title stringlengths 1 111 | text stringlengths 0 136k |
|---|---|
Paruntuk Kana | Paruntuk Kana (Lontara script: , parable) is one of Makassarese literary works, sentences containing allegory, satire or comparison. It is like proverb or aphorism. Nowadays, Paruntuk Kana is virtually forgotten by Makassarese people as a part of their culture. In the past, it was used to show the respectful or reminde... |
Gular Ahmadova | Gular Mikayil qizi Ahmadova (), née Aliyeva (born 20 August 1965, Baku), is a retired Azerbaijani politician, former member of the National Assembly of Azerbaijan and former member of the ruling New Azerbaijan Party. She gained notoriety in 2012 after a video shot on a hidden camera was released, featuring Ahmadova neg... |
Liberty & Lament | Liberty & Lament is Lucero's own record label. The label is a part of the EastWest Records family of labels.
Current Bands
Lucero
Glossary |
Argoed, Powys | Argoed is a small village in the community of Nantmel, Powys, Wales, which is 55 miles (88 km) from Cardiff and 152 miles (244 km) from London.
The Argoed water mill dates back to at least 1840. It stands on Nant Treflyn, a tributary of the River Wye, not far from Doldowlod Hall, Llanwrthwl. The property has recently ... |
Gorriti (disambiguation) | Gorriti is a town in Larraun, Navarre, Spain. It may also refer to:
People
Raúl Gorriti,Raúl Enrique Gorriti Drago (10 October 1956 – 2 April 2015) was a professional football midfielder from Peru.
José Ignacio de Gorriti,General José Ignacio de Gorriti (1770 – 9 November 1835) was an Argentine statesman, soldier and ... |
Wrestling at the 1924 Summer Olympics – Men's Greco-Roman bantamweight | The men's Greco-Roman bantamweight was a Greco-Roman wrestling event held as part of the Wrestling at the 1924 Summer Olympics programme. It was the first appearance of the event. Bantamweight was the lightest category, including wrestlers weighing up to 58 kilograms.
Results
Source: Official results; Wudarski
The to... |
Flying frog | A flying frog (also called a gliding frog) is a frog that has the ability to achieve gliding flight. That is, it can descend at an angle of less than 45° relative to the horizontal. Other (non-flying) arboreal frogs can also descend, but only at angles greater than 45°, which is referred to as parachuting.
Gliding fli... |
File Under: Easy Listening | File Under: Easy Listening (also known as F.U.E.L.) is the second (not counting the EP Beaster) and final studio album by Sugar.
Background
Primary songwriter Bob Mould discussed material written after Beaster in 1993: "It's pretty punk rock. Not real fast, just pretty basic. A lot of it's really vocal-y. Really beaut... |
Shake for the Sheik | "Shake for the Sheik" is a song by English pop-rock band The Escape Club, from their 1988 album Wild Wild West. Written by the band members and produced by Chris Kimsey, the song was released as the album's second single and reached number 28 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart in January 1989.
Release and reception
"... |
Kristina Paner | Kristina Paner (born August 1, 1971 in Manila, Philippines) is a Filipino actress and singer. She is an alumna of Miriam College (then Maryknoll College).
Early life
At a very young age, Paner's parents noticed her interest in music. Her adoptive parents were prominent celebrities as well. Her father Manny Paner was a... |
Rookley Manor | Rookley Manor (also Roclee, Rokeley, Roucle) is a manor house on the Isle of Wight, situated in the parish of Arreton. Though originally in Godshill parish, it is now included for the greater part in the boundaries of South Arreton.
History
The Lisle family owned Rookley Manor under their neighbouring manor of Appl... |
Sophie and Peter Johnston (album) | Sophie and Peter Johnston is the eponymous 1987 first album from the duo of the same name.
Track listing
"Television Satellite"
"Open Up"
"A Bigger Temptation"
"Take That Jerkin Off"
"Some Sunny Day"
"Happy Together"
"Torn Open"
"Run Away"
"I Want You to Know"
"No Time"
"Sold on You"
"Brain Def" |
Stancil | Stancil is the name of:
Felicia Stancil (born 1995), bicyclist
Stancil Johnson, psychiatrist and frisbee enthusiast
T. J. Stancil (born 1982), football player |
James Forrest (adventurer) | James Forrest is an English adventurer, hiker and author from Birmingham, England. In 2017 Forrest broke the record for the fastest known completion of all 446 mountains in England and Wales. He climbed every 2,000ft mountain in England and Wales, peaks known as the 'Nuttalls', in six months, walking over 1,000 miles i... |
Ardyaloon, Western Australia | Ardyaloon or One Arm Point, also known as Bardi, is an Aboriginal Australian community town on the Dampier Peninsula, in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. It is located north of Perth and the closest populated town is Derby. At the , Bardi had a population of 365.
The Bardi Ardyaloon hatchery has successfull... |
Starch mogul | A starch mogul is a machine that makes shaped candies or candy centers from syrups or gels, such as gummi candy. These softer candies and centers are made by filling a tray with cornstarch, stamping the desired shape into the starch, and then pouring the filling or gel into the holes made by the stamp. When the candi... |
Sylvester–Gallai theorem | The Sylvester–Gallai theorem in geometry states that, given a finite number of points in the Euclidean plane, either
all the points lie on a single line; or
there is at least one line which contains exactly two of the points.
It is named after James Joseph Sylvester, who posed it as a problem in 1893, and Tibor Galla... |
Szachy, Lublin Voivodeship | Szachy is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Drelów, within Biała Podlaska County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately north of Drelów, west of Biała Podlaska, and north of the regional capital Lublin. |
Obierwia | Obierwia is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lelis, within Ostrołęka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. |
Dronpa | Dronpa is a reversibly switchable photoactivatable fluorescent protein that is 2.5 times as bright as EGFP. Dronpa gets switched off by strong illumination with 488 nm (blue) light and this can be reversed by weak 405 nm UV light. A single dronpa molecule can be switched on and off over 100 times. It has an excitation... |
Guess Who's Sleeping in My Bed? | Guess Who's Sleeping in My Bed? is a 1973 American made-for-television comedy film starring Barbara Eden and Dean Jones, directed by Theodore J. Flicker from a teleplay written by Pamela Herbert Chais based on her play Six Weeks in August. It originally premiered as the ABC Movie of the Week on October 31, 1973.
Synop... |
Stolany | Stolany is a village in the Pardubice Region of the Czech Republic. It has around 350 inhabitants.
External links
Short official information about the village (in Czech) |
Andrew E. Bellisario | Andrew Eugene Bellisario (born December 19, 1956) is an American bishop of the Catholic Church serving as the sixth and current bishop of the Diocese of Juneau. He also serves as apostolic administrator for the Archdiocese of Anchorage.
Biography
Bellisario entered the Congregation of the Mission (Vicentians) in 1975... |
Sualkuchi | Sualkuchi (Pron: ˈʃʊɑ:lˌkʊʧɪ) is a census town in Kamrup district in the Indian state of Assam. It is situated on the north bank of the river Brahmaputra, about 35 km from Guwahati, Sualkuchi is a block of Kamrup District. It has large number of cottage industry engaged in handloom, for which it is also known as the "M... |
Velasco the Basque | Velasco the Basque (, Balask al-Galaski) was the Basque ruler of Pamplona in the early 9th century.
Velasco may have come to power in 799 in the uprising that overthrew the Umayyad rule in Pamplona. The Muslim governor, Muṭarrif ibn Mūsa, probably of the Banu Qasi, was assassinated.
The contemporary Annales Regni Fra... |
Kuchpanqa | Kuchpanqa (Quechua kuchpay to roll, -nqa an archaic nominalising suffix to indicate a place destinated for something, "(place) for rolling something", hispanicized spelling Cuchpanga) is a mountain at a small lake of that name in the Andes of Peru, about high. It is located in the Pasco Region, Pasco Province, in the ... |
GLUT3 | Glucose transporter 3 (or GLUT3), also known as solute carrier family 2, facilitated glucose transporter member 3 (SLC2A3) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the SLC2A3 gene. GLUT3 facilitates the transport of glucose across the plasma membranes of mammalian cells. GLUT3 is most known for its specific expression... |
Boulder Point | Boulder Point () is the southern extremity of Stonington Island, close off the west coast of Graham Land. It was first surveyed in 1940 by the United States Antarctic Service. Upon being resurveyed in 1948 by the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey it was named for its prominent granite boulder. |
Custody Notification Scheme | A Custody Notification Scheme (CNS) is a 24-hour legal advice and support telephone hotline for any Australian Aboriginal person brought into custody, connecting them with lawyers from the Aboriginal Legal Service. It is intended to reduce the high number of Aboriginal deaths in custody by counteracting the effects of ... |
Quenisset (crater) | Quenisset is an impact crater on Mars, located in the Ismenius Lacus quadrangle at 34.6° N and 319.4° W. It measures 138 kilometer in diameter. Adopted by IAU's Working Group for Planetary System Nomenclature in 1973, the crater was named after French astronomer Ferdinand Quénisset.
Description
Some close up images ... |
Loophole (short story) | "Loophole" is a science fiction short story by British writer Arthur C. Clarke, first published in 1946 in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction. It was subsequently published as part of a short story collection in A Treasury of Science Fiction (Groff Conklin, 1948 and Expedition to Earth in 1953.
It details the... |
St. Rynagh's GAA | St. Rynagh's (Irish: Naomh Raghnach) is a Gaelic Athletic Association club that encompasses the towns of Cloghan and Banagher in County Offaly, in Ireland. Formed in 1961, the club gained almost immediate success - winning the senior championship in 1965. St. Rynagh's went on to appear in three All-Ireland club finals ... |
Thom Wolf | Thom Wolf is international president and professor of global studies of University Institute, New Delhi, India, an Asia-based learning group in, servicing South and East Asia, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Middle East, and Europe. He is an International Fellow of Canyon Institute of Advanced Studies, Phoenix.
Wolf... |
Annie Kuether | Annie Kuether is a Democratic member of the Kansas House of Representatives, representing the 55th district. She has served since 1997.
Committee membership
Energy and Utilities (Ranking Member)
Judiciary
Major donors
The top 5 donors to Kuether's 2008 campaign:
1. Kansans for Lifesaving Cures $1,000
2. Golden ... |
Margaret Baird | Margaret Alison Baird (1945 – 2016) was a Professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Otago. Her research considered dendritic cells and their role in cancer and infectious disease.
Early life and education
Baird was born in Tauranga, a small town that is on the North Island of New... |
Jean-Théodore Laurent | Jean-Théodore Laurent (6 July 1804 – 20 February 1884) was the Apostolic Vicar of Luxembourg from 1841 to 1856.
Laurent was born in 1804 in Aachen to a family of modest means. His father, the Luxembourger Franz Laurent, had 14 children with his wife Gertrude Schönen, originally from Aachen. After attending a Gymnasium... |
Quilly, Ardennes | Quilly is a commune in the Ardennes department in northern France.
Population |
William Becknell | William Becknell (1787 or 1788 – April 30, 1865) was an American soldier, politician, and freight operator who is credited with opening the Santa Fe Trail in 1821, which became an early major transportation route through central North America that connected Franklin, Missouri with Santa Fe, New Mexico. It served as a v... |
Marcus Minucius Rufus | Marcus Minucius Rufus (died August 2, 216 BC) was a Roman consul in 221 BC. He was also Magister Equitum during the dictatorship of Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosus known as Cunctator.
He was a political enemy of Fabius Maximus. He was against his delaying defensive strategy during the Second Punic War. While the Car... |
Get Skintight | Get Skintight is the third studio album by the American rock band The Donnas, released in 1999 (See 1999 in music) on Lookout!.
As of 2005 it has sold 58,000 units in United States according to Nielsen SoundScan.
Track listing
All songs written by Brett Anderson, Torry Castellano, Maya Ford and Allison Robertson exce... |
Matheson, New South Wales | Matheson, New South Walesis civil parish of Manara County and a rural locality of Central Darling Shire in far western New South Wales.
Matheson is located at 32°49′35″S 144°12′59″E and the area is hot and arid and as such there are no settlements with Matheson but the nearest town is Ivanhoe 3 kilometers to the sout... |
Meet the Mormons | Meet the Mormons is a 2014 American documentary film directed by Blair Treu and produced by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). The film documents the lives of six devout Mormons living in the United States, Costa Rica, and Nepal. The LDS Church donated all net proceeds from the theatrical rel... |
Manche (disambiguation) | Manche is a French department in Lower Normandy.
Manche or La Manche may also refer to:
English Channel ()
Daniel Manche (born 1993), American child actor
French frigate Manche (1806)
La Manche, Newfoundland and Labrador, a former community in Canada
La Manche Provincial Park, in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada... |
Manzil (1995 film) | Manzil is a 1995 Maldivian drama film directed by Mariyam Shauqee and Arifa Ibrahim. Produced by Shauqee, the film stars Abdulla Munaz, Aishath Shirani, Mariyam Nisha and Arifa Ibrahim in pivotal roles.
Premise
An intelligent and honest orphan, Zahidha (Aishath Shirani) moves out of her sister's house unable to tolera... |
Denver Heights, West Virginia | Denver Heights is an unincorporated community in Marshall County, West Virginia. |
Aroga hulthemiella | Aroga hulthemiella is a moth of the family Gelechiidae. It is found in northern Iran. |
Zero Tolerance (1999 film) | Zero Tolerance () is a Swedish action film which was released to cinemas in Sweden on 29 October 1999, directed by Anders Nilsson. It is the first film in the series about police officer Johan Falk (Jakob Eklund) and is followed by Executive Protection in 2001 and The Third Wave and 2003.
Plot
Johan Falk, a Gothenbur... |
Timpa Lake | Timpa Lake is a small alpine lake in Elmore County, Idaho, United States, located in the Sawtooth Mountains in the Sawtooth National Recreation Area. The lake is accessed from Sawtooth National Forest trail 479 along Timpa Creek Creek.
Timpa Lake is in the Sawtooth Wilderness, and a wilderness permit can be obtained ... |
Cristovam Roberto Ribeiro da Silva | Cristovam Roberto Ribeiro da Silva (born 25 July 1990), simply known as Cristovam, is a Brazilian footballer who plays as a right back for Guarani, on loan from Paraná.
Club career
On 27 June 2013, FK Senica signed Cristovam together with his teammate Hiago on one-year loan with option to buy from Brazilian club Arapo... |
Viktor Gozhy | Viktor Spiridonovich Gozhy (; born 10 July 1946, in Ukraine) is a Russian politician, former First vice-chairman of the Jewish Autonomous Oblast. He is the next in the line of succession after the Chairman of the Government, Nikolay Mikhaylovich Volkov. |
Dar Gol (disambiguation) | Dar Gol is a village in Hormozgan Province, Iran.
Dar Gol () may also refer to:
Dar Gol-e Seyyed Hasan, Kermanshah Province
Dar Gol-e Seyyed Salim, Kermanshah Province
Dar Gol-e Teymaz, Kermanshah Province
Dar Gol, Lorestan |
Bouteflika | Bouteflika is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Abdelaziz Bouteflika (born 1937), Algerian president 1999-2019
(born 1958), Abdelaziz' brother and one of his advisors |
Tryvannstårnet | Tryvannstårnet is a 118-metre (387 feet) tall broadcasting tower near Oslo, located 529 metres (1,736 feet) above mean sea level on the summit of Tryvannshøyden hill overlooking lake Tryvann.
Tryvannstårnet was built in 1962 and has an observation deck at a height of 60 metres (197 feet), from which, weather condition... |
Edward O'Brien, 14th Baron Inchiquin | Edward Donough O'Brien, 14th Baron Inchiquin KP (14 May 1839 – 9 April 1900) was the holder of a hereditary peerage in the Peerage of Ireland, as well as Chief of the Name of O'Brien and Prince of Thomond in the Gaelic Irish nobility. In 1862, he was appointed High Sheriff of Clare.
Born the eldest son of Lucius O'Bri... |
First Greceanîi Cabinet | The First Greceanîi Cabinet was the Cabinet of Moldova from 31 March 2008 to 10 June 2009. It was the first government led by Zinaida Greceanîi who was Prime Minister of Moldova from 2008 to 2009.
Cabinet of Minister
The composition of the cabinet of was as follows:
External links
Government of Moldova |
Marko Mirgorodský | Marko Mirgorodský (born 4 November 1998) is a Slovak slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 2013. He competes in the C1 event and is once World U23 Champion (2017) and twice World Junior Champion (2015 & 2016).
Mirgorodský won a silver medal in the C1 team event at the 2018 European Canoe Sl... |
French ship Conquérant (1746) | The Conquérant was originally launched in 1746 on a design by François Coulomb the Younger. She was taken out of service in March 1764 and rebuilt at Brest as a Citoyen class 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy.
She took part in the Battle of the Nile, where she was armed with only 18- and 12-pounders, and crew... |
Tanwé-Hessou | Tanwé-Hessou is an arrondissement in the Zou department of Benin. It is an administrative division under the jurisdiction of the commune of Zogbodomey. 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 7,512. |
The Accidental Spy | The Accidental Spy is a 2001 Hong Kong martial arts action film, starring Jackie Chan and directed by Teddy Chan. Filming took place in Seoul, Hong Kong, Istanbul and Cappadocia, Turkey.
Although it is a Hong Kong film, much of the dialogue is in English, particularly during communications between the Chinese characte... |
Go Harder | "Go Harder" may refer to:
"Go Harder", song by British boyband JLS from 4th Dimensions Tour
"Go Harder", song by Jaz-O
"Go Harder", song by Future from Pluto (Future album) |
Edmonton Trappers | The Edmonton Trappers were a minor league baseball team in Edmonton, Alberta. They were a part of the Triple-A level in the Pacific Coast League, ending with the 2004 season. Their home games were played at Telus Field in downtown Edmonton.
The Trappers joined the PCL in 1981 when Edmonton businessman Peter Pocklingto... |
Canon's Town | Canon's Town or Canonstown (Ordnance Survey) is a hamlet in west Cornwall, England, UK, situated on the A30 road in the civil parish of Ludgvan, between Penzance and Hayle. It is southwest of St Erth railway station. It is in the civil parish of St Erth |
Albert Ayguesparse | Albert Ayguesparse (1900–1996) was a Belgian writer.
Bibliography
Essays
Machinismes et culture
Magie du capitalisme
Poetry
Neuf offrandes claires (1923)
Le Vin noir de Cahors (1957 - Prix Engelman)
Langage
Novels
La main morte
Notre ombre nous précède (Prix Rossel 1952)
Une génération pour rien (1954 - Pri... |
Fulton Creek (Ohio) | Fulton Creek is a stream in the U.S. state of Ohio.
Fulton Creek was named for one Mr. Fulton, a pioneer who disappeared near this creek and was not heard from again, despite an extensive search. |
Reuben Davis House | The Reuben Davis House, also known as Sunset Hill, is a U.S. national historic place located in Aberdeen, Mississippi. It is an impressive two-story antebellum mansion that was constructed between 1847 and 1853. Well known as the former residence of Reuben Davis, a prominent attorney, statesman, and author, the propert... |
Rosières-en-Haye | Rosières-en-Haye is a commune in the Meurthe-et-Moselle department in north-eastern France.
It hosted an important Air Base (the Toul-Rosières Air Base) that has been converted in 2012 in the largest photovoltaic power plant of Europe at that time. |
Fougaron | Fougaron is a commune in the Haute-Garonne department in southwestern France.
Population |
Clypeostoma elongatum | Clypeostoma elongatum is a species of sea snails, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Chilodontidae (formerly in the family Trochidae, the top snails).
Description
The size of the shell varies between 7 mm and 24 mm.
Distribution
This marine species occurs off the Philippines and Indonesia. |
Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data | The Journal of Physical and Chemical Reference Data is a quarterly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by AIP Publishing on behalf of the National Institute of Standards and Technology. The objective of the journal is to provide critically evaluated physical and chemical property data, fully documented as to the... |
Xining Xiaoqiao railway station | Xining Xiaoqiao Railway Station is a railway station on the Qingzang railway. It serves the city of Xining and is located 3 km from Xining Railway Station. |
Sports broadcasting contracts in New Zealand | This article refers to sports broadcasting contracts in New Zealand. For a list of other country's broadcasting rights, see Sports television broadcast contracts.
Association football
Football
From 2019 until 2023, the match aired on Sky Sport also available on beIN Sports platforms due to Sky-beIN four year partners... |
SV Borussia-Preußen Stettin | SV Borussia Preußen Stettin was a German association football club from the city of Stettin, Pomerania Province (today Szczecin, Poland).
The club was established in 1937 after a merger of 1. Stettiner Borussia-Poseidon and SC Preußen Stettin.
After two seasons in the Gauliga Pommern (I) the team was demoted to the B... |
Ernest Nister | Ernest Nister (1841–1906) was a publisher and printer of movable books for children and paper ephemera such as greeting cards, post cards, and calendars. He was born in Darmstadt, Germany and later had an office in London. He refined the techniques used in the design of "magic windows," "dissolving picture," and pop-u... |
Duke Ding of Qi | Duke Ding of Qi (; reigned c. 10th century BC) was the second recorded ruler of the ancient Chinese state of Qi during the Western Zhou Dynasty. His personal name was Lü Ji (呂伋) and ancestral name was Jiang (姜).
According to classical Chinese texts such as the Records of the Grand Historian and Zuo Zhuan, Duke Ding s... |
2017–18 Rensselaer Engineers women's ice hockey season | The Rensselaer Engineers represented Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in ECAC women's ice hockey during the 2017–18 NCAA Division I women's ice hockey season.
Offseason
Recruiting
2017–18 Engineers
Schedule
|-
!colspan=12 style="background:#F7001F;color:white;"| Regular Season |
Berolina | Berolina is the New Latin female personification of Berlin and the allegorical female figure symbolizing the city. One of the best-known portraits of Berolina is the statue that once stood in Alexanderplatz.
Statue
In 1871, emperor William I ordered an Berolina statue in Belle-Alliance-Platz (today's Mehringplatz), ... |
Hilton Mexico City Reforma | Hilton Mexico City Reforma is a five-star luxury hotel in Mexico City, Mexico, overlooking Alameda Central. The hotel is operated by the Hilton Hotels chain (formerly the Sheraton). It was built in 2004. It is situated in the heart of the old city on Avenida Juárez, in close proximity to Hidalgo Metro Station. It has b... |
Barnaby's Tower | Barnaby's Tower stands at the southeast corner of the city walls of Chester, Cheshire, England. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.
The tower probably dates from the 13th century, and it was damaged in 1644–46 during the Civil War. When the city walls wer... |
Yiya Murano | María de las Mercedes Bernardina Bolla Aponte de Murano (20 May 1930 - 26 April 2014), better known as Yiya Murano, and also referred to as the Poisoner of Monserrat was an Argentinian serial killer and swindler. Convicted of three murders, she was imprisoned for 16 years before being sent to an elderly care facility t... |
Hesamabad, Zanjan | Hesamabad (, also Romanized as Ḩesāmābād; also known as Asmawa and Hīssamābād) is a village in Zarrineh Rud Rural District, Bizineh Rud District, Khodabandeh County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,817, in 350 families. |
Microcrambon | Microcrambon is a monotypic moth genus of the family Crambidae described by Stanisław Błeszyński in 1970. Its single species, Microcrambon paphiellus, described by Achille Guenée in 1862, is endemic to Réunion and Seychelles. |
Dois (album) | Dois (English: Two) is the second studio album by Brazilian rock band Legião Urbana. It was released in July 1986.
Release history
Renato Russo originally intended Dois as a double-disc album named "Mitologia e Intuição" ("Mythology and Intuition"), including some material later recorded for Que País É Este, but EMI-O... |
Ken Karcher | Kenneth Paul Karcher (born July 1, 1963) is an American football coach and former player. He is currently the head football coach at East Central Community College, a position he has held since January 2013. Karcher served in the same capacity at Liberty University from 2000 to 2005, compiling a record of 21–46.
Early... |
Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford | The Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford (the Migration Observatory) is a project providing analysis of immigration and migration issues affecting the United Kingdom. It is a part of the Oxford University's Centre on Migration Policy and Society (COMPAS) and was launched in March 2011 with the broad aim of... |
Sonic Unleashed | Sonic Unleashed is a 2008 platform video game in the Sonic the Hedgehog series. The story follows Sonic as he attempts to restore the world after his nemesis Doctor Eggman shatters it with a powerful laser to unleash Dark Gaia, an ancient evil, while dealing with having become a "Werehog", a werewolf-esque transformati... |
Jim Chalmers (disambiguation) | Jim Chalmers is a Queensland politician and member of the Australian House of Representatives since 2013.
Jim Chalmers may also refer to:
Jim Chalmers (New South Wales politician) (1901–1986), member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1947 to 1956
Jimmy Chalmers (1877–1915), Scottish footballer |
USS Jamestown | USS Jamestown may refer to any one of a number of United States Navy vessels.
, was a sloop that served from 1844 until 1892
, was a patrol gunboat that served from 1941 until 1946
, was originally a Liberty ship (AG-166) completed in 1945, converted and renamed in 1963, and then redesignated in 1964 to AGTR-3. Sc... |
Triggerfinger (album) | Triggerfinger is the self-titled debut album of Belgian rock band Triggerfinger. Released on January 26, 2004 via Green L.F.ant Records, the album features the singles "Inner Peace" and "Camaro", the latter of which features guitar riffs based on the song Kashmir by English rock band Led Zeppelin.
Track listing
Perso... |
End of preview. Expand in Data Studio
YAML Metadata Warning:empty or missing yaml metadata in repo card
Check out the documentation for more information.
train split:
- 20k documents from Wikipedia (The Pile)
valid split:
- 5k documents from Wikipedia (The Pile)
- Downloads last month
- 4