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Q7900541
|
Uria River
|
The Uria (in its upper course also: Lupul) is a right tributary of the river Olt in Romania. It flows into the Olt in Câinenii Mari. Its length is 16 km (9.9 mi) and its basin size is 36 km2 (14 sq mi).
|
river in Romania
|
[
"river"
] |
Q7054050
|
North Balgowlah
|
North Balgowlah is a suburb of Northern Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. North Balgowlah is located 13 kilometres north-east of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Northern Beaches Council, and part of the Northern Beaches region. North Balgowlah shares the postcode 2093 with the adjacent Balgowlah and Balgowlah Heights. There is access to Manly Dam Memorial Park from many streets in North Balgowlah for bushwalking, kayaking, swimming, and water-skiing. Manly Dam also has a children's playground which is currently being re-developed, and multiple picnic areas North Balgowlah is home to a primary school, Community Centre, park and local shops.
|
locality in New South Wales, Australia
|
[
"suburb"
] |
Q2996260
|
Jarnac Convention
|
The Jarnac Convention was a bilateral agreement between the Kingdom of France and the United Kingdom in 1847 at the end of the Franco-Tahitian War. Its purpose was to end Franco-British diplomatic tension by guaranteeing the independence of the Leeward Islands in Polynesia. It was abrogated with the agreement of both parties in 1887.
|
1847 treaty between France and the United Kingdom
|
[
"treaty"
] |
Q21519173
|
Sakellariou
|
Sakellarios (Greek: Σακελλάριος), genitive and feminine form Sakellariou (Σακελλαρίου), is a Greek surname deriving from the Byzantine office of sakellarios. The surname may refer to: Alekos Sakellarios (1913-1991), film director Alexandros Sakellariou (1887-1982), admiral and defence minister Georgios Sakellarios (1765-1838), physician of Ali Pasha Pericles A. Sakellarios (1905-1985), architect Rita Sakellariou (1934-1999), singer.
|
family name (Σακελλαρίου)
|
[
"family name"
] |
Q26837394
|
Benjamin Fernandes
|
Benjamin Fernandes (born 25 November 1992) is a Tanzanian entrepreneur and former national television presenter. He worked at The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in the United States in their Digital Team and Financial Services team. He is the first Tanzanian to attend Stanford Graduate School of Business as an Africa MBA Fellow and the youngest African to ever be accepted to Stanford Graduate School of Business. In 2017, Fernandes became the first Tanzanian in history to attend both Stanford Graduate School of Business and Harvard John F. Kennedy School of Government for an executive education program.
|
Tanzanian award winning speaker and national television personality
|
[
"human"
] |
Q24911353
|
Abu Jarash
|
Abu Jarash (Arabic: أبو جرش) is a neighborhood and district of the al-Salihiyah municipality of Damascus, Syria. It had a population of 12,798 in the 2004 census. In the 1936 French Mandate census, Abu Jarash had a population of 9,600, all Muslims. The neighborhood was built around the domed mausoleum of Abu Jarash, also known as Abdallah ibn Sala al-Raqqi, a high-ranking Ayyubid royal court official.
|
neighborhood in Damascus, Damascus Governorate, Syria
|
[
"neighborhood"
] |
Q10780429
|
Kocaköy
|
Kocaköy is a small village in Tarsus district of Mersin Province, Turkey. It is situated at 36°55′N 35°02′E in the Çukurova plains. Its distance to Tarsus is 12 kilometres (7.5 mi) and to Mersin is 40 kilometres (25 mi). Although its name mean "big village" actually it is one of the least populous settlements in Tarsus district with a population of only 46. as of 2012.
|
village in Mersin Province, Turkey
|
[
"village"
] |
Q16355917
|
Safien
|
Safien is a former municipality in the district of Surselva in the Swiss canton of Graubünden. The municipalities of Valendas, Versam, Safien and Tenna merged on 1 January 2013 into the new municipality of Safiental.
|
former municipality of Switzerland
|
[
"former municipality of Switzerland",
"village",
"municipality of Switzerland"
] |
Q1396334
|
Samuel Osgood
|
Samuel Osgood (February 3, 1747 – August 12, 1813) was an American merchant and statesman born in Andover, Massachusetts, currently a part of North Andover, Massachusetts. His family home still stands at 440 Osgood Street in North Andover and his home in New York City, the Samuel Osgood House, served as the country's first Presidential mansion. He served in the Massachusetts and New York State legislatures, represented Massachusetts in the Continental Congress and was the fourth Postmaster General of the United States (the first under the current Constitution), serving during George Washington's first term. In 1812, he was elected the first president of the newly formed City Bank of New York, which later became Citibank, predecessor of today's Citigroup.
|
American politician (1748-1813)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5421432
|
Explosive Ordnance Disposal Badge
|
The Explosive Ordnance Disposal Badge is a military badge of the United States Armed Forces which recognizes those service members, qualified as explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) technicians, who are specially trained to deal with the construction, deployment, disarmament, and disposal of high explosive munitions including other types of ordnance such as nuclear, biological and chemical weapons along with improvised explosive devices (IED) and improvised nuclear devices (IND). Also known as the “EOD Badge” or "Crab", the decoration is issued by the United States Army, Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps. The EOD Badge is the only occupational badge awarded to all four services under the United States Department of Defense. First created in the 1950s, the EOD Badge is issued in three levels and is identical for all branches of service. Although each service has its own requirements the basic EOD badge is issued upon completion of explosive handling training and between 18–24 months of on-the-job field training. The Senior EOD Badge is issued after 3–5 years as an explosive ordnance specialist and the Master Explosive Ordnance Disposal Badge is issued after 7–15 years of service in a senior supervisory position.
|
military badge of the United States Armed Forces for members qualified as explosive ordnance disposal technicians
|
[
"military decoration"
] |
Q47126967
|
Alessandro Franzetti
|
Alessandro Franzetti (born 16 May 1991) is an Italian paralympic rower who won a gold medal as cox at the 2008 Summer Paralympics (he was seventeen).
|
Italian rower
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4105204
|
Vasyutino, Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast
|
Vasyutino (Russian: Васютино) is a rural locality (a village) in Prigorodnoye Rural Settlement, Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 143 as of 2002.
|
human settlement in Sokolsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia
|
[
"hamlet"
] |
Q7454467
|
Sergithang Gewog
|
Sergithang Gewog (Dzongkha: གསེར་གྱི་ཐང་) (old name: Patalay) is one of the twelve gewogs (village blocks or counties) of Tsirang District, Bhutan. Sergithang Gewog is located in the northwest of Tsirang District, east of the River Puna Tsang Chu, north of its tributary Burichu, west of Pungtencchu Gewog and south of Wangdue Phodrang District.
|
gewog in Tsirang District, Bhutan
|
[
"gewog of Bhutan"
] |
Q15762069
|
Socio-Economic Planning Sciences
|
Socio-Economic Planning Sciences (full title: Socio-Economic Planning Sciences: The International Journal of Public Sector Decision-Making) is a bi-monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal covering socio-economics as it relates to development economics and public policy. It was established in 1967 and is published by Elsevier. The editor-in-chief is Rajan Batta (University at Buffalo). According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2021 impact factor of 4.923.
|
journal
|
[
"scientific journal"
] |
Q2997697
|
Rokytne Raion, Kyiv Oblast
|
Rokytne Raion (Ukrainian: Рокитнянський район) was a raion (district) in Kyiv Oblast of Ukraine. Its administrative center was the urban-type settlement of Rokytne. The raion was abolished on 18 July 2020 as part of the administrative reform of Ukraine, which reduced the number of raions of Kyiv Oblast to seven. The last estimate of the raion population was 25,729 (2020 est.).
|
Kyiv district
|
[
"raion of Ukraine"
] |
Q48975091
|
Giuseppe Baldini
|
Giuseppe Baldini (1807 – 1876) was an Italian painter, specializing in portraits, landscapes, and religious subjects, born in Livorno where he worked most of his life.
|
Italian painter
|
[
"human"
] |
Q3129746
|
Papa Dee
|
David Christopher Daniel Wahlgren (born 13 July 1966), better known by the stage name Papa Dee, is a Swedish rapper. His most commercially successful track is his version of the Cat Stevens song "The First Cut Is the Deepest".
|
Swedish musician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q95830
|
Peter Eigen
|
Peter Eigen (born June 11, 1938 in Augsburg, Germany) is a lawyer, development economist and civil society leader. Over a period of 12 years, Eigen founded and chaired Transparency International (TI), a non-governmental organization with National Chapters in over 100 countries. Founded in 1993, TI promotes transparency and accountability in government, business and international development.
|
German lawyer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q1680946
|
James P. Woods
|
James Pleasant Woods (February 4, 1868 – July 7, 1948) was a U.S. Representative from Virginia.
|
American politician (1868-1948)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q3952004
|
A Joke of Destiny
|
A Joke of Destiny (Italian: Scherzo del destino in agguato dietro l'angolo come un brigante da strada) is a 1983 Italian comedy film directed by Lina Wertmüller. It was entered into the 14th Moscow International Film Festival.
|
1983 film by Lina Wertmüller
|
[
"film"
] |
Q21573885
|
Kenya national under-20 football team
|
The Kenya national under-20 football team represents Kenya in football at this age level and is controlled by the Football Kenya Federation. The team competes in the African U-20 Championship, held every two years.
|
national association football team
|
[
"national sports team",
"national association football team"
] |
Q2609832
|
Ron Bontemps
|
Ronald Yngve Bontemps (August 11, 1926 – May 13, 2017) was an American basketball player who competed in the 1952 Summer Olympics. He was born in Taylorville, Illinois and attended Beloit College. He was a captain of the United States men's basketball team, which won the gold medal in the 1952 Olympic Games. He played in all eight games. Bontemps died on May 13, 2017 in Peoria, Illinois, aged 90.
|
American basketball player (1926-2017)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4884194
|
Bellulia kendricki
|
Bellulia kendricki is a moth of the family Erebidae first described by Michael Fibiger in 2010. It is known from Hainan in China.
|
species of insect
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q676666
|
Macroglossum belis
|
Macroglossum belis, the common hummingbird hawkmoth, is a moth of the family Sphingidae. It was described by Carl Linnaeus in his 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. It is known from Sri Lanka, India, Nepal, Thailand, southern China, Taiwan, Japan (Ryukyu Archipelago), Vietnam and Indonesia (Java).
|
species of moth
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q15396325
|
Beaufortia sprengelioides
|
Beaufortia sprengelioides is a plant in the myrtle family, Myrtaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a rigid, spreading shrub with crowded, round leaves and small, roughly spherical heads of pale pink flowers on the ends of its branches. It was one of the first Australian plant species collected by Europeans and has had several name changes since then.
|
species of plant
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q7792550
|
Thomas Morgan
|
Sir Thomas Morgan (died 5 June 1565) was an English Member of Parliament. He was the eldest son of Sir William Morgan of Pencoed, Monmouthshire. He was a Gentleman pensioner from 1540 to 1544 and a Justice of the Peace for Monmouthshire from 1543 until his death. He served in the French wars in 1544 and was knighted at the siege of Boulogne. He was elected M.P. for Monmouthshire on his return in 1546 and was appointed High Sheriff of Monmouthshire for 1547–48 and 1558–59. He married Cecily, the daughter of Sir George Herbert of Swansea, Glamorgan; they had 5 sons and a daughter. His son, Sir William was an M.P. for Monmouth Boroughs.
|
English Member of Parliament, died 1565
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7369248
|
Ross Corner
|
Ross Corner is an unincorporated community in Imperial County, California. It is located 2 miles (3 km) west-southwest of Bard on County Route S24, at an elevation of 131 feet (40 m).The name, bestowed in 1917, honors William Crawford Ross, an early settler who opened a gas station there.
|
unincorporated community in California
|
[
"unincorporated community in the United States"
] |
Q690313
|
Dean Shiels
|
Dean Andrew Shiels (born 1 February 1985) is a Northern Irish former footballer, who is the current manager of Dungannon Swifts. He played for Hibernian, Doncaster Rovers, Kilmarnock, Rangers, Dundalk, FC Edmonton and Dunfermline Athletic, and made 14 full international appearances for Northern Ireland. His father is Kenny Shiels, who was his manager at Kilmarnock.
|
British footballer (born 1985)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7962003
|
Walk Amongst the Living
|
Walk Amongst the Living is the fourth album by British synthpop band Blue October.
|
album by Blue October
|
[
"album"
] |
Q61668396
|
Marina Saito
|
Marina Saito (斉藤 真理菜, Saitō Marina, born 15 October 1995) is a Japanese athlete specialising in the javelin throw. She represented her country at the 2017 World Championships. In addition, she won the silver medal at the 2017 Summer Universiade. Her personal best in the event is 62.37 metres set in Taipei in 2017.
|
Japanese athlete
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4776636
|
Antonio Gaona
|
Antonio Gaona (1793–1848) was a general in the Mexican army of the 19th century. He served under Mexican President Antonio López de Santa Anna during the Texas revolution and Mexican–American War.
|
Mexican general
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7322740
|
Ricardo Montaner
|
Ricardo Montaner is the eponymous debut studio album recorded by Argentine-Venezuelan singer-songwriter Ricardo Montaner. It was released by Sono-Rodven Discos in 1986. It reached No. 1 on the Billboard Latin Pop Albums chart.
|
album by Ricardo Montaner
|
[
"album"
] |
Q5274807
|
Diego Salcedo
|
Bishop Diego Salcedo Benacos (May 30, 1575 – April 2, 1644) was a Spanish bishop. He became Roman Catholic bishop of Astorga in 1639, and died in 1644.
|
Spanish bishop
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5415090
|
Eva Krapl
|
Eva Krapl (January 16, 1966) is a former professional tennis player from Switzerland, active from 1987 to 1990.Krapl currently works as a coach in the TIF Academy in Switzerland.
|
Swiss tennis player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q96219316
|
Laura Lexx
|
Laura Lexx (born 28 September 1986) is an English comedian and writer originally from Somerset.
|
British comedian and writer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q431807
|
Barbara Amiel
|
Barbara Joan Estelle Amiel, Baroness Black of Crossharbour, DSS (born 4 December 1940), is a British-Canadian conservative journalist, writer, and socialite. She is married to former media proprietor Conrad Black.
|
British journalist, writer, and socialite
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7660751
|
Sylvester
|
Sylvester is a locality in northern Alberta, Canada within the County of Grande Prairie No. 1. It is approximately 41 km (25 mi) southwest of Highway 43 and 75 km (47 mi) west of Grande Prairie. The locality of Sylvester was centered on Sylvester Post Office established in June 1936 about 60 km (37 mi) west-southwest of Grande Prairie on the NW quarter of section 19, township 69, range 11, west of the 6th meridian. It took its name from nearby Sylvester Creek, which in turn was named after Sylvester Belcourt, an Iroquois Cree Metis fur trapper who had settled in the area. The post office also contained a store. The first postmaster was T.R. Elliot. Across from Elliott's store and post office was Itipaw School, a one-room log school which had been built in 1934. The post office closed in 1951, and the school in 1952. Information on Sylvester locality and the people who lived there can be found in Beaverlodge to the Rockies.
|
community in Alberta, Canada
|
[
"human settlement"
] |
Q3470236
|
Saltfleetby
|
Saltfleetby is a village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England on the coast of the North Sea, approximately 7 miles (11 km) east from Louth and 10 miles (16 km) north from Mablethorpe. The parish had a population of 599 in the 2001 Census, decreasing to 568 at the 2011 Census.A local name for the village is Soloby.Until 1999 Saltfleetby comprised three parishes: Saltfleetby St Peter, Saltfleetby All Saints and Saltfleetby St Clement, each one centred on the church that gave it its name. The hamlet of Three Bridges is south of Saltfleetby St Peter. Saltfleetby contains a wooden village hall, fishing lakes with a campsite and shop, and the Prussian Queen public house. Saltfleetby Gas Field, north of North End Lane, is part of the neighbouring village of South Cockerington.
|
coastal civil parish in Lincolnshire, England
|
[
"civil parish"
] |
Q6658304
|
Liverpool 9–0 Crystal Palace
|
On 12 September 1989, Liverpool faced Crystal Palace in a First Division fixture at Anfield, during the 1989–90 season. Crystal Palace were newly promoted to the Division, while Liverpool had been narrowly pipped to the League title by Arsenal in the previous season. Liverpool won the match 9–0, recording their biggest ever top-flight win, and inflicting Palace's heaviest ever defeat. Eight different players scored for Liverpool, the first time this has happened for the same club in English football history.
|
football match
|
[
"association football match of club teams"
] |
Q42310488
|
Sonny Spencer
|
Sonny Spencer (18 May 1903 – 21 November 1943) was a British middle-distance runner. He competed in the men's 1500 metres at the 1924 Summer Olympics. He was killed in action during World War II.
|
British middle-distance runner
|
[
"human"
] |
Q3114169
|
1992 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix
|
The 1992 Porsche Tennis Grand Prix was a women's tennis tournament played on indoor hard courts at the Filderstadt Tennis Centre in Filderstadt, Germany and was part of the Tier II of the 1992 WTA Tour. It was the 15th edition of the tournament and was held from 12 October to 18 October 1992. On her 36th birthday third-seeded Martina Navratilova won the singles title, her sixth at the event, and earned $70,000 first-prize money.
|
tennis tournament
|
[
"tennis tournament edition"
] |
Q22024187
|
Old Hartwick Village Cemetery
|
Old Hartwick Village Cemetery, also known as Robinson Cemetery, is a historic cemetery located near Hartwick in Otsego County, New York. The cemetery was established in 1797 and contains approximately 300 burials. The markers date from the late-1790s through about 1880, with the majority dated between about 1825 and 1865.: 3–4 It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013.
|
historic cemetery in New York, United States
|
[
"cemetery"
] |
Q15715949
|
Museum of Death
|
Museum of Death is a museum with locations on Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, Los Angeles, and New Orleans. It was established in June 1995 by J. D. Healy and Catherine Shultz with the museum's stated goal being "to make people happy to be alive. "The museum was originally established in 1995 in San Diego, in a building the owners claimed was the city's first mortuary. It began as a hobby of the founders J. D. Healy and Catherine Shultz. They would write to serial killers they were interested in, and then show off the artwork their pen pals had created once a year at a specialist show. In 1995, after a few years of exhibitions, the collection, and many other materials, were made into a museum.In late 1999, the couple attempted to acquire a large amount of materials from the Heaven's Gate cult suicides. Although they had been able to purchase many items prior to the main police auction, their interest in buying enough merchandise to recreate the scene in its entirety, led to enormous press interest and publicity. They were subsequently evicted by their landlord, and moved to Hollywood Boulevard in Los Angeles.Prior to the new Los Angeles building becoming a museum, the building was the home of Westbeach Recorders, and prior to that, Producers Studio, where Pink Floyd and others recorded. The walls include deadening agents to help with recordings, which now serve to lend a quiet acoustic setting for the various exhibitions.
|
museum
|
[
"museum"
] |
Q7437349
|
Scott Targett
|
Scott Targett is a businessman in the province of New Brunswick, Canada. He is also a former politician having served in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 2003 to 2006.A Liberal, he served in the shadow cabinet of Shawn Graham critiquing the ministers of natural resources and later human resources. He was also chair of the Liberal caucus from 2003 to 2004.Born in rural New Brunswick, Targett was educated at the University of New Brunswick. He married Rhonda MacDonald.
|
Canadian politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q54959092
|
Claire Ptak
|
Claire Ptak is an American baker, food writer, and food stylist. She owns and runs a bakery-café, Violet Cakes, in London's East End. Alongside running her own business, Ptak has also published an array of cookbooks and written a food column for the Guardian and the Observer Food Monthly. She is widely known for having baked the royal wedding cake for the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex – a layered sponge filled and covered with a lemon and elderflower buttercream icing.
|
American baker, pastry chef, and food writer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q5236917
|
David M. Gilbert
|
David M. Gilbert is an American molecular biologist, known for work in DNA replication. He is currently an investigator at the San Diego Biomedical Research Institute. Gilbert was formerly a Professor of Molecular Biology in the Department of Biological Science and Co-founder and Former Director of the Center for Genomics and Personalized Medicine at Florida State University. Gilbert’s work focuses on the mechanisms regulating DNA replication during the cell cycle and the relationship between DNA replication and structural and functional organization of chromosomes, most recently during differentiation in human and mouse embryonic stem cells and in pediatric leukemia. Gilbert received his BA degrees in Biochemistry/Cell Biology and Philosophy from the University of California, San Diego and his PhD in Genetics from Stanford University. He did two post-doctoral training periods, first as an EMBO fellow with Pierre Chambon in Strasbourg, France, studying transcriptional control, and second as a Roche fellow with Melvin DePamphilis studying replication origin recognition. He joined the faculty at State University of New York (SUNY) Upstate Medical University in 1994 and was appointed full professor in 2003. In 2006, he moved to Florida State University. He was elected as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in 2008, as well as becoming a member of the American Society of Hematology in 2013 and the International Society for Stem Cell Research in 2014. Gilbert's other awards include being named Florida State University Distinguished Research Professor (2015), the Pfeiffer Endowed Professorship for Cancer Research (2015), and the Florida State University Graduate.
|
American scientist
|
[
"human"
] |
Q168028
|
United States Army Vietnam
|
United States Army Republic of Vietnam (USARV) was a corps-level support command of the United States Army in the Vietnam War.
|
military unit
|
[
"Army Service Component Command"
] |
Q15455342
|
Stelis canae
|
Stelis canae is a species of orchid plant native to Panama.
|
species of plant
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q87937878
|
Leonela Paola Yúdica
|
Leonela Paola Yúdica Andino (born 18 September 1988) is an Argentine professional boxer who has held the IBF female flyweight title since 2014. As of September 2020, she is ranked as the world's third best active female flyweight by BoxRec and fifth by The Ring.
|
Argentine professional boxer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7971207
|
Warwick Township
|
Warwick Township is a township in north-central Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 17,783 at the 2010 census. It completely surrounds the borough of Lititz and contains the unincorporated villages of Brunnerville, Disston, Kissel Hill, Lexington, Millway, and Rothsville.
|
township in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania
|
[
"township of Pennsylvania"
] |
Q610515
|
Antón Arrufat
|
Antón Arrufat Mrad (born 14 August 1935, Santiago de Cuba, Cuba) is a Cuban dramatist, novelist, short story writer, poet and essayist. Arrufat is of mixed Catalan and Lebanese parentage. At the age of 11, he moved with his family from Santiago de Cuba to Havana. He studied philology at the University of Havana. His first book appeared in 1962, a collection of his early poems. He won the Premio Nacional de Literatura de Cuba in 2000.The Antón Arrufat Papers are held at Princeton University Library. The consist "of manuscripts of poems, short stories, novels, and criticism by Antón Arrufat, Virgilio Piñera, and Witold Gombrowicz; and correspondence of Antón Arrufat.".
|
Cuban dramatist
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7738982
|
The Hassles
|
The Hassles were a rock group in the 1960s, most notable for recording the first releases to feature Billy Joel. The group released two full-length albums (United Artists Records) and a number of singles.
|
American psychedelic rock band
|
[
"rock group"
] |
Q21996957
|
Gwendolyn Wilson Fowler
|
Gwendolyn Wilson Fowler (December 8, 1907 – November 19, 1997) was an African-American pharmacist, the first black woman licensed in Iowa. She also became the first African-American woman from Iowa to serve in the United States Foreign Service, when she was posted to Vietnam in the 1950s. She was inducted into the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in 1987.
|
African-American pharmacist
|
[
"human"
] |
Q595829
|
Porchères
|
Porchères (French pronunciation: [pɔʁʃɛʁ]) is a commune in the Gironde department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France.
|
commune in Gironde, France
|
[
"commune of France"
] |
Q121062
|
Alfred Biolek
|
Alfred Franz Maria Biolek (10 July 1934 – 23 July 2021) was a German entertainer and television producer. Biolek held a PhD in law and was an honorary professor at the Academy of Media Arts Cologne. He received many awards for his work on television which included popular long-running series, and pioneering work for talk shows and cooking shows in the 1970s. He also received awards for his efforts for promoting the culture of food and wine. He supported and founded charities for Africa.
|
German entertainer and television producer (1934-2021)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q16502858
|
Smuts Ngonyama
|
Lulama Smuts Ngonyama (born 22 August 1952) is a South African ambassador previously to Spain and currently to Japan, and a former head of communications for the African National Congress (ANC) in South Africa. He was born in Uitenhage, attended school in Fort Beaufort and graduated from the University of Fort Hare.Following the removal of President Thabo Mbeki from the presidency in 2008, Ngonyama announced his resignation from the ANC to join the Congress of the People (COPE) breakaway party led by Mosiuoa Lekota and Mbhazima Shilowa.Ngonyama was Spokesperson and Public Secretary of COPE. However, on 25 April 2014 Ngonyama resigned from COPE, citing the directionless nature of the movement.
|
South African politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4873220
|
Battlesden House
|
Battlesden House was a large manor house situated in parkland, Battlesden Park, close to the hamlet of Battlesden in Bedfordshire, England. A manor house was constructed in the late 16th century and was associated with the family of Lord Bathurst before he sold the estate to Sir Gregory Page in 1724. The estate was later inherited by Page's great-nephew Sir Gregory Page-Turner in 1775.The original house was demolished in 1860 and a new house was built in 1864. This had 40 rooms and a large ballroom and cost £70,000 to build, while the surrounding parkland and lake were created by Sir Joseph Paxton. However, the owner, Sir Edward Page-Turner did not like the house, preferring to let it to a wealthy tenant before selling the estate to Francis Russell, 9th Duke of Bedford in 1885. The Duke, who already owned two country houses in the county, was interested in the land rather than the building, so he ordered the partial demolition of the house in 1886. Only the ground floor was retained, which was used as a nursing home during the First World War and a maternity home in the Second World War. This was demolished after the war leaving just the Garden House, which is today a private dwelling. Two identical lodges built in a style to match the house, one on the A5 Watling Street and the other on A4012 (now, in 2019, the B5704) near Milton Bryan provided access to the estate, and remain in existence although in private ownership.According to legend, the.
|
Country house in Bedfordshire, UK
|
[
"English country house"
] |
Q7128964
|
Pam O'Neil
|
Pamela Frances O'Neil (born 20 September 1945) is a former Australian politician. She was the Labor member for Fannie Bay in the Northern Territory Legislative Assembly from 1977 to 1983. In 1984, she was appointed Australia's first Sex Discrimination Commissioner by the Hawke Government, holding the position until 1988 when she was succeeded by Quentin Bryce.
|
Australian politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q16584108
|
Jota González
|
Jesús Javier González (born 2 February 1972), known as Jota González, is a Spanish handball head coach. He is the second manager of Paris Saint-Germain Handball. He was the manager of Liga ASOBAL club Naturhouse La Rioja, and has taken the team to the EHF Cup.
|
Spanish handball head coach
|
[
"human"
] |
Q4647718
|
A. E. Cook House
|
The A. E. Cook House is an historic house at 176 Aldrich Street in Uxbridge, Massachusetts. The construction date of this 1+1⁄2 story wood frame Cape style house is not known; based on stylistic analysis, it may have been built as early as 1750, making it one of the older homes in South Uxbridge. All of its facades are asymmetrical in appearance; the main facade has a central door, with two windows on one side, and one on the other. The house's age is in part given by its massive central chimney.On October 7, 1983, it was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
|
United States historic place
|
[
"house"
] |
Q2460505
|
Gmina Mińsk Mazowiecki
|
Gmina Mińsk Mazowiecki is a rural gmina (administrative district) in Mińsk County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. Its seat is the town of Mińsk Mazowiecki, although the town is not part of the territory of the gmina. The gmina covers an area of 112.28 square kilometres (43.4 sq mi), and as of 2006 its total population is 12,876 (14,628 in 2013). There is nature reserve called Marsh of Pogorzel, with drosera rotundifolia flowers..
|
rural gmina of Poland
|
[
"rural municipality of Poland"
] |
Q3627139
|
1987–88 A.S. Roma season
|
A.S. Roma returned to prominence with a 3rd place in Serie A under returning coach Nils Liedholm. With new signings such as Rudi Völler and Lionello Manfredonia, Roma was able to qualify for international football once again, with playmaker Giuseppe Giannini arguably playing at his very peak, setting a career record 11 league goals from attacking midfield.
|
A.S. Roma 1987–88 football season
|
[
"association football team season"
] |
Q4651702
|
AGS Entertainment
|
AGS Entertainment is an Indian film production, distribution company and multiplex chain in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. It was established in 2006 by three brothers Kalpathi S. Aghoram, Kalpathi S.Ganesh and Kalpathi S. Suresh.
|
Indian entertainment company
|
[
"business"
] |
Q6363221
|
Kanin, Pomeranian Voivodeship
|
Kanin [ˈkanin] (German: Schlüsselberg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Nowa Wieś Lęborska, within Lębork County, Pomeranian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 5 kilometres (3 mi) west of Nowa Wieś Lęborska, 6 km (4 mi) west of Lębork, and 67 km (42 mi) west of the regional capital Gdańsk. For details of the history of the region, see History of Pomerania. The village has a population of 50.
|
village in Pomeranian, Poland
|
[
"village of Poland"
] |
Q14935778
|
Arubiddy Station
|
Arubiddy Station is a pastoral lease that operates as a sheep station in Western Australia. It is located 394 kilometres (245 mi) east of Norseman and 489 kilometres (304 mi) south east of Laverton on the Nullarbor Plain in the Goldfields-Esperance region. The station occupies an area of 3,144 square kilometres (1,214 sq mi) and has a carrying capacity of 21,000 sheep. The station is composed of open grassland and saltbush with no salt lakes or heavy scrub, all divided into 44 well fenced paddocks that respond quickly after rain. The property has a machinery shed, a six stand woolshed, with extensive weldmesh yards and a drafting facility, and is fenced with 1,650 kilometres (1,025 mi) of fencing. No surface water sources exist and bores are used to water stock. There are a total of 12 bores with 127 kilometres (79 mi) of piping to distribute water about the property.Arrubiddy was established in 1961 along with other properties in the area, including Rawlinna, Kanandah and Moonera Stations, then later Kybo and Balgair were established.The current homestead was built in 1969, constructed from brick and has three bedrooms, one bathroom and two loungerooms. Another cottage exists near the homestead with quarters for another twenty staff with mess facilities, known as the shearers' quarters. There is a two bedroom cottage also located near the homestead for an overseer. There is also a three bedroom house located near the highway for another staff member and their family. The Brown family took over at Arubiddy in the 1970s and continued.
|
Pastoral lease in Goldfields=Esperance region of Western Australia
|
[
"pastoral lease"
] |
Q14927774
|
Enoclerus lecontei
|
Enoclerus lecontei, the blackbellied clerid, is a species of checkered beetle in the family Cleridae. It is found in Central America and North America.
|
species of insect
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q675360
|
canton of Crozon
|
The canton of Crozon is an administrative division of the Finistère department, northwestern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Crozon.It consists of the following communes:.
|
canton of France
|
[
"canton of France"
] |
Q11308965
|
Diacetyl reductase, (S)-acetoin forming
|
Diacetyl reductase ((S)-acetoin forming) (EC 1.1.1.304, (S)-acetoin dehydrogenase) is an enzyme with systematic name (S)-acetoin:NAD+ oxidoreductase. This enzyme catalyses the following chemical reaction (S)-acetoin + NAD+ ⇌ {\displaystyle \rightleftharpoons } diacetyl + NADH + H+The reaction is catalysed in the reverse direction. This activity is usually associated with butanediol dehydrogenase activity (EC 1.1.1.4 or EC 1.1.1.76). While the butanediol dehydrogenase activity is reversible, diacetyl reductase activity is irreversible. This enzyme has been reported in the bacteria Geobacillus stearothermophilus, Enterobacter aerogenes and Klebsiella pneumoniae. Different from EC 1.1.1.303, diacetyl reductase ((R)-acetoin forming).
|
class of enzymes
|
[
"alcohol oxidoreductase",
"Acetoin dehydrogenase",
"group or class of enzymes"
] |
Q27797724
|
Santiago Huauclilla Municipality
|
Santiago Huauclilla is a town and municipality in Oaxaca in south-western Mexico. The municipality covers an area of km². It is part of the Nochixtlán District in the southeast of the Mixteca Region. As of 2005, the municipality had a total population of 607.
|
human settlement in Mexico
|
[
"municipality of Mexico"
] |
Q10712480
|
Valtissius diversus
|
Valtissius diversus is a species of dirt-colored seed bug in the family Rhyparochromidae. It is found in Central America and North America.
|
species of insect
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q3328210
|
José Bello Amigo
|
José Fernando Bello Amigo Serans (born 5 November 1978) is a Spanish-born Australian retired footballer who played as a goalkeeper.
|
footballer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q7639206
|
Sundar C. Babu
|
Sundar C Babu composes music for Tamil, Malayalam and Telugu films in India. He is the son of an eminent Veena Vidhwan Dr.Chitti Babu and Sudakshina Devi and his brothers are Rangasai and Radhakrishnan. Under his father's guidance, Babu began his film composing in the year 2006 for the Malayalam film Chacko Randaaman. However, he shot to fame with his Tamil debut in Chithiram Pesuthadi in the same year. The song "Vaala Meenukkum" became hugely popular among the masses and since then he has been composing for various films. His popularity in Telugu films began through the film Shambo Shiva Shambo. He studied in an Alpha school.
|
Indian musician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q16522039
|
NK Osijek
|
Nogometni klub Osijek (English: Osijek Football Club), commonly referred to as NK Osijek or simply Osijek (Croatian pronunciation: [ôsijeːk]), is a Croatian professional football club from Osijek. Founded in 1947, it was the club from Slavonia with the most seasons in the Yugoslav First League and, after the independence of Croatia in 1992, it is one of the four clubs that have never been relegated from the Croatian First League, the others being Dinamo Zagreb, Hajduk Split and Rijeka.
|
association football club in Croatia
|
[
"association football club"
] |
Q206542
|
weather house
|
A weather house is a folk art device in the shape of a small German or Alpine chalet that indicates the weather. A typical weather house has two doors side by side. The left side has a girl or woman, the right side a boy or man. The female figure comes out of the house when the weather is sunny and dry, while the male (often carrying an umbrella) comes out to indicate rain.
|
hygrometric folk art
|
[
"meteorological instrument",
"hygrometer"
] |
Q25316251
|
PLW Heavyweight Championship
|
The PLW Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling heavyweight championship in Power League Wrestling (PLW). It is the top championship of the PLW promotion, and one of two singles titles along with the PLW New England Championship. The inaugural champion was "The Fighter" Joe O., who defeated The Shadow Warrior in a tournament final on November 18, 1991, to become the first PLW Heavyweight Champion. Scott Z. holds the record for most reigns, with four. At 1,239 days, "Punisher" Don Vega's first and only reign is the longest in the title's history. Gino Martino's only reign was the shortest in the history of the title as he gave the belt to manager Scott Knight immediately after winning it. Overall, there have been 36 reigns shared between 27 wrestlers with nine vacancies.
|
Professional wrestling championship
|
[
"professional wrestling championship"
] |
Q2221174
|
Harpactira cafreriana
|
Harpactira cafreriana otherwise known as the Cape copper baboon or amber baboon tarantula spider was first described by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1837. It is found in South Africa, being terrestrial or semi-fossorial in nature.
|
species of arachnid
|
[
"taxon"
] |
Q20052540
|
Airão Santa Maria, Airão São João e Vermil
|
Airão Santa Maria, Airão São João e Vermil (officially: União das Freguesias de Airão Santa Maria, Airão São João e Vermil) is a civil parish in the municipality of Guimarães, Portugal. It was formed in 2013 by the merger of the former parishes Santa Maria de Airão, São João Batista de Airão, and Vermil. The population in 2021 was 3,213, in an area of 7.48 km2.
|
civil parish in Guimarães
|
[
"freguesia of Portugal"
] |
Q43831007
|
Rouge and Riches
|
Rouge and Riches is a lost 1920 silent film drama directed by Harry L. Franklin. It starred Mary MacLaren. It was produced and distributed by the Universal Film Manufacturing Company.
|
1920 film directed by Harry L. Franklin
|
[
"film"
] |
Q5125841
|
Clap Back
|
"Clap Back" is a song by American rapper Ja Rule, released as the only single from his fifth studio album, Blood in My Eye (2003). It was produced by American producer Justin Atson JustYaBoy DefJam along with Scott Storch, who helped write the song along with Ja Rule and Irv Gotti. In the United States, the song was released along with "The Crown" (featuring Sizzla) from Blood in My Eye, and outside the United States the song was released along with "Murder Reigns", the final single from Ja Rule's previous studio album The Last Temptation (2002). The song is a diss track directed at 50 Cent and Eminem, with lines such as "Like Bush and Saddam, I'm-a find out where Em Laden's hiding and bomb him first", "And God gave me his blessings to handle my business, All these wanksta snitches, let the nina blow kisses, If she some how misses, he gon' meet the mistress, And 'Clap that boy' like Birdman and Clipse". Another line, "Fuck the Dog, beware of Rule, 'cause I'm the problem", was also interpreted as being aimed at DMX.. The song is the origin of the popular slang 'clap back' in street lingo meaning to respond or retaliate to personal attack or criticism.
|
single by Ja Rule
|
[
"single"
] |
Q60497160
|
Marcos Bahia
|
Marcos Antônio Silva Santos (born 13 June 2000) is a Brazilian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Italian club SS Lazio.
|
football player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q6400705
|
Mujiharf
|
Mujiharf (Tajik: Муҷихарф Mujikharf, Persian: موج حرف) is a village and jamoat in Tajikistan. It is located in Nurobod District, one of the Districts of Republican Subordination. The jamoat has a total population of 17,366 (2015).
|
town and Jamoat in Districts of Republican Subordination, Tajikistan
|
[
"human settlement",
"jamoat"
] |
Q22064578
|
Parisi
|
Parisi is a municipality in the state of São Paulo in Brazil. The population is 2,169 (2020 est.) in an area of 84.5 km². The elevation is 496 m.
|
municipality in the state of São Paulo, Brazil
|
[
"municipality of Brazil"
] |
Q3169655
|
Jean-Pierre Poccioni
|
Jean-Pierre Poccioni (born 1948) is a French writer, whose first novel, Le Beau Désordre, was published in 2000. In January 2006, he published La Maison du Faune.
|
French writer
|
[
"human"
] |
Q448291
|
Gerald Vanenburg
|
Gerald Mervin Vanenburg (born 5 March 1964) is a Dutch former professional footballer who played as a right winger. He amassed Eredivisie totals of 372 games and 112 goals for Ajax and PSV combined, winning fifteen major titles between the two clubs, including the 1988 European Cup with the latter. Subsequently he played in Japan, France and Germany, in a 20-year professional career. Vanenburg earned more than 40 caps for the Netherlands, appearing at the 1990 World Cup and Euro 1988 and winning the latter tournament.
|
Dutch association football player
|
[
"human"
] |
Q55720003
|
Mary Elizabeth Tillinghast
|
Mary Elizabeth Tillinghast (1845 - December 15, 1912) was an American artist. Best known for stained glass, her professional career encompassed roles as architect, muralist, mosaic artist, textile artist, inventor, writer, and studio boss. Tillinghast trained in Paris, then embarked on a commercial career in the decorative arts studios of 1880s New York City. Her early career was marked with successes despite a chaotic business relationship with John La Farge that ended in years of public litigation. Once independent, from the mid-1880s until her death in 1912, Tillinghast continued to produce major stained glass commissions while also running a stable, successful decorative arts business, working from a well-known studio in Greenwich Village.
|
American artist and decorator
|
[
"human"
] |
Q919719
|
Fort Edward
|
Fort Edward is a town and the county seat of Washington County, New York, United States. The population was 10,205 at the 2011 census. The municipal center complex is on U.S. Route 4 between the villages of Hudson Falls and Fort Edward. When construction of the complex was completed in 1994, most of the administrative offices were moved from the original county seat of Hudson Falls to this location. The town of Fort Edward is part of the Glens Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area.The town contains a village also named Fort Edward. Both are located on the western border of the county.
|
town of New York, United States
|
[
"town of the United States",
"town of New York",
"county seat"
] |
Q30349632
|
Pacôme Rupin
|
Pacôme Rupin (born 25 January 1985) is a French politician who served as a member of the National Assembly from 2017 to 2022, representing the 7th constituency of Paris. A member of La République En Marche! (LREM), his constituency covers the 4th arrondissement, as well as parts of the 11th and 12th arrondissements.
|
French politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q30681024
|
Vietnamese nationalism
|
Vietnamese nationalism (Vietnamese: chủ nghĩa dân tộc Việt Nam / chủ nghĩa quốc gia Việt Nam, Chữ Hán: 主義民族越南 / 主義國家越南) is a form of nationalism that asserts the Vietnamese people are an independent nation and promotes cultural unity in Vietnam. It encompasses a broad range of ideas and sentiments harbored by the Vietnamese people for many centuries to preserve and defend the national identity of the Vietnamese nation. Vietnamese is recognized as the only language in the country. Vietnamese nationalism focuses on the nation's military history, although there are cultural and civil aspects to it as well. Some modern nationalist concepts in Vietnam focus on China, where anti-Chinese sentiment in Vietnam has been fueled in various forms, from the Vietnamese believing they were defending visages of Sinitic civilization from Manchus and Mongols during the Mongol Invasions of Vietnam, to promoting Pan-Baiyueism. Nationalism that promoted anti-French views has been prominent in the past. Vietnam's current socialist government-sponsored form is also regarded as a synthesis of nationalism and communism.Although within the East Asian cultural sphere, Vietnamese nationalism also affirms a Southeast Asian identity, in contrast to the general East Asian identity, which is seen to be more Northeast Asian.
|
form of nationalism regarding the Vietnamese people and nation
|
[
"political ideology",
"nationalism"
] |
Q7198891
|
Josephine Chan Shu-ying
|
Josephine Chan Shu-ying (Chinese: 陳樹英; born 18 November 1958) is a Hong Kong politician and former chairman of the Tuen Mun District Council. As a Democratic Party member, Chan has been member of the Tuen Mun District Council from 1994 to 2015 and again from 2020 to 2021 for Siu Hong constituency and former member of the Regional Council.
|
Hong Kong politician
|
[
"human"
] |
Q2874520
|
Avrecourt
|
Avrecourt (French pronunciation: [avʁəkuʁ]) is a commune in the Haute-Marne department in north-eastern France. Between 1972 and 2012 it was part of the commune Val-de-Meuse.
|
commune in Haute-Marne, France
|
[
"commune of France"
] |
Q4885300
|
Ben Bhraggie
|
Ben Bhraggie (Scottish Gaelic: Beinn a' Bhragaidh) is a hill in Scotland which rises to an elevation of 397 metres (1,302 ft) above sea level. The hill dominates the skyline above the village of Golspie and is visible from many parts of east Sutherland. The 100-foot-tall (30-metre) statue which is perched on top is that of George Leveson-Gower, Marquess of Stafford and first Duke of Sutherland who became notorious through the part he played in the Highland clearances.
|
mountain in Highland, Scotland, UK
|
[
"mountain"
] |
Q8025248
|
Wingohocking Creek
|
Wingohocking Creek was once a major tributary of another Philadelphia, Pennsylvania stream, Frankford Creek, which flows into the Delaware River. Frankford Creek was formed by the confluence of Wingohocking Creek and Tacony Creek (sections of which, in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, are also called Tookany Creek). Since Wingohocking Creek is now obliterated, having been piped underground in the late 19th century, it can be confusing to look at a modern map, which shows Tacony Creek suddenly changing names "in the middle of the stream," so to speak, and becoming Frankford Creek. The point at which the name changes is near the present intersection of I and Ramona Streets, where the Wingohocking once joined the Tacony to form the Frankford Creek. What was once a major stream and the site of many mills and factories has been completely wiped off the map—all but the city's sewer maps, that is. The outlet of the Wingohocking Sewer is the largest in the Philadelphia sewer system, about 24 feet (7.3 m) high. It is visible from various points in the Juniata neighborhood and the adjoining golf course. The word "Wingohocking" may have originated from the indigenous Lenni Lenape for "favorite land for planting" or, perhaps, "crooked water." By other accounts, the stream was named by James Logan in honor of Chief Wingohocking, with whom he traded names in traditional Native American fashion as a sign of mutual respect.The stream now flows in a combined sewer (carrying both storm water and raw sewage) under Belfield Avenue and close to the route of.
|
river in the United States of America
|
[
"river"
] |
Q17083489
|
New York Music Awards
|
The New York Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony and live concert, established in 1986 with its first sold-out show at Madison Square Garden, New York City, United States. It ran for six years with annual sold-out shows at the Beacon Theater, and then four years through 1996 with awards announced but not presented at one specific ceremony and venue. The New York Music Awards was established by Robbie Woliver and Marilyn Lash to celebrate New York City and its music after they lost the lease to their legendary and influential Greenwich Village music venue Folk City. The New York Music Awards celebrates New York-born-and-raised and NY-based/NY-identified artists and their recordings. Nominees include major label and indie label artists as well as unsigned and rising artists. The NYMAs introduced "new" artists such as Whitney Houston, Madonna, L.L. Cool J, Vanessa Williams, Joan Osborne, and Mary J. Blige, and have been credited for first introducing rap & hip hop to the mainstream. Up-and-coming and established artists in more than 50 different musical categories were honored each year in exciting award presentations featuring unforgettable performances by the best in the industry. Nominations and voting are done by a process that includes open nominations and finalist voting by music journalists and music industry representatives, along with a public vote. Critically acclaimed, the prestigious New York Music Awards was called "Better than the Grammys" by The New York Times and the "best" and "most trendsetting" awards show by the New York Daily News. Artists who participated and performed, and.
|
award
|
[
"award"
] |
Q7834476
|
Transitions
|
"Transitions" is the fourth episode of the fifth season of the HBO original series, The Wire. The episode was written by Ed Burns from a story by David Simon & Ed Burns and was directed by Dan Attias, who won the Directors Guild of America Award for Outstanding Directing – Drama Series for the episode. It first aired on January 27, 2008.
|
episode of The Wire (S5 E4)
|
[
"television series episode"
] |
Q5893518
|
Heinrich Andres
|
Heinrich Andres (5 May 1883, Bengel – 11 August 1970, Bonn) was a German educator and botanist known for his investigations of Rhineland flora.Up until 1910 he was a schoolteacher in the town of Hetzhof, afterwards teaching classes in Bonn. He was the taxonomic authority of the genera Monotropastrum and Monotropanthum as well as of numerous species within the plant family Ericaceae. In 1967 Hermann Otto Sleumer dedicated the genus Andresia in his honor.
|
German botanist and pteridologist (1883–1970)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q21145142
|
José Melitón Chávez
|
José Meltión Chávez (2 July 1957 – 25 May 2021) was an Argentine Roman Catholic bishop.
|
Argentinian bishop (1957-2021)
|
[
"human"
] |
Q13651405
|
Kupriyanovo
|
Kupriyanovo (Russian: Куприяново) is a rural locality (a village) in Yudinskoye Rural Settlement, Velikoustyugsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 4 as of 2002.
|
human settlement in Velikoustyugsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia
|
[
"hamlet"
] |
Q24639978
|
South Park: The Fractured But Whole
|
South Park: The Fractured but Whole is a 2017 role-playing video game developed by Ubisoft San Francisco and published by Ubisoft in collaboration with South Park Digital Studios. Based on the American animated television series South Park, it is the sequel to the 2014 video game South Park: The Stick of Truth. The game's narrative occurs one day after the events of its predecessor; it follows the New Kid, who has recently moved to South Park and becomes involved in an epic roleplay involving two rival superhero factions vying to create their own superhero media franchises. The superheroes' game unintentionally uncovers a conspiracy to raise crime in the town, bringing them into conflict with supervillains, genetically engineered monsters, the police, crime families, and the new kingpin of crime. The game is played from a 2.5D third-person perspective, replicating the aesthetic of the television series. The New Kid is able to freely explore South Park, interacting with characters, undertaking quests, and accessing new areas by progressing through the main story. The player can choose from up to ten superhero archetypes ranging from high-speed Speedsters, close-combat Brutalists, powerful Psychics, and healing Plantmancers; each offering unique abilities. The New Kid and up to three allies fight their enemies using attacks including melee, ranged, and powerful farts. Battles take place on a grid, around which participants can move freely. Attacks have specific areas of effect, requiring tactical positioning for attack and defense. Following Ubisoft's purchase of the rights to The Stick of Truth in 2013, the company moved development of.
|
video game
|
[
"video game"
] |
Q15256618
|
Mozia
|
Motya was an ancient and powerful city on San Pantaleo Island off the west coast of Sicily, in the Stagnone Lagoon between Drepanum (modern Trapani) and Lilybaeum (modern Marsala). It is within the present-day commune of Marsala, Italy. Many of the city's ancient monuments have been excavated and are visible today.Motya has become known for the marble statue of the Motya Charioteer, found in 1979 and on display at the local Giuseppe Whitaker museum.
|
ancient Greek island city
|
[
"Ancient Greek archaeological site",
"archaeological site",
"island"
] |
Q59240252
|
John Englehardt
|
John Lewis Englehardt III (born May 23, 1987) is an American fiction writer and educator. His debut novel is Bloomland.
|
American fiction writer (birn 1987)
|
[
"human"
] |
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