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Q24579236
|
Thaer Krouma
|
Thaer Sami Krouma (Arabic: ثائر كروما; born 2 February 1990) is a Syrian footballer who plays for Iraqi Premier League club Naft Al-Basra.
|
footballer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q6519059
|
Leib Gurwicz
|
Aryeh Ze'ev (Leib) Gurwicz (1906–20 October 1982) was an influential Orthodox rabbi and Talmudic scholar. He was the son-in-law of Rabbi Elyah Lopian and best known as Rosh Yeshiva of the Gateshead Yeshiva in Gateshead, England, where he taught for over 30 years. He studied at various yeshivas in Lithuania and Poland before moving to England to get married in 1932. This move saved him from the Holocaust under the Nazis.
|
British rabbi
|
[
"human"
] |
Q2250802
|
Hixon
|
Hixon is a village and a civil parish in the English county of Staffordshire.grid reference SK003259.
|
village in Staffordshire, England, United Kingdom
|
[
"village",
"civil parish"
] |
Q29075824
|
1929 Fresno State Bulldogs football team
|
The 1929 Fresno State Bulldogs football team represented Fresno State Normal School—now known as California State University, Fresno—during the 1929 college football season. Fresno State competed in the Far Western Conference (FWC). The 1929 team was led by first-year head coach Stanley Borleske and played home games at Fresno State College Stadium on the campus of Fresno City College in Fresno, California. They finished with a record of one win and seven losses (1–7, 1–4 FWC). The Bulldogs were outscored by their opponents 40–250 for the season and were shut out in six of the eight games.
|
American college football team season
|
[
"American football team season"
] |
Q841301
|
Wisconsin Highway 60
|
State Trunk Highway 60, often called Highway 60, STH-60 or WIS 60, is a state highway in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. It runs east–west in southern Wisconsin from Prairie du Chien on the Mississippi River at the Iowa state line to the village of Grafton near Lake Michigan.
|
state highway in Wisconsin, United States
|
[
"road"
] |
Q24663422
|
Hadnall
|
Hadnall is a village and civil parish in Shropshire, England. It lies on the A49, some 9 km north-north-east of Shrewsbury. The population of the civil parish at the 2011 census was 688. The Welsh Marches Line runs just outside the village and there was once a railway station. Today, Hadnall has a primary school, a successful village shop, a pub and two AA rosette restaurants. The village church is dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene. General Sir Rowland Hill, 1st Viscount Hill, who lived at nearby Hardwick Grange, is buried here, as was writer Charles Hulbert who lived at Providence Grove. John Bromley, future trade union leader and Labour MP, whose parents lived at Haston Grove in the parish, was born and baptised here in 1876.Hadnall was formerly part of the old parish of Myddle.A real ale brewery, The Salopian Brewery, is based at Old Station Yard on Station Road, Hadnall. It moved to this location in 2014 having previously operated from Shrewsbury.The village is served by the 511 bus route, operated by Arriva Midlands North, which runs between Shrewsbury and Whitchurch via Wem. Some services terminate in Wem and do not continue to Whitchurch.
|
village in the United Kingdom
|
[
"village",
"civil parish"
] |
Q7601555
|
Stardance
|
Stardance is a science fiction novel by Spider Robinson and Jeanne Robinson, published by Dial Press in 1979 as part of its Quantum science fiction line. The novel's opening segment originally appeared in Analog in 1977 as the novella "Stardance", followed by the serialized conclusion, "Stardance II", in Analog in 1978.After the Dial hardcover appeared in 1979, Stardance was reprinted in paperback by Dell Books in 1980, followed by reissues from Tor Books and Baen Books over the next decade. Baen compiled the novel, together with its sequel, Starseed, in a mass market paperback omnibus, The Star Dancers, in 1997; in 2006, Baen published a hardcover omnibus, The Stardance Trilogy, adding a third novel, Starmind.
|
novel by Spider Robinson
|
[
"literary work"
] |
Q16236893
|
Cameron McCarthy
|
Cameron McCarthy (born 1 April 1995) is an Australian rules footballer who last played for the Fremantle Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). He previously played for the Greater Western Sydney Giants from 2013 to 2016.
|
Australian footballer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q21570280
|
Makrynia Municipal Unit
|
Makryneia (Greek: Μακρυνεία) is a former municipality in Aetolia-Acarnania, West Greece, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Agrinio, of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 149.687 km2. Population 3,681 (2011). The seat of the municipality was in Gavalou. The municipal unit is located south and southeast of Lake Trichonida, and northwest of the mountain Arakynthos. There are farmlands near the lake shore, and forests on the mountain slopes. Makryneia is southeast of Agrinio, northeast of Missolonghi and northwest of Naupactus.
|
subdivision of Agrinio Municipality, Greece
|
[
"former municipality",
"municipal unit of Greece"
] |
Q61702581
|
Tylotiella idae
|
Tylotiella idae is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropoda mollusk in the family Drilliidae.
|
species of mollusc
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q2361515
|
DN1A
|
DN1A (Romanian: Drumul Național 1A) is a national road in Romania connecting Bucharest and Brașov via Ploiești which is 184.8 km (114.8 mi) long. It serves as an alternative to the route through the Valea Prahovei (Prahova Valley).
|
road in Romania
|
[
"road"
] |
Q3066427
|
Francisco Aguirre de la Hoz
|
Francisco Aguirre de la Hoz (born 1943, in Ávila, Spain) is a Spanish lawyer and former politician. After qualifying as a lawyer at the University of Valladolid and University of Valencia, together with Emilio Attard, he helped to found the Valencian Regional Party and later, the Democratic Popular Party (PDP). Subsequently, the PDP, together with other parties, formed the Union of the Democratic Centre (UCD). As a UCD member, at the 1977 General Election, he was elected to the Spanish Congress of Deputies representing Valencia Province and was re-elected in the subsequent election in 1979. From April 1978 until June 1979 he served as Minister for Economics and Manufacturing in the Valencian Regional Administration. He did not stand at the 1982 election, retiring from politics and moving to Barcelona where he founded a Business Association.
|
Member Congress of Deputies
|
[
"human"
] |
Q6254909
|
John Rienstra
|
John William Rienstra (born March 22, 1963, in Grand Rapids, Michigan) is a former guard who played seven professional seasons for the National Football League's Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cleveland Browns. Rienstra attended Temple University after graduating from the Academy of the New Church Secondary Schools. At the 1986 NFL Draft, the Steelers selected Reinstra with the 9th pick in the 1st round. On July 6, 2016, Rienstra discovered the remains of Joe Keller, a man from Cleveland, Tennessee, who had gone missing while on a jog on July 23, 2015, in a remote and rugged area of the Rio Grande National Forest in Conejos County, Colorado.
|
All-American college football player, professional football player, offensive lineman
|
[
"human"
] |
Q13438124
|
Bembidion pedicellatum
|
Bembidion pedicellatum is a species of ground beetle in the family Carabidae. It is found in North America.
|
species of insect
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q59940505
|
Pseudotetracha murchisona
|
Pseudotetracha murchisona is a species of tiger beetle in the subfamily Cicindelinae that was described by Edmond Jean-Baptiste Fleutiaux in 1896, and is native to Australia.
|
species of insect
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q2818079
|
6 Hours of Zhuhai
|
The 6 Hours of Zhuhai is a sports car endurance race held at the Zhuhai International Circuit in Zhuhai, Guangdong, China. The race was first held in 1994 on a street circuit as a round of the BPR Global GT Series. It was held 7 times in 14 years in BPR and the FIA GT Championship, and revived in 2010 under the Intercontinental Le Mans Cup.
|
endurance automobile race
|
[
"endurance race",
"recurring sporting event"
] |
Q4324377
|
Novolakskoye
|
Novolakskoye (Russian: Новолакское, Chechen: Бони-Эвла, Lak: Новолак) is a rural locality (a selo) and the administrative center of Novolaksky District of the Republic of Dagestan, Russia. Population: 5,951 (2010 Census); 4,169 (2002 Census); 2,785 (1989 Census).
|
human settlement in Novolaksky District, Republic of Dagestan, Russia
|
[
"human settlement",
"subdivisions of Russia",
"village"
] |
Q129144
|
British Forces Gibraltar
|
British Forces Gibraltar is the British Armed Forces stationed in the British overseas territory of Gibraltar. Gibraltar is used primarily as a training area, thanks to its good climate and rocky terrain, and as a stopover for aircraft and ships en route to and from deployments East of Suez or Africa.
|
military unit
|
[
"area command"
] |
Q6404558
|
Kid Willson
|
Frank Hoxie "Kid" Willson (November 3, 1895 – April 17, 1964) was a professional baseball player. He played parts of two seasons in Major League Baseball nine years apart, in 1918 and 1927, both for the Chicago White Sox. He was primarily used as a pinch hitter, appearing just twice in the field, once as a left fielder and once as a center fielder, among his eleven major league games.
|
Major League Baseball player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5224957
|
Darren Hayman & the Secondary Modern
|
Darren Hayman & the Secondary Modern are a British band who have released four albums. Darren Hayman has previously performed with Hefner and The French, and continues to collaborate with ex-members of both bands. The name of the band refers to a type of school which existed in post-war Britain. Since 2012, Hayman's backing bands have been known as The Long Parliament and The Short Parliament.
|
musical artist
|
[
"musical group"
] |
Q931520
|
Prosenjakovci
|
Prosenjakovci (pronounced [pɾɔsɛˈnjaːkɔu̯tsi]; Hungarian: Pártosfalva) is a village in the Municipality of Moravske Toplice in the Prekmurje region of Slovenia, close to the border with Hungary.
|
human settlement
|
[
"human settlement"
] |
Q14716821
|
Taylor-Frohman House
|
The Taylor-Frohman House at 1315 Columbus Ave. in Sandusky, Ohio was built in 1906. It was built by George Feick. It includes Colonial Revival architecture. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.The house is an "imposing" three-story building. It has a two-story front porch with four columns, two pilasters, and a pediment. The house also has a six-column portico. It was home of Sidney Frohman and Elnore (née Dauch) Frohman from about 1920 until Sidney's death in the 1960s. Sidney was president of the Hinde and Dauch Paper Company, which popularized use of corrugated cardboard in shipping, in lieu of barrels and bags.
|
historic house in Ohio, United States
|
[
"single-family detached home"
] |
Q330776
|
Abraham ben Solomon
|
Abraham ben Solomon of Torrutiel (Utiel, Valencia) was a Spanish Jewish historian of the early 16th century.
|
Spanish historian
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5035684
|
Capital Ward
|
Capital Ward or Ward 17 (French: Quartier Capitale) is a city ward located in the centre of Ottawa, Ontario. Situated just south of downtown Ottawa, the ward includes the communities of Old Ottawa East, Old Ottawa South, the Glebe, Heron Park, Carleton University, and Riverside Out of all the wards currently in existence, Capital ward has existed the longest. It was originally created in 1909 from parts of Wellington Ward and Central Ward when the Glebe was settled. The original capital ward consisted solely of the Glebe. It eventually annexed Old Ottawa South before assuming its current borders. Its first aldermen were John Carnochan and J. W. Nelson.
|
place in Ontario, Canada
|
[
"municipal electoral district of Ottawa",
"ward"
] |
Q56065136
|
Ronald Cardwell
|
Ronald Cardwell (born September 1, 1932) is an American rower. He competed in the men's coxed four event at the 1956 Summer Olympics.
|
American rower
|
[
"human"
] |
Q42531131
|
2016–17 Burundi Premier League
|
The 2016–17 Burundi Ligue A season is the top level of football competition in Burundi. It began on 10 September 2016 and concluded on 21 May 2017. A total of 16 clubs participate in the 2016–17 Ligue A.
|
season of football team
|
[
"association football team season"
] |
Q48700509
|
Ryan Hewitt
|
Ryan Hewitt is an American music producer, engineer and mixer known for his work with The Lumineers, Red Hot Chili Peppers, The Avett Brothers, The Dixie Chicks, Third Eye Blind, Jamie Cullum, John Frusciante and the Turnpike Troubadours. Hewitt is a Grammy Award winner having received the accolade for mixing and engineering Red Hot Chili Peppers' ninth studio album Stadium Arcadium. The album received seven Grammy nominations and won in the categories of Best Rock Album and Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Package. He is currently based in Nashville, TN.
|
record producer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q544301
|
Nigel Godrich
|
Nigel Timothy Godrich (born 28 February 1971) is an English record producer, recording engineer and musician. He is known for his work with the English rock band Radiohead, having produced all their studio albums since OK Computer (1997) and several projects by the singer Thom Yorke. He is a member of Atoms for Peace (with Yorke) and Ultraísta. Early in his career, Godrich worked as the house engineer at RAK Studios, London, under the producer John Leckie. He met Radiohead while working at RAK on their second album, The Bends (1995), for which he received his first production credit. Radiohead hired him to produce their next album, OK Computer, which was a major success and brought him attention from major artists; he has since worked with acts including Beck, Air, Paul McCartney, U2, R.E.M., Pavement, Roger Waters and Arcade Fire. Godrich is the creator of the music webseries From the Basement.
|
English record producer and sound engineer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5168012
|
Coordinated Science Laboratory
|
The Coordinated Science Laboratory (CSL) is a major scientific research laboratory at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. With deep roots in information technology, CSL has invented and deployed many landmark innovations, such as the electric vacuum gyroscope, the first computer-assisted instructional program and the plasma TV. Today, research thrusts include computer vision, economics and energy systems, information trust, neuroengineering, parallel computing, robotics and more.
|
scientific research laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
|
[
"research institute"
] |
Q34999367
|
Gholamreza Rahimi
|
Gholamreza Rahimi (born 23 July 1978) is an Iranian Paralympic archer. In the 2016 Summer Paralympics, his debut games, Rahimi won his first Paralympic medal which was gold.
|
Iranian Paralympic archer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q1192422
|
pipeline
|
In computing, a pipeline, also known as a data pipeline, is a set of data processing elements connected in series, where the output of one element is the input of the next one. The elements of a pipeline are often executed in parallel or in time-sliced fashion. Some amount of buffer storage is often inserted between elements. Computer-related pipelines include: Instruction pipelines, such as the classic RISC pipeline, which are used in central processing units (CPUs) and other microprocessors to allow overlapping execution of multiple instructions with the same circuitry. The circuitry is usually divided up into stages and each stage processes a specific part of one instruction at a time, passing the partial results to the next stage. Examples of stages are instruction decode, arithmetic/logic and register fetch. They are related to the technologies of superscalar execution, operand forwarding, speculative execution and out-of-order execution. Graphics pipelines, found in most graphics processing units (GPUs), which consist of multiple arithmetic units, or complete CPUs, that implement the various stages of common rendering operations (perspective projection, window clipping, color and light calculation, rendering, etc.). Software pipelines, which consist of a sequence of computing processes (commands, program runs, tasks, threads, procedures, etc. ), conceptually executed in parallel, with the output stream of one process being automatically fed as the input stream of the next one. The Unix system call pipe is a classic example of this concept. HTTP pipelining, the technique of issuing multiple HTTP requests through the same TCP connection, without waiting for the previous one to finish.
|
data processing chain
|
[
"computer science term",
"method"
] |
Q2128498
|
Committee of 100
|
The Committee of 100 is a leadership organization of Chinese Americans in business, government, academia and the arts whose stated aim is "to encourage constructive relations between the peoples of the United States and Greater China." It was founded in 1990 by I. M. Pei. Its current chair is H. Roger Wang, chairman and former chief executive officer (CEO) of the Golden Eagle International Group, and its current president is Zhengyu Huang.
|
American organization founded in 1990 promoting Chinese-American relations
|
[
"organization"
] |
Q85788978
|
Nic Sampson
|
Nic Sampson is a New Zealand actor, comedian, and writer known for his roles as Chip Thorn, the Yellow Mystic Ranger on Power Rangers Mystic Force, Detective Constable Sam Breen on The Brokenwood Mysteries, and for the New Zealand sketch show Funny Girls.
|
New Zealand actor, comedian, and writer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q11802902
|
Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 5101
|
Papyrus Oxyrhynchus 5101, designated P.Oxy.LXXVII 5101 (LDAB 140272; Rahlfs 2227) contains fragments of a manuscript in Koine Greek of the Septuagint (LXX), written on papyrus in roll form. It has been palaeographycally dated to have been written between 50 and 150 C.E.
|
fragmentary manuscript
|
[
"manuscript"
] |
Q28870967
|
Leslie Francis
|
Leslie Pickering Francis is an American philosopher, currently Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Distinguished Professor of Law at University of Utah.Francis holds joint appointments as Alfred C. Emery professor of law and professor of philosophy, and adjunct appointments in Family and Preventive Medicine (in the Division of Public Health), Internal Medicine (in the Program for Medical Ethics and Humanities), and Political Science, at the University of Utah. She was appointed to the rank of Distinguished Professor in 2009 and became director of the University of Utah Center for Law and Biomedical Sciences in 2015. Francis was President of the Pacific Division of the American Philosophical Association in 2015-2016. She served in the past as Vice President of the International Society for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy and as a member of the Ethics Committee of the American Society for Reproductive Medicine. She also is past co-chair of the Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security Subcommittee of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. Francis also has been a member of the Medicare Coverage Advisory Committee and of the American Bar Association's Commission on Law and Aging. Francis is also a member of the Utah State Bar who provides pro bono representation to people who are the subject of petitions for guardianship. She does this as a member of the signature program of the Utah State Courts which was created to ensure independent representation of individuals with disabilities.
|
American philosopher
|
[
"human"
] |
Q38945049
|
Martin Larsen
|
Martin Larsen (born 19 February 1992) is a Danish handball player for Aalborg Håndbold and the Danish national team.
|
Danish handball player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5851440
|
Euphorbia brachycera
|
Euphorbia brachycera is a species of flowering plant in the Euphorbiaceae family. It is referred to by the common name horned spurge and is native to Northern Mexico and the Rocky Mountains of the US. It is a rhizomatous herbaceous perennial growing in spreading mats, with narrow green leaves and yellow flowerheads.
|
species of plant
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q376275
|
Bronzolo
|
Bronzolo (Italian pronunciation: [bronˈdzɔːlo]; German: Branzoll [branˈtsɔl]) is a comune (municipality) in South Tyrol in northern Italy, located about 11 kilometres (7 mi) south of the city of Bolzano. It is one of only five mainly Italian speaking municipalities in South Tyrol.
|
municipality in South Tyrol, Italy
|
[
"commune of Italy"
] |
Q98098785
|
Aghnasurn
|
Aughnasurn, or Aghnasurn is a townland in the civil parish of Kilbryan, County Roscommon, Ireland.
|
place in County Roscommon, Ireland
|
[
"administrative territorial entity"
] |
Q6401197
|
Khedivial Agricultural Society
|
The Khedivial Agricultural Society was the first Egyptian agricultural society founded in 1898 under the patronage of Husayn Kamil. The foundation of the Khedivial Agricultural Society was impelled by the lack of a local, Egyptian controlled agricultural society that could conduct scientific studies to mitigate agricultural problems under the British Occupation.
|
organization
|
[
"organization"
] |
Q3219773
|
Lavandula
|
Lavandula (common name lavender) is a genus of 47 known species of flowering plants in the mint family, Lamiaceae. It is native to the Old World and is found in Cape Verde and the Canary Islands, and from Europe across to northern and eastern Africa, the Mediterranean, southwest Asia to India.Many members of the genus are cultivated extensively in temperate climates as ornamental plants for garden and landscape use, for use as culinary herbs, and also commercially for the extraction of essential oils. The most widely cultivated species, Lavandula angustifolia, is often referred to as lavender, and there is a color named for the shade of the flowers of this species. Lavender has been used over centuries in traditional medicine and cosmetics, and "limited clinical trials support therapeutic use of lavender for pain, hot flushes, and postnatal perineal discomfort.".
|
genus of plants
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q661142
|
Ridicule
|
Ridicule (French pronunciation: [ʁidikyl]) is a 1996 French period drama film directed by Patrice Leconte and starring Charles Berling, Jean Rochefort, Fanny Ardant and Judith Godrèche. Set in the 18th century at the decadent court of Versailles, where social status can rise and fall based on one's ability to mete out witty insults and avoid ridicule oneself, the film's plot examines the social injustices of late 18th-century France, in showing the corruption and callousness of the aristocrats.
|
1996 film by Patrice Leconte
|
[
"film"
] |
Q55616810
|
Liar & Spy
|
Liar & Spy is a children's novel written by Rebecca Stead published in 2012 that is set in Brooklyn and describes the adventures of Georges and Safer, two middle school students who are working to unmask a suspected spy in their building. At the same time, Georges is experiencing a casual bullying that adults in his life seem to minimize. Stead was the first American author to win the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize for Liar & Spy, in 2013.
|
book by Rebecca Stead
|
[
"literary work"
] |
Q5999196
|
Marionetas
|
Marionetas (English title:Marionettes) is a Mexican telenovela produced by Eugenio Cobo for Televisa in 1986. It is an original story of María Antonieta Saavedra and directed by Miguel Córcega. Alma Delfina, Ana Silvia Garza and Jéssica Jurado starred as protagonists.
|
television series
|
[
"television series"
] |
Q2080686
|
Mackenzie Esporte Clube
|
Mackenzie Esporte Clube (short, just Mackenzie) is a social, recreational and sports club from Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The club has tradition in forming new athletes, especially in women's volleyball. The most prominent athletes that started in the club are the two-times Olympic champion Sheilla Castro, and the Olympic bronze-medal winners Ana Paula Connelly and Érika Coimbra. Mackenzie holds the record of 15 Minas Gerais Women's Volleyball Championships. The club maintained a professional team in the Brazilian Women's Volleyball Superleague between the seasons 2007–08 and 2011–12.
|
recreational, cultural and sports club from Belo Horizonte, Brazil
|
[
"business"
] |
Q240937
|
Jessye Norman
|
Jessye Mae Norman (September 15, 1945 – September 30, 2019) was an American opera singer and recitalist. She was able to perform dramatic soprano roles, but refused to be limited to that voice type. A commanding presence on operatic, concert and recital stages, Norman was associated with roles including Beethoven's Leonore, Wagner's Sieglinde and Kundry, Cassandre and Didon by Berlioz and Bartók's Judith. The New York Times music critic Edward Rothstein described her voice as a "grand mansion of sound", and wrote that "it has enormous dimensions, reaching backward and upward. It opens onto unexpected vistas. It contains sunlit rooms, narrow passageways, cavernous halls. "Norman trained at Howard University, the Peabody Institute, and the University of Michigan. Her career began in Europe, where she won the ARD International Music Competition in Munich in 1968, which led to a contract with the Deutsche Oper Berlin. Her operatic début came as Elisabeth in Wagner's Tannhäuser, after which she sang as Verdi's Aida at La Scala in Milan. She made her first operatic appearance in the U.S. in 1982 with the Opera Company of Philadelphia, when cast as Jocasta in Stravinsky's Oedipus rex, and as Dido in Purcell's Dido and Aeneas. She went on to sing leading roles with many other companies, including the Metropolitan Opera, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the Paris Opera, and the Royal Opera, London. She sang at the second inauguration of Ronald Reagan, at Queen Elizabeth II's 60th birthday celebration in 1986, and performed the La Marseillaise to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the.
|
American opera singer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4749626
|
AméricaEconomía
|
AméricaEconomía is a Latin American magazine founded in 1986 by Chilean Elías Selman and Swede Nils Strandberg. The 1980s was considered the lost decade in Latin America, but Selman and Strandberg decided to create the first Latin American business magazine. It is headquartered in Santiago, Chile.Since 1986, AméricaEconomía analyzes the business, economics and finance in Latin America. Today it's published monthly in Spanish and Portuguese. Editors and journalists of the group are in Miami, Santiago, Buenos Aires, Lima, Bogotá, Mexico City and São Paulo. There is also a network of correspondents around the world that covers the development of international business in a Latin American perspective. Since 1993 AméricaEconomía has conducted research and rankings of the major topics of interest to senior executives and entrepreneurs from Latin America.AméricaEconomía has information platforms in regions including Peru, Mexico, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina, and Brazil.
|
magazine
|
[
"magazine"
] |
Q11038496
|
Fimbristylis acuminata
|
Fimbristylis acuminata, commonly known as pointed fimbristylis, is a sedge of the family Cyperaceae that is found in tropical areas extending from India, through parts of South East Asia and into northern Australia.The rhizomatous perennial grass-like or herb sedge typically grows to a height of 0.3 metres (0.98 ft) and has a tufted habit. It blooms between May and August and produces brown flowers.In Western Australia it is found along creeks and in other damp areas in the Kimberley region where it grows in muddy-loamy soils.
|
species of plant
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q21282008
|
Joanna Borowiak
|
Joanna Beata Borowiak (born 20 August 1967) is a Polish politician. She was elected to the Sejm (9th term) representing the constituency of Toruń. She previously also served in the 8th term of the Sejm (2015–2019).
|
Polish politician and deputy
|
[
"human"
] |
Q18367127
|
Ołdaki-Polonia
|
Ołdaki-Polonia [ɔu̯ˈdaki pɔˈlɔɲa] is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Andrzejewo, within Ostrów Mazowiecka County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 kilometres (4 mi) north-east of Andrzejewo, 27 km (17 mi) east of Ostrów Mazowiecka, and 113 km (70 mi) north-east of Warsaw. The village has a population of 110.
|
village in Masovian, Poland
|
[
"village of Poland"
] |
Q4625595
|
2012 Florida A&M Rattlers football team
|
The 2012 Florida A&M Rattlers football team represented Florida A&M University as a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) in the 2012 NCAA Division I FCS football season. The Rattlers were led by fifth year head coach Joe Taylor and played their home games at Bragg Memorial Stadium. They finished the season 4–7 overall and 4–4 in MEAC play to tie for sixth place.
|
American college football team season
|
[
"American football team season"
] |
Q17641611
|
Howden Minster
|
Howden Minster (also known as the Minster Church of St Peter and St Paul, Howden) is a large Grade I listed Church of England church in the Diocese of York. It is located in Howden, East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is one of the largest churches in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It is dedicated to St Peter and St Paul and it is therefore properly known as 'the Minster Church of St Peter and St Paul'. Its Grade I listed status also includes the Chapter House.
|
church in Howden, East Riding of Yorkshire, UK
|
[
"church building"
] |
Q21508585
|
Linz
|
Linz ( LINTS, German: [ˈlɪnts] (listen); Czech: Linec) is the capital of Upper Austria and third-largest city in Austria. In the north of the country, it is on the Danube 30 kilometres (19 miles) south of the Czech border. In 2018, the population was 204,846.In 2009, it was a European Capital of Culture.
|
capital city of Upper Austria, Austria
|
[
"statutory city of Austria",
"big city",
"municipality of Austria"
] |
Q5545755
|
George W. Taylor
|
George W. Taylor (July 10, 1901 – December 15, 1972) was a notable professor of industrial relations at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and is credited with founding the academic field of study known as industrial relations. He served in several capacities in the federal government, most notably as a mediator and arbitrator. During his career, Taylor settled more than 2,000 strikes.In 1967, he helped draft the New York state civil service law which legalized collective bargaining in that state but which also banned strikes by public employees—legislation widely known today as the Taylor Law.
|
American academic
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4318226
|
Andrey Nechaev
|
Andrey Alekseyevich Nechayev (Russian: Андрей Алексеевич Нечаев; born February 2, 1953, Moscow) is a Russian politician, scientist and economist. He is best known for being the first Minister of Economic Development of new Russia, from 1992-1993 (Viktor Chernomyrdin's First Cabinet). Nechayev is one of the authors and active participants in the program of market-oriented economic reforms in Russia.
|
Russian economist and politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q95207647
|
Zinaida Kiriyenko
|
Zinaida Mikhailovna Kiriyenko (Russian: Зинаи́да Миха́йловна Кириенко; 9 July 1933 – 12 February 2022) was a Russian actress and singer, Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1965), People's Artist of the RSFSR (1977). She was known for her roles in the films And Quiet Flows the Don, Fate of a Man, and Chronicle of Flaming Years.
|
Russian actress
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7799063
|
Thunder on the Left
|
Thunder on the Left is a novel by Christopher Morley, originally published in 1925. In it, Morley looks at maturity, individual growth, and human nature. It was adapted as a play by Jean Ferguson Black in 1934. Movie rights in perpetuity were sold to Picture Entertainment International, Lee Caplin, for $52,000 in the 1990s.
|
book by Christopher Morley
|
[
"literary work"
] |
Q6428062
|
Komagatani Station
|
Komagatani Station (駒ヶ谷駅, Komagatani-eki) is a passenger railway station in located in the city of Habikino, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Kintetsu Railway.
|
railway station in Habikino, Osaka prefecture, Japan
|
[
"railway station"
] |
Q1838612
|
Fortjenstmedaljen
|
The Medal of Merit (Danish: Fortjenstmedaljen) is the oldest extant award medal presented by the Kingdom of Denmark. Established by Christian VII on 16 May 1792, and re-instituted by ordinance of Christian VIII on 24 July 1845, it is a personal award of the Sovereign.
|
Danish decoration
|
[
"medal"
] |
Q12281675
|
Ilian Vassilev
|
Ilian Vassilev (Bulgarian: Илиян Василев) (born July 7, 1956) is a Bulgarian diplomat, writer, and political blogger. He was President of the Bulgarian Foreign Investment Agency from 1997 to 2000, the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Bulgaria to the Russian Federation from 2000 to 2006, following which he became Chairman of Deloitte in Bulgaria. At present he is Managing Partner of his own consulting company Innovative Energy Solutions. He is Chairman of the Reform Union Club (RUC) and Honorary Chair of the Bulgarian Economic Forum since its Foundation in 1997. Ilian Vassilev also coordinates the Sofia Business School, a joint undertaking of the RUC and the New Bulgarian University. He has served as advisor on energy related matters to succeeding Bulgarian governments and appears as a regular energy security commentator for western news outlets, including the Financial Times, Reuters, and others.
|
Bulgarian diplomat
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7408605
|
Samanta Bardini
|
Samanta Bardini (born 27 February 1977) is an Italian softball player who competed in the 2004 Summer Olympics.
|
Olympic softball player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5533202
|
Genionys
|
Genionys is a village in Varėna district municipality, in Alytus County, in southeastern Lithuania. According to the 2001 census, the village has a population of 30 people.
|
village in Lithuania
|
[
"village"
] |
Q2056521
|
Pat McGee Band
|
The Pat McGee Band is a rock band from Richmond, Virginia. Formed by frontman Pat McGee, who attended Longwood College in Farmville, VA. On the heels of his solo release From the Wood in 1995, the Pat McGee Band signed with Warner Bros. Records subsidiary Giant Records in 1999. Shine, the band's major-label debut, was released in 2000 with the national singles "Runaway" and "Rebecca". After two years of delays, the band released their second album with Warner, Save Me, in 2004. The band was dropped from the label that year and picked up by Kirtland Records. An enhanced Save Me is now being distributed through Kirtland with the radio single "Must Have Been Love". Former guitarist and vocalist Al Walsh left the band in an amicable split at the end of 2001. Keyboardist and vocalist Jonathan Bryan Williams left in 2003 but rejoined the band in late 2005. Both were significant contributors to the band's sound, particularly in the form of backing vocals. The band didn't see another background vocalist until the 2003 addition of keyboardist/guitarist Todd Wright. Longtime bassist John Small left the band in 2004. With Jonathan's return, Todd Wright has left the band. Todd is now finding success as the front man of his own band, Getaway Car, where he's backed by guitarist Matt Miceli and Crix Reardon - while still a part of Pat McGee Band - on bass. Drummer Chris Williams died in his home October 28, 2006 from complications due to a heart condition. As of June 2007, the.
|
American rock band
|
[
"rock group"
] |
Q322341
|
Pierre-Jean Mariette
|
Pierre-Jean Mariette (7 May 1694 – 10 September 1774) was a collector of and dealer in old master prints, a renowned connoisseur, especially of prints and drawings, and a chronicler of the careers of French Italian and Flemish artists. He was born and died in Paris, and was a central figure in the artistic culture of the city for decades.
|
French art historian
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4580017
|
1981 Texas Longhorns football team
|
The 1981 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 1981 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Longhorns finished the regular season with a 9–1–1 record and defeated Alabama in the 1982 Cotton Bowl Classic.
|
American college football team season
|
[
"American football team season"
] |
Q4153155
|
Gushchino
|
Gushchino (Russian: Гущино) is a rural locality (a village) in Sizemskoye Rural Settlement, Sheksninsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 3 as of 2002.
|
human settlement in Sizemskaya, Sheksninsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia
|
[
"hamlet"
] |
Q7204312
|
Pleasure to Burn
|
Pleasure to Burn is the second album by American hard rock band Systematic, released on April 15, 2003.
|
album by Systematic
|
[
"album"
] |
Q5166990
|
Cook Neilson
|
Cook Neilson (born August 24, 1943) is an American former journalist and motorcycle racer made famous for his win on a Ducati 750SS at Daytona in 1977. He graduated from Princeton in the mid 1960s, was hired as associate editor of Cycle in September 1967; promoted to editor in 1969, and is credited for making that magazine successful through the 1970s. While at Cycle magazine, he wrote a series of articles on the cookbook construction of a 160 mph (260 km/h) Top Fuel Harley-Davidson Sportster. Neilson was inducted into the Ducati North America Hall of Fame, and the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 2006.During his racing career, Neilson had thirty-eight starts and nineteen wins; all on the Ducati 750SS. He also occasionally raced for the Butler & Smith BMW team and the Racecrafter Kawasaki team. Neilson had three podium finishes at Daytona: 1975 (First), 1976 (Third), and 1977 (First). In 2006, Ducati Motor Holdings announced a limited edition replica of Neilson's 750SS winning motorcycle, which he had nicknamed "Old Blue." This motorcycle, named New Blue, will be customized by the NCR racing house based in Bologna. The race replica is in honor of the 30th anniversary of Neilson's win at Daytona. Cook crashed a Desmosedici RR, one of 1,500 produced, at a Ducati-sponsored trackday at Putnam Park Roadcourse on September 15, 2008. He was not injured in the accident.
|
American motorcycle racer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q88722
|
Ernst Adolf Coccius
|
Ernst Adolf Coccius (September 19, 1825 – November 24, 1890) was a German ophthalmologist who was a native of Knauthain, which today is part of the city of Leipzig. He studied medicine in Leipzig, Prague and Paris, and earned his degree in 1848 with the thesis "De morbis typhum sequentibus". From 1849 to 1857 he served as an assistant to Friedrich Philipp Ritterich at the Leipzig Eye Clinic, becoming its director and a full professor in 1867, positions he held up until his death in 1890. After his death, he was succeeded by Hubert Sattler (1844-1928) at the University of Leipzig. In 1853, Coccius provided the first description of retinal breaks of the eye, and subsequently made the association to retinal detachment. In 1853 he devised an ophthalmoscope that was a modification of the device invented by Hermann von Helmholtz (1821-1894). His elder brother was the pianist and pedagogue Theodor Coccius (1824-1897).
|
German ophthalmologist
|
[
"human"
] |
Q889751
|
Japan Ground Self-Defense Force
|
The Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (Japanese: 陸上自衛隊, romanized: Rikujō Jieitai), JGSDF (陸自, Rikuji), also referred to as the Japanese Army, is the land warfare branch of the Japan Self-Defense Forces. Created on July 1, 1954, it is the largest of the three service branches. New military guidelines, announced in December 2010, direct the Japan Self-Defense Forces away from their Cold War focus on the Soviet Union to a new focus on China, especially in respect of the dispute over the Senkaku Islands. The JGSDF operates under the command of the chief of the ground staff, based in the city of Ichigaya, Shinjuku, Tokyo. The present chief of staff is General Gorō Yuasa (湯浅悟郎). The JGSDF numbered around 150,000 soldiers in 2018.
|
army branch of the Japanese armed forces
|
[
"army"
] |
Q31449980
|
Siggenthal-Würenlingen railway station
|
Siggenthal-Würenlingen railway station (German: Bahnhof Siggenthal-Würenlingen) is a railway station in the municipality of Untersiggenthal, in the Swiss canton of Aargau. It is an intermediate stop on the standard gauge Turgi–Koblenz–Waldshut line of Swiss Federal Railways.
|
railway station in Switzerland
|
[
"railway station"
] |
Q56276101
|
Story of Nhô village
|
Story of Nhô village (Vietnamese: Chuyện làng Nhô) is a 1997 Vietnamese telefilm adapted from Nguyễn Quang Thiều's 1994 novel The assassin of the fields (Kẻ ám sát cánh đồng). The film was produced by Vietnam Television Film Center and directed by Đặng Lưu Việt Bảo.
|
1997 film
|
[
"film"
] |
Q11572216
|
The Frolic of the Beasts
|
The Frolic of the Beasts (Japanese: 獣の戯れ, Hepburn: Kemono no Tawamure) is a 1961 novel by Yukio Mishima. It is considered a minor work from Mishima's middle period. Drawing inspiration from Noh plays, specifically the 14th-century Motomezuka, the novel centers on a tragic love triangle depraved by adultery and violence. It is a short novel in length and has a nonlinear narrative structure. The novel was first serialised thirteen times in the weekly magazine Shukan Shincho between 12 June 1961 and 4 September 1961. It was published in hardcover format by Shinchosha on 30 September 1961. It was published in paperback by Shincho Bunko on 10 July 1966. The novel was translated into Italian by Lydia Origlia and published by Feltrinelli in September 1983. The novel was translated into English by Andrew Clare and published in paperback format in the United States and Canada by Vintage International on 27 November 2018. Clare's translation was later published in paperback in the United Kingdom by Penguin Modern Classics on 4 April 2019.The novel was adapted into film by Sōkichi Tomimoto in 1964, starring Ayako Wakao.
|
novel by Yukio Mishima
|
[
"literary work",
"film"
] |
Q26219859
|
athletics at the 2016 Summer Olympics – men's 1500 metres
|
The men's 1500 metres event at the 2016 Summer Olympics took place between 16–20 August at the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Forty-two athletes from 26 nations competed. The event was won by Matthew Centrowitz, Jr. of the United States, the nation's first title in the event since 1908 and third overall. Taoufik Makhloufi and Nick Willis became the seventh and eighth men to win a second medal in the event, with Willis the only one to do so in non-consecutive Games.
|
men's 1500 metres events at the Olympics
|
[
"Olympic sporting event"
] |
Q7903678
|
Uvedale
|
Uvedale may refer to: ForenameUvedale Price (1747–1829), Herefordshire landowner who was at the heart of the 'Picturesque debate' of the 1790s Uvedale Shobdon Corbett DSO (1909–2005), British soldier, politician and businessman Uvedale Tomkins Price (1685–1764), British Member of Parliament Uvedale Corbett Junior Poor Law Inspector Sir Uvedale Corbet, 3rd Baronet (1668–1701)SurnameEdmund Uvedale (disambiguation), more than one person Robert Uvedale (1642–1722), English teacher and horticulturist William Uvedale (ca. 1581–1652), English politician.
|
family name
|
[
"family name"
] |
Q55635712
|
Thirty-eight Infantry Bluff
|
Thirty-eight Infantry Bluff is a cliff along the Nisqually River in the U.S. state of Washington.Thirty-eight Infantry Bluff was named in honor of the 38th Infantry Regiment (United States), for its role in World War I.
|
cliff in United States of America; geonames ID = 5813343
|
[
"cliff"
] |
Q6184235
|
Jerry Patton
|
Jerry Patton (born March 27, 1946, in Saginaw, Michigan – May 19, 1983) was an American football defensive lineman in the National Football League for the Minnesota Vikings, Buffalo Bills, Detroit Lions, Philadelphia Eagles, and the New England Patriots. He played college football at the University of Nebraska.
|
American football player (1946-1983)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q16767013
|
Silva
|
Silva is a surname in Portuguese-speaking countries, such as Portugal and Brazil. It is derived from the Latin word silva, meaning "forest" or "woodland". It is the family name of the House of Silva. The name is also widespread in Galician-speaking regions of Spain (mostly in Galicia) and even more so in regions of the former Portuguese Empire in the Americas (being the most common surname in Brazil), in Africa and Asia, notably in India and Sri Lanka. It is also quite common in Spanish-speaking Latin America. Movement of people has led to the name being used in many places. Due to emigration from Portuguese-speaking countries, Silva (and the variants Da Silva and De Silva) is the fifth most common surname in the French department of Val-de-Marne, outside Paris, and it was the 19th most common family name given to newborns between 1966 and 1990 in France. It is also the seventh most common surname (and the most common non-German, non-French) in Luxembourg. It is also among the top 20 surnames in Andorra, Angola, Cape Verde and Switzerland.
|
family name
|
[
"family name",
"toponymic surname"
] |
Q319834
|
Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza
|
Pietro Paolo Savorgnan di Brazzà, later known as Pierre Paul François Camille Savorgnan de Brazza; 26 January 1852 – 14 September 1905), was an Italian-born, naturalized French explorer. With his family's financial help, he explored the Ogooué region of Central Africa, and later with the backing of the Société de Géographie de Paris, he reached far into the interior along the right bank of the Congo. His friendly manner, great charm and peaceful approach made him popular among Africans. Under French colonial rule, the capital of the Republic of the Congo was named Brazzaville after him and the name was retained by the post-colonial rulers, the only African nation to do so, except for Pretoria, South Africa; Port Louis, Mauritius; and Victoria, Seychelles.
|
Italian explorer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7866789
|
USP13
|
Ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase 13 is an enzyme that in humans is encoded by the USP13 gene.
|
protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens
|
[
"protein-coding gene",
"gene"
] |
Q16158526
|
Judah of Melun
|
Judah of Melun was a French rabbi and tosafist of the first half of the 13th century. He was the son of the tosafist David of Melun (from the area of Seine-et-Marne). In Perez of Corbeil's tosafot to Baba Ḳamma (ed. Leghorn, p. 53a) he is quoted under the name "Judah of Melun." After 1224, he took charge of the Talmud school at Melun He was one of the four rabbis who defended the Talmud against Nicholas Donin in the public disputation at Paris in 1240.
|
13th century Jewish rabbi
|
[
"human"
] |
Q19870942
|
Australian Estates No. 1 Store
|
Australian Estates No.1 Store is a heritage-listed former warehouse and now apartments at 50 Macquarie Street, Teneriffe, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. It was designed by Montague Stanley and built from c. 1926 to 1927 by Stuart Brothers (Sydney). It is now known as the Saratoga Woolstore Apartments. It was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 21 October 1992.
|
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
|
[
"historic site"
] |
Q235682
|
Madison De La Garza
|
Madison Lee De La Garza (born December 28, 2001) is an American actress. De La Garza is known for playing Juanita Solis on Desperate Housewives. She is the younger half-sister of singer Demi Lovato.
|
American actress
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5428194
|
Fabrizio Anselmi
|
Fabrizio Anselmi (born 11 May 1978) is an Italian footballer who plays as a defender. He spent most of his career in Italian Lega Pro.
|
Italian footballer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q1709980
|
Jovita
|
Jovita is a town located south of the Province of Córdoba, in central Argentina. According to the 2010 census, Jovita has a population of 4,470. Jovita is geographically situated in the middle of the Humid Pampa region or Pampa's Plain, and its economy is mainly reliant on cattle farming and agriculture, especially with the farming of soya, sunflower oil, corn and wheat among other products. Jovita was founded in 1905 and its blueprints were made and approved on May 15, 1907 and October 28, 1907. The land on which the town is built were donated by two sisters: Magdalena and Jovita from whom the town now takes its name. Jovitas original name was Pichi Tromen Station "El Juncalito". This was until 1906 when its name was changed to Santa Magdalena and Jovita Station. This name was retained until 1983, when according to resolution N°322/83, its name was changed again to the current name of Jovita.
|
town in Córdoba, Argentina
|
[
"town",
"municipality"
] |
Q5602606
|
Green Grass and High Tides
|
"Green Grass and High Tides" is a song by the Southern rock band Outlaws. It is the tenth and final track on the band's debut album, Outlaws. The song is one of their best known, and has received extensive play on album-oriented radio stations, although it was never released as a single. The song is notable for having two extended guitar solos that stretch the song to nearly 10 minutes. Outlaws founding member Hughie Thomasson said: "I wrote that song in St. Augustine, Florida. We went to a cookout on the beach and everybody forgot to bring their guitars. I was standing by the ocean and there was a breeze and the words kept coming to me. It’s about all the rock stars I liked that died had come back and were playing a show just for me. Like Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison. And eventually more of course." Henry Paul told Songfacts that this song is not about marijuana, but about deceased rock and roll luminaries, and the title, he says, was taken from the 1966 "Best Of" collection by the Rolling Stones called Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass): "From what I gather, there was an album out, the best of The Rolling Stones, called High Tide and Green Grass. That was the name of the Rolling Stones' greatest hits—this is like 1966—and I think it was a manifestation of that title turned in reverse, 'Green Grass and High Tides.' I know that much. And I know that it was a.
|
song by the Outlaws
|
[
"musical work/composition"
] |
Q18752695
|
Theater Altenburg
|
The Landestheater Altenburg is a multi-partstheatre in Altenburg and part of the Theater Altenburg-Gerade. The venues used are the Großes Haus with 500 seats as well as the Heizhaus and the Theater unterm Dach. The general director and managing director since 2011 is Kay Kuntze.
|
German theatre
|
[
"theater"
] |
Q2591113
|
Wolfgang Sandner
|
Wolfgang Sandner (2 March 1949 in Teisendorf – 5 December 2015) was a German physicist who was employed in atomic and laser physics. From 2010 to 2012 he was president of the German Physical Society. Until his death, he was director general of the ELI Delivery Consortium International Association (AISBL) located in Brussels.
|
German physicist (1949-2015)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5191784
|
Ctirad Ovčáčík
|
Ctirad Ovčáčík (born 18 October 1984, in Ostrava) is a Czech professional ice hockey defenceman. He played with HC Vítkovice in the Czech Extraliga during the 2010–11 Czech Extraliga season.
|
Czech ice hockey player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q349636
|
Adam Hall
|
Adam John Hall (born August 14, 1980) is an American former professional ice hockey player. A second round selection of the Nashville Predators in the 1999 NHL Entry Draft, Hall played in the National Hockey League for the Nashville Predators, New York Rangers, Minnesota Wild, Pittsburgh Penguins, Tampa Bay Lightning, Carolina Hurricanes and Philadelphia Flyers. He finished his career in the National League (NL), playing three seasons for HC Ambrì-Piotta.
|
American ice hockey player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q28457313
|
Dataminr
|
Dataminr is a global artificial intelligence company that provides real-time information alerts about high-impact events to hundreds of clients in over 75 countries. The company’s private sector product, Dataminr Pulse, is used by corporations to monitor real-time events, and to aid with crisis response by providing playbooks, messaging tools and post-event documentation. Dataminr's First Alert technology is used by first responders, such as those helping to provide aid during natural disasters and other emergency events.Dataminr employs around 800 people and is headquartered in New York. The company has offices in New York City, Washington, D.C., Bozeman, and Seattle, as well as London, England, Dublin, Ireland, Melbourne, Australia, and Copenhagen, Denmark.
|
artificial intelligence platform for event and risk detection
|
[
"business"
] |
Q6273763
|
Jonathan M. Dorfan
|
Jonathan Manne Dorfan (born October 10, 1947) is a particle physicist and the President-Emeritus of the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Graduate University. He is a former director of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (1999–2007; SLAC). In 2010 he joined the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology as President. In 2017 he was awarded Japan's Order of the Rising Sun.
|
South African physicist
|
[
"human"
] |
Q20012181
|
Coward
|
Coward is the sixth studio album from Haste the Day. Solid State Records released the album on May 18, 2015. The album was released following the band's successful funding campaign via the crowdfunding website IndieGoGo, to which fans contributed more than twice the band's original goal. Coward is unique in that it features contributions from every member throughout the band's career, and is the first studio album to feature original vocalist Jimmy Ryan since the band's 2005 release When Everything Falls.
|
album by Haste the Day
|
[
"album"
] |
Q22058567
|
Swift
|
Swift is an unincorporated community in Baldwin County, Alabama, United States.
|
unincorporated community in Alabama
|
[
"unincorporated community in the United States"
] |
Q56816031
|
2019 SAFF Women's Championship
|
The 2019 SAFF Women's Championship was the 5th edition of the SAFF Women's Championship, the biennial international women's football championship contested by the national teams of the South Asian Football Federation (SAFF). Initially, scheduled from 17 to 26 December 2018 in Sri Lanka, the competition was rescheduled, as Sri Lanka withdrew as hosts. Afterwards, it was scheduled to be held in 2019 from 12–22 March and to be hosted by Nepal. India won the tournament by defeating Nepal 3–1 in the final.
|
international football competition
|
[
"sports season",
"SAFF Women's Championship"
] |
Q6807044
|
Mediterranean Cosmos
|
Mediterranean Cosmos is a shopping mall located in Pylaia on the east side of Thessaloniki, the second-largest city in Greece. It opened officially in October 2005 and it claims to be the largest retail and entertainment development in Southeastern Europe. It contains more than 200 retail units and facilities including an 11-screen multiplex cinema, numerous shops of fashion and electronics goods as well as coffeehouses, restaurants, bars, a supermarket, an Amphitheatre with a capacity of 400 people and an Eastern Orthodox church of St Andrew. The mall is located about 5 km away from Thessaloniki International Airport, "Macedonia", close to the busy suburb of Kalamaria and the Interbalkan Medical Center. It can be accessed by Greek National Road 67, the highway connecting Thessaloniki with the southern part of Chalkidiki. Inside the mall, a multitude of roads and squares have been created to reflect the character of traditional cities of Northern Greece in combination with the advantages of a modern city's center. In June 2012 the company that owns the mall, Lamda Development, announced that they will begin to charge parking fees from mid-February 2013.
|
shopping mall in Pylaia, Thessaloniki, Greece
|
[
"shopping center"
] |
Q15691176
|
A. M. Rathnam
|
A. M. Rathnam is an Indian film producer known for his works in Telugu cinema and Tamil cinema. Under the gamut of Sri Surya Movies Entertainment, Hyderabad, a movie production house owned by him, he has produced blockbusters in Telugu such as Karthavyam (1990), Peddarikam (1992), Sneham Kosam (1999) and Kushi (2001). He ventured into Tamil cinema in 1996 with the blockbuster Indian, which was India's Official Entry for the Best Foreign Language Film for the Academy Awards. He then produced films such as Kushi, Run, Boys, Enakku 20 Unakku 18, Dhool, Ghilli, 7G Rainbow Colony, Arrambam, Bangaram, Yennai Arindhaal and Vedalam.
|
film producer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q42186607
|
Tobacco Road
|
Tobacco Road is a 1932 novel by Erskine Caldwell about Georgia sharecroppers. It was dramatized for Broadway by Jack Kirkland in 1933, and ran for eight years. A 1941 film version, deliberately played mainly for laughs, was directed by John Ford, and the storyline was considerably altered. In 1998, the Modern Library ranked Tobacco Road number 91 on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. The novel was included in Life magazine's list of the 100 outstanding books of 1924–1944.
|
1932 novel by Erskine Caldwell
|
[
"literary work"
] |
Q2939665
|
Carmona
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Carmona is a genus of flowering plants in the borage family, Boraginaceae. Members of the genus are commonly known as scorpionbush. Carmona retusa (Fukien tea tree) is used in bonsai because of its ability to develop a thick and interesting trunk, small white flowers that bloom almost year-round, and tiny round green, red, or black fruits. The lobed leaves are shiny dark green and maintain their small size.
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genus of plants
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[
"taxon"
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Q2822093
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Abu Said Gorgani
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Abu Sa'id al-Dharir al-Jurjani (ابو سعيد الضرير الجرجاني), also Gurgani, was a 9th-century Persian mathematician and astronomer from Gurgan (Jurjan), Iran. He wrote a treatise on geometrical problems and another on the drawing of the meridian. George Sarton considers him a pupil of Ibn al-A'rabi, but Carl Brockelmann rejects this opinion.
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Islamic mathematician and astronomer
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[
"human"
] |
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