chunks
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ids
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{ "retrieved": [ "Basin (chanson de geste) Basin is a \"chanson de geste\" about Charlemagne's childhood. While the Old French epic poem has been lost, the story has come down to us via a 13th-century Norse prose version in the \"Karlamagnús saga\". At the death of his father, an angel warns the young Charlemagne...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Embassy of Japan, Seoul The Embassy of Japan in Seoul () is the diplomatic mission of Japan in South Korea. It is located in Seoul, South Korea's capital. The current embassy was opened in 18 December 1965, following the re-establishment of relations between the two countries, under its first am...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Francesco Suriano Francesco Suriano (1445-after 1481) was an Italian friar of the Franciscan order, who wrote a guide for travel to the Holy Land. He was born in 1445 to a noble family of Venice. He may have first travelled to Alexandria, Egypt in 1462, as a young man. At age 25, he entered the ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Buddleja davidii 'Tobudviole' = Buzz Lavender The series of Buddleja davidii cultivars was released to commerce in the UK in 2009, the result of seven years' intensive breeding and selection by Charles Valin of the UK's Thomson & Morgan nursery. ' is also sold as depending on country of sale. Th...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Ford 7W The Ford 7W Ten is a car built by Ford UK between 1937 and 1938. The car was an updated version of the Model C Ten with the same 1172 cc engine and three speed gearbox, and used the same transverse leaf front and rear suspension. The chassis now featured a stiffer braced design, and the ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Hierarchical classifier A hierarchical classifier is a classifier that maps input data into defined subsumptive output categories. The classification occurs first on a low-level with highly specific pieces of input data. The classifications of the individual pieces of data are then combined syst...
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{ "retrieved": [ "1980–81 Cypriot Second Division The 1980–81 Cypriot Second Division was the 26th season of the Cypriot second-level football league. Evagoras Paphos won their 3rd title. Fourteen teams participated in the 1980–81 Cypriot Second Division. All teams played against each other twice, once at their h...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Leonidas D. Robinson Leonidas Dunlap Robinson (April 22, 1867 – November 7, 1941) was a U.S. Representative from North Carolina. Born in Gulledge Township, North Carolina, Robinson attended the common schools. He moved to Wadesboro in 1888. He studied law. He was admitted to the bar in 1889 and ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Elma Napier Elma Napier (née Gordon-Cumming; 23 March 1892 – 12 November 1973), also known as Elma Gibbs and by the pen-name Elizabeth Garner, was a Scottish-born writer and politician who lived most of her life in the Caribbean island of Dominica. She published several novels and memoirs based ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Vladimir Kenigson Vladimir Vladimirovich Kenigson, or Königson () was born November 7, 1907 in the family of barrister Vladimir Petrovich Kenigson in Simferopol, the Russian Empire. Swede by birth. Vladimir Kenigson graduated from the school at Simferopol Drama Theatre in 1925 and was admitted t...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Anastasios Donis Anastasios \"Tasos\" Donis (; born 29 August 1996) is a Greek footballer who plays as a forward for VfB Stuttgart as well as the Greece national football team. In January 2013, Donis moved from Panathinaikos to Juventus for €300,000. The move was completed in May 2012, where he ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Comedic journalism Comedic journalism is a new form of journalism, popularized in the twenty-first century, that incorporates a comedic tone to transmit the news to mass audiences, using humour and/or satire to relay a point in news reports. Comedic journalism has been applied to print media in ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "London Conversations: The Best of Saint Etienne London Conversations: The Best of Saint Etienne is a compilation album by Saint Etienne. It was released as a deluxe 2CD/DVD set (packaged in a hardback book), standard 2-CD set and on double 12\" vinyl. It features the 2008 Xenomania Mix of \"Burn...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Dev Gurung Dev Gurung () is a Nepalese politician, belonging to the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist). Gurung became Minister of Law and Justice on August 22, 2008. In 2002, B.S., Gurung became the president of the All Nepal National Free Students Union. After the party had declared People's War...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Double check valve A double check valve or double check assembly (DCA) is a backflow prevention device designed to protect water supplies from contamination. It is also a valve used in air brake systems on heavy trucks. It consists of two check valves assembled in series. This employs two operat...
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{ "retrieved": [ "William de Bois Maclaren William Frederick de Bois Maclaren (17 November 1856 – 3 June 1921) was publisher, businessman and Scout Commissioner for Rosneath, Dunbartonshire, Scotland. He is most recognized as the first major benefactor of Scouting by donating Gilwell Park in 1919. William Frederi...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Veer Towers Veer Towers are twin 37-story, , residential towers located within CityCenter on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. Each tower houses 335 luxury condominium units ranging from . The two towers were designed by Murphy/Jahn Architects of Chicago and lean in opposite directions (f...
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{ "retrieved": [ "David Merkow David Bartos Merkow (born May 5, 1985) is a long-hitting American :golfer. He won the World Junior Masters tournament boys 14–15 division as a youth in 2000, and the American Junior Golf Association's SLI Junior Classic boys division two years later. In June 2005 he and a former hig...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Bordei Park Bordei Park () is a park in northern Bucharest. The terrain where the Bordei Park stands (which included the Bordei Lake and amounted to 0.13 km²) was bought by the Bucharest Municipality from the Marmorosch Blank Bank in 1932 for a price of 16 million lei ($110,000 at the time). The...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Shadows (The X-Files) \"Shadows\" is the sixth episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series \"The X-Files\". It premièred on the Fox network on October 22, 1993. It was written by Glen Morgan and James Wong, directed by Michael Lange, and featured guest appearanc...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Arabian sand gazelle The Arabian sand gazelle (\"Gazella marica\", formerly \"Gazella subgutturosa marica\") or reem () is a species of gazelle native to the Syrian and Arabian Deserts. Today it survives in the wild in small, isolated populations in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Oman, ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Groton, Massachusetts Groton is a town in northwestern Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States, within the Greater Boston metropolitan area. The population was 10,873 at the 2012 town census. It is home to two prep schools: Groton School, founded in 1884, and Lawrence Academy at Groton, f...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Dachimawa Lee Dachimawa Lee (; lit. \"Dajjimawa Lee: Bye, Villain! Take the Express Train to Hell\") is a 2008 South Korean film. It has been released via online streaming in the United States with the title \"Dachimawa Lee: Gangnam Spy\". The legendary Korean spy Dachimawa Lee is assigned to re...
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{ "retrieved": [ "TooManyLeftHands TooManyLeftHands is a Copenhagen-based Danish DJ and producer duo consisting of Anders K and Martin Nick. Their work is mainly in the House / Tech / Progressive / Deep genres. Anders K is a successful Danish DJ who teamed up with club-owner, events organizer and producer Martin ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Pierre Valmera Pierre \"Pierry\" Valmera (born September 29, 1981) is a retired Haitian professional basketball player, who played for Ancien in the Ligue Nationale de Basket in Switzerland. Valmera was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Having taught himself basketball in his native country, he emi...
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{ "retrieved": [ "The Cult of the Self The Cult of the Self (French: \"Le Culte du moi\") is a trilogy of books by French author Maurice Barrès, sometimes called his \"trilogie du moi\". The trilogy was influenced by Romanticism, and it also made an apology of the pleasure of the senses. Barrès wrote the works wh...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Paul Coffey Paul Douglas Coffey (born June 1, 1961) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey defenseman who played for nine teams in the National Hockey League. Known for his speed and scoring prowess, Coffey ranks second all-time among NHL defensemen in career goals, assists, and points, b...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Ted de Corsia Ted de Corsia (September 29, 1903 – April 11, 1973) was an American radio, film, and television actor best remembered for his role as a gangster who turned state's evidence in the film \"The Enforcer\" (1951). Edward Gildea De Corsia was born in Brooklyn, New York. De Corsia was a ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender, and the New Racism Black Sexual Politics: African Americans, Gender and the New Racism by Patricia Hill Collins is a work of critical theory that discusses the way that race, class and gender intersect to affect the lives of African American men ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Brad Bell (golfer) Brad Bell (born September 1, 1961) is an American professional golfer. Bell was born in Sacramento, California. He played college golf at UC Davis and UCLA where he was a two-time All-American. Bell played on the European Tour in 1986 and 1987 where his best finish was T-37 at...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Bluecrest Health Bluecrest Health is a privately run health screening company founded in the UK in 2012 and based in Worthing, West Sussex. Bluecrest offer a range of screenings in the UK and Ireland; clinics are set up at mobile sites across the country. A division of Bluecrest Health Screening...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Chuck Garfien Chuck Garfien is an anchor/reporter for NBC Sports Chicago. He's the host of White Sox Pregame/Postgame Live, and is the station's sideline reporter for the Chicago Bulls. Since joining NBC Sports Chicago in 2004, Garfien has won 6 Chicago/Midwest Emmy awards for feature stories on...
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{ "retrieved": [ "ACAMPs Apoptotic-cell associated molecular patterns (ACAMPs) are molecular markers present on cells which are going through apoptosis, i.e. programmed cell death (similarly, Pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) are markers of invading pathogens and Damage-associated molecular patterns ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Volixibat Volixibat (INN; development code SHP626) is a medication under development as a possible treatment for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), the most severe form of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). No other pharmacotherapy yet exists for NASH, so there is interest in whether v...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Biryukove Biryukove (; , \"Biryukovo\") is an urban-type settlement in Sverdlovsk Raion of Luhansk Oblast, a part of Ukraine. Population: . It is situated in 18 km from Sverdlovsk near the river Kundrjutsja, feeder of Seversky Donets. The nearest railway station, Dolzhanskaya, is situated in 12 ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Feminization of language In linguistics, feminization has two mutually independent meanings. First, it refers to the process of re-classifying nouns and adjectives which as such refer to male beings, including occupational terms, as feminine. This is done most of the time by adding inflectional ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Ing Cup The Ing Cup is an international Go tournament, with a large cash prize of over US$400,000. It was begun by, and is named after, Ing Chang-ki. In the 7th Ing Cup (2012/13), Fan Tingyu (b. 1996) beat Park Junghwan (b. 1993) [3-1] and became the youngest Ing Cup winner in history. In the se...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Ménilmontant Ménilmontant () is a neighbourhood of Paris, situated in the city's 20th arrondissement. It is affectionately known to locals as \"Ménilmuche\". Originally a hamlet within the independent commune (municipality) of Belleville, Ménilmontant was, like other suburban communes surroundin...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Carlos Alfredo Peyrellade Carlos Alfredo Peyrellade Zaldivar (1840-1908) was a Haitian classical pianist and music educator. He is best known as founder of the Carlos Alfredo Peyrellade Conservatory of music in Havana, Cuba. Peyrellade was born in Port-au-Prince into a musical family. His brothe...
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{ "retrieved": [ "UEFA Euro 2016 squads For UEFA Euro 2016, the 24 participating national teams had to submit squads of 23 players – of which three had to be goalkeepers – by 31 May 2016, 10 days prior to the opening match of the tournament. In the event that a player on the submitted squad list suffered an injur...
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{ "retrieved": [ "1952 Afghan parliamentary election A royal proclamation was issued calling upon the people to elect the eighth National Assembly, consisting of 171 seats, within three months. As no census of population has ever been taken there were no electoral lists, the February 1952 election in Afghanistan ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "The Cruise of the Make-Believes The Cruise of the Make-Believes is a lost 1918 American silent dramatic feature film starring Lila Lee in her first motion picture. It was directed by George Melford and is based on a 1907 novel by Tom Gallon. Famous Players-Lasky produced and Paramount Pictures r...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Charles McCabe Charles McCabe (1915–1983) was a columnist for the \"San Francisco Chronicle\" from the mid-1950s until his death May 1, 1983 at the age of 68. He was born and raised in New York's \"Hells Kitchen\" and was educated by the Jesuits. McCabe started as a police reporter for the \"New...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Grey-headed fish eagle The grey-headed fish eagle (\"Haliaeetus ichthyaetus\") is a fish-eating bird of prey from South East Asia. It is a large stocky raptor with adults having dark brown upper body, grey head and lighter underbelly and white legs. Juveniles are paler with darker streaking. It ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Christy Heffernan Christy Heffernan (born 26 December 1957) is an Irish retired hurler who played as a full-forward for the Kilkenny senior team. Born in Glenmore, County Kilkenny, Heffernan first arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of twenty-two when he first linked up with the Kilkenn...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Garbage (computer science) In computer science, garbage includes objects, data, or other regions of the memory of a computer system (or other system resources), which will not be used in any future computation by the system, or by a program running on it. As computer systems all have finite amou...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Metuisela Talebula Metuisela Talebula (born 20 May 1991) is a Fijian rugby union footballer. He plays fullback, fly-half and wing for Bordeaux Bègles and Fiji. Talebula was selected to play for the Fiji Juniors to the 2011 IRB Junior World Championship in Italy. He scored three tries in the tour...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Overlay (poker) In poker, an overlay is the gap between a poker tournament's guaranteed prize pool and the actual prize pool generated by entrants. For example, if a tournament has a guaranteed prize pool of $10,000, a buy in of $100 and 90 players enter, the players will contribute only $9,000 ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Balachka Balachka (; ) are the dialects of Ukrainian spoken by the Cossacks of North Caucasus, especially in the region around the Kuban River. The term originated from the Ukrainian term \"balakaty'\", which colloquially means \"to talk\", \"to chat\". Some linguists characterize Balachka verna...
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{ "retrieved": [ "HAT-trie The HAT-Trie is a type of radix trie that uses array nodes to collect individual key–value pairs under radix nodes and hash buckets into an associative array. Unlike a simple hash table, HAT-tries store key–value in an ordered collection. The original inventors are Nikolas Askitis and R...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Kalana Greene Kalana Lanette Greene (born July 13, 1987), is an American professional women's basketball guard, who currently plays for the Minnesota Lynx of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA), and CCC Polkowice in Poland. She played her college career at the University of Connec...
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{ "retrieved": [ "The Last Harvest: Paintings of Rabindranath Tagore The Last Harvest was an exhibition of Rabindranath Tagore's paintings to mark the 150th anniversary of Tagore's birth. It was commissioned by the Ministry of Culture, India and organised with the National Gallery of Modern Art (NGMA). It consist...
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{ "retrieved": [ "St. Charles College (Sudbury) St. Charles College is a high school located at 1940 Hawthorne Drive in Greater Sudbury, Ontario. The school motto is \"\"Goodness Discipline and Knowledge\"\" and is based on the Basilian motto, \"Bonitatem et disciplinam et scientiam doce me\", which comes from Ps...
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{ "retrieved": [ "2019 Major League Baseball All-Star Game The 2019 Major League Baseball All-Star Game will be the 90th Major League Baseball All-Star Game. The game will be hosted by the Cleveland Indians and will be played at Progressive Field on July 9, 2019. The decision to name Cleveland the host city was a...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Gas carrier A gas carrier (or gas tanker) is a ship designed to transport LPG, LNG or liquefied chemical gases in bulk. The seaborne transport of liquefied gases began in 1934 when a major international company put two combined oil/LPG tankers into operation. The ships, basically oil tankers, ha...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Los Borrachos del Tablón Los Borrachos del Tablón (Drunks of bleachers in English) is the \"barra brava\" of the Club Atlético River Plate. It is one of the scariest barra brava groups in Argentina. Under the leadership Luisito Pereyra and Edgar \"Diariero\" (\"Newspaper Man\") Butassi, the barr...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Paulina Lebl-Albala Paulina Lebl-Albala (August 9, 1891 – October 8, 1967) was a Serbian feminist, translator, literary critic, literature theoretician, and professor of literature in Belgrade. A co-founder of the Yugoslav Association of University-Educated Women (1927), she also served as the o...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Jaime Jaime is a common Spanish and Portuguese masculine given name for Jacob, James, Jamie, or Jacques. In Occitania Jacobus became \"Jacome\" and later \"Jacme\". In east Spain, \"Jacme\" became \"Jaime\"; in Aragon it became \"Chaime\", in Catalonia it became \"Jaume\". In western Spain Jacob...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Battus I of Cyrene Battus I of Cyrene (), also known as Battus Aristotle (Βάττος Ἀριστοτέλης) or Aristaeus (Ἀρισταῖος) was the founder of the Ancient Greek colony of Cyrene. He was its first king, the first Greek king in Africa and the founder of the Battiad dynasty. He also has a butterfly name...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Society Stores Supermarkets Society Stores Supermarkets is a supermarket chain in Kenya. The head office of Society Stores is located in the town of Thika, approximately , by road, northeast of Nairobi, the capital and largest city in Kenya. As of February 2016, Society Stores owns and operates ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "New Rochelle artist colony The New Rochelle artist colony was a community of artists, actors, musicians, playwrights and writers who settled in the city of New Rochelle, New York during the early twentieth century. By the 1920s, New Rochelle had more artists per capita than almost any city in th...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Interstate 86 (Pennsylvania–New York) Interstate 86 (I-86) is an Interstate Highway that extends for through northwestern Pennsylvania and southern New York in the United States. The highway has two segments: the longer of the two begins at an interchange with I-90 east of Erie, Pennsylvania, an...
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{ "retrieved": [ "The current Governor is Mir Ghazanfar Ali Khan, who took over on 20 November 2015. \n The Governor of Gilgit-Baltistan is the appointed Head of State of the provincial government in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. The governor is designated by the Prime Minister and is normally regarded a ceremonial...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Gruzinsky Gruzinsky (; ) was a title and later the surname of two different princely lines of the Bagrationi dynasty of Georgia, both of which received it as subjects of the Russian Empire. The name \"Gruzinsky\" (also spelled Gruzinski or Gruzinskii) derives from the Russian language, originall...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Pothos longipes Pothos longipes is a climbing plant of the warmer rainforests of eastern Australia. Distributed from Boorganna Nature Reserve in the Mid North Coast of New South Wales to tropical Queensland. Mostly found on trunks of trees. An attractive plant with interesting flowers and bright...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Don't Let Go (George Duke album) Don't Let Go is the twelfth studio album by American keyboardist and record producer George Duke. It was released in 1978 through Epic Records. Recording sessions for the album took place at Paramount Recording Studios in Los Angeles, California. The album featur...
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{ "retrieved": [ "1967 NBA Playoffs The 1967 NBA Playoffs was the postseason tournament of the National Basketball Association's 1966-67 season. The tournament concluded with the Eastern Division champion Philadelphia 76ers defeating the Western Division champion San Francisco Warriors 4 games to 2 in the NBA Fin...
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{ "retrieved": [ "August William Edwins August William Edwins (August 12, 1871 – July 2, 1942) was the American founder of the Augustana Evangelical Lutheran Church mission in the Xuchang, Henan, China. August William Edwins was born August 12, 1871 in Ogden, Boone Co., Iowa. His parents had emigrated from Sweden...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Tony László Tony László (born 16 October 1960) is an American born to parents of Hungarian and Italian descent. He was raised in the United States and came to Japan in 1985. As a freelance journalist, he has written articles in English and Japanese. He has been a representative and webmaster for...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Asuka Langley Soryu In a \"Newtype\" poll from March 2010, Asuka was voted as the third most popular female anime character from the 1990s. Asuka's surname comes from the Japanese World War II aircraft carrier \"Soryu\", her middle name from the American World War II aircraft carrier \"Langley\"...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Leopold Kny Carl Ignaz Leopold Kny (6 July 1841 – 26 June 1916) was a German botanist born in Breslau. He studied at Breslau, Munich and Berlin, where he was a pupil of Alexander Braun (1805–1877). In 1873 he became an associate professor at the University of Berlin, as well as director of the n...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Boxing at the 2012 Summer Olympics – Qualification Qualification for the Boxing Events at the 2012 Summer Olympics is based on the WBS Individual Championships, the 2011 World Championships and 5 Continental Qualifying Events to be held in 2012. Qualification for the women's events was at the Wo...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Windsor Beauties The Windsor Beauties are a famous collection of paintings by Sir Peter Lely, painted in the early to mid-1660s. The name stems from the original location of the collection, which was housed in the Queen's bedchamber in Windsor Castle. They can now be seen at Hampton Court Palace...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Fort Yamhill Fort Yamhill was an American military fortification in what became the state of Oregon. Built in 1856 in the Oregon Territory, it remained an active post until 1866. The Army outpost was used to provide a presence next to the Grand Ronde Agency Coastal Reservation. Several officers ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Swink, Colorado Swink is a Statutory Town in Otero County, Colorado, United States. The population was 696 at the 2000 census. A post office called Swink has been in operation since 1906. The community was named after George W. Swink, a Colorado politician. As of the census of 2000, there were 6...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Adam Newbold Adam Charles Newbold (born 16 November 1989) is an English footballer who plays as a striker. In December 2010, it was announced that he had agreed a deal to sign for Australian side Ballarat Red Devils. He is expected to make his debut for the club in February. Newbold scored on hi...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Colegio San Agustín (Cochabamba) The San Agustin High School of Cochabamba (\"Colegio San Agustín\" in Spanish) is a private high school located in Cochabamba, Bolivia. Augustinians settled in Cochabamba in 1950 to contribute to the education in Bolivia. They founded the high school in 1954 and ...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Slade Alive! – The Live Anthology Slade Alive! – The Live Anthology is a two-disc live compilation album by the British rock band Slade. It was released in August 2006 by Salvo. It reached No. 191 in the UK. The anthology includes the band's entire collection of officially released live material...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Vadakkuparamba Vadakkuparamba is a small village in Anakkayam panchayat, in the Malappuram District of Kerala, India. Nearby cities are Pandikkad (5 km) and Manjeri (10 km).kadalundi river surrounding the village. Vadakkuparamba village is a predominantly Muslim populated area. Hindus exist in c...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Midnight Rambler \"Midnight Rambler\" is a song by the English rock band the Rolling Stones, released on their 1969 album \"Let It Bleed\". The song is a loose biography of Albert DeSalvo, who confessed to being the Boston Strangler. Keith Richards has called the number \"a blues opera\" and the...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Palena River The Palena River or Carrenleufú is a river shared by Chile and Argentina in Northern Patagonia. It drains the waters of the Vintter Lake, also shared by these nations, and it flows into the Pacific Ocean. This river has a regular glacial regime and rapid white waters. The rapids bet...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Santa Gadea Santa Gadea () is a church dedicated to Saint Agatha in Burgos, Spain. The church is famous in history and literature for being the site where Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar (El Cid) at the behest of the Castilian Cortes, forced Alfonso VI to swear an oath that he was not an accomplice in the...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Communication!!! Communication!!! is the second studio album by American-born Japanese pop singer Leah Dizon. It was released on August 20, 2008 by Victor Entertainment. Dizon herself also wrote or co-wrote 10 of the tracks, along with composing 2 herself. It was released in a CD-only and CD + D...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Wherwell Abbey Wherwell Abbey was an abbey of Benedictine nuns in Wherwell, Hampshire, England. The nunnery was founded about 986 by Ælfthryth, the widow of King Edgar. She retired there to live a life of penance for her part in the murders of her first husband Æthelwald and of her step-son King...
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{ "retrieved": [ "University Royal Naval Unit A University Royal Naval Unit (URNU) is a Royal Navy training establishment connected to a university, or a number of universities concentrated in one area. There are 15 URNUs nationwide in the UK, and each URNU has land-based facilities near the university in questio...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Stéphane Trévisan Stéphane Trévisan (born March 27, 1974) is a French former professional football goalkeeper. During his career, which began in 1995 at Toulouse Fontaines and concluded in 2010 after a three-year spell with Guingamp, he made over 200 league appearances. Trévisan started his prof...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Wu Mochou Wu Mochou, also known by her English name Momo Wu (born April 18, 1992), is a Chinese singer. She rose to fame after her runner-up of The Voice of China (season 1). Wu was born in Qiqihar, the daughter of an obscure singer. During her childhood, Wu followed her parents in a caravan and...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Tisab Ting Tisab Ting, or, The Electrical Kiss is an 1896 Canadian science fiction novel, written by Ida May Ferguson of New Brunswick under the pseudonym \"Dyjan Fergus.\" The book is set in late 20th century Montreal and features an \"electrical genius\": a \"learned Chinaman\" who woos and wi...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Zsuzsa Koncz Zsuzsa Koncz (, born 7 March 1946, Pély) is a Hungarian pop singer, whose lyrics (mostly written by János Bródy) were sometimes highly critical of the country's pre-1990 political system. Her career started after her performance in the Ki mit tud? talent show of 1962. She has been p...
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{ "retrieved": [ "* Amy Poehler \n * Nick Offerman \n\n\n Making It (originally titled The Handmade Project) is an American reality competition series, co-hosted by Amy Poehler and Nick Offerman. The series premiered on July 31, 2018 on NBC. \n Season | Episodes | Originally aired \n---|---|--- \nFirst ai...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Alis Lesley Alis Lesley (born Alice Lesley, April 20, 1938) is an American former rockabilly singer, once billed as \"the female Elvis Presley.\" Lesley was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Her family later moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where she attended Phoenix Junior College. She majore...
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{ "retrieved": [ "La Padania La Padania was an Italian daily newspaper, and the official press organ of the political party Lega Nord. \"La Padania\" was the official newspaper of Northern League of Umberto Bossi founded in 1997 by Davide Caparini and directed by Gianluca Marchi (both coming from 'L'Indipendente'...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Franz Josef Radermacher Franz Josef Radermacher is a German mathematician and economist. He is Professor of Informatics at Ulm University. He is one of the co-founders of the Global Marshall Plan Initiative that suggests a socio-ecological plan to eradicate poverty, increasing global wealth whil...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Semnan, Iran Semnan (; , also Romanized as Semnān and Samnān) is the capital city of Semnan Province, Iran. Its population was 153,680 people and 36,298 families as of the 2011 census. Semnan is located 216 kilometers east of Tehran in north central Iran. It is home to Semnani languages and is k...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Alastair J Macdonald Dr Alastair Macdonald is a Scottish historian. He is the Mackie Lecturer in History at the University of Aberdeen. His field of research is Scotland-England relations during the late medieval period (1369-1403), particularly the development of \"Frontier societies\" and Scot...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Defamiliarization Defamiliarization or ostranenie () is the artistic technique of presenting to audiences common things in an unfamiliar or strange way in order to enhance perception of the familiar. According to (De Guzman, 2016), Defamiliarization of that which is or has become familiar or tak...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Haitian American Sugar Company Haitian American Sugar Company, S.A. (HASCO) was an American business venture which sought to produce and sell sugar and other goods in Haiti and the United States. The company was registered with a capital of five million dollars on 5 August 1912 in Wilmington, De...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Jim Hansen (Idaho politician) James Duncan Hansen (born November 5, 1959) is an American attorney, Ada County Highway District Commissioner and former Democratic politician from Idaho. He was the 2006 Democratic nominee for Congress in Idaho's 2nd district, but was defeated by four-term incumben...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Vytautas Kolesnikovas Vytautas Kolesnikovas (born September 25, 1948 in Alytus, Lithuania) is a painter, graphic artist, politician, and signatory of the 1990 Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania. From 1968 to 1974 Kolesnikovas studied art in Moscow. After returning to Lithuania...
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{ "retrieved": [ "Khmer Special Forces The Khmer Special Forces, also designated 'Khmer SF' for short or Forces Speciales Khmères (FSK) in French, were the elite Special Operations unit of the Khmer National Armed Forces (commonly known by their French acronym, FANK) during the 1970-75 Cambodian Civil War. The hi...
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