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Gao Heng (legal scholar)
Gao Heng (Chinese: 高恒; January 1930 – 22 August 2019) was a Chinese legal scholar and historian, known for his research on the Shuihudi Qin bamboo texts and the legal systems of the Qin and Han dynasties. He was a research professor at the Institute of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). He was elected an honorary academician of the CASS in 2006.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2019-08-28T22:57:34Z
2019-08-28T22:58:08Z
48,613,813
Babington Path
Babington Path (Chinese: 巴丙頓道) is a street in Mid-Levels, Hong Kong Island spanning from the junction between Bonham Road, St. Stephen's Lane and Park Road to Robinson Road. The street is intersected by Lyttelton Road.
[ "Geography" ]
2015-11-21T13:32:01Z
2015-11-21T14:02:04Z
48,859,161
Gaius Sedatius Florus
Gaius Sedatius Florus (Latin: C. Sedat. Florus; fl. early 2nd-century AD) was a lawyer and secretary for the administration of Portus Namnetum (modern Nantes) with Marcus Gemellius Secundus sometime in the early second century. A member of the Sedatii family, Florus could have been a relative, albeit a poor relation, to the senator Marcus Sedatius Severianus; he might have even been a client of Severianus, or even an emancipated slave. According to an inscription found in Nantes, Florus and Gemellius were prosecutors representing the people of the port and used their own money to establish a tribunal in the market place.
[ "History" ]
2015-12-19T09:25:37Z
2015-12-22T08:41:33Z
31,278,869
The Dead Circus
The Dead Circus is a neo-noir crime novel set in 1960s–80s Los Angeles by John Kaye. The novel was shortlisted by The New York Times for their Book of the Year list in 2003.
[ "Government" ]
2011-03-24T01:26:56Z
2011-03-24T02:12:28Z
17,237,920
List of bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in Alabama
This is a list of bridges and tunnels on the National Register of Historic Places in the U.S. state of Alabama.
[ "Lists" ]
2008-05-03T01:44:59Z
2008-05-03T01:47:33Z
1,960,031
Newfoundland Power
Newfoundland Power Inc. is an electric utility owned by Fortis Inc. which is the primary retailer of electric power in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador. The company was formed by the Royal Securities Corporation of Montreal in 1924 as the Newfoundland Light & Power Company. In the year of its incorporation it purchased the assets of the St. John's Light and Power Company which had been formed originally by Robert Gillespie Reid as the St. John's Street Railway Company in 1896. Those assets included Newfoundland and Labrador's first hydro electric generating station at Petty Harbour, Petty Harbour Hydro Electric Generating Station. After 1924 Newfoundland Light & Power Company became a subsidiary of the International Power Company, and it remained a subsidiary until 1949, when the parent company sold its shares in it to the general public.
[ "Energy" ]
2005-05-29T20:55:01Z
2005-05-29T20:55:29Z
68,704,108
Kings Cross Theatre
The Kings Cross Theatre was located at the corner of Darlinghurst Road and Victoria Street, Sydney, between 1916 and 1966.
[ "Entertainment", "Entities" ]
2021-09-12T04:04:01Z
2021-09-12T04:14:06Z
22,849,327
Ju-On: The Grudge (video game)
Ju-On: The Grudge, known in Japan as Kyōfu Taikan: Ju-On, is a survival horror video game developed for the Wii. It was produced in honor of the Ju-On series' 10th anniversary. The game was directed by Takashi Shimizu, who also helmed the films. The game was developed by feelplus and published in Japan by AQ Interactive on July 30, 2009, and in North America and Europe in October of the same year by Xseed Games and Rising Star Games, respectively. The game is centered on a family that moved into a cursed house.
[ "Technology" ]
2009-05-18T17:55:34Z
2009-05-26T19:17:23Z
24,413,406
Judith Hall (poet)
Judith Hall is an American poet.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2009-09-20T19:11:44Z
2009-09-20T21:19:47Z
5,679,295
Menachem Ziemba
Rabbi Menachem Ziemba (1883–1943) (Hebrew: מנחם זמבה) was a distinguished pre-World War II Rabbi, known as a Talmudic genius and prodigy. He is known to be fluent in all of Talmud as well as many of the works of the later Rabbis such as Rabbi Joseph Rosen and Rabbi Meir Simcha of Dvinsk. He was gunned down by the Germans in the Warsaw Ghetto.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2006-06-23T12:57:14Z
2006-06-23T13:20:27Z
611,432
Yoddha (1992 film)
Yoddha: The Warrior, or simply Yodha (transl. Warrior) is a 1992 Indian Malayalam-language fantasy action film directed by Sangeeth Sivan and written by Sasidharan Arattuvazhi. Mohanlal plays the lead role of Thaiparambil Ashokan, the saviour destined to rescue the Rimpoche of a Nepalese Buddhist monastery from sorcerers practicing black magic. The ensemble supporting cast include Siddharth Lama, Jagathy Sreekumar, Puneet Issar, Madhoo and Urvashi. The original songs and background score were composed by A. R. Rahman.
[ "Sports" ]
2004-04-22T05:37:38Z
2004-05-18T03:14:47Z
32,401,936
Hugh Hamilton (bishop)
Hugh Hamilton (26 March 1729 – 1 December 1805) was a mathematician, natural philosopher (scientist) and professor at Trinity College Dublin, and later a Church of Ireland bishop, Bishop of Clonfert and Kilmacduagh and then Bishop of Ossory.
[ "Mathematics" ]
2011-07-13T17:43:47Z
2011-07-13T17:43:57Z
6,393,146
Deceleration parameter
The deceleration parameter q {\displaystyle q} in cosmology is a dimensionless measure of the cosmic acceleration of the expansion of space in a Friedmann–Lemaître–Robertson–Walker universe. It is defined by: q = d e f − a ¨ a a ˙ 2 {\displaystyle q\ {\stackrel {\mathrm {def} }{=}}\ -{\frac {{\ddot {a}}a}{{\dot {a}}^{2}}}} where a {\displaystyle a} is the scale factor of the universe and the dots indicate derivatives by proper time. The expansion of the universe is said to be "accelerating" if a ¨ > 0 {\displaystyle {\ddot {a}}>0} (recent measurements suggest it is), and in this case the deceleration parameter will be negative. The minus sign and name "deceleration parameter" are historical; at the time of definition a ¨ {\displaystyle {\ddot {a}}} was expected to be negative, so a minus sign was inserted in the definition to make q {\displaystyle q} positive in that case. Since the evidence for the accelerating universe in the 1998–2003 era, it is now believed that a ¨ {\displaystyle {\ddot {a}}} is positive therefore the present-day value q 0 {\displaystyle q_{0}} is negative (though q {\displaystyle q} was positive in the past before dark energy became dominant).
[ "Universe" ]
2006-08-11T16:02:15Z
2006-08-11T16:05:49Z
18,419,664
St Mary Woolchurch Haw
St Mary Woolchurch Haw was a parish church in the City of London, destroyed in the Great Fire of London of 1666 and not rebuilt. It came within the ward of Walbrook.
[ "Entities" ]
2008-07-13T13:35:25Z
2008-07-13T13:50:16Z
1,659,660
And yet it moves
"And yet it moves" or "Although it does move" (Italian: E pur si muove or Eppur si muove [epˈpur si ˈmwɔːve]) is a phrase attributed to the Italian mathematician, physicist, and philosopher Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) in 1633 after being forced to recant his claims that the Earth moves around the Sun, rather than the converse. In this context, the implication of the phrase is: despite his recantation, the Inquisition's proclamations to the contrary, or any other conviction or doctrine of men, the Earth does, in fact, move (around the Sun, and not vice versa).
[ "Universe" ]
2005-03-28T14:19:07Z
2005-03-29T15:42:14Z
6,039,094
Cooling center
A cooling center is an air-conditioned public or private space to temporarily deal with the adverse health effects of extreme heat weather conditions, like the ones caused by heat waves. Cooling centers are one of the possible mitigation strategies to prevent hyperthermia caused by heat, humidity, and poor air quality. As the danger of heat waves has risen in the public consciousness, cooling centers are increasingly used in larger cities such as Los Angeles, New York City, Chicago, Boston, and Toronto, as well as less urban population areas. Cooling centers may also be used in places like Portland and Seattle where home air conditioning is rare but summer can bring temperatures exceeding 90 °F (32 °C) for several days. Similarly, during the 2018 heat wave and fires that reached northern Scandinavia, a supermarket in Finland was temporarily used as a cooling center.
[ "Engineering" ]
2006-07-20T06:56:41Z
2006-07-20T12:23:26Z
31,675,067
Abul Hussain
Abul Hussain (15 August 1922 – 29 June 2014) was a Bangladeshi poet. He was awarded Ekushey Padak in 1980 and Bangla Academy Literary Award in 1963.
[ "Education" ]
2011-05-04T14:21:20Z
2011-05-04T14:31:54Z
44,062,966
Ahad Pazaj
Ahad Pazaj (Persian: احد پازاج; born June 22, 1970, in Ardabil, Iran) was an Iranian Greco-Roman wrestler, and coach of Iranian Greco-Roman wrestling team.
[ "Sports" ]
2014-10-09T06:24:47Z
2014-10-09T06:27:29Z
53,989,517
Peng Shaoyi
Peng Shaoyi (Chinese: 彭少逸; pinyin: Péng Shǎoyì; Wade–Giles: P'eng Shao-i; 9 November 1917 – 6 May 2017) was a Chinese physical chemist. Peng was elected as an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) in 1980. He was a member of China Democratic League since 1956.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2017-05-08T05:02:46Z
2017-05-08T05:12:57Z
544,523
Kat O
Kat O (Chinese: 吉澳), also named Crooked Island, is an island in northeast Hong Kong.
[ "Geography" ]
2004-03-22T18:56:24Z
2004-03-22T19:00:41Z
23,733,164
Yosef Yitzchak Shloush
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Shloush (Chelouche) (Hebrew: יוסף יצחק שלוּש) (known to his community as "Rebbi Yosef") (1890–1960) lived in the old city of Jerusalem until 1938 when he moved to Machane Yehuda. He was the head of the Chevrah Kadisha and the Av bet din (rabbinical court head) of the Sephardic community of Jerusalem.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2009-07-24T19:48:25Z
2009-07-24T19:50:57Z
4,862,698
Craig Melchert
Harold Craig Melchert (born April 5, 1945) is an American linguist known particularly for his work on the Anatolian branch of Indo-European.
[ "Language" ]
2006-04-23T07:50:22Z
2006-04-23T07:52:40Z
38,298,081
Love in the Wilderness
Love in the Wilderness is a 1920 British silent drama film directed by Alexander Butler and starring Madge Titheradge, C. M. Hallard and Campbell Gullan. It was adapted from Gertrude Page's 1907 novel Love in the Wilderness. The film is a romantic melodrama, set partly on a farm in Southern Rhodesia. The film was shot in California.
[ "Nature" ]
2013-01-22T13:23:50Z
2013-01-22T13:25:22Z
67,492,802
Osman Yıldırım
Osman Yıldırım (born March 25, 1996) is a Turkish Greco-Roman wrestler competing in the 130 kg division of Greco-Roman wrestling. He is a member of the ASKİ Spor Club.
[ "Sports" ]
2021-04-25T00:14:11Z
2021-04-25T00:38:07Z
4,567,188
Henry Odera Oruka
Henry Odera Oruka (1 June 1944, in Siaya County – 9 December 1995, in Nairobi) was a Kenyan philosopher who is best known for "Sage Philosophy". It was a project started in the 1970’s in an attempt to preserve the knowledge of the indigenous thinkers in traditional African communities.
[ "Philosophy", "Ethics" ]
2006-03-30T13:11:33Z
2006-03-30T13:25:00Z
60,413,389
Harvest Moon: Light of Hope
Harvest Moon: Light of Hope is a farm simulation role-playing game developed by Tabot, Inc. for multiple platforms. First announced at E3 2017, It was first released for Microsoft Windows on November 14, 2017, with versions for PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch following on May 29, 2018. It was later released for iOS and Android on September 26, 2018. A version containing all previously released downloadable content titled Harvest Moon: Light of Hope Complete was released for Windows 10 and Xbox One on September 18, 2020.
[ "Technology" ]
2019-04-04T17:47:28Z
2019-04-05T10:31:08Z
64,314,582
North Shore Medical Center (Miami)
North Shore Medical Center (Miami) is a teaching hospital and a comprehensive stroke center in Miami, Florida. The hospital has more than 400 medical staff and over 700 employees. The hospital serves over 80,000 patients annually. North Shore Medical Center is Florida's first Joint Commission (JCAHO)-accredited chest pain center as well as the first thrombectomy-capable stroke center in Miami Dade. The hospital is also fully accredited by the JCAHO, the nation's oldest and largest hospital accreditation agency.
[ "Life" ]
2020-06-18T20:04:40Z
2020-06-18T20:08:15Z
12,967,912
Harry C. Stutz
Harry Clayton Stutz (September 12, 1876 – June 26, 1930) was an American automobile manufacturer, entrepreneur, self-taught engineer, and innovator in the automobile industry. Stutz was part of the burgeoning Indianapolis automotive industry of the early 20th century, where he founded the Ideal Motor Car Company, later known as the Stutz Motor Car Company, and the short-lived H. C. S. Motor Car Company.
[ "Engineering" ]
2007-08-27T02:52:48Z
2007-10-19T15:37:48Z
15,823,265
1994 Paris Open
The 1994 Paris Open was a men's tennis tournament played on indoor carpet courts. It was the 22nd edition of the Paris Masters, and is part of the ATP Championship Series, Single-Wee of the 1995 ATP Tour. It took place at the Palais omnisports de Paris-Bercy in Paris, France, from 31 October to 7 November 1994. Eighth-seeded Andre Agassi won the singles title. The singles draw was headlined by ATP No.
[ "Economy" ]
2008-02-18T14:18:33Z
2008-03-20T21:46:31Z
55,334,095
Julia Lee-Thorp
Julia Anne Lee-Thorp, (born 20 April 1951) is a South African archaeologist and academic. She is Head of the Stable Light Isotope Laboratory and Professor of Archaeological Science and Bioarchaeology at the University of Oxford. Lee-Thorp is most well known for her work on dietary ecology and human origins, using stable isotope chemistry to study fossil bones and teeth.
[ "People" ]
2017-09-24T18:27:33Z
2017-09-24T18:53:38Z
13,134,210
Orban
Orban, also known as Urban (Hungarian: Orbán; died 1453), was an iron founder and engineer from Brassó, Transylvania, in the Kingdom of Hungary (today Brașov, Romania), who cast large-calibre artillery for the Ottoman siege of Constantinople in 1453. Orban was Hungarian, according to most modern authors, while some scholars also mention his potential German ancestry. Alternative theories suggest he had Wallachian roots. Laonikos Chalkokondyles used the term Dacian to describe him. He had offered his services to the Byzantines in 1452, a year before the Ottomans attacked the city, but the Byzantine emperor Constantine XI could not afford Orban's high salary nor did the Byzantines possess the materials necessary for constructing such a large siege cannon.
[ "Military" ]
2007-09-07T00:18:12Z
2007-09-07T00:19:46Z
13,868,397
Black God (manga)
Black God (Japanese: 黒神, Hepburn: Kuro Kami) is a Japanese-Korean manga series written by Dall-Young Lim and illustrated by Park Sung-woo. Square Enix published the manga in Japan's bi-monthly seinen magazine Young Gangan. The story is initially set in modern-day Tokyo, then changes to the island of Okinawa in the middle of the story. The word "Black" in the title refers to the character Kuro (黒), as it means black in Japanese. "God" in the title refers to the fact that Kuro is a superhuman, or "Tera Guardian".
[ "Technology" ]
2007-10-23T03:17:41Z
2007-10-23T03:23:38Z
44,140,458
Hinoki International School
Hinoki International School (previously known as the Japanese American School of South East Michigan or JASSEM) was a two-way Japanese-English language immersion elementary school in Livonia, Michigan in Metro Detroit which opened in 2010 as a charter school. It closed in 2015 before a planned opening of a new Farmington Hills, Michigan campus.
[ "Education" ]
2014-10-17T22:29:02Z
2014-10-17T22:48:47Z
10,262,809
Bombing of Helsinki in World War II
Helsinki, the capital of Finland, was bombed repeatedly during World War II. Between 1939 and 1944, Finland was subjected to a number of bombing campaigns by the Soviet Union. The largest were three raids in February 1944, which have been called The Great Raids Against Helsinki.
[ "Military" ]
2007-03-25T18:50:17Z
2007-03-25T18:51:25Z
2,390,396
Hell Ride
Hell Ride is a 2008 American action/neo-outlaw biker film written and directed by Larry Bishop, and starring Bishop, Michael Madsen, Dennis Hopper, Eric Balfour, Vinnie Jones, Leonor Varela and David Carradine. It was released under the "Quentin Tarantino Presents" banner. The film is an homage to the original outlaw biker films of the 1960s and 1970s.
[ "Internet" ]
2005-08-06T07:39:51Z
2005-08-06T07:41:13Z
36,326,985
David Rachline
David Rachline (born 2 December 1987) is a French politician for National Rally. He was elected mayor of Fréjus in March 2014 and elected to the French Senate in September 2014.
[ "Politics" ]
2012-07-04T18:57:39Z
2012-07-04T19:02:18Z
9,224,959
Societe Generale Ghana
Societe Generale Ghana Limited (SG) is a bank that is based in Ghana, previously known as Société Générale - Social Security Bank (SG-SSB). The bank is part of the Société Générale banking group. The bank is based in Accra and its stock is listed on the Ghana Stock Exchange. It is a component of the GSE All-Share Index. According to its website it is the 7th largest bank in Ghana and has 45 networked branches in Ghana.
[ "Economy" ]
2007-01-31T11:26:41Z
2007-01-31T11:32:12Z
73,418,362
Hannah Schmitz
Hannah Schmitz (née McMillan; born May 1985) is a British engineer, currently working for Austrian Formula One team Red Bull Racing as Principal Strategy Engineer. She is widely regarded as one of the most successful female figures in the sport of Formula One, heralded as key in Red Bull's 2021, 2022, and 2023 title charges.
[ "Engineering" ]
2023-03-30T07:26:56Z
2023-03-30T08:17:13Z
3,187,347
Cougar Helicopters
Cougar Helicopters (a VIH Aviation Group Company) is a St. John's based commercial helicopter company servicing offshore oil and gas fields off the coast of Newfoundland. Cougar has permanent facilities in St. John's and Halifax. The company is affiliated with Bristow Helicopters which has a financial stake in Cougar.
[ "Business" ]
2005-11-18T02:12:17Z
2005-11-26T21:51:09Z
51,015,455
Browar Koszalin
Browar Koszalin is a brewery in Koszalin, Poland that is located in a Neo-Gothic building, built in the second half of the nineteenth century, that brews BROK beer. It belongs to the Van Pur brewery conglomerate.
[ "Food_and_drink" ]
2016-07-07T04:00:29Z
2016-07-07T04:04:18Z
57,838,053
1974 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries bombing
The 1974 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries bombing (Japanese: 三菱重工爆破事件) was a terrorist bombing of the Mitsubishi Heavy Industries headquarters in Tokyo, Japan on 30 August 1974, killing eight people and injuring at least 376 others. The bombing was committed by the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front, a radical far-left anti-Japanese organization, against Mitsubishi Heavy Industries for supplying the United States against North Vietnam during the Vietnam War. The 1974 Mitsubishi Heavy Industries bombing was the deadliest terrorist attack in Japan until the Tokyo subway sarin attack in 1995.
[ "Military" ]
2018-07-06T01:42:54Z
2018-07-06T01:51:43Z
2,971,567
Tam Kon Shan
Tam Kon Shan (Chinese: 擔杆山 or 担杆山) is a hill that stands between Moon Tsai Tong and Cheung Shue Tau on Tsing Yi Island, Hong Kong. Part of the hill was removed to build the west half of the Cheung On Estate. The nearby Tam Kon Shan Road and Tam Kon Shan Interchange were named after the hill.
[ "Geography" ]
2005-10-22T17:23:48Z
2005-12-11T10:50:43Z
25,862,939
Peter Alliss Masters
Peter Alliss Masters is a golfing society that raises funds to provide children who have very limited mobility with powered wheelchairs. The charity has been going since the 1970s led by its patron, BBC's Voice of Golf, Peter Alliss.
[ "Health" ]
2010-01-19T11:06:17Z
2010-01-19T11:14:14Z
46,245,930
Lin Tai-yi
Lin Tai-yi (Chinese: 林太乙; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Lîm Thài-it; April 1, 1926 – July 2003) was a Chinese-American writer and translator. She was also known as Anor Lin or Lin Wu-Shuang. The daughter of Lin Yutang, she was born in Beijing and came to the United States with her family when she was ten. Lin was educated at Columbia University. She taught Chinese at Yale.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2015-03-27T22:00:38Z
2015-03-28T12:35:45Z
447,538
William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth
William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth, PC, FRS (20 June 1731 – 15 July 1801), styled as Viscount Lewisham from 1732 to 1750, was a British statesman and philanthropist who served as Secretary of State for the Colonies from 1772 to 1775, during the initial stages of the American Revolution. He is also the namesake of Dartmouth College.
[ "Health" ]
2004-01-30T06:14:12Z
2004-01-30T06:17:06Z
15,326,042
Imakita Kosen
Imakita Kōsen (今北 洪川, 3 August 1816 – 16 January 1892) was a Japanese Rinzai Zen rōshi and Neo-Confucianist. Kosen did his Zen training under Daisetsu Shoen (1797–1855) at Sōkoku-ji and received inka from Gisan Zenkai at Sōgen-ji in Okayama. Kosen was instrumental in bringing Zen to lay practitioners and to the west. Kosen's Dharma heir Soyen Shaku participated in the World Parliament of Religions in Chicago, which introduced Soyen Shaku's student D. T. Suzuki to Paul Carus and western Theosophy. Kosen's dharma descendant Tetsuo Sōkatsu established Ningen Zen Kyodan, an independent lay-Rinzai school.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2008-01-20T11:10:09Z
2008-01-20T11:11:10Z
6,534,572
Indigenous psychology
Indigenous psychology is defined by Kim and Berry as "the scientific study of human behavior or mind that is native, that is not transported from other regions, and that is designed for its people." There is a strong emphasis on how one's actions are influenced by the environment surrounding them as well as the aspects that make it up. This would include analyzing the context, in addition to the content that combine to make the domain that one is living in. The context would consist of the family, social, cultural, and ecological pieces and the content would consist of the meaning, values, and beliefs. Since the mid 1970s, there has been outcry about the traditional views from psychologists across the world, from Africa to Australia and many places in between about how the methods only reflect what would work in Europe and the Americas.
[ "Humanities" ]
2006-08-18T11:28:55Z
2006-08-18T11:30:36Z
11,869,667
François Nicholas Madeleine Morlot
François Nicholas Madeleine Morlot (28 December 1795 – 29 December 1862) was a French prelate of the Catholic Church. He was Archbishop of Paris from 1857 until his death. He was previously Bishop of Orléans from 1839 and then Archbishop of Tours from 1843.
[ "Religion" ]
2007-06-20T18:32:42Z
2007-06-20T18:38:35Z
55,534,689
John McGrath (ice hockey)
John William McGrath (March 10, 1891 – February 18, 1924) was a Canadian amateur ice hockey player and private secretary and advisor to former President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt between 1912 and 1916.
[ "Human_behavior" ]
2017-10-14T21:42:18Z
2017-10-14T21:45:03Z
58,252,181
Angela Bishop
Angela Bishop (born 6 September 1967) is an Australian reporter and television presenter who was a co-host and the entertainment presenter on Network 10's Studio 10.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2018-08-24T06:34:54Z
2018-08-24T06:36:00Z
72,227,940
Yoshiko Wakabayashi
Yoshiko Wakabayashi (born 21 May 1950) is a Brazilian computer scientist and applied mathematician whose research interests include combinatorial optimization, polyhedral combinatorics, packing problems, and graph algorithms. She is a professor in the department of computer science and institute of mathematics and statistics at the University of São Paulo.
[ "Knowledge" ]
2022-11-10T23:33:36Z
2023-03-20T08:02:32Z
154,332
Air Malta
Air Malta, stylized as airmalta, was a Maltese airline headquartered in Luqa and based at Malta International Airport. It operated services as the country's flag carrier to destinations in Europe, the Middle East and North Africa. Air Malta ceased operations on 30 March 2024 and was replaced on the next day with a new flag carrier, KM Malta Airlines.
[ "Business" ]
2002-12-04T09:18:17Z
2002-12-04T09:19:08Z
65,226,978
Slavic creation myth
The Slavic creation myth is a cosmogonic myth in Slavic mythology that explains how the world was created, who created it, and what principles guide it. This myth, in its Christianized form, survived until the nineteenth and twentieth century in various parts of the Slavdom in chronicles or folklore. In the Slavic mythology there are three versions of this myth: the first version is the so-called earth-diver myth, which intertwines two main motifs: the dualistic motif – the cooperation of God and the Devil (that is, the "good god" and the "bad god") is required to create the world, and the oceanic motif – the pre-existence water, where the seed of the Earth comes from; the second version speaks about the origin of the universe and the world from the Cosmic Egg and the World Tree; the third one about creation from a dismemberment of a primordial being.
[ "Universe" ]
2020-09-04T21:23:36Z
2020-09-04T22:06:53Z
76,816,052
Heysham hogback
The Heysham hogback is an early medieval sculpted stone discovered around the beginning of the 19th century in the churchyard of St Peter's Church, Heysham, on the Lancashire coast, and now kept for protection inside the church. It is one of seventeen known early medieval stones in Heysham, a concatenation which once caused this site to be called "one of the most interesting in the country from the archaeological point of view". It is a product of the 10th-century Norse culture of the British Isles of which the precise purpose is not certainly known, though it may be a grave-marker. The carvings on the stone have been the subject of much dispute, different scholars interpreting them as showing a hunting scene, the patriarch Adam, the Norse hero Sigurd, the end of the world in Norse myth, or as being intended to blend both Christian and pagan themes. It has been called "perhaps the best example of its kind in the country".
[ "Universe" ]
2024-05-04T13:19:51Z
2024-05-04T17:12:07Z
67,655,520
Ali Shabani
Ali Shabanibengar (Persian: علی شعبانی بنگر, born 18 May 1995) is an Iranian freestyle wrestler who competes at 97 kilograms. Shabani has claimed the 2021 Asian Continental Championship as well as a bronze medal from the 2018 U23 World Championships. He was also the World Championship representative for Iran in 2019 and is a two–time IRI World Team Member.
[ "Sports" ]
2021-05-13T15:43:50Z
2021-05-13T19:16:10Z
43,828,070
TightVent Europe
TightVent Europe is a platform focused on building and ductwork airtightness issues. The platform's creation was triggered to meet the 2020 targets of the Directive on the energy performance of buildings and overcome the challenges related to envelope and ductwork leakage towards the generalization of nearly zero-energy buildings. The platform's main activities include producing and disseminating policy-oriented publications, networking among local or national airtightness associations, and organizing conferences, workshops and webinars.
[ "Engineering" ]
2014-09-15T06:18:33Z
2014-09-15T06:34:23Z
61,903,671
Patricia Hiddleston
Patricia Hiddleston (9 May 1933 – 8 December 2017), also known as Pat Hiddleston, was a Scottish mathematician who spent most of her professional career in Northern Rhodesia, central Africa.
[ "People" ]
2019-09-28T10:16:49Z
2019-09-28T11:51:57Z
5,843,992
Abu Jafar Shamsuddin
Abu Jafar Shamsuddin (12 March 1911 – 24 August 1988) was a Bangladeshi writer. He was the recipient of Bangla Academy Literary Award in 1968 and Ekushey Padak in 1983.
[ "Education" ]
2006-07-05T20:09:01Z
2006-07-05T20:09:30Z
50,472,193
Mosè Piccio
Mosè Piccio (Hebrew: משה בן יוסף פיגו, Moshe ben Yosef Figu; d. 1576) was an Ottoman lexicographer. Piccio compiled Zikhron Torat Moshe (Hebrew: זכרון תורת משה), which is a dictionary of aggadic terminology first published in Constantinople in 1552. The dictionary's content reflects the impact of the massive migrations taking place at that time around the Mediterranean Basin. == References ==
[ "Language" ]
2016-05-08T08:51:07Z
2016-05-08T08:55:46Z
454,654
Spring 2004 Dior couture collection
The Spring-Summer 2004 Christian Dior haute couture collection was designed by John Galliano and presented on January 19, 2004 in Paris. It was inspired by Galliano's then recent travels to Egypt. (Ethnic influences are often prominent in Galliano's work.) The collection was one of Galliano's most celebrated collections for Dior. The collection included leopard-print fur stoles with collars that "soar like obelisks", billowing gowns of shadow-dyed organza, with hems twisted and folded into lotus flower shapes, and pyramid-shaped gowns made of dozens of golden mirrors, and printed with hieroglyphics, or the glamorous mummies paraded in bandages of black silk tulle flashing with rainbow sequins.
[ "Concepts" ]
2004-02-04T16:13:01Z
2004-12-10T03:56:13Z
24,053,946
Damped Lyman-alpha system
Damped Lyman alpha systems or Damped Lyman alpha absorption systems is a term used by astronomers for concentrations of neutral hydrogen gas that are detected in the spectra of quasars – a class of distant Active Galactic Nuclei. They are defined to be systems where the column density (density projected along the line of sight to the quasar) of hydrogen is larger than 2 x 1020 atoms/cm2. The observed spectra consist of neutral hydrogen Lyman alpha absorption lines which are broadened by radiation damping. These systems can be observed in quantity at relatively high redshifts of 2–4, when they contained most of the neutral hydrogen in the universe. They are believed to be associated with the early stages of galaxy formation, as the high neutral hydrogen column densities of DLAs are also typical of sightlines in the Milky Way, and other nearby galaxies.
[ "Universe" ]
2009-08-20T11:32:22Z
2009-08-20T12:26:42Z
28,396,947
Geac Computer Corporation
Geac Computer Corporation, Ltd (TWSE: GAC and Nasdaq: GEAC) was a producer of enterprise resource planning, performance management, and industry specific software based in Markham, Ontario. It was acquired by Golden Gate Capital's Infor unit in March 2006 for US$1 billion.
[ "Technology" ]
2010-08-17T15:50:04Z
2010-08-17T15:51:22Z
962,703
National Taiwan University Hospital
The National Taiwan University Hospital (NTUH; Chinese: 國立台灣大學醫學院附設醫院; pinyin: Guólì Táiwān Dàxué Yīxuéyuàn Fùshè Yīyuàn) is a medical facility located in the Zhongzheng District of Taipei, Taiwan. It started operations under Japanese rule in Daitōtei (today's Dadaocheng) on 18 June 1895, and moved to its present location in 1898. The hospital was later annexed to the Medical School of Taihoku Imperial University in 1937. The present name was adopted in 1945 upon its affiliation with National Taiwan University. On 19 October 1991, a large new building complex on the so-called East Site was completed.
[ "Life" ]
2004-09-06T13:41:44Z
2004-09-06T13:49:52Z
50,336,817
Amarna letter EA 149
Amarna letter EA 149, titled: "Neither Water nor Wood" is a moderate- to extended-length clay tablet Amarna letter (mid 14th century BC) from Abimilku of Tyre-(called Ṣurru in the letters), written to the Pharaoh of Egypt. The letter concerns the intrigues of neighboring city-states and their rulers, and the loss of the neighboring city of Usu, from where the island of Tyre obtained supplies, for example, water, wood, etc. and a place for burying their deceased. EA 149 is located at the British Museum, no BM 29811. Tablet letter EA 149 can be viewed here: Reverse: [1], Obverse: [2].
[ "Language" ]
2016-04-26T19:44:41Z
2016-04-26T20:06:20Z
12,165,051
Little pied bat
The little pied bat (Chalinolobus picatus) is a species of vesper bat in the family Vespertilionidae. It is found only in semi-arid woodlands in eastern Australia.
[ "Communication" ]
2007-07-09T15:46:23Z
2007-07-19T19:11:48Z
30,267,879
Manishtushu Obelisk
Manishtushu (Man-ištušu) (𒈠𒀭𒅖𒌅𒋢, Ma-an-ish-tu-su) c. 2270-2255 BC (middle chronology) was the third (or possibly second) king of the Akkadian Empire, reigning 15 years from c. 2270 BC until his death in c. 2255 BC . His name means "Who is with him?". He was the son of Sargon the Great, the founder of the Akkadian Empire, and he was succeeded by his son, Naram-Sin who also deified him posthumously. A cylinder seal, of unknown provenance, clearly from the reign of Naram-Sin or later, refers to the deified Manishtushu i.e. "(For) the divine Man-istusu: Taribu, the wife of Lugal-ezen, had (this seal) fashioned".
[ "Language" ]
2011-01-01T06:36:48Z
2011-01-01T06:38:24Z
52,955,685
St. Peter's Church, Colombo
St. Peter's Church (Sinhala:ශාන්ත පීතර දේවස්ථානය Santha Pithara Devasthanaya) is one of the oldest continuously functioning churches in Colombo, Sri Lanka. It is located on Church Street in Colombo Fort, on the northern side of the Grand Oriental Hotel.
[ "Religion" ]
2017-01-23T03:47:57Z
2017-01-23T05:50:44Z
9,346,113
Viacheslav Datsik
Viacheslav Valerievich Datsik (Russian: Вячесла́в Вале́рьевич Да́цик, IPA: [vʲɪtɕɪˈslav ˈdatsɨk]; born 13 February 1980), also known as Red Tarzan and Red-Haired Tarzan, is a Russian white supremacist, convicted felon and mental patient, professional boxer, kickboxer and mixed martial artist. Datsik has fought professionally in his native Russia since 1999, accumulating a record of 14-19 in mixed martial arts. Datsik gained notoriety both for his criminal behavior and vigilante raids on brothels, as well as his white supremacist and neo-Nazi beliefs.
[ "Politics" ]
2007-02-06T13:38:42Z
2007-02-10T00:36:09Z
10,937,607
Oji Umozurike
Oji Umozurike is a Nigerian scholar, activist and a former chairman of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, an organ of the inoperative Organisation of African Unity. He is currently a professor of law at the Abia State University.
[ "People" ]
2007-04-27T22:08:47Z
2007-04-27T22:09:33Z
70,277,306
Immoral Guild
Immoral Guild (Japanese: 不徳のギルド, Hepburn: Futoku no Girudo, "Guild of Depravity") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Taichi Kawazoe. It has been serialized in Square Enix's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Gangan since June 2017, with its chapters collected into 14 tankōbon volumes as of September 2024. An anime television series adaptation by TNK aired from October to December 2022.
[ "Technology" ]
2022-03-10T15:25:43Z
2022-03-10T15:52:28Z
16,894,172
Eugene Mullin
Eugene Mullin (December 18, 1894 – April 15, 1967) was an American screenwriter and film director of the silent era. He wrote for 66 films between 1909 and 1925. He also directed seven films between 1910 and 1921. He was born in Brooklyn, New York and died in Long Island, New York.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2008-04-12T12:31:25Z
2008-04-12T12:32:01Z
13,220,811
The Wealth of Networks
The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom is a book by Harvard Law School professor Yochai Benkler published by Yale University Press on April 3, 2006. The book has been recognized as one of the most influential works of its time concerning the rise and impact of the Internet on the society, particularly in the sphere of economics. It also helped popularize the term Benkler coined few years earlier, the commons-based peer production (CBPP). A PDF of the book is downloadable under a Creative Commons Noncommercial Sharealike license. Benkler has said that his editable online book is "an experiment of how books might be in the future", demonstrating how authors and readers might connect instantly or even collaborate.
[ "Information" ]
2006-04-24T10:18:21Z
2006-04-24T10:24:22Z
13,891,473
Aloysius Pendergast
Aloysius Xingu Leng Pendergast is a fictional character appearing in novels by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child. He first appeared as a supporting character in their first novel, Relic (1995), and in its 1997 sequel Reliquary, before assuming the protagonist's role in the 2002 novel The Cabinet of Curiosities. Pendergast is a special agent with the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). He once worked out of the New Orleans Field Office of the FBI, but resides in New York City and works out of the New York Field Office; he frequently travels out of state to investigate cases which interest him, often those appearing to be the work of serial killers.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2006-03-02T03:31:35Z
2006-03-02T03:40:01Z
2,249,319
List of hotels in New York City
The following is a list of some notable hotels in New York City.
[ "Lists" ]
2005-07-17T01:30:01Z
2005-07-17T01:41:20Z
4,166,831
Wing Sing Street
Wing Sing Street (traditional Chinese: 永勝街; simplified Chinese: 永胜街; pinyin: Yǒngshèng Jiē; Cantonese Yale: wing5 sing3 gaai1), commonly known as Egg Street (鴨蛋街), was a street in Sheung Wan, Hong Kong. The market was erased from the map by Land Development Corporation for the re-development of the area bounded by Wing Lok Street, Man Wa Lane, Bonham Strand, Queen's Road Central and Wing Wo Street. The narrow street was well known for its egg market, dating back to early Chinese settlement of Victoria City on Hong Kong Island. The bounded area now contains the Cosco Tower and Grand Millennium Plaza.
[ "Geography" ]
2006-02-23T01:20:25Z
2006-02-23T01:26:07Z
60,511,211
Selman Kaygusuz
Selman Kaygusuz (born 1 March 1963) is a Turkish wrestler. He competed at the 1984 Summer Olympics and the 1988 Summer Olympics.
[ "Sports" ]
2019-04-16T18:07:17Z
2020-04-12T14:23:41Z
6,830,918
Greater ghost bat
The greater ghost bat (Diclidurus ingens) is a bat species found in northwestern Brazil, southeastern Colombia, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela. == References ==
[ "Communication" ]
2006-09-03T22:35:03Z
2006-09-05T20:51:02Z
938,245
Kong Rong
Kong Rong () (151/153 – 26 September 208), courtesy name Wenju, was a Chinese poet, politician, and minor warlord who lived during the late Eastern Han dynasty of China. He was a 20th generation descendant of Confucius. As he was once the Chancellor of Beihai State, he was also known as Kong Beihai. He was defeated by Yuan Tan in 196 and escaped to the capital Xuchang. For being a political opponent of Cao Cao and humiliating him on multiple occasions, Kong Rong was eventually put to death on various charges.
[ "Philosophy" ]
2004-08-28T19:54:06Z
2004-08-28T20:15:58Z
831,754
Delegated legislation in the United Kingdom
Delegated legislation or secondary legislation in the United Kingdom is law that is not enacted by a legislative assembly such as the UK Parliament, but made by a government minister, a delegated person or an authorised body under powers given to them by an Act of Parliament. Statutory instruments are the most frequently used type of secondary legislation, with approximately 3,500 made each year, although only about 1,000 need to be considered by Parliament. They usually have either "Rules", "Order" or "Regulations" in their title. Secondary legislation is used for a wide variety of purposes such as fixing the date on which an Act of Parliament will come into force; setting fees for a public service; or establishing the details of an Act of Parliament. Delegated legislation is dependent on its parent act, which prescribes its parameters and procedures.
[ "Law" ]
2004-07-16T13:02:27Z
2004-07-16T13:03:09Z
12,840,800
Shmuel Berenbaum
Shmuel Berenbaum (March 13, 1920 – January 6, 2008) was an Orthodox rabbi and rosh yeshiva of the Mir yeshiva in Brooklyn, New York.
[ "Society", "Culture" ]
2007-08-19T18:29:52Z
2007-08-19T18:33:22Z
3,104,207
Melchiorre Gioia
Melchiorre Gioja (10 September 1767 – 2 January 1829) was an Italian writer on philosophy and political economy. His name is spelled Gioia in modern Italian.
[ "Ethics" ]
2005-11-07T22:34:02Z
2005-11-09T18:04:04Z
77,038,032
Tata AIA Life
Tata AIA Life Insurance Company Limited is an Indian joint venture life insurance company, formed by Tata Sons and AIA Group (AIA). It combines Tata's pre-eminent leadership position in India and AIA's presence as the largest, independent listed pan-Asian life insurance group in the world spanning 18 markets in the Asia–Pacific region. Tata Group holds a 51 percent stake in the insurance venture while the remaining 49 percent is held by AIA Group. Tata AIA Life Insurance was licensed on February 12, 2001, and started its operations in India on April 1, 2001. It offers a range of general insurance products such as term life insurance, ULIP, pension plan, casualty insurance, and the like.
[ "Business" ]
2024-05-29T09:03:55Z
2024-05-29T09:26:59Z
71,672,871
Elizabeth Mayhew Edmonds
Elizabeth Mayhew Edmonds (1821-1907) was an English writer active in the 1880s who wrote about modern Greece. Her focus on publishing in magazines and journals as well as in books brought modern Greek life to increased prominence in Britain.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2022-09-04T13:40:43Z
2022-09-04T14:08:39Z
62,732,655
Raissa Calza
Raissa Samojlovna Calza (née Gourevitch; 15 December 1894 – 24 January 1979) was a Ukrainian dancer who became a prominent classical archaeologist of Roman portraiture. When she was young, she fled to Italy and France following the Russian Revolution. After studying archaeology at the École du Louvre, she returned to Italy and began working at the Ostia Antica excavation site, where she met her third husband Guido Calza. She published many books on the archaeological sites in Ostia and was recognized for her efforts with a gold Italian Medal of Merit for Culture and Art on 2 June 1967. She died in 1979 and was buried at the Church of Sant'Ercolano near Ostia Antica.
[ "Humanities" ]
2020-01-03T20:23:24Z
2020-01-03T20:30:03Z
33,987,436
Summit Series (conference)
Summit Series is an American organization that hosts conferences and events for young entrepreneurs, artists and activists. Events organized by the group include an annual invitation to a conference during which participants discuss topics including business practices, technological innovation, and philanthropy. Summit Series attendees have included Bill Clinton, Ted Turner and Richard Branson. Summit Series was founded in 2008 by Elliott Bisnow, Brett Leve, Jeff Rosenthal, Jeremy Schwartz, and Ryan Begelman. Since its foundation, the organization has raised more than $2 million for charitable and non-profit organizations.
[ "Communication" ]
2011-12-07T20:52:36Z
2011-12-16T20:02:11Z
25,141,258
South Wave Court
The following shows the public housing estates (including Home Ownership Scheme (HOS), Private Sector Participation Scheme (PSPS), Tenants Purchase Scheme (TPS) and Sandwich Class Housing Scheme (SCHS)) in Pok Fu Lam, Aberdeen, Wong Chuk Hang and Ap Lei Chau of Southern District, Hong Kong.
[ "Geography" ]
2009-11-20T03:56:47Z
2009-11-20T03:59:06Z
1,128,970
Bishop of Dresden-Meissen
The Bishop of Dresden-Meissen is the ordinary of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Dresden-Meissen in the Archdiocese of Berlin. The diocese covers an area of 16,934 km2 (6,538 sq mi) and was erected as the Diocese of Meissen on 24 June 1921. The name was changed to Dresden-Meissen on 15 November 1979.
[ "Religion" ]
2004-11-03T12:28:27Z
2004-11-03T12:32:26Z
7,385,374
Dito Montiel
Orlandito Montiel is an American author, filmmaker, and musician.
[ "Entertainment" ]
2006-10-10T20:54:30Z
2006-10-10T21:06:43Z
17,315,567
Noel Brunning
Noel Brunning is an Australian television presenter, currently working as the main anchor of Seven News Regional WA (formerly GWN7 News and Golden West News) on Seven (formerly GWN7 and the Golden West Network) in regional Western Australia. Brunning joined GWN in 1986, and rose through the ranks until he became the main presenter on GWN News (which is now Seven News Regional WA) in 1998. In 2007, he went on long service leave to stand as a conservative independent candidate for the Forrest constituency in the Federal election. His candidacy was unsuccessful and Brunning returned to GWN shortly after the election to resume his role as main anchor of Seven News Regional WA. During his election campaign, there was a local promotional movement involving T-shirts depicting Brunning's face, and various humorous slogans.
[ "Mass_media" ]
2008-05-08T00:23:43Z
2008-05-08T00:37:22Z
40,937,065
List of prehistoric scheduled monuments in Gwynedd (former Merionethshire)
Gwynedd is a large rural county in North Wales. The northern half includes the high mountains of Snowdonia and the mixed farmland and hills of the Llŷn Peninsula, which between them make up the historic county of Caernarvonshire. The southern part of Gwynedd is the softer coastal and upland landscapes of the historic county of Merionethshire. Gwynedd, the second-largest county in Wales, has a total of 497 scheduled monuments. That is too many to have on a single list article, so for convenience the list is divided into three.
[ "Lists" ]
2013-10-31T00:17:26Z
2013-10-31T04:04:45Z
5,581,460
Ludwig Riess
Ludwig Riess (1 December 1861 – 27 December 1928) was a German-born historian and educator, noted for his work in late 19th century Japan.
[ "Time" ]
2006-06-16T02:14:28Z
2006-06-16T02:15:01Z
6,628,591
Rawson-Neal Hospital
Rawson-Neal Psychiatric Hospital is a mental hospital located in Las Vegas, Nevada. It opened as a 190-bed facility on August 28, 2006. The hospital is operated by the state of Nevada.
[ "Life" ]
2006-08-23T07:24:27Z
2006-08-23T07:25:05Z
74,824,542
List of dam removals in Connecticut
This is a list of dams in Connecticut that have been removed as physical impediments to free-flowing rivers or streams.
[ "Lists" ]
2023-09-14T22:45:17Z
2023-09-14T22:47:25Z
12,538,549
Pocketed free-tailed bat
The pocketed free-tailed bat (Nyctinomops femorosaccus) is a species of bat in the family Molossidae found in Mexico and in Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas in the United States. They resemble the Brazilian free-tailed bat (Tadarida brasiliensis) but differ morphologically. They are recognized as "least concern" by the IUCN and as "apparently secure" by Natureserve.
[ "Communication" ]
2007-07-31T00:29:41Z
2008-03-08T02:05:24Z
855,653
Benedetto Castelli
Benedetto Castelli (1578 – 9 April 1643), born Antonio Castelli, was an Italian mathematician. Benedetto was his name in religion on entering the Benedictine Order in 1595.
[ "Mathematics" ]
2004-07-25T03:20:03Z
2004-07-25T07:31:16Z
58,082,412
Brian Parker (politician)
Brian Parker (born 1951 or 1952) is an English politician who served as councillor on Pendle Borough Council for the Marsden ward of Nelson, Lancashire, between 2006 and his retirement in 2018. He is the last elected representative of the far-right British National Party (BNP), is currently a member of the British Democratic Party, and has publicly stated that "I am opposed to all black and brown immigration".
[ "Politics" ]
2018-08-06T14:33:54Z
2018-08-06T14:39:00Z
12,017,654
Janet Abu-Lughod
Janet Lippman Abu-Lughod (August 3, 1928 – December 14, 2013) was an American sociologist who made major contributions to world-systems theory and urban sociology.
[ "People" ]
2007-06-30T06:51:29Z
2007-06-30T06:52:27Z
576,478
Canadian Union of Fascists
The Canadian Union of Fascists was a fascist political party based in the city of Toronto in the 1930s with its western Canadian office in Regina, Saskatchewan. The party was founded in Winnipeg, Manitoba in the summer of 1934 as the British Empire Union of Fascists by Canadian supporters of Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists after BUF member Hubert Cox visited the city in June 1934, claiming to be Mosley's representative. The first leader was Howard Simpkin, a former lieutenant to Canadian Nationalist Party leader William Whittaker who led a group of people breaking away from the CNP, objecting to the party's racialism, declaring that "anti-semitism was a symptom of Germany not of Fascism", and advocated a more economic-oriented program instead built around the fascist economic policies of Mussolini's Italy such as corporatism. The new party attracted around 200 people to its inaugural meeting on June 28, 1934, to hear Cox and Simpkin address the crowd. It soon changed its name to the Canadian Union of Fascists (or Canadian Union) and within a year had branches in Transcona, Manitoba, Toronto and Woodstock, Ontario, Regina, Saskatchewan, and Vancouver.
[ "Politics" ]
2004-04-04T21:49:10Z
2004-11-03T00:00:10Z
3,042,034
Jacobus Golius
Jacob Golius, born Jacob van Gool (1596 – September 28, 1667), was an Orientalist and mathematician based at the Leiden University in the Netherlands. He is primarily remembered as an Orientalist. He published Arabic texts in Arabic at Leiden, and did Arabic-to-Latin translations. His best-known work is an Arabic-to-Latin dictionary, Lexicon Arabico-Latinum (1653), which he sourced for the most part from the Sihah dictionary of Al-Jauhari and the Qamous dictionary of Fairuzabadi.
[ "Mathematics" ]
2005-10-31T03:17:34Z
2005-10-31T03:18:07Z
1,178,669
Carolyn Forché
Carolyn Forché (born April 28, 1950) is an American poet, editor, professor, translator, and human rights advocate. She has received many awards for her literary work.
[ "Academic_disciplines" ]
2004-11-17T06:07:40Z
2005-04-19T03:06:05Z