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In 2008, he saw action in all 13 games, including 12 starts, as a Sam linebacker. He recorded 77 total tackles, including 41 solo and 12.0 for loss, five sacks, two passes broken up, and one quarterback hurry. Fokou led the team in sacks and ranked fifth in total tackles. He accounted for the most sacks by a Maryland linebacker since Shawne Merriman in 2004. Fokou played in the 2009 Under Armour Senior Bowl as a member of the South squad. | Moise Fokou | College career | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#College%20career | 129 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
He also participated in the 2009 NFL Combine. The NFL Draft Scout assessed him as the 30th-ranked outside linebacker prospects for the 2009 NFL draft. | Moise Fokou | Pre-draft | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#Pre-draft | 49 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Fokou was selected in the seventh round by the Philadelphia Eagles as the 230th overall pick in the 2009 NFL Draft. He played all 16 games and won the starting strong-side linebacker job for the final four games. He ended the season with 39 tackles. After starting for most of the season at strong-side linebacker in 2011, Fokou was placed on injured reserve on November 29 due to a sprained ankle suffered during a week 12 loss to the New England Patriots. | Moise Fokou | Philadelphia Eagles | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#Philadelphia%20Eagles | 119 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
On August 2, 2012, Fokou and Greg Lloyd were traded to the Indianapolis Colts for Kevin Thomas and a conditional seventh round pick in the 2013 NFL draft. | Moise Fokou | Indianapolis Colts | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#Indianapolis%20Colts | 47 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Fokou signed with the Tennessee Titans on March 13, 2013. He was released on August 30, 2014. | Moise Fokou | Tennessee Titans | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#Tennessee%20Titans | 30 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
On November 18, 2014, Fokou was signed by the New Orleans Saints. | Moise Fokou | New Orleans Saints | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#New%20Orleans%20Saints | 27 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
On August 10, 2015, Fokou was signed by the Cleveland Browns. On August 31, 2015, he was released by the Browns. | Moise Fokou | Cleveland Browns | 2024-07-28T00:11:46 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moise_Fokou#Cleveland%20Browns | 37 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Farra School or Farragh College was established in 1758 as a charter school and located near Bunbrosna, County Westmeath, Ireland. The school was set up to provide Agricultural instruction to mainly Roman Catholic young boys and men. The school was built circa 1743 on the land of the Wilson family and financed by Reverend William Wilson's will. William Wilson's uncle Andrew Wilson's will established the Wilson's Hospital School at Heathlands for Church of Ireland boys in 1726. The first recorded rugby game in Ireland was played at Farra school in Westmeath on 25 Feb 1879. Farra School were runners up in the 1887 Rugby Leinster Schools Senior Cup. The writer and poet Shan Bullock (John William Bullock) attended Farra School. | Farra School | 2023-11-02T14:26:39 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farra_School# | 188 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| | |
| --- | --- |
| Boatmen's Bank Building | |
| U.S. National Register of Historic Places | |
| | |
| | |
| Marquette Building (St. Louis)Show map of St. LouisMarquette Building (St. Louis)Show map of MissouriMarquette Building (St. Louis)Show map of the United States | |
| Location | 300 North Broadway, St. Louis, Missouri |
| Coordinates | 38°37′41″N 90°11′19″W / 38\.62806°N 90\.18861°W / 38\.62806; \-90\.18861 |
| Built | 1913 |
| Architect | Eames \& Young |
| Architectural style | Classical Revival |
| NRHP reference No. | 98001265 |
| Added to NRHP | October 22, 1998 | | Marquette Building (St. Louis) | 2024-09-12T04:48:56 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquette_Building_(St._Louis)# | 243 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
The Marquette Building, also known as the Boatmen's Bank Building, is a historical building in downtown St. Louis. It was completed in 1914 at Broadway and Olive Streets, at 19 stories, designed by the St. Louis architecture partnership of Eames & Young. The building stands at 20 stories with a 2-story penthouse atop the 20th floor. A 1915 Annex, also designed by Eames & Young, was razed in 1998. The Marquette Building was added to the National Register of Historic Places the same year, and was redeveloped for condos in 2007. The building roof sports a small pool atop the eastern wing and a dog park/ relief area on the western wing, that are available to building residents. | Marquette Building (St. Louis) | 2024-09-12T04:48:56 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquette_Building_(St._Louis)# | 171 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| NGC 536 | |
| --- | --- |
| NGC 542 (left) in HCG 10 | |
| Observation data (J2000 epoch) | |
| Constellation | Andromeda |
| Right ascension | 01h 26m 30\.825s |
| Declination | \+34° 40′ 31\.72″ |
| Redshift | 0\.015531 |
| Heliocentric radial velocity | 4862 km/s |
| Apparent magnitude (B) | 15\.4 |
| Characteristics | |
| Type | Scd |
| Other designations | |
| MCG \+06\-04\-022, PGC 5360 | | | NGC 542 | 2023-06-05T19:35:14 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_542# | 212 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
NGC 542 is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Andromeda, which is approximately 215 million light years from the Milky Way. Together with the galaxies NGC 529, NGC 531, and NGC 536, it forms the Hickson Compact Group 10, abbreviated HCG 10. It was discovered by Irish astronomer R.J. Mitchell in 1885. | NGC 542 | 2023-06-05T19:35:14 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_542# | 93 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| Preceded by | **Commander of the 8th Infantry Division** 1863–1864 | Succeeded by |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Preceded by | **Commander of the 5th Infantry Division** 1864–1869 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | **Commander of the 2nd Grenadier Division** 1869\-1872 | Succeeded by | | Apostol Kostanda | Awards | 2023-05-29T13:59:39 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostol_Kostanda#Awards | 118 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| Apostol Spiridonovich Kostanda | |
| --- | --- |
| | |
| Born | December 24, 1817 |
| Died | December 5, 1898 |
| Allegiance | Russian Empire |
| Service/branch | Imperial Russian Army |
| Commands | 8th Infantry Division5th Infantry Division2nd Grenadier DivisionMoscow Military District |
| Battles/wars | Crimean WarJanuary Uprising | | Apostol Kostanda | 2023-05-29T13:59:39 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostol_Kostanda# | 133 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
Apostol Spiridonovich Kostanda (December 24, 1817 – December 5, 1898) was an Imperial Russian division commander. He fought in wars in Crimea and Poland. He commanded the military forces in Moscow from 1888 to 1896. | Apostol Kostanda | 2023-05-29T13:59:39 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostol_Kostanda# | 58 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Order of Saint Anna, 2nd class, 1854
Order of Saint Vladimir, 4th class, 1854
Gold Sword for Bravery, 1854
Order of Saint Stanislaus (House of Romanov), 1st class, 1862
Order of Saint Anna, 1st class, 1868
Order of Saint Vladimir, 2nd class, 1870
Order of the White Eagle (Russian Empire), 1873
Order of Saint Alexander Nevsky, 1882
Order of St. Andrew, 1896
Order of Prince Danilo I | Apostol Kostanda | Awards | 2023-05-29T13:59:39 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostol_Kostanda#Awards | 107 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| 1995 | *Crying Freeman* | Yes | Yes | Also fight choreographer |
| 2001 | *Brotherhood of the Wolf* | Yes | Yes | |
| 2006 | *Silent Hill* | Yes | Yes | |
| 2014 | *Beauty and the Beast* | Yes | Yes | |
| TBA | *Return to Silent Hill* | Yes | Yes | | | Christophe Gans | Filmography | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Filmography | 164 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| Year | Title | Director | Writer | Notes |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| 1981 | *Silver Slime* | Yes | Yes | \[*better source needed*] |
| 1993 | *The Drowned* | Yes | Yes | Segment of *Necronomicon* | | Christophe Gans | Filmography | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Filmography | 107 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| Christophe Gans | |
| --- | --- |
| Gans in 2010\. | |
| Born | Christophe Gans (1960\-03\-11) 11 March 1960 (age 64\)Antibes, France |
| Occupation(s) | Film director, producer; screenwriter |
| Years active | 1981–present | | Christophe Gans | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans# | 98 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
Christophe Gans (born 11 March 1960) is a French film director, producer, and screenwriter who specializes in horror and fantasy movies. | Christophe Gans | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans# | 36 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Gans was born in Antibes, France. As a teenager, he spent a large portion of his time creating kung fu-themed Super 8 movies with his friends. He later went on to attend the French film school IDHEC, where he created his first short film, Silver Slime, dedicated to Mario Bava. He later spent time as a film critic before co-directing his first film, H.P. Lovecraft's: Necronomicon. His $29 million-budgeted film Le Pacte des Loups was a worldwide success, grossing over $70 million in theaters worldwide. It became the sixth-highest-grossing French-language film of all time in the United States, After the film's success, many producers approached Gans to work on very similar projects to appeal to young audience. | Christophe Gans | Life and career | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Life%20and%20career | 190 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
He went on to direct 2006's cinematic adaptation of the video game Silent Hill, as well as the 2014 fantasy film, Beauty and the Beast. Gans has also appeared in films as an actor, as he portrayed himself in the 2016 mockumentary Fury of the Demon. | Christophe Gans | Life and career | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Life%20and%20career | 75 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Gans was to write and direct an adaptation of the Capcom video game Onimusha; however, after several setbacks he abandoned it and is now attached to the French film Fantômas. He initially was to direct a sequel to Silent Hill, but later pulled out and was replaced by M. J. Bassett. Gans was developing a new live action Corto Maltese film for release in 2020. It was to star Tom Hughes and Milla Jovovich. However, it was cancelled due to legal problems. In January 2020, Gans expressed an interest in directing new Silent Hill and Fatal Frame films, stating that he is developing a screenplay for the former. | Christophe Gans | Future projects | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Future%20projects | 160 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
In 2022, in an interview with French gaming website Jeuxvideo.com, Gans confirmed that he had completed a script for a third Silent Hill film, and is aiming for a 2023 release for the project. He later reiterated this in an interview with JeuxActu, and elaborated that the third film project is to be part of what will be a 'relaunch' of the Silent Hill brand, accompanied by new video games. In October 2022, it was announced that the film would be called Return to Silent Hill and would be based on Silent Hill 2. | Christophe Gans | Future projects | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Future%20projects | 134 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Short film Feature film Producer Saint Ange (2004) | Christophe Gans | Filmography | 2024-10-07T00:34:06 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christophe_Gans#Filmography | 25 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Spirit FM Nueva Vizcaya
| * Bayombong | |
| --- | --- |
| Broadcast area | Nueva Vizcaya and surrounding areas |
| Frequency | 90\.1 MHz |
| Branding | 90\.1 Spirit FM |
| Programming | |
| Language(s) | Ilocano, Filipino |
| Format | Contemporary MOR, OPM, Religious Radio |
| Affiliations | Catholic Media Network |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | * Roman Catholic Diocese of Bayombong * (Global Broadcasting System) |
| Sister stations | DWRV Radyo Veritas |
| History | |
| First air date | June 30, 2000 (2000\-06\-30) |
| Former call signs | DZRV |
| Call sign meaning | **R**adio **V**eritas |
| Technical information | |
| Licensing authority | NTC |
| Power | 5 kW | | DZRV-FM | 2024-01-04T10:11:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DZRV-FM# | 265 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
90.1 Spirit FM (DZRV 90.1 MHz) is an FM station owned and operated by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bayombong in the Philippines. Its studios and transmitter are located at Maharlika Hi-way, Brgy. Luyang, Bayombong. | DZRV-FM | 2024-01-04T10:11:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DZRV-FM# | 69 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| Rank | Archer | Score |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 17 | Jhano Hansdah (IND) | 674 |
| 18 | Jorina Coetzee (RSA) | 672 |
| 19 | Amanda McGregor (NZL) | 671 |
| 20 | Aalin George (IOM) | 670 |
| 21 | Bheigyabati Chanu (IND) | 667 |
| 22 | Nor Ishak (MAS) | 666 |
| 23 | Emma Parker (NIR) | 663 |
| 24 | Janette Howells (WAL) | 661 |
| 25 | Saritha Cham Nong (MAS) | 660 |
| 26 | Susan Maitland (SCO) | 659 |
| 27 | Jeanette Howells (WAL) | 658 |
| 28 | Sarah Rigby (IOM) | 658 |
| 29 | Elizabeth Mitchell (NZL) | 655 |
| 30 | Rosa Ford (NFI) | 644 |
| 31 | Maria Dikomiti (CYP) | 644 |
| 32 | Joanne Snell (NFI) | 637 | | Archery at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Women's compound individual | Ranking Round | 2023-07-13T18:38:30 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archery_at_the_2010_Commonwealth_Games_%E2%80%93_Women%27s_compound_individual#Ranking%20Round | 337 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| Archery at the2010 Commonwealth Games | | |
| --- | --- | --- |
| | | |
| Recurve | | |
| Individual | men | women |
| Team | men | women |
| Compound | | |
| Individual | men | women |
| Team | men | women |
| * v * t * e | | | | Archery at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Women's compound individual | 2023-07-13T18:38:30 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archery_at_the_2010_Commonwealth_Games_%E2%80%93_Women%27s_compound_individual# | 134 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
|
| Rank | Archer | Score |
| --- | --- | --- |
| 1 | Doris Jones (CAN) | 698 |
| 2 | Nicky Hunt (ENG) | 697 |
| 3 | Claudine Jennings (SCO) | 692 |
| 4 | Nichola Simpson (ENG) | 689 |
| 5 | Tracey McGowan (SCO) | 687 |
| 6 | Fiona Hyde (AUS) | 686 |
| 7 | Ashley Wallace (CAN) | 686 |
| 8 | Lucy O´Sullivan (JER) | 683 |
| 9 | Camille Bouffard\-Demers (CAN) | 681 |
| 10 | Fatin Mat Salleh (MAS) | 681 |
| 11 | Tracey Anderson (WAL) | 680 |
| 12 | Stephanie Croskery (NZL) | 679 |
| 13 | Cassie McCall (AUS) | 676 |
| 14 | Danielle Brown (ENG) | 676 |
| 15 | Gagandeep Kaur (IND) | 675 |
| 16 | Rebecca Darby (AUS) | 674 | | Archery at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Women's compound individual | Ranking Round | 2023-07-13T18:38:30 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archery_at_the_2010_Commonwealth_Games_%E2%80%93_Women%27s_compound_individual#Ranking%20Round | 340 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
The women's compound recurve archery event at the 2010 Commonwealth Games was part of the archery programme and took place at the Yamuna Sports Complex. | Archery at the 2010 Commonwealth Games – Women's compound individual | 2023-07-13T18:38:30 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archery_at_the_2010_Commonwealth_Games_%E2%80%93_Women%27s_compound_individual# | 55 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Hofstra University
Zarb School of Business
| Type | Private university business school |
| --- | --- |
| Dean | Janet A. Lenaghan |
| Location | Long Island \& New York City, New York, U.S. |
| Affiliations | Hofstra University |
| Website | business.hofstra.edu | | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business# | 99 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
The Frank G. Zarb School of Business, located at Hofstra University in Hempstead, NY, is noted for its dual AACSB accreditations in business and accounting. The school is named after alumnus Frank Zarb, '57 B.B.A., '62 M.B.A., who was the chair and CEO of the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) and a senior partner of Lazard Freres & Co. The current dean of the business school is Dr. Janet A. Lenaghan. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business# | 132 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
The school offers Bachelor of Business Administration, Master of Business Administration, Master of Science degrees, the Executive Master of Business Administration (E.M.B.A.) degree, as well as minors in business subjects and certificate programs. In 2011, the school launched the first online MBA program on Long Island, NY.[dead link] Hofstra also offers an MBA program with classes held in Manhattan. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | Degrees | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business#Degrees | 99 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
During the summer, the School of Business offers Hofstra students the opportunity to study at Erasmus University in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and at Hong-Ik University in Seoul, South Korea. The business school also has a chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma. One of the newest structures on Hofstra's campus, is the C.V. Starr Hall. It is named for philanthropist Cornelius Vander Starr. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | Facilities | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business#Facilities | 105 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Business students can also participate in scholarly activities like The Merrill Lynch Center. This center was enacted to promote and facilitate faculty and student study in the field of international financial services and markets, and to communicate knowledge and information in this field. The Center will seek to accomplish this through (a) the interaction of academics and professionals; and (b) an interdisciplinary approach to the study of the Center's areas of interest. Other events include the Frank G. Zarb School of Business Executive Speaker Series where numerous business professionals from various, diverse fields are invited to the school to lecture, take part in a question and answer session and share their knowledge/experiences in their area of expertise. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | Centers and special institutes | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business#Centers%20and%20special%20institutes | 173 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Student organizations include the Journal of International Business & Law, which is a joint scholarly publication of the Frank G. Zarb School of Business and the students of the Hofstra University School of Law. The Hofstra Business Consulting Group, which has grown to become a powerful source of strategic consulting for growing businesses in the New York metropolitan area and the Hofstra American Marketing Association. The Hofstra Marketing Association is a member of the American Marketing Association and provides its members with opportunities to improve their skills, interact with professionals from local businesses, and keep informed of the latest marketing trends. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | Student organizations | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business#Student%20organizations | 135 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Zarb Business school alumni can participate in The New York Business Schools Club (NYBSC), which was founded in 1990 (and now comprises over 30 leading business schools). The goal of the club is to provide a forum for members to share programming, collaborate on events together and share best practices on events and club administration. Numerous events are held throughout the year (Bi-monthly meetings held in mid-town NY, end of the year cocktail party, the All MBA soiree – an annual holiday party open to the members of all alumni clubs who participate in the NYBSC, and yearly party over the world.). Zarb alumni members are encouraged to join so they can meet and greet other alumni from various business schools. | Frank G. Zarb School of Business | Alumni opportunities | 2024-05-16T22:07:08 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_G._Zarb_School_of_Business#Alumni%20opportunities | 174 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
| *Viola canadensis* | |
| --- | --- |
| | |
|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| *Clade*: | Tracheophytes |
| *Clade*: | Angiosperms |
| *Clade*: | Eudicots |
| *Clade*: | Rosids |
| Order: | Malpighiales |
| Family: | Violaceae |
| Genus: | Viola |
| Species: | ***V. canadensis*** |
| Binomial name | |
| ***Viola canadensis***L. | |
|
| Synonyms | |
| * *Lophion canadense* (L.) Spach * *Lophion rydbergii* (Greene) Nieuwl. \& Lunell * *Viola geminiflora* Greene * *Viola muriculata* Greene * *Viola neomexicana* Greene * *Viola neo\-mexicana* Greene * *Viola rydbergii* Greene * *Lophion rugulosum* (Greene) Lunell, syn of var. *rugulosa* * *Viola scopulorum* (A.Gray) Greene, syn of var. *scopulorum* | | | Viola canadensis | 2023-12-04T16:20:02 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_canadensis# | 348 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
Viola canadensis is a flowering plant in the Violaceae family. It is commonly known as Canadian white violet, Canada violet, tall white violet, or white violet. It is widespread across much of Canada and the United States, from Alaska to Newfoundland, south as far as Georgia and Arizona. It is a perennial herb and the Latin-specific epithet canadensis means of Canada. Viola canadensis bears white blooms with yellow bases and sometimes streaks of purple. The petals are purple-tinged on the backside. The leaves are heart-shaped, with coarse, rounded teeth. | Viola canadensis | 2023-12-04T16:20:02 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_canadensis# | 152 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Subspecies and varieties
Viola canadensis var. canadensis
Viola canadensis subsp. canadensis
Viola canadensis var. rugulosa (Greene) C.L. Hitchc.
Viola canadensis subsp. scopulorum (A. Gray) House | Viola canadensis | 2023-12-04T16:20:02 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_canadensis# | 72 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
It is listed as endangered in Illinois, Maine, and New Jersey, as threatened in Connecticut, and having a historical range in Rhode Island. | Viola canadensis | Conservation status in the United States | 2023-12-04T16:20:02 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_canadensis#Conservation%20status%20in%20the%20United%20States | 50 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
The leaves and blossoms are edible. The latter can be used to make jelly. The South Ojibwa use a decoction of the root for pains near the bladder. | Viola canadensis | Uses | 2023-12-04T16:20:02 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viola_canadensis#Uses | 56 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
***Consultant***
| NAME | ORGANISATION |
| --- | --- |
| Lara Fergus | Independent Consultant, Australia | | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | Participants | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls#Participants | 53 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
***UN System***
| NAME | ORGANISATION |
| --- | --- |
| Roberta Clarke | Director, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, UN Women |
| Nanda Krairiksh | Director, ESCAP Social Development Division |
| Saraswathi Menon | Director, Policy Division, UN Women |
| Ramanathan Balakrishnan | Deputy Director, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific, UN Women |
| Kalliopi Mingeirou | UN Women |
| Tania Farah | UN Women |
| Shoko Ishikawa | UN Women, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific |
| Meryem Aslan | UN Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women |
| Aldijana Sisic | Secretary\-General Campaign UNiTE to End Violence Against Women |
| Clarice Da Silva E Paula | UNICEF |
| Upala Devi | UNFPA |
| Riet Groenen | UNFPA Asia Pacific Regional Office |
| Avni Amina | WHO |
| Suki Beavers | UNDP |
| Cai Cai | ESCAP |
| Jori Jorgensen | ESCAP |
| Heike Alefsen | OHCHR |
| Anna\-Karin Jatfors | UNiTE Campaign, Asia Pacific |
| Sara De La Pena Espin | UN Women, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific |
| Nelien Haspels | ILO |
| Claudia Baroni | UNODC | | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | Participants | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls#Participants | 394 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
***Observers***
| NAME | ORGANISATION |
| --- | --- |
| Nanette Braun | Social Media and Communications, UN Women |
| James Lang | Partners for Prevention (UNDP, UNFPA, UN Women \& UNV Regional Joint Programme for Asia and the Pacific) |
| Emma Fulu | Partners for Prevention (UNDP, UNFPA, UN Women \& UNV Regional Joint Programme for Asia and the Pacific) |
| Soon\-Young Yoon | UN representative for International Alliance of Women |
| Carole Shaw | Asia Pacific Women's Watch |
| Gail Farngalo | Government of Liberia |
| Sofia Dohmen | Swedish SIDA |
| Kathryn Lockett | DfID | | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | Participants | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls#Participants | 213 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
***Experts***
| NAME | ORGANISATION |
| --- | --- |
| Sunila Abeysekera | INFORM, Sri Lanka |
| Mary Carroll Ellsberg | International Center for Research of Women, USA |
| Marai Larasi | Ending Violence Against Women Coalition, UK |
| Lori Lynn Heise | Tackling the Structural Drivers of HIV (STRIVE), USA |
| Tatiana Moura | PROMUNDO, Brazil |
| Mallika Dutt | Breakthrough, India |
| Edwina Kotoisuva | Fiji Women's Crisis Centre, Fiji |
| Lori Michau | Raising Voices, Uganda |
| Dean Peacock | Sonke Gender Justice, South Africa |
| Dubravka Šimonović | Member of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) |
| Jean Ward | Independent Consultant, Kenya |
| Fatuma Chegue | School of Education, Kenyatta University, Kenya |
| Margareta Grape | UN Office of the World Council of Churches |
| Yasmeen Hassan | Equality Now, USA |
| Henriette Jansen | Independent Consultant, Fiji |
| Hibaaq Osman | ED Kamara, N.Africa/M.East |
| Nandita Bhatla | International Centre for Research on Women Asia Regional office (ICRW) |
| Keshan Latchman | UNiTE Global Youth, Trinidad Tobago |
| Molly Melching | TOSTAN, Senegal | | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | Participants | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls#Participants | 403 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
UN Women
ONU Femmes
ONU Mujeres
| | |
| --- | --- |
| Formation | 2010 |
| Type | UN entity |
| Headquarters | New York City, United States |
| Official languages | 4 * English * French |
| Head | Michelle Bachelet |
| Website | www.unwomen.org | | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls# | 109 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
The Expert Group Meeting (EGM): prevention of violence against women and girls was convened as part of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women's multi-year programme of work for 2010–2014. The "Elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls" forms a priority theme for its fifty-seventh session in 2013 (CSW57). The meeting took place in Bangkok, Thailand, 17–20 September 2012 and was organised by the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women), in collaboration with the following organisations: | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls# | 147 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP);
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP);
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA);
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and;
World Health Organization (WHO). | EGM: prevention of violence against women and girls | 2024-09-27T01:43:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EGM:_prevention_of_violence_against_women_and_girls# | 65 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| Team | Years |
| --- | --- |
| Austria | 1997–1999 |
| Finland | 1999–2002 |
| Norway | 2002\-2011 | | Mika Kojonkoski | National teams coached | 2024-09-08T00:16:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mika_Kojonkoski#National%20teams%20coached | 58 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
Mika Kojonkoski (born 19 April 1964 in Rauma, Finland) is a Finnish ski jumping coach and politician. Kojonkoski was a ski jumper himself in the 1980s, but he never reached the level of the best Finnish jumpers like Matti Nykänen. His best result was his 9th place in Chamonix, he also achieved a 16th place in the 1985 Ski flying World Championships in Planica. Kojonkoski quickly became a known figure as a ski coach. After starting up as coach of Finland's junior team, Kojonkoski was hired as the new Austrian coach in 1997. He returned home to Finland to take over the national team in 1999, before he took over the Norwegian team in 2002 where he helped create stars like Sigurd Pettersen, Lars Bystøl, Bjørn Einar Romøren, Anders Jacobsen and Tom Hilde. | Mika Kojonkoski | 2024-09-08T00:16:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mika_Kojonkoski# | 193 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Kojonkoski is an active politician in his hometown of Kuopio, where he represents the National Coalition Party. | Mika Kojonkoski | 2024-09-08T00:16:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mika_Kojonkoski# | 32 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Mika has three children with his wife Ulla. | Mika Kojonkoski | Personal life | 2024-09-08T00:16:53 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mika_Kojonkoski#Personal%20life | 18 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Carbon nanotube springs are springs made of carbon nanotubes (CNTs). They are an alternate form of high-density, lightweight, reversible energy storage based on the elastic deformations of CNTs. Many previous studies on the mechanical properties of CNTs have revealed that they possess high stiffness, strength and flexibility. The Young's modulus of CNTs is 1 TPa and they have the ability to sustain reversible tensile strains of 6% and the mechanical springs based on these structures are likely to surpass the current energy storage capabilities of existing steel springs and provide a viable alternative to electrochemical batteries. The obtainable energy density is predicted to be highest under tensile loading, with an energy density in the springs themselves about 2500 times greater than the energy density that can be reached in steel springs, and 10 times greater than the energy density of lithium-ion batteries. | Carbon nanotube springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs# | 222 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
The process of elastic energy storage in a CNT involves deforming it under an applied load. On removal of the applied load the energy released from the CNT can be used to perform mechanical work. A CNT has the ability to deform reversibly and a spring made from it can undergo repeated charge-discharge cycles without fatigue. A CNT spring can store elastic strain energy with a density several orders of magnitude higher than conventional springs made of steel. Strain energy density in a material is proportional to the product of its Young's modulus and the square of the applied strain. | Carbon nanotube springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs# | 146 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
When multi-walled nanotubes (MWCNTs) are loaded, the majority of the applied load is borne by the outer shell. Owing to this limited load transfer between the different layers of MWCNTs, single walled nanotubes (SWCNTs) are more useful structural materials for springs. | Carbon nanotube springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs# | 81 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Springs for energy storage can be made of SWCNTs or MWCNTs arranged in dense bundles of long, aligned tubes called "forests" of CNTs that are grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD). The "forests" can grow to heights of up to 6 millimeters. A deformed CNT requires a support structure to carry the load of the spring prior to discharge. A mechanical spring must be coupled to external mechanisms to build a power source that is functionally useful. On its own a spring stores potential energy when an external force is applied to it, but releases the energy in a single rapid burst once the force is removed. An effective power source needs to store energy over a period of time, release the energy only when needed and discharge the energy at a desired power level. A CNT based portable power source should have a basic architecture made of four main components, namely a CNT spring, a supporting structure for the spring, a generator-motor combination, and a coupling mechanism between the spring and the generator. | Carbon nanotube springs | Energy storage in CNT springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Energy%20storage%20in%20CNT%20springs | 254 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
For CNTs arranged in groups/bundles called "forests" as described earlier, efficient packing and good alignment in necessary between the tubes to achieve a high energy density. Good load transfer and effective attachment techniques are required so that the shells can be loaded to near their elastic limit. Choosing the appropriate deformation mode consisting of any amongst axial tension, axial compression, torsion or bending or a combination of any of them. A criterion for choosing a deformation mode is not only the highest energy density, but also the proper integration of the deformed spring with the rest of the power dissipation mechanism. | Carbon nanotube springs | Energy storage in CNT springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Energy%20storage%20in%20CNT%20springs | 168 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
A support structure is required to hold the CNT spring in the fully loaded configuration prior to its release. The design of the support structure will depend on the scale of the spring, the deformation mode the CNT is being subjected to and the architecture of the rest of the system. The material selected for the structure should have high strength, because the added mass and volume of the support contribute to reducing the energy density of the entire system. | Carbon nanotube springs | Energy storage in CNT springs | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Energy%20storage%20in%20CNT%20springs | 110 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Analysis is performed on CNTs subject to tensile loads. A hollow cylindrical structure of CNT of length L, diameter d and mean radius r is considered. The tube has thickness n.h, where n is the number of layers in the CNT and h=0.34 nm is the thickness of one shell. The Young's modulus of the material of the CNT is E. In case of SWCNTs, n=1 and n>1 in case of MWCNTs. The cylinder has inner and outer radii of r_{i}=r-{\frac {nh}{2}} and r_{o}=r+{\frac {nh}{2}}. The shell's cross-sectional area is | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 195 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
A=\pi (r_{o}^{2}-r_{i}^{2}) and the total enclosed area is A_{t}=\pi r_{o}^{2}. The strain energy that can be stored in the bar under axial compression to a strain of \epsilon \, is | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 98 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
U={\frac {1}{2}}\iiint (\sigma _{x}\,\epsilon _{x}\,) \,dx\,dy\,dz={\frac {1}{2}}E\epsilon ^{2}\ AL = {\frac {1}{2}}E\epsilon ^{2}\pi (r_{o}^{2}-r_{i}^{2})L | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 121 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
The strain energy density is simply the ratio of the strain energy and the enclosed volume. Therefore, in order for the strain energy density to be high the value of A/A_{t} should be large. So, a spring in axial tension should consist of either SWCNTs with small diameters or uniformly loaded MWCNTs with densely packed shells to maximize A/A_{t}. The CNTs are arranged in groupings, generally bundles. The strain energy density must be reduced by a fill factor k to account for the spacing between the individual CNTs. | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 155 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Consider the cross-section of a bundle of closely packed SWCNTs of radius r, arranged into a two-dimensional triangular lattice with a lattice constant of 2r+h. Ideal packing is assumed with a spacing of h=0.34 nm which is taken equal to the graphitic spacing. When the CNTs are arranged in a bundle the best packing fraction is produced when they are packed in a hexagonal closed packed structure. | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 124 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Consider a cross section of one bundle. A hexagonal shape will be observed. The hexagonal shape with an area of A_{h} is taken to be the repeating geometrical unit in the bundle. Calculations can be performed to show that fill factor k = 91%. In reality, there may not be ideal packing within a bundle, as the actual fraction k may be lower than the value calculated. The expression of strain energy shows that it is advantageous to apply a high tensile strain to the springs to maximize energy storage since strain energy is proportional to square of the strain. | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial tension | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20tension | 149 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Analysis is performed on CNTs subject to compressive loads. The CNT is assumed to be a hollow cylindrical beam of length L, Young's modulus E, and thickness n.h, where n is the number of layers and h=0.34 nm is the thickness of one shell (taken equal to the separation between graphene sheets in graphite). The continuous tube has a mean radius r and diameter d. The cylinder has inner and outer radii of r_{i}=r-{\frac {nh}{2}} and r_{o}=r+{\frac {nh}{2}}. The shell's cross-sectional area is | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial compression | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20compression | 188 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
A=\pi (r_{o}^{2}-r_{i}^{2}) and the total enclosed area is A_{t}=\pi r_{o}^{2}. The strain energy that can be stored in the bar under axial compression to a strain of \epsilon \, is | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial compression | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20compression | 99 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
U={\frac {1}{2}}\iiint (\sigma _{x}\,\epsilon _{x}\,) \,dx\,dy\,dz={\frac {1}{2}}E\epsilon ^{2}\ AL = {\frac {1}{2}}E\epsilon ^{2}\pi (r_{o}^{2}-r_{i}^{2})L | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial compression | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20compression | 122 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
The strain energy density is just the strain energy divided by the enclosed volume.
High energy densities are achieved with a high A/A_{t} ratio. Therefore, in order for CNT springs to achieve a high energy density either SWCNTs with small diameters or MWCNTs with densely packed shells should be used. | Carbon nanotube springs | Axial compression | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Axial%20compression | 96 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
The purpose of using a support structure is to be able to store energy before it is released for use. The support structure should be strong enough to support the applied load (used to compress the CNTs) without reaching failure itself. Another point of consideration is that the energy density of the combined spring and supporting structure is always lower than the energy density of the spring alone. | Carbon nanotube springs | Support structure | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Support%20structure | 93 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
A CNT spring made of bundles of densely packed 1 nm diameter SWCNTs stretched to a 10% strain is predicted to have an energy density of 3.4×106 kJ/m3. The energy density of CNT springs loaded in tension is higher than the energy density of CNT springs loaded in compression. Whereas the current maximum energy density of a carbon-steel watch spring is reported to be between 1080 kJ/m3 and 3000 kJ/m3. Calculations show that when a support structure made of single crystal silicon carbide is used the energy density of CNT springs reduces to 1×106 kJ/m3. Even after considering a support structure and other energy extraction hardware associated with a CNT spring energy harvesting device, its energy density is much greater than mechanical springs and is in approximately the same range as that of lithium-ion batteries. The energy density is much lower than the energy density of any hydrocarbon used in combustion processes. | Carbon nanotube springs | Energy density comparison | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Energy%20density%20comparison | 253 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
A large number of CNTs are needed to store a significant amount of energy that can be used for macroscopic processes. In order to achieve such a large amount of energy storage the CNT springs must maintain high stiffness and elasticity. It is in practice quite difficult to have such high stiffness and elastic strains in yarns or fibers made up of assemblies of CNTs as they seldom maintain mechanical properties of an individual SWCNT. This behavior occurs due to atomic defects and imperfect organisation. Elastic loading is the preferred loading mechanism for reversible energy storage, experiments have been performed that indicate that loading within the fibers deviates from purely elastic behavior. | Carbon nanotube springs | Failure processes that limit energy storage | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Failure%20processes%20that%20limit%20energy%20storage | 174 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Only a portion of the CNTs contribute to the load bearing at a given strain. The unequal amount of slack within each CNT due to the presence of atomic defects and tangling causes different CNTs to fracture at different strains. When MWCNTs are loaded in tension it is difficult to grasp their inner shells. Tensile tests of MWCNTs attached to atomic force microscope (AFM) tips at both ends show that fracture occurs at the outer shell in a way such that majority loading occurs at the outer shell and little load transfer occurs to the inner shells. This causes the stiffness and strength of MWCNTs to be lower than they would be if the shells were loaded equally. | Carbon nanotube springs | Failure processes that limit energy storage | 2024-01-14T13:33:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_nanotube_springs#Failure%20processes%20that%20limit%20energy%20storage | 194 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
El derecho de matar
| Cover Page of the First Issue | |
| --- | --- |
| Author | Raúl Barón Biza |
| Illustrator | Teodoro Piotti |
| Language | Spanish |
| Genre | Novel |
| Published | 1933 |
| Publication place | Argentina | | El derecho de matar | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar# | 90 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
El derecho de matar ("The Right To Kill") is an Argentine novel by Raúl Barón Biza. It was first published in 1933, however the first edition of the book was sequestered by the Argentine government, and thus was largely not available to the public until its second printing in 1935. It is the author's most famous book. | El derecho de matar | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar# | 83 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
El Derecho de Matar tells the story of Jorge Morganti, his sister Irma and his lover Cleo. It is a "pornographic-philosophic" novel, in the tradition of Marqués de Sade. Artificiality and exoticism weave a narrative skewed by philosophical and moral reflections that oscillate between traditional eroticism and a new style developed by the acute sensibility of Barón Biza. | El derecho de matar | Plot and style | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar#Plot%20and%20style | 101 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
In late November 1933 the first edition of “El Derecho de Matar” was announced. The book's presentation was luxurious: 5,000 copies printed on the highest-quality paper, with silver-plated covers. The front cover showed a skull and a scythe, and the back cover an inverted cross over a puddle of blood, created - along with other interior illustrations - by artist Teodoro Piotti. The author had a copy sent to the Vatican, mocking the Pope with his accompanying letter: "So that your doormen will let it through, so that it may attract your attention, so that it will be a bright note of relevance in the sad hall of your dark library; I have plated its covers in silver". Almost immediately, the military government of Argentina ordered the sequestering of the entire edition, and persecuted Barón Biza for obscenity. Barón Biza, at the time already imprisoned for participating in a revolutionary strike, had this to say about the government's censorship: | El derecho de matar | Publishing history | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar#Publishing%20history | 241 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
While I was imprisoned, having finished the printing of my last book “El Derecho de Matar”, a thesis novel in favor of the oppressed and the disinherited, posters announced its appearance in Buenos Aires. The bourgeois press immediately attacked the title of the book, criticizing it before its release, which demonstrated to me that the full and the satiated, with just conscience, were given as future victims of such a right. The government immediately made its fear known by sequestering at the very printing house the 5,000 copies of the first edition. Regardless, “El Derecho de Matar” will be reprinted and given to the public.— Raúl Barón Biza | El derecho de matar | Publishing history | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar#Publishing%20history | 164 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Defended by Néstor Aparicio, Barón Biza later achieved absolution for his work, although he remained imprisoned for political reasons. Early in 1935 a second edition was printed. This edition was much more rustic in presentation, since Barón Biza wanted the novel to be accessible to the working class. The new cover again showed a skull and scythe, but with new art by Carosselli. Equivalents of almost all of the original illustrations by Teodoro Piotti appeared, again re-illustrated by Carosselli. On the back cover was a woman with red hair, with bulging eyes and a furious expression. | El derecho de matar | Publishing history | 2024-01-27T21:28:34 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_derecho_de_matar#Publishing%20history | 156 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
| Frank Shugart | |
| --- | --- |
| | |
| **Shortstop / Outfielder** | |
| **Born:** (1866\-12\-10)December 10, 1866Luthersburg, Pennsylvania, U.S. | |
| **Died:** September 9, 1944(1944\-09\-09\) (aged 77\)Clearfield, Pennsylvania, U.S. | |
| **Batted:** Left**Threw:** Right | |
| MLB debut | |
| August 23, 1890, for the Chicago Pirates | |
| Last MLB appearance | |
| September 27, 1901, for the Chicago White Sox | |
| MLB statistics | |
| Batting average | .267 |
| Home runs | 22 |
| Runs batted in | 384 |
| | |
| Teams | |
| * Chicago Pirates (1890) * Pittsburgh Pirates (1891–1893) * St. Louis Browns (1893–1894) * Louisville Colonels (1895) * Philadelphia Phillies (1897) * Chicago White Sox (1901) | | | Frank Shugart | 2024-07-03T22:59:16 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Shugart# | 300 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
Frank Harry Shugart (December 10, 1866 – September 9, 1944) was an American professional baseball shortstop. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Chicago Pirates, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Browns, Louisville Colonels, Philadelphia Phillies. and Chicago White Sox. Shugart was blacklisted from baseball after the 1901 season because of an altercation on August 21, 1901, in which he punched an umpire in the face and teammate Jack Katoll beaned the umpire in the leg.[citation needed] Katoll only received an 11-game suspension, while Shugart never played in the Major Leagues again.[citation needed] | Frank Shugart | 2024-07-03T22:59:16 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Shugart# | 158 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Professional ratings
| Review scores | |
| --- | --- |
| Source | Rating |
| Allmusic | |
| *The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings* | | | McGriff Avenue | Reception | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue#Reception | 61 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| McGriff Avenue | |
| --- | --- |
| | |
| Studio album by Jimmy McGriff | |
| Released | October 29, 2002 |
| Recorded | October 22 and 23, 2001 |
| Studio | Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ |
| Genre | Jazz |
| Length | 59:20 |
| Label | MilestoneMCD\-9325\-2 |
| Producer | Bob Porter |
| Jimmy McGriff chronology | |
| | *Feelin' It*(2001\) | ***McGriff Avenue***(2002\) | | | --- | --- | --- | | | | McGriff Avenue | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue# | 192 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
McGriff Avenue is an album by organist Jimmy McGriff recorded in 2001 and released on the Milestone label the following year. | McGriff Avenue | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue# | 35 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
Allmusic's Richard S. Ginell said: "McGriff Avenue cruises easily through mostly blues country, highlighted by a few inspired remakes of early McGriff hits ... Though this CD doesn't have the ecstatic super-grooves of some of McGriff's earlier milestones, it still keeps the customers satisfied". On All About Jazz, Joel Roberts noted "While no new ground is broken here, McGriff and company evoke the down home mood of the classic soul jazz years. It ain't quite as greasy as the old days, but it still tastes good". In JazzTimes, Owen Cordle wrote "The organist, an economical player, comes from the slow-burn school. Forget theatrics and fireworks-he’s the type who paces his performances for a steady payoff of good grooves and soulful messages. Everyone delivers heartfelt solos throughout the album and, as always, the dance floor remains open during the set". | McGriff Avenue | Reception | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue#Reception | 235 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
All compositions by Rodney Jones except where noted "All About My Girl" (Jimmy McGriff) – 7:50
"McGriff Avenue" – 7:35
"Soul Street" (Jimmy Forrest) – 10:50
"The Answer Is in the Blues" – 8:13
"The Great Unknown" (McGriff, Ronnie Cuber) – 6:45
"Dissertation on the Blues" – 8:35
"The Worm" (McGriff, Sonny Lester, Fats Theus) – 6:30
"America the Beautiful" (Samuel A. Ward, Katharine Lee Bates) – 3:02 | McGriff Avenue | Track listing | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue#Track%20listing | 154 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Jimmy McGriff – Hammond X-B3 organ
Gordon Beadle, Bill Easley – tenor saxophone
Ronnie Cuber – baritone saxophone
Rodney Jones (tracks 2, 4 & 6), Melvin Sparks-Hassan (tracks 1, 3, 5, 7 & 8) – guitar
Wilbur Bascomb – bass
Bernard Purdie (tracks 1, 3, 5, 7 & 8), Don Williams (tracks 2, 4 & 6) − drums | McGriff Avenue | Personnel | 2021-06-26T04:49:41 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McGriff_Avenue#Personnel | 117 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
DCP Capital
| | |
| --- | --- |
| Native name | 德弘资本 |
| Company type | Private |
| Industry | Private equity |
| Founded | 2017; 7 years ago (2017) |
| Founders | David LiuJulian Wolhardt |
| Headquarters | Beijing, China |
| Key people | David Liu (Chairman)Julian Wolhardt (CEO) |
| AUM | US$5\.5 billion (2023\) |
| Website | dcpcapital.com | | DCP Capital | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital# | 151 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
|
DCP Capital (also known as DCP and Dehong Capital Partners; Chinese: 德弘资本; pinyin: Déhóng zīběn) is a Chinese private equity firm headquartered in Beijing, China. The firm focuses on the consumer, healthcare, education and technology sectors in Asia. DCP has additional offices in Hong Kong and Shanghai. | DCP Capital | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital# | 89 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
In 2016, David Liu and Julian Wolhardt left their positions at Kohlberg Kravis Roberts to form their own investment firm. Both of them were previously Partners at the company where they were in charge of investments in the China region. Prior to that, they both worked together at Morgan Stanley Private Equity. In 2017, the duo established DCP which would focus mainly on China. The firm's strategy was to focus on buyout deals especially in situations when a family business is seeking to by sold because the founder's children were not interested in taking over. DCP would also focus on state-owned enterprise reforms and taking companies private. At the same time, DCP would look at cross-border deals between overseas businesses and the Chinese market. | DCP Capital | Background | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital#Background | 173 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
In April 2019, DCP raised $2.5 billion for its debut fund which at the time was the sixth biggest China fund since the 2007–2008 financial crisis. The fund was significantly oversubscribed due to strong demand and its investors included GIC, Temasek Holdings, Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and the New York State Common Retirement Fund. In October 2019. DCP released a statement condemning imposters who have been using its brand name to defraud investors. It stated that the fraudsters replicated its official information online and tried to collect funds from the public by selling them wealth management products. The fraudsters used a mobile app which had an identical copy of DCP's official website and offered investment products such as futures on crude oil and gold. DCP has stated it has never offered any of these products. | DCP Capital | Background | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital#Background | 193 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
In June 2022, DCP raised $2.5 billion out of its $3 billion target for its second fund. The State Board of Administration of Florida was one of the investors and committed $100 million to the fund. | DCP Capital | Background | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital#Background | 50 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
In August 2018, DCP joined an investor consortium led by Hillhouse Capital to acquire listed company Yum China for $13 billion which would be the largest Chinese acquisition of a consumer company at the time. However, later that month, the deal fell through after Yum China rejected the offer. In March 2022, China-based jobs portal, 51job that was listed on the Nasdaq at the time, agreed to a privatization offer of $4.3 billion from DCP. In February 2023, DCP acquired a minority interest in the Chinese operations of Jamieson Wellness, a Canadian multinational pharmaceutical company. DCP paid $35 million for 33.3% of the Chinese business. It also subscribed for $75 million of preferred shares of Jamieson Wellness. | DCP Capital | Notable deals | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital#Notable%20deals | 181 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
On 31 May 2023, Cargill sold its China poultry unit to DCP citing difficulties in market conditions due to factors such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the COVID-19 pandemic. The firm is known for backing Ping An Insurance, Mengniu Dairy, Haier and China International Capital Corporation. | DCP Capital | Notable deals | 2023-12-22T10:04:01 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCP_Capital#Notable%20deals | 80 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
Valentina Serghei (born February 14, 1948) is a Romanian sprint canoer who competed in the late 1960s. She finished fourth in the K-2 500 m event at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City. | Valentina Serghei | 2024-07-28T03:06:28 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valentina_Serghei# | 57 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
|
| Name | Translation | Notes |
| --- | --- | --- |
| *Homo absconditus* | "man the inscrutable" | Soloveitchik, 1965 *Lonely Man of Faith* |
| *Homo absurdus* | "absurd man" | Giovanni Patriarca *Homo Economicus, Absurdus, or Viator?* 2014 |
| *Homo adaptabilis* | "adaptable man" | Giovanni Patriarca *Homo Economicus, Absurdus, or Viator?* 2014 |
| *Homo adorans* | "worshipping man" | Man as a worshipping agent, a servant of God or gods. |
| *Homo aestheticus* | "aesthetic man" | In Goethe's *Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre*, the main antagonist of *Homo oeconomicus* in the internal conflict tormenting the philosopher. *Homo aestheticus* is "man the aristocrat" in feelings and emotions. Dissanayake (1992\) uses the term to suggest that the emergence of art was central to the formation of the human species. |
| *Homo amans* | "loving man" | Man as a loving agent; Humberto Maturana 2008 |
| *Homo animalis* | "man with a soul" | Man as in possession of an *animus sive mens* (a soul or mind), Heidegger (1975\). |
| *Homo apathetikos* | "apathetic man" | Used by Abraham Joshua Heschel in his book *The Prophets* to refer to the Stoic notion of the ideal human being, one who has attained apatheia. |
| *Homo avarus* | "man the greedy" | Used for man "activated by greed" by Barnett (1977\). |
| *Homo combinans* | "combining man" | Man as the only species that performs the unbounded combinatorial operations that underlie syntax and possibly other cognitive capacities; Cedric Boeckx 2009\. |
| *Homo communicans* | "communicating man" | \[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo contaminatus* | "contaminated man" | Suggested by Romeo (1979\) alongside *Homo inquinatus* ("polluted man") "to designate contemporary Man polluted by his own technological advances". |
| *Homo creator* | "creator man" | Due to Nicolaus Cusanus in reference to man as *imago Dei*; expanded to *Homo alter deus* by K.\-O. Apel (1955\). |
| *Homo degeneratus* | "degenerative man" | A man or the mankind as a whole if they undergo any regressive development (devolution); Andrej Poleev 2013 |
| *Homo demens* | "mad man" | Man as the only being with irrational delusions. Edgar Morin, 1973 *The Lost Paradigm: Human Nature* |
| *Homo deus* | "human god" | Man as god, endowed with supernatural abilities such as eternal life as outlined in Yuval Noah Harari's 2015 book *Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow* |
| *Homo dictyous* | "network man" | Humankind as having a brain evolved for social connections |
| *Homo discens* | "learning man" | Human capability to learn and adapt, Heinrich Roth, Theodor Wilhelm\[*year needed*]\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo documentator* | "documenting man" | Human need and propensity to document and organize knowledge, Suzanne Briet in *What Is Documentation?*, 1951 |
| *Homo domesticus* | "domestic man" | A human conditioned by the built environment; Oscar Carvajal, 2005 Derrick Jensen, 2006 |
| *Homo donans et recipiens* | "giving and receiving (hu)man" | A human conditioned by free gifting and receiving; Genevieve Vaughan, 2021 |
| *Homo duplex* | "double man" | Georges\-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, 1754\.\[*citation needed*] Honoré de Balzac, 1846\. Joseph Conrad, 1903\. The idea of the double or divided man is developed by Émile Durkheim (1912\) to figure the interaction of man's animal and social tendencies. |
| *Homo economicus* | "economic man" | Man as a rational and self\-interested agent (19th century) |
| *Homo educandus* | "to be educated" | Human need of education before reaching maturity, Heinrich Roth 1966\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo ethicus* | "ethical man" | Man as an ethical agent. |
| *Homo excentricus* | "not self\-centered" | Human capability for objectivity, human self\-reflection, theory of mind, Helmuth Plessner, 1928\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo faber* | "toolmaker man""fabricator man""worker man" | Karl Marx, Kenneth Oakley 1949, Max Frisch 1957, Hannah Arendt. |
| *Homo ferox* | "ferocious man" | T. H. White 1958 |
| *Homo generosus* | "generous man" | Tor Nørretranders, *Generous Man* (2005\) |
| *Homo geographicus* | "man in place" | Robert D. Sack, *Homo Geographicus* (1997\) |
| *Homo grammaticus* | "grammatical man" | Human use of grammar, language, Frank Palmer 1971 |
| *Homo hierarchicus* | "hierarchical man" | Louis Dumont 1966 |
| *Homo humanus* | "human man" | Used as a term for mankind considered as human in the cultural sense, as opposed to *homo biologicus*, man considered as a biological species (and thus synonymous with *Homo sapiens*); the distinction was made in these terms by John N. Deely (1973\). |
| *Homo hypocritus* | "hypocritical man" | Robin Hanson (2010\); also called "man the sly rule bender" |
| *Homo imitans* | "imitating man" | Human capability of learning and adapting by imitation, Andrew N. Meltzoff 1988, Jürgen Lethmate 1992\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo inermis* | "helpless man" | Man as defenseless, unprotected, devoid of animal instincts. J. F. Blumenbach 1779, J. G. Herder 1784–1791, Arnold Gehlen 1940\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo interrogans* | "questioning man" | The human is a questioning or inquiring being, a being who not only asks questions but is capable of questioning or questing without there being an object referent for the inquiry itself and capable of ever\-asking. Abraham Joshua Heschel discussed this idea in his 1965 book *Who is Man?* but John Bruin coined the term in his 2001 book *Homo Interrogans: Questioning and the Intentional Structure of Cognition* |
| *Homo ignorans* | "ignorant man" | Antonym to *sciens* (Bazán 1972, Romeo 1979:64\) |
| *Homo interreticulatus* | "buried\-within\-the\-rectangle man" | Used by philosopher David Bentley Hart to describe humanity lost within the screens of computers and other devices |
| *Homo investigans* | "investigating man" | Human curiosity and capability to learn by deduction, Werner Luck 1976\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo juridicus* | "juridical man" | Homo juridicus identifies normative primacy of law, Alain Supiot, 2007\. |
| *Homo laborans* | "working man" | Human capability for division of labour, specialization and expertise in craftsmanship and, Theodor Litt 1948\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo liturgicus* | "the man who participates with others in rituals that recognize and enact meaning" | Philosopher James K. A. Smith uses this terms to describe a basic way in which humans dwell together with habitual practices that both embody and reorient us toward shared higher goods. |
| *Homo logicus* | "the man who wants to understand" | Homo logicus are driven by an irresistible desire to understand how things work. By contrast, Homo sapiens have a strong desire for success. Alan Cooper, 1999 |
| *Homo loquens* | "talking man" | Man as the only animal capable of language, J. G. Herder 1772, J. F. Blumenbach 1779\.\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo loquax* | "chattering man" | parody variation of *Homo loquens*, used by Henri Bergson (1943\), Tom Wolfe (2006\), also in *A Canticle for Leibowitz* (1960\). |
| *Homo ludens* | "playing man" | Friedrich Schiller (1795\); Johan Huizinga, *Homo Ludens* (1938\); Hideo Kojima (2016\). The characterization of human culture as essentially bearing the character of play. |
| *Homo mendax* | "lying man" | Man with the ability to tell lies. Fernando Vallejo\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo metaphysicus* | "metaphysical man" | Arthur Schopenhauer, 1819\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo narrans* | "storytelling man" | man not only as an intelligent species, but also as the only one who tells stories, used by Walter Fisher in 1984\. Also *Pan narrans* "storytelling ape" in *The Science of Discworld II: The Globe* by Terry Pratchett, Ian Stewart and Jack Cohen |
| *Homo necans* | "killing man" | Walter Burkert, 1972 |
| *Homo neophilus* and *Homo neophobus* | "Novelty\-loving man" and "Novelty\-fearing man", respectively | coined by characters in the Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson to describe two distinct types of human being: one which seeks out and embraces new ideas and situations (*neophilus*), and another which clings to habit and fears the new (*neophobus*). |
| *Homo otiosus* | "slacker man" | The 11th Edition of The Encyclopædia Britannica defines man as "a seeker after the greatest degree of comfort for the least necessary expenditure of energy". In *The Restless Compendium* Michael Greaney credits Sociologist Robert Stebbins with coining the term "homo otiosus" to refer to the privileged economic class of "persons of leisure", asserting that a distinctiveness of humans is that they (unlike other animals and machines) are capable of intentional laziness. |
| *Homo patiens* | "suffering man" | Human capability for suffering, Viktor Frankl 1988\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo viator* | "man the pilgrim" | Man as on his way towards finding God, Gabriel Marcel, 1945\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo pictor* | "depicting man", "man the artist" | Human sense of aesthetics, Hans Jonas, 1961 |
| *Homo poetica* | "man the poet", "man the meaning maker" | Ernest Becker, in *The Structure of Evil: An Essay on the Unification of the Science of Man* (1968\). |
| *Homo religiosus* | "religious man" | Alister Hardy\[*year needed*]\[*citation needed*] |
| *Homo ridens* | "laughing man" | G. B. Milner, 1969 |
| *Homo reciprocans* | "reciprocal man" | man as a cooperative actor who is motivated by improving his environment and wellbeing; Samuel Bowles and Herbert Gintis, 1997 |
| *Homo sacer* | "the sacred man" or "the accursed man" | in Roman law, a person who is banned and may be killed by anybody, but may not be sacrificed in a religious ritual. Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben takes the concept as the starting point of his main work Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life (1998\) |
| *Homo sanguinis* | "bloody man" | A comment on human foreign relations and the increasing ability of man to wage war by anatomist W. M. Cobb in the Journal of the National Medical Association in 1969 and 1975\. |
| *Homo sciens* | "knowing man" | Used by Siger of Brabant, noted as a precedent of *Homo sapiens* by Bazán (1972\) (Romeo 1979:128\) |
| *Homo sentimentalis* | "sentimental man" | man born to a civilization of sentiment, who has raised feelings to a category of value; the human ability to empathize, but also to idealize emotions and make them servants of ideas. Milan Kundera in *Immortality* (1990\), Eugene Halton in *Bereft of Reason: On the Decline of Social Thought and Prospects for Its Renewal* (1995\). |
| *Homo socius* | "social man" | Man as a social being. Inherent to humans as long as they have not lived entirely in isolation. Peter Berger \& Thomas Luckmann in *The Social Construction of Reality* (1966\). |
| *Homo sociologicus* | "sociological man" | parody term; the human species as prone to sociology, Ralf Dahrendorf.\[*year needed*] |
| *Homo Sovieticus* | (Dog Latin for "Soviet Man") | A sarcastic and critical reference to an average conformist person in the USSR and other countries of the Eastern Bloc. The term was popularized by Soviet writer and sociologist Aleksandr Zinovyev, who wrote the book titled *Homo Sovieticus*. |
| *Homo Spiritualis* | "Spiritual man" | Due to historian of European religious history Steven Ozment. |
| *Homo superior* | "superior man" | Coined by the titular character in Olaf Stapledon's novel *Odd John* (1935\) to refer to superpowered mutants like himself. Also occurs in Marvel Comics' *The X\-Men* (1963–present), the BBC series *The Tomorrow People* (1973–1979\), and David Bowie's song "Oh! You Pretty Things" 1971\. |
| *Homo symbolicus* | "symbolic culture man" | The emergence of symbolic culture. 2011 \[Editors Christopher S. Henshilwood and Francesco d'Errico, *Homo Symbolicus: The dawn of language, imagination and spirituality* |
| *Homo sympathetikos* | "sympathetic man" | The term used by Abraham Joshua Heschel in his book *The Prophets* to refer to the prophetic ideal for humans: sympathetic feeling or sharing in the concerns of others, the highest expression of which is sharing in God's concern, feeling, or pathos. |
| *Homo technologicus* | "technological man" | Yves Gingras 2005, similar to *homo faber*, in a sense of man creating technology as an antithesis to nature. |
| *Homo terrans* | "Earth humans" | as in contrast to Homo ares (or Homo martial): 'Mars human' |
| *Jocko Homo* | "ape\-man" | Coined and defined by Bertram Henry Shadduck in his 1924 tract *Jocko\-Homo Heavenbound* the phrase gained prominence via the release DEVO's 1977 song "Jocko Homo". | | Names for the human species | List of binomial names | 2024-10-09T00:53:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_for_the_human_species#List%20of%20binomial%20names | 4,078 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "table"
} |
| Human | |
| --- | --- |
| | |
| An adult human male (left) and female (right) from the Akha tribe in Northern Thailand | |
|
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Mammalia |
| Order: | Primates |
| Suborder: | Haplorhini |
| Infraorder: | Simiiformes |
| Family: | Hominidae |
| Subfamily: | Homininae |
| Tribe: | Hominini |
| Genus: | Homo |
| Species: | ***H. sapiens*** |
| Binomial name | |
| ***Homo sapiens***Linnaeus, 1758 | |
|
| Subspecies | |
| * †*Homo sapiens idaltu* White *et al.*, 2003 * *Homo sapiens sapiens* | |
| Synonyms | |
| Species synonymy * *aethiopicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *americanus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *arabicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *aurignacensis*Klaatsch \& Hauser, 1910 * *australasicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *cafer*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *capensis*Broom, 1917 * *columbicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *cro\-magnonensis*Gregory, 1921 * *drennani*Kleinschmidt, 1931 * *eurafricanus*(Sergi, 1911\) * *grimaldiensis*Gregory, 1921 * *grimaldii*Lapouge, 1906 * *hottentotus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *hyperboreus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *indicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *japeticus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *melaninus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *monstrosus*Linnaeus, 1758 * *neptunianus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *palestinus*McCown \& Keith, 1932 * *patagonus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *priscus*Lapouge, 1899 * *proto\-aethiopicus*Giuffrida\-Ruggeri, 1915 * *scythicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *sinicus*Bory de St. Vincent, 1825 * *spelaeus*Lapouge, 1899 * *troglodytes*Linnaeus, 1758 * *wadjakensis*Dubois, 1921 | | | Names for the human species | 2024-10-09T00:53:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_for_the_human_species# | 710 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "infobox"
} |
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In addition to the generally accepted taxonomic name Homo sapiens (Latin: 'wise man', Linnaeus 1758), other Latin-based names for the human species have been created to refer to various aspects of the human character. The common name of the human species in English is historically man (from Germanic mann), often replaced by the Latinate human (since the 16th century). | Names for the human species | 2024-10-09T00:53:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_for_the_human_species# | 95 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
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Look up human_being#Translations in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. The Indo-European languages have a number of inherited terms for mankind. The etymon of man is found in the Germanic languages, and is cognate with Manu, the name of the human progenitor in Hindu mythology, and found in Indic terms for man (including manuṣya, manush, and manava). | Names for the human species | In the world's languages | 2024-10-09T00:53:09 | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_for_the_human_species#In%20the%20world%27s%20languages | 114 | {
"language": "en",
"type": "text"
} |
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