text": " Ogawayama (小川山) is a 2,418m tall mountain on the border of Nagano and Yamanashi prefectures in Japan. It is a famous rock climbing area. The rock in Ogawayama consists of granite. Some famous boulders can be found in Ogawayama. Such as Captain Ahab, the first boulder problem opened in Japan in 1980, and the notorious Banshousha slab boulder. There is multipitch climbing up to 9 pitches. The routes are generally not bolted.", "score": "1.3810558" }, { "id": "15833685", "title": "Mount Kannon", "text": " Mount Kannon (観音岳) is located in the Hidaka Mountains, Hokkaidō, Japan. It is named after Kannon the bodhisattva of compassion.", "score": "1.3805584" } ]
[ "Mount Shinten\n Mount Shinten (信天山) is a mountain located on Kuba-jima of Senkaku Islands in Ishigaki, Okinawa, Japan. It is the second highest point of the island, after Mount Chitose.", "Mount Mitake (Tokyo)\n Mount Mitake (御岳山) is a mountain in the Chichibu Tama Kai National Park near Tokyo, Japan. It stands 929 m tall. On the mountain is a Shinto shrine where practices such as Futomani divination take place. It is one of the many highlights of the Chichibu Tama Kai National Park, which covers more than 1250 km2 of forested mountains, hills, gorges and some rural towns in the prefectures of Yamanashi, Saitama, Nagano and Tokyo. The trip from Tokyo's Shinjuku Station to Mitake Station on the Ōme Line takes about 95 minutes. A shuttle bus, located 50 meters to the left ", "Glossary of Shinto\n (立山, lit. \"Upright Mountain\") (the mountains Fuji, Haku and Tate are also known as the Sanreizan, mentioned below), Mount Ōmine (大峰山, lit. \"Great Peak Mountain\"), Mount Shakka (釈迦ヶ岳, lit. \"Sakyamuni's Great Mountain\"), Mount Daisen (大山, lit. \"Great Mountain\"), and Mount Ishizuchi (石鎚山, lit. \"Stone Hammer Mountain\") ; Naraku (奈落, lit. \"Fall [from] Grace\") – The Hell realm of incarnation, the lowest and worst realm on the Wheel of Re-incarnation. See Rinne (below). ; Nenju / Nenzu / Juzu / Zuzu (念珠 / 数珠, lit. \"Thought Beads\"; \"Garland\") – Shinto-Buddhist Rosary; a string or necklace of beads used for prayers. ; Ne-no-kuni (根の国, lit. \"Land of Roots\" or \"Land of Origin\") – ", "Mount Yōtei\n Mount Yōtei (羊蹄山) is an active stratovolcano located in Shikotsu-Toya National Park, Hokkaidō, Japan. It is also called Yezo Fuji or Ezo Fuji (蝦夷富士), \"Ezo\" being an old name for the island of Hokkaido, because it resembles Mount Fuji. The mountain is also known as Makkari Nupuri (マッカリヌプリ) and Mount Shiribeshi (後方羊蹄山). It is one of the 100 famous mountains in Japan.", "Mount Nantai\n Mount Nantai (男体山) literally \"man's body mountain\", also called Futara-san (二荒山) is a stratovolcano in the Nikkō National Park in Tochigi Prefecture, on central Honshū, the main island of Japan. It stands at 2,486 m high. A prominent landmark, it can be seen on clear days from as far as the Pacific coast, 100 km away.", "Mount Jōnen\n Mount Jōnen (常念岳) is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains, reaching the height of 2857 m. It is situated in Japan's Hida Mountains in Nagano Prefecture and in Chūbu-Sangaku National Park. The shape of the mountain looks like the triangle. It can be seen from Azumi Basin.", "Mount Mitake (Hyōgo)\n Mount Mitake is the highest mountain in the Taki Mountains, including Mount Nishigatake and Mount Koganegadake. The Taki Mountains were one of the most holiest places for shugendō from Kamakura period to Muromachi period. However, Tanba Shugendō, a sect of Shugendo in Tanba Province, lost against Yamato Shugendō, another Shugendo sect of Yamato Province including Mount Ōmine, all of the temples in the Taki Mountains were burned in 1482.", "Mount Shindainichi\n Mount Shindainichi (新大日) is a peak of the Tanzawa Mountains with an elevation of 1340 m, and is located due east of Mount Tō. It is located within the boundary of the Tanzawa-Ōyama Quasi-National Park. The mountain is easily accessible by a hiking trail from Yabitsu Pass, which intersects with the Nagaone Trail from the village of Kiyokawa, and with the trail leading directly to Mount Tō which is approximately a 40-minute hike.", "Mount Mitake (Hyōgo)\n Mount Mitake (御嶽) is a 793 m high Japanese mountain located around 50 km north of Kobe in Hyōgo Prefecture. It should not be confused with Mount Mitake, a mountain in Tokyo, or Mount Ontake in Nagano Prefecture written with the same characters. This mountain is one of the 50 famous mountains in Hyōgo Prefecture.", "Historic Villages of Shirakawa-gō and Gokayama\n Mt Hakusan is the principal mountain in this area, and has been regarded as a sacred summit since ancient times. In the 8th century the Shirakawa-gō and Gokayama area became a location for ascetic religious practices, and mountain worship centred on Mt Hakusan. For a long time afterwards, the region was under the control of the Tendai sect of Buddhist Japan. The tradition of Ochi-udo Densetsu (legend of defeated warriors who flee to the remote areas) remains today, no doubt as a result of its remote, isolated and mountainous nature. Tendai sect religion was replaced in the 13th century by the Jodo Shin sect and remains the main religious influence to the present day. Nowadays all three villages within the world heritage site belong to the modern-day administrative organisation of the Mura system.", "Shugendō\n the Ōmine mountain range is Mount Hakkyō at an altitude of 1915 m, and there are 75 places for ascetic practices along the mountain trail, and Ōminesan-ji Temple at the top of Mount Ōmine at an altitude of 1719 m is considered to be the highest sacred site of Shugendō. At present, the Ōmine mountain range is designated as a UNESCO World Heritage Site \"Sacred Sites and Pilgrimage Routes in the Kii Mountain Range\" and Yoshino-Kumano National Park. In modern times, Shugendō is practiced mainly through Tendai and Shingon temples. Some temples include Kimpusen-ji in Yoshino (Tendai), Ideha Shrine in the Three Mountains of Dewa and Daigo-ji in Kyoto (Shingon).", "Mount Higashidate\n Mount Higashidate (東館山) is a mountain in Japan located in Yamanouchi, Nagano. For the 1998 Winter Olympics, it hosted the alpine skiing giant slalom events.", "Mount Funagata\n Mount Funagata (船形山) is a mountain within the Ōu Mountains on the border of Miyagi Prefecture and Yamagata Prefecture in the Tōhoku region of northern Japan. It is listed as one of the \"200 famous mountains of Japan\" and has a height of 1500.34 m. The mountain is also known as Mount Goshō (御所山) when viewed from Yamagata prefecture.", "Mount Jōnen\nJōnen Hut (常念小屋) - On the pass of Jōnen Pass (常念乗越) between Mount Jōnen and Mount Yokotooshi. It is one of the oldest hut in Japan. ; Mount Chō Hut (蝶ヶ岳ヒュッテ) - Near the top of Mount Chō. ; Yokoo Mountain Cottage (横尾山荘) - In Yokoo most in the north of Kamikochi. ; Daiten Cottage (大天荘) - Near the top of Mount Otensyo. Thera are several Mountain hut around Mount Jōnen. There is the Campsite on each hut.", "Xindian District\n In 1920, during the period of Japanese rule, the area was established as Shinten Town (新店街), Bunsan District, Taihoku Prefecture.", "Nyonin Kinsei\nMount Fuji (Yamanashi Prefecture and Shizuoka Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in the late Edo period. ; Tateyama (Toyama Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in 1872 (1872). ; Hakusan (Ishikawa Prefecture and Gifu Prefecture) - Same as above. ; Hiei (Shiga Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture) - same as above. ; Mount Ontake (Nagano Prefecture, Gifu Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted around 1877 (10th year of Meiji). ; Mount Kōya (Wakayama Prefecture) - However, the ban was lifted in 1904 (37th year of Meiji). ; Three Mountains of Dewa (Yamagata Prefecture) - The ban was lifted in 1997 (Heisei 9). However, there are separate training periods for men and ", "Mountain worship\n Mountain worship originally evolved from Animism of Nature worship, and took the form of Shinbutsu-shūgō until the end of the Edo period, when Shinbutsu-shūgō was banned by the Separation of Buddhism and Shintoism after the Meiji (era), temples and shrines have been separated, including in the Three Mountains of Dewa, where Shugen of the Shingon esoteric Buddhism type was originally strong, and many of the main bodies of faith have taken the form of shrines. Many of the main body of beliefs survived in the form of shrines. While the mountains were the object of worship as the divine realm, they also developed as the other realm where the spirits of the dead gathered, and where offerings to ancestral spirits such as Itako's Kuchiyose were made. In addition, it is customary for people to climb mountains as a manifestation of their faith, and even today, many people climb mountains, including those that are considered sacred sites.", "Mount Kirishima\n Kirishima Mountains (霧島山) are a 1700 meter high active volcano group in Kagoshima Prefecture and Miyazaki Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. Numerous eruptions have been recorded since 742. Very strong eruptions happened in 788, 1716 and 1717. Augite-hypersthene andesite is the dominant rock type. The highest peak is Karakuni-dake (韓国岳) (1700 m). Its name literally means \"Korea Peak\"; it was once believed to be so high that the Korean Peninsula could be seen from its summit. Other peaks include the sacred and often fabled in national foundation mythology, Takachiho-no-mine (高千穂峰) (1573 m) as well as Shinmoedake (新燃岳), both active volcanoes. They are part of Kirishima-Yaku National Park near Kirishima City. Legend via oldest extant texts state the summit of Takachiho was stuck the mysterious spear ", "Ogawayama\n Ogawayama (小川山) is a 2,418m tall mountain on the border of Nagano and Yamanashi prefectures in Japan. It is a famous rock climbing area. The rock in Ogawayama consists of granite. Some famous boulders can be found in Ogawayama. Such as Captain Ahab, the first boulder problem opened in Japan in 1980, and the notorious Banshousha slab boulder. There is multipitch climbing up to 9 pitches. The routes are generally not bolted.", "Mount Kannon\n Mount Kannon (観音岳) is located in the Hidaka Mountains, Hokkaidō, Japan. It is named after Kannon the bodhisattva of compassion." ]
In what country is Dual Plover?
[ "Australia", "Commonwealth of Australia", "AU", "AUS", "au", "British Colony of Australia", "🇦🇺", "Straya", "Aussieland" ]
country
Dual Plover
3,957,671
88
[ { "id": "12642879", "title": "Dual Plover", "text": " Dual Plover is a pioneering independent Australian record label, founded in Sydney in 1996, notable for discovering some of the most enigmatic artists in experimental music. Founded by Lucas Abela and Swerve Harris, Dual Plover are concerned with releasing audio works by people whose work is outside of current trends, be it pop trends or the so-called avant-garde music trends. Dual Plover's first release 'a kombi - music to drive-by' consisted of recordings from a Volkswagen Kombi van originally recorded at picturesque Waverley Cemetery in September 1994. From 1996 onwards they have also been manufacturing CDs and DVDs as well as touring artists such as Kevin Blechdom, Al Duval and many others, both in their native Australia as well as internationally.", "score": "1.8000717" }, { "id": "6785849", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " This species is predominantly found in New Zealand as this country holds these birds’ main nesting sites, however, they are partly migratory, with some dotterels’ that nest in South Island riverbeds and outwash fans from the high country, generally migrate to winter in Australia, New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Fiji, along with various other tropic countries. Other lowland and central southern birds move to different areas around New Zealand. Each bird will return to New Zealand to breed and for nesting season. Banded dotterels are spread throughout New Zealand however, they are more commonly located around northland coastal areas and around near off shore islands, as well as dense population located on Stewart Island. They are located sparsely on the west ", "score": "1.6987923" }, { "id": "30725737", "title": "Double Island, Hong Kong", "text": " Double Island became part of the Plover Cove (Extension) Country Park in 1979.", "score": "1.619209" }, { "id": "6785846", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " The double-banded plover (Charadrius bicinctus), known as the banded dotterel or pohowera in New Zealand, is a species of bird in the plover family. Two subspecies are recognised: the nominate Charadrius bicinctus bicinctus, which breeds throughout New Zealand, including the Chatham Islands, and Charadrius bicinctus exilis, which breeds in New Zealand's subantarctic Auckland Islands.", "score": "1.6123879" }, { "id": "30693069", "title": "Two-banded plover", "text": " The two-banded plover (Charadrius falklandicus) is a species of bird in the family Charadriidae. It breeds in Argentina, Chile and the Falkland Islands. Part of the population migrates north in winter with some birds reaching Uruguay and southern Brazil. Its natural habitats are freshwater lakes, saline marshes, rocky shores, and sandy shores.", "score": "1.6068313" }, { "id": "6785850", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " around Taharoa to the North Cape with a few isolated pairs found around Taranaki. Populations distributed throughout the Auckland and Chatham Islands have been observed to only travel locally throughout the year, whereas birds located on the mainland around high country outwash fans in the South Island generally commence migrations of hundreds of kilometres to Australia. Birds that don't migrate out of New Zealand tend to breed in the lower areas of the South Island along with central rivers and have been recorded to commonly move north to winter along coastal areas of the northern area in the North Island. Other dotterels that already breed on northern coastal lagoons and beaches sometimes only move a few kilometres away.", "score": "1.5800385" }, { "id": "6785851", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " Northern populations of double-banded plover are commonly found to have inhabited sandy beaches and sandpits as well as few pairs accustoming to shell banks in harbours with few found on gravel beaches and nesting sites generally found clustered around stream-mouths. During the breeding periods, males create numerous nests constructed on open patches of slightly elevated sand or on shells and occasionally in cushion plants which are all mostly padded with various materials retrieved from close by. Birds found in the southern parts of New Zealand, such as Stewart Island, prefer to breed on unprotected sub-alpine and stony areas but become coastal during off-breeding months where they feed around the beach areas. Braided rivers are also an ideal habitat preferred by many dotterels around the Canterbury areas.", "score": "1.5737095" }, { "id": "30693131", "title": "Long-billed plover", "text": " The long-billed plover is widely distributed throughout South and East Asia. It is quite uncommon throughout its range and occurs in small numbers. Breeding ground generally includes western, northern, and central parts of China, Japan, North Korea, and South Korea. Many instances of breeding activity have been reported in the Bureya river and other parts of far east Russia, Honshu island in Japan, southeastern China, and in the western Arunachal Pradesh in India near the Himalayas. This species has also been spotted during its breeding season in Singapore. The long-billed plover travels south of its breeding range to spend the winter. It generally winters throughout eastern Nepal, northeast India to Indochina, southern China, South Korea, Honshu, Shikoku, and Kiyushu islands of Japan, Taiwan, Myanmar, Malaysia, and Thailand. Populations on the three main islands of Japan do ", "score": "1.5692158" }, { "id": "31267583", "title": "Greater sand plover", "text": " It breeds in the semi-deserts of Turkey and eastwards through Central Asia. It nests in a bare ground scrape. This species is strongly migratory, wintering on sandy beaches in East Africa, South Asia and Australasia. It is a rare vagrant in western Europe, where it has been recorded as far west as Iceland. It has been spotted twice in North America, the most recent being on May 14, 2009, in Jacksonville, Florida.", "score": "1.5649537" }, { "id": "1727797", "title": "Red-capped plover", "text": " The red-capped plover is widespread in Australia; it is a vagrant to New Zealand, although it bred there for some time in small numbers from 1950–1980. The species occupies a range of coastal and inland habitats, including estuaries, bays, beaches, sandflats, and mudflats; inland saline wetlands. It is also found in inland wetland areas with bare ground.", "score": "1.5470314" }, { "id": "7385631", "title": "Kentish plover", "text": " along the Arabian Peninsula, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Bahrain in the Middle East. Small populations can be found on islands too, such as the Cape Verde archipelago, the Canary Islands, and the Azores. It is a rare vagrant in Australia. Some populations do not migrate, such as the Maio (Cape Verde) population, however other populations can migrate reasonable distances, for example, plovers that spend winter in North Africa have been known to migrate to Turkey and Greece in the spring. Some birds breeding in western Europe are not known to travel very far, just within Europe, however some do travel, mainly to Western Africa.", "score": "1.546632" }, { "id": "6785847", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " A 2015 study found its closest relatives to be other plovers found in New Zealand, the New Zealand plover or New Zealand dotterel (Charadrius obscurus) and the wrybill (Anarhynchus frontalis), which the study found to be in the Charadrius clade.", "score": "1.5324332" }, { "id": "30693126", "title": "Long-billed plover", "text": " The long-billed plover (Charadrius placidus) is a species of wading bird in the family Charadriidae. It can be found in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, North Korea, Russia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. The long-billed plover is a migratory bird, so it breeds and spends the winter in different parts of its range. This bird can often be spotted along the shores of rivers, streams, in wetlands, and rice fields. It forages on the shoreline primarily for aquatic insects, insect larvae, and other invertebrates. It is difficult to distinguish between male and female individuals because of their similar plumage. The breeding season starts at the end of February or early March and ends in July. A male and a female forms a monogamous pair and maintains their territory throughout the breeding season. A global population survey in 2016 assessed the long-billed plover as a species of least concern on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List.", "score": "1.5286272" }, { "id": "12164389", "title": "Plover", "text": " The European golden plover spends summers in Iceland, and in Icelandic folklore, the appearance of the first plover in the country means that spring has arrived. The Icelandic media always covers the first plover sighting. A rare habit of a species that migrates every year to the Ozogoche lagoons, in southern Ecuador, occurs between September and October, when hundreds of plovers (called 'cuvivíes' in that area) swoop down and dive into the icy waters of the lagoons, where they die of hypothermia, a suicidal behavior for which no scientific explanation has been found so far.", "score": "1.5242014" }, { "id": "6785855", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " weeks until they fledge. The parents will then stay close by for several days until the chicks join flocks and become fully independent. Both of the parents continue to tend their young for another two weeks when birds have grown their contour feathers and the birds all part ways. Some of these birds migrate overseas to nearby countries such as southern Australia, Tasmania or other tropic countries. Other dotterels fled to the northern areas of New Zealand in groups alongside many other adult banded dotterels and newly fledged chicks. A high percentage of all offspring return to the breeding grounds for mating within their first year, however the rest of the generation return in their second year.", "score": "1.5168016" }, { "id": "8769164", "title": "Shore plover", "text": " Shore plovers are endangered, with a world population of around 200 birds. The species survived on only one island, Rangatira, in the Chatham Islands, from where it has since been introduced to other offshore islands, such as Mangere Island in the Chathams, Mana Island near Wellington and Motutapu near Auckland. The world population was roughly 70 breeding pairs in 1937 and their habitat was declared a reserve in 1954. The population fluctuated in the 1980s, with only 40 breeding pairs in 1982, rising to 80 pairs in 1987 and a high of 94 pairs in 2010. A second wild population of about 20 ", "score": "1.5111356" }, { "id": "6785852", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " Around the month of July in New Zealand, the banded dotterels enter the breeding season, more commonly in the South Island or southern areas of the North Island such as Hawke's Bay, Marlborough, Kaikoura Peninsula, Canterbury, Otago, Stewart Island etc. These birds form seasonal monogamous pairs where once a partner is found, they remain with that one bird for the rest of the breeding season to help raise the young. During this time, the male grows colored bands on his chest prior to the beginning of the breeding season and later females are attracted by the loud calls of the male where they are then presented with several nests which they can choose between while the male puts ", "score": "1.5083936" }, { "id": "2382512", "title": "Oriental plover", "text": " Breeds in Mongolia, eastern Russia and Manchuria; migrates through eastern China and South-East Asia to Indonesia and northern Australia. Rare in New Guinea; straggler to New Zealand and Europe four times (Finland, Norway, Sweden and The Netherlands). The oriental plover breeds in dry steppes, deserts, arid grasslands and saltpans. Its non-breeding habitat includes grasslands, salt-fields and coastal areas.", "score": "1.5052521" }, { "id": "15732741", "title": "Malaysian plover", "text": " there has been intensive development pressure on the remaining Malaysian plover habitats in Thailand. This is likely to continue as the Thai economy continues to improve from the Asian financial crisis and the domestic tourist market expands. The main remaining large populations of Malaysian plovers in Thailand are in Khao Sam Roi Yot National Park (Thailand's first marine protected area), and beaches around Bonok village both in Prachuap Khiri Khan province and Laem Phak Bia in Petchburi province. Bonok made headlines in the Thai and international media when a prominent environmental activist (Charoen Wataksorn) who helped to protect one of these undeveloped beaches from the construction of a coal power plant, was murdered after protesting against illegal land grabs ", "score": "1.4873013" }, { "id": "6785860", "title": "Double-banded plover", "text": " Prior to 1908, banded dotterels in New Zealand were shot in large numbers by market gunners upon the return of these migrating birds for breeding. However, in 1908, the banded dotterels were placed on the protected list, prohibiting any more shootings from occurring to the point where they are now moderately common. In 2013 local Maori in the Pencarrow Coast, Wellington region, placed a rahui on the area, to protect 20 pairs of banded dotterel from dogs and cars. This species has the conservation status of \"Regionally Vulnerable\" in the Wellington region. The species is classified as Near Threatened.", "score": "1.4848394" } ]
[ "Dual Plover\n Dual Plover is a pioneering independent Australian record label, founded in Sydney in 1996, notable for discovering some of the most enigmatic artists in experimental music. Founded by Lucas Abela and Swerve Harris, Dual Plover are concerned with releasing audio works by people whose work is outside of current trends, be it pop trends or the so-called avant-garde music trends. Dual Plover's first release 'a kombi - music to drive-by' consisted of recordings from a Volkswagen Kombi van originally recorded at picturesque Waverley Cemetery in September 1994. From 1996 onwards they have also been manufacturing CDs and DVDs as well as touring artists such as Kevin Blechdom, Al Duval and many others, both in their native Australia as well as internationally.", "Double-banded plover\n This species is predominantly found in New Zealand as this country holds these birds’ main nesting sites, however, they are partly migratory, with some dotterels’ that nest in South Island riverbeds and outwash fans from the high country, generally migrate to winter in Australia, New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Fiji, along with various other tropic countries. Other lowland and central southern birds move to different areas around New Zealand. Each bird will return to New Zealand to breed and for nesting season. Banded dotterels are spread throughout New Zealand however, they are more commonly located around northland coastal areas and around near off shore islands, as well as dense population located on Stewart Island. They are located sparsely on the west ", "Double Island, Hong Kong\n Double Island became part of the Plover Cove (Extension) Country Park in 1979.", "Double-banded plover\n The double-banded plover (Charadrius bicinctus), known as the banded dotterel or pohowera in New Zealand, is a species of bird in the plover family. Two subspecies are recognised: the nominate Charadrius bicinctus bicinctus, which breeds throughout New Zealand, including the Chatham Islands, and Charadrius bicinctus exilis, which breeds in New Zealand's subantarctic Auckland Islands.", "Two-banded plover\n The two-banded plover (Charadrius falklandicus) is a species of bird in the family Charadriidae. It breeds in Argentina, Chile and the Falkland Islands. Part of the population migrates north in winter with some birds reaching Uruguay and southern Brazil. Its natural habitats are freshwater lakes, saline marshes, rocky shores, and sandy shores.", "Double-banded plover\n around Taharoa to the North Cape with a few isolated pairs found around Taranaki. Populations distributed throughout the Auckland and Chatham Islands have been observed to only travel locally throughout the year, whereas birds located on the mainland around high country outwash fans in the South Island generally commence migrations of hundreds of kilometres to Australia. Birds that don't migrate out of New Zealand tend to breed in the lower areas of the South Island along with central rivers and have been recorded to commonly move north to winter along coastal areas of the northern area in the North Island. Other dotterels that already breed on northern coastal lagoons and beaches sometimes only move a few kilometres away.", "Double-banded plover\n Northern populations of double-banded plover are commonly found to have inhabited sandy beaches and sandpits as well as few pairs accustoming to shell banks in harbours with few found on gravel beaches and nesting sites generally found clustered around stream-mouths. During the breeding periods, males create numerous nests constructed on open patches of slightly elevated sand or on shells and occasionally in cushion plants which are all mostly padded with various materials retrieved from close by. Birds found in the southern parts of New Zealand, such as Stewart Island, prefer to breed on unprotected sub-alpine and stony areas but become coastal during off-breeding months where they feed around the beach areas. Braided rivers are also an ideal habitat preferred by many dotterels around the Canterbury areas.", "Long-billed plover\n The long-billed plover is widely distributed throughout South and East Asia. It is quite uncommon throughout its range and occurs in small numbers. Breeding ground generally includes western, northern, and central parts of China, Japan, North Korea, and South Korea. Many instances of breeding activity have been reported in the Bureya river and other parts of far east Russia, Honshu island in Japan, southeastern China, and in the western Arunachal Pradesh in India near the Himalayas. This species has also been spotted during its breeding season in Singapore. The long-billed plover travels south of its breeding range to spend the winter. It generally winters throughout eastern Nepal, northeast India to Indochina, southern China, South Korea, Honshu, Shikoku, and Kiyushu islands of Japan, Taiwan, Myanmar, Malaysia, and Thailand. Populations on the three main islands of Japan do ", "Greater sand plover\n It breeds in the semi-deserts of Turkey and eastwards through Central Asia. It nests in a bare ground scrape. This species is strongly migratory, wintering on sandy beaches in East Africa, South Asia and Australasia. It is a rare vagrant in western Europe, where it has been recorded as far west as Iceland. It has been spotted twice in North America, the most recent being on May 14, 2009, in Jacksonville, Florida.", "Red-capped plover\n The red-capped plover is widespread in Australia; it is a vagrant to New Zealand, although it bred there for some time in small numbers from 1950–1980. The species occupies a range of coastal and inland habitats, including estuaries, bays, beaches, sandflats, and mudflats; inland saline wetlands. It is also found in inland wetland areas with bare ground.", "Kentish plover\n along the Arabian Peninsula, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Bahrain in the Middle East. Small populations can be found on islands too, such as the Cape Verde archipelago, the Canary Islands, and the Azores. It is a rare vagrant in Australia. Some populations do not migrate, such as the Maio (Cape Verde) population, however other populations can migrate reasonable distances, for example, plovers that spend winter in North Africa have been known to migrate to Turkey and Greece in the spring. Some birds breeding in western Europe are not known to travel very far, just within Europe, however some do travel, mainly to Western Africa.", "Double-banded plover\n A 2015 study found its closest relatives to be other plovers found in New Zealand, the New Zealand plover or New Zealand dotterel (Charadrius obscurus) and the wrybill (Anarhynchus frontalis), which the study found to be in the Charadrius clade.", "Long-billed plover\n The long-billed plover (Charadrius placidus) is a species of wading bird in the family Charadriidae. It can be found in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Nepal, North Korea, Russia, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. The long-billed plover is a migratory bird, so it breeds and spends the winter in different parts of its range. This bird can often be spotted along the shores of rivers, streams, in wetlands, and rice fields. It forages on the shoreline primarily for aquatic insects, insect larvae, and other invertebrates. It is difficult to distinguish between male and female individuals because of their similar plumage. The breeding season starts at the end of February or early March and ends in July. A male and a female forms a monogamous pair and maintains their territory throughout the breeding season. A global population survey in 2016 assessed the long-billed plover as a species of least concern on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List.", "Plover\n The European golden plover spends summers in Iceland, and in Icelandic folklore, the appearance of the first plover in the country means that spring has arrived. The Icelandic media always covers the first plover sighting. A rare habit of a species that migrates every year to the Ozogoche lagoons, in southern Ecuador, occurs between September and October, when hundreds of plovers (called 'cuvivíes' in that area) swoop down and dive into the icy waters of the lagoons, where they die of hypothermia, a suicidal behavior for which no scientific explanation has been found so far.", "Double-banded plover\n weeks until they fledge. The parents will then stay close by for several days until the chicks join flocks and become fully independent. Both of the parents continue to tend their young for another two weeks when birds have grown their contour feathers and the birds all part ways. Some of these birds migrate overseas to nearby countries such as southern Australia, Tasmania or other tropic countries. Other dotterels fled to the northern areas of New Zealand in groups alongside many other adult banded dotterels and newly fledged chicks. A high percentage of all offspring return to the breeding grounds for mating within their first year, however the rest of the generation return in their second year.", "Shore plover\n Shore plovers are endangered, with a world population of around 200 birds. The species survived on only one island, Rangatira, in the Chatham Islands, from where it has since been introduced to other offshore islands, such as Mangere Island in the Chathams, Mana Island near Wellington and Motutapu near Auckland. The world population was roughly 70 breeding pairs in 1937 and their habitat was declared a reserve in 1954. The population fluctuated in the 1980s, with only 40 breeding pairs in 1982, rising to 80 pairs in 1987 and a high of 94 pairs in 2010. A second wild population of about 20 ", "Double-banded plover\n Around the month of July in New Zealand, the banded dotterels enter the breeding season, more commonly in the South Island or southern areas of the North Island such as Hawke's Bay, Marlborough, Kaikoura Peninsula, Canterbury, Otago, Stewart Island etc. These birds form seasonal monogamous pairs where once a partner is found, they remain with that one bird for the rest of the breeding season to help raise the young. During this time, the male grows colored bands on his chest prior to the beginning of the breeding season and later females are attracted by the loud calls of the male where they are then presented with several nests which they can choose between while the male puts ", "Oriental plover\n Breeds in Mongolia, eastern Russia and Manchuria; migrates through eastern China and South-East Asia to Indonesia and northern Australia. Rare in New Guinea; straggler to New Zealand and Europe four times (Finland, Norway, Sweden and The Netherlands). The oriental plover breeds in dry steppes, deserts, arid grasslands and saltpans. Its non-breeding habitat includes grasslands, salt-fields and coastal areas.", "Malaysian plover\n there has been intensive development pressure on the remaining Malaysian plover habitats in Thailand. This is likely to continue as the Thai economy continues to improve from the Asian financial crisis and the domestic tourist market expands. The main remaining large populations of Malaysian plovers in Thailand are in Khao Sam Roi Yot National Park (Thailand's first marine protected area), and beaches around Bonok village both in Prachuap Khiri Khan province and Laem Phak Bia in Petchburi province. Bonok made headlines in the Thai and international media when a prominent environmental activist (Charoen Wataksorn) who helped to protect one of these undeveloped beaches from the construction of a coal power plant, was murdered after protesting against illegal land grabs ", "Double-banded plover\n Prior to 1908, banded dotterels in New Zealand were shot in large numbers by market gunners upon the return of these migrating birds for breeding. However, in 1908, the banded dotterels were placed on the protected list, prohibiting any more shootings from occurring to the point where they are now moderately common. In 2013 local Maori in the Pencarrow Coast, Wellington region, placed a rahui on the area, to protect 20 pairs of banded dotterel from dogs and cars. This species has the conservation status of \"Regionally Vulnerable\" in the Wellington region. The species is classified as Near Threatened." ]
In what country is Saint-Antonin?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Saint-Antonin, Gers
5,696
57
[ { "id": "30311666", "title": "Saint-Antonin, Alpes-Maritimes", "text": " Saint-Antonin (Sant Antonin in Occitan) is a commune in the Alpes-Maritimes department in southeastern France.", "score": "1.7334005" }, { "id": "11960707", "title": "Saint-Antonin, Gers", "text": " Saint-Antonin (Sent Antonin in Occitan) is a commune in the Gers department in southwestern France. It is located near Auch and Mauvezin.", "score": "1.5825372" }, { "id": "1752473", "title": "Saint-Antonin-sur-Bayon", "text": " Saint-Antonin-sur-Bayon (Sant Antonin de Baion in Occitan) is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern France. The small stream Bayon runs through the village.", "score": "1.5677254" }, { "id": "9309606", "title": "Saint-Antonin-de-Lacalm", "text": " Saint-Antonin-de-Lacalm (Languedocien: Sent Antonin de la Calm) is a former commune in the Tarn department in southern France. On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Terre-de-Bancalié.", "score": "1.5275104" }, { "id": "11582602", "title": "Sant'Antonin, Venice", "text": " Sant'Antonin is a church in the sestiere of Castello in Venice, Italy.", "score": "1.5011492" }, { "id": "10582546", "title": "Antonin (name)", "text": " Antonin, Antonín, and Antoñín are masculine given names. Antonín, a Czech name in use in the Czech Republic, and Antonin, a French name in use in France, Switzerland, Belgium, Canada, West Greenland, Haiti, French Guiana, Madagascar, Benin, Niger, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, Western Sahara, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Chad, Central African Republic, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda, are both considered alternate forms of Antonino. Antoñín, a Spanish name in use in Spain, parts of the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Western Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Argentina, Uruguay, and the Falkland Islands, is a diminutive form of Antonio. As a surname it is derived from the Antonius root name. Notable people with these names include the following:", "score": "1.4964294" }, { "id": "10582559", "title": "Antonin (name)", "text": "Arnold Antonin (born 1942), Haitian film director ; Magdalena Saint Antonin (born 1965), Argentine skier ; Théodore Antonin, French football manager ", "score": "1.4916193" }, { "id": "9096879", "title": "Saint-Cassin", "text": " Saint-Cassin is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in southeastern France. It is part of the urban area of Chambéry.", "score": "1.4893633" }, { "id": "31886693", "title": "Arnold Antonin", "text": " Mr. Antonin addressed the Haitian dream, creation and madness. The film turned out to be 52 minutes. It was broadcast by RFO and in the video section of the Caribbean Film Festival of Saint Barthélémy. In 2007, his documentary made the previous year called “Le president a-t-il le sida”, was selected for the Caribbean Films Itinerant Festival. On January 20th, 2011 UNESCO organized a round table in Paris to celebrate Haiti. They then projected six of Arnold Antonin's films in the presence of the director. He has been a member of several international juries for films in Havana, Caribbean Images, Namur, Ouagadougou Fespaco, Oaxaca México, Bogota, Sugar (Bolivia).", "score": "1.4682254" }, { "id": "28950074", "title": "St. Antoni", "text": " St. Antoni (Saint-Antoine; Sent-Antèno ) is a former municipality in the district of Sense in the canton of Fribourg in Switzerland. It is one of the municipalities with a large majority of German speakers in the mostly French speaking Canton of Fribourg. On 1 January 2021 the former municipalities of St. Antoni and Alterswil merged into the municipality of Tafers.", "score": "1.4603767" }, { "id": "9097374", "title": "Saint-Amarin", "text": " Saint-Amarin (Sankt Amarin; Alsatian: Sàntàmàrì) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. ", "score": "1.4571702" }, { "id": "2282132", "title": "Joseph-François-Félix Garnier de Saint-Antonin", "text": " Saint-Antonin was born to a family from Aix-en-Provence. He joined the Navy as a Garde-Marine on 18 Septembern 1749. Saint-Antonin was promoted to Lieutenant on 15 January 1762, and to Captain on 4 April 1777. He was first officer on the 64-gun Provence. He took part in the Battle of Grenada on 6 July 1779, and took over command of Provence when her captain, Champorcin, was killed. He was then given command of the 64-gun Fantasque, which he captained at the Siege of Savannah. In 1780, he commanded the frigate Lutine for a mission in the Eastern Mediterranean. In 1781, he was at Malta and Toulon. He retired from the Navy on 29 August 1783.", "score": "1.4571228" }, { "id": "10113950", "title": "Saint-Antonin-de-Sommaire", "text": " Saint-Antonin-de-Sommaire is a commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France.", "score": "1.4498531" }, { "id": "3944013", "title": "Sant'Antonino, Haute-Corse", "text": " Sant'Antonino is a commune in the Haute-Corse department of France on the island of Corsica. It is one of Les Plus Beaux Villages de France.", "score": "1.4493948" }, { "id": "31886673", "title": "Arnold Antonin", "text": " Arnold Antonin (born 1942 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti) is a Haitian film director. A man of diverse careers, Arnold Antonin is known both inside and outside Haiti for his social, political and cultural commitment. He was honored for lifetime achievement with the Djibril Diop Mambety award at the International Film Cannes Festival in 2002. He received the Paul Robeson African Diaspora best film award at FESPACO in Ouagadougou in 2007, 2009, and 2011. He also received numerous awards and accolades at festivals for his documentaries and fiction movies. He was president of the Haitian Filmmakers Association (AHC) from 2005 to 2009.", "score": "1.4481385" }, { "id": "8725644", "title": "Canton of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val", "text": " The canton of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val is a former canton in the department of Tarn-et-Garonne in south-central France. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 9 communes, which joined the canton of Quercy-Rouergue in 2015.", "score": "1.4464196" }, { "id": "1249729", "title": "Saint-Antoine, Cantal", "text": " Saint-Antoine (Sant Antòni) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.", "score": "1.4449759" }, { "id": "31900244", "title": "Saint-Saturnin-lès-Apt", "text": "🇮🇹 Castelfranco di Sopra, Italy ", "score": "1.4394174" }, { "id": "1476322", "title": "Saint-Saturnin, Cantal", "text": " Saint-Saturnin (Auvergnat: Sant Saturnin) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France. Its 12th century church is a listed monument.", "score": "1.434101" }, { "id": "27866318", "title": "Prés Cassin, les Saintes", "text": " Prés Cassin is a quartier of Terre-de-Haut Island, located in Îles des Saintes archipelago in the Caribbean. It is located in the southwestern part of the island.", "score": "1.4235429" } ]
[ "Saint-Antonin, Alpes-Maritimes\n Saint-Antonin (Sant Antonin in Occitan) is a commune in the Alpes-Maritimes department in southeastern France.", "Saint-Antonin, Gers\n Saint-Antonin (Sent Antonin in Occitan) is a commune in the Gers department in southwestern France. It is located near Auch and Mauvezin.", "Saint-Antonin-sur-Bayon\n Saint-Antonin-sur-Bayon (Sant Antonin de Baion in Occitan) is a commune in the Bouches-du-Rhône department in southern France. The small stream Bayon runs through the village.", "Saint-Antonin-de-Lacalm\n Saint-Antonin-de-Lacalm (Languedocien: Sent Antonin de la Calm) is a former commune in the Tarn department in southern France. On 1 January 2019, it was merged into the new commune Terre-de-Bancalié.", "Sant'Antonin, Venice\n Sant'Antonin is a church in the sestiere of Castello in Venice, Italy.", "Antonin (name)\n Antonin, Antonín, and Antoñín are masculine given names. Antonín, a Czech name in use in the Czech Republic, and Antonin, a French name in use in France, Switzerland, Belgium, Canada, West Greenland, Haiti, French Guiana, Madagascar, Benin, Niger, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea, Senegal, Mauritania, Western Sahara, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Chad, Central African Republic, Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Republic of the Congo, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda, are both considered alternate forms of Antonino. Antoñín, a Spanish name in use in Spain, parts of the United States, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Western Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Argentina, Uruguay, and the Falkland Islands, is a diminutive form of Antonio. As a surname it is derived from the Antonius root name. Notable people with these names include the following:", "Antonin (name)\nArnold Antonin (born 1942), Haitian film director ; Magdalena Saint Antonin (born 1965), Argentine skier ; Théodore Antonin, French football manager ", "Saint-Cassin\n Saint-Cassin is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in southeastern France. It is part of the urban area of Chambéry.", "Arnold Antonin\n Mr. Antonin addressed the Haitian dream, creation and madness. The film turned out to be 52 minutes. It was broadcast by RFO and in the video section of the Caribbean Film Festival of Saint Barthélémy. In 2007, his documentary made the previous year called “Le president a-t-il le sida”, was selected for the Caribbean Films Itinerant Festival. On January 20th, 2011 UNESCO organized a round table in Paris to celebrate Haiti. They then projected six of Arnold Antonin's films in the presence of the director. He has been a member of several international juries for films in Havana, Caribbean Images, Namur, Ouagadougou Fespaco, Oaxaca México, Bogota, Sugar (Bolivia).", "St. Antoni\n St. Antoni (Saint-Antoine; Sent-Antèno ) is a former municipality in the district of Sense in the canton of Fribourg in Switzerland. It is one of the municipalities with a large majority of German speakers in the mostly French speaking Canton of Fribourg. On 1 January 2021 the former municipalities of St. Antoni and Alterswil merged into the municipality of Tafers.", "Saint-Amarin\n Saint-Amarin (Sankt Amarin; Alsatian: Sàntàmàrì) is a commune in the Haut-Rhin department in Grand Est in north-eastern France. ", "Joseph-François-Félix Garnier de Saint-Antonin\n Saint-Antonin was born to a family from Aix-en-Provence. He joined the Navy as a Garde-Marine on 18 Septembern 1749. Saint-Antonin was promoted to Lieutenant on 15 January 1762, and to Captain on 4 April 1777. He was first officer on the 64-gun Provence. He took part in the Battle of Grenada on 6 July 1779, and took over command of Provence when her captain, Champorcin, was killed. He was then given command of the 64-gun Fantasque, which he captained at the Siege of Savannah. In 1780, he commanded the frigate Lutine for a mission in the Eastern Mediterranean. In 1781, he was at Malta and Toulon. He retired from the Navy on 29 August 1783.", "Saint-Antonin-de-Sommaire\n Saint-Antonin-de-Sommaire is a commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France.", "Sant'Antonino, Haute-Corse\n Sant'Antonino is a commune in the Haute-Corse department of France on the island of Corsica. It is one of Les Plus Beaux Villages de France.", "Arnold Antonin\n Arnold Antonin (born 1942 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti) is a Haitian film director. A man of diverse careers, Arnold Antonin is known both inside and outside Haiti for his social, political and cultural commitment. He was honored for lifetime achievement with the Djibril Diop Mambety award at the International Film Cannes Festival in 2002. He received the Paul Robeson African Diaspora best film award at FESPACO in Ouagadougou in 2007, 2009, and 2011. He also received numerous awards and accolades at festivals for his documentaries and fiction movies. He was president of the Haitian Filmmakers Association (AHC) from 2005 to 2009.", "Canton of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val\n The canton of Saint-Antonin-Noble-Val is a former canton in the department of Tarn-et-Garonne in south-central France. It was disbanded following the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. It consisted of 9 communes, which joined the canton of Quercy-Rouergue in 2015.", "Saint-Antoine, Cantal\n Saint-Antoine (Sant Antòni) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France.", "Saint-Saturnin-lès-Apt\n🇮🇹 Castelfranco di Sopra, Italy ", "Saint-Saturnin, Cantal\n Saint-Saturnin (Auvergnat: Sant Saturnin) is a commune in the Cantal department in south-central France. Its 12th century church is a listed monument.", "Prés Cassin, les Saintes\n Prés Cassin is a quartier of Terre-de-Haut Island, located in Îles des Saintes archipelago in the Caribbean. It is located in the southwestern part of the island." ]
In what country is Peterson?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Peterson, Indiana
5,435,300
47
[ { "id": "2183498", "title": "Ferdinand Peterson", "text": " Ferdinand Peterson (also Ferdinand Petersen; 13 March 1887 Lehtse Parish, Järva County – 18 February 1979 Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA) was an Estonian engineer and politician. From 1918-1919, he was Minister of Roads in Estonian Provisional Government. In 1919, he was a member of Asutav Kogu. In 1944, he fled the Soviet occupation of Estonia to Germany, and in 1949 he emigrated to the United States. He was a honorary alumnus of the Estonian Students' Society.", "score": "1.5741451" }, { "id": "10967825", "title": "Kamau Peterson", "text": " Kamau Peterson (born September 16, 1978) is a former professional Canadian football wide receiver and formerly the offensive coordinator for the York Lions football team. He last played for the BC Lions of the Canadian Football League. He was originally drafted sixth overall by the Calgary Stampeders in the 2001 CFL Draft and won the 89th Grey Cup with the team that year. Although he was born in Los Angeles, California, United States, Peterson grew up in Detroit, Michigan, but was schooled in LaSalle, Ontario, so he counts as a non-import in the CFL. Kamau transitioned into his post-football career by founding PlaymakerU which trained young athletes in many sports but especially football. Based in Sherwood Park, Alberta he ", "score": "1.5443549" }, { "id": "16348761", "title": "Peterson Pipes", "text": " Peterson is an Irish pipe maker.", "score": "1.542547" }, { "id": "15471953", "title": "Pete Peterson", "text": " Peterson's first wife died in 1995. Two weeks after his installation in Hanoi, he met Vi Le, Australia's senior trade commissioner, born in Vietnam, whom he married. In 2002, he moved to Melbourne, Australia, so they could be closer to her family. In 2009, Peterson acquired Australian citizenship.", "score": "1.5387995" }, { "id": "870795", "title": "Jaime Peterson", "text": " Jaime Peterson (born September 29, 1971) is a Dominican-American former professional basketball player. A 2.06m forward-center, he was born in New York City to Dominican parents. After playing for three different high schools, including a postgraduate year at Maine Central Institute, Peterson played two seasons in the junior college circuit with Champlain College in Vermont before playing in the NCAA Division I with the Pittsburgh Panthers. He went undrafted in the 1995 NBA draft, and he started his professional career in France. In 2003 he was named the Most Valuable Player of the Liga Española de Baloncesto, the second tier of Spanish basketball. He played for the Dominican Republic national team from 1995 to 2005, and he won the silver medal at the 1995 and 2003 editions of Centrobasket.", "score": "1.5283917" }, { "id": "14205741", "title": "Doug Peterson (Nebraska politician)", "text": " Doug Peterson (born April 4, 1959) is an American lawyer and politician who is the 33rd and current attorney general of Nebraska. A Republican, Peterson was elected attorney general during the 2014 election and assumed office in January 2015.", "score": "1.5184174" }, { "id": "26640336", "title": "Eric Peterson", "text": " Peterson was born in Indian Head, Saskatchewan, Canada. He is married to fellow actor and People for Education executive director Annie Kidder, who is the sister of Margot Kidder. Peterson and his wife live in Toronto, Ontario, with their two daughters, although he still frequents his home province of Saskatchewan, where he owns a cottage on Katepwa Lake in the Qu'Appelle Valley near his hometown.", "score": "1.5168188" }, { "id": "31044079", "title": "Gilles Peterson", "text": " Peterson was born in Caen, Normandy, France to a French mother and Swiss father and moved with his family to South London during childhood. He is a French citizen and does not hold dual citizenship with Britain. As of 2018, Peterson lives in Stoke Newington in North London with his wife and two sons, Oliver and Luc.", "score": "1.50837" }, { "id": "9082532", "title": "Peterson's", "text": " Peterson's, founded in 1966, is an American company that has a wide range of live, print, and online products and services, including test preparation, career exploration tools, memory retention techniques, professional writing services, and school, financial aid, and scholarship searches. Peterson's is currently headquartered in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, a suburb of Denver, Colorado. It was formerly headquartered for many years in Lawrence Township, New Jersey. Peterson's was privately held until its 1995 purchase by The Thomson Corporation. It became part of Thomson Learning (spun off in 2007 as Cengage Learning). On July 27, 2006, Peterson's was acquired by the Nelnet family of companies. On December 31, 2017 Peterson's was acquired by Triangle Digital Ventures. In 2019, Peterson's acquired B.E.S. Publishing.", "score": "1.506509" }, { "id": "6904059", "title": "Peterson Schools", "text": " The average yearly enrollment at Peterson Schools in its four locations is 1,883 students. The student body is predominantly Mexican, at 60.65% of the student population, 25.86% are U.S. and Canadian students and 5.15% are from other countries (Brazil, China, Corea, Argentina, etc.). The faculty is recruited internationally and locally. The average faculty staff is 420 members.", "score": "1.5061634" }, { "id": "4808772", "title": "Peter G. Peterson", "text": " Peterson was born in Kearney, Nebraska, as the eldest of three children to Venetia \"Venet\" Paul (Pavlou- Παύλου) and George Peterson (Petropoulos- Πετρόπουλος), both were immigrants from southern Greece. He had one younger sister, Elaine, who died of croup when she was one year old and a brother, John, who was the youngest. His father arrived in the United States at the age of 17 and worked as a dishwasher for Union Pacific Railroad and roomed on a caboose. In 1923, George opened and then ran a Greek diner named Central Café in Kearney after changing his name from Georgios Petropoulos. Peter ", "score": "1.5035658" }, { "id": "28635261", "title": "Lembit Peterson", "text": "1998: Republic of Estonia cultural prize ; 2006: Order of the National Coat of Arms, IV class. Lembit Peterson (born on 18 August 1953 in Tallinn) is an Estonian actor, theatre director and theatre pedagogue. In 1971 he graduated from Tallinn State Conservatory's Stage Art Department. From 1976 to 1979 and 1985 to 1988 he worked at Estonian Youth Theatre, and from 1979 to 1982 at Ugala Theatre. In 1994 he was one of the founders of the studio theatre Theatrum. Awards:", "score": "1.4954678" }, { "id": "26228625", "title": "Jerome P. Peterson", "text": " '''Jerome P. \"J.P.\" Peterson''' (July 14, 1936 – January 25, 2018) was an American educator and politician. Peterson was born in Braham, Minnesota. He received his bachelor's degree in education from Augsburg College in 1958. He also studied at University of Minnesota and St. Cloud State University. He taught social studies, drivers training, and physical education at Princeton High School in Princeton, Minnesota. He lived in Princeton, Minnesota. Peterson served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1983 to 1990 and was a Democrat. Peterson died suddenly in Princeton, Minnesota.", "score": "1.4919811" }, { "id": "28875196", "title": "Peterson, Iowa", "text": " The Peterson Patriot has been in print since 1880.", "score": "1.4845204" }, { "id": "27715667", "title": "Casper Petersen", "text": " Peterson was born in Mielberg (a hamlet southwest of Jagel), in the Duchy of Schleswig, on March 14, 1826; was educated at the Teachers' Seminary at Tondern, Schleswig, and worked as a schoolteacher for five years. Peterson joined the military service of Schleswig-Holstein from 1848 to 1851, participating in the First Schleswig War against Denmark. He came to the United States in 1851, and first settled in Milwaukee, where he was a teacher and organist in the first Lutheran school of that city. He moved to Chicago in 1852 and worked as a clerk; and to Racine in 1855, where he tried his hand as a merchant; and to New Holstein in 1861, where he became a farmer. He was chairman of the town for a member of years and president of the Calumet County Mutual Fire Insurance Co.", "score": "1.4795027" }, { "id": "1583167", "title": "Val Peterson", "text": " Frederick Valdemar Erastus Peterson (July 18, 1903 – October 17, 1983), also known as Val Peterson, was an American politician and diplomat who served as the 26th governor of Nebraska from 1947 to 1953, as director of the Federal Civil Defense Administration from 1953 to 1957, U.S. ambassador to Denmark from 1957 to 1961, and U.S. Ambassador to Finland from 1969 to 1973.", "score": "1.4757162" }, { "id": "14205742", "title": "Doug Peterson (Nebraska politician)", "text": " Peterson, who was born in Columbus, Nebraska, was raised in Lincoln, Nebraska. He graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1981 and earned a Juris Doctorate from the Pepperdine University School of Law in 1985. Peterson worked for the district attorney of Lincoln County for two years until serving an additional two years as an assistant Nebraska attorney general to Robert Spire from 1988 until 1990. He entered private practice, where he would remain until his 2014 election as Attorney General of Nebraska. Peterson was sworn in as the 32nd attorney general of Nebraska at the Nebraska State Capitol in Lincoln on January 8, 2015. Peterson, who lives in Lincoln, is the nephew of former governor of Nebraska Val Peterson.", "score": "1.4739101" }, { "id": "30804988", "title": "Peterson, Minnesota", "text": " Peterson is a city in Fillmore County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 199 at the 2010 census.", "score": "1.4738998" }, { "id": "11539898", "title": "Lynn Peterson (American politician)", "text": " Lynn Peterson (born October 22, 1968) is an American politician in the U.S. state of Oregon serving as the council president of Metro. Metro is the only directly-elected regional government in the United States, and spans 24 cities in the Portland, Oregon three-county area, along with many unincorporated suburbs in the Portland metropolitan area.", "score": "1.4735556" }, { "id": "7572398", "title": "Paul Peterson (golfer)", "text": " Paul Peterson (born July 1, 1988) is an American professional golfer, currently playing on the European Tour and the Asian Tour.", "score": "1.472378" } ]
[ "Ferdinand Peterson\n Ferdinand Peterson (also Ferdinand Petersen; 13 March 1887 Lehtse Parish, Järva County – 18 February 1979 Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA) was an Estonian engineer and politician. From 1918-1919, he was Minister of Roads in Estonian Provisional Government. In 1919, he was a member of Asutav Kogu. In 1944, he fled the Soviet occupation of Estonia to Germany, and in 1949 he emigrated to the United States. He was a honorary alumnus of the Estonian Students' Society.", "Kamau Peterson\n Kamau Peterson (born September 16, 1978) is a former professional Canadian football wide receiver and formerly the offensive coordinator for the York Lions football team. He last played for the BC Lions of the Canadian Football League. He was originally drafted sixth overall by the Calgary Stampeders in the 2001 CFL Draft and won the 89th Grey Cup with the team that year. Although he was born in Los Angeles, California, United States, Peterson grew up in Detroit, Michigan, but was schooled in LaSalle, Ontario, so he counts as a non-import in the CFL. Kamau transitioned into his post-football career by founding PlaymakerU which trained young athletes in many sports but especially football. Based in Sherwood Park, Alberta he ", "Peterson Pipes\n Peterson is an Irish pipe maker.", "Pete Peterson\n Peterson's first wife died in 1995. Two weeks after his installation in Hanoi, he met Vi Le, Australia's senior trade commissioner, born in Vietnam, whom he married. In 2002, he moved to Melbourne, Australia, so they could be closer to her family. In 2009, Peterson acquired Australian citizenship.", "Jaime Peterson\n Jaime Peterson (born September 29, 1971) is a Dominican-American former professional basketball player. A 2.06m forward-center, he was born in New York City to Dominican parents. After playing for three different high schools, including a postgraduate year at Maine Central Institute, Peterson played two seasons in the junior college circuit with Champlain College in Vermont before playing in the NCAA Division I with the Pittsburgh Panthers. He went undrafted in the 1995 NBA draft, and he started his professional career in France. In 2003 he was named the Most Valuable Player of the Liga Española de Baloncesto, the second tier of Spanish basketball. He played for the Dominican Republic national team from 1995 to 2005, and he won the silver medal at the 1995 and 2003 editions of Centrobasket.", "Doug Peterson (Nebraska politician)\n Doug Peterson (born April 4, 1959) is an American lawyer and politician who is the 33rd and current attorney general of Nebraska. A Republican, Peterson was elected attorney general during the 2014 election and assumed office in January 2015.", "Eric Peterson\n Peterson was born in Indian Head, Saskatchewan, Canada. He is married to fellow actor and People for Education executive director Annie Kidder, who is the sister of Margot Kidder. Peterson and his wife live in Toronto, Ontario, with their two daughters, although he still frequents his home province of Saskatchewan, where he owns a cottage on Katepwa Lake in the Qu'Appelle Valley near his hometown.", "Gilles Peterson\n Peterson was born in Caen, Normandy, France to a French mother and Swiss father and moved with his family to South London during childhood. He is a French citizen and does not hold dual citizenship with Britain. As of 2018, Peterson lives in Stoke Newington in North London with his wife and two sons, Oliver and Luc.", "Peterson's\n Peterson's, founded in 1966, is an American company that has a wide range of live, print, and online products and services, including test preparation, career exploration tools, memory retention techniques, professional writing services, and school, financial aid, and scholarship searches. Peterson's is currently headquartered in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, a suburb of Denver, Colorado. It was formerly headquartered for many years in Lawrence Township, New Jersey. Peterson's was privately held until its 1995 purchase by The Thomson Corporation. It became part of Thomson Learning (spun off in 2007 as Cengage Learning). On July 27, 2006, Peterson's was acquired by the Nelnet family of companies. On December 31, 2017 Peterson's was acquired by Triangle Digital Ventures. In 2019, Peterson's acquired B.E.S. Publishing.", "Peterson Schools\n The average yearly enrollment at Peterson Schools in its four locations is 1,883 students. The student body is predominantly Mexican, at 60.65% of the student population, 25.86% are U.S. and Canadian students and 5.15% are from other countries (Brazil, China, Corea, Argentina, etc.). The faculty is recruited internationally and locally. The average faculty staff is 420 members.", "Peter G. Peterson\n Peterson was born in Kearney, Nebraska, as the eldest of three children to Venetia \"Venet\" Paul (Pavlou- Παύλου) and George Peterson (Petropoulos- Πετρόπουλος), both were immigrants from southern Greece. He had one younger sister, Elaine, who died of croup when she was one year old and a brother, John, who was the youngest. His father arrived in the United States at the age of 17 and worked as a dishwasher for Union Pacific Railroad and roomed on a caboose. In 1923, George opened and then ran a Greek diner named Central Café in Kearney after changing his name from Georgios Petropoulos. Peter ", "Lembit Peterson\n1998: Republic of Estonia cultural prize ; 2006: Order of the National Coat of Arms, IV class. Lembit Peterson (born on 18 August 1953 in Tallinn) is an Estonian actor, theatre director and theatre pedagogue. In 1971 he graduated from Tallinn State Conservatory's Stage Art Department. From 1976 to 1979 and 1985 to 1988 he worked at Estonian Youth Theatre, and from 1979 to 1982 at Ugala Theatre. In 1994 he was one of the founders of the studio theatre Theatrum. Awards:", "Jerome P. Peterson\n '''Jerome P. \"J.P.\" Peterson''' (July 14, 1936 – January 25, 2018) was an American educator and politician. Peterson was born in Braham, Minnesota. He received his bachelor's degree in education from Augsburg College in 1958. He also studied at University of Minnesota and St. Cloud State University. He taught social studies, drivers training, and physical education at Princeton High School in Princeton, Minnesota. He lived in Princeton, Minnesota. Peterson served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1983 to 1990 and was a Democrat. Peterson died suddenly in Princeton, Minnesota.", "Peterson, Iowa\n The Peterson Patriot has been in print since 1880.", "Casper Petersen\n Peterson was born in Mielberg (a hamlet southwest of Jagel), in the Duchy of Schleswig, on March 14, 1826; was educated at the Teachers' Seminary at Tondern, Schleswig, and worked as a schoolteacher for five years. Peterson joined the military service of Schleswig-Holstein from 1848 to 1851, participating in the First Schleswig War against Denmark. He came to the United States in 1851, and first settled in Milwaukee, where he was a teacher and organist in the first Lutheran school of that city. He moved to Chicago in 1852 and worked as a clerk; and to Racine in 1855, where he tried his hand as a merchant; and to New Holstein in 1861, where he became a farmer. He was chairman of the town for a member of years and president of the Calumet County Mutual Fire Insurance Co.", "Val Peterson\n Frederick Valdemar Erastus Peterson (July 18, 1903 – October 17, 1983), also known as Val Peterson, was an American politician and diplomat who served as the 26th governor of Nebraska from 1947 to 1953, as director of the Federal Civil Defense Administration from 1953 to 1957, U.S. ambassador to Denmark from 1957 to 1961, and U.S. Ambassador to Finland from 1969 to 1973.", "Doug Peterson (Nebraska politician)\n Peterson, who was born in Columbus, Nebraska, was raised in Lincoln, Nebraska. He graduated from the University of Nebraska in 1981 and earned a Juris Doctorate from the Pepperdine University School of Law in 1985. Peterson worked for the district attorney of Lincoln County for two years until serving an additional two years as an assistant Nebraska attorney general to Robert Spire from 1988 until 1990. He entered private practice, where he would remain until his 2014 election as Attorney General of Nebraska. Peterson was sworn in as the 32nd attorney general of Nebraska at the Nebraska State Capitol in Lincoln on January 8, 2015. Peterson, who lives in Lincoln, is the nephew of former governor of Nebraska Val Peterson.", "Peterson, Minnesota\n Peterson is a city in Fillmore County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 199 at the 2010 census.", "Lynn Peterson (American politician)\n Lynn Peterson (born October 22, 1968) is an American politician in the U.S. state of Oregon serving as the council president of Metro. Metro is the only directly-elected regional government in the United States, and spans 24 cities in the Portland, Oregon three-county area, along with many unincorporated suburbs in the Portland metropolitan area.", "Paul Peterson (golfer)\n Paul Peterson (born July 1, 1988) is an American professional golfer, currently playing on the European Tour and the Asian Tour." ]
In what country is Joy?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Joy, Arkansas
612,520
63
[ { "id": "31145096", "title": "Joy (magazine)", "text": "Germany (since 1995) ; Hungary (since 1998) ; Serbia (since 2003) ; Romania (since 2004) ; Czech Republic (since 2005) ; Russia (since 2006) ; Bulgaria (since 2006) ; Ukraine (since 2007) ; Indonesia (since 2011) Joy has 9 international editions:", "score": "1.7825565" }, { "id": "27959633", "title": "Joy (2018 film)", "text": " Joy is a 2018 Austrian drama film directed and written by Sudabeh Mortezai. The plot revolves around Joy (Anwulika Alphonsus), a young Nigerian woman who walks the streets to pay off debts while also supporting her family in Nigeria and her daughter in Vienna. It was selected as the Austrian entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. However, the film was disqualified in November 2019, with the Academy stating that the film had too much dialogue in English. The filmmakers disputed the disqualification, arguing that when the parts of the dialogue in Nigerian Pidgin that are unintelligible to English speakers are counted separately from English, English constitutes less than 50% of the entire dialogue and thus the film should be eligible, but the Academy stood by its initial decision.", "score": "1.7166607" }, { "id": "27959634", "title": "Joy (2018 film)", "text": " Joy is a young Nigerian woman walking the streets to pay off debts while supporting her family in Nigeria and her daughter in Vienna. She’s instructed to supervise Precious, a new teenage girl from Nigeria about to go down the same path as her.", "score": "1.7048323" }, { "id": "27191706", "title": "Joy FM (Ghana)", "text": " Joy FM is a privately owned radio station in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The station is owned and run by the media group company Multimedia Group Limited. It is arguably the leading radio station in Ghana that broadcasts in the English language. Established in 1995 by Kwasi Twum, the founder of Multimedia Group Limited, Joy FM became the first private radio station to be licensed in Ghana.", "score": "1.6913581" }, { "id": "28960105", "title": "Joy (Austrian band)", "text": " as well as remakes of such hits as \"Touch by Touch\" and \"Valerie\". The album was released in Austria by the label Major Babies, and reached No. 21 in Austrian national chart. In September 2011 the album was released in Russia on the CD-Land label, and in Hungary – distributed by Hargent Media. On 15 July 2011, the trio performed in Estonia, at the Viljandi Retrofest for more than seven thousand viewers from Estonia and Latvia. In November 2011, Joy performed in Moscow once more – at the Diskoteka 80-x festival. This time the festival took place in the Olympic Stadium in Moscow. Since May 2012, Freddy Jaklitsch, due to his responsibilities as a leader of the popular band Seer, has performed with Joy less often. Michael Scheickl became Joy's lead vocalist for live shows.", "score": "1.6698945" }, { "id": "28960101", "title": "Joy (Austrian band)", "text": " USSR, where it reached No. 3 in the charts by Krugozor magazine in 1987. A few years later in Hungary, local group Inflagranty recorded a cover version entitled \"Te meg en\". Since 1986, Joy began performing on various TV shows, such as the GDR-based TV-show Kessel Buntes. In 1986, the trio recorded a second album, Joy and Tears. The album included the single \"Japanese Girls\". It reached No. 14 on the Austrian national chart, and their popularity had reached Asia. In 1986, the trio won the most popular international act in South Korea. Their Asian tour, which occurred on January and February 1987 in Bangkok, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and Seoul, was attended by more than 60,000 spectators. In ", "score": "1.6629915" }, { "id": "358883", "title": "Joy Mogensen", "text": " Joy Mogensen (born 11 August 1980) is a Danish social democratic politician who served as Minister of Culture and Church from 2019 to 2021. She was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and is educated at Roskilde University. She served as mayor of Roskilde Municipality from 2011 to 2019. She was appointed Minister for Culture and Church in the Frederiksen Cabinet from 27 June 2019. In August 2021, she stepped down as minister. She also starred in \"Spreading Joy 1, 2 and 3\"", "score": "1.6473908" }, { "id": "2905464", "title": "Joy 94.9", "text": "Most Outstanding Media award 2008 ", "score": "1.6454337" }, { "id": "31468765", "title": "Joy of Europe", "text": " Joy of Europe (Ρадост Европе / Radost Evrope) is a European dance festival with a long tradition. The annual event takes place in Belgrade, Serbia with 30 European nations showcasing their culture through dance and music. The European nations are usually accompanied by another country from another continent.", "score": "1.644582" }, { "id": "8206042", "title": "Joy (For King & Country song)", "text": " \"Joy\" (stylized as \"joy.\" ) is the lead single by Christian alternative rock duo For King & Country for their third studio album, Burn the Ships (2018). It was released as a single on 18 May 2018. The song became the group's highest charting single, peaking at No. 2 on the Hot Christian Songs chart. It lasted 36 weeks on the overall chart, being in the top ten for its entire run. It also peaked at No. 14 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100, and is their second highest charting entry in their career. The song is played in a F minor key, and 120 beats per minute. It was nominated for the 2019 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song. It was also nominated for Top Christian Song at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards.", "score": "1.6439543" }, { "id": "31145095", "title": "Joy (magazine)", "text": " Joy is an international women's magazine, started in 1995 with German language edition. Magazine topics are lifestyle, trends, fashion, beauty, men. Covers usually feature famous actresses, singers and other female entertainers. In Germany Joy is part of Bauer Media and is published by Marquard on a monthly basis.", "score": "1.6376904" }, { "id": "1424124", "title": "City of Joy (2016 film)", "text": " The Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo is a region where being a woman is hard, often experiencing violence in the wake of a 20 year long war driven by colonialism. In the film, women band together at the leadership center to find a way to handle the horrible experiences they've had to live through and come out on the other side to be leaders and inspirations for other women in the region.", "score": "1.6375962" }, { "id": "1424123", "title": "City of Joy (2016 film)", "text": " City of Joy is a 2016 documentary film directed and written by Madeleine Gavin. It follows the first class of students at a leadership center in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. The film was released by Netflix on September 7, 2018.", "score": "1.63401" }, { "id": "28960098", "title": "Joy (Austrian band)", "text": " Joy is an Austrian pop band, best known for the hits \"Touch by Touch\" and \"Valerie\".", "score": "1.6323093" }, { "id": "27931115", "title": "Norwegian Joy", "text": " Norwegian Joy is a Breakaway Plus-class cruise ship operated by Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) and is the second of four Breakaway Plus-class vessels in the company's fleet. Built by Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany, she was delivered in April 2017.", "score": "1.6316394" }, { "id": "282889", "title": "Joy House (Marshall, Michigan)", "text": " The Joy house is a two-story frame structure with clapboards and a gabled roof, built in a style somewhat reminiscent of the Italian Villa style. The windows are double-hung sash units with plain trim. The most distinctive feature of the house is the three-story corner tower, with a pyramidal roof and crocketed finial somewhat like a pagoda. The tower has box cornices, and two front windows with bracketed balconies and cornices. The front porch is also bracketed, and framed by square columns.", "score": "1.6153646" }, { "id": "8206045", "title": "Joy (For King & Country song)", "text": " The music video for the single \"Joy\" was released on 20 May 2018. Set in the 1960s, and a black and white clip follows the group as they lead the staff on a quest for joy. The production takes place during a television news broadcast. The visual features television personality Candace Cameron Bure. Bure and Joel Smallbone portray news presenters charged with information about a major storm threatening the country.", "score": "1.6153404" }, { "id": "30293895", "title": "Arif Khan Joy", "text": " Joy was elected as a Member of Parliament for the Netrokona-2 constituency in 2014. He is a member of the Bangladesh Awami League party. A former professional footballer and vice president of the Bangladesh Football Federation, Joy has been appointed as Deputy Minister in the Ministry of Youth and Sports, the first former professional athlete to hold a position in this ministry.", "score": "1.6073252" }, { "id": "27871481", "title": "Joy (2015 film)", "text": " Joy is a 2015 American biographical comedy-drama film, written and directed by David O. Russell and starring Jennifer Lawrence as Joy Mangano, a self-made millionaire who created her own business empire. Joy received a theatrical release on December 25, 2015, distributed by 20th Century Fox. It received mixed reviews from critics, who praised Lawrence's performance but criticized the writing and pace of the film. Lawrence received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress and won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. Joy was also nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, among other accolades.", "score": "1.6060989" }, { "id": "27919621", "title": "In-Joy", "text": " In-Joy is a Danish boyband that took part in the third season of the Danish X Factor in 2010. The four-member band was made of Esbjørn Nordby Birch (as Essi), Jannick Ricky Fritze, Kevin Sparwath Nielsen and Nabil Moujahid (older brother of the singer Basim), himself an earlier successful X Factor contestant and performer even after the competition. At the time of the competition (2010), Essi was 25, Nabil 24, Jannick 20 and Kevin 16. Essi was from Aarhus and worked in Post Denmark, Nabil from Høje Gladsaxe and followed a music and dancing career, Jannick from Vejle but lived in Copenhagen and worked as a waiter and finally youngest Kevin from Herlev, a 9th-grade student, but pursuing theatrical studies for seven years at Eventyrteatret, an acting ", "score": "1.6042211" } ]
[ "Joy (magazine)\nGermany (since 1995) ; Hungary (since 1998) ; Serbia (since 2003) ; Romania (since 2004) ; Czech Republic (since 2005) ; Russia (since 2006) ; Bulgaria (since 2006) ; Ukraine (since 2007) ; Indonesia (since 2011) Joy has 9 international editions:", "Joy (2018 film)\n Joy is a 2018 Austrian drama film directed and written by Sudabeh Mortezai. The plot revolves around Joy (Anwulika Alphonsus), a young Nigerian woman who walks the streets to pay off debts while also supporting her family in Nigeria and her daughter in Vienna. It was selected as the Austrian entry for the Best International Feature Film at the 92nd Academy Awards. However, the film was disqualified in November 2019, with the Academy stating that the film had too much dialogue in English. The filmmakers disputed the disqualification, arguing that when the parts of the dialogue in Nigerian Pidgin that are unintelligible to English speakers are counted separately from English, English constitutes less than 50% of the entire dialogue and thus the film should be eligible, but the Academy stood by its initial decision.", "Joy (2018 film)\n Joy is a young Nigerian woman walking the streets to pay off debts while supporting her family in Nigeria and her daughter in Vienna. She’s instructed to supervise Precious, a new teenage girl from Nigeria about to go down the same path as her.", "Joy FM (Ghana)\n Joy FM is a privately owned radio station in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The station is owned and run by the media group company Multimedia Group Limited. It is arguably the leading radio station in Ghana that broadcasts in the English language. Established in 1995 by Kwasi Twum, the founder of Multimedia Group Limited, Joy FM became the first private radio station to be licensed in Ghana.", "Joy (Austrian band)\n as well as remakes of such hits as \"Touch by Touch\" and \"Valerie\". The album was released in Austria by the label Major Babies, and reached No. 21 in Austrian national chart. In September 2011 the album was released in Russia on the CD-Land label, and in Hungary – distributed by Hargent Media. On 15 July 2011, the trio performed in Estonia, at the Viljandi Retrofest for more than seven thousand viewers from Estonia and Latvia. In November 2011, Joy performed in Moscow once more – at the Diskoteka 80-x festival. This time the festival took place in the Olympic Stadium in Moscow. Since May 2012, Freddy Jaklitsch, due to his responsibilities as a leader of the popular band Seer, has performed with Joy less often. Michael Scheickl became Joy's lead vocalist for live shows.", "Joy (Austrian band)\n USSR, where it reached No. 3 in the charts by Krugozor magazine in 1987. A few years later in Hungary, local group Inflagranty recorded a cover version entitled \"Te meg en\". Since 1986, Joy began performing on various TV shows, such as the GDR-based TV-show Kessel Buntes. In 1986, the trio recorded a second album, Joy and Tears. The album included the single \"Japanese Girls\". It reached No. 14 on the Austrian national chart, and their popularity had reached Asia. In 1986, the trio won the most popular international act in South Korea. Their Asian tour, which occurred on January and February 1987 in Bangkok, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and Seoul, was attended by more than 60,000 spectators. In ", "Joy Mogensen\n Joy Mogensen (born 11 August 1980) is a Danish social democratic politician who served as Minister of Culture and Church from 2019 to 2021. She was born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, and is educated at Roskilde University. She served as mayor of Roskilde Municipality from 2011 to 2019. She was appointed Minister for Culture and Church in the Frederiksen Cabinet from 27 June 2019. In August 2021, she stepped down as minister. She also starred in \"Spreading Joy 1, 2 and 3\"", "Joy 94.9\nMost Outstanding Media award 2008 ", "Joy of Europe\n Joy of Europe (Ρадост Европе / Radost Evrope) is a European dance festival with a long tradition. The annual event takes place in Belgrade, Serbia with 30 European nations showcasing their culture through dance and music. The European nations are usually accompanied by another country from another continent.", "Joy (For King & Country song)\n \"Joy\" (stylized as \"joy.\" ) is the lead single by Christian alternative rock duo For King & Country for their third studio album, Burn the Ships (2018). It was released as a single on 18 May 2018. The song became the group's highest charting single, peaking at No. 2 on the Hot Christian Songs chart. It lasted 36 weeks on the overall chart, being in the top ten for its entire run. It also peaked at No. 14 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100, and is their second highest charting entry in their career. The song is played in a F minor key, and 120 beats per minute. It was nominated for the 2019 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song. It was also nominated for Top Christian Song at the 2019 Billboard Music Awards.", "Joy (magazine)\n Joy is an international women's magazine, started in 1995 with German language edition. Magazine topics are lifestyle, trends, fashion, beauty, men. Covers usually feature famous actresses, singers and other female entertainers. In Germany Joy is part of Bauer Media and is published by Marquard on a monthly basis.", "City of Joy (2016 film)\n The Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo is a region where being a woman is hard, often experiencing violence in the wake of a 20 year long war driven by colonialism. In the film, women band together at the leadership center to find a way to handle the horrible experiences they've had to live through and come out on the other side to be leaders and inspirations for other women in the region.", "City of Joy (2016 film)\n City of Joy is a 2016 documentary film directed and written by Madeleine Gavin. It follows the first class of students at a leadership center in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. The film was released by Netflix on September 7, 2018.", "Joy (Austrian band)\n Joy is an Austrian pop band, best known for the hits \"Touch by Touch\" and \"Valerie\".", "Norwegian Joy\n Norwegian Joy is a Breakaway Plus-class cruise ship operated by Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) and is the second of four Breakaway Plus-class vessels in the company's fleet. Built by Meyer Werft in Papenburg, Germany, she was delivered in April 2017.", "Joy House (Marshall, Michigan)\n The Joy house is a two-story frame structure with clapboards and a gabled roof, built in a style somewhat reminiscent of the Italian Villa style. The windows are double-hung sash units with plain trim. The most distinctive feature of the house is the three-story corner tower, with a pyramidal roof and crocketed finial somewhat like a pagoda. The tower has box cornices, and two front windows with bracketed balconies and cornices. The front porch is also bracketed, and framed by square columns.", "Joy (For King & Country song)\n The music video for the single \"Joy\" was released on 20 May 2018. Set in the 1960s, and a black and white clip follows the group as they lead the staff on a quest for joy. The production takes place during a television news broadcast. The visual features television personality Candace Cameron Bure. Bure and Joel Smallbone portray news presenters charged with information about a major storm threatening the country.", "Arif Khan Joy\n Joy was elected as a Member of Parliament for the Netrokona-2 constituency in 2014. He is a member of the Bangladesh Awami League party. A former professional footballer and vice president of the Bangladesh Football Federation, Joy has been appointed as Deputy Minister in the Ministry of Youth and Sports, the first former professional athlete to hold a position in this ministry.", "Joy (2015 film)\n Joy is a 2015 American biographical comedy-drama film, written and directed by David O. Russell and starring Jennifer Lawrence as Joy Mangano, a self-made millionaire who created her own business empire. Joy received a theatrical release on December 25, 2015, distributed by 20th Century Fox. It received mixed reviews from critics, who praised Lawrence's performance but criticized the writing and pace of the film. Lawrence received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress and won the Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy for her performance. Joy was also nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy, among other accolades.", "In-Joy\n In-Joy is a Danish boyband that took part in the third season of the Danish X Factor in 2010. The four-member band was made of Esbjørn Nordby Birch (as Essi), Jannick Ricky Fritze, Kevin Sparwath Nielsen and Nabil Moujahid (older brother of the singer Basim), himself an earlier successful X Factor contestant and performer even after the competition. At the time of the competition (2010), Essi was 25, Nabil 24, Jannick 20 and Kevin 16. Essi was from Aarhus and worked in Post Denmark, Nabil from Høje Gladsaxe and followed a music and dancing career, Jannick from Vejle but lived in Copenhagen and worked as a waiter and finally youngest Kevin from Herlev, a 9th-grade student, but pursuing theatrical studies for seven years at Eventyrteatret, an acting " ]
In what country is Valea Pleșii River?
[ "Romania", "Roumania", "Rumania", "România", "ro", "🇷🇴" ]
country
Valea Pleșii River (Bârsa)
6,089,701
3
[ { "id": "15514253", "title": "Valea Roșie (Crișul Negru)", "text": " The Valea Roșie or Roșia (Rossia-patak or Remete-patak) is a river in Romania, Bihor County, right tributary of the Crișul Negru. Its length is 38 km and its basin size is 308 km2. The river starts at the Roșia karst spring in the Pădurea Craiului Mountains. It flows through the hills of the Beiuș Depression and joins the Crișul Negru near Pocola. The most important villages on the river are Roșia, Remetea and Pocola.", "score": "1.693681" }, { "id": "31419056", "title": "Valea Șesii (Arieș)", "text": " The Valea Șesii or Valea Șesei is a right tributary of the river Arieș in Romania. It flows into the Arieș near Baia de Arieș. The Valea Șesii dam is built on this river. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 38 km2.", "score": "1.6671553" }, { "id": "2671620", "title": "Valea Vadului", "text": " The Valea Vadului is a river in Constanța County, Romania. Near the village Vadu it flows into the lagoon Balta Mare, which is connected with the Black Sea. Its length is 7 km and its basin size is 17 km2.", "score": "1.6652827" }, { "id": "5392863", "title": "Valea Cerbului (Prahova)", "text": " The Valea Cerbului is a right tributary of the river Prahova in Romania. It source is in the Bucegi Mountains. It flows into the Prahova in Bușteni. Its length is 7 km and its basin size is 26 km2.", "score": "1.6557925" }, { "id": "14188910", "title": "Valea Crișului (river)", "text": " The Valea Crișului is a right tributary of the river Olt in Romania. It flows into the Olt in Ghidfalău. Its length is 16 km and its basin size is 33 km2.", "score": "1.6531227" }, { "id": "5393282", "title": "Valea Locii", "text": " The Valea Locii (also: Valea Locei) is a left tributary of the river Nicolina in Romania. It flows into the Nicolina in Lunca Cetățuii. Its length is 12 km and its basin size is 85 km2. The Bârca and Ciurbești dams are located on this river.", "score": "1.649034" }, { "id": "5984357", "title": "Valea Cheii (Dâmbovița)", "text": " The Valea Cheii (also: Cheia, in its upper course also: Rudărița) is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. Its source is in the Leaota Mountains. It flows into the Dâmbovița downstream from Podu Dâmboviței. Its length is 14 km and its basin size is 35 km2.", "score": "1.6418684" }, { "id": "12124607", "title": "Valea Mare (Netezi)", "text": " The Valea Mare is a right tributary of the river Netezi in Romania. It flows into the Netezi in Grumăzești. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 40 km2.", "score": "1.6328955" }, { "id": "28955771", "title": "Vasile", "text": "Pârâul lui Vasile, a river in Romania ; Valea lui Vasile, a river in Romania ; Vasile Aron (Sibiu district) ", "score": "1.6314293" }, { "id": "465317", "title": "Valea Fânețelor", "text": " The Valea Fânețelor (also: Valea Fânațelor or Ghepiș) is a left tributary of the river Barcău in Romania. It discharges into the Barcău near Cenaloș. It flows through the villages Cuieșd, Țigăneștii de Criș, Picleu, Brusturi, Păulești, Gurbești, Spinuș, Ciulești and Sărsig. Its length is 30 km and its basin size is 178 km2.", "score": "1.6297289" }, { "id": "30141148", "title": "Valea Racilor (Arieș)", "text": " The Valea Racilor is a small river in the Apuseni Mountains, Cluj County, western Romania. It is a left tributary of the river Arieș. It flows through the municipalities Feleacu, Tureni and Turda, and joins the Arieș in the town Turda. It is fed by several smaller streams, including the Fâneața Vacilor. Its length is 25 km and its basin size is 166 km2.", "score": "1.6274872" }, { "id": "10546956", "title": "Valea Mare (Almaș)", "text": " The Valea Mare is a right tributary of the river Almaș in Romania. It flows into the Almaș in Pogănești. Its length is 11 km and its basin size is 18 km2.", "score": "1.6254172" }, { "id": "15515352", "title": "Valea Mare (Crișul Negru)", "text": " The Valea Mare is a left tributary of the river Crișul Negru in Romania. It flows into the Crișul Negru near Cusuiuș. Its length is 8.9 km and its basin size is 21.7 km2.", "score": "1.6242477" }, { "id": "12121840", "title": "Valea Largă (Arieș)", "text": " The Valea Largă is a small river in Cluj County, western Romania. It is a left tributary of the river Arieș. It flows through the municipalities Frata, Ceanu Mare, Tritenii de Jos and Viișoara, and joins the Arieș at Viișoara. It is fed by several smaller streams, including Tritul and Valea Lată. Its length is 24 km and its basin size is 193 km2.", "score": "1.619703" }, { "id": "5985803", "title": "Valea Bădenilor", "text": " The Valea Bădenilor (also: Bădeanca) is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. Its source is in the Leaota Mountains. It flows into the Dâmbovița in Bădeni. Its length is 15 km and its basin size is 56 km2.", "score": "1.6145599" }, { "id": "15919040", "title": "Valea Stanciului (river)", "text": " The Valea Stanciului is a left tributary of the river Săcuieu in Romania. It flows into the Săcuieu in Răchițele. Its length is 15 km and its basin size is 31 km2. The river valley is known for its gorge Cheile Văii Stanciului and the Vălul Miresei waterfalls.", "score": "1.6121783" }, { "id": "1863820", "title": "Valea Morii (Hârtibaciu)", "text": " The Valea Morii is a left tributary of the river Hârtibaciu in Romania. It flows into the Hârtibaciu west of Noiștat. Its length is 18 km and its basin size is 39 km2.", "score": "1.6082084" }, { "id": "29773727", "title": "Valea Mare (Danube)", "text": " The Valea Mare (also: Valea Negrenilor) is a right tributary of the Danube in Romania. It passes through Lake Dunăreni and flows into the Danube near Dunăreni. Its length is 29 km and its basin size is 344 km2.", "score": "1.6068912" }, { "id": "4740064", "title": "Valea Luncanilor", "text": " The Valea Luncanilor (also: Luncani, in its upper course: Pârâul Vânătorului) is a right tributary of the river Strei in Romania. It discharges into the Strei in Streisângeorgiu. Its length is 27 km and its basin size is 148 km2.", "score": "1.6024735" }, { "id": "8105726", "title": "Valea Vladului", "text": " The Valea Vladului is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. It discharges into the Dâmbovița in the Făgăraș Mountains. Its length is 8 km and its basin size is 20 km2.", "score": "1.6009235" } ]
[ "Valea Roșie (Crișul Negru)\n The Valea Roșie or Roșia (Rossia-patak or Remete-patak) is a river in Romania, Bihor County, right tributary of the Crișul Negru. Its length is 38 km and its basin size is 308 km2. The river starts at the Roșia karst spring in the Pădurea Craiului Mountains. It flows through the hills of the Beiuș Depression and joins the Crișul Negru near Pocola. The most important villages on the river are Roșia, Remetea and Pocola.", "Valea Șesii (Arieș)\n The Valea Șesii or Valea Șesei is a right tributary of the river Arieș in Romania. It flows into the Arieș near Baia de Arieș. The Valea Șesii dam is built on this river. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 38 km2.", "Valea Vadului\n The Valea Vadului is a river in Constanța County, Romania. Near the village Vadu it flows into the lagoon Balta Mare, which is connected with the Black Sea. Its length is 7 km and its basin size is 17 km2.", "Valea Cerbului (Prahova)\n The Valea Cerbului is a right tributary of the river Prahova in Romania. It source is in the Bucegi Mountains. It flows into the Prahova in Bușteni. Its length is 7 km and its basin size is 26 km2.", "Valea Crișului (river)\n The Valea Crișului is a right tributary of the river Olt in Romania. It flows into the Olt in Ghidfalău. Its length is 16 km and its basin size is 33 km2.", "Valea Locii\n The Valea Locii (also: Valea Locei) is a left tributary of the river Nicolina in Romania. It flows into the Nicolina in Lunca Cetățuii. Its length is 12 km and its basin size is 85 km2. The Bârca and Ciurbești dams are located on this river.", "Valea Cheii (Dâmbovița)\n The Valea Cheii (also: Cheia, in its upper course also: Rudărița) is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. Its source is in the Leaota Mountains. It flows into the Dâmbovița downstream from Podu Dâmboviței. Its length is 14 km and its basin size is 35 km2.", "Valea Mare (Netezi)\n The Valea Mare is a right tributary of the river Netezi in Romania. It flows into the Netezi in Grumăzești. Its length is 10 km and its basin size is 40 km2.", "Vasile\nPârâul lui Vasile, a river in Romania ; Valea lui Vasile, a river in Romania ; Vasile Aron (Sibiu district) ", "Valea Fânețelor\n The Valea Fânețelor (also: Valea Fânațelor or Ghepiș) is a left tributary of the river Barcău in Romania. It discharges into the Barcău near Cenaloș. It flows through the villages Cuieșd, Țigăneștii de Criș, Picleu, Brusturi, Păulești, Gurbești, Spinuș, Ciulești and Sărsig. Its length is 30 km and its basin size is 178 km2.", "Valea Racilor (Arieș)\n The Valea Racilor is a small river in the Apuseni Mountains, Cluj County, western Romania. It is a left tributary of the river Arieș. It flows through the municipalities Feleacu, Tureni and Turda, and joins the Arieș in the town Turda. It is fed by several smaller streams, including the Fâneața Vacilor. Its length is 25 km and its basin size is 166 km2.", "Valea Mare (Almaș)\n The Valea Mare is a right tributary of the river Almaș in Romania. It flows into the Almaș in Pogănești. Its length is 11 km and its basin size is 18 km2.", "Valea Mare (Crișul Negru)\n The Valea Mare is a left tributary of the river Crișul Negru in Romania. It flows into the Crișul Negru near Cusuiuș. Its length is 8.9 km and its basin size is 21.7 km2.", "Valea Largă (Arieș)\n The Valea Largă is a small river in Cluj County, western Romania. It is a left tributary of the river Arieș. It flows through the municipalities Frata, Ceanu Mare, Tritenii de Jos and Viișoara, and joins the Arieș at Viișoara. It is fed by several smaller streams, including Tritul and Valea Lată. Its length is 24 km and its basin size is 193 km2.", "Valea Bădenilor\n The Valea Bădenilor (also: Bădeanca) is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. Its source is in the Leaota Mountains. It flows into the Dâmbovița in Bădeni. Its length is 15 km and its basin size is 56 km2.", "Valea Stanciului (river)\n The Valea Stanciului is a left tributary of the river Săcuieu in Romania. It flows into the Săcuieu in Răchițele. Its length is 15 km and its basin size is 31 km2. The river valley is known for its gorge Cheile Văii Stanciului and the Vălul Miresei waterfalls.", "Valea Morii (Hârtibaciu)\n The Valea Morii is a left tributary of the river Hârtibaciu in Romania. It flows into the Hârtibaciu west of Noiștat. Its length is 18 km and its basin size is 39 km2.", "Valea Mare (Danube)\n The Valea Mare (also: Valea Negrenilor) is a right tributary of the Danube in Romania. It passes through Lake Dunăreni and flows into the Danube near Dunăreni. Its length is 29 km and its basin size is 344 km2.", "Valea Luncanilor\n The Valea Luncanilor (also: Luncani, in its upper course: Pârâul Vânătorului) is a right tributary of the river Strei in Romania. It discharges into the Strei in Streisângeorgiu. Its length is 27 km and its basin size is 148 km2.", "Valea Vladului\n The Valea Vladului is a left tributary of the river Dâmbovița in Romania. It discharges into the Dâmbovița in the Făgăraș Mountains. Its length is 8 km and its basin size is 20 km2." ]
In what country is Sutlepa?
[ "Estonia", "Republic of Estonia", "Estland", "Eesti", "ee", "EST", "🇪🇪" ]
country
Sutlepa
1,448,611
55
[ { "id": "28397101", "title": "Sutlepa", "text": " Sutlepa (Sutlep) is a village in Lääne-Nigula Parish, Lääne County, in western Estonia. Wooden Sutlepa chapel from the 17th century was moved to Estonian Open Air Museum in Tallinn in 1970.", "score": "1.9345253" }, { "id": "16232453", "title": "Estonian Open Air Museum", "text": " Sutlepa chapel Sutlepa chapel was built in the region populated by Estonian Swedes and is one of the oldest wooden buildings in Estonia. The chapel was built in Sutlepa village of Noarootsi parish as a subordinate church to Noarootsi parish church. The construction cannot be precisely dated: archival data mention the chapel as early as in 1627, but the year engraved above the church door is ‘1699’. The chapel was brought to the museum in 1970 and erected in 1971–1976. Sutlepa chapel was re-consecrated in 1989 and has since been a subordinate church of Jaani parish of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church. Sermons are held in the chapel on major holy days and ", "score": "1.6430932" }, { "id": "28532309", "title": "Sutlepa Sea", "text": " Sutlepa Sea (Estonian Sutlepa meri) is a lake in Estonia.", "score": "1.6327534" }, { "id": "3789556", "title": "Sutle", "text": " Sutle is a village in Homalin Township, Hkamti District, in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma.", "score": "1.6094521" }, { "id": "30938349", "title": "Sutlema", "text": " Sutlema is a village in Kohila Parish, Rapla County in northwestern Estonia.", "score": "1.4664261" }, { "id": "5403795", "title": "Supa, Parner", "text": " The majority of the population in the village is Hindu. There are also sizeable minorities Muslims, and Christians in the village. In recent decades, there has been the migration of people from Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Odisha. The migrants find employment in construction and the factories on MIDC industrial park. Supa is known for Apna bakery (established in 1969 famous for desi ghee cookies and kharis). In recent years Supa have become one metro village as it contains people from many locations. Availability of Jobs increasing population in Supa. It is growing as industrial hub.", "score": "1.3961723" }, { "id": "27815860", "title": "Sirpa Suutari", "text": " Sirpa Suutari (Sirpa Suutari-Jääskö ) is a Finnish professional ballroom dancer. Sirpa started dancing ballet at the age of 5 at her native town of Oulu. At 10 she switched to Dancesport. She won a number of Dancesport championships in Finland in 10 Dances category with her partner Timo Pukkila, as well as several titles in junior category with Pekka Suutari-Jaasko. After that she was finalist in Junior Latin with Tony Wong. In 1989 she teamed up with Jukka Haapalainen and turned to Professional category of ballroom championships. They retired from competitive dance in 2002 and have become the Latin cabaret dance artists. At the peak of their success, during 1997–2001, they won a large number of 1st and 2nd places in various international championships. Their highest rating was 1887 (in 2001). For their performances in Professional Latin they have earned a number of (non-championship) awards, including the World Dance & Dance Sport Council ”Isadora Duncan” Award (2002). As of 2010, her residence was in London, Kensington Gardens, and at Katajanokka, Helsinki, so she and Jukka travel much between England and Finland, and to Japan.", "score": "1.392375" }, { "id": "1854558", "title": "Suhana Thapa", "text": " Suhana Thapa (सुहाना थापा) is a Nepali film actress. She first debuted as an actor with the film A Mero Hajur 3, of her own home production.", "score": "1.378196" }, { "id": "6532330", "title": "Baspa River", "text": " Baspa River rises near the Indo-Chinese border and forms the Baspa Valley (also known as the Sangla Valley) - one of the most scenic in Himalayas. The Chung Sakhago Pass lies at the head of the valley. It is fed by the perennial glaciers and shares the catchment area with the Ganges. Baspa starts at the Baspa hills, joins Sutlej River from the left bank near Karcham. The upper and middle slopes of the valley along the river are covered with pine and oak forests. Pastures, meadows and fields cover the lower slopes. Some of the most picturesque villages in the Himalayas can be found here. Only the lower half of the 95 kilometers length of the valley is inhabited - all the way from Chitkul (3,475 m) to where the Baspa meets the Sutlej River at Karcham (1,830 m). Though gentle most of the way, it would be difficult to raft in Baspa as some stretches have sheer falls.", "score": "1.3763933" }, { "id": "8439214", "title": "Cypa decolor", "text": " It is found in northeastern India, Nepal, Myanmar, southwestern China, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia (Sarawak) and Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo, Kalimantan, Papua New Guinea).", "score": "1.3758566" }, { "id": "27386249", "title": "Supayalat", "text": " the abduction of the royal couple in Mandalay. At the time of her return to Burma, the country was in the grip of nationalist fervor. She became a focus of anti-colonial and nationalist sentiment. Hmaing founded the Protection Committee for the Queen, with other nationalists. The committee pressed the British government to improve Suphayalat's living conditions and provide her with a small allowance. Hmaing was a boarder at Myadaung Monastery built by the queen who never had the chance to conduct an opening ceremony (yeizetcha, literally \"pour drops of water\", in order to call on the goddess of earth to witness the ", "score": "1.3692157" }, { "id": "31672402", "title": "Supaksorn Chaimongkol", "text": " Supaksorn Chaimongkol (ศุภักษร ไชยมงคล; ; born December 2, 1982) is a Thai model and actress. Her nickname is Kratae (กระแต). She graduate a bachelor of Communication Arts from Rangsit University. Her film roles include Kunpan: Legend of the Warlord, Art of the Devil and Andaman Girl, all under director Thanit Jitnukul. In 2007, she starred in the spy-action comedy, Chai Lai, directed by Poj Arnon, and the martial arts drama Brave, featuring Thai stunt actor Pairote Boongerd (Mike B.) and Malaysian comedian Afdlin Shauki. The film started to air on April 2012 in Malaysia. In 2008, she starred in Handle Me With Care, a romantic drama written and directed by Kongdej Jaturanrasamee. ", "score": "1.3644824" }, { "id": "5403794", "title": "Supa, Parner", "text": " Supa or Supe is a village in Parner taluka in Ahmednagar district of state of Maharashtra, India.", "score": "1.3623446" }, { "id": "29293149", "title": "Sutlej", "text": " The source of the Sutlej is west of the catchment area of Lake Rakshastal in Tibet, as springs in an ephemeral stream. Lake Rakshastal used to be part of the Sutlej river basin long ago and separated from the Sutlej due to tectonic activity. The nascent river flows at first west-northwest for about 260 km under the Tibetan name Langqên Zangbo (Elephant River or Elephant Spring) to the Shipki La pass, entering India in Himachal Pradesh state. It then has its main knee heading west-southwest for about 360 km to meet the Beas River near Harike, Tarn Taran district, Punjab state. Ropar Wetland in Punjab state is located on the Sutlej river basin. Evidence suggests Indus Valley Civilisation ", "score": "1.3557458" }, { "id": "7514027", "title": "Sujata Stupa", "text": " Sujata Stupa, also Sujata Kuti stupa or Sujata Garh, is a Buddhist stupa located in the village of Senanigrama (Bakraur) slightly east of Bodh Gaya in the state of Bihar, India. It lies directly across the Phalgu River from the town of Bodh Gaya, where Gautama Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment. It is a walk of about 20 minutes, from Bodh Gaya to Sujata Stupa. It was initially built in the 2nd century BCE as confirmed by finds of Dark Grey polished wares and a punch-marked coin in the monastery nearby. The stupa was dedicated to the milkmaid Sujata, from the village of Bakraur, who is said to have fed Gautama Buddha milk and rice at this spot as he was sitting under a Banyan ", "score": "1.3496319" }, { "id": "29293153", "title": "Sutlej", "text": " Langqên Zangbo is a river in Ngari, Tibet, China. The name Langqên, Tibetan for \"elephant\", is because of a valley that resembles an elephant trunk. This river is the main source of the Sutlej, a tributary of Indus River. It enters India at Shipki La pass. The source is south of Gangdise Range, in Ngari Prefecture. Its course is mainly in the Zanda County. The river drains an area of 22,760 km2, and covers a length of 309 km. The drop in height is 3,256 m. Historically, the river was the centre of the Zhangzhung Kingdom until its fall in the 8th century AD.", "score": "1.3468531" }, { "id": "32443734", "title": "Suk Bahadur", "text": " Suk Bahadur Thapa (ဆွတ်ဗဟာဒူး) is a Burmese footballer who served as the major for 4th Infantry Battalion (4th Gurkha) of Myanmar Army. He was also a dominating tennis and field hockey player as well as the national 100-meter sprint champion which he held under 11 seconds. Bahadur is Gurkha from Myanmar.", "score": "1.3433409" }, { "id": "31353363", "title": "Supa, Estonia", "text": " Supa is a village in Valga Parish, Valga County in southern Estonia. It has a population of 33 (as of 1 January 2010).", "score": "1.3405671" }, { "id": "4325721", "title": "Investment protection", "text": " On 21 October 2011, Nepal entered into BIPA with India during an official visit of Prime-minister Dr. Baburam Bhattarai. Returning home, he faced political obstacles from his own ruling party chauvinist wing. In the airport he faced black-flags welcome and was criticized in parliamentary meeting as well as in party meeting. No one knew that Nepal already had another 5 BIPAs since 1983.", "score": "1.3377521" }, { "id": "9026868", "title": "Sanepa", "text": " Sanepa is a place in Lalitpur District of Nepal. It borders Jhamsikhel, Balkhu, Kupondole and Teku. It is popular as a place for tourists to stay, and many restaurants and bars are situated here. In view of its popularity with tourists, it is also known as the second Thamel; Jhamsikhel is also referred to as Jhamel (from Thamel). The head party office of the Nepali Congress is situated at Sanepa, as is the residence of COAS (Chief of the Army Staff). The British School, Primary wing of Graded English Medium School, Gyanodaya Bal Batika School, Shuvatara School, and various international non-government organizations along with many embassies for Nepal is located here.", "score": "1.3367765" } ]
[ "Sutlepa\n Sutlepa (Sutlep) is a village in Lääne-Nigula Parish, Lääne County, in western Estonia. Wooden Sutlepa chapel from the 17th century was moved to Estonian Open Air Museum in Tallinn in 1970.", "Estonian Open Air Museum\n Sutlepa chapel Sutlepa chapel was built in the region populated by Estonian Swedes and is one of the oldest wooden buildings in Estonia. The chapel was built in Sutlepa village of Noarootsi parish as a subordinate church to Noarootsi parish church. The construction cannot be precisely dated: archival data mention the chapel as early as in 1627, but the year engraved above the church door is ‘1699’. The chapel was brought to the museum in 1970 and erected in 1971–1976. Sutlepa chapel was re-consecrated in 1989 and has since been a subordinate church of Jaani parish of the Estonian Evangelical Lutheran Church. Sermons are held in the chapel on major holy days and ", "Sutlepa Sea\n Sutlepa Sea (Estonian Sutlepa meri) is a lake in Estonia.", "Sutle\n Sutle is a village in Homalin Township, Hkamti District, in the Sagaing Region of northwestern Burma.", "Sutlema\n Sutlema is a village in Kohila Parish, Rapla County in northwestern Estonia.", "Supa, Parner\n The majority of the population in the village is Hindu. There are also sizeable minorities Muslims, and Christians in the village. In recent decades, there has been the migration of people from Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, and Odisha. The migrants find employment in construction and the factories on MIDC industrial park. Supa is known for Apna bakery (established in 1969 famous for desi ghee cookies and kharis). In recent years Supa have become one metro village as it contains people from many locations. Availability of Jobs increasing population in Supa. It is growing as industrial hub.", "Sirpa Suutari\n Sirpa Suutari (Sirpa Suutari-Jääskö ) is a Finnish professional ballroom dancer. Sirpa started dancing ballet at the age of 5 at her native town of Oulu. At 10 she switched to Dancesport. She won a number of Dancesport championships in Finland in 10 Dances category with her partner Timo Pukkila, as well as several titles in junior category with Pekka Suutari-Jaasko. After that she was finalist in Junior Latin with Tony Wong. In 1989 she teamed up with Jukka Haapalainen and turned to Professional category of ballroom championships. They retired from competitive dance in 2002 and have become the Latin cabaret dance artists. At the peak of their success, during 1997–2001, they won a large number of 1st and 2nd places in various international championships. Their highest rating was 1887 (in 2001). For their performances in Professional Latin they have earned a number of (non-championship) awards, including the World Dance & Dance Sport Council ”Isadora Duncan” Award (2002). As of 2010, her residence was in London, Kensington Gardens, and at Katajanokka, Helsinki, so she and Jukka travel much between England and Finland, and to Japan.", "Suhana Thapa\n Suhana Thapa (सुहाना थापा) is a Nepali film actress. She first debuted as an actor with the film A Mero Hajur 3, of her own home production.", "Baspa River\n Baspa River rises near the Indo-Chinese border and forms the Baspa Valley (also known as the Sangla Valley) - one of the most scenic in Himalayas. The Chung Sakhago Pass lies at the head of the valley. It is fed by the perennial glaciers and shares the catchment area with the Ganges. Baspa starts at the Baspa hills, joins Sutlej River from the left bank near Karcham. The upper and middle slopes of the valley along the river are covered with pine and oak forests. Pastures, meadows and fields cover the lower slopes. Some of the most picturesque villages in the Himalayas can be found here. Only the lower half of the 95 kilometers length of the valley is inhabited - all the way from Chitkul (3,475 m) to where the Baspa meets the Sutlej River at Karcham (1,830 m). Though gentle most of the way, it would be difficult to raft in Baspa as some stretches have sheer falls.", "Cypa decolor\n It is found in northeastern India, Nepal, Myanmar, southwestern China, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia (Sarawak) and Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo, Kalimantan, Papua New Guinea).", "Supayalat\n the abduction of the royal couple in Mandalay. At the time of her return to Burma, the country was in the grip of nationalist fervor. She became a focus of anti-colonial and nationalist sentiment. Hmaing founded the Protection Committee for the Queen, with other nationalists. The committee pressed the British government to improve Suphayalat's living conditions and provide her with a small allowance. Hmaing was a boarder at Myadaung Monastery built by the queen who never had the chance to conduct an opening ceremony (yeizetcha, literally \"pour drops of water\", in order to call on the goddess of earth to witness the ", "Supaksorn Chaimongkol\n Supaksorn Chaimongkol (ศุภักษร ไชยมงคล; ; born December 2, 1982) is a Thai model and actress. Her nickname is Kratae (กระแต). She graduate a bachelor of Communication Arts from Rangsit University. Her film roles include Kunpan: Legend of the Warlord, Art of the Devil and Andaman Girl, all under director Thanit Jitnukul. In 2007, she starred in the spy-action comedy, Chai Lai, directed by Poj Arnon, and the martial arts drama Brave, featuring Thai stunt actor Pairote Boongerd (Mike B.) and Malaysian comedian Afdlin Shauki. The film started to air on April 2012 in Malaysia. In 2008, she starred in Handle Me With Care, a romantic drama written and directed by Kongdej Jaturanrasamee. ", "Supa, Parner\n Supa or Supe is a village in Parner taluka in Ahmednagar district of state of Maharashtra, India.", "Sutlej\n The source of the Sutlej is west of the catchment area of Lake Rakshastal in Tibet, as springs in an ephemeral stream. Lake Rakshastal used to be part of the Sutlej river basin long ago and separated from the Sutlej due to tectonic activity. The nascent river flows at first west-northwest for about 260 km under the Tibetan name Langqên Zangbo (Elephant River or Elephant Spring) to the Shipki La pass, entering India in Himachal Pradesh state. It then has its main knee heading west-southwest for about 360 km to meet the Beas River near Harike, Tarn Taran district, Punjab state. Ropar Wetland in Punjab state is located on the Sutlej river basin. Evidence suggests Indus Valley Civilisation ", "Sujata Stupa\n Sujata Stupa, also Sujata Kuti stupa or Sujata Garh, is a Buddhist stupa located in the village of Senanigrama (Bakraur) slightly east of Bodh Gaya in the state of Bihar, India. It lies directly across the Phalgu River from the town of Bodh Gaya, where Gautama Buddha is said to have attained enlightenment. It is a walk of about 20 minutes, from Bodh Gaya to Sujata Stupa. It was initially built in the 2nd century BCE as confirmed by finds of Dark Grey polished wares and a punch-marked coin in the monastery nearby. The stupa was dedicated to the milkmaid Sujata, from the village of Bakraur, who is said to have fed Gautama Buddha milk and rice at this spot as he was sitting under a Banyan ", "Sutlej\n Langqên Zangbo is a river in Ngari, Tibet, China. The name Langqên, Tibetan for \"elephant\", is because of a valley that resembles an elephant trunk. This river is the main source of the Sutlej, a tributary of Indus River. It enters India at Shipki La pass. The source is south of Gangdise Range, in Ngari Prefecture. Its course is mainly in the Zanda County. The river drains an area of 22,760 km2, and covers a length of 309 km. The drop in height is 3,256 m. Historically, the river was the centre of the Zhangzhung Kingdom until its fall in the 8th century AD.", "Suk Bahadur\n Suk Bahadur Thapa (ဆွတ်ဗဟာဒူး) is a Burmese footballer who served as the major for 4th Infantry Battalion (4th Gurkha) of Myanmar Army. He was also a dominating tennis and field hockey player as well as the national 100-meter sprint champion which he held under 11 seconds. Bahadur is Gurkha from Myanmar.", "Supa, Estonia\n Supa is a village in Valga Parish, Valga County in southern Estonia. It has a population of 33 (as of 1 January 2010).", "Investment protection\n On 21 October 2011, Nepal entered into BIPA with India during an official visit of Prime-minister Dr. Baburam Bhattarai. Returning home, he faced political obstacles from his own ruling party chauvinist wing. In the airport he faced black-flags welcome and was criticized in parliamentary meeting as well as in party meeting. No one knew that Nepal already had another 5 BIPAs since 1983.", "Sanepa\n Sanepa is a place in Lalitpur District of Nepal. It borders Jhamsikhel, Balkhu, Kupondole and Teku. It is popular as a place for tourists to stay, and many restaurants and bars are situated here. In view of its popularity with tourists, it is also known as the second Thamel; Jhamsikhel is also referred to as Jhamel (from Thamel). The head party office of the Nepali Congress is situated at Sanepa, as is the residence of COAS (Chief of the Army Staff). The British School, Primary wing of Graded English Medium School, Gyanodaya Bal Batika School, Shuvatara School, and various international non-government organizations along with many embassies for Nepal is located here." ]
In what country is Movraž?
[ "Slovenia", "Slovenija", "Republika Slovenija", "si", "🇸🇮", "svn", "slo", "Republic of Slovenia", "SLO" ]
country
Movraž
1,419,351
50
[ { "id": "7817968", "title": "Movraž", "text": " Movraž ( or ) is a small village in the City Municipality of Koper in the Littoral region of Slovenia. The parish church in the settlement is dedicated to the Assumption of Mary.", "score": "1.739079" }, { "id": "7276090", "title": "Automotive industry in Belarus", "text": " MoAZ or Mogilev Automobile Plant is an automotive and earth-moving equipment manufacturer in the city of Mogilev, Belarus. MoAZ is a subsidiary of BelAZ since 2006. In 1958 MoAZ was named in honor of Sergey Kirov, a prominent early Bolshevik leader in the Soviet Union. The company was founded in 1935 as Workshop. In 1941 the plant was evacuated to Kuibyshev, where he mastered the production of engines for the attack aircraft IL-2. After World War II the plant was returned to Mogilev and produced locomotives, steam-powered machinery, overhead cranes and oil trucks on chassis GAZ-51. In 1958 the factory conveyor ", "score": "1.4511074" }, { "id": "11058877", "title": "Qazax", "text": " A memorial museum dedicated to Molla Panah Vagif and Molla Vali Vidadi is located in the city.", "score": "1.3852053" }, { "id": "32502041", "title": "The Return of Nathan Brazil", "text": " allowed to re-enter the Well. As the novel closes, Mavra, Marquoz, and Yua have arrived at their new hexes and are beginning to find their bearings. Marquoz is in Hakazit, a high-tech, volcanic land of massive armored lizards (though not firebreathers, to his disappointment). Yua is in Awbri, a nontechnological land of arboreal mammals in which the society is dominated by males. Mavra is in Dillia, semitechnological land of the centaurs. Gypsy resurfaces in an ocean hex, curiously untransformed. As the first waves of Olympians begin to pass through zone, an alarm sounds, and Serge Ortega is summoned to find that his guards have killed Nathan Brazil.", "score": "1.3771858" }, { "id": "11976249", "title": "Automotive industry in Bulgaria", "text": " The Moskvitch was a 20th-century Soviet/Bulgarian passenger car. Between 1966 and 1990, the Balkan factory in Lovech, Bulgaria, assembled the Soviet-designed Moskvitch 408 (later replaced by the 412 / 1500 and Aleko) from complete knock down (CKD) kits. During the fall of 1965 Bulgaria and the USSR signed an economic cooperation agreement for the period of 1966-1970, which contained a provision that by the end of 1968 the Balkan factory in Lovech would be completely tooled for the assembly of 15,000 Moskvitch 408 passenger cars annually. In January 1966, a group of 20 Bulgarian engineers is sent to the MZMA (Moscow Factory for Compact Cars), later renamed to AZLK or ", "score": "1.3758696" }, { "id": "7276091", "title": "Automotive industry in Belarus", "text": " named S. Kirov Mintyazhmasha USSR in Mogilev was transferred to the production of single-axle tractor MAZ-529, developed at the Minsk Automobile Plant. In 1960 MoAZ and Minsk Automobile Plant was transferred a group of designers, which became the basis of the technical services of the plant. Since that time MoAZ became one of the largest manufacturers of earth-moving equipment in the USSR. In 2006 the factory became a branch of JSC \"BelAZ\". Since 2012 - the branch of \"BelAZ\" - managing company \"BelAZ-Holding\". The company mainly works on exports - more than 85% of production going to CIS member states.", "score": "1.3628914" }, { "id": "31606185", "title": "Mozhan Marnò", "text": " Marnò was born in Los Angeles. Her parents are from Iran and met in California. She was educated at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. She received her BA in French and German comparative literature from Barnard College of Columbia University and her MFA in Acting from the Yale School of Drama.", "score": "1.316134" }, { "id": "15139612", "title": "Acâș", "text": "🇭🇺 Markaz, Hungary ", "score": "1.3132582" }, { "id": "14093879", "title": "Vladimir Ionesyan", "text": "\"Mosgaz\" is a ten-part artistic television series by Andrey Malyukov, released in 2012. The series is a free statement of the real events, with the difference being that Vladimir Ionesyan was renamed Vladislav Vikhrov. Maksim Matveyev performed the role. ; Diagnosis: Maniac (2004). ; \"Call, close the door\" - a documentary on Channel First (premiered on November 2, 2012). ; \"Open, Mosgaz!\" - episode from the documentary series \"The investigation was conducted...\", hosted by Leonid Kanevsky. ; \"Fear of the capital. The Mosgaz case documentary on Channel First\" (1998). ", "score": "1.31268" }, { "id": "12955764", "title": "Mokresh, Montana Province", "text": " Mokresh (Мокреш) is a village in northwestern Bulgaria, located in the Valchedram Municipality of the Montana Province. The village is situated in a small valley, 7 km from Valchedram, 19 km from Lom, and 50 km from Montana.", "score": "1.3117571" }, { "id": "10387188", "title": "Mowr Deraz, Kavar", "text": " Mowr Deraz (, also Romanized as Mowr Derāz) is a village in Kavar Rural District, in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 126, in 26 families.", "score": "1.310744" }, { "id": "9382135", "title": "Cochylidia moguntiana", "text": " Cochylidia moguntiana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Poland, Austria, Italy, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Hungary, Romania, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, northern Pakistan, Iran, China (Anhui, Beijing, Fujian, Gansu, Guizhou, Hebei, Heilongjiang, Henan, Hunan, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Ningxia, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanxi, Sichuan, Tianjin) and Korea. The wingspan is 9–15 mm. Adults have been recorded on wing in July and August in Europe. The larvae feed on Artemisia campestris. Larvae can be found in May and June.", "score": "1.3104527" }, { "id": "28166159", "title": "Shahmar Movsumov", "text": " Shahmar Movsumov was born on January 31, 1972, in Nakhchivan. From 1990 to 1995 he studied at the Faculty of International Economic Relations of Moscow State Institute of International Relations. In 2003–2004 he received master's degree in public administration from Harvard Kennedy School.", "score": "1.3099449" }, { "id": "4508556", "title": "Mount Davraz", "text": " Mount Davraz (Davraz Dağı), also sometimes cited as Mount Davras, is a mountain and a winter sports and ski resort in the Taurus Mountains in Isparta Province in southern Turkey. The nearest cities are the province seat of Isparta and its depending district of Eğirdir, both of which are at a roughly equal distance of 25 km from the Davraz Ski Resort (Isparta Davraz Kayak Merkezi). Antalya is 140 km away and, served by good road connections, is approximately a 1 ½ hour transfer. The tallest peak (Büyük Davraz) at the resort is 2637 m with the highest skiing height being at 2250 m. There are black, red, blue and yellow runs, so there are facilities for all levels of skiers. Access to the slopes is via drag and chair lifts - depending on the particular run. The resort is open from December 1 each year, although the main period of winter sports varies with the snow conditions, which usually means from the first week in January. Davraz is served by one main hotel, Sirene Davras Ski and Wellness Hotel. The hotel is located at 1650 m.", "score": "1.3080623" }, { "id": "6128244", "title": "Mavrud", "text": " Regarded as one of the most highly esteemed local wines, Mavrud vineyards are mainly found around Asenovgrad and Perushtitsa, as well as more rarely near Pazardzhik, Stara Zagora and Chirpan. There is speculation amongst grape growers that Mavrud may be an ancient clone of Mourvedre, imported into Bulgaria by the Romans.", "score": "1.3018951" }, { "id": "25550659", "title": "Ivan Moudov", "text": " Ivan Moudov (born 1975) is a Bulgarian conceptual artist. He is member of the Institute of Contemporary Art - Sofia since 2007. His most notable works evolve around the traffic behaviour, including One hour priority in 2000, Sofia, 14:13 Minutes Priority in 2005 in Weimar and the similar work 9:43 Minutes Priority in 2009, presented at the Saltzburger Kunstverein in Salzburg, Germany. The works of the Traffic Control cycle are presented at various contemporary art festivals in different European cities, including Graz, Austria in 2001, Cetinje, Montenegro in 2002, Thessaloniki, Greece 2003. Another theme that frequents his works is related to the missing contemporary art collection in his home country. The whole cycle is named MUSIZ after the abbreviation of imaginative contemporary art museum. A video installation of the cycle is presented in 2010 in Plovdiv and later in Alberta Pane gallery in Paris. Moudov was born in Sofia.", "score": "1.2983148" }, { "id": "14695199", "title": "Divraz", "text": " Divraz (, also Romanized as Dīvraz) is a village in Bala Khiyaban-e Litkuh Rural District, in the Central District of Amol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 393, in 95 families.", "score": "1.2905104" }, { "id": "30534398", "title": "Qazvin", "text": "🇵🇹 Évora, Portugal (2016) ; 🇱🇧 Baalbek, Lebanon (2015) ; 🇰🇬 Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (2011) ; 🇹🇷 Denizli, Turkey (2012) ; 🇲🇾 Shah Alam, Malaysia (2011) ", "score": "1.2901046" }, { "id": "31978223", "title": "Russia–Turkmenistan relations", "text": " head of the company described the technical features of the vehicles, noting in particular that they are capable of working in temperatures ranging from minus 45 to plus 50 degrees. The open joint stock company KamAZ is Russia's largest automotive corporation. Its vehicles account for 36 percent of the Russian market. It has assembly plants in six foreign countries: Poland, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Ethiopia and Vietnam. One of its affiliated companies has been working in Turkmenistan since May 2006. To ensure warranty and post-warranty service a temporary centre in Ashgabat has been opened. The servicing of vehicles is done by experts from the KamAZ factory. The new service centre was founded in May 2007. It houses not only a working area but also classrooms and offices.", "score": "1.289902" }, { "id": "29166216", "title": "Vráž (Beroun District)", "text": " Vráž is a municipality and village in Beroun District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,200 inhabitants.", "score": "1.2827661" } ]
[ "Movraž\n Movraž ( or ) is a small village in the City Municipality of Koper in the Littoral region of Slovenia. The parish church in the settlement is dedicated to the Assumption of Mary.", "Automotive industry in Belarus\n MoAZ or Mogilev Automobile Plant is an automotive and earth-moving equipment manufacturer in the city of Mogilev, Belarus. MoAZ is a subsidiary of BelAZ since 2006. In 1958 MoAZ was named in honor of Sergey Kirov, a prominent early Bolshevik leader in the Soviet Union. The company was founded in 1935 as Workshop. In 1941 the plant was evacuated to Kuibyshev, where he mastered the production of engines for the attack aircraft IL-2. After World War II the plant was returned to Mogilev and produced locomotives, steam-powered machinery, overhead cranes and oil trucks on chassis GAZ-51. In 1958 the factory conveyor ", "Qazax\n A memorial museum dedicated to Molla Panah Vagif and Molla Vali Vidadi is located in the city.", "The Return of Nathan Brazil\n allowed to re-enter the Well. As the novel closes, Mavra, Marquoz, and Yua have arrived at their new hexes and are beginning to find their bearings. Marquoz is in Hakazit, a high-tech, volcanic land of massive armored lizards (though not firebreathers, to his disappointment). Yua is in Awbri, a nontechnological land of arboreal mammals in which the society is dominated by males. Mavra is in Dillia, semitechnological land of the centaurs. Gypsy resurfaces in an ocean hex, curiously untransformed. As the first waves of Olympians begin to pass through zone, an alarm sounds, and Serge Ortega is summoned to find that his guards have killed Nathan Brazil.", "Automotive industry in Bulgaria\n The Moskvitch was a 20th-century Soviet/Bulgarian passenger car. Between 1966 and 1990, the Balkan factory in Lovech, Bulgaria, assembled the Soviet-designed Moskvitch 408 (later replaced by the 412 / 1500 and Aleko) from complete knock down (CKD) kits. During the fall of 1965 Bulgaria and the USSR signed an economic cooperation agreement for the period of 1966-1970, which contained a provision that by the end of 1968 the Balkan factory in Lovech would be completely tooled for the assembly of 15,000 Moskvitch 408 passenger cars annually. In January 1966, a group of 20 Bulgarian engineers is sent to the MZMA (Moscow Factory for Compact Cars), later renamed to AZLK or ", "Automotive industry in Belarus\n named S. Kirov Mintyazhmasha USSR in Mogilev was transferred to the production of single-axle tractor MAZ-529, developed at the Minsk Automobile Plant. In 1960 MoAZ and Minsk Automobile Plant was transferred a group of designers, which became the basis of the technical services of the plant. Since that time MoAZ became one of the largest manufacturers of earth-moving equipment in the USSR. In 2006 the factory became a branch of JSC \"BelAZ\". Since 2012 - the branch of \"BelAZ\" - managing company \"BelAZ-Holding\". The company mainly works on exports - more than 85% of production going to CIS member states.", "Mozhan Marnò\n Marnò was born in Los Angeles. Her parents are from Iran and met in California. She was educated at Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts. She received her BA in French and German comparative literature from Barnard College of Columbia University and her MFA in Acting from the Yale School of Drama.", "Acâș\n🇭🇺 Markaz, Hungary ", "Vladimir Ionesyan\n\"Mosgaz\" is a ten-part artistic television series by Andrey Malyukov, released in 2012. The series is a free statement of the real events, with the difference being that Vladimir Ionesyan was renamed Vladislav Vikhrov. Maksim Matveyev performed the role. ; Diagnosis: Maniac (2004). ; \"Call, close the door\" - a documentary on Channel First (premiered on November 2, 2012). ; \"Open, Mosgaz!\" - episode from the documentary series \"The investigation was conducted...\", hosted by Leonid Kanevsky. ; \"Fear of the capital. The Mosgaz case documentary on Channel First\" (1998). ", "Mokresh, Montana Province\n Mokresh (Мокреш) is a village in northwestern Bulgaria, located in the Valchedram Municipality of the Montana Province. The village is situated in a small valley, 7 km from Valchedram, 19 km from Lom, and 50 km from Montana.", "Mowr Deraz, Kavar\n Mowr Deraz (, also Romanized as Mowr Derāz) is a village in Kavar Rural District, in the Central District of Kavar County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 126, in 26 families.", "Cochylidia moguntiana\n Cochylidia moguntiana is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae. It is found in Spain, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, Poland, Austria, Italy, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Hungary, Romania, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Russia, Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan, northern Pakistan, Iran, China (Anhui, Beijing, Fujian, Gansu, Guizhou, Hebei, Heilongjiang, Henan, Hunan, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Ningxia, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanxi, Sichuan, Tianjin) and Korea. The wingspan is 9–15 mm. Adults have been recorded on wing in July and August in Europe. The larvae feed on Artemisia campestris. Larvae can be found in May and June.", "Shahmar Movsumov\n Shahmar Movsumov was born on January 31, 1972, in Nakhchivan. From 1990 to 1995 he studied at the Faculty of International Economic Relations of Moscow State Institute of International Relations. In 2003–2004 he received master's degree in public administration from Harvard Kennedy School.", "Mount Davraz\n Mount Davraz (Davraz Dağı), also sometimes cited as Mount Davras, is a mountain and a winter sports and ski resort in the Taurus Mountains in Isparta Province in southern Turkey. The nearest cities are the province seat of Isparta and its depending district of Eğirdir, both of which are at a roughly equal distance of 25 km from the Davraz Ski Resort (Isparta Davraz Kayak Merkezi). Antalya is 140 km away and, served by good road connections, is approximately a 1 ½ hour transfer. The tallest peak (Büyük Davraz) at the resort is 2637 m with the highest skiing height being at 2250 m. There are black, red, blue and yellow runs, so there are facilities for all levels of skiers. Access to the slopes is via drag and chair lifts - depending on the particular run. The resort is open from December 1 each year, although the main period of winter sports varies with the snow conditions, which usually means from the first week in January. Davraz is served by one main hotel, Sirene Davras Ski and Wellness Hotel. The hotel is located at 1650 m.", "Mavrud\n Regarded as one of the most highly esteemed local wines, Mavrud vineyards are mainly found around Asenovgrad and Perushtitsa, as well as more rarely near Pazardzhik, Stara Zagora and Chirpan. There is speculation amongst grape growers that Mavrud may be an ancient clone of Mourvedre, imported into Bulgaria by the Romans.", "Ivan Moudov\n Ivan Moudov (born 1975) is a Bulgarian conceptual artist. He is member of the Institute of Contemporary Art - Sofia since 2007. His most notable works evolve around the traffic behaviour, including One hour priority in 2000, Sofia, 14:13 Minutes Priority in 2005 in Weimar and the similar work 9:43 Minutes Priority in 2009, presented at the Saltzburger Kunstverein in Salzburg, Germany. The works of the Traffic Control cycle are presented at various contemporary art festivals in different European cities, including Graz, Austria in 2001, Cetinje, Montenegro in 2002, Thessaloniki, Greece 2003. Another theme that frequents his works is related to the missing contemporary art collection in his home country. The whole cycle is named MUSIZ after the abbreviation of imaginative contemporary art museum. A video installation of the cycle is presented in 2010 in Plovdiv and later in Alberta Pane gallery in Paris. Moudov was born in Sofia.", "Divraz\n Divraz (, also Romanized as Dīvraz) is a village in Bala Khiyaban-e Litkuh Rural District, in the Central District of Amol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 393, in 95 families.", "Qazvin\n🇵🇹 Évora, Portugal (2016) ; 🇱🇧 Baalbek, Lebanon (2015) ; 🇰🇬 Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (2011) ; 🇹🇷 Denizli, Turkey (2012) ; 🇲🇾 Shah Alam, Malaysia (2011) ", "Russia–Turkmenistan relations\n head of the company described the technical features of the vehicles, noting in particular that they are capable of working in temperatures ranging from minus 45 to plus 50 degrees. The open joint stock company KamAZ is Russia's largest automotive corporation. Its vehicles account for 36 percent of the Russian market. It has assembly plants in six foreign countries: Poland, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Ethiopia and Vietnam. One of its affiliated companies has been working in Turkmenistan since May 2006. To ensure warranty and post-warranty service a temporary centre in Ashgabat has been opened. The servicing of vehicles is done by experts from the KamAZ factory. The new service centre was founded in May 2007. It houses not only a working area but also classrooms and offices.", "Vráž (Beroun District)\n Vráž is a municipality and village in Beroun District in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic. It has about 1,200 inhabitants." ]
In what country is Sarnowo, Chełmno County?
[ "Poland", "POL", "Republic of Poland", "PL", "Polska" ]
country
Sarnowo, Chełmno County
5,696,015
38
[ { "id": "26110746", "title": "Sarnowo, Lipno County", "text": " Sarnowo (Rehgart) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skępe, within Lipno County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.", "score": "1.7176356" }, { "id": "14139859", "title": "Chełmno, Szamotuły County", "text": " The oldest known mention of the village comes from 1257. Chełmno was a private village of Polish nobility, administratively located in the Poznań County in the Poznań Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Polish Crown. During the German occupation of Poland (World War II), in 1940, the occupiers carried out expulsions of Poles, who were sent to a transit camp in Łódź, and then deported to the General Government in the more eastern part of German-occupied Poland, while their houses and farms were handed over to German colonists as part of the Lebensraum policy.", "score": "1.6923707" }, { "id": "2542995", "title": "Sarnów, Kozienice County", "text": " Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Gniewoszów, within Kozienice County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 2 km south-east of Gniewoszów, 23 km south-east of Kozienice, and 102 km south-east of Warsaw.", "score": "1.6770701" }, { "id": "6053908", "title": "Sarnowo, Masovian Voivodeship", "text": " Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kuczbork-Osada, within Żuromin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Kuczbork-Osada, 13 km north-east of Żuromin, and 121 km north-west of Warsaw.", "score": "1.6688862" }, { "id": "14139858", "title": "Chełmno, Szamotuły County", "text": " Chełmno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pniewy, within Szamotuły County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-east of Pniewy, 22 km south-west of Szamotuły, and 42 km west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 423.", "score": "1.6328813" }, { "id": "455070", "title": "Sarnowo, Nidzica County", "text": " Sarnowo (Scharnau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kozłowo, within Nidzica County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 15 km south-west of Nidzica and 60 km south of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 420.", "score": "1.6288273" }, { "id": "32156222", "title": "Sarnowo, Pomeranian Voivodeship", "text": " Sarnowo (Sarnowò) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Kartuzy, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north of Kartuzy and 29 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "score": "1.6212101" }, { "id": "4992443", "title": "Sarnowo, West Pomeranian Voivodeship", "text": " Sarnowo is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Bobolice, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "score": "1.6090121" }, { "id": "14139860", "title": "Chełmno, Szamotuły County", "text": "Teofila Radońska (1846–ca. 1913), Polish publicist, poet, and translator ", "score": "1.6088066" }, { "id": "4412696", "title": "Nowe Sarnowo", "text": " Nowe Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dzierzążnia, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. Despite being founded for a significant period of time, its population has remained low.", "score": "1.6035447" }, { "id": "280520", "title": "Sarnowo, Lidzbark County", "text": " Sarnowo (Rehagen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lidzbark Warmiński, within Lidzbark County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Lidzbark Warmiński and 41 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "score": "1.5914457" }, { "id": "710773", "title": "Chełmno", "text": " Chełmno (older Culm; ) is a town in northern Poland near the Vistula river with 20,000 inhabitants. Situated in the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship since 1999, Chełmno was previously in Toruń Voivodeship (1975–1998). Because of its historical importance as the first major stronghold of at first the Piasts and later Teutonic Knights in the region, the city gave its name to the entire area, Chełmno Land (and later an administrative unit of the Polish Crown, the Chełmno Voivodeship), the local Catholic diocese and Kulm law, which was used to found cities and towns around Poland, including the current capital city of Warsaw.", "score": "1.571913" }, { "id": "32175449", "title": "Sarnowy", "text": " Sarnowy (Sarnowë) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kościerzyna, within Kościerzyna County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Kościerzyna and 53 km south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 175.", "score": "1.5700374" }, { "id": "4992522", "title": "Sarbinowo, Koszalin County", "text": " Sarbinowo (German: Sorenbohm) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Mielno, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 17 km north-west of Koszalin and 130 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1637 the area was part of Duchy of Pomerania. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 558.", "score": "1.5693349" }, { "id": "7213728", "title": "Chełmno Słowieńskie", "text": " Chełmno Słowieńskie is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Postomino, within Sławno County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Postomino, 14 km north-west of Sławno, and 177 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "score": "1.566913" }, { "id": "10748447", "title": "Sarnów, Poddębice County", "text": " Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dalików, within Poddębice County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south-east of Dalików, 14 km south-east of Poddębice, and 24 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.5654035" }, { "id": "4936259", "title": "Sarnów, Sochaczew County", "text": " Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rybno, within Sochaczew County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Rybno, 9 km north-west of Sochaczew, and 60 km west of Warsaw.", "score": "1.5635278" }, { "id": "26196537", "title": "Sarnowo, Gmina Lubraniec", "text": " Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubraniec, within Włocławek County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland. In the forest near the village is a group of 9 megalithic tombs which were built by people from Funnelbeaker Culture in 4000 years BC.", "score": "1.5469995" }, { "id": "2627675", "title": "Sarnów, Łask County", "text": " Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Widawa, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-east of Widawa, 26 km south of Łask, and 57 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "score": "1.5408077" }, { "id": "5201795", "title": "Tarnowo, Myślibórz County", "text": " Tarnowo (Justinenhof) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Myślibórz, within Myślibórz County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "score": "1.5374813" } ]
[ "Sarnowo, Lipno County\n Sarnowo (Rehgart) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Skępe, within Lipno County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland.", "Chełmno, Szamotuły County\n The oldest known mention of the village comes from 1257. Chełmno was a private village of Polish nobility, administratively located in the Poznań County in the Poznań Voivodeship in the Greater Poland Province of the Polish Crown. During the German occupation of Poland (World War II), in 1940, the occupiers carried out expulsions of Poles, who were sent to a transit camp in Łódź, and then deported to the General Government in the more eastern part of German-occupied Poland, while their houses and farms were handed over to German colonists as part of the Lebensraum policy.", "Sarnów, Kozienice County\n Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Gniewoszów, within Kozienice County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 2 km south-east of Gniewoszów, 23 km south-east of Kozienice, and 102 km south-east of Warsaw.", "Sarnowo, Masovian Voivodeship\n Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kuczbork-Osada, within Żuromin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north of Kuczbork-Osada, 13 km north-east of Żuromin, and 121 km north-west of Warsaw.", "Chełmno, Szamotuły County\n Chełmno is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pniewy, within Szamotuły County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km south-east of Pniewy, 22 km south-west of Szamotuły, and 42 km west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 423.", "Sarnowo, Nidzica County\n Sarnowo (Scharnau) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kozłowo, within Nidzica County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 15 km south-west of Nidzica and 60 km south of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 420.", "Sarnowo, Pomeranian Voivodeship\n Sarnowo (Sarnowò) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Kartuzy, within Kartuzy County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north of Kartuzy and 29 km west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "Sarnowo, West Pomeranian Voivodeship\n Sarnowo is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Bobolice, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "Chełmno, Szamotuły County\nTeofila Radońska (1846–ca. 1913), Polish publicist, poet, and translator ", "Nowe Sarnowo\n Nowe Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dzierzążnia, within Płońsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. Despite being founded for a significant period of time, its population has remained low.", "Sarnowo, Lidzbark County\n Sarnowo (Rehagen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lidzbark Warmiński, within Lidzbark County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Lidzbark Warmiński and 41 km north of the regional capital Olsztyn.", "Chełmno\n Chełmno (older Culm; ) is a town in northern Poland near the Vistula river with 20,000 inhabitants. Situated in the Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship since 1999, Chełmno was previously in Toruń Voivodeship (1975–1998). Because of its historical importance as the first major stronghold of at first the Piasts and later Teutonic Knights in the region, the city gave its name to the entire area, Chełmno Land (and later an administrative unit of the Polish Crown, the Chełmno Voivodeship), the local Catholic diocese and Kulm law, which was used to found cities and towns around Poland, including the current capital city of Warsaw.", "Sarnowy\n Sarnowy (Sarnowë) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kościerzyna, within Kościerzyna County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south of Kościerzyna and 53 km south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 175.", "Sarbinowo, Koszalin County\n Sarbinowo (German: Sorenbohm) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Mielno, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 17 km north-west of Koszalin and 130 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1637 the area was part of Duchy of Pomerania. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 558.", "Chełmno Słowieńskie\n Chełmno Słowieńskie is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Postomino, within Sławno County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 9 km west of Postomino, 14 km north-west of Sławno, and 177 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.", "Sarnów, Poddębice County\n Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dalików, within Poddębice County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km south-east of Dalików, 14 km south-east of Poddębice, and 24 km west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Sarnów, Sochaczew County\n Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Rybno, within Sochaczew County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 5 km north-east of Rybno, 9 km north-west of Sochaczew, and 60 km west of Warsaw.", "Sarnowo, Gmina Lubraniec\n Sarnowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lubraniec, within Włocławek County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland. In the forest near the village is a group of 9 megalithic tombs which were built by people from Funnelbeaker Culture in 4000 years BC.", "Sarnów, Łask County\n Sarnów is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Widawa, within Łask County, Łódź Voivodeship, in central Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-east of Widawa, 26 km south of Łask, and 57 km south-west of the regional capital Łódź.", "Tarnowo, Myślibórz County\n Tarnowo (Justinenhof) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Myślibórz, within Myślibórz County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania." ]
In what country is Saint-Pierrevillers?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Saint-Pierrevillers
4,512,972
86
[ { "id": "9096935", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-Belleville", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-Belleville (Sent-Pierro-de-Bèlavela) is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.", "score": "1.5436531" }, { "id": "14834389", "title": "Saint-Pierre, Ouest", "text": " Saint-Pierre is a village in the Cornillon commune in the Croix-des-Bouquets Arrondissement in the Ouest department of Haiti.", "score": "1.5415773" }, { "id": "2670183", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-Juillers", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-Juillers is a commune in the Charente-Maritime department in southwestern France.", "score": "1.5282568" }, { "id": "9627313", "title": "Saint-Pierre-des-Landes", "text": " Saint-Pierre-des-Landes is a commune in the Mayenne department in north-western France. Amenities: Small supermarket, boulangerie, infant school, dechetterie, repair garage, hairdresser, Mairie, fire station, small War Memorial, public toilets, small fishing lake", "score": "1.519761" }, { "id": "11491758", "title": "Saint-Pierre-d'Autils", "text": " Saint-Pierre-d'Autils is a former commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France. On 1 January 2017, it was merged into the new commune La Chapelle-Longueville. Its habitants are called the Petrusians.", "score": "1.4985092" }, { "id": "25551648", "title": "Saint-Pierre, Réunion", "text": " Saint Pierre is the third-largest commune in the French overseas department and region of Réunion. Located on the southwest side of the island, it is the capital of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands. It developed from a port built from 1854 to 1882, which was used for the trade between Asia and Europe. Today, it features 400 sites for fishing and pleasure boats, while most of the commercial traffic moved north to Le Port.", "score": "1.4918029" }, { "id": "2670097", "title": "Sainte-Marie-de-Ré", "text": "🇫🇷 Pierrefort The commune is twinned with:", "score": "1.4895719" }, { "id": "15310202", "title": "Saint-Pierre-Langers", "text": " Saint-Pierre-Langers is a commune in the Manche department in Normandy in north-western France.", "score": "1.4863789" }, { "id": "2082071", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-la-Fage", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-la-Fage (Languedocien: Sant Pèire de la Faja) is a commune in the Hérault department in the Occitanie region in southern France.", "score": "1.4855714" }, { "id": "32038384", "title": "Saint-Pierreville", "text": " Saint-Pierreville (Sant Pèire Viala) is a commune in the Ardèche department in southern France.", "score": "1.4813468" }, { "id": "5026000", "title": "Saint-Pierre-les-Bois", "text": " A farming area comprising the village and several hamlets situated by the banks of the small river Portefeuille, about 32 mi south of Bourges at the junction of the D69 with the D3 road. The river Arnon forms a small part of the commune’s northern border.", "score": "1.4807929" }, { "id": "15140775", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage (Sant-Pierro-de-Mèsâjo) is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France. Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage is located next to the mountain of Connex and between the Vercors and Taillefer. Near Vizille and Grenoble. In 1946 an accident along the Rampe de Laffrey killed 18 near here.", "score": "1.4789101" }, { "id": "11960792", "title": "Saint-Pierre-d'Aubézies", "text": " Saint-Pierre-d'Aubézies (Gascon: Sent Pèr d'Auvesias) is a commune in the Gers department in southwestern France.", "score": "1.4782302" }, { "id": "31851826", "title": "Saint-Pierre, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence", "text": " Saint-Pierre (Sant Pèire) is a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in southeastern France.", "score": "1.4735262" }, { "id": "31713439", "title": "Saint-Pierre-lès-Franqueville", "text": " Saint-Pierre-lès-Franqueville is a commune in the Aisne department and Hauts-de-France region of northern France.", "score": "1.4720271" }, { "id": "5025999", "title": "Saint-Pierre-les-Bois", "text": " Saint-Pierre-les-Bois is a commune in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France.", "score": "1.4715084" }, { "id": "4768145", "title": "St-Pierre-Jolys", "text": " St-Pierre-Jolys (formerly Rivière-aux-Rats/Rat River, St-Pierre/St. Pierre) is a village in the Canadian province of Manitoba, located 50 km southeast of Winnipeg on Highway 59 near the Rat River. It is surrounded by the Rural Municipality of De Salaberry, and the nearest communities to it are Steinbach, St. Malo, Morris and Niverville. Agriculture is the dominant industry: primarily dairy farming and livestock. Being important sectors for the life of the community, the local businesses, services, and hospitality are strong. Tourism is also important to the village: the former Crow Wing Trail is now part of the Trans-Canada Trail, and St. Pierre-Jolys hosts several popular festivals, such as la Cabane à Sucre (maple syrup festival) in April; le Festival Chantecler, a celebration of Francophone arts; and the signature St-Pierre-Jolys Frog Follies and Ag Fair (les Folies Grenouilles et Foire Agricoles), a village fair featuring the Canadian frog jumping competition. There are 3 schools, a hospital, and a sizable Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachment in the village. Bilingual St-Pierre-Jolys has collaborated with nearby St. Malo on several ventures, including a trade show and a hockey league. The dramatic sequences for the 2012 documentary We Were Children were shot there.", "score": "1.4713266" }, { "id": "9627315", "title": "Saint-Pierre-la-Cour", "text": " Saint-Pierre-la-Cour is a commune, in the Mayenne department in the north-western of France.", "score": "1.4707525" }, { "id": "5702446", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-Côle", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-Côle (Limousin: Sent Peir de Còla) is a commune in the Dordogne department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "score": "1.4673114" }, { "id": "15870555", "title": "Saint-Pierre-de-Clages", "text": " Saint-Pierre-de-Clages is a village in Switzerland. It is located in the French-speaking part of the Canton of Valais in the municipality of Chamoson. The village of Saint-Pierre-de-Clages was joined with the municipality of Chamoson in 1376. It is famous for its 11th-century church with its octagonal bell tower. The village of Saint-Pierre-de-Clages is also known as the Swiss book town with an annual book festival.", "score": "1.461519" } ]
[ "Saint-Pierre-de-Belleville\n Saint-Pierre-de-Belleville (Sent-Pierro-de-Bèlavela) is a commune in the Savoie department in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region in south-eastern France.", "Saint-Pierre, Ouest\n Saint-Pierre is a village in the Cornillon commune in the Croix-des-Bouquets Arrondissement in the Ouest department of Haiti.", "Saint-Pierre-de-Juillers\n Saint-Pierre-de-Juillers is a commune in the Charente-Maritime department in southwestern France.", "Saint-Pierre-des-Landes\n Saint-Pierre-des-Landes is a commune in the Mayenne department in north-western France. Amenities: Small supermarket, boulangerie, infant school, dechetterie, repair garage, hairdresser, Mairie, fire station, small War Memorial, public toilets, small fishing lake", "Saint-Pierre-d'Autils\n Saint-Pierre-d'Autils is a former commune in the Eure department in Normandy in northern France. On 1 January 2017, it was merged into the new commune La Chapelle-Longueville. Its habitants are called the Petrusians.", "Saint-Pierre, Réunion\n Saint Pierre is the third-largest commune in the French overseas department and region of Réunion. Located on the southwest side of the island, it is the capital of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands. It developed from a port built from 1854 to 1882, which was used for the trade between Asia and Europe. Today, it features 400 sites for fishing and pleasure boats, while most of the commercial traffic moved north to Le Port.", "Sainte-Marie-de-Ré\n🇫🇷 Pierrefort The commune is twinned with:", "Saint-Pierre-Langers\n Saint-Pierre-Langers is a commune in the Manche department in Normandy in north-western France.", "Saint-Pierre-de-la-Fage\n Saint-Pierre-de-la-Fage (Languedocien: Sant Pèire de la Faja) is a commune in the Hérault department in the Occitanie region in southern France.", "Saint-Pierreville\n Saint-Pierreville (Sant Pèire Viala) is a commune in the Ardèche department in southern France.", "Saint-Pierre-les-Bois\n A farming area comprising the village and several hamlets situated by the banks of the small river Portefeuille, about 32 mi south of Bourges at the junction of the D69 with the D3 road. The river Arnon forms a small part of the commune’s northern border.", "Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage\n Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage (Sant-Pierro-de-Mèsâjo) is a commune in the Isère department in southeastern France. Saint-Pierre-de-Mésage is located next to the mountain of Connex and between the Vercors and Taillefer. Near Vizille and Grenoble. In 1946 an accident along the Rampe de Laffrey killed 18 near here.", "Saint-Pierre-d'Aubézies\n Saint-Pierre-d'Aubézies (Gascon: Sent Pèr d'Auvesias) is a commune in the Gers department in southwestern France.", "Saint-Pierre, Alpes-de-Haute-Provence\n Saint-Pierre (Sant Pèire) is a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in southeastern France.", "Saint-Pierre-lès-Franqueville\n Saint-Pierre-lès-Franqueville is a commune in the Aisne department and Hauts-de-France region of northern France.", "Saint-Pierre-les-Bois\n Saint-Pierre-les-Bois is a commune in the Cher department in the Centre-Val de Loire region of France.", "St-Pierre-Jolys\n St-Pierre-Jolys (formerly Rivière-aux-Rats/Rat River, St-Pierre/St. Pierre) is a village in the Canadian province of Manitoba, located 50 km southeast of Winnipeg on Highway 59 near the Rat River. It is surrounded by the Rural Municipality of De Salaberry, and the nearest communities to it are Steinbach, St. Malo, Morris and Niverville. Agriculture is the dominant industry: primarily dairy farming and livestock. Being important sectors for the life of the community, the local businesses, services, and hospitality are strong. Tourism is also important to the village: the former Crow Wing Trail is now part of the Trans-Canada Trail, and St. Pierre-Jolys hosts several popular festivals, such as la Cabane à Sucre (maple syrup festival) in April; le Festival Chantecler, a celebration of Francophone arts; and the signature St-Pierre-Jolys Frog Follies and Ag Fair (les Folies Grenouilles et Foire Agricoles), a village fair featuring the Canadian frog jumping competition. There are 3 schools, a hospital, and a sizable Royal Canadian Mounted Police detachment in the village. Bilingual St-Pierre-Jolys has collaborated with nearby St. Malo on several ventures, including a trade show and a hockey league. The dramatic sequences for the 2012 documentary We Were Children were shot there.", "Saint-Pierre-la-Cour\n Saint-Pierre-la-Cour is a commune, in the Mayenne department in the north-western of France.", "Saint-Pierre-de-Côle\n Saint-Pierre-de-Côle (Limousin: Sent Peir de Còla) is a commune in the Dordogne department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "Saint-Pierre-de-Clages\n Saint-Pierre-de-Clages is a village in Switzerland. It is located in the French-speaking part of the Canton of Valais in the municipality of Chamoson. The village of Saint-Pierre-de-Clages was joined with the municipality of Chamoson in 1376. It is famous for its 11th-century church with its octagonal bell tower. The village of Saint-Pierre-de-Clages is also known as the Swiss book town with an annual book festival." ]
In what country is Archipelago Museum?
[ "Finland", "Republic of Finland", "Finnia", "Land of Thousand Lakes", "fi", "Suomi", "Suomen tasavalta", "Republiken Finland", "🇫🇮", "FIN" ]
country
Archipelago Museum
420,208
54
[ { "id": "927047", "title": "Archipelago Museum", "text": " The Archipelago Museum (or Rönnäs-museum) in Rönnäs, Loviisa in Finland, is dedicated to coastal areas and the archipelagos and their specific life. It is run by a local trust from the start in 1985. The museum holds one of Finland's largest collections of traditional peasant boats. The basic exhibition located in the basement of the main building, stresses the impact of human life in the nature of the archipelagos by describing the initial colonization of the barren areas, as well as of the introduction of agrarian occupation. In addition to the maritime occupation such as seal hunting, fishery and seabird hunting, also coastal navigation and pilotage are presented in the exhibition. The boat occupies the central position in being the prime tool of ", "score": "1.6358408" }, { "id": "927048", "title": "Archipelago Museum", "text": " population. The upper floor of the main building presents an exhibition of wooden boats and boat building. Here we find work boats and boats of bygone days, as well as a presentation of wooden boat building along clinker and cravel-techniques. In addition to permanent exhibitions here mentioned the museum annually presents a selected theme connected to the maritime culture. In the wooden shed, opposite the main building, the visitor will find a collection of marine engines, inboard as well as outboard, possibly the most important in Finland. The upper floor of this shed houses an exhibition on summer life in the skerries in bygone days including pleasure boats. The museum trust also publishes a journal concerned with the archaeology and ethnology of boats.", "score": "1.5695882" }, { "id": "13710647", "title": "Archipelago National Park", "text": " Archipelago National Park (Skärgårdshavets nationalpark, Saaristomeren kansallispuisto) is a national park in Southwest Finland. It was established in 1983 and covers 500 km2 of land areas, a huge land area considering that the area mostly is outer archipelago with few islands even 1 km2 - and the big ones are inhabited and mostly privately owned and thus not part of the national park. The park's web pages give that number as non-qualified \"area\". It is part of the UNESCO biosphere reserves and received a PAN Parks certificate in 2007. The park encompasses all state-owned land and water areas owned by the state within the borders ", "score": "1.4530818" }, { "id": "4335467", "title": "Maritime Museum (Indonesia)", "text": " The Maritime Museum (Museum Bahari) is located in the old Sunda Kelapa harbor area in Penjaringan Administrative Village, Penjaringan Subdistrict, Jakarta, Indonesia. The museum was inaugurated inside the former Dutch East India Company warehouses. The museum focuses on the maritime history of Indonesia and the importance of the sea to the economy of present-day Indonesia. The museum displays models of fishing boats and other maritime objects from different parts of Indonesia. The museum also exhibits the celebrated Pinisi schooners of the Bugis people of South Sulawesi, which at present make up one of the last sea-going sailing fleets in the world. In January 2018, much of the museum was destroyed by a fire.", "score": "1.4383146" }, { "id": "11519245", "title": "List of museums by country", "text": "Falkland Islands Museum ", "score": "1.4345886" }, { "id": "13710666", "title": "Archipelago National Park", "text": " The main means of transportation in the Archipelago National Park are shuttle ships or boats. There is shuttle ship connection to all of the inhabited islands within the cooperation area. The islands of Holma, Jurmo and Berghamn are accessible by shuttle ship and national park services offered on the islands. The shuttle ship harbours at Prostvik and Pärnäs in Nagu and Kasnäs in Kimitoön are accessible by road and have bus connections. You can reach both the Archipelago visitor centre Blue Mussel and the Korpoström Archipelago centre by car.", "score": "1.4337239" }, { "id": "4859151", "title": "Indonesia Museum", "text": " The Indonesia Museum (Museum Indonesia), is an anthropology and ethnological museum located in Taman Mini Indonesia Indah (TMII), Jakarta, Indonesia. The museum is concentrated on arts and cultures of various ethnic groups that inhabit Indonesian archipelago and formed the modern nation of Indonesia. The museum is a richly decorated building in Balinese architecture. The museum boasts a comprehensive collection consisting of over 1,000 pieces of traditional and contemporary Indonesian arts, crafts and traditional costumes from the different regions of the nation.", "score": "1.4334797" }, { "id": "15782129", "title": "Museum of Science and the Cosmos", "text": " The Museum of Science and the Cosmos (El Museo de las Ciencias y el Cosmos), is an astronomy, technology, and science museum located in the city of San Cristóbal de La Laguna on Tenerife island, in the Spanish Canary Islands of Macaronesia. It belongs to the Cabildo de Tenerife and the Tenerife Organization of Museums and Centers. The museum opened in 1993 under the initiative of the Cabildo and the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC). It is considered the primary astronomy and science museum of the Canary Islands and the Macaronesian archipelago.", "score": "1.4279997" }, { "id": "7630321", "title": "Åland Museum", "text": " Cultural History Museum of Åland traces the history of the islands from prehistoric times up until the present day while the Art Museum houses a permanent collection of local art as well as interesting temporary exhibitions. The museum plays an inspirational place for display of culture of both Finland and Sweden. Complete history of the development of the islands (Ålands Islands are 6000 islands which are self-governing Islands off the Finnish coast. said to be politically Finnish but culturally Swedish), from prehistoric times onwards till date, is exhibited. Local artists are provided opportunities to display their paintings in exclusive areas of the museum. Ten such exhibitions are held every year on varying themes.", "score": "1.4220084" }, { "id": "4469530", "title": "Archipelago Tomorrow", "text": " Archipelago Tomorrow (Archipel Demain) is a right-wing political movement in the French collectivité d'outre-mer of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. It consists of Experience and Innovation and Miquelon Objectives. Archipelago Tomorrow is a socially conservative right-wing political party.", "score": "1.419282" }, { "id": "8646359", "title": "Turks and Caicos National Museum", "text": " The Turks and Caicos National Museum is the national museum of the Turks and Caicos Islands. It is located in Guinep House on Front Street to the north of Cockburn Town on Grand Turk Island, which is also the capital of the archipelago. Established in the 1980s and opened in 1991, the museum is publicly funded as a nonprofit trust. It exhibits pre-historic Lucayan culture and records the history of the islands of the colonial era and the slave trade, all related to the sea. An arboretum is adjacent to the museum.", "score": "1.4186687" }, { "id": "13710654", "title": "Archipelago National Park", "text": " southwestern archipelago became a part of the northern Baltic Sea region cultures, which had common means of livelihood, use of metals, and burial customs. The present National Park area became inhabited in the Iron Age (500 BCE-1150 CE). Many ancient remains of the Iron Age settlements have been found in the National Parks cooperation area. Pollen analysis has shown that the agriculture in the coast has been continuous since the Iron Age until these days. The most characteristic antiquities of the archipelago are relics from the historic times, from the end of the Iron Age until the 18th and 19th century. These immovable relics are also protected ", "score": "1.4174408" }, { "id": "11519267", "title": "List of museums by country", "text": "Pitcairn Island Museum ", "score": "1.4149798" }, { "id": "3346525", "title": "Museum Island", "text": " The Museum Island (Museumsinsel) is a museum complex on the northern part of the Spree Island in the historic heart of Berlin. It is one of the most visited sights of Germany's capital and one of the most important museum sites in Europe. Built from 1830 to 1930 by order of the Prussian Kings according to plans by five architects, the Museum Island was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. It consists of the Altes Museum, the Neues Museum, the Alte Nationalgalerie, the Bode-Museum and the Pergamonmuseum. As Museum Island includes all of Spree Island north of the Unter den Linden, the Berliner Dom is also located here, near the Lustgarten. To the south, the reconstructed Berlin Palace houses the Humboldt Forum museum and opened in 2020. Since the German reunification, the Museum Island has been rebuilt and extended according to a master plan. In 2019, a new visitor center and art gallery, the James Simon Gallery, was opened.", "score": "1.4145049" }, { "id": "24954201", "title": "Bagn Bygdesamling", "text": " The museum was founded in 1920 on the Islandsmoen farm. It includes the farm itself, a saw mill, a flour mill and other furnished buildings. The museum consisting of 12 log buildings and a building for permanent displays. The collection was donated to the village in 1941 by Olaus Islandsmoen, a local politician and educator. Additionally, the museum has exhibition about composer Sigurd Islandsmoen and an exhibition about the author Mikkjel Fønhus. The museum contains a preserved farm, a saw with water stream and a neighborhood school with an original interior. The museum has also displays at the small farms Sandviken and Bagnsbergatn. The last one is the site of a Norwegian World War II memorial location. All the items in the museum are original and have been collected from various farms and other locations in the area. The permanent display consists of artifacts from both the Stone Age and Iron Age, textiles and clothing, furniture and kitchen items and artifacts from the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany.", "score": "1.4142566" }, { "id": "11519242", "title": "List of museums by country", "text": "The Dominica Museum ", "score": "1.4119635" }, { "id": "16488743", "title": "Museum of the Islands", "text": " Museum of the Islands (MOTI) is a museum in Pine Island Center, Lee County, Florida. Exhibits include shells, dolls, household items, and fishing artifacts. The museum is housed in a former library building. It opened in 1989. The museum is located at 5728 Sesame.", "score": "1.411366" }, { "id": "6174313", "title": "Svalbard Museum", "text": " The Svalbard Museum is a museum in Longyearbyen, the largest town in the Svalbard archipelago. The museum displays artifacts from the history of Svalbard since its settlement, and exhibits of local plants and animals. Its exhibitions describe the factors that support human activity in Svalbard, showing the close relationship between nature and human cultural history on the islands. \"Life in Light and Ice\" is the museum's core exhibit. It describes the history of the archipelago, from the first whalers to the present society based on mining, research, and tourism. The museum is housed in the University Centre in Svalbard building. The Svalbard Museum was awarded the 2008 Council of Europe Museum Prize, awarded annually by the Committee on Culture, Science and Education of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (under the European Museum of the Year Award scheme of the European Museum Forum)). The award is given annually to a European museum which (among other criteria) is judged to have made a significant contribution to the understanding of European cultural heritage.", "score": "1.409807" }, { "id": "13710649", "title": "Archipelago National Park", "text": " the archipelago culture and different cultural landscapes. The cooperation area plays a great in this. The National park by itself encompasses about 2000 of the 8400 islets and skerries within the cooperation area. The larger islands are mainly owned by their inhabitants. One may move around freely by boat in the National park, with the exception of some protected areas. Shuttle ships operate the inhabited islands and many entrepreneurs offer transportation by agreement. Camping is allowed only in designated places (allowed on privately own lands in accordance with the freedom to roam), remembering to respect the domestic peace. Building campfires is allowed only in ", "score": "1.4047059" }, { "id": "3148380", "title": "Museo de la Naturaleza y Arqueología", "text": " Museo de la Naturaleza y Arqueología (MUNA), (Museum of Nature and Archeology, formerly Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre) is a museum-based in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, (Canary Islands, Spain). It contains many significant archaeological finds and is considered the best repository of objects from the Pre-Castilian Canary Islands. The museum also houses significant paleontological, botanical, entomological, and marine and terrestrial vertebrate collections, and is considered the best Natural Library of the Canary Islands. Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre integrates the Archaeological Museum of Tenerife, the Bioantropología's Canary Institute and the Museum of Natural Sciences of Tenerife. The museum is ", "score": "1.4045012" } ]
[ "Archipelago Museum\n The Archipelago Museum (or Rönnäs-museum) in Rönnäs, Loviisa in Finland, is dedicated to coastal areas and the archipelagos and their specific life. It is run by a local trust from the start in 1985. The museum holds one of Finland's largest collections of traditional peasant boats. The basic exhibition located in the basement of the main building, stresses the impact of human life in the nature of the archipelagos by describing the initial colonization of the barren areas, as well as of the introduction of agrarian occupation. In addition to the maritime occupation such as seal hunting, fishery and seabird hunting, also coastal navigation and pilotage are presented in the exhibition. The boat occupies the central position in being the prime tool of ", "Archipelago Museum\n population. The upper floor of the main building presents an exhibition of wooden boats and boat building. Here we find work boats and boats of bygone days, as well as a presentation of wooden boat building along clinker and cravel-techniques. In addition to permanent exhibitions here mentioned the museum annually presents a selected theme connected to the maritime culture. In the wooden shed, opposite the main building, the visitor will find a collection of marine engines, inboard as well as outboard, possibly the most important in Finland. The upper floor of this shed houses an exhibition on summer life in the skerries in bygone days including pleasure boats. The museum trust also publishes a journal concerned with the archaeology and ethnology of boats.", "Archipelago National Park\n Archipelago National Park (Skärgårdshavets nationalpark, Saaristomeren kansallispuisto) is a national park in Southwest Finland. It was established in 1983 and covers 500 km2 of land areas, a huge land area considering that the area mostly is outer archipelago with few islands even 1 km2 - and the big ones are inhabited and mostly privately owned and thus not part of the national park. The park's web pages give that number as non-qualified \"area\". It is part of the UNESCO biosphere reserves and received a PAN Parks certificate in 2007. The park encompasses all state-owned land and water areas owned by the state within the borders ", "Maritime Museum (Indonesia)\n The Maritime Museum (Museum Bahari) is located in the old Sunda Kelapa harbor area in Penjaringan Administrative Village, Penjaringan Subdistrict, Jakarta, Indonesia. The museum was inaugurated inside the former Dutch East India Company warehouses. The museum focuses on the maritime history of Indonesia and the importance of the sea to the economy of present-day Indonesia. The museum displays models of fishing boats and other maritime objects from different parts of Indonesia. The museum also exhibits the celebrated Pinisi schooners of the Bugis people of South Sulawesi, which at present make up one of the last sea-going sailing fleets in the world. In January 2018, much of the museum was destroyed by a fire.", "List of museums by country\nFalkland Islands Museum ", "Archipelago National Park\n The main means of transportation in the Archipelago National Park are shuttle ships or boats. There is shuttle ship connection to all of the inhabited islands within the cooperation area. The islands of Holma, Jurmo and Berghamn are accessible by shuttle ship and national park services offered on the islands. The shuttle ship harbours at Prostvik and Pärnäs in Nagu and Kasnäs in Kimitoön are accessible by road and have bus connections. You can reach both the Archipelago visitor centre Blue Mussel and the Korpoström Archipelago centre by car.", "Indonesia Museum\n The Indonesia Museum (Museum Indonesia), is an anthropology and ethnological museum located in Taman Mini Indonesia Indah (TMII), Jakarta, Indonesia. The museum is concentrated on arts and cultures of various ethnic groups that inhabit Indonesian archipelago and formed the modern nation of Indonesia. The museum is a richly decorated building in Balinese architecture. The museum boasts a comprehensive collection consisting of over 1,000 pieces of traditional and contemporary Indonesian arts, crafts and traditional costumes from the different regions of the nation.", "Museum of Science and the Cosmos\n The Museum of Science and the Cosmos (El Museo de las Ciencias y el Cosmos), is an astronomy, technology, and science museum located in the city of San Cristóbal de La Laguna on Tenerife island, in the Spanish Canary Islands of Macaronesia. It belongs to the Cabildo de Tenerife and the Tenerife Organization of Museums and Centers. The museum opened in 1993 under the initiative of the Cabildo and the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC). It is considered the primary astronomy and science museum of the Canary Islands and the Macaronesian archipelago.", "Åland Museum\n Cultural History Museum of Åland traces the history of the islands from prehistoric times up until the present day while the Art Museum houses a permanent collection of local art as well as interesting temporary exhibitions. The museum plays an inspirational place for display of culture of both Finland and Sweden. Complete history of the development of the islands (Ålands Islands are 6000 islands which are self-governing Islands off the Finnish coast. said to be politically Finnish but culturally Swedish), from prehistoric times onwards till date, is exhibited. Local artists are provided opportunities to display their paintings in exclusive areas of the museum. Ten such exhibitions are held every year on varying themes.", "Archipelago Tomorrow\n Archipelago Tomorrow (Archipel Demain) is a right-wing political movement in the French collectivité d'outre-mer of Saint Pierre and Miquelon. It consists of Experience and Innovation and Miquelon Objectives. Archipelago Tomorrow is a socially conservative right-wing political party.", "Turks and Caicos National Museum\n The Turks and Caicos National Museum is the national museum of the Turks and Caicos Islands. It is located in Guinep House on Front Street to the north of Cockburn Town on Grand Turk Island, which is also the capital of the archipelago. Established in the 1980s and opened in 1991, the museum is publicly funded as a nonprofit trust. It exhibits pre-historic Lucayan culture and records the history of the islands of the colonial era and the slave trade, all related to the sea. An arboretum is adjacent to the museum.", "Archipelago National Park\n southwestern archipelago became a part of the northern Baltic Sea region cultures, which had common means of livelihood, use of metals, and burial customs. The present National Park area became inhabited in the Iron Age (500 BCE-1150 CE). Many ancient remains of the Iron Age settlements have been found in the National Parks cooperation area. Pollen analysis has shown that the agriculture in the coast has been continuous since the Iron Age until these days. The most characteristic antiquities of the archipelago are relics from the historic times, from the end of the Iron Age until the 18th and 19th century. These immovable relics are also protected ", "List of museums by country\nPitcairn Island Museum ", "Museum Island\n The Museum Island (Museumsinsel) is a museum complex on the northern part of the Spree Island in the historic heart of Berlin. It is one of the most visited sights of Germany's capital and one of the most important museum sites in Europe. Built from 1830 to 1930 by order of the Prussian Kings according to plans by five architects, the Museum Island was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1999. It consists of the Altes Museum, the Neues Museum, the Alte Nationalgalerie, the Bode-Museum and the Pergamonmuseum. As Museum Island includes all of Spree Island north of the Unter den Linden, the Berliner Dom is also located here, near the Lustgarten. To the south, the reconstructed Berlin Palace houses the Humboldt Forum museum and opened in 2020. Since the German reunification, the Museum Island has been rebuilt and extended according to a master plan. In 2019, a new visitor center and art gallery, the James Simon Gallery, was opened.", "Bagn Bygdesamling\n The museum was founded in 1920 on the Islandsmoen farm. It includes the farm itself, a saw mill, a flour mill and other furnished buildings. The museum consisting of 12 log buildings and a building for permanent displays. The collection was donated to the village in 1941 by Olaus Islandsmoen, a local politician and educator. Additionally, the museum has exhibition about composer Sigurd Islandsmoen and an exhibition about the author Mikkjel Fønhus. The museum contains a preserved farm, a saw with water stream and a neighborhood school with an original interior. The museum has also displays at the small farms Sandviken and Bagnsbergatn. The last one is the site of a Norwegian World War II memorial location. All the items in the museum are original and have been collected from various farms and other locations in the area. The permanent display consists of artifacts from both the Stone Age and Iron Age, textiles and clothing, furniture and kitchen items and artifacts from the Occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany.", "List of museums by country\nThe Dominica Museum ", "Museum of the Islands\n Museum of the Islands (MOTI) is a museum in Pine Island Center, Lee County, Florida. Exhibits include shells, dolls, household items, and fishing artifacts. The museum is housed in a former library building. It opened in 1989. The museum is located at 5728 Sesame.", "Svalbard Museum\n The Svalbard Museum is a museum in Longyearbyen, the largest town in the Svalbard archipelago. The museum displays artifacts from the history of Svalbard since its settlement, and exhibits of local plants and animals. Its exhibitions describe the factors that support human activity in Svalbard, showing the close relationship between nature and human cultural history on the islands. \"Life in Light and Ice\" is the museum's core exhibit. It describes the history of the archipelago, from the first whalers to the present society based on mining, research, and tourism. The museum is housed in the University Centre in Svalbard building. The Svalbard Museum was awarded the 2008 Council of Europe Museum Prize, awarded annually by the Committee on Culture, Science and Education of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (under the European Museum of the Year Award scheme of the European Museum Forum)). The award is given annually to a European museum which (among other criteria) is judged to have made a significant contribution to the understanding of European cultural heritage.", "Archipelago National Park\n the archipelago culture and different cultural landscapes. The cooperation area plays a great in this. The National park by itself encompasses about 2000 of the 8400 islets and skerries within the cooperation area. The larger islands are mainly owned by their inhabitants. One may move around freely by boat in the National park, with the exception of some protected areas. Shuttle ships operate the inhabited islands and many entrepreneurs offer transportation by agreement. Camping is allowed only in designated places (allowed on privately own lands in accordance with the freedom to roam), remembering to respect the domestic peace. Building campfires is allowed only in ", "Museo de la Naturaleza y Arqueología\n Museo de la Naturaleza y Arqueología (MUNA), (Museum of Nature and Archeology, formerly Museo de Ciencias Naturales, Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre) is a museum-based in Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Tenerife, (Canary Islands, Spain). It contains many significant archaeological finds and is considered the best repository of objects from the Pre-Castilian Canary Islands. The museum also houses significant paleontological, botanical, entomological, and marine and terrestrial vertebrate collections, and is considered the best Natural Library of the Canary Islands. Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre integrates the Archaeological Museum of Tenerife, the Bioantropología's Canary Institute and the Museum of Natural Sciences of Tenerife. The museum is " ]
In what country is Revigliasco d'Asti?
[ "Italy", "Italia", "Italian Republic", "IT", "🇮🇹", "ITA" ]
country
Revigliasco d'Asti
1,292,989
95
[ { "id": "33176037", "title": "Revigliasco d'Asti", "text": "🇫🇷 Garons, France (2000) Revigliasco d'Asti is twinned with: ", "score": "2.0693266" }, { "id": "33176036", "title": "Revigliasco d'Asti", "text": " Revigliasco d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 45 km southeast of Turin and about 6 km southwest of Asti. Revigliasco d'Asti borders the following municipalities: Antignano, Asti, Celle Enomondo, and Isola d'Asti.", "score": "2.0654163" }, { "id": "33175674", "title": "Costigliole d'Asti", "text": "🇩🇪 Weinsberg, Germany; twinned since 2000 ", "score": "1.67432" }, { "id": "1461110", "title": "A.S.D. Asti", "text": " A.S.D. Asti, known as Asti and formerly A.S.D. Alfieri Asti or A.S.D. Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (Colline Alfieri D.B. or just Colline Alfieri ), is an Italian football club based in Asti, Piedmont. FIGC registration number of the club is 63,519. The club spent entire history in the Piedmont - Aosta Valley divisions of the Lega Nazionale Dilettanti.", "score": "1.5844802" }, { "id": "33175944", "title": "Montechiaro d'Asti", "text": "🇮🇹 Finale Ligure, Italy ", "score": "1.5687823" }, { "id": "28987109", "title": "Asti", "text": " The three neighbouring Provinces of Asti, Cuneo, and Alessandria incorporate the Langhe and Monferrato Hills region in the centre of Piedmont, limestone and sandstone deposits laid down by the retreating Adriatic some 5 million years ago, and are home to some of Italy's most known red wines, plus some white ones. Asti is the center of production of the sparkling Asti (DOCG, often known as Asti Spumante). Asti is typically sweet and low in alcohol (often below 8%). It is made solely from the moscato bianco white muscat grape. Other wines include a premium version known as Moscato d'Asti (DOCG) and the red Barbera. The first products from the province of Asti to become known internationally are Martini and Rossi, Gancia and Riccadonna, which made commercial wines like Asti Spumante; red wines such as Barbera d'Asti, Freisa d'Asti, Grignolino d'Asti, Bonarda, Grignolino and Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato are also becoming widespread worldwide. These wines and many others can be sampled during the week-long Douja d'Or wine exhibition which is held at the same time as the Palio and Sagre. The first documentation on the variety Freisa d'Asti are from the beginning of the 16th century.", "score": "1.5607779" }, { "id": "28987091", "title": "Asti", "text": " Asti (, , ; Ast ) is a comune of 74,348 inhabitants (1-1-2021) located in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, about 55 km east of Turin in the plain of the Tanaro River. It is the capital of the province of Asti and it is deemed to be the modern capital of Montferrat.", "score": "1.519292" }, { "id": "26666909", "title": "List of Italian DOCG wines", "text": "Asti in the sub-appellations Asti (Bianco) and Moscato d'Asti (Bianco), produced in the provinces of Asti, Cuneo and Alessandria ; Barbaresco (Rosso as normale and Riserva), produced in the province of Cuneo ; Barbera d'Asti (Rosso as normale and Superiore), produced in the province of Asti, with the option to indicate one of the sub-regions ; Tinella in the region surrounding Costigliole d'Asti ; Colli Astiani in the region surrounding Vigliano d'Asti ; Nizza, produced in the region surrounding Nizza Monferrato. Formerly a sub-region of Barbera d'Asti, it was promoted to DOCG in 2014 ; Barbera del Monferrato Superiore (Rosso), produced in the provinces of Asti and Alessandria ; Barolo (Rosso as normale, Riserva and Chinato), produced in the province of Cuneo ; Brachetto d'Acqui or Acqui (Rosso as normale and Spumante), produced in the provinces of Asti and Alessandria ; Dolcetto di Dogliani ", "score": "1.4859438" }, { "id": "28987115", "title": "Asti", "text": "🇺🇸 Miami-Dade, Florida, United States, since 1985 ; 🇫🇷 Valence, France, since 1966 ; 🇩🇪 Biberach an der Riß, Germany ; 🇮🇱 Ma'alot-Tarshiha, Israel ; Nanyang, Henan, China Asti is twinned with:", "score": "1.4849036" }, { "id": "33175671", "title": "Costigliole d'Asti", "text": " Costigliole d'Asti is particularly known for its viticulture. Its vineyards, which cover an area of more than 11.75 km², are the most extensive of any Piedmontese commune.", "score": "1.4805025" }, { "id": "33175670", "title": "Costigliole d'Asti", "text": " Costigliole d'Asti (Costiòle d'Ast) is a small Italian town in the Province of Asti, southern Piedmont. It lies about 13 km south of the city of Asti in the Alto Monferrato, on the edge of the Langhe, in the alluvial plain of the river Tanaro southwards into the hills. The name derives from the Latin Corte Costeliolae. The neighbouring communes are Agliano Terme, Antignano, Calosso, Castagnole delle Lanze, Isola d'Asti, Montegrosso d'Asti, and San Martino Alfieri (in the Province of Asti); and Castiglione Tinella and Govone (in the Province of Cuneo).", "score": "1.4800718" }, { "id": "531127", "title": "Asti's Festival of Festivals", "text": " The Festival delle Sagre features Italy's largest open-air restaurant, offering a variety of authentic Piedmont cuisine. More than 40 Pro Loco organizations of the Province of Asti present their specialties, accompanied by Asti DOC and DOCG wines, from stalls set up in Asti's large, central 'Campo del Palio' square, arranged to re-create an old village atmosphere. Both written and oral recipes created by generations of rural people are used each year to present a menu of over eighty different dishes, prepared using ingredients that are typical for the Asti region. Some are unusual, such as rice with Barbera d'Asti, Polenta with wild boar stew, rabbit agnolotti, fried bleak (alborelle - a type of fish), farinata (belecauda in Asti dialect) or bollitto with bagnetto verde. Some dishes are prepared in almost industrial quantities - in 2004 over 4,000 kg of rabbit agnolotti were consumed - and are sold at affordable prices. ", "score": "1.4797521" }, { "id": "9973350", "title": "Malvasia di Castelnuovo Don Bosco", "text": " The production regulations require that the grapes are grown on the hills within the borders of the following communes of the Province of Asti: Albugnano, Castelnuovo Don Bosco, Passerano Marmorito, Pino d’Asti, Berzano di San Pietro and Moncucco Torinese. The wine itself is preferably made in the same area, however vinification is allowed elsewhere in the Province of Asti and the wine is currently produced also in wineries in Cocconato and Calosso.", "score": "1.4569683" }, { "id": "28987117", "title": "Villanova d'Asti", "text": "🇫🇷 Châteaurenard, France, since 1994 ; 🇦🇷 Santa Clara de Saguier, Argentina, since 2012 Villanova d'Asti is twinned with: ", "score": "1.4445984" }, { "id": "33175404", "title": "Buttigliera d'Asti", "text": " Buttigliera d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 20 km southeast of Turin and about 25 km northwest of Asti.", "score": "1.444269" }, { "id": "7739231", "title": "Reșița", "text": "🇨🇦 Canada, Moncton ; 🇮🇹 Italy, Pesaro ", "score": "1.4409759" }, { "id": "27739727", "title": "Asti Calcio F.C.", "text": " Another club, Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (FIGC registration number: 63519 ) was renamed to A.S.D. Alfieri Asti as an illegitimate phoenix club. In 2019 the club was renamed to A.S.D. Asti. The club has no relation to yet another club, Don Bosco Asti. The club played in Eccellenza Piedmont-Aosta Valley since 2017 (as of 2019–20 season).", "score": "1.4369032" }, { "id": "33175728", "title": "Isola d'Asti", "text": " Isola d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 45 km southeast of Turin and about 8 km south of Asti. Isola d'Asti borders the following municipalities: Antignano, Asti, Costigliole d'Asti, Mongardino, Montegrosso d'Asti, Revigliasco d'Asti, and Vigliano d'Asti. The municipal seat is in the frazione of Isola Piano.", "score": "1.4323705" }, { "id": "28987111", "title": "Asti", "text": " The main football club of the town was Asti Calcio F.C. (ex-A.C.D. Asti), which folded in 2017. Another football club, A.S.D. Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (ex-A.C. Celle, from Celle Enomondo), relocated to the city and was renamed to \"A.S.D. Alfieri Asti\" in 2017. Since 2019 it was known as A.S.D. Asti. Former futsal league champion, A.S.D. Asti Calcio a 5 is also based in Asti.", "score": "1.4264312" }, { "id": "15063744", "title": "Asti wine", "text": " Asti (also known as Asti Spumante) is a sparkling white Italian wine that is produced throughout southeastern Piedmont but is particularly focused around the towns of Asti and Alba. Since 1993 the wine has been classified as a Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) and as of 2004 was Italy's largest producing appellation. On an average vintage more than ten times as much Asti is produced in Piedmont than the more well-known Piedmontese red wine Barolo. Made from the Moscato Bianco grape, it is sweet and low in alcohol, and often served with dessert. Unlike Champagne, Asti is not made ", "score": "1.4237752" } ]
[ "Revigliasco d'Asti\n🇫🇷 Garons, France (2000) Revigliasco d'Asti is twinned with: ", "Revigliasco d'Asti\n Revigliasco d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 45 km southeast of Turin and about 6 km southwest of Asti. Revigliasco d'Asti borders the following municipalities: Antignano, Asti, Celle Enomondo, and Isola d'Asti.", "Costigliole d'Asti\n🇩🇪 Weinsberg, Germany; twinned since 2000 ", "A.S.D. Asti\n A.S.D. Asti, known as Asti and formerly A.S.D. Alfieri Asti or A.S.D. Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (Colline Alfieri D.B. or just Colline Alfieri ), is an Italian football club based in Asti, Piedmont. FIGC registration number of the club is 63,519. The club spent entire history in the Piedmont - Aosta Valley divisions of the Lega Nazionale Dilettanti.", "Montechiaro d'Asti\n🇮🇹 Finale Ligure, Italy ", "Asti\n The three neighbouring Provinces of Asti, Cuneo, and Alessandria incorporate the Langhe and Monferrato Hills region in the centre of Piedmont, limestone and sandstone deposits laid down by the retreating Adriatic some 5 million years ago, and are home to some of Italy's most known red wines, plus some white ones. Asti is the center of production of the sparkling Asti (DOCG, often known as Asti Spumante). Asti is typically sweet and low in alcohol (often below 8%). It is made solely from the moscato bianco white muscat grape. Other wines include a premium version known as Moscato d'Asti (DOCG) and the red Barbera. The first products from the province of Asti to become known internationally are Martini and Rossi, Gancia and Riccadonna, which made commercial wines like Asti Spumante; red wines such as Barbera d'Asti, Freisa d'Asti, Grignolino d'Asti, Bonarda, Grignolino and Ruché di Castagnole Monferrato are also becoming widespread worldwide. These wines and many others can be sampled during the week-long Douja d'Or wine exhibition which is held at the same time as the Palio and Sagre. The first documentation on the variety Freisa d'Asti are from the beginning of the 16th century.", "Asti\n Asti (, , ; Ast ) is a comune of 74,348 inhabitants (1-1-2021) located in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy, about 55 km east of Turin in the plain of the Tanaro River. It is the capital of the province of Asti and it is deemed to be the modern capital of Montferrat.", "List of Italian DOCG wines\nAsti in the sub-appellations Asti (Bianco) and Moscato d'Asti (Bianco), produced in the provinces of Asti, Cuneo and Alessandria ; Barbaresco (Rosso as normale and Riserva), produced in the province of Cuneo ; Barbera d'Asti (Rosso as normale and Superiore), produced in the province of Asti, with the option to indicate one of the sub-regions ; Tinella in the region surrounding Costigliole d'Asti ; Colli Astiani in the region surrounding Vigliano d'Asti ; Nizza, produced in the region surrounding Nizza Monferrato. Formerly a sub-region of Barbera d'Asti, it was promoted to DOCG in 2014 ; Barbera del Monferrato Superiore (Rosso), produced in the provinces of Asti and Alessandria ; Barolo (Rosso as normale, Riserva and Chinato), produced in the province of Cuneo ; Brachetto d'Acqui or Acqui (Rosso as normale and Spumante), produced in the provinces of Asti and Alessandria ; Dolcetto di Dogliani ", "Asti\n🇺🇸 Miami-Dade, Florida, United States, since 1985 ; 🇫🇷 Valence, France, since 1966 ; 🇩🇪 Biberach an der Riß, Germany ; 🇮🇱 Ma'alot-Tarshiha, Israel ; Nanyang, Henan, China Asti is twinned with:", "Costigliole d'Asti\n Costigliole d'Asti is particularly known for its viticulture. Its vineyards, which cover an area of more than 11.75 km², are the most extensive of any Piedmontese commune.", "Costigliole d'Asti\n Costigliole d'Asti (Costiòle d'Ast) is a small Italian town in the Province of Asti, southern Piedmont. It lies about 13 km south of the city of Asti in the Alto Monferrato, on the edge of the Langhe, in the alluvial plain of the river Tanaro southwards into the hills. The name derives from the Latin Corte Costeliolae. The neighbouring communes are Agliano Terme, Antignano, Calosso, Castagnole delle Lanze, Isola d'Asti, Montegrosso d'Asti, and San Martino Alfieri (in the Province of Asti); and Castiglione Tinella and Govone (in the Province of Cuneo).", "Asti's Festival of Festivals\n The Festival delle Sagre features Italy's largest open-air restaurant, offering a variety of authentic Piedmont cuisine. More than 40 Pro Loco organizations of the Province of Asti present their specialties, accompanied by Asti DOC and DOCG wines, from stalls set up in Asti's large, central 'Campo del Palio' square, arranged to re-create an old village atmosphere. Both written and oral recipes created by generations of rural people are used each year to present a menu of over eighty different dishes, prepared using ingredients that are typical for the Asti region. Some are unusual, such as rice with Barbera d'Asti, Polenta with wild boar stew, rabbit agnolotti, fried bleak (alborelle - a type of fish), farinata (belecauda in Asti dialect) or bollitto with bagnetto verde. Some dishes are prepared in almost industrial quantities - in 2004 over 4,000 kg of rabbit agnolotti were consumed - and are sold at affordable prices. ", "Malvasia di Castelnuovo Don Bosco\n The production regulations require that the grapes are grown on the hills within the borders of the following communes of the Province of Asti: Albugnano, Castelnuovo Don Bosco, Passerano Marmorito, Pino d’Asti, Berzano di San Pietro and Moncucco Torinese. The wine itself is preferably made in the same area, however vinification is allowed elsewhere in the Province of Asti and the wine is currently produced also in wineries in Cocconato and Calosso.", "Villanova d'Asti\n🇫🇷 Châteaurenard, France, since 1994 ; 🇦🇷 Santa Clara de Saguier, Argentina, since 2012 Villanova d'Asti is twinned with: ", "Buttigliera d'Asti\n Buttigliera d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 20 km southeast of Turin and about 25 km northwest of Asti.", "Reșița\n🇨🇦 Canada, Moncton ; 🇮🇹 Italy, Pesaro ", "Asti Calcio F.C.\n Another club, Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (FIGC registration number: 63519 ) was renamed to A.S.D. Alfieri Asti as an illegitimate phoenix club. In 2019 the club was renamed to A.S.D. Asti. The club has no relation to yet another club, Don Bosco Asti. The club played in Eccellenza Piedmont-Aosta Valley since 2017 (as of 2019–20 season).", "Isola d'Asti\n Isola d'Asti is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Asti in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 45 km southeast of Turin and about 8 km south of Asti. Isola d'Asti borders the following municipalities: Antignano, Asti, Costigliole d'Asti, Mongardino, Montegrosso d'Asti, Revigliasco d'Asti, and Vigliano d'Asti. The municipal seat is in the frazione of Isola Piano.", "Asti\n The main football club of the town was Asti Calcio F.C. (ex-A.C.D. Asti), which folded in 2017. Another football club, A.S.D. Colline Alfieri Don Bosco (ex-A.C. Celle, from Celle Enomondo), relocated to the city and was renamed to \"A.S.D. Alfieri Asti\" in 2017. Since 2019 it was known as A.S.D. Asti. Former futsal league champion, A.S.D. Asti Calcio a 5 is also based in Asti.", "Asti wine\n Asti (also known as Asti Spumante) is a sparkling white Italian wine that is produced throughout southeastern Piedmont but is particularly focused around the towns of Asti and Alba. Since 1993 the wine has been classified as a Denominazione di Origine Controllata e Garantita (DOCG) and as of 2004 was Italy's largest producing appellation. On an average vintage more than ten times as much Asti is produced in Piedmont than the more well-known Piedmontese red wine Barolo. Made from the Moscato Bianco grape, it is sweet and low in alcohol, and often served with dessert. Unlike Champagne, Asti is not made " ]
In what country is Willow River?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Willow River (Mississippi River tributary)
1,093,104
62
[ { "id": "32883666", "title": "Willow River (British Columbia)", "text": " The Willow River is a tributary of the Fraser River in the north-central Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It enters the Fraser near the community of Willow River, just upstream from the city of Prince George, near the confluence of the Salmon River. Its source is in the Cariboo goldfields at Jack of Clubs Lake in the mining and arts community of Wells, British Columbia, near Barkerville. In 1974, the canyon of the Willow River, east of Prince George, was the scene of a tragic accident involving eight teenagers who died when their three canoes and kayak were broken in the raging waters and boulders of a narrow gorge.", "score": "1.5195093" }, { "id": "5583384", "title": "Willow River (Kettle River tributary)", "text": " The Willow River is a 31.4 mi tributary of the Kettle River in eastern Minnesota in the United States. It is one of three rivers by that name in Minnesota. Via the Kettle and St. Croix rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River.", "score": "1.5192432" }, { "id": "30954821", "title": "Willow River, Minnesota", "text": " Willow River is a city in Pine County, Minnesota, United States, at the confluence of the Kettle and Willow Rivers. The population was 415 at the 2010 census. Interstate 35, County Road 43, and County 61 (Cross Street) are three of the main routes in the community.", "score": "1.5168092" }, { "id": "4177487", "title": "Big Willow River", "text": "\"Big Willow River\" at Atlas of Canada. Accessed 2016-04-24. ", "score": "1.5085021" }, { "id": "12623365", "title": "Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan", "text": " After a devastating prairie fire destroyed much of the grass and timber in the area around Wood Mountain, Saskatchewan, many First Nations and Métis people were driven by a bison shortage and an increasing population to seek out new settlements. Many settled along the Milk River, south of the 49th parallel, and the Frenchman River, one of its tributaries in Saskatchewan. A number of them settled in the area known by the Métis as Talle de Saules (clump of willows) and Hart Rouge, now known as Willow Bunch. In 1881, Jean-Louis Légaré, a French-Canadian trader and one of the founding members of ", "score": "1.5016153" }, { "id": "1721273", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " Willow River is a community northeast of Prince George, on the northeast bank of the Willow River, 2.5 km southeast of the confluence with the Fraser River, in central British Columbia. The name derives from the many willow swamps in the river valley. Comprising about 150 residents, it has a general store/post-office, a volunteer fire department, church building and a small community hall. Street map.", "score": "1.5011795" }, { "id": "1721324", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " In May 1913, two surveyors of the township drowned in a canoeing accident on the Fraser reef below the Willow. Along the Upper Fraser River, this location, the Giscome Rapids, the Grand Canyon, and the Goat River Rapids, were extremely dangerous and believed to be the scenes of numerous drownings. In July, a scow loaded with 17 tons of rails and dump cars, was cut free from its moorings at Willow River and drifted downstream until it was deliberately maneuvered onto a sandbar 30 mi north of Quesnel. During 1914–16, the jail/police barracks, on the south corner of Gwen and Willow, stationed BC Provincial Police Constable Henry N. Wood (1889–1967) & his ", "score": "1.4845059" }, { "id": "4177486", "title": "Big Willow River", "text": " The Big Willow River is a river in northeastern Kenora District in northwestern Ontario, Canada. It is a tributary of James Bay. The Big Willow River begins in muskeg and flows north-northeast to its mouth at James Bay.", "score": "1.4762493" }, { "id": "30954827", "title": "Willow River, Minnesota", "text": " According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 1.86 sqmi, of which 1.71 sqmi is land and 0.15 sqmi is water.", "score": "1.4655693" }, { "id": "30954826", "title": "Willow River, Minnesota", "text": " men. The mill cut 125,000 feet of lumber per day during their peak season. Many who worked in the logging camps during the winter came to the mill to work in the spring. On May 8, 1891, the village plat was filed in Pine County. The Fox-Wisdom Lumber Company and its employees made up the majority of property owners. Willow River, like many other villages in northern Minnesota, owed its existence to the lumber industry. In November 1891, Willow River was incorporated as a village by a vote of 37 to 18 in the upstairs hall of the Fox-Wisdom Company store.", "score": "1.4637176" }, { "id": "1721322", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " community hall opened in 1949 on the south corner of Reta and Willow. The furnace, installed almost a decade later, ameliorated wintertime use of the building. Social events were held for teenagers in the hall or school. In 1970, the dilapidated hall was demolished, and the population estimate of 500 seems overstated. People had dispersed after the mills closed and the remaining residents drove to jobs in Giscome. The Willow River Recreation Association (WRRA) was incorporated in 1971. The school building continued to be used for social events such as dancing. In need of major maintenance, demolition became the only option. Opened in 1980, the ", "score": "1.4606545" }, { "id": "33149882", "title": "Willows, Saskatchewan", "text": " Willows is an unincorporated community in Lake of the Rivers Rural Municipality No. 72, Saskatchewan, Canada. It previously held the status of a village until January 1, 1950. The name is a contraction of William Gibson Lowes, owner of the first store.", "score": "1.4582286" }, { "id": "1721278", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " as \"Willow River\", and then further described the location as \"the only townsite registered as Willow River\". Either their acquisition of Lot 782 between the two developments or legal pressure amended it to \"next to the GTP townsite of Willow River\". The devious marketing practices created some buyer remorse among naïve faraway investors. Most of the premium lots with river frontage are now merely river silt. Meanwhile, the GTP weekly advertisements publicized their land as \"the only one official and original GTP town of Willow River\". Based in South Fort George, F.W. Crawford, the BC manager of the GTP's Transcontinental Townsites ", "score": "1.4381003" }, { "id": "12623361", "title": "Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan", "text": " The Métis Local #17 in Willow Bunch is one of the first Locals established within the Métis Nation of Saskatchewan.", "score": "1.4366076" }, { "id": "1721274", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " A trackside signpost marks the flag stop for Via Rail's Jasper – Prince Rupert train. The immediate Via Rail stops are Prince George to the southwest and Aleza Lake to the east.", "score": "1.4326453" }, { "id": "1721275", "title": "Willow River, British Columbia", "text": " The river confluence, close proximity to the Salmon River, and being handy to the Giscome Portage, made it a strategic location. The Cariboo, Barkerville & Willow River Railway (CB&WR) proposed linking Barkerville and Eagle (Eaglet) Lake. In its 1909 Annual Report, the Willow River Timber Co. (WRT) of Ontario highlighted the line's value in accessing the company's remote timber limits in the upper reaches of the Willow River. Investing $1.5 million in timber limits, a British syndicate planned a mammoth sawmill at the river mouth. The CB&WR never eventuated. Asset sales followed the 1922 WRT receivership. By 1912, a Victoria-based syndicate ", "score": "1.4325006" }, { "id": "30811425", "title": "Willowby, New Zealand", "text": " Willowby has its own volunteer rural fire fighting unit. It covers a catchment between the Ashburton and Hinds rivers and was founded to serve the local farming community, especially during dry summers. It has 21 members, and as part of the national rural fire service, it can provide assistance and back-up to other volunteer units in the surrounding region.", "score": "1.4312526" }, { "id": "30954823", "title": "Willow River, Minnesota", "text": " only in August 1879 that the completed line from St. Paul to Duluth was opened. The railroad helped settle and promote living in the northern part of Minnesota. The railroad also promoted the lumber industry. Many towns and villages, including Willow River, were organized once a lumber company set up shop. In March 1874, the Kettle River Township was organized and Willow River at this time consisted of a railroad depot, water tank, wood yard, and two section houses built for the railroad hands. Pine County records show that the three sections of land that would eventually make up the village of ", "score": "1.4305851" }, { "id": "10658113", "title": "Willow Beach National Fish Hatchery", "text": " The Willow Beach National Fish Hatchery is administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, located approximately 45 miles (72.4 km) South East of Las Vegas, Nevada, in Mohave County, Arizona on the Arizona side of the Colorado River twelve miles (~19 km) south of the Hoover Dam.", "score": "1.429838" }, { "id": "4083392", "title": "Willow Creek Border Crossing", "text": " The Willow Creek Border Crossing connects the cities of Havre, Montana and Govenlock, Saskatchewan on the Canada–United States border. It is reached by Montana Secondary Highway 233 on the American side and Saskatchewan Highway 21 on the Canadian side. Canada replaced its 1974 border station at this crossing with a modular unit in 2015. The US replaced its border inspection facilities in 2012. These facilities were originally built in 1962. Prior to that time, people entering the US at this location were expected to travel to Havre to report for inspection. The last 10 miles of the road between Havre and the Canada–US border were unpaved as recently as 2000.", "score": "1.4297581" } ]
[ "Willow River (British Columbia)\n The Willow River is a tributary of the Fraser River in the north-central Interior of British Columbia, Canada. It enters the Fraser near the community of Willow River, just upstream from the city of Prince George, near the confluence of the Salmon River. Its source is in the Cariboo goldfields at Jack of Clubs Lake in the mining and arts community of Wells, British Columbia, near Barkerville. In 1974, the canyon of the Willow River, east of Prince George, was the scene of a tragic accident involving eight teenagers who died when their three canoes and kayak were broken in the raging waters and boulders of a narrow gorge.", "Willow River (Kettle River tributary)\n The Willow River is a 31.4 mi tributary of the Kettle River in eastern Minnesota in the United States. It is one of three rivers by that name in Minnesota. Via the Kettle and St. Croix rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River.", "Willow River, Minnesota\n Willow River is a city in Pine County, Minnesota, United States, at the confluence of the Kettle and Willow Rivers. The population was 415 at the 2010 census. Interstate 35, County Road 43, and County 61 (Cross Street) are three of the main routes in the community.", "Big Willow River\n\"Big Willow River\" at Atlas of Canada. Accessed 2016-04-24. ", "Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan\n After a devastating prairie fire destroyed much of the grass and timber in the area around Wood Mountain, Saskatchewan, many First Nations and Métis people were driven by a bison shortage and an increasing population to seek out new settlements. Many settled along the Milk River, south of the 49th parallel, and the Frenchman River, one of its tributaries in Saskatchewan. A number of them settled in the area known by the Métis as Talle de Saules (clump of willows) and Hart Rouge, now known as Willow Bunch. In 1881, Jean-Louis Légaré, a French-Canadian trader and one of the founding members of ", "Willow River, British Columbia\n Willow River is a community northeast of Prince George, on the northeast bank of the Willow River, 2.5 km southeast of the confluence with the Fraser River, in central British Columbia. The name derives from the many willow swamps in the river valley. Comprising about 150 residents, it has a general store/post-office, a volunteer fire department, church building and a small community hall. Street map.", "Willow River, British Columbia\n In May 1913, two surveyors of the township drowned in a canoeing accident on the Fraser reef below the Willow. Along the Upper Fraser River, this location, the Giscome Rapids, the Grand Canyon, and the Goat River Rapids, were extremely dangerous and believed to be the scenes of numerous drownings. In July, a scow loaded with 17 tons of rails and dump cars, was cut free from its moorings at Willow River and drifted downstream until it was deliberately maneuvered onto a sandbar 30 mi north of Quesnel. During 1914–16, the jail/police barracks, on the south corner of Gwen and Willow, stationed BC Provincial Police Constable Henry N. Wood (1889–1967) & his ", "Big Willow River\n The Big Willow River is a river in northeastern Kenora District in northwestern Ontario, Canada. It is a tributary of James Bay. The Big Willow River begins in muskeg and flows north-northeast to its mouth at James Bay.", "Willow River, Minnesota\n According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 1.86 sqmi, of which 1.71 sqmi is land and 0.15 sqmi is water.", "Willow River, Minnesota\n men. The mill cut 125,000 feet of lumber per day during their peak season. Many who worked in the logging camps during the winter came to the mill to work in the spring. On May 8, 1891, the village plat was filed in Pine County. The Fox-Wisdom Lumber Company and its employees made up the majority of property owners. Willow River, like many other villages in northern Minnesota, owed its existence to the lumber industry. In November 1891, Willow River was incorporated as a village by a vote of 37 to 18 in the upstairs hall of the Fox-Wisdom Company store.", "Willow River, British Columbia\n community hall opened in 1949 on the south corner of Reta and Willow. The furnace, installed almost a decade later, ameliorated wintertime use of the building. Social events were held for teenagers in the hall or school. In 1970, the dilapidated hall was demolished, and the population estimate of 500 seems overstated. People had dispersed after the mills closed and the remaining residents drove to jobs in Giscome. The Willow River Recreation Association (WRRA) was incorporated in 1971. The school building continued to be used for social events such as dancing. In need of major maintenance, demolition became the only option. Opened in 1980, the ", "Willows, Saskatchewan\n Willows is an unincorporated community in Lake of the Rivers Rural Municipality No. 72, Saskatchewan, Canada. It previously held the status of a village until January 1, 1950. The name is a contraction of William Gibson Lowes, owner of the first store.", "Willow River, British Columbia\n as \"Willow River\", and then further described the location as \"the only townsite registered as Willow River\". Either their acquisition of Lot 782 between the two developments or legal pressure amended it to \"next to the GTP townsite of Willow River\". The devious marketing practices created some buyer remorse among naïve faraway investors. Most of the premium lots with river frontage are now merely river silt. Meanwhile, the GTP weekly advertisements publicized their land as \"the only one official and original GTP town of Willow River\". Based in South Fort George, F.W. Crawford, the BC manager of the GTP's Transcontinental Townsites ", "Willow Bunch, Saskatchewan\n The Métis Local #17 in Willow Bunch is one of the first Locals established within the Métis Nation of Saskatchewan.", "Willow River, British Columbia\n A trackside signpost marks the flag stop for Via Rail's Jasper – Prince Rupert train. The immediate Via Rail stops are Prince George to the southwest and Aleza Lake to the east.", "Willow River, British Columbia\n The river confluence, close proximity to the Salmon River, and being handy to the Giscome Portage, made it a strategic location. The Cariboo, Barkerville & Willow River Railway (CB&WR) proposed linking Barkerville and Eagle (Eaglet) Lake. In its 1909 Annual Report, the Willow River Timber Co. (WRT) of Ontario highlighted the line's value in accessing the company's remote timber limits in the upper reaches of the Willow River. Investing $1.5 million in timber limits, a British syndicate planned a mammoth sawmill at the river mouth. The CB&WR never eventuated. Asset sales followed the 1922 WRT receivership. By 1912, a Victoria-based syndicate ", "Willowby, New Zealand\n Willowby has its own volunteer rural fire fighting unit. It covers a catchment between the Ashburton and Hinds rivers and was founded to serve the local farming community, especially during dry summers. It has 21 members, and as part of the national rural fire service, it can provide assistance and back-up to other volunteer units in the surrounding region.", "Willow River, Minnesota\n only in August 1879 that the completed line from St. Paul to Duluth was opened. The railroad helped settle and promote living in the northern part of Minnesota. The railroad also promoted the lumber industry. Many towns and villages, including Willow River, were organized once a lumber company set up shop. In March 1874, the Kettle River Township was organized and Willow River at this time consisted of a railroad depot, water tank, wood yard, and two section houses built for the railroad hands. Pine County records show that the three sections of land that would eventually make up the village of ", "Willow Beach National Fish Hatchery\n The Willow Beach National Fish Hatchery is administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, located approximately 45 miles (72.4 km) South East of Las Vegas, Nevada, in Mohave County, Arizona on the Arizona side of the Colorado River twelve miles (~19 km) south of the Hoover Dam.", "Willow Creek Border Crossing\n The Willow Creek Border Crossing connects the cities of Havre, Montana and Govenlock, Saskatchewan on the Canada–United States border. It is reached by Montana Secondary Highway 233 on the American side and Saskatchewan Highway 21 on the Canadian side. Canada replaced its 1974 border station at this crossing with a modular unit in 2015. The US replaced its border inspection facilities in 2012. These facilities were originally built in 1962. Prior to that time, people entering the US at this location were expected to travel to Havre to report for inspection. The last 10 miles of the road between Havre and the Canada–US border were unpaved as recently as 2000." ]
In what country is Uñón District?
[ "Peru", "pe", "Republic of Peru", "República del Perú", "🇵🇪", "Republica del Peru" ]
country
Uñón District
2,520,473
31
[ { "id": "26103825", "title": "Uñón District", "text": " Uñón District is one of fourteen districts of the province Castilla in Peru.", "score": "1.789679" }, { "id": "9699106", "title": "Ungheni District", "text": " Telecommunications and information sources is an area that every year more and progress records. Diversity and quality of these services has increased considerably. The banking system is represented by 11 branches of banks in Moldova.", "score": "1.5388234" }, { "id": "1332329", "title": "Una district", "text": " Una is a district in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. Una shares its border with the Hoshiarpur and Rupnagar districts of Punjab and Kangra, Hamirpur and Bilaspur district of Himachal Pradesh. The terrain is generally semi-hilly with low hills. Una has five tehsils, namely Ghanari, Haroli, Amb, Bangana and Una itself. It was a tehsil of Hoshiarpur district until the Punjab Reorganisation Act, 1966 and Kangra district until 1972, after which it became a district of Himachal Pradesh.", "score": "1.5246441" }, { "id": "10540478", "title": "Unn, Bhiwani", "text": " Nauranga Bass Jattan is a village in the Bhiwani district of the Indian state of Haryana. It lies approximately 43 km south of the district headquarters town of Bhiwani. In this village there is a famous temple of the Hindu which is very famous in nearby area people from other states also visit there", "score": "1.5173445" }, { "id": "1332331", "title": "Una district", "text": " According to the 2011 census Una district has a population of 521,173, giving it a ranking of 543rd in India (out of a total of 640). The district has a population density of 338 PD/sqkm. Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 16.24%. Una has a sex ratio of 977 females for every 1000 males, and a literacy rate of 87.23%. Local languages are Himachali, Hindi and Punjabi. Punjabi with mixture of Himachali language is mostly used in plain areas of Una City, tehsil Ghanari and Haroli Tehsil. But in other areas like Bangana, Amb and Chintpurni Himachali language is widely spoken. According to the 2001 census, the total population of Una was 447,967 with a sex-ratio of 997. The literacy rate stood at 81.09%. In 2011, population figures were raised to 521,057 with decreased sex ratio of 977. The literacy rate increased to 87.23%. The total area of the district is 1549 km2. The urban population contributes nearly 9% of the total population. Hinduism is the most common religion. Sikhism and Islam have sizable number of followers. Christians and others form very small minorities.", "score": "1.473485" }, { "id": "1332334", "title": "Una district", "text": " Una is connected by road and only one railway line through The NH-503 national highway passes through the city. Una is located about 375 km north of New Delhi and 120 km from Chandigarh.", "score": "1.4611542" }, { "id": "25467366", "title": "Kabul Polytechnic University", "text": " The Civil Engineering Department in UNO is run by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) faculty, which provides bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees in Civil Engineering including Water Resources and Hydraulic Engineering. Funds for this partnership are provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through FHI360. This partnership is part of the United States Workforce Development Program (USWDP) for Afghanistan administered by FHI360. The project is designed to develop professional capacity in Afghanistan that addresses the needs of the growing Afghan HHS market. Addressing these needs will require updated methods of education to develop new skills.", "score": "1.434142" }, { "id": "1332332", "title": "Una district", "text": "Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Una ", "score": "1.4323142" }, { "id": "25991613", "title": "Uganda National Oil Company", "text": " The headquarters of UNOC are located in Fairway Tower, at 15 Yusuf Lule Road, on Nakasero Hill, in Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city. The coordinates of UNOC headquarters are 0°19'42.0\"N, 32°34'57.0\"E (Latitude:0.328333; Longitude:32.582500).", "score": "1.4309744" }, { "id": "1332335", "title": "Una district", "text": " The Una city is served by the Una Himachal railway station. It is connected by a single broad gauge railway line, which is the only one in the whole state. It enters Una from Nangal (Punjab) and runs all the way to Daulatpur. Two express trains (Himachal Express and Jan Shatabdi Express) connect it to Delhi daily.", "score": "1.4274039" }, { "id": "31085058", "title": "Un, Surat", "text": " Unn is a Municipality city in Surat district in the Indian state of Gujarat. The city comes under Surat Metropolitan Region.", "score": "1.4132061" }, { "id": "1332330", "title": "Una district", "text": " Una lies in the south-western part of Himachal Pradesh, with the Sivalik Hills of the Himalayas rolling on one side. The Satluj river passes alongside Shahtalai Hills, known for the shrine of Baba Balak Nath. The altitudes vary from more than 408 meters in city Una to over 1000 meters in Chintpurni. Una district is bounded by the river Beas on the north and the river Satluj in the east, the Swan River which is basically seasonal river flows 65 km right across the Jaswan Valley towards south until it submerges in the Sutlej river near Anandpur.", "score": "1.4075089" }, { "id": "12218717", "title": "Unomachi Station", "text": " Unomachi Station (卯之町駅) is a railway station on the Yosan Line in Seiyo, Ehime Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number \"U18\".", "score": "1.405123" }, { "id": "10891811", "title": "Unna", "text": " Unna is a city of around 57,000 people in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, the seat of the Unna district. The newly refurbished Unna station has trains to all major cities in North Rhine Westphalia including Dortmund, Cologne, Münster, Hamm, Düsseldorf and Wuppertal. There is also the Regional-Express 7 (Rhein-Münsterland-Express), which runs from Rheine via Cologne to Krefeld.", "score": "1.3935094" }, { "id": "16128044", "title": "Unnao", "text": " The District is roughly a parallelogram in shape and lies between Latitude 26°8' N & 27°2' N and Longitude 80°3' E & 81°3' E. It is bounded on the North by District Hardoi, on the East by District Lucknow, on the South by District Rae Bareli and on the West by the Ganga which separates it from districts of Kanpur & Fatehpur.", "score": "1.3851657" }, { "id": "10671439", "title": "Uno (Guinea-Bissau)", "text": " The Uno Sector, part of the Bolama Region, covers Uno and the nearby islands of Eguba, Orango, Unhocomo, Unhocomozinho and Uracane. The sector's population is 6,751 (2009 census).", "score": "1.3827372" }, { "id": "13001465", "title": "Uno-X", "text": " Uno-X is a chain of unmanned fuel stations throughout Norway and Denmark. It is operated as the low-cost section of YX Energi. The chain was originally created as a low cost chain in Denmark in the late 1950s. The rights to use the name in Sweden were sold to Britain's Burmah Oil. In 1991 Norsk Hydro acquired the 330 outlets of the Danish operation and five years later it bought the Swedish Uno-X chain from Burmah. After Norsk Hydro merged its operations in Denmark and Norway with Texaco, the chain was repositioned on wholly unmanned sites under a new yellow, black and red logo, and now has around 110 stations in Norway and 200 stations in Denmark. The Danish chain includes the architecturally well known Skovshoved Petrol Station designed in 1936 by Arne Jacobsen. Following Norsk Hydro's acquisition by Statoil, the 250 stations in Sweden were sold in December 2009 to St1 and the Norwegian and Danish operations to the retail group Reitangruppen. Uno-X Hydrogen plans to build 20 hydrogen stations before 2020, each capable of dispensing 200 kg of hydrogen per day, and 100 kg in 3 hours.", "score": "1.3757775" }, { "id": "4862286", "title": "Gurbansoltan Eje District", "text": " Gurbansoltan Eje District (formerly Yilanly District) is a district of Daşoguz Province in Turkmenistan. The administrative center of the district is the town of Ýylanly. The district is named after Gurbansoltan Eje, former president Saparmurat Niazov's mother.", "score": "1.3706034" }, { "id": "16128042", "title": "Unnao", "text": " Unnao district is surrounded by some of the main cities of Uttar Pradesh – Lucknow, Kanpur, Raebareli and Hardoi.", "score": "1.3674705" }, { "id": "28752609", "title": "Unam station", "text": " Unam station is a railway station in Unjŏn County, North P'yŏngan Province, North Korea. It is on located on the P'yŏngŭi Line of the Korean State Railway.", "score": "1.3664927" } ]
[ "Uñón District\n Uñón District is one of fourteen districts of the province Castilla in Peru.", "Ungheni District\n Telecommunications and information sources is an area that every year more and progress records. Diversity and quality of these services has increased considerably. The banking system is represented by 11 branches of banks in Moldova.", "Una district\n Una is a district in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh. Una shares its border with the Hoshiarpur and Rupnagar districts of Punjab and Kangra, Hamirpur and Bilaspur district of Himachal Pradesh. The terrain is generally semi-hilly with low hills. Una has five tehsils, namely Ghanari, Haroli, Amb, Bangana and Una itself. It was a tehsil of Hoshiarpur district until the Punjab Reorganisation Act, 1966 and Kangra district until 1972, after which it became a district of Himachal Pradesh.", "Unn, Bhiwani\n Nauranga Bass Jattan is a village in the Bhiwani district of the Indian state of Haryana. It lies approximately 43 km south of the district headquarters town of Bhiwani. In this village there is a famous temple of the Hindu which is very famous in nearby area people from other states also visit there", "Una district\n According to the 2011 census Una district has a population of 521,173, giving it a ranking of 543rd in India (out of a total of 640). The district has a population density of 338 PD/sqkm. Its population growth rate over the decade 2001-2011 was 16.24%. Una has a sex ratio of 977 females for every 1000 males, and a literacy rate of 87.23%. Local languages are Himachali, Hindi and Punjabi. Punjabi with mixture of Himachali language is mostly used in plain areas of Una City, tehsil Ghanari and Haroli Tehsil. But in other areas like Bangana, Amb and Chintpurni Himachali language is widely spoken. According to the 2001 census, the total population of Una was 447,967 with a sex-ratio of 997. The literacy rate stood at 81.09%. In 2011, population figures were raised to 521,057 with decreased sex ratio of 977. The literacy rate increased to 87.23%. The total area of the district is 1549 km2. The urban population contributes nearly 9% of the total population. Hinduism is the most common religion. Sikhism and Islam have sizable number of followers. Christians and others form very small minorities.", "Una district\n Una is connected by road and only one railway line through The NH-503 national highway passes through the city. Una is located about 375 km north of New Delhi and 120 km from Chandigarh.", "Kabul Polytechnic University\n The Civil Engineering Department in UNO is run by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) faculty, which provides bachelor’s, master’s and doctorate degrees in Civil Engineering including Water Resources and Hydraulic Engineering. Funds for this partnership are provided by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through FHI360. This partnership is part of the United States Workforce Development Program (USWDP) for Afghanistan administered by FHI360. The project is designed to develop professional capacity in Afghanistan that addresses the needs of the growing Afghan HHS market. Addressing these needs will require updated methods of education to develop new skills.", "Una district\nJawahar Navodaya Vidyalaya, Una ", "Uganda National Oil Company\n The headquarters of UNOC are located in Fairway Tower, at 15 Yusuf Lule Road, on Nakasero Hill, in Kampala, Uganda's capital and largest city. The coordinates of UNOC headquarters are 0°19'42.0\"N, 32°34'57.0\"E (Latitude:0.328333; Longitude:32.582500).", "Una district\n The Una city is served by the Una Himachal railway station. It is connected by a single broad gauge railway line, which is the only one in the whole state. It enters Una from Nangal (Punjab) and runs all the way to Daulatpur. Two express trains (Himachal Express and Jan Shatabdi Express) connect it to Delhi daily.", "Un, Surat\n Unn is a Municipality city in Surat district in the Indian state of Gujarat. The city comes under Surat Metropolitan Region.", "Una district\n Una lies in the south-western part of Himachal Pradesh, with the Sivalik Hills of the Himalayas rolling on one side. The Satluj river passes alongside Shahtalai Hills, known for the shrine of Baba Balak Nath. The altitudes vary from more than 408 meters in city Una to over 1000 meters in Chintpurni. Una district is bounded by the river Beas on the north and the river Satluj in the east, the Swan River which is basically seasonal river flows 65 km right across the Jaswan Valley towards south until it submerges in the Sutlej river near Anandpur.", "Unomachi Station\n Unomachi Station (卯之町駅) is a railway station on the Yosan Line in Seiyo, Ehime Prefecture, Japan. It is operated by JR Shikoku and has the station number \"U18\".", "Unna\n Unna is a city of around 57,000 people in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, the seat of the Unna district. The newly refurbished Unna station has trains to all major cities in North Rhine Westphalia including Dortmund, Cologne, Münster, Hamm, Düsseldorf and Wuppertal. There is also the Regional-Express 7 (Rhein-Münsterland-Express), which runs from Rheine via Cologne to Krefeld.", "Unnao\n The District is roughly a parallelogram in shape and lies between Latitude 26°8' N & 27°2' N and Longitude 80°3' E & 81°3' E. It is bounded on the North by District Hardoi, on the East by District Lucknow, on the South by District Rae Bareli and on the West by the Ganga which separates it from districts of Kanpur & Fatehpur.", "Uno (Guinea-Bissau)\n The Uno Sector, part of the Bolama Region, covers Uno and the nearby islands of Eguba, Orango, Unhocomo, Unhocomozinho and Uracane. The sector's population is 6,751 (2009 census).", "Uno-X\n Uno-X is a chain of unmanned fuel stations throughout Norway and Denmark. It is operated as the low-cost section of YX Energi. The chain was originally created as a low cost chain in Denmark in the late 1950s. The rights to use the name in Sweden were sold to Britain's Burmah Oil. In 1991 Norsk Hydro acquired the 330 outlets of the Danish operation and five years later it bought the Swedish Uno-X chain from Burmah. After Norsk Hydro merged its operations in Denmark and Norway with Texaco, the chain was repositioned on wholly unmanned sites under a new yellow, black and red logo, and now has around 110 stations in Norway and 200 stations in Denmark. The Danish chain includes the architecturally well known Skovshoved Petrol Station designed in 1936 by Arne Jacobsen. Following Norsk Hydro's acquisition by Statoil, the 250 stations in Sweden were sold in December 2009 to St1 and the Norwegian and Danish operations to the retail group Reitangruppen. Uno-X Hydrogen plans to build 20 hydrogen stations before 2020, each capable of dispensing 200 kg of hydrogen per day, and 100 kg in 3 hours.", "Gurbansoltan Eje District\n Gurbansoltan Eje District (formerly Yilanly District) is a district of Daşoguz Province in Turkmenistan. The administrative center of the district is the town of Ýylanly. The district is named after Gurbansoltan Eje, former president Saparmurat Niazov's mother.", "Unnao\n Unnao district is surrounded by some of the main cities of Uttar Pradesh – Lucknow, Kanpur, Raebareli and Hardoi.", "Unam station\n Unam station is a railway station in Unjŏn County, North P'yŏngan Province, North Korea. It is on located on the P'yŏngŭi Line of the Korean State Railway." ]
In what country is Ban On?
[ "Thailand", "Kingdom of Thailand", "th", "Siam", "🇹🇭", "Land of Smiles", "THA" ]
country
Ban On
3,438,406
42
[ { "id": "14106641", "title": "Burqa", "text": " Netherlands (in public schools, hospitals and on public transport), Germany (partial bans in some states), Italy (in some localities), Spain (in some localities of Catalonia), Russia (in the Stavropol Krai), Luxembourg, Switzerland, Norway (in nurseries, public schools and universities), Canada (in the public workplace in Quebec), Gabon, Chad, Senegal, the Republic of the Congo, Cameroon (in some localities), Niger (in some localities), Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan (ban on all personal religious symbols), Azerbaijan (in public schools), Turkey (in the judiciary, military and police), Kosovo (in public schools), Bosnia and Herzegovina (in courts and other legal institutions), Morocco (ban on manufacturing, marketing and sale), Tunisia (in public institutions), Egypt (in universities), Algeria (in the public workplace), and China (in Xinjiang).", "score": "1.5777543" }, { "id": "707652", "title": "Smoking ban", "text": " illegal to advertise cigarettes or other tobacco products. In 2010 Nepal planned to enact a new anti-smoking bill that would ban smoking in public places and outlaw all tobacco advertising to prevent young people from smoking. On 31 May 2011 Venezuela introduced a restriction upon smoking in enclosed public and commercial spaces. Smoking was first restricted in schools, hospitals, trains, buses and train stations in Turkey in 1996. In 2008 a more comprehensive smoking ban was implemented, covering all public indoor venues. Smoking has been restricted at a French beach – the Plage Lumière in La Ciotat, France, became the first beach in ", "score": "1.5266203" }, { "id": "6244875", "title": "Advertising in the Middle East", "text": " Health Organization, advertisements promoting beer, wine and spirits are banned in the country. In 1996, a decree was issued outlawing advertisements for tobacco products. Some products or services are simply banned in the country, likely meaning advertisements about those products are as well. Facebook, and presumably advertisements promoting it, was banned in 2007 (the ban was later lifted in 2011). Other social media sites including YouTube are also banned. Independent news media in Syria is banned and so is the use of foreign currencies in business deals. Even though not directly referring to advertising, Freedom House said in 2017 that the press in Syria is not free, ", "score": "1.5198951" }, { "id": "4615234", "title": "List of countries with alcohol prohibition", "text": " (sales temporarily banned in bars and restaurants from December 13, 2021 due to the Omicron variant in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway) ; (legal for non-Muslims foreigners, Muslims can only consume alcohol inside a bar) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (De facto illegal in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip only, legal in the West Bank) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (prohibition is only by the emirate of sharjah) 🇳🇴 Norway (sales temporarily banned in bars and restaurants from December 13, 2021 due to the Omicron variant in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway) ; (legal for ", "score": "1.5109655" }, { "id": "12306074", "title": "Alcohol advertising", "text": " from this. In Finland, Parliament of Finland decided to ban alcohol outdoor advertising, except during sport events. This new law is going to take place in January 2015. In the United Kingdom, the Advertising Standards Authority have banned several ads that don't comply with the restrictions in the EU directive. In Norway, Advertising on alcohol is banned totally since 1975. In September 2017, Facebook announced it would allow users to hide all alcohol advertisements. The move is debated within the UK, as Alcohol Research UK group welcomed the change, while the Alcohol Standards Authority said the UK already had some of the strictest rules in the world. In November 2018, Ireland introduced a law banning alcohol advertisements near schools, children play areas, public transportation, and cinemas, as well as restricting visibility of alcohol products in stores. The legislation will take effect November 2019.", "score": "1.4751463" }, { "id": "707655", "title": "Smoking ban", "text": " in the country. The Pitcairn Islands had previously banned the sale of cigarettes; however, it now permits sales from a government-run store. The Pacific island of Niue hopes to become the next country to prohibit the sale of tobacco. A proposal in Iceland would ban tobacco sales from shops, making it prescription-only and therefore dispensable only in pharmacies on doctor's orders. New Zealand hopes to achieve being tobacco-free by 2025 and Finland by 2040. In 2012, anti-smoking groups proposed a 'smoking licence' – if a smoker managed to quit and hand back their licence, they would get back any money ", "score": "1.4613361" }, { "id": "26456546", "title": "Cigarette", "text": " prohibit the sale of tobacco. Iceland is also proposing banning tobacco sales from shops, making it prescription-only and therefore dispensable only in pharmacies on doctor's orders. New Zealand hopes to achieve being tobacco-free by 2025 and Finland by 2040. Singapore and the Australian state of Tasmania have proposed a 'tobacco free millennium generation initiative' by banning the sale of all tobacco products to anyone born in and after the year 2000. In March 2012, Brazil became the world's first country to ban all flavored tobacco including menthols. It also banned the majority of the estimated 600 additives used, permitting only eight. This regulation applies to domestic and imported cigarettes. Tobacco manufacturers had 18 months to remove the noncompliant cigarettes, 24 months to remove the other forms of noncompliant tobacco. Under sharia law, the consumption of cigarettes by Muslims is prohibited.", "score": "1.4524708" }, { "id": "15571542", "title": "Tobacco display ban", "text": " A tobacco display ban, point-of-sale display ban or retail display ban is a measure imposed in some jurisdictions prohibiting shops and stores to display tobacco products. Tobacco display bans are in place in several countries: Canada, Croatia, Ireland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Thailand, Finland, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The implementation differs, but the ban in most jurisdictions mandates that shops and stores that sell tobacco products keep the products out of sight of customers, under the counter, or in special cabinets. Tobacco products can only be shown on request from customers. The idea behind the regulation is that people would be less inclined to smoke if they can not see the products. The long term effects of these policies cannot be proven as insufficient ", "score": "1.449507" }, { "id": "12833562", "title": "Tobacco smoking", "text": " allow some limited advertising at retailers. Norway has a complete ban of point of sale advertising. This includes smoking products and accessories. Implementing these policies can be challenging, all of these countries experienced resistance and challenges from the tobacco industry. The World Health Organisation recommends the complete ban of all types of advertisement or product placement, including at vending machines, at airports and on internet shops selling tobacco. The evidence is as yet unclear as to the impact of such bans. Many countries have a smoking age. In many countries, including the United States, most European Union member states, New Zealand, ", "score": "1.448071" }, { "id": "707653", "title": "Smoking ban", "text": " to restrict smoking, from August 2011, in an effort to encourage more tourists to visit the beach. In 2012, smoking in Costa Rica became subject to some of the most restrictive regulations in the world, with the practice being banned from many outdoor recreational and educational areas as well as in public buildings and vehicles. In 2021, New Zealand announced that legislation would be introduced in 2022 to ban smoking for life for anyone then under the age of 14. This would increase the legal smoking age by one year, every year, leading eventually to a complete ban on smoking in the country.", "score": "1.4383571" }, { "id": "26579112", "title": "Immigration policy of Donald Trump", "text": " nations. This has led to a 40% drop in entrants. On June 26, 2018, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 along ideological lines in favor of the September 2017 version (Presidential Proclamation 9645) of the Trump administration's travel ban, reversing lower courts that had deemed the ban unconstitutional. In January 2020 he added six more countries to the ban, effective February 22. People from Nigeria (the most populous country in Africa), Myanmar (where refugees have been fleeing alleged genocide), Eritrea, and Kyrgyzstan will be banned from obtaining immigrant visas (for people intending to stay in the United States). People from Sudan and Tanzania will be banned from obtaining diversity visas.", "score": "1.4338398" }, { "id": "32906461", "title": "Smoking in Syria", "text": " that had taken place over the course of the 15 years preceding the ban is believed to be at an end. Despite the successful cut-down on public smoking, the ban has also caused an increase in narghile delivery and at-home smoking, since this type of smoking is not prohibited by the ban. Health Minister Rida Said defended the ban saying it “protects the rights of non-smokers, many of whom are children, and is an important step towards reduction of smoking-related illness”. Syria's revolutionary youth organization (affiliated with the ruling Ba’ath party) held a rally in Damascus to promote the new law, as a means of bringing about a “healthy and strong population”", "score": "1.4322538" }, { "id": "7195317", "title": "Derrick Watson", "text": " In his decision, Watson prevented the blocking of citizens of Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and Chad from traveling to the United States, while leaving intact the restrictions for North Korean citizens and some Venezuelan officials. He argued that the revised ban \"suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor\". On June 26, 2018, in Trump v. Hawaii the Supreme Court reversed this decision in a 5–4 decision, ruling that plaintiffs did not have a \"likelihood of success on the merits\" on either their INA or their Establishment Clause claims. The court vacated the injunction and remanded the case to lower courts for further proceedings.", "score": "1.4221478" }, { "id": "3289785", "title": "Facebook", "text": " In many countries the social networking sites and mobile apps have been blocked temporarily or permanently, including China, Iran, Vietnam, Pakistan, Syria, and North Korea. In May 2018, the government of Papua New Guinea announced that it would ban Facebook for a month while it considered the impact of the website on the country, though no ban has since occurred. In 2019, Facebook announced that influencers are no longer able to promote any vape, tobacco products, or weapons on its platforms.", "score": "1.4172281" }, { "id": "707656", "title": "Smoking ban", "text": " paid for it. Medical students in Singapore and the Australian state of Tasmania have proposed a 'tobacco free millennium generation initiative' by banning the sale of all tobacco products to anyone born in and after the year 2000. In March 2012, Brazil became the world's first country to ban all flavored tobacco, including the menthol-flavored kind. It also banned the majority of the estimated 600 additives used, permitting only eight. This regulation applies to domestic and internationally imported cigarettes. Tobacco manufacturers had 18 months to remove the non-compliant cigarettes, and 24 months to remove the other forms of non-compliant tobacco.", "score": "1.4168323" }, { "id": "11397241", "title": "2C-T-7", "text": " The Netherlands was the first country in the world to ban 2C-T-7, after being sold in smartshops for a short period. After 2C-T-2 was first banned, 2C-T-7 quickly appeared on the market, but was soon banned as well. 2C-T-7 is a list I drug of the Opium Law.", "score": "1.4147797" }, { "id": "635399", "title": "Prohibition of drugs", "text": " (Dexedrine), methamphetamine (Desoxyn), methcathinone, and methylphenidate (Ritalin). The following individual drugs, listed under their respective family groups (e.g., barbiturates, benzodiazepines, opiates), are the most frequently sought after by drug users and as such are prohibited or otherwise heavily regulated for use in many countries: The regulation of the above drugs varies in many countries. Alcohol possession and consumption by adults is today widely banned only in Islamic countries and certain states of India. The United States, Finland, and Canada banned alcohol in the early part of the 20th century; this was called Prohibition. Although alcohol prohibition was repealed in these countries at a national level, there ", "score": "1.4113169" }, { "id": "31163825", "title": "Hijab by country", "text": " In 2016, a ban on the wearing of face-covering clothing in public was adopted by the Bulgarian parliament. The Bulgarian parliament enacted the ban on the basis of security concerns, however the ban stimulated conflict as 10 percent of the country's population identifies as Muslim. Women who violate the burqa ban face fines up to €770 (~US$848) and have their social security benefits suspended.", "score": "1.4092242" }, { "id": "10343956", "title": "Andy Nicholls", "text": " FBOs in Scotland. FBO had been in place in England and Wales for six years and were being expanded to include Scotland. The campaign was launched at Hampden Park in Glasgow with Nicholls saying, \"A banning order hurts more than any thump or kick you get and, more importantly, hurts more than any fine. They even hurt more than getting sent to prison. The banning orders changed my life because it's taken away something from me which, even as a hooligan, I was passionate about. Taking away that part of your life hurts.\" The same month Nicholls had also appeared on the BBC documentary programme Panorama during an undercover investigation into previously unreported violence at ", "score": "1.4087749" }, { "id": "32906458", "title": "Smoking in Syria", "text": " Smoking in Syria is currently banned inside cafes (hookah bars), restaurants and other public spaces by a presidential decree issued on 12 October 2009 which went into effect on 21 April 2010. Syria was the first Arab country to introduce such a ban. The decree also outlaws smoking in educational institutions, health centres, sports halls, cinemas and theatres and on public transport. The restrictions include the narghile. According to the official Syrian Arab News Agency, fines for violating the ban range from 500 to 100,000 Syrian pounds (US$11 to $2,169). A decree in 1996 banned tobacco advertising, while a 2006 law outlawed smoking on public transport and in some public places, introducing fines for offenders. People under the age of 18 are not allowed to buy tobacco in Syria.", "score": "1.4066579" } ]
[ "Burqa\n Netherlands (in public schools, hospitals and on public transport), Germany (partial bans in some states), Italy (in some localities), Spain (in some localities of Catalonia), Russia (in the Stavropol Krai), Luxembourg, Switzerland, Norway (in nurseries, public schools and universities), Canada (in the public workplace in Quebec), Gabon, Chad, Senegal, the Republic of the Congo, Cameroon (in some localities), Niger (in some localities), Sri Lanka, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan (ban on all personal religious symbols), Azerbaijan (in public schools), Turkey (in the judiciary, military and police), Kosovo (in public schools), Bosnia and Herzegovina (in courts and other legal institutions), Morocco (ban on manufacturing, marketing and sale), Tunisia (in public institutions), Egypt (in universities), Algeria (in the public workplace), and China (in Xinjiang).", "Smoking ban\n illegal to advertise cigarettes or other tobacco products. In 2010 Nepal planned to enact a new anti-smoking bill that would ban smoking in public places and outlaw all tobacco advertising to prevent young people from smoking. On 31 May 2011 Venezuela introduced a restriction upon smoking in enclosed public and commercial spaces. Smoking was first restricted in schools, hospitals, trains, buses and train stations in Turkey in 1996. In 2008 a more comprehensive smoking ban was implemented, covering all public indoor venues. Smoking has been restricted at a French beach – the Plage Lumière in La Ciotat, France, became the first beach in ", "Advertising in the Middle East\n Health Organization, advertisements promoting beer, wine and spirits are banned in the country. In 1996, a decree was issued outlawing advertisements for tobacco products. Some products or services are simply banned in the country, likely meaning advertisements about those products are as well. Facebook, and presumably advertisements promoting it, was banned in 2007 (the ban was later lifted in 2011). Other social media sites including YouTube are also banned. Independent news media in Syria is banned and so is the use of foreign currencies in business deals. Even though not directly referring to advertising, Freedom House said in 2017 that the press in Syria is not free, ", "List of countries with alcohol prohibition\n (sales temporarily banned in bars and restaurants from December 13, 2021 due to the Omicron variant in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway) ; (legal for non-Muslims foreigners, Muslims can only consume alcohol inside a bar) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (De facto illegal in the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip only, legal in the West Bank) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (excluding non-Muslims) ; (prohibition is only by the emirate of sharjah) 🇳🇴 Norway (sales temporarily banned in bars and restaurants from December 13, 2021 due to the Omicron variant in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in Norway) ; (legal for ", "Alcohol advertising\n from this. In Finland, Parliament of Finland decided to ban alcohol outdoor advertising, except during sport events. This new law is going to take place in January 2015. In the United Kingdom, the Advertising Standards Authority have banned several ads that don't comply with the restrictions in the EU directive. In Norway, Advertising on alcohol is banned totally since 1975. In September 2017, Facebook announced it would allow users to hide all alcohol advertisements. The move is debated within the UK, as Alcohol Research UK group welcomed the change, while the Alcohol Standards Authority said the UK already had some of the strictest rules in the world. In November 2018, Ireland introduced a law banning alcohol advertisements near schools, children play areas, public transportation, and cinemas, as well as restricting visibility of alcohol products in stores. The legislation will take effect November 2019.", "Smoking ban\n in the country. The Pitcairn Islands had previously banned the sale of cigarettes; however, it now permits sales from a government-run store. The Pacific island of Niue hopes to become the next country to prohibit the sale of tobacco. A proposal in Iceland would ban tobacco sales from shops, making it prescription-only and therefore dispensable only in pharmacies on doctor's orders. New Zealand hopes to achieve being tobacco-free by 2025 and Finland by 2040. In 2012, anti-smoking groups proposed a 'smoking licence' – if a smoker managed to quit and hand back their licence, they would get back any money ", "Cigarette\n prohibit the sale of tobacco. Iceland is also proposing banning tobacco sales from shops, making it prescription-only and therefore dispensable only in pharmacies on doctor's orders. New Zealand hopes to achieve being tobacco-free by 2025 and Finland by 2040. Singapore and the Australian state of Tasmania have proposed a 'tobacco free millennium generation initiative' by banning the sale of all tobacco products to anyone born in and after the year 2000. In March 2012, Brazil became the world's first country to ban all flavored tobacco including menthols. It also banned the majority of the estimated 600 additives used, permitting only eight. This regulation applies to domestic and imported cigarettes. Tobacco manufacturers had 18 months to remove the noncompliant cigarettes, 24 months to remove the other forms of noncompliant tobacco. Under sharia law, the consumption of cigarettes by Muslims is prohibited.", "Tobacco display ban\n A tobacco display ban, point-of-sale display ban or retail display ban is a measure imposed in some jurisdictions prohibiting shops and stores to display tobacco products. Tobacco display bans are in place in several countries: Canada, Croatia, Ireland, Iceland, Norway, Russia, Thailand, Finland, Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom. The implementation differs, but the ban in most jurisdictions mandates that shops and stores that sell tobacco products keep the products out of sight of customers, under the counter, or in special cabinets. Tobacco products can only be shown on request from customers. The idea behind the regulation is that people would be less inclined to smoke if they can not see the products. The long term effects of these policies cannot be proven as insufficient ", "Tobacco smoking\n allow some limited advertising at retailers. Norway has a complete ban of point of sale advertising. This includes smoking products and accessories. Implementing these policies can be challenging, all of these countries experienced resistance and challenges from the tobacco industry. The World Health Organisation recommends the complete ban of all types of advertisement or product placement, including at vending machines, at airports and on internet shops selling tobacco. The evidence is as yet unclear as to the impact of such bans. Many countries have a smoking age. In many countries, including the United States, most European Union member states, New Zealand, ", "Smoking ban\n to restrict smoking, from August 2011, in an effort to encourage more tourists to visit the beach. In 2012, smoking in Costa Rica became subject to some of the most restrictive regulations in the world, with the practice being banned from many outdoor recreational and educational areas as well as in public buildings and vehicles. In 2021, New Zealand announced that legislation would be introduced in 2022 to ban smoking for life for anyone then under the age of 14. This would increase the legal smoking age by one year, every year, leading eventually to a complete ban on smoking in the country.", "Immigration policy of Donald Trump\n nations. This has led to a 40% drop in entrants. On June 26, 2018, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 along ideological lines in favor of the September 2017 version (Presidential Proclamation 9645) of the Trump administration's travel ban, reversing lower courts that had deemed the ban unconstitutional. In January 2020 he added six more countries to the ban, effective February 22. People from Nigeria (the most populous country in Africa), Myanmar (where refugees have been fleeing alleged genocide), Eritrea, and Kyrgyzstan will be banned from obtaining immigrant visas (for people intending to stay in the United States). People from Sudan and Tanzania will be banned from obtaining diversity visas.", "Smoking in Syria\n that had taken place over the course of the 15 years preceding the ban is believed to be at an end. Despite the successful cut-down on public smoking, the ban has also caused an increase in narghile delivery and at-home smoking, since this type of smoking is not prohibited by the ban. Health Minister Rida Said defended the ban saying it “protects the rights of non-smokers, many of whom are children, and is an important step towards reduction of smoking-related illness”. Syria's revolutionary youth organization (affiliated with the ruling Ba’ath party) held a rally in Damascus to promote the new law, as a means of bringing about a “healthy and strong population”", "Derrick Watson\n In his decision, Watson prevented the blocking of citizens of Iran, Libya, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, and Chad from traveling to the United States, while leaving intact the restrictions for North Korean citizens and some Venezuelan officials. He argued that the revised ban \"suffers from precisely the same maladies as its predecessor\". On June 26, 2018, in Trump v. Hawaii the Supreme Court reversed this decision in a 5–4 decision, ruling that plaintiffs did not have a \"likelihood of success on the merits\" on either their INA or their Establishment Clause claims. The court vacated the injunction and remanded the case to lower courts for further proceedings.", "Facebook\n In many countries the social networking sites and mobile apps have been blocked temporarily or permanently, including China, Iran, Vietnam, Pakistan, Syria, and North Korea. In May 2018, the government of Papua New Guinea announced that it would ban Facebook for a month while it considered the impact of the website on the country, though no ban has since occurred. In 2019, Facebook announced that influencers are no longer able to promote any vape, tobacco products, or weapons on its platforms.", "Smoking ban\n paid for it. Medical students in Singapore and the Australian state of Tasmania have proposed a 'tobacco free millennium generation initiative' by banning the sale of all tobacco products to anyone born in and after the year 2000. In March 2012, Brazil became the world's first country to ban all flavored tobacco, including the menthol-flavored kind. It also banned the majority of the estimated 600 additives used, permitting only eight. This regulation applies to domestic and internationally imported cigarettes. Tobacco manufacturers had 18 months to remove the non-compliant cigarettes, and 24 months to remove the other forms of non-compliant tobacco.", "2C-T-7\n The Netherlands was the first country in the world to ban 2C-T-7, after being sold in smartshops for a short period. After 2C-T-2 was first banned, 2C-T-7 quickly appeared on the market, but was soon banned as well. 2C-T-7 is a list I drug of the Opium Law.", "Prohibition of drugs\n (Dexedrine), methamphetamine (Desoxyn), methcathinone, and methylphenidate (Ritalin). The following individual drugs, listed under their respective family groups (e.g., barbiturates, benzodiazepines, opiates), are the most frequently sought after by drug users and as such are prohibited or otherwise heavily regulated for use in many countries: The regulation of the above drugs varies in many countries. Alcohol possession and consumption by adults is today widely banned only in Islamic countries and certain states of India. The United States, Finland, and Canada banned alcohol in the early part of the 20th century; this was called Prohibition. Although alcohol prohibition was repealed in these countries at a national level, there ", "Hijab by country\n In 2016, a ban on the wearing of face-covering clothing in public was adopted by the Bulgarian parliament. The Bulgarian parliament enacted the ban on the basis of security concerns, however the ban stimulated conflict as 10 percent of the country's population identifies as Muslim. Women who violate the burqa ban face fines up to €770 (~US$848) and have their social security benefits suspended.", "Andy Nicholls\n FBOs in Scotland. FBO had been in place in England and Wales for six years and were being expanded to include Scotland. The campaign was launched at Hampden Park in Glasgow with Nicholls saying, \"A banning order hurts more than any thump or kick you get and, more importantly, hurts more than any fine. They even hurt more than getting sent to prison. The banning orders changed my life because it's taken away something from me which, even as a hooligan, I was passionate about. Taking away that part of your life hurts.\" The same month Nicholls had also appeared on the BBC documentary programme Panorama during an undercover investigation into previously unreported violence at ", "Smoking in Syria\n Smoking in Syria is currently banned inside cafes (hookah bars), restaurants and other public spaces by a presidential decree issued on 12 October 2009 which went into effect on 21 April 2010. Syria was the first Arab country to introduce such a ban. The decree also outlaws smoking in educational institutions, health centres, sports halls, cinemas and theatres and on public transport. The restrictions include the narghile. According to the official Syrian Arab News Agency, fines for violating the ban range from 500 to 100,000 Syrian pounds (US$11 to $2,169). A decree in 1996 banned tobacco advertising, while a 2006 law outlawed smoking on public transport and in some public places, introducing fines for offenders. People under the age of 18 are not allowed to buy tobacco in Syria." ]
In what country is Kanaküla?
[ "Estonia", "Republic of Estonia", "Estland", "Eesti", "ee", "EST", "🇪🇪" ]
country
Kanaküla
2,634,990
59
[ { "id": "29346151", "title": "Kanaküla", "text": " Kanaküla is a village in Saarde Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia.", "score": "1.451229" }, { "id": "8255075", "title": "Kauppakorkeakoulun Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat", "text": "USA and Canada 2010 ; Spain 2009 ; China 2006 ; Germany 2003 ; Brazil 2002 ", "score": "1.3774467" }, { "id": "8764217", "title": "Kankaanpää", "text": " Ala-Honkajoki, Hapua, Jyränkylä, Karhusaari, Korvaluoma, Kyynärjärvi, Narvi, Niinisalo, Santaskylä, Taulunoja, Venesjärvi, Veneskoski, Verttuu and Vihteljärvi.", "score": "1.366905" }, { "id": "5557167", "title": "Houaïlou", "text": " The town is part of the Ajië-Aro Kanak cultural grouping, and Ajië is the local language. Over 90% of the population identified as Kanak in the 2014 census. There are some European mine workers and farmers, and a small number of Polynesians, and Asian from different countries.", "score": "1.3628795" }, { "id": "5557497", "title": "Poum", "text": " There is one boarding middle school near Poum village. The Kanak population pursue diverse subsistence activities, sometimes combined with paid work. There is one service station and store, opened in the 2010s. Tourists can stay at a western style hotel complex, the Malabou Beach hotel on Nehoue Bay, which is owned by the Northern Province corporation, Grands Hôtels - it has 35 employees. There are also two tourist cottages (Golone and Poingam), a campsite (Pagop) and home stays are also possible. Fishing is still pursued mainly by the islanders, especially from Tiabet, although commercial fish sales are affected by the long distances ", "score": "1.3606842" }, { "id": "7793526", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " Kanak (French spelling until 1984: Canaque) are the indigenous Melanesian inhabitants of New Caledonia, an overseas collectivity of France in the southwest Pacific. According to the 2019 census, they make up 41.2% of the total population with around 112,000 people. The Kanaks refer to the European inhabitants of New Caledonia as Caldoches. Though Melanesian settlement is recorded on Grande Terre's Presqu'île de Foué as far back as the Lapita culture, the origin of the Kanak people is unclear. Ethnographic research has shown that Polynesian seafarers have intermarried with the Kanaks over the centuries. New Caledonia was annexed to France in 1853, and became an overseas territory of France in 1956. ", "score": "1.355988" }, { "id": "11694206", "title": "Kanake", "text": " Kanake (or Kanacke, Kana(c)k; pl. Kanacken or Kanaks/Kanax) is a German word for people from German-speaking countries with roots in Turkey, Arab countries and Persian speaking countries. It is used as a derogatory word, but also as a self-denomination. It was transferred with more ambiguous connotations to Southern European immigrants in the 1960s, and is now usually used with an exclusively derogatory connotation against people with roots in the \"Orient\" (German term for the area which includes North Africa, Middle East and Afghanistan). The word is originally derived from the Hawaiian word for human, kanaka. Until 2009, several rough translations of the word \"Kanak\" were admitted: \"goddess\". In its resolution n°5195, the Academy of the Polynesian languages Pa ' umotu specified a definition more faithful to the primal Polynesian language Mamaka Kaïo of origin, that of ", "score": "1.3310968" }, { "id": "10704879", "title": "Kanacea", "text": " Kanacea (pronounced ) (Kanathea ) is a volcanic island with seven peaks in Fiji's Lau archipelago. It is 15 km west of Vanua Balavu. Covering an area of 12.48 sqkm, it has a maximum elevation of 259 meters. The island features a coconut plantation and many streams, and is circled by great beaches and fringing reefs with a boat opening and a large lagoon on the northeastern side. Plantation buildings and a school remain. Kanacea is privately owned. Its main economic activity was centered on copra and sugarcane, and it retains a coconut plantation.", "score": "1.3159219" }, { "id": "273375", "title": "Lifou Island", "text": " The term Kanak is used for natives of the islands and their native language of the island is Drehu, with people descending from Melanesians and Polynesians. With a total of 19 different tribes inhabiting the three Loyalty Islands, six of which are on Lifou. The current traditional high chief of the island is Evanes Boula, who is chief of 13 of the three islands tribes, succeeding Henri Boula on 13 June 1999.", "score": "1.3103461" }, { "id": "7793529", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " The word 'Kanak' is derived from kanaka maoli, a Hawaiian phrase meaning 'ordinary person' which was at one time applied indiscriminately by European colonisers, traders and missionaries in Oceania to any non-European Pacific islander. Prior to European contact, there were no unified states in New Caledonia, and no single self-appellation used to refer to its inhabitants. Other words have been coined from Kanak in the past few generations: Kanaky is an ethno-political name for the island or the entire territory. Kanéka is a musical genre associated with the Kanak, stylistically a form of reggae with added flutes, percussion and harmonies. Kaneka often has political lyrics and is sung in Drehu, Paici or other Melanesian languages, or in French. The word \"kanak\" is grammatically invariable. The German racial epithet Kanake — which is now applied to all non-whites, even Southern Europeans in some cases, and especially to Turkish immigrants – also derives from the same source, and was originally applied to people from German colonial possessions in Oceania.", "score": "1.3023126" }, { "id": "3378633", "title": "Seutula", "text": " Seutula (Sjöskog) is a district in Vantaa, Finland, located inside the curve of the River Vantaa. Seutula is also a village in the medieval town of Helsinki, stretching to Rajakoski in the north, Lavanko in the east covering the whole district of Kiila, and including Sotilaskorpi in the south. On the other hand, the western part of the river's curve, including the Königstedt Manor, belongs to the village of Riipilä. Seutula is often considered a region stretching even outside the official district, and it has an active local community. In terms of government, Seutula, Riipilä, and Kiila belong to the ", "score": "1.2988763" }, { "id": "8764221", "title": "Kankaanpää", "text": "🇸🇪 Bollnäs, Sweden ; 🇳🇴 Flekkefjord, Norway ; Gagra, Georgia ; 🇩🇪 Misburg, Germany ; Morsø Municipality, Denmark Kankaanpää is twinned with: ", "score": "1.2971942" }, { "id": "3765747", "title": "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta", "text": " The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany.", "score": "1.2932088" }, { "id": "11428948", "title": "Kaniakapupu", "text": " Kaniakapūpū (\"the singing of the land shells\"), known formerly as Luakaha (\"place of relaxation\"), is the ruins of the former summer palace of King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. Built in the 1840s, and situated in the cool uplands of the Nuʻuanu Valley, it served as the king and queen's summer retreat after the capital of the Kingdom of Hawaii moved from Lahaina to Honolulu in 1845. It was famous for being the site of a grand luau attended by an estimated ten thousand guests during the 1847 Hawaiian Sovereignty Restoration Day celebration. The palace had fallen into ruins by 1874; no records exist about its condition in the intervening years. Rediscovered in the 1950s, the site was cleared and efforts were made to stabilize the ruins from further damage by the elements and invasive plant growth. The site remains officially off-limits to the public and trespassers are subjected to citations, although the site is not regularly monitored.", "score": "1.2900085" }, { "id": "11441240", "title": "Chuuk State", "text": "Namoneas ; Faichuuk ; Hall Islands ; Namonuito Atoll (Magur Islands) (northwest) ; Pattiw (Western Islands) ; Mortlock Islands Chuuk State (also known as Truk) is one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The other states are Kosrae State, Pohnpei State, and Yap State. It consists of several island groups: Chuuk is the most populous state of the FSM with 50,000 inhabitants on 120 km2. Chuuk Lagoon is where most people live. Weno Island in the lagoon functions as state capital and is FSM's biggest city. It is scheduled to possibly vote for independence in 2022.", "score": "1.2857672" }, { "id": "15643198", "title": "List of diasporas", "text": " to New Caledonia in the 1910s due to racial fears of Kanaks live among the country's white European-descent majority. Today, an estimated 30,000 Australian descendants of Kanaks live in the state of Queensland, where the main concentration of Australian plantation agriculture took place. ; Newfie, a colloquial name for people from the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, originally for inhabitants of the Island of Newfoundland. The Newfie diaspora frequently emigrated to other provinces of Canada for employment opportunities in the tens of thousands since the 1920s, while some Newfoundlanders went to the US and the UK in a lesser extent. Newfoundland became Canada's 10th province in 1949, after 350 years of British rule. ; New York City relocatees ", "score": "1.2826098" }, { "id": "31421723", "title": "Kanak railway station", "text": " Kanak railway station is located in Pakistan.", "score": "1.2814294" }, { "id": "2231289", "title": "Nuuk", "text": " KANUKOKA (Kalaallit Nunaanni Kommunit Kattuffiat) was based in Nuuk. It was an association of Greenland's municipalities, led by Enok Sandgreen. The aim of the organisation was to facilitate cooperation among all five municipalities of Greenland: Avannaata, Kujalleq, Qeqertalik, Qeqqata, and Sermersooq. However, Sermersooq and Qeqertalik both withdrew and KANUKOKA was dissolved as of Tuesday, 31 July, 2018. The organisation ran the municipal elections every four years, with the last election taking place in 2016. All municipal authorities in Greenland were members of the organisation up until its 2018 dissolution. The association was overseen by Maliina Abelsen, the Minister for Social Affairs in the Government of Greenland.", "score": "1.2787704" }, { "id": "12984230", "title": "Laiaküla", "text": " Laiaküla is a village in Viimsi Parish, Harju County in northern Estonia. It's located about 10 km east of the centre of Tallinn. Laiaküla is an exclave of Viimsi Parish, situated between Tallinn and Maardu. As of 2011 Census, the settlement's population was 740, of which the Estonians were 461 (62.3%). Laiaküla is reachable from the centre of Tallinn by Tallinn Bus Company's route nr. 34A (Viru keskus – Muuga aedlinn), average traveling time is about 29 minutes (the stop's name is Käära).", "score": "1.2701046" }, { "id": "7793540", "title": "Kanak people", "text": " New Caledonia or Territoire des Nouvelle-Caledonie et Dependances, is approximately 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) off the northeast coast of Australia. Of its 500 islands, the five main ones are inhabited, are spread across an area 30 miles wide and over 250 miles in length. As of 2009, the Melanesian Kanak people constituted 40.3% (99,078) of the population of 245,580 in New Caledonia, a minority in their ancestral land. The other groups consist of Europeans (mostly French) at 29%, Wallisian 9%, people of mixed ancestry (8%), and other groups including Polynesians, Indonesians, Vietnamese and those (believed to be chiefly of European ancestry) who identified simply as \"Caledonian.\" In 1774, Cook landed in Balade and estimated a population of around 50,000 for the whole island. A minimum of 100,000 is more likely, considering the amount of land that can be shown to have been cultivated pre-colonially. This declined to 27,000 during early colonial rule as a result of disease. Kanaks were historically associated with tribes, including the Bwaarhat, Tiendanite, Goa, and Goosana, as well as clans, such as the Poowe.", "score": "1.2694666" } ]
[ "Kanaküla\n Kanaküla is a village in Saarde Parish, Pärnu County, in southwestern Estonia.", "Kauppakorkeakoulun Ylioppilaskunnan Laulajat\nUSA and Canada 2010 ; Spain 2009 ; China 2006 ; Germany 2003 ; Brazil 2002 ", "Kankaanpää\n Ala-Honkajoki, Hapua, Jyränkylä, Karhusaari, Korvaluoma, Kyynärjärvi, Narvi, Niinisalo, Santaskylä, Taulunoja, Venesjärvi, Veneskoski, Verttuu and Vihteljärvi.", "Houaïlou\n The town is part of the Ajië-Aro Kanak cultural grouping, and Ajië is the local language. Over 90% of the population identified as Kanak in the 2014 census. There are some European mine workers and farmers, and a small number of Polynesians, and Asian from different countries.", "Poum\n There is one boarding middle school near Poum village. The Kanak population pursue diverse subsistence activities, sometimes combined with paid work. There is one service station and store, opened in the 2010s. Tourists can stay at a western style hotel complex, the Malabou Beach hotel on Nehoue Bay, which is owned by the Northern Province corporation, Grands Hôtels - it has 35 employees. There are also two tourist cottages (Golone and Poingam), a campsite (Pagop) and home stays are also possible. Fishing is still pursued mainly by the islanders, especially from Tiabet, although commercial fish sales are affected by the long distances ", "Kanak people\n Kanak (French spelling until 1984: Canaque) are the indigenous Melanesian inhabitants of New Caledonia, an overseas collectivity of France in the southwest Pacific. According to the 2019 census, they make up 41.2% of the total population with around 112,000 people. The Kanaks refer to the European inhabitants of New Caledonia as Caldoches. Though Melanesian settlement is recorded on Grande Terre's Presqu'île de Foué as far back as the Lapita culture, the origin of the Kanak people is unclear. Ethnographic research has shown that Polynesian seafarers have intermarried with the Kanaks over the centuries. New Caledonia was annexed to France in 1853, and became an overseas territory of France in 1956. ", "Kanake\n Kanake (or Kanacke, Kana(c)k; pl. Kanacken or Kanaks/Kanax) is a German word for people from German-speaking countries with roots in Turkey, Arab countries and Persian speaking countries. It is used as a derogatory word, but also as a self-denomination. It was transferred with more ambiguous connotations to Southern European immigrants in the 1960s, and is now usually used with an exclusively derogatory connotation against people with roots in the \"Orient\" (German term for the area which includes North Africa, Middle East and Afghanistan). The word is originally derived from the Hawaiian word for human, kanaka. Until 2009, several rough translations of the word \"Kanak\" were admitted: \"goddess\". In its resolution n°5195, the Academy of the Polynesian languages Pa ' umotu specified a definition more faithful to the primal Polynesian language Mamaka Kaïo of origin, that of ", "Kanacea\n Kanacea (pronounced ) (Kanathea ) is a volcanic island with seven peaks in Fiji's Lau archipelago. It is 15 km west of Vanua Balavu. Covering an area of 12.48 sqkm, it has a maximum elevation of 259 meters. The island features a coconut plantation and many streams, and is circled by great beaches and fringing reefs with a boat opening and a large lagoon on the northeastern side. Plantation buildings and a school remain. Kanacea is privately owned. Its main economic activity was centered on copra and sugarcane, and it retains a coconut plantation.", "Lifou Island\n The term Kanak is used for natives of the islands and their native language of the island is Drehu, with people descending from Melanesians and Polynesians. With a total of 19 different tribes inhabiting the three Loyalty Islands, six of which are on Lifou. The current traditional high chief of the island is Evanes Boula, who is chief of 13 of the three islands tribes, succeeding Henri Boula on 13 June 1999.", "Kanak people\n The word 'Kanak' is derived from kanaka maoli, a Hawaiian phrase meaning 'ordinary person' which was at one time applied indiscriminately by European colonisers, traders and missionaries in Oceania to any non-European Pacific islander. Prior to European contact, there were no unified states in New Caledonia, and no single self-appellation used to refer to its inhabitants. Other words have been coined from Kanak in the past few generations: Kanaky is an ethno-political name for the island or the entire territory. Kanéka is a musical genre associated with the Kanak, stylistically a form of reggae with added flutes, percussion and harmonies. Kaneka often has political lyrics and is sung in Drehu, Paici or other Melanesian languages, or in French. The word \"kanak\" is grammatically invariable. The German racial epithet Kanake — which is now applied to all non-whites, even Southern Europeans in some cases, and especially to Turkish immigrants – also derives from the same source, and was originally applied to people from German colonial possessions in Oceania.", "Seutula\n Seutula (Sjöskog) is a district in Vantaa, Finland, located inside the curve of the River Vantaa. Seutula is also a village in the medieval town of Helsinki, stretching to Rajakoski in the north, Lavanko in the east covering the whole district of Kiila, and including Sotilaskorpi in the south. On the other hand, the western part of the river's curve, including the Königstedt Manor, belongs to the village of Riipilä. Seutula is often considered a region stretching even outside the official district, and it has an active local community. In terms of government, Seutula, Riipilä, and Kiila belong to the ", "Kankaanpää\n🇸🇪 Bollnäs, Sweden ; 🇳🇴 Flekkefjord, Norway ; Gagra, Georgia ; 🇩🇪 Misburg, Germany ; Morsø Municipality, Denmark Kankaanpää is twinned with: ", "Eteläsuomalainen osakunta\n The Nation has friendship contracts with several student nations, student associations and student societies at universities in Finland, Estonia, Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Germany.", "Kaniakapupu\n Kaniakapūpū (\"the singing of the land shells\"), known formerly as Luakaha (\"place of relaxation\"), is the ruins of the former summer palace of King Kamehameha III and Queen Kalama on the island of Oahu in Hawaii. Built in the 1840s, and situated in the cool uplands of the Nuʻuanu Valley, it served as the king and queen's summer retreat after the capital of the Kingdom of Hawaii moved from Lahaina to Honolulu in 1845. It was famous for being the site of a grand luau attended by an estimated ten thousand guests during the 1847 Hawaiian Sovereignty Restoration Day celebration. The palace had fallen into ruins by 1874; no records exist about its condition in the intervening years. Rediscovered in the 1950s, the site was cleared and efforts were made to stabilize the ruins from further damage by the elements and invasive plant growth. The site remains officially off-limits to the public and trespassers are subjected to citations, although the site is not regularly monitored.", "Chuuk State\nNamoneas ; Faichuuk ; Hall Islands ; Namonuito Atoll (Magur Islands) (northwest) ; Pattiw (Western Islands) ; Mortlock Islands Chuuk State (also known as Truk) is one of the four states of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). The other states are Kosrae State, Pohnpei State, and Yap State. It consists of several island groups: Chuuk is the most populous state of the FSM with 50,000 inhabitants on 120 km2. Chuuk Lagoon is where most people live. Weno Island in the lagoon functions as state capital and is FSM's biggest city. It is scheduled to possibly vote for independence in 2022.", "List of diasporas\n to New Caledonia in the 1910s due to racial fears of Kanaks live among the country's white European-descent majority. Today, an estimated 30,000 Australian descendants of Kanaks live in the state of Queensland, where the main concentration of Australian plantation agriculture took place. ; Newfie, a colloquial name for people from the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador, originally for inhabitants of the Island of Newfoundland. The Newfie diaspora frequently emigrated to other provinces of Canada for employment opportunities in the tens of thousands since the 1920s, while some Newfoundlanders went to the US and the UK in a lesser extent. Newfoundland became Canada's 10th province in 1949, after 350 years of British rule. ; New York City relocatees ", "Kanak railway station\n Kanak railway station is located in Pakistan.", "Nuuk\n KANUKOKA (Kalaallit Nunaanni Kommunit Kattuffiat) was based in Nuuk. It was an association of Greenland's municipalities, led by Enok Sandgreen. The aim of the organisation was to facilitate cooperation among all five municipalities of Greenland: Avannaata, Kujalleq, Qeqertalik, Qeqqata, and Sermersooq. However, Sermersooq and Qeqertalik both withdrew and KANUKOKA was dissolved as of Tuesday, 31 July, 2018. The organisation ran the municipal elections every four years, with the last election taking place in 2016. All municipal authorities in Greenland were members of the organisation up until its 2018 dissolution. The association was overseen by Maliina Abelsen, the Minister for Social Affairs in the Government of Greenland.", "Laiaküla\n Laiaküla is a village in Viimsi Parish, Harju County in northern Estonia. It's located about 10 km east of the centre of Tallinn. Laiaküla is an exclave of Viimsi Parish, situated between Tallinn and Maardu. As of 2011 Census, the settlement's population was 740, of which the Estonians were 461 (62.3%). Laiaküla is reachable from the centre of Tallinn by Tallinn Bus Company's route nr. 34A (Viru keskus – Muuga aedlinn), average traveling time is about 29 minutes (the stop's name is Käära).", "Kanak people\n New Caledonia or Territoire des Nouvelle-Caledonie et Dependances, is approximately 1,200 kilometres (750 mi) off the northeast coast of Australia. Of its 500 islands, the five main ones are inhabited, are spread across an area 30 miles wide and over 250 miles in length. As of 2009, the Melanesian Kanak people constituted 40.3% (99,078) of the population of 245,580 in New Caledonia, a minority in their ancestral land. The other groups consist of Europeans (mostly French) at 29%, Wallisian 9%, people of mixed ancestry (8%), and other groups including Polynesians, Indonesians, Vietnamese and those (believed to be chiefly of European ancestry) who identified simply as \"Caledonian.\" In 1774, Cook landed in Balade and estimated a population of around 50,000 for the whole island. A minimum of 100,000 is more likely, considering the amount of land that can be shown to have been cultivated pre-colonially. This declined to 27,000 during early colonial rule as a result of disease. Kanaks were historically associated with tribes, including the Bwaarhat, Tiendanite, Goa, and Goosana, as well as clans, such as the Poowe." ]
In what country is Breitenfelde?
[ "Germany", "FRG", "BRD", "Bundesrepublik Deutschland", "Federal Republic of Germany", "de", "Deutschland", "GER", "BR Deutschland", "DE" ]
country
Breitenfelde (Amt)
3,373,198
67
[ { "id": "25167877", "title": "Breitenfelde", "text": " Breitenfelde is a village in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is situated near the Elbe-Lübeck Canal, approx. 5 km southwest of Mölln, and 30 km south of Lübeck. Breitenfelde is part of the Amt (\"collective municipality\") Breitenfelde. From November 1944 to April 1945, an external command of the Neuengamme concentration camp was housed in Breitenfelde. It comprised 20 prisoners who had to do forced labor for the SS-Bauleitung Mölln in the sawmill of the Karl Gülzow company.", "score": "1.6156038" }, { "id": "28772687", "title": "Breitenfeld, Saxony-Anhalt", "text": " Breitenfeld is a village and a former municipality in the district Altmarkkreis Salzwedel, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2011, it has been part of the town of Gardelegen.", "score": "1.513371" }, { "id": "13747757", "title": "Breitenfeld, Leipzig", "text": " Breitenfeld is a village in Germany, incorporated into the city of Leipzig since 1999. It lies 8 km north of the city centre, near the old road to Landsberg. To the south, it borders the suburbanised villages of Lindenthal and Wiederitzsch; to the north it is bordered by the autobahn A14. It was the site of the Battle of Breitenfeld (1631), an important Swedish-Protestant victory in the Thirty Years' War.", "score": "1.5059878" }, { "id": "30230892", "title": "Breckerfeld", "text": "🇫🇷 Gençay, Vienne, France ", "score": "1.4749659" }, { "id": "6979015", "title": "Battle of Breitenfeld (1631)", "text": " The battlefield today is bisected by the A14 autobahn, which slices through the fields where the majority of the action occurred, between the original position of Tilly, at Breitenfeld, and the original positions of the Swedes and Saxons, around Podelwitz. In the eastern portion of the village of Breitenfeld stands a monument to Gustav Adolf and the victory his army accomplished there in 1631. It was erected in 1831 on the two hundredth anniversary of the battle and bears the following inscription:", "score": "1.4532449" }, { "id": "13747759", "title": "Breitenfeld, Leipzig", "text": " Count of Tilly. In 1642, in a second Battle of Breitenfeld (1642), the troops of Sweden and Saxony again defeated the imperial troops. At the Battle of Nations in 1813, the Prussian general Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher established his command post in the Breitenfeld mill, from which he coordinated the attacks on Napoleon's French troops positioned in Möckern and Gohlis. In 1856, the patrimonial authority was relinquished and Breitenfeld acquired local autonomy within the duchy of Saxony, as a community with its own village council. In 1923, the village formed part of the conjoined community of Lindenthal, and in 1999, joined with the city of Leipzig. Since 2002, Breitenfeld has been the main home of the Leipzig animal rescue, and the city's fairgrounds and exhibition hall is located at the village.", "score": "1.4429468" }, { "id": "8972992", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " Saarland) in the west, was ceded to the Oldenburg-ruled Principality of Birkenfeld (as of 1919, this became the Birkenfeld section of Oldenburg). During this time, the village belonged to the Bürgermeisterei (“Mayoralty”) of Herrstein. As a result of this rather arbitrary border (the criterion for forming a territorial unit was a population figure of 20,000), Breitenthal wound up a border town. While Oberhosenbach, Wickenrodt and Weiden were likewise Oldenburg territory, the neighbouring municipalities of Sulzbach and Hottenbach were Prussian territory. This border persisted as a district boundary between the Birkenfeld and Bernkastel districts even after German Unification and indeed as late as 1969, ", "score": "1.4404311" }, { "id": "25048313", "title": "Breitling (Warnow)", "text": " The Breitling is a bodden-like, roughly 2,500 metre wide opening in the lower Warnow just before its mouth on the Baltic Sea in Germany. Its north to south extent is about 1,500 metres. The Breitling is only linked to the Baltic itself through a narrow access channel in Warnemünde, the Seekanal. For these reasons the Breitling is a perfect natural harbour. On the Baltic side the Breitling is bordered by the Rostock quarter of Hohe Düne. On its southern shore is Rostock Harbour, on the northern shore the port of the German Navy. This is where their corvette squadron and the 7th Fast Patrol Boat squadron is based. In front of Hohe Düne, separated only by the Pinnengraben ditch, lies the uninhabited island of Pagenwerder which ", "score": "1.4076817" }, { "id": "12533997", "title": "Breitenlohe", "text": " Breitenlohe has an auxiliary fire brigade.", "score": "1.4064455" }, { "id": "30674212", "title": "Gençay", "text": "Breckerfeld, Northern Rhine-Westphalia, Germany ", "score": "1.3956959" }, { "id": "12497206", "title": "Regis-Breitingen", "text": " Regis-Breitingen is a town in the Leipzig district, in the Free State of Saxony, Germany. It is situated on the river Pleiße, 6 km southwest of Borna.", "score": "1.3949865" }, { "id": "8972975", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " Breitenthal borders on Oberhosenbach, Wickenrodt, Niederhosenbach, Herrstein, Mörschied and Weiden. The nearest major town is Idar-Oberstein on the Deutsche Edelsteinstraße (“German Gem Road”).", "score": "1.3934755" }, { "id": "11899113", "title": "Breite Oak Tree Reserve", "text": " Breite Nature Reserve is a 74 ha nature reserve in Sighișoara, Romania, a place with a special emotional and cultural background. The largest grassland plateau in Europe, the Breite Reserve has attracted visitors for hundreds of years. The Breite Plateau near Sighisoara is the largest, most representative and well-preserved wooded habitat with hornbeam and oak trees in central and eastern Europe. Breite is a culturally modified forest that carries the local Transylvanian Saxons culture over eight centuries and a rich and varied nature. Both in terms of natural heritage and as a lineage of Sighisoara, Breite is a unique value in Europe. The oaks from Breite are the oldest living things in Sighisoara: ", "score": "1.3911726" }, { "id": "30230889", "title": "Breckerfeld", "text": " Breckerfeld is a town in the district of Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis, in North Rhine-Westphalia, (Germany). It is located in the southeasternmost part of the Ruhr area in northern Sauerland. The town is a member of Regionalverband Ruhr (association).", "score": "1.3838794" }, { "id": "8972989", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " the rest of the region, came into French hands. Under Napoleonic administration after the conquest of the lands on the Rhine’s left bank in 1795, Breitenthal was a commune in the Mairie (“Mayoralty”) of Hottenbach in the canton of Herrstein in the arrondissement of Birkenfeld in the Department of Sarre, established in 1798 as part of the French First Republic, becoming in 1804 the First French Empire. This, at least, spelt the end of serfdom for the local inhabitants; the Rhinegraves and Waldgraves lost their privileges over the peasants, who could now fish and hunt more or less unhindered. Tithes were abolished, and ", "score": "1.3812478" }, { "id": "8972972", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " Breitenthal (Hunsrück) (Hunsrückisch: Bränel) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Herrstein-Rhaunen, whose seat is in Herrstein.", "score": "1.381125" }, { "id": "29987514", "title": "Sierpowo, Pomeranian Voivodeship", "text": " Sierpowo (Breitenfelde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarne, within Człuchów County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km south of Czarne, 26 km west of Człuchów, and 136 km south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. It is located within the historic region of Pomerania. The village has a population of 187. Sierpowo was a private village within the Polish Crown, owned by various Polish nobles, administratively located in the Człuchów County in the Pomeranian Voivodeship. During World War II the Germans operated a labor camp for prisoners of war from the Stalag II-B prisoner-of-war camp in the village. The landmark of Sierpowo is the timber framed Saint Jude Thaddeus church, built in the 17th century.", "score": "1.3748627" }, { "id": "5469343", "title": "Breit", "text": " In Breit stands the Kugelbaum, a roughly 200-year-old oak. The local sport club is FC Büdlich-Breit-Naurath. Moreover, there are a music club, a church choir, a theatre club and the promotional association of the Breit volunteer fire brigade. Running by Breit is the Via Ausonia (or Ausoniusweg in German), a hiking trail – formerly a Roman road – leading from Trier to Bingen am Rhein and named after the Roman poet and state official Decimus Magnus Ausonius, who between AD 365 and 368 travelled in the area and described it.", "score": "1.3739827" }, { "id": "8972991", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " June 1815, the area around Herrstein was awarded to Prussia, and administered as the Oberstein district, on the basis of the 25th article of the concluding act of the Congress of Vienna. In the course of the implementation of the Concert of Europe after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, though, Prussia had to indemnify several lesser rulers with pieces of territory on the Rhine's left bank under Article 49 of the concluding act of the Congress of Vienna. Thus, in 1817, Breitenthal, along with the whole Birkenfeld region from Kirnsulzbach in the east to Selbach (nowadays an outlying centre of Nohfelden in ", "score": "1.36955" }, { "id": "8973021", "title": "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate", "text": " in 1966, lies on the village's southeastern outskirts on Kreisstraße 26 on the way to Niederhosenbach. TuS Breitenthal/Oberhosenbach has at its disposal a grass-covered sporting ground on the way out of the village towards Oberhosenbach (and actually within Oberhosenbach's limits). Nearby are a small playground and a football pitch. South of the village, on the way to the Jammerseiche, on a meadow, lies a floodlit drill ground, which serves the gymnastic and sport club's football teams as a training ground. DSG Breitenthal ’95 has no sporting ground at its disposal in Breitenthal. They play and train at TuS Tiefenstein’s sport facilities in Idar-Oberstein.", "score": "1.3692197" } ]
[ "Breitenfelde\n Breitenfelde is a village in the district of Lauenburg, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. It is situated near the Elbe-Lübeck Canal, approx. 5 km southwest of Mölln, and 30 km south of Lübeck. Breitenfelde is part of the Amt (\"collective municipality\") Breitenfelde. From November 1944 to April 1945, an external command of the Neuengamme concentration camp was housed in Breitenfelde. It comprised 20 prisoners who had to do forced labor for the SS-Bauleitung Mölln in the sawmill of the Karl Gülzow company.", "Breitenfeld, Saxony-Anhalt\n Breitenfeld is a village and a former municipality in the district Altmarkkreis Salzwedel, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 1 January 2011, it has been part of the town of Gardelegen.", "Breitenfeld, Leipzig\n Breitenfeld is a village in Germany, incorporated into the city of Leipzig since 1999. It lies 8 km north of the city centre, near the old road to Landsberg. To the south, it borders the suburbanised villages of Lindenthal and Wiederitzsch; to the north it is bordered by the autobahn A14. It was the site of the Battle of Breitenfeld (1631), an important Swedish-Protestant victory in the Thirty Years' War.", "Breckerfeld\n🇫🇷 Gençay, Vienne, France ", "Battle of Breitenfeld (1631)\n The battlefield today is bisected by the A14 autobahn, which slices through the fields where the majority of the action occurred, between the original position of Tilly, at Breitenfeld, and the original positions of the Swedes and Saxons, around Podelwitz. In the eastern portion of the village of Breitenfeld stands a monument to Gustav Adolf and the victory his army accomplished there in 1631. It was erected in 1831 on the two hundredth anniversary of the battle and bears the following inscription:", "Breitenfeld, Leipzig\n Count of Tilly. In 1642, in a second Battle of Breitenfeld (1642), the troops of Sweden and Saxony again defeated the imperial troops. At the Battle of Nations in 1813, the Prussian general Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher established his command post in the Breitenfeld mill, from which he coordinated the attacks on Napoleon's French troops positioned in Möckern and Gohlis. In 1856, the patrimonial authority was relinquished and Breitenfeld acquired local autonomy within the duchy of Saxony, as a community with its own village council. In 1923, the village formed part of the conjoined community of Lindenthal, and in 1999, joined with the city of Leipzig. Since 2002, Breitenfeld has been the main home of the Leipzig animal rescue, and the city's fairgrounds and exhibition hall is located at the village.", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n Saarland) in the west, was ceded to the Oldenburg-ruled Principality of Birkenfeld (as of 1919, this became the Birkenfeld section of Oldenburg). During this time, the village belonged to the Bürgermeisterei (“Mayoralty”) of Herrstein. As a result of this rather arbitrary border (the criterion for forming a territorial unit was a population figure of 20,000), Breitenthal wound up a border town. While Oberhosenbach, Wickenrodt and Weiden were likewise Oldenburg territory, the neighbouring municipalities of Sulzbach and Hottenbach were Prussian territory. This border persisted as a district boundary between the Birkenfeld and Bernkastel districts even after German Unification and indeed as late as 1969, ", "Breitling (Warnow)\n The Breitling is a bodden-like, roughly 2,500 metre wide opening in the lower Warnow just before its mouth on the Baltic Sea in Germany. Its north to south extent is about 1,500 metres. The Breitling is only linked to the Baltic itself through a narrow access channel in Warnemünde, the Seekanal. For these reasons the Breitling is a perfect natural harbour. On the Baltic side the Breitling is bordered by the Rostock quarter of Hohe Düne. On its southern shore is Rostock Harbour, on the northern shore the port of the German Navy. This is where their corvette squadron and the 7th Fast Patrol Boat squadron is based. In front of Hohe Düne, separated only by the Pinnengraben ditch, lies the uninhabited island of Pagenwerder which ", "Breitenlohe\n Breitenlohe has an auxiliary fire brigade.", "Gençay\nBreckerfeld, Northern Rhine-Westphalia, Germany ", "Regis-Breitingen\n Regis-Breitingen is a town in the Leipzig district, in the Free State of Saxony, Germany. It is situated on the river Pleiße, 6 km southwest of Borna.", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n Breitenthal borders on Oberhosenbach, Wickenrodt, Niederhosenbach, Herrstein, Mörschied and Weiden. The nearest major town is Idar-Oberstein on the Deutsche Edelsteinstraße (“German Gem Road”).", "Breite Oak Tree Reserve\n Breite Nature Reserve is a 74 ha nature reserve in Sighișoara, Romania, a place with a special emotional and cultural background. The largest grassland plateau in Europe, the Breite Reserve has attracted visitors for hundreds of years. The Breite Plateau near Sighisoara is the largest, most representative and well-preserved wooded habitat with hornbeam and oak trees in central and eastern Europe. Breite is a culturally modified forest that carries the local Transylvanian Saxons culture over eight centuries and a rich and varied nature. Both in terms of natural heritage and as a lineage of Sighisoara, Breite is a unique value in Europe. The oaks from Breite are the oldest living things in Sighisoara: ", "Breckerfeld\n Breckerfeld is a town in the district of Ennepe-Ruhr-Kreis, in North Rhine-Westphalia, (Germany). It is located in the southeasternmost part of the Ruhr area in northern Sauerland. The town is a member of Regionalverband Ruhr (association).", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n the rest of the region, came into French hands. Under Napoleonic administration after the conquest of the lands on the Rhine’s left bank in 1795, Breitenthal was a commune in the Mairie (“Mayoralty”) of Hottenbach in the canton of Herrstein in the arrondissement of Birkenfeld in the Department of Sarre, established in 1798 as part of the French First Republic, becoming in 1804 the First French Empire. This, at least, spelt the end of serfdom for the local inhabitants; the Rhinegraves and Waldgraves lost their privileges over the peasants, who could now fish and hunt more or less unhindered. Tithes were abolished, and ", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n Breitenthal (Hunsrück) (Hunsrückisch: Bränel) is an Ortsgemeinde – a municipality belonging to a Verbandsgemeinde, a kind of collective municipality – in the Birkenfeld district in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. It belongs to the Verbandsgemeinde of Herrstein-Rhaunen, whose seat is in Herrstein.", "Sierpowo, Pomeranian Voivodeship\n Sierpowo (Breitenfelde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Czarne, within Człuchów County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 7 km south of Czarne, 26 km west of Człuchów, and 136 km south-west of the regional capital Gdańsk. It is located within the historic region of Pomerania. The village has a population of 187. Sierpowo was a private village within the Polish Crown, owned by various Polish nobles, administratively located in the Człuchów County in the Pomeranian Voivodeship. During World War II the Germans operated a labor camp for prisoners of war from the Stalag II-B prisoner-of-war camp in the village. The landmark of Sierpowo is the timber framed Saint Jude Thaddeus church, built in the 17th century.", "Breit\n In Breit stands the Kugelbaum, a roughly 200-year-old oak. The local sport club is FC Büdlich-Breit-Naurath. Moreover, there are a music club, a church choir, a theatre club and the promotional association of the Breit volunteer fire brigade. Running by Breit is the Via Ausonia (or Ausoniusweg in German), a hiking trail – formerly a Roman road – leading from Trier to Bingen am Rhein and named after the Roman poet and state official Decimus Magnus Ausonius, who between AD 365 and 368 travelled in the area and described it.", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n June 1815, the area around Herrstein was awarded to Prussia, and administered as the Oberstein district, on the basis of the 25th article of the concluding act of the Congress of Vienna. In the course of the implementation of the Concert of Europe after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, though, Prussia had to indemnify several lesser rulers with pieces of territory on the Rhine's left bank under Article 49 of the concluding act of the Congress of Vienna. Thus, in 1817, Breitenthal, along with the whole Birkenfeld region from Kirnsulzbach in the east to Selbach (nowadays an outlying centre of Nohfelden in ", "Breitenthal, Rhineland-Palatinate\n in 1966, lies on the village's southeastern outskirts on Kreisstraße 26 on the way to Niederhosenbach. TuS Breitenthal/Oberhosenbach has at its disposal a grass-covered sporting ground on the way out of the village towards Oberhosenbach (and actually within Oberhosenbach's limits). Nearby are a small playground and a football pitch. South of the village, on the way to the Jammerseiche, on a meadow, lies a floodlit drill ground, which serves the gymnastic and sport club's football teams as a training ground. DSG Breitenthal ’95 has no sporting ground at its disposal in Breitenthal. They play and train at TuS Tiefenstein’s sport facilities in Idar-Oberstein." ]
In what country is Konjsko Brdo?
[ "Croatia", "Republic of Croatia", "HR", "HRV", "hr", "🇭🇷", "CRO" ]
country
Konjsko Brdo
2,096,935
90
[ { "id": "27638444", "title": "Konjsko Brdo", "text": " The population in 2011 was 118.", "score": "1.7778201" }, { "id": "27638443", "title": "Konjsko Brdo", "text": " Konjsko Brdo is a village in the municipality of Perušić, Lika-Senj County, Croatia.", "score": "1.6314652" }, { "id": "31326330", "title": "Visočica hill", "text": " Visočica (also known as Brdo Grad (Bosnian: Hill Town) is a 213-metre-high hill in Bosnia and Herzegovina famous as the site of the Old town of Visoki. The hill has for more than a decade been the subject of a pseudoarchaeological belief that it is part of an ancient man-made pyramid complex. This notion is rejected by Western archaeologists and geologists.", "score": "1.45594" }, { "id": "9571300", "title": "Brdo, Slovenske Konjice", "text": " Brdo is a settlement in the Municipality of Slovenske Konjice in eastern Slovenia. Traditionally the entire area around Slovenske Konjice was part of Styria. It is now included in the Savinja Statistical Region.", "score": "1.4386412" }, { "id": "30938622", "title": "Dindo, Konjic", "text": " Dindo is a village in the municipality of Konjic, in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dindo is located in a mountainous rural area in the south-eastern part of Konjic Municipality on the border with Kalinovik Municipality, which also marks the Inter-Entity Boundary Line (IEBL) between the two constituent entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, FB&H and RS. A bridge carrying an important road across the Ljuta, a right tributary of the Neretva, was destroyed in 1995 during the last days of the Bosnian War before the signing of the Dayton Agreement. The destroyed bridge was replaced with a Bailey bridge in 2002. The work was undertaken by a Spanish Engineering Unit of SFOR based in Mostar. As well as restoring road communications the replacement of the bridge was intended to make it easier for displaced persons to return to their pre-war homes, to support agriculture and to contribute to economic prosperity in the region, encouraging trade between the two entities.", "score": "1.4317737" }, { "id": "10376400", "title": "Konjsko, Resen", "text": " Konjsko (Коњско) is a village in the Resen Municipality of North Macedonia. Located on the western shore of Lake Prespa, Konjsko is just east of the Albania–North Macedonia border, with the village of Tuminec being the nearest settlement on the opposite side of the border. Konjsko is also the nearest settlement to the island of Golem Grad.", "score": "1.4189619" }, { "id": "4632657", "title": "Banjsko Brdo", "text": " Banjsko Brdo (Serbian Cyrillic: Бањско брдо) is a mountain in southwestern Serbia, above the town of Priboj. Its highest peak has an elevation of 1,282 meters above sea level.", "score": "1.4183478" }, { "id": "28861145", "title": "Brda, Konjic", "text": " Brda is a village in the municipality of Kalinovik, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.4127293" }, { "id": "2745942", "title": "Drinovačko Brdo", "text": " Drinovačko Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Grude. It is located at the Bosnia-Croatia border.", "score": "1.3942723" }, { "id": "5027937", "title": "Banj brdo", "text": " Banj brdo (Serbian Cyrilic: Бањ брдо, translated as Banj hill), before known as Šehitluci (Serbian Cyrilic: Шехитлуци) is a 431 meter hill and tourist and recreation place in Banja Luka, part of Bjeljavina mountain. On top of the hill there is Monument to fallen Krajina soldiers, work of Antun Augustinčić dedicated to dead soldiers of People Liberation War in Bosanska Krajina and it is possible to see whole city from that place. Serpentine road on Banj brdo that leads to the monument is made in years 1932 and 1933 on which today small tourist bus is circulating between Day of the City of Banja Luka (April 22) and September 30.", "score": "1.387493" }, { "id": "10376401", "title": "Konjsko, Resen", "text": " Konjsko has almost no permanent residents.", "score": "1.3870828" }, { "id": "7423386", "title": "Kruševo Brdo", "text": " Kruševo Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska, municipality Kotor Varoš in geographical region Bosanska Krajina. It is administratively divided into Krševo Brdo I and II.", "score": "1.378871" }, { "id": "4688909", "title": "Konjsko Tunnel", "text": " The Konjsko Tunnel is located between Vučevica and Dugopolje interchanges of the A1 motorway, in the central Dalmatia region of Croatia. The tunnel tubes vary in length, and are 1262 m and 1122 m long respectively. The tunnel tubes were completed simultaneously. Its construction has been completed in 2004. The northern portal of the tunnel is at elevation of 343.7 m.a.s.l., while the southern one is found at 338.7 m.a.s.l. The maximum permitted driving speed in the tunnel is 100 km/h. The tunnel is operated and maintained by Hrvatske autoceste.", "score": "1.3656964" }, { "id": "12117871", "title": "Kanarevo Brdo", "text": " Kanarevo Brdo developed on the right bank of the Topčiderka river, in southern section of the large park-woods Košutnjak and Topčider, on the road connecting downtown Belgrade to, at that time, industrial suburb of Rakovica. It still remains mainly residential area, with two elementary schools (Đura Jakšić and Ivo Andrić), a medical centre, soccer field of the FK Rakovica and an open green market, with a population of 11,320 in 2011 (combined population of the local communities of Kanarevo Brdo, 6,376 and Košutnjak, 4,944).", "score": "1.3656354" }, { "id": "2214535", "title": "Brdo pri Lukovici", "text": " Brdo Castle (Grad Brdo), also known as the Kersnik Manor (Kersnikova graščina), is located in the settlement. A castle was first mentioned at Brdo in the 15th century but was destroyed in the peasant uprising of 1515. The current structure is a 16th-century castle that was built by the Counts of Lamberg. A plaque above the entry is dated 1552 and bears the Lamberg coat of arms and a German inscription: \"The noble Hans von Lamberg, owner of Črnelo and Mengeš, started building this castle, and then by God's will it was completed by his son Andreas von Lamberg of Črnelo ", "score": "1.3632482" }, { "id": "2794547", "title": "Konjsko, Posušje", "text": " Konjsko is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Posušje.", "score": "1.361818" }, { "id": "8916077", "title": "NAAI", "text": "🇲🇪 Breznica ; 🇷🇸 Rad ", "score": "1.3591379" }, { "id": "7768609", "title": "Jagodnja", "text": " Jagodnja (Serbian Cyrillic: Јагодња) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Krupanj. Its highest peak Košutnja Stopa has an elevation of 939 meters above sea level. The peak of Mačkov kamen (923 m, 44.32889°N, 19.2925°W) was the site of one of bloodiest battles in World War I between Serbian and Austro-Hungarian army, during the Battle of Drina. There is a monument (Memorial ossuary Mačkov kamen) dedicated to the fallen Serbian soldiers.", "score": "1.3555827" }, { "id": "26447251", "title": "Konjsko, Sevnica", "text": " Konjsko (Roßbach ) is a small settlement in the hills above the right bank of the Sava River south of Boštanj in the Municipality of Sevnica in central Slovenia. The area is part of the historical region of Lower Carniola. The municipality is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.", "score": "1.3518231" }, { "id": "32945452", "title": "Konjšica", "text": " Konjšica (in older sources also Košica, Koschza ) is a settlement in the hills on the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Litija in central Slovenia. A small part of the settlement also lies in the Municipality of Zagorje ob Savi. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region; until January 2014 the municipality was part of the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. The local church is dedicated to Saint Bartholomew (sveti Jernej) and belongs to the Parish of Podkum. It dates to 1780. The conductor Carlos Kleiber and his wife Stanislava Brezovar are buried at the local cemetery.", "score": "1.3511742" } ]
[ "Konjsko Brdo\n The population in 2011 was 118.", "Konjsko Brdo\n Konjsko Brdo is a village in the municipality of Perušić, Lika-Senj County, Croatia.", "Visočica hill\n Visočica (also known as Brdo Grad (Bosnian: Hill Town) is a 213-metre-high hill in Bosnia and Herzegovina famous as the site of the Old town of Visoki. The hill has for more than a decade been the subject of a pseudoarchaeological belief that it is part of an ancient man-made pyramid complex. This notion is rejected by Western archaeologists and geologists.", "Brdo, Slovenske Konjice\n Brdo is a settlement in the Municipality of Slovenske Konjice in eastern Slovenia. Traditionally the entire area around Slovenske Konjice was part of Styria. It is now included in the Savinja Statistical Region.", "Dindo, Konjic\n Dindo is a village in the municipality of Konjic, in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dindo is located in a mountainous rural area in the south-eastern part of Konjic Municipality on the border with Kalinovik Municipality, which also marks the Inter-Entity Boundary Line (IEBL) between the two constituent entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, FB&H and RS. A bridge carrying an important road across the Ljuta, a right tributary of the Neretva, was destroyed in 1995 during the last days of the Bosnian War before the signing of the Dayton Agreement. The destroyed bridge was replaced with a Bailey bridge in 2002. The work was undertaken by a Spanish Engineering Unit of SFOR based in Mostar. As well as restoring road communications the replacement of the bridge was intended to make it easier for displaced persons to return to their pre-war homes, to support agriculture and to contribute to economic prosperity in the region, encouraging trade between the two entities.", "Konjsko, Resen\n Konjsko (Коњско) is a village in the Resen Municipality of North Macedonia. Located on the western shore of Lake Prespa, Konjsko is just east of the Albania–North Macedonia border, with the village of Tuminec being the nearest settlement on the opposite side of the border. Konjsko is also the nearest settlement to the island of Golem Grad.", "Banjsko Brdo\n Banjsko Brdo (Serbian Cyrillic: Бањско брдо) is a mountain in southwestern Serbia, above the town of Priboj. Its highest peak has an elevation of 1,282 meters above sea level.", "Brda, Konjic\n Brda is a village in the municipality of Kalinovik, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "Drinovačko Brdo\n Drinovačko Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Grude. It is located at the Bosnia-Croatia border.", "Banj brdo\n Banj brdo (Serbian Cyrilic: Бањ брдо, translated as Banj hill), before known as Šehitluci (Serbian Cyrilic: Шехитлуци) is a 431 meter hill and tourist and recreation place in Banja Luka, part of Bjeljavina mountain. On top of the hill there is Monument to fallen Krajina soldiers, work of Antun Augustinčić dedicated to dead soldiers of People Liberation War in Bosanska Krajina and it is possible to see whole city from that place. Serpentine road on Banj brdo that leads to the monument is made in years 1932 and 1933 on which today small tourist bus is circulating between Day of the City of Banja Luka (April 22) and September 30.", "Konjsko, Resen\n Konjsko has almost no permanent residents.", "Kruševo Brdo\n Kruševo Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska, municipality Kotor Varoš in geographical region Bosanska Krajina. It is administratively divided into Krševo Brdo I and II.", "Konjsko Tunnel\n The Konjsko Tunnel is located between Vučevica and Dugopolje interchanges of the A1 motorway, in the central Dalmatia region of Croatia. The tunnel tubes vary in length, and are 1262 m and 1122 m long respectively. The tunnel tubes were completed simultaneously. Its construction has been completed in 2004. The northern portal of the tunnel is at elevation of 343.7 m.a.s.l., while the southern one is found at 338.7 m.a.s.l. The maximum permitted driving speed in the tunnel is 100 km/h. The tunnel is operated and maintained by Hrvatske autoceste.", "Kanarevo Brdo\n Kanarevo Brdo developed on the right bank of the Topčiderka river, in southern section of the large park-woods Košutnjak and Topčider, on the road connecting downtown Belgrade to, at that time, industrial suburb of Rakovica. It still remains mainly residential area, with two elementary schools (Đura Jakšić and Ivo Andrić), a medical centre, soccer field of the FK Rakovica and an open green market, with a population of 11,320 in 2011 (combined population of the local communities of Kanarevo Brdo, 6,376 and Košutnjak, 4,944).", "Brdo pri Lukovici\n Brdo Castle (Grad Brdo), also known as the Kersnik Manor (Kersnikova graščina), is located in the settlement. A castle was first mentioned at Brdo in the 15th century but was destroyed in the peasant uprising of 1515. The current structure is a 16th-century castle that was built by the Counts of Lamberg. A plaque above the entry is dated 1552 and bears the Lamberg coat of arms and a German inscription: \"The noble Hans von Lamberg, owner of Črnelo and Mengeš, started building this castle, and then by God's will it was completed by his son Andreas von Lamberg of Črnelo ", "Konjsko, Posušje\n Konjsko is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Posušje.", "NAAI\n🇲🇪 Breznica ; 🇷🇸 Rad ", "Jagodnja\n Jagodnja (Serbian Cyrillic: Јагодња) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Krupanj. Its highest peak Košutnja Stopa has an elevation of 939 meters above sea level. The peak of Mačkov kamen (923 m, 44.32889°N, 19.2925°W) was the site of one of bloodiest battles in World War I between Serbian and Austro-Hungarian army, during the Battle of Drina. There is a monument (Memorial ossuary Mačkov kamen) dedicated to the fallen Serbian soldiers.", "Konjsko, Sevnica\n Konjsko (Roßbach ) is a small settlement in the hills above the right bank of the Sava River south of Boštanj in the Municipality of Sevnica in central Slovenia. The area is part of the historical region of Lower Carniola. The municipality is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.", "Konjšica\n Konjšica (in older sources also Košica, Koschza ) is a settlement in the hills on the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Litija in central Slovenia. A small part of the settlement also lies in the Municipality of Zagorje ob Savi. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region; until January 2014 the municipality was part of the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. The local church is dedicated to Saint Bartholomew (sveti Jernej) and belongs to the Parish of Podkum. It dates to 1780. The conductor Carlos Kleiber and his wife Stanislava Brezovar are buried at the local cemetery." ]
In what country is New York State Route 157?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
New York State Route 157
1,918,483
78
[ { "id": "25906201", "title": "New York State Route 155", "text": " New York State Route 155 (NY 155) is a 16.85 mi state highway located entirely within Albany County in the Capital District of New York. The western terminus of the route is at NY 85A in Voorheesville. The eastern terminus is at NY 32 in Watervliet. NY 155 mainly serves as a connection to the Albany International Airport from the major roads it connects to.", "score": "1.615658" }, { "id": "7628919", "title": "New York State Route 60", "text": " New York State Route 60 (NY 60) is a north–south state highway in Chautauqua County, New York, in the United States. The southern terminus of the route is at an intersection with U.S. Route 62 (US 62) south of the city of Jamestown in the town of Kiantone. Its northern terminus is at a junction with NY 5 in the city of Dunkirk. In between, NY 60 intersects the lengthy County Route 380 (CR 380) in Kiantone and Gerry, the Southern Tier Expressway (Interstate 86 or I-86 and NY 17) in Ellicott, and the New York State Thruway (I-90) in the town of Dunkirk.", "score": "1.5741756" }, { "id": "25906204", "title": "New York State Route 155", "text": " 155 and CR 157 cross over the New York State Thruway (I-90), and cross through another section of the Albany Pine Bush Preserve. Soon leaving the city of Albany, the routes cross into the town of Colonie after a short stint back in Guilderland. Turning further to the northeast through Colonie, NY 155 and CR 157 pass through the hamlet of Karner and cross over tracks used by Amtrak. After crossing the tracks, the road passes through a corner of the village of Colonie. The routes reach a junction with NY 5 (Central Avenue) and the surrounding commercial area. NY 155 and CR 157 along New Karner Road, a two-lane arterial. At the ", "score": "1.5687436" }, { "id": "25906202", "title": "New York State Route 155", "text": " NY 155 begins at a roundabout with NY 85A (Maple Road) on the eastern edge of Voorheesville in the town of New Scotland. NY 155 proceeds northeast along State Farm Road, crossing under the former railroad bed of the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad into a junction with County Route 306 (CR 306 or Voorheesville Avenue / Normanskill Road). The two lane road continues on, winding northwest through New Scotland before entering the town of Guilderland. The route passes east of the Albany Country Club before crossing the Normans Kill creek and passing a housing development. Crossing Blockhouse Creek, NY 155 reaches the hamlet of Westmere. Through Westmere, NY 155 bends northeast, crossing past the ", "score": "1.5605152" }, { "id": "7628929", "title": "New York State Route 60", "text": " When NY 60 was assigned in the mid-1920s, it began at the New York–Pennsylvania border southeast of Jamestown and ended at NY 5 (now US 20) in Fredonia. In between, the route passed through Frewsburg, Jamestown, and Cassadaga. From Laona to Fredonia, NY 60 was routed on Porter Avenue, Liberty Street, and Water Street. NY 60 was extended north to NY 20A (modern NY 5) in Dunkirk by way of Temple Street and Central Avenue as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. US 62 was extended into New York c. 1932. From the Pennsylvania state line to Frewsburg, US 62 initially overlapped NY 60. The overlap was eliminated in the 1940s when NY ", "score": "1.5366197" }, { "id": "25906203", "title": "New York State Route 155", "text": " Trails Golf Course and past several housing developments before reaching the center of the hamlet, where it crosses US 20 (Western Avenue). At this junction, maintenance jurisdiction switches from the New York State Department of Transportation to Albany County, and the route becomes concurrent with CR 157. The road name change names from State Farm Road to New Karner Road. Shortly north of US 20, the route crosses into the city of Albany at Corporate Circle. Through Albany, NY 155 and CR 157 remain a two-lane arterial, passing through the Albany Pine Bush Preserve and intersecting with the western terminus of the Washington Avenue Extension (unsigned NY 910D). Just north of Washington Avenue Extension, ", "score": "1.5221069" }, { "id": "6522089", "title": "New York State Route 30", "text": " New York State Route 30 (NY 30) is a state highway in the central part of New York in the United States. It extends for 300.71 mi from an interchange with NY 17 (Future Interstate 86) in the Southern Tier to the US–Canada border in the state's North Country, where it continues into Quebec as Route 138. On a regional level, the route serves to connect the Catskill Park to the Adirondack Park. In the latter, NY 30 is known as the Adirondack Trail. Aside from the state parks, the route serves the city of Amsterdam (where it meets the New York State Thruway) and several villages. NY 30 was assigned in the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to most of its modern routing south of Wells, replacing a series of designations that had been assigned to the highway in the 1920s. The portion of what is now NY 30 north of Speculator was initially part of NY 10. When that route was truncated to Arietta c. 1960, NY 30 was extended northward over NY 10's former alignment by way of an overlap with NY 8.", "score": "1.5114279" }, { "id": "8064279", "title": "New York State Route 380", "text": " NY 380 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York and extended from NY 60 north of Jamestown to NY 5 north of Brocton, a routing that remained in place up to and through the 1970s. Although the highway was signed as a state route, most of the route was actually maintained by Chautauqua County. The only section of the route that was maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation was the portion between NY 424 in Stockton and US 20 in Brocton. NY 380's short overlap with US 20 in Brocton was also state-maintained. On April 1, 1980, ownership and maintenance of NY 380's lone independent, state-maintained portion from ", "score": "1.5063529" }, { "id": "15758636", "title": "New York State Route 146", "text": " 146 on the new state highway. Most of former NY 146 west of Altamont became part of NY 156, save for a one-block section of Main Street within the village. It is now designated as NY 912C, an unsigned 0.08 mi reference route serving a connector between NY 156 and NY 146, which do not meet despite both highways using Main Street as an entrance to the village. In Schenectady, NY 146 was originally routed on Union, Jay, and Nott Streets and Van Vranken Avenue through the northern portion of the city. It was realigned between 1938 and 1947 to bypass the northern part of the city on Balltown Road. The New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) has ", "score": "1.4979079" }, { "id": "30637388", "title": "List of highways numbered 157", "text": " Ellipse sign 157.svg New Jersey Route 157 ; New Mexico 157.svg New Mexico State Road 157 ; NY-157.svg New York State Route 157 ; NY-157A.svg New York State Route 157A ; NC 157.svg North Carolina Highway 157 ; PA-157.svg Pennsylvania Route 157 ; South Carolina 157.svg South Carolina Highway 157 ; Secondary Tennessee 157.svg Tennessee State Route 157 ; Texas 157.svg Texas State Highway 157 (former) ; Texas Loop 157.svg Texas State Highway Loop 157 ; Utah SR 157.svg Utah State Route 157 ; Virginia 157.svg Virginia State Route 157 ; WIS 157.svg Wisconsin Highway 157 ; WY-157.svg Wyoming Highway 157 ; Territories: ; PR secondary 157.svg Puerto Rico Highway 157 ", "score": "1.4970536" }, { "id": "25906205", "title": "New York State Route 155", "text": " with Watervliet–Shaker Road, NY 155 and CR 157 turn east, while the right-of-way continues north as Vly Road. Still in the town of Colonie, NY 155 and CR 157 continue east along Watervliet–Shaker Road, passing the Memory's Garden Cemetery. Passing north of Stump Pond, the routes soon turn northeast through the hamlet of Shakers, where widens into a four lane divided highway. County Route 157 ends at a junction with CR 151 (Albany Shaker Road). NY 155 and CR 151 become concurrent, running along the divided four-lane Albany Shaker Road, which provides the main access to Albany International Airport. Passing the main terminal of the airport, the routes bends southward at the entrance ", "score": "1.4964368" }, { "id": "27715836", "title": "New York State Route 85", "text": " In 1908, the New York State Legislature created Route 7, an unsigned legislative route extending from Binghamton to Albany via Oneonta and Schoharie. Route 7 entered the town of New Scotland on what is now NY 157 and followed it to its eastern end at modern NY 85. At this point, the route turned onto the old Albany–Schoharie plank road and continued east to Albany on New Scotland Road and New Scotland Avenue. The section of legislative Route 7 east of modern NY 157 was not assigned a posted designation until the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York when it became part of NY ", "score": "1.4947952" }, { "id": "26646867", "title": "P.S. 157", "text": " P.S. 157 is a historic school building located at 327 St. Nicholas Avenue between West 126th and West 127th Streets in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was built from 1896 to 1899 and was designed by C. B. J. Snyder in the Renaissance Revival style. It ceased being a school in 1975, and was converted to rental apartments in 1993.", "score": "1.4935665" }, { "id": "7628920", "title": "New York State Route 60", "text": " NY 60 begins at an intersection with US 62 (West Main Street) in the town of Kiantone, just west of the hamlet of Frewsburg. NY 60 heads northwestward through Kiantone as Stillwater–Frewsburg Road, entering the hamlet of Stillwater. There, NY 60 intersects with County Route 380 (CR 380; Busti Stillwater Road / Peck Settlement Road) and CR 49 (Kiantone Road) and is known as Foote Avenue Extentsion. At this intersection, NY 60 turns northward through Kiantone, changing names to Foote Avenue as it enters the city of Jamestown. NY 60 is at this point a four-lane commercial arterial through the southern end ", "score": "1.4885111" }, { "id": "10100289", "title": "New Jersey Route 157", "text": " Route 157 originates as an alignment of U.S. Route 9/State Highway Route 4 through Absecon (from an intersection with New Jersey Route 43). The route was originally designated in the 1927 renumbering as a state highway from Absecon to Paterson. In 1930, the route was extended southward to Cape May, New Jersey, and the alignment of current-day Route 157 was bypassed to the west. The former alignment of Route 4 was left unnumbered. Route 157 was designated to a previously unnumbered roadway and has remained unchanged since.", "score": "1.4882916" }, { "id": "15758628", "title": "New York State Route 146", "text": " New York State Route 146 (NY 146) is a state highway in the Capital District of New York in the United States. It extends for 43 mi from Gallupville at NY 443 to near Mechanicville at U.S. Route 4 (US 4) and NY 32. NY 146 is a major thoroughfare in the city of Schenectady, just outside Albany. Most of the route follows an east–west alignment; however, the middle third of the route between Guilderland and Clifton Park runs in a more north–south manner in order to serve Schenectady. At one time, NY 146 had three spur routes; only one—NY 146A—still exists. NY 146 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. At the time, NY 146 began at modern NY 443 in Berne and followed what is now NY 156 northeast to Altamont while modern NY 146 west of Altamont was part of NY 156. The alignments of the two routes were flipped in the late 1930s. Other minor realignments have occurred since, most notably near Mechanicville.", "score": "1.4881004" }, { "id": "10100287", "title": "New Jersey Route 157", "text": " Route 157 is a short state highway in the city of Absecon, New Jersey. The route runs for only 0.91 mi as North Shore Road from an intersection with U.S. Route 30 (US 30), County Route 585 (CR 585) and Atlantic County Route 601 in the center of Absecon to an intersection with U.S. Route 9 in the northern portion of the city. The route is a former alignment of U.S. Route 9/State Highway Route 4 through Absecon, intersecting with State Highway Route 43 starting in the 1927 state highway renumbering. The route stayed on the alignment until 1930, when U.S. Route 9/Route 4 was bypassed to the west. The former alignment remained unnumbered until the 1953 state highway renumbering, when it was designated as Route 157.", "score": "1.4836807" }, { "id": "2750547", "title": "New York State Route 910D", "text": " New York State Route 910D (NY 910D) is a 3.30 mi unsigned reference route designation for Washington Avenue Extension, a divided highway extension of Washington Avenue in Albany, New York, in the United States. The state-maintained portion of the highway begins at an intersection with NY 155 (here county-maintained as County Route 157 or CR 157) and ends just east of CR 156 (Fuller Road) at Interstate 90 (I-90) exit 2. Past I-90 and University Avenue, the highway is maintained by the city of Albany and known as Washington Avenue. Washington Avenue Extension was constructed in the late 1960s and open to traffic by 1973.", "score": "1.4829731" }, { "id": "6335431", "title": "New York State Route 164 (1940–1960s)", "text": " New York State Route 164 (NY 164) was a state highway in the New York City Metropolitan Area. It extended for 5 mi from U.S. Route 9 (US 9) and NY 9A in Yonkers to US 1 in the New York City borough of the Bronx. The route ran mostly along the New York City line and indirectly met both the Saw Mill River Parkway and the New York State Thruway in Yonkers. NY 164 followed McLean Avenue in Yonkers and Nereid and Baychester Avenues in the Bronx. The NY 164 designation was assigned c. 1940 to provide a signed route to the 1939–1940 New York World's Fair held in Queens. Originally, it began at the northern approach to the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge and followed Eastern Boulevard (now the path of the Bruckner Expressway) ", "score": "1.4799833" }, { "id": "2249812", "title": "National Highway 157A (India)", "text": " National Highway 157A, commonly referred to as NH 157A is a national highway in India. It is a secondary route of National Highway 57. NH-157A runs in the state of Odisha in India.", "score": "1.4793928" } ]
[ "New York State Route 155\n New York State Route 155 (NY 155) is a 16.85 mi state highway located entirely within Albany County in the Capital District of New York. The western terminus of the route is at NY 85A in Voorheesville. The eastern terminus is at NY 32 in Watervliet. NY 155 mainly serves as a connection to the Albany International Airport from the major roads it connects to.", "New York State Route 60\n New York State Route 60 (NY 60) is a north–south state highway in Chautauqua County, New York, in the United States. The southern terminus of the route is at an intersection with U.S. Route 62 (US 62) south of the city of Jamestown in the town of Kiantone. Its northern terminus is at a junction with NY 5 in the city of Dunkirk. In between, NY 60 intersects the lengthy County Route 380 (CR 380) in Kiantone and Gerry, the Southern Tier Expressway (Interstate 86 or I-86 and NY 17) in Ellicott, and the New York State Thruway (I-90) in the town of Dunkirk.", "New York State Route 155\n 155 and CR 157 cross over the New York State Thruway (I-90), and cross through another section of the Albany Pine Bush Preserve. Soon leaving the city of Albany, the routes cross into the town of Colonie after a short stint back in Guilderland. Turning further to the northeast through Colonie, NY 155 and CR 157 pass through the hamlet of Karner and cross over tracks used by Amtrak. After crossing the tracks, the road passes through a corner of the village of Colonie. The routes reach a junction with NY 5 (Central Avenue) and the surrounding commercial area. NY 155 and CR 157 along New Karner Road, a two-lane arterial. At the ", "New York State Route 155\n NY 155 begins at a roundabout with NY 85A (Maple Road) on the eastern edge of Voorheesville in the town of New Scotland. NY 155 proceeds northeast along State Farm Road, crossing under the former railroad bed of the Albany and Susquehanna Railroad into a junction with County Route 306 (CR 306 or Voorheesville Avenue / Normanskill Road). The two lane road continues on, winding northwest through New Scotland before entering the town of Guilderland. The route passes east of the Albany Country Club before crossing the Normans Kill creek and passing a housing development. Crossing Blockhouse Creek, NY 155 reaches the hamlet of Westmere. Through Westmere, NY 155 bends northeast, crossing past the ", "New York State Route 60\n When NY 60 was assigned in the mid-1920s, it began at the New York–Pennsylvania border southeast of Jamestown and ended at NY 5 (now US 20) in Fredonia. In between, the route passed through Frewsburg, Jamestown, and Cassadaga. From Laona to Fredonia, NY 60 was routed on Porter Avenue, Liberty Street, and Water Street. NY 60 was extended north to NY 20A (modern NY 5) in Dunkirk by way of Temple Street and Central Avenue as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. US 62 was extended into New York c. 1932. From the Pennsylvania state line to Frewsburg, US 62 initially overlapped NY 60. The overlap was eliminated in the 1940s when NY ", "New York State Route 155\n Trails Golf Course and past several housing developments before reaching the center of the hamlet, where it crosses US 20 (Western Avenue). At this junction, maintenance jurisdiction switches from the New York State Department of Transportation to Albany County, and the route becomes concurrent with CR 157. The road name change names from State Farm Road to New Karner Road. Shortly north of US 20, the route crosses into the city of Albany at Corporate Circle. Through Albany, NY 155 and CR 157 remain a two-lane arterial, passing through the Albany Pine Bush Preserve and intersecting with the western terminus of the Washington Avenue Extension (unsigned NY 910D). Just north of Washington Avenue Extension, ", "New York State Route 30\n New York State Route 30 (NY 30) is a state highway in the central part of New York in the United States. It extends for 300.71 mi from an interchange with NY 17 (Future Interstate 86) in the Southern Tier to the US–Canada border in the state's North Country, where it continues into Quebec as Route 138. On a regional level, the route serves to connect the Catskill Park to the Adirondack Park. In the latter, NY 30 is known as the Adirondack Trail. Aside from the state parks, the route serves the city of Amsterdam (where it meets the New York State Thruway) and several villages. NY 30 was assigned in the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York to most of its modern routing south of Wells, replacing a series of designations that had been assigned to the highway in the 1920s. The portion of what is now NY 30 north of Speculator was initially part of NY 10. When that route was truncated to Arietta c. 1960, NY 30 was extended northward over NY 10's former alignment by way of an overlap with NY 8.", "New York State Route 380\n NY 380 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York and extended from NY 60 north of Jamestown to NY 5 north of Brocton, a routing that remained in place up to and through the 1970s. Although the highway was signed as a state route, most of the route was actually maintained by Chautauqua County. The only section of the route that was maintained by the New York State Department of Transportation was the portion between NY 424 in Stockton and US 20 in Brocton. NY 380's short overlap with US 20 in Brocton was also state-maintained. On April 1, 1980, ownership and maintenance of NY 380's lone independent, state-maintained portion from ", "New York State Route 146\n 146 on the new state highway. Most of former NY 146 west of Altamont became part of NY 156, save for a one-block section of Main Street within the village. It is now designated as NY 912C, an unsigned 0.08 mi reference route serving a connector between NY 156 and NY 146, which do not meet despite both highways using Main Street as an entrance to the village. In Schenectady, NY 146 was originally routed on Union, Jay, and Nott Streets and Van Vranken Avenue through the northern portion of the city. It was realigned between 1938 and 1947 to bypass the northern part of the city on Balltown Road. The New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) has ", "List of highways numbered 157\n Ellipse sign 157.svg New Jersey Route 157 ; New Mexico 157.svg New Mexico State Road 157 ; NY-157.svg New York State Route 157 ; NY-157A.svg New York State Route 157A ; NC 157.svg North Carolina Highway 157 ; PA-157.svg Pennsylvania Route 157 ; South Carolina 157.svg South Carolina Highway 157 ; Secondary Tennessee 157.svg Tennessee State Route 157 ; Texas 157.svg Texas State Highway 157 (former) ; Texas Loop 157.svg Texas State Highway Loop 157 ; Utah SR 157.svg Utah State Route 157 ; Virginia 157.svg Virginia State Route 157 ; WIS 157.svg Wisconsin Highway 157 ; WY-157.svg Wyoming Highway 157 ; Territories: ; PR secondary 157.svg Puerto Rico Highway 157 ", "New York State Route 155\n with Watervliet–Shaker Road, NY 155 and CR 157 turn east, while the right-of-way continues north as Vly Road. Still in the town of Colonie, NY 155 and CR 157 continue east along Watervliet–Shaker Road, passing the Memory's Garden Cemetery. Passing north of Stump Pond, the routes soon turn northeast through the hamlet of Shakers, where widens into a four lane divided highway. County Route 157 ends at a junction with CR 151 (Albany Shaker Road). NY 155 and CR 151 become concurrent, running along the divided four-lane Albany Shaker Road, which provides the main access to Albany International Airport. Passing the main terminal of the airport, the routes bends southward at the entrance ", "New York State Route 85\n In 1908, the New York State Legislature created Route 7, an unsigned legislative route extending from Binghamton to Albany via Oneonta and Schoharie. Route 7 entered the town of New Scotland on what is now NY 157 and followed it to its eastern end at modern NY 85. At this point, the route turned onto the old Albany–Schoharie plank road and continued east to Albany on New Scotland Road and New Scotland Avenue. The section of legislative Route 7 east of modern NY 157 was not assigned a posted designation until the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York when it became part of NY ", "P.S. 157\n P.S. 157 is a historic school building located at 327 St. Nicholas Avenue between West 126th and West 127th Streets in the Harlem neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. It was built from 1896 to 1899 and was designed by C. B. J. Snyder in the Renaissance Revival style. It ceased being a school in 1975, and was converted to rental apartments in 1993.", "New York State Route 60\n NY 60 begins at an intersection with US 62 (West Main Street) in the town of Kiantone, just west of the hamlet of Frewsburg. NY 60 heads northwestward through Kiantone as Stillwater–Frewsburg Road, entering the hamlet of Stillwater. There, NY 60 intersects with County Route 380 (CR 380; Busti Stillwater Road / Peck Settlement Road) and CR 49 (Kiantone Road) and is known as Foote Avenue Extentsion. At this intersection, NY 60 turns northward through Kiantone, changing names to Foote Avenue as it enters the city of Jamestown. NY 60 is at this point a four-lane commercial arterial through the southern end ", "New Jersey Route 157\n Route 157 originates as an alignment of U.S. Route 9/State Highway Route 4 through Absecon (from an intersection with New Jersey Route 43). The route was originally designated in the 1927 renumbering as a state highway from Absecon to Paterson. In 1930, the route was extended southward to Cape May, New Jersey, and the alignment of current-day Route 157 was bypassed to the west. The former alignment of Route 4 was left unnumbered. Route 157 was designated to a previously unnumbered roadway and has remained unchanged since.", "New York State Route 146\n New York State Route 146 (NY 146) is a state highway in the Capital District of New York in the United States. It extends for 43 mi from Gallupville at NY 443 to near Mechanicville at U.S. Route 4 (US 4) and NY 32. NY 146 is a major thoroughfare in the city of Schenectady, just outside Albany. Most of the route follows an east–west alignment; however, the middle third of the route between Guilderland and Clifton Park runs in a more north–south manner in order to serve Schenectady. At one time, NY 146 had three spur routes; only one—NY 146A—still exists. NY 146 was assigned as part of the 1930 renumbering of state highways in New York. At the time, NY 146 began at modern NY 443 in Berne and followed what is now NY 156 northeast to Altamont while modern NY 146 west of Altamont was part of NY 156. The alignments of the two routes were flipped in the late 1930s. Other minor realignments have occurred since, most notably near Mechanicville.", "New Jersey Route 157\n Route 157 is a short state highway in the city of Absecon, New Jersey. The route runs for only 0.91 mi as North Shore Road from an intersection with U.S. Route 30 (US 30), County Route 585 (CR 585) and Atlantic County Route 601 in the center of Absecon to an intersection with U.S. Route 9 in the northern portion of the city. The route is a former alignment of U.S. Route 9/State Highway Route 4 through Absecon, intersecting with State Highway Route 43 starting in the 1927 state highway renumbering. The route stayed on the alignment until 1930, when U.S. Route 9/Route 4 was bypassed to the west. The former alignment remained unnumbered until the 1953 state highway renumbering, when it was designated as Route 157.", "New York State Route 910D\n New York State Route 910D (NY 910D) is a 3.30 mi unsigned reference route designation for Washington Avenue Extension, a divided highway extension of Washington Avenue in Albany, New York, in the United States. The state-maintained portion of the highway begins at an intersection with NY 155 (here county-maintained as County Route 157 or CR 157) and ends just east of CR 156 (Fuller Road) at Interstate 90 (I-90) exit 2. Past I-90 and University Avenue, the highway is maintained by the city of Albany and known as Washington Avenue. Washington Avenue Extension was constructed in the late 1960s and open to traffic by 1973.", "New York State Route 164 (1940–1960s)\n New York State Route 164 (NY 164) was a state highway in the New York City Metropolitan Area. It extended for 5 mi from U.S. Route 9 (US 9) and NY 9A in Yonkers to US 1 in the New York City borough of the Bronx. The route ran mostly along the New York City line and indirectly met both the Saw Mill River Parkway and the New York State Thruway in Yonkers. NY 164 followed McLean Avenue in Yonkers and Nereid and Baychester Avenues in the Bronx. The NY 164 designation was assigned c. 1940 to provide a signed route to the 1939–1940 New York World's Fair held in Queens. Originally, it began at the northern approach to the Bronx–Whitestone Bridge and followed Eastern Boulevard (now the path of the Bruckner Expressway) ", "National Highway 157A (India)\n National Highway 157A, commonly referred to as NH 157A is a national highway in India. It is a secondary route of National Highway 57. NH-157A runs in the state of Odisha in India." ]
In what country is Le Moustoir?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Le Moustoir
14,017
56
[ { "id": "26880372", "title": "Le Moustoir", "text": " Inhabitants of Le Moustoir are called moustoiriens in French.", "score": "1.6453865" }, { "id": "26880371", "title": "Le Moustoir", "text": " Le Moustoir (Ar Vouster) is a commune in the Côtes-d'Armor department of Brittany in northwestern France.", "score": "1.5629878" }, { "id": "1826172", "title": "Moustoir-Ac", "text": " Inhabitants of Moustoir-Ac are called in French Moustoiracais.", "score": "1.4942284" }, { "id": "1826171", "title": "Moustoir-Ac", "text": " Moustoir-Ac (Moustoer-Logunec'h) is a commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.", "score": "1.4645879" }, { "id": "1826198", "title": "Moustoir-Remungol", "text": " Inhabitants of Moustoir-Remungol are called in French Moustoiriens.", "score": "1.403293" }, { "id": "12922463", "title": "Le Moustier", "text": " Le Moustier is an archeological site consisting of two rock shelters in Peyzac-le-Moustier, a village in the Dordogne, France. It is known for a complete skeleton of the species Homo neanderthalensis that was discovered in 1908. The Mousterian tool culture is named after Le Moustier, which was first excavated from 1863 by the Englishman Henry Christy and the Frenchman Édouard Lartet. In 1979, Le Moustier was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List laong with other nearby archeological sites as part of the Prehistoric Sites and Decorated Caves of the Vézère Valley.", "score": "1.3964782" }, { "id": "13072619", "title": "Dahlenburg", "text": " Le Molay-Littry, France", "score": "1.3796074" }, { "id": "1826196", "title": "Moustoir-Remungol", "text": " Moustoir-Remungol (Moustoer-Remengol) is a former commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.", "score": "1.3725178" }, { "id": "4328984", "title": "Le Pressoir d'Argent", "text": " Le Pressoir d'Argent is a two Michelin star restaurant owned by British celebrity chef and restaurateur Gordon Ramsay located in Bordeaux, France. It opened in 2015 and was Ramsay's third restaurant in France.", "score": "1.3581595" }, { "id": "14723819", "title": "Le Lioran", "text": " Within France it is administratively located in the commune of Laveissière, the canton of Murat, the arrondissement of Saint-Flour, the département of Cantal, and the région of Auvergne. However, the village of Prat du Bouc is located in the commune of Albepierre-Bredons, but shares the same upwards administrative chain as the other settlements.", "score": "1.3311133" }, { "id": "27007422", "title": "La Moustache", "text": " La Moustache (in English, The Moustache) is a French film from 2005, directed by Emmanuel Carrère and starring Vincent Lindon, and adapted from Carrère's own novel. The film features music from Philip Glass. The film was awarded the Label Europa Cinemas prize at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival and is currently distributed theatrically in the United States by the Cinema Guild with a DVD release handled by Koch-Lorber Films. The film is based on a 1986 book of the same title by Carrere.", "score": "1.3308978" }, { "id": "30899720", "title": "Stade du Moustoir", "text": " The Stade du Moustoir - Yves Allainmat, known as the Stade du Moustoir, is a multi-use stadium in Lorient, France. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of FC Lorient. The stadium can hold up to 18,110 with the new south stand.", "score": "1.3254147" }, { "id": "14302616", "title": "Moustey", "text": " Moustey (Mostèirs e Viganon) is a commune in the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "score": "1.3235965" }, { "id": "29576542", "title": "Raymond Blanc", "text": " where he opened Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons, a country house hotel and double Michelin starred restaurant. Awarded five AA stars and with a score of 19/20 from respected French guide Gault Millau, Le Manoir describes itself as \"one of the ultimate gastronomic destinations in the country\". Blanc opened Le Petit Blanc, the first of a chain of smaller restaurants, in Oxford in June 1996. Blanc's stated aim with these was to bring the French philosophy of \"good food being central to good living\" to the United Kingdom. His desire was to create and serve food that can be enjoyed by everyone – \"from the time-conscious business person to those ", "score": "1.3033993" }, { "id": "28084593", "title": "Moulin Rouge", "text": " Moulin Rouge is a cabaret in Paris, France. The original house, which burned down in 1915, was co-founded in 1889 by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, who also owned the Paris Olympia. Close to Montmartre in the Paris district of Pigalle on Boulevard de Clichy in the 18th arrondissement, it is marked by the red windmill on its roof. The closest métro station is Blanche. Moulin Rouge is best known as the birthplace of the modern form of the can-can dance. Originally introduced as a seductive dance by the courtesans who operated from the site, the can-can dance revue evolved into a form of entertainment of its own and led to the introduction of cabarets across Europe. Today, the Moulin Rouge is a tourist attraction, offering musical dance entertainment for visitors from around the world. The club's decor still contains much of the romance of fin de siècle France.", "score": "1.3028224" }, { "id": "4328986", "title": "Le Pressoir d'Argent", "text": " Le Pressoir d’Argent was opened in September 2015 and was Ramsay’s third restaurant in France after the Trianon Palace and the Veranda in Versailles. It was awarded two Michelin stars in the 2016 list.", "score": "1.3008165" }, { "id": "8703908", "title": "Le Manoir de Paris", "text": " Le Manoir de Paris (literally The Paris Manor) is a walk-through haunted house. It is one of the former ceramic workshops of Choisy-le-Roi, in the 10th district of Paris, France. ", "score": "1.2964878" }, { "id": "27007430", "title": "La Moustache", "text": " ferry stops for the night, he pays local sailors to take him with them on their boat. They agree, and Marc arrives at an unspecified village in China. Marc stays at a hotel there for a period of time, becoming known with the locals, and regrows his signature moustache. Marc arrives back at the hotel one day to find Agnès awaiting him, as though she has been with him the entire trip. Agnès makes fun of his brightly patterned jacket and asks him why he bought it, hoping he will not wear it in Paris. They go out to a casino and meet new friends that ", "score": "1.2957025" }, { "id": "13888131", "title": "Issy-les-Moulineaux", "text": "🇩🇪 Weiden in der Oberpfalz, Germany (1962) ; 🇧🇪 Frameries, Belgium (1979) ; 🇮🇹 Macerata, Italy (1982) ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Hounslow, England, United Kingdom (1982) ; Dapaong, Togo (1989) ; 🇦🇲 Vagharshapat, Armenia (1989) ; 🇪🇸 Pozuelo de Alarcón, Spain (1990) ; 🇮🇱 Nahariya, Israel (1994) ; 🇨🇳 Dongcheng (Beijing), China (1997) ; 🇨🇳 Leshan, China (2003) ; 🇰🇷 Guro (Seoul), South Korea (2005) ; 🇯🇵 Ichikawa, Japan (2012) Issy-les-Moulineaux is twinned with: Since 2018, Issy-les-Moulineaux also has friendly relations with New Julfa (Isfahan), Iran.", "score": "1.2890286" }, { "id": "13047631", "title": "Le Courrier de Floride", "text": " Le Courrier de Floride is a free monthly French-speaking newspaper in Florida, on paper and on internet, founded in 2013 by Gwendal Gauthier. Hard copies of the newspaper are distributed in French stores, at consulates, and in schools, in Florida. The first issue of the journal included an exclusive interview with the then-outgoing Consul général de France à Miami, Gaël de Maisonneuve. Le Courrier de Floride also included interviews of other French officials, such as the new consul of France in Miami, the consul of Canada in Miami, and the first interview of the new ambassador of France to the United States, Gérard Araud. An interview published at the French consul's website notes that it had been a long time since any French newspaper appeared at a local level in the United States, perhaps not since French-language newspapers in Louisiana ceased publishing in the early 1900s (The New Orleans ", "score": "1.2845936" } ]
[ "Le Moustoir\n Inhabitants of Le Moustoir are called moustoiriens in French.", "Le Moustoir\n Le Moustoir (Ar Vouster) is a commune in the Côtes-d'Armor department of Brittany in northwestern France.", "Moustoir-Ac\n Inhabitants of Moustoir-Ac are called in French Moustoiracais.", "Moustoir-Ac\n Moustoir-Ac (Moustoer-Logunec'h) is a commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.", "Moustoir-Remungol\n Inhabitants of Moustoir-Remungol are called in French Moustoiriens.", "Le Moustier\n Le Moustier is an archeological site consisting of two rock shelters in Peyzac-le-Moustier, a village in the Dordogne, France. It is known for a complete skeleton of the species Homo neanderthalensis that was discovered in 1908. The Mousterian tool culture is named after Le Moustier, which was first excavated from 1863 by the Englishman Henry Christy and the Frenchman Édouard Lartet. In 1979, Le Moustier was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List laong with other nearby archeological sites as part of the Prehistoric Sites and Decorated Caves of the Vézère Valley.", "Dahlenburg\n Le Molay-Littry, France", "Moustoir-Remungol\n Moustoir-Remungol (Moustoer-Remengol) is a former commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.", "Le Pressoir d'Argent\n Le Pressoir d'Argent is a two Michelin star restaurant owned by British celebrity chef and restaurateur Gordon Ramsay located in Bordeaux, France. It opened in 2015 and was Ramsay's third restaurant in France.", "Le Lioran\n Within France it is administratively located in the commune of Laveissière, the canton of Murat, the arrondissement of Saint-Flour, the département of Cantal, and the région of Auvergne. However, the village of Prat du Bouc is located in the commune of Albepierre-Bredons, but shares the same upwards administrative chain as the other settlements.", "La Moustache\n La Moustache (in English, The Moustache) is a French film from 2005, directed by Emmanuel Carrère and starring Vincent Lindon, and adapted from Carrère's own novel. The film features music from Philip Glass. The film was awarded the Label Europa Cinemas prize at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival and is currently distributed theatrically in the United States by the Cinema Guild with a DVD release handled by Koch-Lorber Films. The film is based on a 1986 book of the same title by Carrere.", "Stade du Moustoir\n The Stade du Moustoir - Yves Allainmat, known as the Stade du Moustoir, is a multi-use stadium in Lorient, France. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home stadium of FC Lorient. The stadium can hold up to 18,110 with the new south stand.", "Moustey\n Moustey (Mostèirs e Viganon) is a commune in the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "Raymond Blanc\n where he opened Le Manoir aux Quat' Saisons, a country house hotel and double Michelin starred restaurant. Awarded five AA stars and with a score of 19/20 from respected French guide Gault Millau, Le Manoir describes itself as \"one of the ultimate gastronomic destinations in the country\". Blanc opened Le Petit Blanc, the first of a chain of smaller restaurants, in Oxford in June 1996. Blanc's stated aim with these was to bring the French philosophy of \"good food being central to good living\" to the United Kingdom. His desire was to create and serve food that can be enjoyed by everyone – \"from the time-conscious business person to those ", "Moulin Rouge\n Moulin Rouge is a cabaret in Paris, France. The original house, which burned down in 1915, was co-founded in 1889 by Charles Zidler and Joseph Oller, who also owned the Paris Olympia. Close to Montmartre in the Paris district of Pigalle on Boulevard de Clichy in the 18th arrondissement, it is marked by the red windmill on its roof. The closest métro station is Blanche. Moulin Rouge is best known as the birthplace of the modern form of the can-can dance. Originally introduced as a seductive dance by the courtesans who operated from the site, the can-can dance revue evolved into a form of entertainment of its own and led to the introduction of cabarets across Europe. Today, the Moulin Rouge is a tourist attraction, offering musical dance entertainment for visitors from around the world. The club's decor still contains much of the romance of fin de siècle France.", "Le Pressoir d'Argent\n Le Pressoir d’Argent was opened in September 2015 and was Ramsay’s third restaurant in France after the Trianon Palace and the Veranda in Versailles. It was awarded two Michelin stars in the 2016 list.", "Le Manoir de Paris\n Le Manoir de Paris (literally The Paris Manor) is a walk-through haunted house. It is one of the former ceramic workshops of Choisy-le-Roi, in the 10th district of Paris, France. ", "La Moustache\n ferry stops for the night, he pays local sailors to take him with them on their boat. They agree, and Marc arrives at an unspecified village in China. Marc stays at a hotel there for a period of time, becoming known with the locals, and regrows his signature moustache. Marc arrives back at the hotel one day to find Agnès awaiting him, as though she has been with him the entire trip. Agnès makes fun of his brightly patterned jacket and asks him why he bought it, hoping he will not wear it in Paris. They go out to a casino and meet new friends that ", "Issy-les-Moulineaux\n🇩🇪 Weiden in der Oberpfalz, Germany (1962) ; 🇧🇪 Frameries, Belgium (1979) ; 🇮🇹 Macerata, Italy (1982) ; 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 Hounslow, England, United Kingdom (1982) ; Dapaong, Togo (1989) ; 🇦🇲 Vagharshapat, Armenia (1989) ; 🇪🇸 Pozuelo de Alarcón, Spain (1990) ; 🇮🇱 Nahariya, Israel (1994) ; 🇨🇳 Dongcheng (Beijing), China (1997) ; 🇨🇳 Leshan, China (2003) ; 🇰🇷 Guro (Seoul), South Korea (2005) ; 🇯🇵 Ichikawa, Japan (2012) Issy-les-Moulineaux is twinned with: Since 2018, Issy-les-Moulineaux also has friendly relations with New Julfa (Isfahan), Iran.", "Le Courrier de Floride\n Le Courrier de Floride is a free monthly French-speaking newspaper in Florida, on paper and on internet, founded in 2013 by Gwendal Gauthier. Hard copies of the newspaper are distributed in French stores, at consulates, and in schools, in Florida. The first issue of the journal included an exclusive interview with the then-outgoing Consul général de France à Miami, Gaël de Maisonneuve. Le Courrier de Floride also included interviews of other French officials, such as the new consul of France in Miami, the consul of Canada in Miami, and the first interview of the new ambassador of France to the United States, Gérard Araud. An interview published at the French consul's website notes that it had been a long time since any French newspaper appeared at a local level in the United States, perhaps not since French-language newspapers in Louisiana ceased publishing in the early 1900s (The New Orleans " ]
In what country is Mackay Courthouse?
[ "Australia", "Commonwealth of Australia", "AU", "AUS", "au", "British Colony of Australia", "🇦🇺", "Straya", "Aussieland" ]
country
Mackay Courthouse
5,049,215
41
[ { "id": "33000202", "title": "Mackay Courthouse", "text": " Mackay Courthouse is located at 12 Brisbane Street, Mackay in Queensland, Australia. The complex contains the current and former courthouses as well as police residences and other police buildings.", "score": "1.8915297" }, { "id": "33000203", "title": "Mackay Courthouse", "text": " The courthouse was constructed during the Great Depression as part of a government initiated works scheme to alleviate unemployment. It was completed in 1939. The courthouse was designed by the Queensland Chief Architect AB Leven in the Georgian revival style. The building underwent a major refurbishment in 2003. Four new courtrooms, judicial chambers, jury facilities, interview rooms, vulnerable witness room, public waiting areas and a lift were added.", "score": "1.8398765" }, { "id": "436436", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " Mackay Court House and Police Station is a heritage-listed courthouse and police station at 67 Victoria Street and (on the same block) 14 Brisbane Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. They were built from 1886 to 1963. It is also known as Mackay Court House and Mackay Police Station. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.", "score": "1.7930009" }, { "id": "436449", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " Georgian Revival style. The Mackay Court House is amongst the grandest of these buildings with handsome internal detailing including panelled offices. The Court was also designed to accommodate other important government functions such as the office of the Lands Commissioner. The foundation stone was laid on 31 March 1938 by Premier Forgan Smith. The new court house addressed Victoria Street where the first police lock-up had been and thus provided the main street with an imposing public building. The old court house became a police station after the court moved to its new premises effecting a reversal of zones ", "score": "1.7355728" }, { "id": "436442", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " centres where substantial new court houses were erected. In 1884 contracts for a new court house were prepared following the construction of new police stables and lock-up keeper's quarters. The new court house was designed by noted architect John James Clark, who was at the time Queensland Colonial Architect. Clark was born and trained in Liverpool, England. He arrived in Melbourne in 1853 and won a number of architectural competitions, his success in such competitions being a feature of his career. He designed some major public buildings in Melbourne, including the Treasury. He moved to Sydney in 1881 and in ", "score": "1.6602407" }, { "id": "436455", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " The court house is a two-storey Georgian Revival building constructed of face brick with rendered detail. It has two hipped roof bays flanking a parapeted Tuscan giant order colonnade, with paired cement rendered concrete columns and a wrought iron balustrade. The rear elevation also has a two-storey verandah supported on Tuscan order columns with iron balustrading between. The high hipped main roof is clad in fibrous cement tiles and is topped by a fleche centred over an octagonal well in the first floor vestibule. The Brisbane Street elevation has a pedimented parapet with a circular louvred vent set in the gable. The building has multiple paned sash windows which are shaded by sun hoods on the lower floor. The interiors are well preserved and the entry and stair halls and the vestibule are panelled with polished silky oak, the floor being finished with coloured terrazzo.", "score": "1.649929" }, { "id": "436453", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " The Police Station (former Court House) is a classical revival building of rendered brick scribed to resemble stonework and is set well back from the street. The majority of the building rises to 2 storeys and the roof is clad with corrugated fibrous cement sheeting. The street entrance features an arcaded Tuscan order portico with 3 bays separated by square pilasters rising through 2 stories to the triangular pediment, which has a circular louvred vent in its centre. Three square windows are located in the spandrel over the arches, each with a moulded frame all around. This entrance is flanked by single storey ", "score": "1.6444573" }, { "id": "436452", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " The court house and police complex is situated in the central business district of Mackay on the corner of Victoria and Brisbane Streets.", "score": "1.6443808" }, { "id": "436437", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " The site has been associated with the police and judiciary in Mackay since the 1860s. Although buildings were erected and removed during the 19th and 20th centuries as the site developed, the major buildings remain and include the police station, built as a court house in 1886, the current court house, built in 1938, and two brick police residences from 1936 to 1937. A 1960s watch house and keeper's residence are also on this site. The town of Mackay is named for John Mackay who entered the valley of the Pioneer River in 1860 and established a pastoral run there ", "score": "1.6351842" }, { "id": "436443", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " had become Queensland Colonial Architect. Although he left the position in 1885, he was responsible for some important public buildings including courthouses at Charters Towers, Rockhampton and Warwick. They and the Mackay court house were designed in the classical revival style thought appropriate for public buildings intended to convey a sense of stability and dignity, particularly a court house which represented the power of the law. The contractor for the work was Denis Kelleher and the cost on completion, including a strong room and furniture, was. The court house was a single storey building with rooms extended to each ", "score": "1.6299268" }, { "id": "436440", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " 1865 recommended cutting costs and improving efficiency by combining police and judiciary functions in the same building. Because police travelled on horseback, the provision of stables and a paddock for police horses was necessary, so that police reserves for all these purposes were gazetted in major towns. A police watch house was built in Mackay in 1865 at the northern end of the current site and a Police Magistrate was appointed to serve the district. In 1872 a simple timber courthouse with a shingled roof was constructed. It was built near the Customs House rather than the police facilities and ", "score": "1.6273199" }, { "id": "31061099", "title": "Mackay Building", "text": " Mackay Building, also known as Mackay Hall, is a historic building located on the campus of Park University at Parkville, Platte County, Missouri. It was built in 1886, and is a three-story, rock-faced limestone structure with Richardsonian Romanesque, High Victorian Gothic, and Chateauesque style design elements. It measures approximately 137 feet by 84 feet. It features a clock tower with tall spire rising in stages from a semi-detached central block, textured wall surfaces, complex roofs and towers, wall dormers, asymmetrical bays, and polychromatic color scheme. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.", "score": "1.6222391" }, { "id": "436725", "title": "Mackay Customs House", "text": " Mackay Customs House is a heritage-listed customs house at 31 River Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. The design is attributed to John Smith Murdoch and the builder was MS Caskie. It was completed in April 1902. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 7 February 2005.", "score": "1.6136205" }, { "id": "9720567", "title": "Mackay Town Hall", "text": " The former Mackay Town Hall is a two-storeyed rendered masonry building facing Sydney Street, Mackay. The street facade, facing west, has a two-storey arcaded verandah is symmetrical about a central entry and clock tower. To the northern side and the rear of the building is a public park. The street facade is divided into five bays of semi-circular moulded arches with pilasters between and string courses. At the centre is a square clock tower with balustrade parapet, ball finials and circular windows. Above the entry archway, which projects slightly forward of the others, is \"Town Hall 1912\" in relief. The parapet of the ", "score": "1.6085625" }, { "id": "436444", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " of the front entrance containing barristers and witnesses' rooms and which were later extended by one room on each side. Behind the bench were rooms for the judge, police magistrates, Clerk of Petty Sessions and Jury. It was opened on 27 May 1886 and the first local sitting of the Supreme Court was held on 15 June 1886. A new gaol at North Mackay was completed in 1888 and facilities at the police complex and court complex improved with quarters for the police sergeant proposed in 1889 and police quarters in 1896. Although suffering a devastating cyclone in 1918, ", "score": "1.6052282" }, { "id": "436454", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " which continue the arcaded effect with arched windows, now filled with glass louvres. The windows in the upper storey and the side windows and porches on the lower storeys are shaded by sun hoods on cast iron brackets. Windows were double hung and timber framed: some of these have been replaced. There is a tall brick chimney set back from each side of the entrance serving the corner fireplaces in the former female witnesses room and barristers room. A third chimney rises at the rear. Internally, the courtroom space is now occupied by offices although the ground floor plan is actually little changed.", "score": "1.6046854" }, { "id": "33000138", "title": "Innisfail Court House", "text": " of government buildings such as court houses, government offices and state schools. The Innisfail and Mackay court houses are two fine examples of the substantial brick buildings erected through this work scheme. The new building was completed in late 1939. Offices for a number of Government Departments were provided on the ground floor, with the court room and court facilities located on the first floor of the building. Minor alterations have been undertaken to the building in recent years, including the addition of a small air conditioning enclosure at the south east end of the court house. The court house served as a coordinating point for the Cyclone Larry relief effort in 2006.", "score": "1.5998447" }, { "id": "436451", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " a surge of post-war development in response to growth in the population and economy and following the lifting of restrictions imposed on building during and immediately after World War II. A new watch house keeper's residence, costing, was built adjoining the existing residence at the same time. In 1989 the demolition of the police station was proposed, but the people of Mackay strongly supported retention of the building, which underwent refurbishment in 1990–1991 as did the 1938 Court House. A large new police building on site includes a watch house, the old one being used now mainly for storage.", "score": "1.5963525" }, { "id": "9720556", "title": "Mackay Town Hall", "text": " Mackay Town Hall is a heritage-listed former town hall at 63 Sydney Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. It is the second town hall to be built on this site. It was designed by Arthur Rigby built in 1912 by Charles Porter for the Mackay Town Council. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 29 May 1998.", "score": "1.5926383" }, { "id": "436459", "title": "Mackay Court House and Police Station", "text": " This is individually and collectively reflected in the buildings on site. The quality of the buildings, in design and material, also illustrates the importance of Mackay as a regional centre, both in the 1880s when sugar was booming, and during the period between the World Wars when Mackay was the fastest growing town in Queensland. The 1930s buildings are major examples of buildings constructed as part of the public works program undertaken by the Labor government during the Depression to alleviate unemployment. As major public works, the court houses are important in the life and work of government architects JJ Clark and AB ", "score": "1.5906873" } ]
[ "Mackay Courthouse\n Mackay Courthouse is located at 12 Brisbane Street, Mackay in Queensland, Australia. The complex contains the current and former courthouses as well as police residences and other police buildings.", "Mackay Courthouse\n The courthouse was constructed during the Great Depression as part of a government initiated works scheme to alleviate unemployment. It was completed in 1939. The courthouse was designed by the Queensland Chief Architect AB Leven in the Georgian revival style. The building underwent a major refurbishment in 2003. Four new courtrooms, judicial chambers, jury facilities, interview rooms, vulnerable witness room, public waiting areas and a lift were added.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n Mackay Court House and Police Station is a heritage-listed courthouse and police station at 67 Victoria Street and (on the same block) 14 Brisbane Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. They were built from 1886 to 1963. It is also known as Mackay Court House and Mackay Police Station. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n Georgian Revival style. The Mackay Court House is amongst the grandest of these buildings with handsome internal detailing including panelled offices. The Court was also designed to accommodate other important government functions such as the office of the Lands Commissioner. The foundation stone was laid on 31 March 1938 by Premier Forgan Smith. The new court house addressed Victoria Street where the first police lock-up had been and thus provided the main street with an imposing public building. The old court house became a police station after the court moved to its new premises effecting a reversal of zones ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n centres where substantial new court houses were erected. In 1884 contracts for a new court house were prepared following the construction of new police stables and lock-up keeper's quarters. The new court house was designed by noted architect John James Clark, who was at the time Queensland Colonial Architect. Clark was born and trained in Liverpool, England. He arrived in Melbourne in 1853 and won a number of architectural competitions, his success in such competitions being a feature of his career. He designed some major public buildings in Melbourne, including the Treasury. He moved to Sydney in 1881 and in ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n The court house is a two-storey Georgian Revival building constructed of face brick with rendered detail. It has two hipped roof bays flanking a parapeted Tuscan giant order colonnade, with paired cement rendered concrete columns and a wrought iron balustrade. The rear elevation also has a two-storey verandah supported on Tuscan order columns with iron balustrading between. The high hipped main roof is clad in fibrous cement tiles and is topped by a fleche centred over an octagonal well in the first floor vestibule. The Brisbane Street elevation has a pedimented parapet with a circular louvred vent set in the gable. The building has multiple paned sash windows which are shaded by sun hoods on the lower floor. The interiors are well preserved and the entry and stair halls and the vestibule are panelled with polished silky oak, the floor being finished with coloured terrazzo.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n The Police Station (former Court House) is a classical revival building of rendered brick scribed to resemble stonework and is set well back from the street. The majority of the building rises to 2 storeys and the roof is clad with corrugated fibrous cement sheeting. The street entrance features an arcaded Tuscan order portico with 3 bays separated by square pilasters rising through 2 stories to the triangular pediment, which has a circular louvred vent in its centre. Three square windows are located in the spandrel over the arches, each with a moulded frame all around. This entrance is flanked by single storey ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n The court house and police complex is situated in the central business district of Mackay on the corner of Victoria and Brisbane Streets.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n The site has been associated with the police and judiciary in Mackay since the 1860s. Although buildings were erected and removed during the 19th and 20th centuries as the site developed, the major buildings remain and include the police station, built as a court house in 1886, the current court house, built in 1938, and two brick police residences from 1936 to 1937. A 1960s watch house and keeper's residence are also on this site. The town of Mackay is named for John Mackay who entered the valley of the Pioneer River in 1860 and established a pastoral run there ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n had become Queensland Colonial Architect. Although he left the position in 1885, he was responsible for some important public buildings including courthouses at Charters Towers, Rockhampton and Warwick. They and the Mackay court house were designed in the classical revival style thought appropriate for public buildings intended to convey a sense of stability and dignity, particularly a court house which represented the power of the law. The contractor for the work was Denis Kelleher and the cost on completion, including a strong room and furniture, was. The court house was a single storey building with rooms extended to each ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n 1865 recommended cutting costs and improving efficiency by combining police and judiciary functions in the same building. Because police travelled on horseback, the provision of stables and a paddock for police horses was necessary, so that police reserves for all these purposes were gazetted in major towns. A police watch house was built in Mackay in 1865 at the northern end of the current site and a Police Magistrate was appointed to serve the district. In 1872 a simple timber courthouse with a shingled roof was constructed. It was built near the Customs House rather than the police facilities and ", "Mackay Building\n Mackay Building, also known as Mackay Hall, is a historic building located on the campus of Park University at Parkville, Platte County, Missouri. It was built in 1886, and is a three-story, rock-faced limestone structure with Richardsonian Romanesque, High Victorian Gothic, and Chateauesque style design elements. It measures approximately 137 feet by 84 feet. It features a clock tower with tall spire rising in stages from a semi-detached central block, textured wall surfaces, complex roofs and towers, wall dormers, asymmetrical bays, and polychromatic color scheme. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.", "Mackay Customs House\n Mackay Customs House is a heritage-listed customs house at 31 River Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. The design is attributed to John Smith Murdoch and the builder was MS Caskie. It was completed in April 1902. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 7 February 2005.", "Mackay Town Hall\n The former Mackay Town Hall is a two-storeyed rendered masonry building facing Sydney Street, Mackay. The street facade, facing west, has a two-storey arcaded verandah is symmetrical about a central entry and clock tower. To the northern side and the rear of the building is a public park. The street facade is divided into five bays of semi-circular moulded arches with pilasters between and string courses. At the centre is a square clock tower with balustrade parapet, ball finials and circular windows. Above the entry archway, which projects slightly forward of the others, is \"Town Hall 1912\" in relief. The parapet of the ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n of the front entrance containing barristers and witnesses' rooms and which were later extended by one room on each side. Behind the bench were rooms for the judge, police magistrates, Clerk of Petty Sessions and Jury. It was opened on 27 May 1886 and the first local sitting of the Supreme Court was held on 15 June 1886. A new gaol at North Mackay was completed in 1888 and facilities at the police complex and court complex improved with quarters for the police sergeant proposed in 1889 and police quarters in 1896. Although suffering a devastating cyclone in 1918, ", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n which continue the arcaded effect with arched windows, now filled with glass louvres. The windows in the upper storey and the side windows and porches on the lower storeys are shaded by sun hoods on cast iron brackets. Windows were double hung and timber framed: some of these have been replaced. There is a tall brick chimney set back from each side of the entrance serving the corner fireplaces in the former female witnesses room and barristers room. A third chimney rises at the rear. Internally, the courtroom space is now occupied by offices although the ground floor plan is actually little changed.", "Innisfail Court House\n of government buildings such as court houses, government offices and state schools. The Innisfail and Mackay court houses are two fine examples of the substantial brick buildings erected through this work scheme. The new building was completed in late 1939. Offices for a number of Government Departments were provided on the ground floor, with the court room and court facilities located on the first floor of the building. Minor alterations have been undertaken to the building in recent years, including the addition of a small air conditioning enclosure at the south east end of the court house. The court house served as a coordinating point for the Cyclone Larry relief effort in 2006.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n a surge of post-war development in response to growth in the population and economy and following the lifting of restrictions imposed on building during and immediately after World War II. A new watch house keeper's residence, costing, was built adjoining the existing residence at the same time. In 1989 the demolition of the police station was proposed, but the people of Mackay strongly supported retention of the building, which underwent refurbishment in 1990–1991 as did the 1938 Court House. A large new police building on site includes a watch house, the old one being used now mainly for storage.", "Mackay Town Hall\n Mackay Town Hall is a heritage-listed former town hall at 63 Sydney Street, Mackay, Mackay Region, Queensland, Australia. It is the second town hall to be built on this site. It was designed by Arthur Rigby built in 1912 by Charles Porter for the Mackay Town Council. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 29 May 1998.", "Mackay Court House and Police Station\n This is individually and collectively reflected in the buildings on site. The quality of the buildings, in design and material, also illustrates the importance of Mackay as a regional centre, both in the 1880s when sugar was booming, and during the period between the World Wars when Mackay was the fastest growing town in Queensland. The 1930s buildings are major examples of buildings constructed as part of the public works program undertaken by the Labor government during the Depression to alleviate unemployment. As major public works, the court houses are important in the life and work of government architects JJ Clark and AB " ]
In what country is Landresse?
[ "France", "fr", "FR", "République française", "La France", "Republic of France", "French Republic", "FRA", "the Hexagon" ]
country
Landresse
4,558,262
99
[ { "id": "30029952", "title": "Angresse", "text": " Angresse (Angressa) is a commune of the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "score": "1.4368346" }, { "id": "27986975", "title": "Adélie Land", "text": " Adélie Land (Terre Adélie, ) is a claimed territory on the continent of Antarctica. It stretches from a portion of the Southern Ocean coastline all the way inland to the South Pole. France has administered it as one of five districts of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands since 1955 and applied the Antarctic Treaty System rules since 1961. Article 4 deals with territorial claims, and although it does not renounce or diminish any preexisting claims to sovereignty, it also does not prejudice the position of Contracting Parties in their recognition or non-recognition of territorial sovereignty. France has had a permanent station in Adélie Land since April 9, 1950. The current Dumont d'Urville Station has a winter population around 25, but this goes up to about 78 during the Antarctic summer. A species of penguin was named after it, called the Adelie Penguin.", "score": "1.3587359" }, { "id": "1847608", "title": "Les Landes", "text": " Les Landes is an area of coastal heathland in the north-west of Jersey. It has been designated as a Site of Special Interest (SSI) since 1996. The site is the largest of its kind in Jersey at 160 ha.", "score": "1.3435786" }, { "id": "8285715", "title": "French Southern and Antarctic Lands", "text": "1) Adélie Land (Terre Adélie), the French claim on the continent of Antarctica. ; 2) Crozet Islands (Îles Crozet), a group in the southern Indian Ocean, south of Madagascar. ; 3) Kerguelen Islands (Archipel des Kerguelen), a group of volcanic islands in the southern Indian Ocean, southeast of Africa, approximately equidistant between Africa, Antarctica and Australia. ; 4) Saint Paul and Amsterdam Islands (Îles Saint Paul et Amsterdam), a group to the north of the Kerguelen Islands. ; 5) The Scattered Islands (Îles Éparses), a dispersed group of islands around the coast of Madagascar. The French Southern and Antarctic Lands (Terres australes et antarctiques françaises, TAAF) is an Overseas Territory ", "score": "1.3377328" }, { "id": "6989603", "title": "Landepéreuse", "text": " the hills of the Perche country to the south and the Pays d'Auge a few kilometres to the west. The landscape is made up of fields, pastures, orchards and woods. These are sometimes separated by hedges, mostly hawthorn or blackthorn (sloe). The territory of the commune is crossed by two dry valleys: Since the middle of the 1980s, an underground drain has run down the middle of this valley. Regularly, every year after thunder storms, water runs in these two dry river valleys for a few hours, up to a few days sometimes. During a very rainy episode at the beginning of 2001 (floods in the Somme), for several months rivers ran down the dry valleys to the east of town as well.", "score": "1.3337414" }, { "id": "1426066", "title": "Land-en-Zeezicht", "text": " Land-en-Zeezicht is a neighborhood of Somerset West, a suburb of Cape Town, in the Western Cape, South Africa. It was originally part of the historic Vergelegen wine estate. In 1914, Hendrik Hendriksz came into possession of the area known as Land-en-Zeezicht, building his mansion on Verster Avenue. Two of his daughters, Alida and later Johanna, married Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr (Onze Jan) in that house. His family and descendants lived until 1947 and again from 1951 to 1971 on the farm. Gradually, the farm area urbanized. The Polish Zamoyski counts began restoring the mansion in 1981, and in 1985, the mansion was declared a historical site, SAHRA file 9/2/083/0018", "score": "1.3260713" }, { "id": "15002825", "title": "ZAD de Notre-Dame-des-Landes", "text": " ZAD de Notre-Dame-des-Landes (also known as ZAD NDDL) is the most well-known 'Zone to Defend' in France. Located in the Loire-Atlantique department near to Nantes, it is a very large, mostly agricultural terrain of 1,650 hectares (4,080 acres) which became nationally famous in the early 2010s and has resisted several concerted attempts by the French state to evict it. For decades there was local resistance to plans to build a new airport in the rural commune of Notre-Dame-des-Landes. In the 2000s much of the land was squatted as farmers were evicted. The new occupants set up autonomous self-sufficient structures such as a communal bakery and animal husbandry. Attempts to evict the squatters saw largescale counter-mobilisations in 2012 and 2018. French president Emmanuel Macron announced in January 2018 that the plans for the airport would be shelved and the already existing airport at Nantes would be redeveloped instead. Many of the remaining projects at the ZAD then engaged in a process of legalisation.", "score": "1.315201" }, { "id": "5209630", "title": "France", "text": " Island. ; In the Indian Ocean: Kerguelen Islands, Crozet Islands, St. Paul and Amsterdam islands, and the Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean ; In the Antarctic: Adélie Land. The vast majority of France's territory and population is situated in Western Europe and is called Metropolitan France, to distinguish it from the country's various overseas polities. It is bordered by the North Sea in the north, the English Channel in the northwest, the Atlantic Ocean in the west and the Mediterranean sea in the southeast. Its land borders consist of Belgium and Luxembourg in the northeast, Germany and Switzerland in ", "score": "1.3102307" }, { "id": "3083253", "title": "Belgian government at Sainte-Adresse", "text": " By October 1914, the vast majority of Belgian territory (2,598 out of 2,636 communes) was under German occupation. The only portion of Belgium that remained controlled by the Kingdom of Belgium in exile was the strip of territory behind the Yser Front. In October 1914, the government moved to the French coastal city of Le Havre. It was established in the large Immeuble Dufayel (\"Dufayel Building\"), built by the French businessman Georges Dufayel in 1911, situated in the suburb of Sainte-Adresse. The whole area of Sainte-Adresse, which still carries the national colours of Belgium on its shield, was leased to Belgium by the French government as a temporary administrative centre while the rest of Belgium was occupied. The area had a sizeable Belgian émigré population, and even used Belgian postage stamps. King Albert I considered that it was inappropriate for the King to leave his own country and so did not join his government in Le Havre. Instead, he established his staff in the Flemish town of Veurne, just behind the Yser Front, in the last strip of unoccupied Belgian territory.", "score": "1.3082104" }, { "id": "6989599", "title": "Landepéreuse", "text": " Landepéreuse is a former commune in the Eure department, in Normandy in northern France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Mesnil-en-Ouche.", "score": "1.3077922" }, { "id": "15561697", "title": "Lande, Norway", "text": " Lande is a village in the municipality of Brønnøy in Nordland county, Norway. It is located on the Tosen fjord, an arm of the Bindalsfjorden, about 11 km southwest of the village of Tosbotn. The village is an old church site, and currently the location of Tosen Chapel.", "score": "1.3056177" }, { "id": "25646973", "title": "Lande, Østfold", "text": " Lande is a borough in Østfold county, Norway, located close to the lake Tunevannet and east of E6, which is the national highway going through Sarpsborg.", "score": "1.3051552" }, { "id": "26797376", "title": "Landéhen", "text": " People from Landéhen are called landéhennais in French.", "score": "1.2982714" }, { "id": "31276416", "title": "List of transcontinental countries", "text": "🇫🇷 France: Metropolitan France is located in Europe, while the five overseas departments and regions, five overseas collectivities, and one Sui generis collectivity are located in other continental regions. Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon are located in North America, French Guiana is located in South America, Mayotte and Réunion are located in Africa, and French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna, and New Caledonia are located in Oceania. These 11 populated territories of overseas France are integral parts of France, as are the uninhabited Clipperton Island in North America and the uninhabited French Southern and Antarctic Lands, which include the claimed Adélie Land on the Antarctic mainland, the Crozet Islands and the Kerguelen Islands in the Antarctic region, Saint Paul and Amsterdam Islands on the Australian Plate, and the Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean. French sovereignty claim on Adélie Land is in abeyance under the Antarctic Treaty System. France has territory in each continental region except Asia. ", "score": "1.2908432" }, { "id": "12791637", "title": "Chez Lando", "text": " Chez Lando is a hotel and restaurant located in the Rwandan capital city, Kigali. The hotel was founded in the 1980s by prominent Rwandan businessman and politician Lando Ndasingwa, and his Canadian wife Hélène, who were both killed in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Following Ndasingwa's death, the hotel was taken over by his sister Anne-Marie Kantengwa, who was a 2013 student on the IEEW's Peace Through Business program.", "score": "1.2888985" }, { "id": "8539595", "title": "Landerneau station", "text": " Gare de Landerneau is a railway station serving the town Landerneau, Finistère department, western France. It is situated on the Paris–Brest railway and the branch to Quimper.", "score": "1.2839653" }, { "id": "5169398", "title": "Overseas France", "text": " Overseas France (France d'outre-mer) consists of thirteen French-administered territories outside Europe, mostly remains of the French colonial empire that chose to remain a part of the French state under various statuses after decolonization. This collective name is used in everyday life in France but is not an administrative designation in its own right. Indeed, the five overseas regions have exactly the same administrative status as the metropolitan regions while the five overseas collectivities are semi-autonomous and New Caledonia is an autonomous territory. Overseas France includes island territories in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, French Guiana on the South American continent, and several peri-Antarctic islands as well as a claim in Antarctica. Excluding the district of Adélie Land, where French sovereignty is effective de jure by French law, but where the French exclusive claim on this part of Antarctica is frozen ", "score": "1.2839403" }, { "id": "337748", "title": "Landévant", "text": " Inhabitants of Landévant are called in French Landévantais.", "score": "1.2835951" }, { "id": "8285721", "title": "French Southern and Antarctic Lands", "text": " The French Southern Territories (i.e. the TAAF excluding Adélie Land) have been given the following country codes: FS (FIPS) and TF (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2).", "score": "1.2827914" }, { "id": "3737461", "title": "Landes de Gascogne", "text": " The Landes de Gascogne (in Gascon, classic spelling las Lanas de Gasconha, Fébusienne spelling leus Lanes de Gascougne), or Gascony Moors, is a natural region of France of nearly 14000 km2. It extends over three departments: Gironde, Landes and Lot-et-Garonne, and includes 386 communes. The region is a flat, sandy plain in the west of the Aquitaine Basin beside the Atlantic Ocean. The interior is cut off from the sea by a barrier of dunes. It is dominated by pine forests that cover 66% of the territory, with islets of agriculture over 18% of the territory. Before humans began to modify the landscape the Landes de Gascogne was covered by ", "score": "1.2790778" } ]
[ "Angresse\n Angresse (Angressa) is a commune of the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.", "Adélie Land\n Adélie Land (Terre Adélie, ) is a claimed territory on the continent of Antarctica. It stretches from a portion of the Southern Ocean coastline all the way inland to the South Pole. France has administered it as one of five districts of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands since 1955 and applied the Antarctic Treaty System rules since 1961. Article 4 deals with territorial claims, and although it does not renounce or diminish any preexisting claims to sovereignty, it also does not prejudice the position of Contracting Parties in their recognition or non-recognition of territorial sovereignty. France has had a permanent station in Adélie Land since April 9, 1950. The current Dumont d'Urville Station has a winter population around 25, but this goes up to about 78 during the Antarctic summer. A species of penguin was named after it, called the Adelie Penguin.", "Les Landes\n Les Landes is an area of coastal heathland in the north-west of Jersey. It has been designated as a Site of Special Interest (SSI) since 1996. The site is the largest of its kind in Jersey at 160 ha.", "French Southern and Antarctic Lands\n1) Adélie Land (Terre Adélie), the French claim on the continent of Antarctica. ; 2) Crozet Islands (Îles Crozet), a group in the southern Indian Ocean, south of Madagascar. ; 3) Kerguelen Islands (Archipel des Kerguelen), a group of volcanic islands in the southern Indian Ocean, southeast of Africa, approximately equidistant between Africa, Antarctica and Australia. ; 4) Saint Paul and Amsterdam Islands (Îles Saint Paul et Amsterdam), a group to the north of the Kerguelen Islands. ; 5) The Scattered Islands (Îles Éparses), a dispersed group of islands around the coast of Madagascar. The French Southern and Antarctic Lands (Terres australes et antarctiques françaises, TAAF) is an Overseas Territory ", "Landepéreuse\n the hills of the Perche country to the south and the Pays d'Auge a few kilometres to the west. The landscape is made up of fields, pastures, orchards and woods. These are sometimes separated by hedges, mostly hawthorn or blackthorn (sloe). The territory of the commune is crossed by two dry valleys: Since the middle of the 1980s, an underground drain has run down the middle of this valley. Regularly, every year after thunder storms, water runs in these two dry river valleys for a few hours, up to a few days sometimes. During a very rainy episode at the beginning of 2001 (floods in the Somme), for several months rivers ran down the dry valleys to the east of town as well.", "Land-en-Zeezicht\n Land-en-Zeezicht is a neighborhood of Somerset West, a suburb of Cape Town, in the Western Cape, South Africa. It was originally part of the historic Vergelegen wine estate. In 1914, Hendrik Hendriksz came into possession of the area known as Land-en-Zeezicht, building his mansion on Verster Avenue. Two of his daughters, Alida and later Johanna, married Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr (Onze Jan) in that house. His family and descendants lived until 1947 and again from 1951 to 1971 on the farm. Gradually, the farm area urbanized. The Polish Zamoyski counts began restoring the mansion in 1981, and in 1985, the mansion was declared a historical site, SAHRA file 9/2/083/0018", "ZAD de Notre-Dame-des-Landes\n ZAD de Notre-Dame-des-Landes (also known as ZAD NDDL) is the most well-known 'Zone to Defend' in France. Located in the Loire-Atlantique department near to Nantes, it is a very large, mostly agricultural terrain of 1,650 hectares (4,080 acres) which became nationally famous in the early 2010s and has resisted several concerted attempts by the French state to evict it. For decades there was local resistance to plans to build a new airport in the rural commune of Notre-Dame-des-Landes. In the 2000s much of the land was squatted as farmers were evicted. The new occupants set up autonomous self-sufficient structures such as a communal bakery and animal husbandry. Attempts to evict the squatters saw largescale counter-mobilisations in 2012 and 2018. French president Emmanuel Macron announced in January 2018 that the plans for the airport would be shelved and the already existing airport at Nantes would be redeveloped instead. Many of the remaining projects at the ZAD then engaged in a process of legalisation.", "France\n Island. ; In the Indian Ocean: Kerguelen Islands, Crozet Islands, St. Paul and Amsterdam islands, and the Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean ; In the Antarctic: Adélie Land. The vast majority of France's territory and population is situated in Western Europe and is called Metropolitan France, to distinguish it from the country's various overseas polities. It is bordered by the North Sea in the north, the English Channel in the northwest, the Atlantic Ocean in the west and the Mediterranean sea in the southeast. Its land borders consist of Belgium and Luxembourg in the northeast, Germany and Switzerland in ", "Belgian government at Sainte-Adresse\n By October 1914, the vast majority of Belgian territory (2,598 out of 2,636 communes) was under German occupation. The only portion of Belgium that remained controlled by the Kingdom of Belgium in exile was the strip of territory behind the Yser Front. In October 1914, the government moved to the French coastal city of Le Havre. It was established in the large Immeuble Dufayel (\"Dufayel Building\"), built by the French businessman Georges Dufayel in 1911, situated in the suburb of Sainte-Adresse. The whole area of Sainte-Adresse, which still carries the national colours of Belgium on its shield, was leased to Belgium by the French government as a temporary administrative centre while the rest of Belgium was occupied. The area had a sizeable Belgian émigré population, and even used Belgian postage stamps. King Albert I considered that it was inappropriate for the King to leave his own country and so did not join his government in Le Havre. Instead, he established his staff in the Flemish town of Veurne, just behind the Yser Front, in the last strip of unoccupied Belgian territory.", "Landepéreuse\n Landepéreuse is a former commune in the Eure department, in Normandy in northern France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Mesnil-en-Ouche.", "Lande, Norway\n Lande is a village in the municipality of Brønnøy in Nordland county, Norway. It is located on the Tosen fjord, an arm of the Bindalsfjorden, about 11 km southwest of the village of Tosbotn. The village is an old church site, and currently the location of Tosen Chapel.", "Lande, Østfold\n Lande is a borough in Østfold county, Norway, located close to the lake Tunevannet and east of E6, which is the national highway going through Sarpsborg.", "Landéhen\n People from Landéhen are called landéhennais in French.", "List of transcontinental countries\n🇫🇷 France: Metropolitan France is located in Europe, while the five overseas departments and regions, five overseas collectivities, and one Sui generis collectivity are located in other continental regions. Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Barthélemy, Saint Martin, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon are located in North America, French Guiana is located in South America, Mayotte and Réunion are located in Africa, and French Polynesia, Wallis and Futuna, and New Caledonia are located in Oceania. These 11 populated territories of overseas France are integral parts of France, as are the uninhabited Clipperton Island in North America and the uninhabited French Southern and Antarctic Lands, which include the claimed Adélie Land on the Antarctic mainland, the Crozet Islands and the Kerguelen Islands in the Antarctic region, Saint Paul and Amsterdam Islands on the Australian Plate, and the Scattered Islands in the Indian Ocean. French sovereignty claim on Adélie Land is in abeyance under the Antarctic Treaty System. France has territory in each continental region except Asia. ", "Chez Lando\n Chez Lando is a hotel and restaurant located in the Rwandan capital city, Kigali. The hotel was founded in the 1980s by prominent Rwandan businessman and politician Lando Ndasingwa, and his Canadian wife Hélène, who were both killed in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Following Ndasingwa's death, the hotel was taken over by his sister Anne-Marie Kantengwa, who was a 2013 student on the IEEW's Peace Through Business program.", "Landerneau station\n Gare de Landerneau is a railway station serving the town Landerneau, Finistère department, western France. It is situated on the Paris–Brest railway and the branch to Quimper.", "Overseas France\n Overseas France (France d'outre-mer) consists of thirteen French-administered territories outside Europe, mostly remains of the French colonial empire that chose to remain a part of the French state under various statuses after decolonization. This collective name is used in everyday life in France but is not an administrative designation in its own right. Indeed, the five overseas regions have exactly the same administrative status as the metropolitan regions while the five overseas collectivities are semi-autonomous and New Caledonia is an autonomous territory. Overseas France includes island territories in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, French Guiana on the South American continent, and several peri-Antarctic islands as well as a claim in Antarctica. Excluding the district of Adélie Land, where French sovereignty is effective de jure by French law, but where the French exclusive claim on this part of Antarctica is frozen ", "Landévant\n Inhabitants of Landévant are called in French Landévantais.", "French Southern and Antarctic Lands\n The French Southern Territories (i.e. the TAAF excluding Adélie Land) have been given the following country codes: FS (FIPS) and TF (ISO 3166-1 alpha-2).", "Landes de Gascogne\n The Landes de Gascogne (in Gascon, classic spelling las Lanas de Gasconha, Fébusienne spelling leus Lanes de Gascougne), or Gascony Moors, is a natural region of France of nearly 14000 km2. It extends over three departments: Gironde, Landes and Lot-et-Garonne, and includes 386 communes. The region is a flat, sandy plain in the west of the Aquitaine Basin beside the Atlantic Ocean. The interior is cut off from the sea by a barrier of dunes. It is dominated by pine forests that cover 66% of the territory, with islets of agriculture over 18% of the territory. Before humans began to modify the landscape the Landes de Gascogne was covered by " ]
In what country is Robinson?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Robinson, Minnesota
5,614,172
79
[ { "id": "7531280", "title": "Expeditie Robinson", "text": " Expeditie Robinson is a popular reality television program in the Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium) that debuted in 2000. It was the second production worldwide of a format first shown in Swedish TV in 1997. The format, most notable under the title Survivor, has since then also been produced in many other countries. The name of the show alludes to Robinson Crusoe, a story featuring people marooned by shipwreck. The fifteenth season in 2013 was the first season without contestants from Belgium, due to lack of television ratings in Belgium. However, the Flemish host Evi Hanssen would continue to co-host the show with Dutch host Dennis Weening. In 2014 Evi was replaced by Nicolette Kluijver.", "score": "1.4779711" }, { "id": "30134405", "title": "Madubuko Diakité", "text": " Madubuko A. Robinson Diakité (born 17 December 1940) is a U.S.-born human rights lawyer and documentary filmmaker currently residing in Sweden. He has traveled widely throughout Africa and currently freelances as a guest lecturer and consultant on African migration, the African diaspora, human rights law, film history and mass media.", "score": "1.4683694" }, { "id": "7562700", "title": "Robinsonekspedisjonen", "text": " Robinsonekspedisjonen is a popular Norwegian reality television program debuting in 1999. In the fall of 1998 TV3 purchased the broadcast rights to air their own version of Expedition Robinson. Norway was one of the first countries to adopt the Robinson format following its success in both Sweden and Denmark. While it has never achieved as high of ratings as that of Denmark and Sweden's versions of the show, it is still considered a ratings success. The name alludes to both Robinson Crusoe and The Swiss Family Robinson, two stories featuring people marooned by shipwrecks. Following a two year hiatus after the VIP season with Denmark and Sweden, Robinsonekspedisjonen returned in 2007 and has seen a season over season ratings growth since.", "score": "1.4605013" }, { "id": "13925837", "title": "Chris Robinson (radio personality)", "text": " Robinson was born in Northampton, UK in 1956 and was educated at Wellingborough School before completing a degree in Geography at Magdalene College, Cambridge University in 1978. He married Dara Beard in 1979. They have two sons: Phillip (1989) and Tim (1994). In 1995 the family moved to Toronto Canada and became Canadian citizens.", "score": "1.4545918" }, { "id": "3382173", "title": "Psychiana", "text": " Psychiana burgeoned during the Great Depression, but Robinson offended many of his contemporaries, not only by the \"businesslike\" nature of Psychiana, but also with his harsh criticisms of conventional Christianity. Deportation proceedings were initiated against him in a federal court in Idaho, his opponents claiming that he was a foreign national illegally residing in the United States. During the trial, Robinson contended that although he had been raised in England, he had been born in New York City while his father was visiting the U.S., and was therefore a U.S. citizen. Nonetheless he was ordered to leave the country. Robinson traveled to Cuba, where he stayed briefly while Idaho ", "score": "1.4536403" }, { "id": "28993901", "title": "Sozhasingarayer Robinson", "text": " Sozhasingarayer Robinson , also widely known as simply S. Robinson (born 23 June 1980 in Pondicherry, India) is a professional Indian basketball player. He currently plays for the Tamil Nadu Basketball Team which competes in the India National Cup.", "score": "1.4534013" }, { "id": "8038966", "title": "Nelcia Robinson-Hazell", "text": " has worked to reestablish ties between the Black Carib community of Saint Vincent and the Garifuna populations in Belize and other Central American countries, through cultural heritage programs. She has published five collections of poetry and a poetry award in St. Vincent bears her name. In 1995, Robinson attended the World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen, participating in a hunger strike by women from developing nations to bring attention to the need for assistance to eliminate poverty and for debt relief from developed nations. Her concerns were that small island nations in the Caribbean due to size and environmental factors were vulnerable under existing trade policies and that the vulnerability adversely impacted women to a greater ", "score": "1.4491055" }, { "id": "31212186", "title": "Robinsón Pitalúa", "text": " Robinson Pitalúa Támara (September 3, 1964 – September 22, 1985) was a Colombian boxer, who represented his native country at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in the Men's Bantamweight division. Born in Montería, Córdoba Pitalúa won the bronze medal in the same weight category a year earlier at the 1983 Pan American Games. He died in a drowning accident 1985 in Miami, Florida, USA.", "score": "1.444643" }, { "id": "26783122", "title": "Shane Robinson (politician)", "text": " From 2005 to 2006 he worked as an English Instructor in South Korea. Following his return to the United States, he worked for a number of organizations, including the AIDS Project of Southern Vermont, the Iracambi Atlantic Rainforest Research and Conservation Center which is located in Minas Gerais, Brazil, and where Robinson resided for six months, and afterwards for the Coulter Companies (now known as MCI USA) for whom he helped manage non-profit clients and was the director of sustainability. During this period, Robinson also began work on a graduate degree in sustainable development, which he earned in 2011. Currently, Robinson is co-owner of Anthropocene Solutions, a sustainability, nonprofit management, and government affairs firm, and is co-executive director of The Ehlers-Danlos Society. He also works on the side as a National Ski Patrol alpine patroller. He is married with two children.", "score": "1.4444855" }, { "id": "15649998", "title": "Robbie Robinson (rugby union)", "text": " Robert Blair \"Robbie\" Robinson (born 22 August 1989 in Westport, New Zealand) is a professional rugby union player who represents the Sunwolves in the Super Rugby competition as well as Toyota Verblitz in the Japan.", "score": "1.4382772" }, { "id": "2549185", "title": "Ged Robinson", "text": " Ged Robinson (born 20 June 1983 in Wellington, New Zealand) is a rugby union footballer. His regular playing position is hooker. He formerly represented the Melbourne Rebels in Super Rugby, and he formerly played 5 games for the and mostly on the bench the Wellington Lions in New Zealand.", "score": "1.4273424" }, { "id": "26783120", "title": "Shane Robinson (politician)", "text": " Robinson was born on December 26, 1976 to American parents living in Ahwaz, Iran. As a child Robinson lived in Bolivia, the nation of his mother's birth, as well as Brazil, Maryland, Nevada, and Poland. He later graduated from Reno High School.", "score": "1.4241519" }, { "id": "28993902", "title": "Sozhasingarayer Robinson", "text": "2003-04 Negar sang Sharekord 🇮🇷 ; 2004 Indian Overseas Bank Chennai 🇮🇳 ; 2004 Farsh Mashad 🇮🇷 ; 2005 Tamil Nadu 🇮🇳 ; 2005-06 Indian Overseas Bank Chennai 🇮🇳 ; 2006 offer sheet Auckland Stars 🇳🇿, never played ; 2010 Indian Army 🇮🇳 Sozhasingarayer Robinson, born in Pondicherry, grew up in Gujarat, India. A standout athlete in India, Robinson started to gain international media attention when he led India with 36 points to a surprise victory at the 2004 FIBA Asia Stanković Cup against South Korea, a regular competitor for the title at international tournaments in Asia. For unknown reasons, he did not take the offer to play professionally in New Zealand in 2006, following extraordinary performances against the Tall Blacks. In that same year he was banned from representing his state's basketball team for missing its training camp. Robinson is known as being extremely outspoken as he severely criticized the lack of support for India's national basketball team from which he retired in 2006 only to try a comeback a little later. Robinson is one of the most well known figures in Indian basketball. Altogether, he played professional in basketball for the following teams:", "score": "1.4234018" }, { "id": "7811282", "title": "Mark Robinson (Australian politician)", "text": " Robinson was born in Traralgon, Victoria. He has a PhD from the University of Queensland, a Master of Arts in International Studies from Griffith University, and a Bachelor of Science majoring in marine biology and zoology from James Cook University. He was a lecturer, teacher and charity manager before entering politics.", "score": "1.4208289" }, { "id": "2100795", "title": "Peter Robinson (novelist)", "text": " Robinson was born in Armley, Leeds, son of Clifford Robinson (a photographer) and Miriam Jarvis (a homemaker). Robinson emigrated to Canada to continue his studies after completing his first degree at the University of Leeds. Robinson lives in the Beaches area of Toronto with his wife, Sheila Halladay, and he occasionally teaches crime writing at the University of Toronto's School of Continuing Studies. He has taught at a number of Toronto colleges and served as Writer-in-Residence at the University of Windsor, 1992-93. Robinson and his wife live in Toronto, Canada, but they have a holiday cottage in Richmond, North Yorkshire.", "score": "1.419189" }, { "id": "9946073", "title": "Paul Robinson (footballer, born 1984)", "text": " Paul Robinson (born 28 May 1984 in Newcastle upon Tyne) is an English professional footballer who plays as a forward for North Shields. He notably played in the Football League for Grimsby Town, where he was on loan from Tranmere Rovers. He left Rovers in 2004 having failed to make an appearance and went on to feature for Vauxhall Motors, York City, Bedlington Terriers, Newcastle Blue Star and Whitley Bay.", "score": "1.4184903" }, { "id": "8495903", "title": "Russ Robinson", "text": " Russ Robinson is an American heir and businessman.", "score": "1.4157495" }, { "id": "10442035", "title": "Jabel Robinson", "text": " Jabel Robinson (December 11, 1831 – November 9, 1907) was an English-born farmer, lumber merchant and political figure in Ontario, Canada. He represented Elgin West in the House of Commons of Canada from 1900 to 1904 as an Independent. He was born in Linslade, Buckinghamshire, the son of William Robinson and May Clover, and was educated in England. He first worked as a carpenter and joiner. He was married twice: to Caroline Barnwell in 1854 and to Mary S. Mines in 1887. He served as a member of the St. Thomas town council and as a member of the council for Southwold Township.", "score": "1.4132009" }, { "id": "3585208", "title": "Svend Robinson", "text": " Robinson was the NDP MP for ridings in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby, British Columbia, the third-largest city in British Columbia. As the longest-serving British Columbia MP of his time, in office from 1979 to 2004, Robinson is notable for having been the first Canadian MP to come out as gay, in the spring of 1988. He was the only openly LGBT member of the Canadian House of Commons until Bloc Québécois MP Réal Ménard came out in 1994. Robinson is known for his negative views on American foreign policy, especially towards Cuba, his challenge of corporate power, his criticism of Israel, and his strong support for Palestinian leaders. Party leader McDonough briefly removed Robinson's ", "score": "1.4132009" }, { "id": "27091699", "title": "Brandon Robinson (basketball)", "text": " Brandon Robinson (born March 25, 1989) is an American professional basketball player currently plays for Flamengo of the Novo Basquete Brasil. He was named NBL Canada Rookie of the Year and All-Star Game Most Valuable Player in 2012. Robinson played with Seminole State College of Florida and Clayton State University at the college level.", "score": "1.4128726" } ]
[ "Expeditie Robinson\n Expeditie Robinson is a popular reality television program in the Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium) that debuted in 2000. It was the second production worldwide of a format first shown in Swedish TV in 1997. The format, most notable under the title Survivor, has since then also been produced in many other countries. The name of the show alludes to Robinson Crusoe, a story featuring people marooned by shipwreck. The fifteenth season in 2013 was the first season without contestants from Belgium, due to lack of television ratings in Belgium. However, the Flemish host Evi Hanssen would continue to co-host the show with Dutch host Dennis Weening. In 2014 Evi was replaced by Nicolette Kluijver.", "Madubuko Diakité\n Madubuko A. Robinson Diakité (born 17 December 1940) is a U.S.-born human rights lawyer and documentary filmmaker currently residing in Sweden. He has traveled widely throughout Africa and currently freelances as a guest lecturer and consultant on African migration, the African diaspora, human rights law, film history and mass media.", "Robinsonekspedisjonen\n Robinsonekspedisjonen is a popular Norwegian reality television program debuting in 1999. In the fall of 1998 TV3 purchased the broadcast rights to air their own version of Expedition Robinson. Norway was one of the first countries to adopt the Robinson format following its success in both Sweden and Denmark. While it has never achieved as high of ratings as that of Denmark and Sweden's versions of the show, it is still considered a ratings success. The name alludes to both Robinson Crusoe and The Swiss Family Robinson, two stories featuring people marooned by shipwrecks. Following a two year hiatus after the VIP season with Denmark and Sweden, Robinsonekspedisjonen returned in 2007 and has seen a season over season ratings growth since.", "Chris Robinson (radio personality)\n Robinson was born in Northampton, UK in 1956 and was educated at Wellingborough School before completing a degree in Geography at Magdalene College, Cambridge University in 1978. He married Dara Beard in 1979. They have two sons: Phillip (1989) and Tim (1994). In 1995 the family moved to Toronto Canada and became Canadian citizens.", "Psychiana\n Psychiana burgeoned during the Great Depression, but Robinson offended many of his contemporaries, not only by the \"businesslike\" nature of Psychiana, but also with his harsh criticisms of conventional Christianity. Deportation proceedings were initiated against him in a federal court in Idaho, his opponents claiming that he was a foreign national illegally residing in the United States. During the trial, Robinson contended that although he had been raised in England, he had been born in New York City while his father was visiting the U.S., and was therefore a U.S. citizen. Nonetheless he was ordered to leave the country. Robinson traveled to Cuba, where he stayed briefly while Idaho ", "Sozhasingarayer Robinson\n Sozhasingarayer Robinson , also widely known as simply S. Robinson (born 23 June 1980 in Pondicherry, India) is a professional Indian basketball player. He currently plays for the Tamil Nadu Basketball Team which competes in the India National Cup.", "Nelcia Robinson-Hazell\n has worked to reestablish ties between the Black Carib community of Saint Vincent and the Garifuna populations in Belize and other Central American countries, through cultural heritage programs. She has published five collections of poetry and a poetry award in St. Vincent bears her name. In 1995, Robinson attended the World Summit for Social Development in Copenhagen, participating in a hunger strike by women from developing nations to bring attention to the need for assistance to eliminate poverty and for debt relief from developed nations. Her concerns were that small island nations in the Caribbean due to size and environmental factors were vulnerable under existing trade policies and that the vulnerability adversely impacted women to a greater ", "Robinsón Pitalúa\n Robinson Pitalúa Támara (September 3, 1964 – September 22, 1985) was a Colombian boxer, who represented his native country at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in the Men's Bantamweight division. Born in Montería, Córdoba Pitalúa won the bronze medal in the same weight category a year earlier at the 1983 Pan American Games. He died in a drowning accident 1985 in Miami, Florida, USA.", "Shane Robinson (politician)\n From 2005 to 2006 he worked as an English Instructor in South Korea. Following his return to the United States, he worked for a number of organizations, including the AIDS Project of Southern Vermont, the Iracambi Atlantic Rainforest Research and Conservation Center which is located in Minas Gerais, Brazil, and where Robinson resided for six months, and afterwards for the Coulter Companies (now known as MCI USA) for whom he helped manage non-profit clients and was the director of sustainability. During this period, Robinson also began work on a graduate degree in sustainable development, which he earned in 2011. Currently, Robinson is co-owner of Anthropocene Solutions, a sustainability, nonprofit management, and government affairs firm, and is co-executive director of The Ehlers-Danlos Society. He also works on the side as a National Ski Patrol alpine patroller. He is married with two children.", "Robbie Robinson (rugby union)\n Robert Blair \"Robbie\" Robinson (born 22 August 1989 in Westport, New Zealand) is a professional rugby union player who represents the Sunwolves in the Super Rugby competition as well as Toyota Verblitz in the Japan.", "Ged Robinson\n Ged Robinson (born 20 June 1983 in Wellington, New Zealand) is a rugby union footballer. His regular playing position is hooker. He formerly represented the Melbourne Rebels in Super Rugby, and he formerly played 5 games for the and mostly on the bench the Wellington Lions in New Zealand.", "Shane Robinson (politician)\n Robinson was born on December 26, 1976 to American parents living in Ahwaz, Iran. As a child Robinson lived in Bolivia, the nation of his mother's birth, as well as Brazil, Maryland, Nevada, and Poland. He later graduated from Reno High School.", "Sozhasingarayer Robinson\n2003-04 Negar sang Sharekord 🇮🇷 ; 2004 Indian Overseas Bank Chennai 🇮🇳 ; 2004 Farsh Mashad 🇮🇷 ; 2005 Tamil Nadu 🇮🇳 ; 2005-06 Indian Overseas Bank Chennai 🇮🇳 ; 2006 offer sheet Auckland Stars 🇳🇿, never played ; 2010 Indian Army 🇮🇳 Sozhasingarayer Robinson, born in Pondicherry, grew up in Gujarat, India. A standout athlete in India, Robinson started to gain international media attention when he led India with 36 points to a surprise victory at the 2004 FIBA Asia Stanković Cup against South Korea, a regular competitor for the title at international tournaments in Asia. For unknown reasons, he did not take the offer to play professionally in New Zealand in 2006, following extraordinary performances against the Tall Blacks. In that same year he was banned from representing his state's basketball team for missing its training camp. Robinson is known as being extremely outspoken as he severely criticized the lack of support for India's national basketball team from which he retired in 2006 only to try a comeback a little later. Robinson is one of the most well known figures in Indian basketball. Altogether, he played professional in basketball for the following teams:", "Mark Robinson (Australian politician)\n Robinson was born in Traralgon, Victoria. He has a PhD from the University of Queensland, a Master of Arts in International Studies from Griffith University, and a Bachelor of Science majoring in marine biology and zoology from James Cook University. He was a lecturer, teacher and charity manager before entering politics.", "Peter Robinson (novelist)\n Robinson was born in Armley, Leeds, son of Clifford Robinson (a photographer) and Miriam Jarvis (a homemaker). Robinson emigrated to Canada to continue his studies after completing his first degree at the University of Leeds. Robinson lives in the Beaches area of Toronto with his wife, Sheila Halladay, and he occasionally teaches crime writing at the University of Toronto's School of Continuing Studies. He has taught at a number of Toronto colleges and served as Writer-in-Residence at the University of Windsor, 1992-93. Robinson and his wife live in Toronto, Canada, but they have a holiday cottage in Richmond, North Yorkshire.", "Paul Robinson (footballer, born 1984)\n Paul Robinson (born 28 May 1984 in Newcastle upon Tyne) is an English professional footballer who plays as a forward for North Shields. He notably played in the Football League for Grimsby Town, where he was on loan from Tranmere Rovers. He left Rovers in 2004 having failed to make an appearance and went on to feature for Vauxhall Motors, York City, Bedlington Terriers, Newcastle Blue Star and Whitley Bay.", "Russ Robinson\n Russ Robinson is an American heir and businessman.", "Jabel Robinson\n Jabel Robinson (December 11, 1831 – November 9, 1907) was an English-born farmer, lumber merchant and political figure in Ontario, Canada. He represented Elgin West in the House of Commons of Canada from 1900 to 1904 as an Independent. He was born in Linslade, Buckinghamshire, the son of William Robinson and May Clover, and was educated in England. He first worked as a carpenter and joiner. He was married twice: to Caroline Barnwell in 1854 and to Mary S. Mines in 1887. He served as a member of the St. Thomas town council and as a member of the council for Southwold Township.", "Svend Robinson\n Robinson was the NDP MP for ridings in the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby, British Columbia, the third-largest city in British Columbia. As the longest-serving British Columbia MP of his time, in office from 1979 to 2004, Robinson is notable for having been the first Canadian MP to come out as gay, in the spring of 1988. He was the only openly LGBT member of the Canadian House of Commons until Bloc Québécois MP Réal Ménard came out in 1994. Robinson is known for his negative views on American foreign policy, especially towards Cuba, his challenge of corporate power, his criticism of Israel, and his strong support for Palestinian leaders. Party leader McDonough briefly removed Robinson's ", "Brandon Robinson (basketball)\n Brandon Robinson (born March 25, 1989) is an American professional basketball player currently plays for Flamengo of the Novo Basquete Brasil. He was named NBL Canada Rookie of the Year and All-Star Game Most Valuable Player in 2012. Robinson played with Seminole State College of Florida and Clayton State University at the college level." ]