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22106882
22106882
Dolichamphilius longiceps
{ "paragraph": [ "Dolichamphilius longiceps\n", "Dolichamphilius longiceps is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Wagenia Rapids on the Lualaba River. It reaches a length of 4.2 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 42, 56, 71, 129, 151 ], "end": [ 55, 63, 103, 143, 164 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Democratic Republic of the Congo", "Wagenia Rapids", "Lualaba River" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo", "Wagenia%20Rapids", "Lualaba%20River" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Fish described in 2003,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758319", "wikidata_label": "Dolichamphilius longiceps", "wikipedia_title": "Dolichamphilius longiceps", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106882, "parentid": 856377116, "revid": 906092644, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:39:56Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dolichamphilius%20longiceps&oldid=906092644" }
22106885
22106885
KWBW
{ "paragraph": [ "KWBW\n", "KWBW (1450 AM/98.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to Hutchinson, Kansas, United States, the station serves the Reno County area. KWBW was established in 1935 and was the first radio station to serve the Hutchinson area. In 2013 KWBW launched an FM simulcast. The station is currently owned by Eagle Communications\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 6, 11, 14, 19 ], "end": [ 10, 13, 18, 21 ], "text": [ "1450", "AM", "98.5", "FM" ], "href": [ "1450%20AM", "AM%20broadcasting", "98.5%20FM", "FM%20broadcasting" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Radio stations established in 1973,Talk radio stations in the United States,1973 establishments in Kansas,CBS Sports Radio stations,Radio stations in Kansas
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6340444", "wikidata_label": "KWBW", "wikipedia_title": "KWBW", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106885, "parentid": 822585603, "revid": 826256414, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-02-18T03:28:15Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=KWBW&oldid=826256414" }
22106908
22106908
1804 in Norway
{ "paragraph": [ "1804 in Norway\n", "Events in the year 1804 in Norway.\n", "Section::::Incumbents.\n", "BULLET::::- Monarch: Christian VII\n", "Section::::Births.\n", "BULLET::::- 19 September – Elling Eielsen, minister and Lutheran Church leader in America (d.1883)\n", "BULLET::::- 8 November – Hans Eleonardus Møller, politician and businessperson (d.1867)\n", "Section::::Births.:Full date unknown.\n", "BULLET::::- Paulus Flood, merchant and politician (d.1847)\n", "BULLET::::- Jens Christian Folkman Schaanning, politician\n", "BULLET::::- Jacob Worm Skjelderup, politician and Minister (d.1863)\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Biørn Wenneberg, politician\n", "Section::::Deaths.\n", "BULLET::::- 29 June – Halvor Blinderen, farmer (born 1733).\n", "Section::::Deaths.:Full date unknown.\n", "BULLET::::- Kristofer Sjursson Hjeltnes, farmer and businessperson (b.1730)\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 3, 3, 5, 5, 6, 6, 8, 8, 9, 10, 10, 11, 13, 13, 15, 15 ], "start": [ 27, 12, 21, 27, 93, 25, 82, 12, 53, 12, 12, 62, 12, 22, 53, 12, 70 ], "end": [ 33, 19, 34, 41, 97, 47, 86, 24, 57, 45, 33, 66, 32, 38, 57, 39, 74 ], "text": [ "Norway", "Monarch", "Christian VII", "Elling Eielsen", "1883", "Hans Eleonardus Møller", "1867", "Paulus Flood", "1847", "Jens Christian Folkman Schaanning", "Jacob Worm Skjelderup", "1863", "Hans Biørn Wenneberg", "Halvor Blinderen", "1733", "Kristofer Sjursson Hjeltnes", "1730" ], "href": [ "Norway", "List%20of%20Norwegian%20monarchs", "Christian%20VII", "Elling%20Eielsen", "1883%20in%20Norway", "Hans%20Eleonardus%20M%C3%B8ller", "1867%20in%20Norway", "Paulus%20Flood", "1847%20in%20Norway", "Jens%20Christian%20Folkman%20Schaanning", "Jacob%20Worm%20Skjelderup", "1863%20in%20Norway", "Hans%20Bi%C3%B8rn%20Wenneberg", "Halvor%20Blinderen", "1733%20in%20Norway", "Kristofer%20Sjursson%20Hjeltnes", "1730%20in%20Norway" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "Norway-related events during the year of 1804", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4553807", "wikidata_label": "1804 in Norway", "wikipedia_title": "1804 in Norway", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106908, "parentid": 847124359, "revid": 907181869, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-21T02:54:08Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1804%20in%20Norway&oldid=907181869" }
22106921
22106921
Dark Realm
{ "paragraph": [ "Dark Realm\n", "Filmed on location in the Isle of Man\n", "Dark Realm is an anthology series hosted by Eric Roberts. The series aired in syndication in the United States for a total of 13 episodes, from May to December 2001.\n", "Section::::Episodes.\n", "BULLET::::1. \"Castle Keep\" - A love triangle between students and a professor on an archaeological dig turns deadly as they conduct a dig in a haunted castle. This episode features Miranda Raison.\n", "BULLET::::2. \"She's the One\" - A man tries to rescue his beauty-obsessed girlfriend from undergoing extensive plastic surgery at a sinister spa.\n", "BULLET::::3. \"Organizer 2000\" - After causing an accident that kills his long-time crush, a young man is given an electronic organizer that takes him back in time to experience scenes from his life with her.\n", "BULLET::::4. \"Party On\" - Two brothers looking for a party stumble into purgatory.\n", "BULLET::::5. \"Exposure\" - A ruthless investment banker makes a deal with the Devil.\n", "BULLET::::6. \"Skin Deep\" - An innocent young woman undergoes a personality change after being bitten by a were-tiger.\n", "BULLET::::7. \"See No Evil\" - A genuine crystal ball makes business boom for a phony psychic.\n", "BULLET::::8. \"The Housesitter\" - A college student housesitting for a cranky woman finds the situation getting out of control as she copes with mysterious warnings, odd neighbors, and an escaped killer who seems to be filling the local park with body parts.\n", "BULLET::::9. \"Johnny's Guitar\" - A struggling musician discovers the secret — and the curse — behind a music legend when he inherits the man's demonic instrument. The episode featured Def Leppard singer Joe Elliott, and Corey Feldman.\n", "BULLET::::10. \"Murder One\" - A lawyer finds himself in the middle of a nest of vampires when he joins a local law firm.\n", "BULLET::::11. \"Emma's Boy\" - A couple expecting their first child pays a visit to the wife's ancestral land and encounters evil.\n", "BULLET::::12. \"Blackout (Part 1)\" - An amnesiac takes his new bride to visit his childhood home, but a stranger with a terribly familiar face leads to an argument between the newlyweds.\n", "BULLET::::13. \"Blackout (Part 2)\" - Brad's shocking recollection has landed him in jail for murder, but his suspicions are aroused when he realizes that no one around him is who they claim to be.\n", "Section::::Syndication.\n", "\"Dark Realm\" aired on the Chiller network in the United States in 2009.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 2, 2, 2, 4, 12, 12, 12, 18 ], "start": [ 17, 44, 78, 181, 184, 203, 220, 26 ], "end": [ 33, 56, 89, 195, 195, 214, 233, 33 ], "text": [ "anthology series", "Eric Roberts", "syndication", "Miranda Raison", "Def Leppard", "Joe Elliott", "Corey Feldman", "Chiller" ], "href": [ "anthology%20series", "Eric%20Roberts", "Broadcast%20syndication", "Miranda%20Raison", "Def%20Leppard", "Joe%20Elliott", "Corey%20Feldman", "Chiller%20%28TV%20channel%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
French anthology television series,2000s American horror television series,English-language television programs,Canadian anthology television series,Television series by Warner Bros. Television,First-run syndicated television programs in the United States,2001 American television series debuts,American anthology television series,Canadian horror fiction television series,2001 American television series endings
{ "description": "Dark Realm", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3702727", "wikidata_label": "Dark Realm", "wikipedia_title": "Dark Realm", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106921, "parentid": 869877055, "revid": 906616865, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-17T01:22:53Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dark%20Realm&oldid=906616865" }
22106912
22106912
HAV Eiendom
{ "paragraph": [ "HAV Eiendom\n", "HAV Eiendom AS is a company that is responsible for the urban redevelopment of the Bjørvika area of Oslo, Norway. Owned by the Oslo Port Authority, the former owner of the Bjørvika area, the company's goal is to \"participate in the urban development of the Bjørvika area through development, rental, management, purchase and sale of real estate in the Bjørvika area\". The company was founded on 7 April 2003.\n", "The company owns most of the real estate in Bjørvika, though parts have been sold to Statsbygg to build the Oslo Opera House. As of 2009, the company retains of land, and is able to develop of real estate. This includes the possibility of 5,000 apartments, in addition to commercial buildings and several of the countries largest cultural institutions, including the Stenersen Museum, the Munch Museum and Oslo Public Library. About 20,000 jobs will be located to Bjørvika. Most of the development will begin after 2010, when the Bjørvika Tunnel opens and the European Route E18 north of Bjørvika, including Bispelokket, is removed. The development of Sørengautstikkeren, a peninsula that sticks out form Bjørvika, has been sold to a private company, Sørenga Utvikling.\n", "Along with Oslo S Utvikling, that will develop real estate on property owned by the Norwegian State Railways in the north of Bjørvika, HAV Eiendom owns Bjørvika Utvikling. This company is responsible for overall planning and the development of infrastructure and public areas in Bjørvika.\n" ] }
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Companies established in 2003,Companies based in Oslo
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5628989", "wikidata_label": "HAV Eiendom", "wikipedia_title": "HAV Eiendom", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106912, "parentid": 859759966, "revid": 895915210, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-05-07T08:24:09Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=HAV%20Eiendom&oldid=895915210" }
22106930
22106930
Apistogramma taeniata
{ "paragraph": [ "Apistogramma taeniata\n", "Apistogramma taeniata is a small freshwater fish from the lower Tapajós River basin in Brazil.\n", "It is a dwarf cichlid.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 2 ], "start": [ 33, 64, 8 ], "end": [ 48, 77, 21 ], "text": [ "freshwater fish", "Tapajós River", "dwarf cichlid" ], "href": [ "freshwater%20fish", "Tapaj%C3%B3s%20River", "dwarf%20cichlid" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "" ] }
Apistogramma,Fish described in 1862,Taxa named by Albert Günther
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q128396", "wikidata_label": "Apistogramma taeniata", "wikipedia_title": "Apistogramma taeniata", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106930, "parentid": 892898371, "revid": 892905533, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-04-17T16:43:56Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Apistogramma%20taeniata&oldid=892905533" }
22106852
22106852
Chattri, Brighton
{ "paragraph": [ "Chattri, Brighton\n", "The Chattri is a war memorial in the English city of Brighton and Hove. It is sited above the city on the South Downs above the suburb of Patcham, and is accessible only by bridleway. It stands on the site where a number of Indian soldiers who fought for the British Empire were cremated during the First World War. The structure has Grade II listed status, reflecting its architectural and historic importance. In 2017, as part of the 100th anniversary of World War I, the site of the Chattri was dedicated as a Fields in Trust Centenary Field because of its local heritage and significance.\n", "Section::::Indian soldiers in Brighton.\n", "India was part of the British Empire during the First World War, and more than 800,000 Indian soldiers fought for the Allied Powers. During the four years of fighting, thousands of wounded combatants were brought to Britain to be treated in makeshift military hospitals. Three were established in Brighton; one was the town's famous royal palace, the Royal Pavilion. King George V is said to have decreed that Indian soldiers were to be treated at the Pavilion, apparently believing that the flamboyant Indo-Saracenic building would provide familiar surroundings. In December 1914, 345 injured soldiers were transported to Brighton by train and were transferred to the hospitals. The King and Queen, Mayor of Brighton, Chief Constable of Brighton and other dignitaries visited frequently, and careful arrangements were made at the Royal Pavilion to provide for the different dietary and other cultural requirements of Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims.\n", "Although the great majority of soldiers recovered from their injuries, some died. The 21 Muslim men who died were taken to the Shah Jahan Mosque in Woking, Surrey, and buried in accordance with Islamic tradition in a new cemetery. The bodies of 53 Hindus and Sikhs were taken to a remote location high on the South Downs above Brighton, where a ghat (funeral pyre) was built so they could be cremated and their ashes scattered in the English Channel. This funeral rite was again carried out in line with religious custom. In total, 18 men who were treated at the Royal Pavilion died, ten of whom were cremated on the ghat. (The 56 other victims died at the Kitchener Hospital—now Brighton General Hospital—or a temporarily converted school at York Place.)\n", "Section::::History of the memorial.\n", "In August 1915, soon after the last cremations at the ghat site, a lieutenant in the Indian Medical Service and the Mayor of Brighton, Sir John Otter, planned the establishment of a memorial to the soldiers who had died in Brighton. Lt Das Gupta made the proposal, but Otter took on the project almost single-handedly; after leaving his position as Mayor he chaired Brighton's Indian Memorials Committee. In December 1915 he made a proposal to the India Office for a memorial on the ghat site and another in Brighton town centre; Sir Austen Chamberlain, the Secretary of State for India, agreed this in February 1916. In July of that year, the land on which the ghat stood, and the immediate area around it, was transferred from the Marquess of Abergavenny to the ownership of Brighton County Borough. At the same time, the India Office agreed to share the cost of building and erecting the memorial with Brighton Corporation (the forerunner of the present Brighton and Hove City Council), on the understanding that the Corporation would be responsible for the town centre memorial.\n", "Funds were raised during 1917. After delays caused by the need to dedicate all available resources to the war effort, in April 1918 a Manchester-based building firm was awarded the contract to build the memorial. The main building material was marble; its arrival from Sicily was delayed by more than a year, but building work started in mid-1920.\n", "A young Indian architect E. C. Henriques from Mumbai, who was completing his studies in England designed The Chattri; Sir Samuel Swinton Jacob, an English architect who was responsible for many buildings in India and who helped pioneer the Indo-Saracenic architectural style, provided guidance. Construction work started in August 1920 and continued until the end of that year. Brighton Corporation owned the memorial and took responsibility for its maintenance, and a cottage was provided nearby for a caretaker. This added £1,117 (£ in ) to the final cost of £4,964 (£ in ).\n", "The Chattri was unveiled on 1 February 1921 by Edward, Prince of Wales.\n", "By the 1930s, the memorial had fallen into disrepair. The caretaker had died, nobody had replaced him, and the cottage had been demolished. The India Office, which had received many complaints about The Chattri's condition despite the Brighton Corporation having taken full responsibility for its upkeep, liaised with the Corporation and the Imperial War Graves Commission in an attempt to encourage action. Between them, they planned a new maintenance policy and agreed to reduce the amount of surrounding land belonging to the memorial; in 1920 a area had been created around it. The Second World War intervened, though, and the whole area was requisitioned by the Army. By the end of the war, The Chattri was covered with bullet holes after being used as a target by troops practising their rifle shooting. After the war, the War Office agreed to pay for repairs, and The Chattri was restored to its original condition. Starting in 1951, the Royal British Legion undertook annual pilgrimages to the memorial, and also contributed to its upkeep. Although the pilgrimages ceased in 1999, the Sikh community has led a similar annual ceremony each year since 2000.\n", "The Chattri was listed at Grade II by English Heritage on 20 August 1971. It is one of 1,124 Grade II-listed buildings and structures, and 1,218 listed buildings of all grades, in the city of Brighton and Hove.\n", "Section::::Architecture and location.\n", "The Chattri was built at the exact location where the funeral pyres were constructed for the cremation of the 53 soldiers. This is an isolated, windswept position on the South Downs above Brighton. The only access is from a path off a bridleway between the A27 Brighton Bypass at Patcham and the Clayton Windmills at the top of the Downs. The bridleway, which at that point runs along a ridge between Hogtrough Bottom and Deep Bottom, is part of the Sussex Border Path, and The Chattri is at the northern extremity of the City of Brighton and Hove, on the border with the Mid Sussex district of West Sussex.\n", "White marble from Sicily was used for the body of the memorial. It sits on a plinth of grey stone which stands over three blocks of granite which cover the slabs used during the cremations. The Chattri takes the form of a tall, domed pavilion, rising to to the finial at its apex. The base is square, and the eight columns carrying the dome start with square bases before becoming octagonal halfway up. The base of the dome is then octagonal. The plinth bears an inscription in English, Hindi, Punjabi and Urdu, the text of which was prepared by Sir John Otter:\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Doctor Brighton's Pavilion\n" ] }
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Buildings and structures completed in 1920,Monuments and memorials in East Sussex,Grade II listed monuments and memorials,Brighton,World War I memorials in the United Kingdom,Grade II listed buildings in Brighton and Hove
{ "description": "war memorial in Brighton and Hove, UK", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5087967", "wikidata_label": "Chattri", "wikipedia_title": "Chattri, Brighton", "aliases": { "alias": [ "The Chattri" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22106852, "parentid": 879517673, "revid": 879517706, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-01-21T19:20:41Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chattri,%20Brighton&oldid=879517706" }
22106942
22106942
Showcase (retailer)
{ "paragraph": [ "Showcase (retailer)\n", "Showcase is a North American retail company specializing in emerging trends in health, beauty, home, and toys. There are 118 locations in major malls across Canada and the Northeastern USA, an e-commerce portal called ShopAtShowcase.com, and plans to expand rapidly across the US.\n", "Section::::History.\n", "The first Showcase store was opened in 1994 in the Meadowlark Centre in Edmonton, Alberta. In 2000, the company aggressively expanded at an average of five openings per year. At this time, the company was primarily franchise-based, and modeled primarily as an infomercial outlet store. The \"Edmonton Journal\" covered the grand openings of subsequent stores in the Edmonton area as the chain grew.\n", "Starting in 2003, the company redesigned stores and began to launch proprietary product lines such as Dream Away, Quantum, and Kyoto and expanded beyond infomercial boundaries, and officially changed its name to “Showcase”. Today, Showcase specializes in mass market trends that are new, exclusive, and hard-to-find. Showcase is currently updating its store design and branding to \"The Home of the Hottest Trends\". A flagship store, displaying the new store design and branding, was opened in Sherway Gardens in May 2018.\n", "According to the Corporate Overview on the company's website, they are in the midst of strategizing an expansion to the US, with an ultimate goal of rolling out 100 stores by 2020. Ten pilot stores are planned in the Northeast. Some locations haven opened in Connecticut, Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania.\n", "Section::::Media.\n", "Showcase has been covered in the media usually during the Christmas holiday season as a place to find unique gifts or to find out in person how the novel and unique products “really work”. This interest has been generated because these products are not typically available for customers to try until they have been purchased, usually from the U.S., while in store customers are able to test the products for themselves or receive a demonstration. Showcase has been featured on:\n", "Corporate Media\n", "BULLET::::- ICSC.org, “U.S. a big draw for international retailers eager to expand”\n", "BULLET::::- Inc. magazine, “7 Ways to Spot Trends From the Man Who Turned Trendhunting Into Retail Gold”\n", "BULLET::::- Brampton Board of Trade 2018 Business Excellence Award (Retail) - Winner\n", "BULLET::::- 2018 Deloitte Best Managed Company – Finalist\n", "BULLET::::- 2017 Global Innovation Awards YPO/YPO Gold – Top 10 Finalist\n", "BULLET::::- Brampton Board of Trade 2016 Business Excellence Award (Teamwork) - Finalist\n", "BULLET::::- Brampton Board of Trade 2016 Business Excellence Award (Innovation) - Finalist\n", "BULLET::::- Yale University Entrepreneurship Lecture, 2015\n", "BULLET::::- Yale University Strategic Communication Lecture, 2015\n", "BULLET::::- BNN Interview, 2014\n", "Consumer Media\n", "BULLET::::- CHCH Morning Live on May 31, 2018\n", "BULLET::::- CHCH Hamilton on December 20, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Calgary on December 20, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Winnipeg on December 20, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV News on December 18, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CHCH Morning Live on December 14, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Morning Live on November 30, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Halifax Morning Live on November 24, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Ottawa Morning Live on November 23, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- Global Calgary on November 21, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Calgary at Noon on November 21, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV News Vancouver on November 19, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- CTV Morning Live on November 16, 2017\n", "BULLET::::- Breakfast Television on December 24, 2010\n", "BULLET::::- A-Channel Victoria on December 16, 2010\n", "BULLET::::- Global Television on December 2, 2008\n", "BULLET::::- Breakfast Television on November 25, 2008\n", "BULLET::::- CityNews on December 24, 200\n", "BULLET::::- Breakfast Television on December 17, 2007\n", "BULLET::::- Global Morning Show on December 14, 2007\n", "BULLET::::- Global News on December 6, 2007\n", "BULLET::::- Toronto Star on January 7, 2006\n", "Section::::Proprietary brands.\n", "Showcase owns various proprietary brands that sell in-store and online including Gravity Blade, Slow Rise Squishies, Hidden Gems, Dream Away, Cloud9, Quantum, and Kyoto.\n", "Section::::Canadian trademarks.\n", "Although the ubiquitous red “as seen on TV” logo can be used by anyone, the tradename Showcase, As Seen on TV Showcase, TV Showcase, “The Best of As Seen on TV and more!” and its variants are protected by Canadian trademark law. Showcase has applied for, and in most cases been granted, trademark registration for its various tradenames and proprietary brands with the Canadian Intellectual Property Office. These include:\n", "Showcase The Best of As Seen on TV and more\n", "The best of as-seen-on-TV and more!\n", "TV Showcase Products and Demonstration Stores\n", "As Seen on TV Showcase\n", "The Best of As Seen on TV and more!\n", "As Seen on TV Showcase and Products and Demonstration Stores\n", "Cloud 9 by Dream Away (design)\n", "Cloud 9 by Dream Away (words)\n", "Kyoto Environmental\n", "Dream Away (design)\n", "Dream Away (words)\n", "Kyoto Environmental\n", "Why dream when you can Dream Away?\n", "You Saw It on TV\n", "Don’t Just Dream … Dream Away!\n", "Eco Savvy\n", "Quantum (design) \n", "Quantum (words)\n", "Section::::American trademarks.\n", "Showcase has also registered, or applied for, various trademarks with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, as follows:\n", "Showcase\n", "Showcase The Best of As Seen on TV and more!\n", "The Best of As Seen on TV and more!\n", "Kyoto Environmental\n", "Cloud 9 by Dream Away\n", "Kyoto Environmental Eco Savvy\n", "Quantum\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Showcase on Global Television, December 2, 2008\n", "BULLET::::- Showcase on Breakfast Television, November 25, 2008\n", "BULLET::::- Showcase on CityNews, December 24, 2007\n", "BULLET::::- Showcase on Global Morning Show, December 14, 2007\n", "BULLET::::- Infomercial Ratings, a product review site\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 3, 3, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78 ], "start": [ 72, 291, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 80, 307, 59, 63, 51, 62, 54 ], "text": [ "Edmonton", "Edmonton Journal", "Showcase on Global Television, December 2, 2008", "Showcase on Breakfast Television, November 25, 2008", "Showcase on CityNews, December 24, 2007", "Showcase on Global Morning Show, December 14, 2007", "Infomercial Ratings, a product review site" ], "href": [ "Edmonton", "Edmonton%20Journal", "https%3A//www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3De08sJz0V-dc%26amp%3Bfeature%3Dchannel_page", "https%3A//www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DPYttCkw_rZg%26amp%3Bfeature%3Dchannel_page", "https%3A//www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DPpbLLHzhg-s%26amp%3Bfeature%3Dchannel_page", "https%3A//www.youtube.com/watch%3Fv%3DMIQDASdjA10%26amp%3Bfeature%3Dchannel_page", "http%3A//www.infomercialratings.com" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "Canadian retail company", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7503163", "wikidata_label": "Showcase", "wikipedia_title": "Showcase (retailer)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106942, "parentid": 872786442, "revid": 883507701, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-02-15T20:42:01Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Showcase%20(retailer)&oldid=883507701" }
22106951
22106951
Psammphiletria delicata
{ "paragraph": [ "Psammphiletria delicata\n", "Psammphiletria delicata is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of Congo where it is found in Pool Malebo. It grows to a length of 2.0 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 40, 54, 69, 119 ], "end": [ 53, 61, 97, 130 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Democratic Republic of Congo", "Pool Malebo" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20Congo", "Pool%20Malebo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Taxa named by Tyson R. Roberts,Catfish of Africa,Fish described in 2003,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3759896", "wikidata_label": "Psammphiletria delicata", "wikipedia_title": "Psammphiletria delicata", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106951, "parentid": 826113091, "revid": 906101636, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T16:52:18Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Psammphiletria%20delicata&oldid=906101636" }
22106960
22106960
Psammphiletria nasuta
{ "paragraph": [ "Psammphiletria nasuta\n", "Psammphiletria nasuta is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Central African Republic where it is found in the Ubangui River. It grows to a length of 2.3 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 38, 52, 67, 117 ], "end": [ 51, 59, 91, 130 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Central African Republic", "Ubangui River" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Central%20African%20Republic", "Ubangui%20River" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Taxa named by Tyson R. Roberts,Endemic fauna of the Central African Republic,Fish described in 2003,Catfish of Africa,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2842049", "wikidata_label": "Psammphiletria nasuta", "wikipedia_title": "Psammphiletria nasuta", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106960, "parentid": 826113161, "revid": 906101639, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T16:52:23Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Psammphiletria%20nasuta&oldid=906101639" }
22106998
22106998
Winson
{ "paragraph": [ "Winson\n", "Winson may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Winson Engineering, British manufacturer of narrow gauge and miniature railway steam locomotives and rolling stock during the 1990s\n", "BULLET::::- Winson (cyclecar)\n", "BULLET::::- Winson Hudson (1916–2004), civil rights activist born and raised in Harmony, Mississippi\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Winson Green, loosely defined inner-city area in the west of the city of Birmingham, England\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 2, 3, 4, 6 ], "start": [ 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 30, 29, 25, 24 ], "text": [ "Winson Engineering", "Winson (cyclecar)", "Winson Hudson", "Winson Green" ], "href": [ "Winson%20Engineering", "Winson%20%28cyclecar%29", "Winson%20Hudson", "Winson%20Green" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q8025983", "wikidata_label": "", "wikipedia_title": "", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106998, "parentid": 812852404, "revid": 812852472, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-11-30T06:53:27Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Winson&oldid=812852472" }
22106999
22106999
F.W. Johnson Collegiate
{ "paragraph": [ "F.W. Johnson Collegiate\n", "F.W. Johnson Collegiate is a high school situated in the Glencairn neighbourhood of east Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. The school was named after Frederick W. Johnson, Saskatchewan's former lieutenant-governor. The school's academic program operates based on a differentiated instruction model.\n", "Johnson's 600 students hail primarily from the Glencairn area of the city. It currently has four main feeder schools: Dr. George Ferguson School, Glen Elm School, Henry Braun School and Judge Bryant School.\n", "Section::::Affiliated communities.\n", "BULLET::::- Glencairn (pop. 12,820)\n", "BULLET::::- Glen Elm (pop. 3,235)\n", "Section::::Notable alumni.\n", "BULLET::::- Jamie Heward, retired NHL defenceman\n", "BULLET::::- Shiloh, singer\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- F.W. Johnson Collegiate\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 7, 8, 10 ], "start": [ 89, 97, 146, 261, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 95, 109, 166, 287, 24, 18, 35 ], "text": [ "Regina", "Saskatchewan", "Frederick W. Johnson", "differentiated instruction", "Jamie Heward", "Shiloh", "F.W. Johnson Collegiate" ], "href": [ "Regina%2C%20Saskatchewan", "Saskatchewan", "Frederick%20Johnson%20%28politician%29", "differentiated%20instruction", "Jamie%20Heward", "Shiloh%20%28singer%29", "http%3A//fwjohnsoncollegiate.rbe.sk.ca/" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Educational institutions established in 1985,High schools in Regina, Saskatchewan,1985 establishments in Saskatchewan
{ "description": "high school in Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5423788", "wikidata_label": "F.W. Johnson Collegiate", "wikipedia_title": "F.W. Johnson Collegiate", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106999, "parentid": 893226265, "revid": 893226587, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-04-19T22:19:10Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=F.W.%20Johnson%20Collegiate&oldid=893226587" }
22106931
22106931
The Roy Clark Method
{ "paragraph": [ "The Roy Clark Method\n", "The Roy Clark Method (RCM) was an American rock band formed in Macon, Georgia, in 2000 by Jason Jones, Ben Vance, Tim Vance and Roy Cleary. Known primarily for their quirky lyrics and songs about super-heroes, the band remained active until 2004 with the release of their final and self-titled album.\n", "Section::::History.\n", "RCM was formed in a damp and musty basement in Macon, GA in 2000. Although the lineup changed over the years, the heart and soul of the band had always been brothers Tim Vance (bass), Jay Jones (vocals) and Ben Vance (guitar).\n", "Primarily, the band played parties in their hometown before their stage debut at the 40 Watt Club in Athens, Georgia in June 2000.\n", "Although the lineup changed slightly over the years they were active, the core players (Jay Jones, Ben Vance and Tim Vance) remained the same. The release of their first album Mild-Mannered Supermen saw the addition of Jonny Vance on guitar and the loss of drummer Roy \"Charlemagne\" Cleary. Ben Vance made the transition to drums during the brief period Jonny Vance was on guitar. In 2002, Jonny Vance was replaced by John Spiegle and guitarist Bob Jones was added to the lineup just prior to their final release in 2004.\n", "Although Mild-Mannered Supermen was self-released, RCM signed with Granderful Records for their 2004 album.\n", "RCM stopped performing regular shows in 2004. Although they did play a few shows afterward (particularly to generate interest for their second album), the entire band would never be together on stage again.\n", "In 2007, RCM made all of their music available for free to their Facebook fans.\n", "Section::::Musical Style & Influences.\n", "RCM cited such influences as They Might Be Giants, Violent Femmes, Weezer, Radiohead, Pixies (the bass line for \"Sector 2814\" is the same as the Pixies' \"Where is My Mind?\"), Ben Folds Five and Dead Milkmen among many others.\n", "The band labeled themselves alternative nerdcore rock. The primary songwriters were Jay Jones and Ben Vance who composed rock songs about Green Lantern, Superman, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy and Doctor Who.\n", "Section::::Millipede Studios.\n", "The Roy Clark Method recorded their debut CD in a big house on Crestline Drive in Macon, Georgia that was infested with millipedes in the Summer of 2001, and it was apparently the mating season for this creature. Whenever it rained, the millipedes moved in, one by one. They marched into the house only to die in huge numbers and pile up in every corner of the house.\n", "Ben Vance, drummer for the aforementioned Roy Clark Method (and unfortunate resident of the House of Bugs), diligently went after the millipedes almost daily with various RAID products. He vacuumed up the carcasses, only to find more piled up just minutes later. The owner of the house would not call in an exterminator, although he did consult one.\n", "The most afflicted room in the house was the basement. This huge room was once where Tim Vance (bass player for the Roy Clark Method) slept every night. It was his room, passed down from his older brother who in turn inherited it from his older brother. This basement bedroom also served as the recording studio for the Roy Clark Method.\n", "The room itself had a lot of character. Having been passed down from brother to brother, it contained an eclectic assortment of books and novelties that both inspired and amused RCM. Almost all four walls were lined with bookshelves, full of random titles ranging from Stephen King horror stories to Dr. Seuss classics. Around the room were various comic books, models of Star Wars spaceships, piles of electronic equipment used for recording, musical instruments, and one or two lumpy uncomfortable old chairs. One never needed worry about boredom in this room.\n", "Jonny Vance, guitar player for RCM and engineer of the CD, was once one the proud residents of this room. When he was living there, the room was infested with slugs, and there was one unpleasant Summer when the river overflowed and drove in the rats. Those days are long gone, but the millipedes remained.\n", "It was during the recording of the aforementioned CD that Jay Jones, lead vocalist for RCM, first dubbed the room 'Millipede Studios.\" The name had as much character as the room itself, and so it stuck. Thus was born what RCM hoped might one day become a legend in the music business, but reality told them it would simply never happen.\n", "Section::::Xmusic.\n", "In 2002, Jay Jones and Jonny Vance started Xmusic, a monthly series of concerts held at Macon State College. The shows featured artists from all over Georgia, such as Macon's own \"Happy Scrappy Hero Pups\" (or H.S.H.P), as well as a short set from RCM. Despite the popularity of the series, the college opted not to continue the shows and the series came to an end in 2003. It enjoyed a short revival at Elizabeth Reed's Music Hall in 2003 but the series was cancelled for good after three shows.\n", "Section::::Discography.\n", "BULLET::::- Mild-Mannered Supermen (2002)\n", "BULLET::::- Stop Stepping on My Head EP (2003)\n", "BULLET::::- The Roy Clark Method (album) (2004)\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Official website\n" ] }
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Musical groups disestablished in 2004,Musical groups established in 2000
{ "description": "American rock band formed in Macon, Georgia, in 2000", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7761653", "wikidata_label": "The Roy Clark Method", "wikipedia_title": "The Roy Clark Method", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106931, "parentid": 821596150, "revid": 898302701, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-05-22T18:24:47Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The%20Roy%20Clark%20Method&oldid=898302701" }
22106997
22106997
Nic Wise
{ "paragraph": [ "Nic Wise\n", "Dominique Giovanni \"Nic\" Wise (born September 8, 1987) is an American professional basketball player who last played for KB Peja of the Siguria Superleague.\n", "Section::::High school.\n", "At Kingwood High School, Nic Wise was a two-year letterwinner. He played his freshmen Highschool year at Cinco Ranch in Katy. The following year, he played under his father at Hightower Highschool. His highschool junior year he then went to Westfield Highschool and quickly left when playing time may be in question. He then transferred to Kingwood High School and finished his career with a record of 131–23 (.851)—the most wins by any player in Texas Class 5A history. He averaged 19.0 points, 8.0 assists, 6.0 rebounds, and 4.0 steals per contest. Wise led Kingwood to the Texas Class 5A State Championship game in two straight years, which resulted in a state title to finish his junior year by defeating DeSoto High School, and a loss in his senior year in an overtime game to Plano Senior High School. He was ranked the 26th best high school prospect and the 4th best point guard in the nation by Bob Gibbons's All-Star sports Top 100.\n", "Section::::Collegiate career.\n", "Nic Wise played four years for the Arizona Wildcats. During his junior year, Wise was named to the All-Pac-10 Second Team. In his senior campaign, Wise was selected to the All-Pac-10 First Team and the NABC All District 20 Team.\n", "Section::::Professional career.\n", "In July 2010, Wise was signed by the Telekom Baskets Bonn of Germany for the 2010–11 season.\n", "In August 2011 he signed a one-year deal with STB Le Havre of the LNB Pro A.\n", "On July 12, 2012, he signed with Juvecaserta Basket of Italy. On October 16, 2012, he parted ways with Juvecaserta after playing only three games in Serie A. In January 2013, he signed with Rosa Radom of the Polish Basketball League for the rest of the 2012–13 season.\n", "In August 2013, he signed with Akhisar Belediye of the Turkish Basketball Second League.\n", "On March 1, 2015, he signed with KB Peja of the Siguria Superleague.\n", "Section::::NCAA career statistics.\n", "Source:\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Eurobasket.com Profile\n", "BULLET::::- FIBA.com Profile\n" ] }
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American men's basketball players,Sportspeople from Houston,American expatriate basketball people in Germany,İstanbul Teknik Üniversitesi B.K. players,1987 births,KB Peja players,Living people,American expatriate basketball people in Turkey,Juvecaserta Basket players,American expatriate basketball people in France,Rosa Radom players,Basketball players from Texas,American expatriate basketball people in Italy,Arizona Wildcats men's basketball players,STB Le Havre players,American expatriate basketball people in Kosovo,Point guards
{ "description": "American basketball player", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q465013", "wikidata_label": "Nic Wise", "wikipedia_title": "Nic Wise", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22106997, "parentid": 902724702, "revid": 907146342, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-20T20:38:44Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nic%20Wise&oldid=907146342" }
22107009
22107009
Grant Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Grant Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Grant Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 115 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the northwestern corner of the county, along the Colorado border, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Jaqua Township, Cheyenne County — north, west of Benkelman Township\n", "BULLET::::- Benkelman Township, Cheyenne County — north, east of Jaqua Township\n", "BULLET::::- Wano Township, Cheyenne County — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Logan Township — southeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Stateline Township — southwest\n", "Kit Carson County lies across the Colorado border to the west.\n", "It lies northwest of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "Several intermittent headwaters of Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Republican River, are located in Grant Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Only local roads are located in Grant Township. A small airport, Wright International Airport, lies in the township's southwest.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Grant Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5596554", "wikidata_label": "Grant Township", "wikipedia_title": "Grant Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Grant Township, Sherman County, Kansas" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107009, "parentid": 820483397, "revid": 867574552, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-11-06T16:20:54Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Grant%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=867574552" }
22107010
22107010
Iowa Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Iowa Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Iowa Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 44 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the southeastern corner of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Union Township — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Kingery Township, Thomas County — east\n", "BULLET::::- McAllester Township, Logan County — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Wallace Township, Wallace County — south\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — west\n", "BULLET::::- Itasca Township — northwestern corner\n", "It lies southeast of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "The north fork of the Smoky Hill River flows through the southwestern part of Iowa Township, and the source of the south fork of the Solomon River is located in the northeastern part of the township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Only local roads are located in Iowa Township.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "Iowa Township is currently inactive; by Kansas law, when a township becomes inactive, its powers and duties revert to the county government.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6064712", "wikidata_label": "Iowa Township", "wikipedia_title": "Iowa Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107010, "parentid": 820493195, "revid": 895915301, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-05-07T08:25:19Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Iowa%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=895915301" }
22107011
22107011
Itasca Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Itasca Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Itasca Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 321 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the center of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Iowa Township — southeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Logan Township — west\n", "It lies south of the county seat of Goodland. While part of Goodland lies within the township's original boundaries, the city is not part of the township. There are no communities in the township proper.\n", "The intermittent source of the south fork of Sappa Creek is located in Itasca Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 run east–west through Itasca Township, while its western border with Logan Township is occupied by the north–south K-27. A small airport lies in the northern part of the township. A railroad line also travels east–west through Itasca Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Itasca Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6094117", "wikidata_label": "Itasca Township", "wikipedia_title": "Itasca Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107011, "parentid": 814092730, "revid": 820493498, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-01-15T00:31:44Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Itasca%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=820493498" }
22107012
22107012
Lincoln Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Lincoln Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Lincoln Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 95 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the western part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Grant Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — northeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Logan Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- McPherson Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Stateline Township — west\n", "It lies west of the county seat of Goodland. There are no cities in the township, although the unincorporated community of Ruleton lies in the center of the township.\n", "Intermittent headwaters of Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Republican River, flow through Lincoln Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 travel east–west through Lincoln Township. A railroad line also travels east–west through Lincoln Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "Lincoln Township is currently inactive; by Kansas law, when a township becomes inactive, its powers and duties revert to the county government.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6551147", "wikidata_label": "Lincoln Township", "wikipedia_title": "Lincoln Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107012, "parentid": 814092741, "revid": 816760907, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-12-23T13:46:04Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lincoln%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=816760907" }
22107013
22107013
Llanos Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Llanos Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Llanos Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 43 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the northeastern corner of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Bird City Township, Cheyenne County — north\n", "BULLET::::- Rocewood Township, Rawlins County — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Barrett Township, Thomas County — east\n", "BULLET::::- West Hale Township, Thomas County — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Union Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — southwestern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Shermanville Township — west\n", "It lies northwest of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "The intermittent Sappa and Beaver creeks flow through Llanos Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Only local roads are located in Llanos Township.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Llanos Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6661697", "wikidata_label": "Llanos Township", "wikipedia_title": "Llanos Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107013, "parentid": 814092752, "revid": 818620644, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-01-04T16:36:28Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Llanos%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=818620644" }
22107014
22107014
Logan Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Logan Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Logan Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 246 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the center of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Itasca Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — west\n", "BULLET::::- Grant Township — northwestern corner\n", "It lies west of the county seat of Goodland. While part of Goodland lies within the township's original boundaries, the city is not part of the township. There are no communities in the township proper.\n", "Several intermittent headwaters of Beaver and Sappa creeks flow through Logan Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 travel east–west through Logan Township, and K-27 runs north–south along the border with Itasca Township.Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 travel east–west through the township. A railroad line also travels east–west through Logan Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Logan Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6667228", "wikidata_label": "Logan Township", "wikipedia_title": "Logan Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107014, "parentid": 814092764, "revid": 818724553, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-01-05T05:58:16Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Logan%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=818724553" }
22107016
22107016
McPherson Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "McPherson Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "McPherson Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 52 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the southwestern corner of the county, along the Colorado border, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Stateline Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Sharon Springs Township, Wallace County — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Weskan Township, Wallace County — southwest\n", "Kit Carson County lies across the Colorado border to the west.\n", "It lies southwest of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "The north fork of the Smoky Hill River flows through McPherson Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Only local roads are located in McPherson Township.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, McPherson Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5394949", "wikidata_label": "McPherson Township", "wikipedia_title": "McPherson Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107016, "parentid": 814092780, "revid": 821971385, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-01-23T17:58:37Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=McPherson%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=821971385" }
22107017
22107017
Shermanville Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Shermanville Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Shermanville Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 51 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the northern part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Bird City Township, Cheyenne County — north\n", "BULLET::::- Llanos Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Union Township — southeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — west\n", "It lies northeast of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "The intermittent Sappa and Beaver creeks flow through Shermanville Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Only local roads are located in Shermanville Township.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "Shermanville Township is currently inactive; by Kansas law, when a township becomes inactive, its powers and duties revert to the county government.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7495295", "wikidata_label": "Shermanville Township", "wikipedia_title": "Shermanville Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107017, "parentid": 814092791, "revid": 841348017, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-05-15T09:00:06Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Shermanville%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=841348017" }
22107018
22107018
Smoky Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Smoky Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Smoky Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 87 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the southern part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Logan Township — north, west of Itasca Township\n", "BULLET::::- Itasca Township — north, east of Logan Township\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — northeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Iowa Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Wallace Township, Wallace County — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Sharon Springs Township, Wallace County — south\n", "BULLET::::- McPherson Township — west\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — northwest\n", "It lies south of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "The north fork of the Smoky Hill River flows through Smoky Township. The Sherman Wildlife Area, with areas devoted to hunting and camping, is centered on a lake in the western part of the township, where the river is dammed.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "K-27, a north-south highway, is the only significant road in Smoky Township.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "Smoky Township is currently inactive; by Kansas law, when a township becomes inactive, its powers and duties revert to the county government.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7546198", "wikidata_label": "Smoky Township", "wikipedia_title": "Smoky Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107018, "parentid": 814092803, "revid": 842326998, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-05-21T18:49:10Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Smoky%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=842326998" }
22107019
22107019
Stateline Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Stateline Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Stateline Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 344 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the western part of the county, along the Colorado border, Stateline borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Grant Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- McPherson Township — south\n", "Kit Carson County lies across the Colorado border to the west.\n", "It lies west of the county seat of Goodland. The city of Kanorado is located in the western part of the township, on the Colorado state line. As of 2000, 248 of the township's residents lived in Kanorado; the rest of the township had 96 residents.\n", "Several intermittent headwaters of Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Republican River, flow through Stateline Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 travel east–west through Stateline Township, and the short K-267 connects Kanorado with Interstate 70. A small airport, Hall Farms Airport, is located in the southern part of the township. A railroad line also travels east–west through Stateline Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Stateline Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7603943", "wikidata_label": "Stateline Township", "wikipedia_title": "Stateline Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107019, "parentid": 814092808, "revid": 843778791, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-05-31T12:03:13Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stateline%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=843778791" }
22107020
22107020
Voltaire Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Voltaire Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Voltaire Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 252 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the northern part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Wano Township, Cheyenne County — north\n", "BULLET::::- Bird City Township, Cheyenne County — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Shermanville Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Itasca Township — south, east of Logan Township\n", "BULLET::::- Logan Township — south, west of Itasca Township\n", "BULLET::::- Lincoln Township — southwestern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Grant Township — west\n", "The largest township in Sherman County, it lies north of the county seat of Goodland. While part of Goodland lies within the township's original boundaries, the city is not part of the township. There are no communities in the township proper.\n", "Some intermittent headwaters of Beaver Creek, a tributary of the Republican River, flow through Voltaire Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "K-27, a north-south highway, is the only significant road in Voltaire Township. Goodland Municipal Airport, a general aviation field, lies in the southern part of the township, near Goodland.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Voltaire Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q10748528", "wikidata_label": "Voltaire Township", "wikipedia_title": "Voltaire Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107020, "parentid": 814092820, "revid": 852170784, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-07-27T03:40:59Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Voltaire%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=852170784" }
22107021
22107021
Union Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Union Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Union Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 56 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the eastern part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Llanos Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- West Hale Township, Thomas County — northeast\n", "BULLET::::- Kingery Township, Thomas County — southeast\n", "BULLET::::- Iowa Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Washington Township — west\n", "BULLET::::- Shermanville Township — northwestern corner\n", "It lies east of the county seat of Goodland. There are no communities in the township.\n", "Several intermittent headwaters of Sappa Creek flow through Union Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 run concurrently east–west through Union Township. A railroad line also travels east–west through Union Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "Union Township is currently inactive; by Kansas law, when a township becomes inactive, its powers and duties revert to the county government.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7886322", "wikidata_label": "Union Township", "wikipedia_title": "Union Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107021, "parentid": 814092827, "revid": 850428016, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-07-15T20:16:56Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Union%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=850428016" }
22107023
22107023
Washington Township, Sherman County, Kansas
{ "paragraph": [ "Washington Township, Sherman County, Kansas\n", "Washington Township is one of the thirteen townships of Sherman County, Kansas, United States. The population was 106 at the 2000 census.\n", "Section::::Geography.\n", "Located in the eastern part of the county, it borders the following townships:\n", "BULLET::::- Shermanville Township — north\n", "BULLET::::- Llanos Township — northeastern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Union Township — east\n", "BULLET::::- Iowa Township — south\n", "BULLET::::- Smoky Township — southwestern corner\n", "BULLET::::- Itasca Township — west\n", "BULLET::::- Voltaire Township — northwest\n", "It lies east of the county seat of Goodland. There are no cities in the township, although the unincorporated community of Edson lies in the center of the township.\n", "Several intermittent headwaters of Sappa Creek flow through Washington Township.\n", "Section::::Transportation.\n", "Interstate 70 and U.S. Route 24 run concurrently east–west through Washington Township. The small K-253 connects Edson with the interstate. A railroad line also travels east–west through Washington Township, just north of the interstate.\n", "Section::::Government.\n", "As an active township, Washington Township is governed by a three-member board, composed of the township trustee, the township treasurer, and the township clerk. The trustee acts as the township executive.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- County website\n" ] }
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Townships in Sherman County, Kansas
{ "description": "township in Sherman County, Kansas", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7972468", "wikidata_label": "Washington Township", "wikipedia_title": "Washington Township, Sherman County, Kansas", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107023, "parentid": 788932319, "revid": 814092840, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-12-06T21:19:58Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Washington%20Township,%20Sherman%20County,%20Kansas&oldid=814092840" }
22107037
22107037
Tetracamphilius angustifrons
{ "paragraph": [ "Tetracamphilius angustifrons\n", "Tetracamphilius angustifrons is a species of loach catfish found in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it occurs in the Ubangui River. It grows to a length of 3.9 cm and has a relatively elongate snout with an enlarged olfactory organ.\n" ] }
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Fish of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Taxa named by George Albert Boulenger,Fish of the Central African Republic,Freshwater fish of Africa,Fish described in 1902,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3757495", "wikidata_label": "Tetracamphilius angustifrons", "wikipedia_title": "Tetracamphilius angustifrons", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107037, "parentid": 827594904, "revid": 906106531, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:33:34Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tetracamphilius%20angustifrons&oldid=906106531" }
22107031
22107031
IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey
{ "paragraph": [ "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey\n", "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey, or Wings of Prey on the PC, is a combat flight simulator video game. As with previous installments of the PC series \"IL-2 Sturmovik\", it depicts combat aircraft from World War II, although with less focus on realistic simulation than other entries in the series. The game has a campaign mode in which players are able to fly the Allies against the Axis, and also a multiplayer mode in which they are able to select either faction. A demo of the game launched on the PSN and Xbox 360's Xbox Live on 29 July 2009.\n", "\"Birds of Prey\" is based around the large-scale aerial combat and ground military operations of World War II. Players can participate in some of the war’s most famous battles, piloting fighters, attack aircraft and heavy bombers across a range of missions. There are six theatres of war to engage in: Battle of Britain, Stalingrad, Berlin, Sicily, Korsun and the Battle of the Bulge, representing the main airborne battles of World War II in Europe.\n", "\"Birds of Prey\" has a new damage effects engine. Players can see real-time damage to the aircraft such as holes in the wings and trail lines during dog fights. \"IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey\" features hundreds of aircraft taking part in air battles. The environmental engine also produces high-detail, realistic landscapes that allow players to easily see ground support actions.\n", "The game was developed by Gaijin Entertainment, who subsequently developed Birds of Steel, also exclusively for consoles. \"Birds of Steel\" shares many traits with Birds of Prey (including HUD, aircraft models, controls, and menu design) but differentiates itself by concentrating primarily on US–Japanese aerial battles of the Pacific theater.\n", "Section::::Reception.\n", "On the release, home console and PC versions were met with positive reception, while version for portable consoles received mixed to negative critical reception. GameRankings and Metacritic gave it 80.71% and 80 out of 100 for the Xbox 360 version; 79.82% and 81 out of 100 for the PlayStation 3 version; 79.55% and 78 out of 100 for the PC version; 60% and 63 out of 100 for the PSP version; and 42.25% and 41 out of 100 for the DS version.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Gaijin Entertainment homepage\n" ] }
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Windows games,Video games set in the United Kingdom,PlayStation Portable games,Multiplayer and single-player video games,Video games set in the Soviet Union,Video games scored by Jeremy Soule,PlayStation 3 games,Video games developed in Russia,2009 video games,Xbox 360 games,World War II flight simulation video games,Video games set in England,Nintendo DS games
{ "description": "World War II combat flight simulator video game", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q1255599", "wikidata_label": "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey", "wikipedia_title": "IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Wings of Prey" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107031, "parentid": 869925326, "revid": 892606151, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-04-15T17:39:57Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IL-2%20Sturmovik:%20Birds%20of%20Prey&oldid=892606151" }
22107038
22107038
Sergei Golyatkin
{ "paragraph": [ "Sergei Golyatkin\n", "Sergei Alekseyevich Golyatkin (; born 4 May 1988 in Lukhovitsy) is a Russian footballer who last played for Slutsk. He made his debut in the Russian Premier League in 2007 for FC Rubin Kazan.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 52, 69, 108, 141, 176 ], "end": [ 62, 75, 114, 163, 190 ], "text": [ "Lukhovitsy", "Russia", "Slutsk", "Russian Premier League", "FC Rubin Kazan" ], "href": [ "Lukhovitsy", "Russia", "FC%20Slutsk", "Russian%20Premier%20League", "FC%20Rubin%20Kazan" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Polonia Warsaw players,FC Neftekhimik Nizhnekamsk players,Russian footballers,FC Chernomorets Novorossiysk players,FC SKA-Khabarovsk players,People from Lukhovitsky District,FC Tom Tomsk players,Expatriate footballers in Poland,Russian Premier League players,Expatriate footballers in Belarus,Russian expatriate footballers,FC Rubin Kazan players,FC Granit Mikashevichi players,Living people,Russian expatriate sportspeople in Poland,FC Slutsk players,1988 births,Association football defenders,FC Tyumen players,FC Vityaz Podolsk players
{ "description": "Russian footballer", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4142878", "wikidata_label": "Sergei Golyatkin", "wikipedia_title": "Sergei Golyatkin", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107038, "parentid": 876552281, "revid": 897695756, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-05-18T19:09:44Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sergei%20Golyatkin&oldid=897695756" }
22107046
22107046
Article of manufacture
{ "paragraph": [ "Article of manufacture\n", "In United States patent law, an article of manufacture (also termed a manufacture) is one of the four principal categories of things that may be patented. The other three are a process (also termed a method), a machine, and a composition of matter. In United States patent law, that same terminology has been in use since the first patent act in 1790 (with the exception that processes were formerly termed \"arts\").\n", "In \"In re Nuitjen\", the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said:\n", "Examples of articles of manufacture are ceramics, cast metal articles, hammers, crowbars, chairs, shovels, gloves, shoes, envelopes and mouse-pads. Articles of manufacture may have parts, but any interaction among the parts is usually static.\n", "A natural article, even if subjected to a process, as when the rind of an orange is impregnated with borax to prevent decay, is not an article of manufacture. Thus, in \"American Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Brogdex Co.\", the Supreme Court held:\n", "Addition of borax to the rind of natural fruit does not produce from the raw material an article for use which possesses a new or distinctive form, quality, or property. The added substance only protects the natural article against deterioration by inhibiting development of extraneous spores upon the rind. There is no change in the name, appearance, or general character of the fruit. It remains a fresh orange, fit only for the same beneficial uses as theretofore.\n", "A signal is not an article of manufacture because intangible, incorporeal, transitory entities are not articles of manufacture.\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Printed matter (patent law)\n" ] }
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{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4800907", "wikidata_label": "Article of manufacture", "wikipedia_title": "Article of manufacture", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107046, "parentid": 685153200, "revid": 723226467, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2016-06-01T19:58:12Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Article%20of%20manufacture&oldid=723226467" }
22107047
22107047
Tetracamphilius clandestinus
{ "paragraph": [ "Tetracamphilius clandestinus\n", "Tetracamphilius clandestinus is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Central African Republic where it is found in the Ubangui River. It grows to a length of 2.0 cm.\n" ] }
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Taxa named by Tyson R. Roberts,Endemic fauna of the Central African Republic,Fish described in 2003,Catfish of Africa,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3756248", "wikidata_label": "Tetracamphilius clandestinus", "wikipedia_title": "Tetracamphilius clandestinus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107047, "parentid": 826368229, "revid": 906106541, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:33:39Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tetracamphilius%20clandestinus&oldid=906106541" }
22107054
22107054
Tetracamphilius notatus
{ "paragraph": [ "Tetracamphilius notatus\n", "Tetracamphilius notatus is a species of loach catfish found in the Congo River Basin in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It reaches a length of 3.3 cm and has non-serrate pectoral fin spines, spots instead of bands on the body, and an olfactory organ that is not greatly enlarged. It is a freshwater fish with a tropical climate.\n" ] }
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Taxa named by John Treadwell Nichols,Taxa named by Ludlow Griscom,Fish described in 1917,Amphiliidae,Fish of Africa
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3757477", "wikidata_label": "Tetracamphilius notatus", "wikipedia_title": "Tetracamphilius notatus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107054, "parentid": 891480510, "revid": 906106554, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:33:44Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tetracamphilius%20notatus&oldid=906106554" }
22107064
22107064
Tetracamphilius pectinatus
{ "paragraph": [ "Tetracamphilius pectinatus\n", "Tetracamphilius pectinatus is a species of loach catfish that is found in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It reaches a length of 3.4 cm and has a serrated pectoral fin spine (the serrae are very small) which lacks a locking mechanism. It also has a colour pattern consisting of a series of bands with a paler inner part and darkened margins; the dark narrow bands are a dark chocolate brown, the dorsum of the head and areas between the narrow bands are tan or orangish tan, and the abdomen and other pale areas are cream-colored.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 43, 78, 111 ], "end": [ 56, 102, 143 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Central African Republic", "Democratic Republic of the Congo" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Central%20African%20Republic", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "" ] }
Taxa named by Tyson R. Roberts,Catfish of Africa,Fish described in 2003,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3755984", "wikidata_label": "Tetracamphilius pectinatus", "wikipedia_title": "Tetracamphilius pectinatus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107064, "parentid": 826368320, "revid": 906106570, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:33:49Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tetracamphilius%20pectinatus&oldid=906106570" }
22107078
22107078
Brain Cycles
{ "paragraph": [ "Brain Cycles\n", "Brain Cycles is the second studio album by American psychedelic rock band \"Radio Moscow\". Released on April 14, 2009, the album was the first to feature bassist Zach Anderson, who replaced Luke McDuff in 2007. Issued by Alive Naturalsound, \"Brain Cycles\" was recorded at Sound Farm in Jamaica, Iowa and produced by band members Parker Griggs and Anderson.\n", "Section::::Composition and recording.\n", "In an interview with \"The A.V. Club\", frontman Griggs explained that \"The first album Radio Moscow was written all-instrumental, and the singing was just sort of [an afterthought] ... This album was written more with the vocals in mind.\" On the subject of self-producing the album, Griggs noted that \"I wanted to use the tape again and try to get an old-school sound ... [and] this time around I just tried to give it my all and be more comfortable with that.\" The frontman also noted that \"We recorded this [album] at Sound Farm in Jamaica, [Iowa] instead of Ohio this time. We put a lot more time into it and really focused on the mix to give it a kind of classic psychedelic feel. It's still real bluesy but we tried to make it more psychedelic than the last one.\"\n", "Section::::Style and reception.\n", "In a press release for the album, Radio Moscow compared \"Brain Cycles\" to such psychedelic artists as Randy Holden (of Blue Cheer), The Groundhogs, Peter Green (of Fleetwood Mac) and the Flower Travellin' Band. Writing for music website AllMusic, critic Mark Deming proposed that \"Radio Moscow's second album strongly establishes its stoner credentials even before you've given it a listen, and the music doesn't disappoint if you're hoping for a gloriously resinous musical experience.\" Deming compares \"Brain Cycles\" to psychedelic blues-rock of the 1960s and 1970s, suggesting similarities to the bands Cream and Blue Cheer and noting the latter's album \"Outsideinside\" as possible inspiration for the record.\n", "Deming's AllMusic review is generally positive, although he does conclude that \"\"Brain Cycles\" is undercut by songs that aren't as impressive as the band playing them; for every number like the hard boogieing \"City Lights\" and the frantic wail of \"Just Don't Know,\" there's another that sounds like a tune you'd skip over to get to one of the really good cuts ... They just don't make records like \"Brain Cycles\" anymore, and while most of the album suggests that's too bad, a few cuts demonstrate why folks stopped doing this back in the day.\" The album has received praise for frontman Griggs's vocal work, the added cohesiveness of the rhythm section, and the more sophisticated songwriting. Many critics have also noted that \"Brain Cycles\" is an improvement on the band's debut album \"Radio Moscow\".\n", "Section::::Personnel.\n", "BULLET::::- Radio Moscow\n", "BULLET::::- Parker Griggs – vocals, guitar, drums, percussion, production\n", "BULLET::::- Zach Anderson – bass, production\n", "BULLET::::- Additional personnel\n", "BULLET::::- Justin \"Blind Beard\" Apple – organ on tracks 2 and 5\n", "BULLET::::- Matt Sepanic – recording\n", "BULLET::::- Doug Van Sloun – mastering\n", "BULLET::::- Graphic personnel\n", "BULLET::::- Anthony Yankovic – artwork\n", "BULLET::::- Patrick Boissel – artwork layout\n", "BULLET::::- Allison Cobb – photography\n", "BULLET::::- Bre Sabatino – photography\n", "BULLET::::- Dario Cantatore – photography\n" ] }
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2009 albums,Radio Moscow (band) albums
{ "description": "album by Radio Moscow", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2923586", "wikidata_label": "Brain Cycles", "wikipedia_title": "Brain Cycles", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107078, "parentid": 836646808, "revid": 881421347, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-02-02T13:36:28Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brain%20Cycles&oldid=881421347" }
22107154
22107154
Cammell
{ "paragraph": [ "Cammell\n", "Cammell may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- British Rail Metro-Cammell, produced its first lightweight Diesel multiple units in 1955\n", "BULLET::::- Cammell Laird, British shipbuilders during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries\n", "BULLET::::- Cammell Laird 1907 F.C., football club based at Kirklands Stadium in Rock Ferry, Birkenhead, Merseyside, England\n", "BULLET::::- Cammell Laird Gibraltar, ship repair facility at Gibraltar\n", "BULLET::::- Cammell Laird Social Club, the ninth album released by UK rock band Half Man Half Biscuit in 2002\n", "BULLET::::- East Rail Line Metro Cammell EMU, electric multiple unit owned and operated by the Kowloon-Canton Railway Corporation\n", "BULLET::::- Metro Cammell, Birmingham, England based manufacturer of railway carriages and wagons\n", "BULLET::::- Metro Cammell Weymann, formed in 1932 to produce bus bodies\n", "BULLET::::- NZR RM class (Sentinel-Cammell), steam-powered railcar operated by the New Zealand Railways Department\n", "Section::::People with the surname.\n", "BULLET::::- Donald Cammell (1934–1996), Scottish film director\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Cammell\n" ] }
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{ "description": "Wikipedia disambiguation page", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5026854", "wikidata_label": "Cammell", "wikipedia_title": "Cammell", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107154, "parentid": 746961083, "revid": 849406059, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-07-08T19:40:10Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cammell&oldid=849406059" }
22107107
22107107
John McEwen (disambiguation)
{ "paragraph": [ "John McEwen (disambiguation)\n", "John McEwen was the 18th Prime Minister of Australia.\n", "John McEwen may also refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- John McEwen (athlete) (born 1974), American hammer thrower\n", "BULLET::::- John Blackwood McEwen (1868–1948), Scottish classical composer\n", "BULLET::::- John L. McEwen (1928–2010), American politician\n", "BULLET::::- Sir John McEwen, 1st Baronet (1894–1962), Scottish politician\n", "BULLET::::- John McEwen (cricketer) (1862–1902), English cricketer\n" ] }
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{ "description": "Wikipedia disambiguation page", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6247737", "wikidata_label": "John McEwen", "wikipedia_title": "John McEwen (disambiguation)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107107, "parentid": 833157803, "revid": 864012865, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-10-14T15:01:58Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=John%20McEwen%20(disambiguation)&oldid=864012865" }
22107189
22107189
Plum Spooky
{ "paragraph": [ "Plum Spooky\n", "Plum Spooky (2009) is a novel by Janet Evanovich starring the fictional character Stephanie Plum. It is one of four holiday novellas in the series (now referred to by the publisher as \"Between-the-Numbers Novels\") that star the bounty hunter.\n" ] }
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Stephanie Plum books,American novellas,2009 American novels
{ "description": "book by Janet Evanovich", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7205351", "wikidata_label": "Plum Spooky", "wikipedia_title": "Plum Spooky", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107189, "parentid": 855118773, "revid": 855118837, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-08-16T02:28:53Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Plum%20Spooky&oldid=855118837" }
22107209
22107209
Eliseo
{ "paragraph": [ "Eliseo\n", "Eliseo, the Spanish form of Elisha, may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Alberto (1951–2011), Cuban-born Mexican writer, novelist, essayist and journalist\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Castillo (born 1975), professional boxer\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Grenet (1893–1950), Cuban pianist and a leading composer/arranger\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Martín (born 1973), Aragonese Spanish long-distance runner\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Medina (born 1946), labor activist involved in proposals for U.S. national immigration reform\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Payán (1825–1895), Colombian lawyer, politician, and military officer\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, Cuban-American physician-scientist\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Quintanilla (born 1983), Salvadoran football (soccer) player\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Rivero (born 1957), former Uruguayan footballer\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Salazar (born 1954), racing driver from Chile\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Soriano (born 1947), current Presiding Minister of the Members Church of God International\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Subiela (born 1944), Argentine film director and writer\n", "BULLET::::- Eliseo Valdés Erutes (born 1956), Cuban artist specializing in sculpture, painting, and drawing\n", "BULLET::::- José Eliseo Salamanca (born 1979), Salvadoran professional soccer player\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 ], "start": [ 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 26, 27, 25, 25, 25, 24, 34, 30, 25, 26, 26, 26, 32, 33 ], "text": [ "Eliseo Alberto", "Eliseo Castillo", "Eliseo Grenet", "Eliseo Martín", "Eliseo Medina", "Eliseo Payán", "Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable", "Eliseo Quintanilla", "Eliseo Rivero", "Eliseo Salazar", "Eliseo Soriano", "Eliseo Subiela", "Eliseo Valdés Erutes", "José Eliseo Salamanca" ], "href": [ "Eliseo%20Alberto", "Eliseo%20Castillo", "Eliseo%20Grenet", "Eliseo%20Mart%C3%ADn", "Eliseo%20Medina", "Eliseo%20Pay%C3%A1n", "Eliseo%20J.%20P%C3%A9rez-Stable", "Eliseo%20Quintanilla", "Eliseo%20Rivero", "Eliseo%20Salazar", "Eliseo%20Soriano", "Eliseo%20Subiela", "Eliseo%20Vald%C3%A9s%20Erutes", "Jos%C3%A9%20Eliseo%20Salamanca" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "male given name", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5361701", "wikidata_label": "Eliseo", "wikipedia_title": "Eliseo", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Eliseo (first name)", "Eliseo (given name)" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107209, "parentid": 822337689, "revid": 901309788, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-06-11T01:57:33Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eliseo&oldid=901309788" }
22107204
22107204
FC Taganrog
{ "paragraph": [ "FC Taganrog\n", "FC Taganrog () is an association football club from Taganrog, Russia, founded in 2006, it played in the third-tier Russian Professional Football League since it was founded. It was dissolved after the 2014–15 season due to lack of financing.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Official website\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 3 ], "start": [ 21, 52, 62, 115, 12 ], "end": [ 41, 60, 68, 151, 28 ], "text": [ "association football", "Taganrog", "Russia", "Russian Professional Football League", "Official website" ], "href": [ "association%20football", "Taganrog", "Russia", "Russian%20Professional%20Football%20League", "http%3A//www.fctaganrog.ru/" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Football clubs in Russia,2006 establishments in Russia,Association football clubs disestablished in 2015,Sport in Rostov Oblast,Association football clubs established in 2006
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2376528", "wikidata_label": "FC Taganrog", "wikipedia_title": "FC Taganrog", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107204, "parentid": 759651981, "revid": 824872836, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-02-10T01:12:39Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FC%20Taganrog&oldid=824872836" }
22107033
22107033
Thomas Hayward (tenor)
{ "paragraph": [ "Thomas Hayward (tenor)\n", "Thomas T. Hayward (born Thomas Albert Tibbett; December 1, 1917, Kansas City, Missouri – died February 2, 1995, Las Vegas, Nevada) was an American operatic tenor. He was a cousin of opera singer Lawrence Tibbett.\n", "Section::::Career.\n", "The lyric tenor made his debut with the New York City Opera in November 1944, as Edmondo in Giacomo Puccini's \"Manon Lescaut\", opposite Dorothy Kirsten in the title role.\n", "In 1945 and 1946, he was seen there as Turiddu in \"Cavalleria rusticana\" and in \"The Gypsy Baron\". Soon after his City Opera debut, he won the Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the Air along with baritone Robert Merrill. Immediately following, Hayward was first seen in his many appearances at the Metropolitan Opera, his debut being the part of Tybalt in \"Roméo et Juliette\".\n", "More notable roles at the Met included the Italian Singer in \"Der Rosenkavalier\", Alfred in \"Die Fledermaus\" (with Hilde Gueden and Virginia MacWatters), the name part in \"Faust\", \"B.F. Pinkerton\" in \"Madama Butterfly\", opposite the \"Cio Cio San\" of Victoria de los Angeles and the Duke of Mantua in \"Rigoletto\". His additional duties at the Met included being the principal cover for Jussi Bjoerling. His final opera at that theatre was Mario Cavaradossi in \"Tosca\", in 1957. In 1959, he returned to the City Opera, for \"Die Fledermaus\", conducted by Julius Rudel. In 1963, Hayward appeared in a production by Sarah Caldwell for the Boston Opera Group of \"Faust\", with Beverly Sills and Norman Treigle,\n", "Section::::Concert stage.\n", "He performed to highest critical acclaim in over 400 civic concerts and appeared with every major symphony orchestra in the United States and Canada. His performances on open-air stages included the Hollywood Bowl, Chicago's Grant Park, Denver's Red Rocks, New York's Lewisohn Stadium, Jones Beach Marine Theater starring Hayward in the opening cast as \"Mario\" in the show that was the operetta \"A Night in Venice\" by Johann Strauss II (produced by film producer Mike Todd, complete with floating gondolas and starring Enzo Stuarti and Nola Fairbanks at the newly constructed Jones Beach Theater/), the Los Angeles Civic Light Opera and the Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera\n", "Section::::Radio and television.\n", "For many years he was the star of his own radio show \"Serenade to America\" broadcast from New York City on the NBC network. He was in demand as a guest star on \"The Voice of Firestone\", \"The Bell Telephone Hour\", \"The Ford Sunday Evening Hour\", \"Producers' Showcase\", \"NBC Symphony\", \"Omnibus\", and \"The Milton Berle Show\". His debut abroad was at the Palladium in London where he was a featured guest artist at the gala and was invited to perform on Val Parnell's programme, \"Sunday Night at the London Palladium\" \n", "Section::::Radio and television.:Recordings.\n", "Hayward's studio discography includes RCA, Victor, Cambridge, Everest and Decca in addition to two recordings for CBS: \"Pagliacci\" (as Beppe, opposite Lucine Amara, Richard Tucker and Giuseppe Valdengo (1951), and \"Lucia di Lammermoor\" (as Lord Arturo Bucklaw, with Lily Pons and Richard Tucker, 1954). Both albums were conducted by Fausto Cleva. In 1998, Video Artists International published a compact disc of excerpts from a 1958 performance of \"La traviata\", from New Orleans, Louisiana, with Kirsten and Cornell MacNeil, which displays the voice in his prime.\n", "Section::::Radio and television.:Teaching career and legacy.\n", "In 1964, Hayward left New York for Dallas, Texas, where he became Artist-in-Residence and Chairman of the Voice and Opera Departments of the Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University. He was further honored by being named the Meadows Distinguished Professor of Voice in 1990, and soon after his death in 1995 the establishment of the Thomas Hayward Memorial Award.\n", "Section::::Notable protégés.\n", "BULLET::::- Fernando del Valle\n", "BULLET::::- Donnie Ray Albert\n", "BULLET::::- Gary Lakes\n", "BULLET::::- Jeff Harnar\n", "BULLET::::- Jay Hunter Morris\n", "Section::::Death.\n", "Hayward continued teaching in Dallas until 1994. He died on February 2, 1995 from kidney and heart failure, when he and his wife moved to Nevada.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Hayward in an excerpt from \"I Pagliacci\", youtube.com; accessed October 29, 2016.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 5, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 7, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 11, 13, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 23 ], "start": [ 65, 112, 195, 4, 40, 92, 111, 136, 51, 81, 143, 203, 296, 355, 62, 93, 115, 132, 172, 201, 250, 301, 385, 460, 552, 611, 634, 670, 688, 199, 225, 246, 268, 286, 396, 418, 463, 519, 536, 576, 603, 641, 111, 161, 187, 214, 246, 269, 285, 300, 352, 451, 38, 43, 51, 62, 74, 114, 120, 151, 165, 184, 215, 266, 280, 333, 356, 449, 509, 141, 171, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 86, 129, 211, 15, 59, 107, 124, 151, 71, 96, 182, 217, 314, 372, 79, 107, 127, 151, 177, 217, 273, 310, 400, 465, 564, 625, 652, 683, 702, 213, 235, 255, 284, 312, 413, 435, 472, 531, 550, 595, 632, 669, 114, 183, 210, 242, 265, 281, 292, 321, 361, 462, 41, 49, 60, 69, 79, 117, 129, 163, 179, 201, 234, 275, 294, 345, 383, 460, 524, 167, 200, 30, 29, 22, 23, 29, 59 ], "text": [ "Kansas City, Missouri", "Las Vegas, Nevada", "Lawrence Tibbett", "lyric tenor", "New York City Opera", "Giacomo Puccini", "Manon Lescaut", "Dorothy Kirsten", "Cavalleria rusticana", "The Gypsy Baron", "Metropolitan Opera Auditions of the Air", "Robert Merrill", "Metropolitan Opera", "Roméo et Juliette", "Der Rosenkavalier", "Die Fledermaus", "Hilde Gueden", "Virginia MacWatters", "Faust", "Madama Butterfly", "Victoria de los Angeles", "Rigoletto", "Jussi Bjoerling", "Tosca", "Julius Rudel", "Sarah Caldwell", "Boston Opera Group", "Beverly Sills", "Norman Treigle", "Hollywood Bowl", "Grant Park", "Red Rocks", "Lewisohn Stadium", "Jones Beach Marine Theater", "A Night in Venice", "Johann Strauss II", "Mike Todd", "Enzo Stuarti", "Nola Fairbanks", "Jones Beach Theater", "Los Angeles Civic Light Opera", "Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera", "NBC", "The Voice of Firestone", "The Bell Telephone Hour", "The Ford Sunday Evening Hour", "Producers' Showcase", "NBC Symphony", "Omnibus", "The Milton Berle Show", "Palladium", "Val Parnell", "RCA", "Victor", "Cambridge", "Everest", "Decca", "CBS", "Pagliacci", "Lucine Amara", "Richard Tucker", "Giuseppe Valdengo", "Lucia di Lammermoor", "Lily Pons", "Richard Tucker", "Fausto Cleva", "Video Artists International", "La traviata", "Cornell MacNeil", "Meadows School of the Arts", "Southern Methodist University", "Fernando del Valle", "Donnie Ray Albert", "Gary Lakes", "Jeff Harnar", "Jay Hunter Morris", "Thomas Hayward in an excerpt from \"I Pagliacci\"" ], "href": [ "Kansas%20City%2C%20Missouri", "Las%20Vegas%2C%20Nevada", "Lawrence%20Tibbett", "lyric%20tenor", "New%20York%20City%20Opera", "Giacomo%20Puccini", "Manon%20Lescaut%20%28Puccini%29", "Dorothy%20Kirsten", "Cavalleria%20rusticana", "The%20Gypsy%20Baron", "Metropolitan%20Opera%20Auditions%20of%20the%20Air", "Robert%20Merrill", "Metropolitan%20Opera", "Rom%C3%A9o%20et%20Juliette", "Der%20Rosenkavalier", "Die%20Fledermaus", "Hilde%20Gueden", "Virginia%20MacWatters", "Faust%20%28opera%29", "Madama%20Butterfly", "Victoria%20de%20los%20Angeles", "Rigoletto", "Jussi%20Bjoerling", "Tosca", "Julius%20Rudel", "Sarah%20Caldwell", "Boston%20Opera%20Group", "Beverly%20Sills", "Norman%20Treigle", "Hollywood%20Bowl", "Grant%20Park%20%28Chicago%29", "Red%20Rocks", "Lewisohn%20Stadium", "Jones%20Beach%20Marine%20Theater", "Eine%20Nacht%20in%20Venedig", "Johann%20Strauss%20II", "Mike%20Todd", "Enzo%20Stuarti", "Nola%20Fairbanks", "Jones%20Beach%20Theater", "Los%20Angeles%20Civic%20Light%20Opera", "Pittsburgh%20Civic%20Light%20Opera", "NBC", "The%20Voice%20of%20Firestone", "The%20Bell%20Telephone%20Hour", "The%20Ford%20Sunday%20Evening%20Hour", "Producers%27%20Showcase", "NBC%20Symphony", "Omnibus%20%28U.S.%20TV%20series%29", "The%20Milton%20Berle%20Show", "Palladium", "Val%20Parnell", "RCA", "Victor%20Talking%20Machine%20Company", "Cambridge", "Everest", "Decca%20Records", "CBS", "Pagliacci", "Lucine%20Amara", "Richard%20Tucker", "Giuseppe%20Valdengo", "Lucia%20di%20Lammermoor", "Lily%20Pons", "Richard%20Tucker", "Fausto%20Cleva", "Video%20Artists%20International", "La%20traviata", "Cornell%20MacNeil", "Meadows%20School%20of%20the%20Arts", "Southern%20Methodist%20University", "Fernando%20del%20Valle", "Donnie%20Ray%20Albert", "Gary%20Lakes", "Jeff%20Harnar", "Jay%20Hunter%20Morris", "https%3A//www.youtube.com/gB2xUex7uMo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
1995 deaths,Musicians from Kansas City, Missouri,Texas classical music,20th-century American educators,20th-century opera singers,American operatic tenors,Southern Methodist University faculty,Disease-related deaths in Nevada,RCA Records artists,Deaths from kidney failure,Decca Records artists,1917 births,Voice teachers,20th-century American singers,Singers from Missouri,Classical musicians from Missouri,Winners of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions
{ "description": "American operatic tenor", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7790535", "wikidata_label": "Thomas Hayward", "wikipedia_title": "Thomas Hayward (tenor)", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Thomas Albert Tibbett" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107033, "parentid": 880112970, "revid": 881045019, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-01-31T02:38:27Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas%20Hayward%20(tenor)&oldid=881045019" }
22107148
22107148
Dutch Surinamese
{ "paragraph": [ "Dutch Surinamese\n", "Dutch Surinamese () are Surinamese people of Dutch descent. \n", "Dutch migrant settlers in search of a better life started arriving in Suriname (previously known as Dutch Guiana) in the 19th century with the \"boeroes\", poor farmers arriving from the Dutch provinces of Gelderland, Utrecht, and Groningen. Furthermore, the Surinamese ethnic group, the Creoles, persons of mixed African-European ancestry, are partially of Dutch descent.\n", "Many Dutch settlers left Suriname after independence in 1975, which diminished the white Dutch population. Currently there are around 1000 boeroes left in Suriname, and 3000 outside Suriname. Inside Suriname, they work in several sectors of society. Some families still work in the agricultural sector.\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Netherlands–Suriname relations\n", "BULLET::::- Surinamese people in the Netherlands\n", "BULLET::::- Surinamese Dutch\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 5, 6, 7 ], "start": [ 24, 45, 70, 100, 185, 204, 216, 229, 286, 312, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 41, 50, 78, 112, 200, 214, 223, 238, 293, 328, 42, 48, 28 ], "text": [ "Surinamese people", "Dutch", "Suriname", "Dutch Guiana", "Dutch provinces", "Gelderland", "Utrecht", "Groningen", "Creoles", "African-European", "Netherlands–Suriname relations", "Surinamese people in the Netherlands", "Surinamese Dutch" ], "href": [ "Surinamese%20people", "Dutch%20people", "Suriname", "Dutch%20colonisation%20of%20the%20Guianas", "Provinces%20of%20the%20Netherlands", "Gelderland", "Utrecht", "Groningen%20%28province%29", "Creole%20peoples", "Mulatto", "Netherlands%E2%80%93Suriname%20relations", "Surinamese%20people%20in%20the%20Netherlands", "Surinamese%20Dutch" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Dutch diaspora by country,Surinamese people of Dutch descent,European Surinamese,Ethnic groups in Suriname
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2378525", "wikidata_label": "Dutch Surinamese", "wikipedia_title": "Dutch Surinamese", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107148, "parentid": 855132751, "revid": 890654812, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-04-02T18:09:18Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dutch%20Surinamese&oldid=890654812" }
22107213
22107213
Joseph Bloor
{ "paragraph": [ "Joseph Bloor\n", "Joseph Bloor (or Bloore) (1789–1862) was an innkeeper, brewer, and land speculator in the 19th century who founded the Village of Yorkville and is the namesake for Toronto's Bloor Street. Originally from Staffordshire, England, he emigrated to Canada in 1819 and eventually moved to the village of York, Upper Canada (later Toronto) with his wife Sarah (nee Lees) and three children, where he became a prominent early figure.\n", "Bloor kept a hotel, Farmer’s Arms Inn, at 157 King Street East (now home to St. Lawrence Hall) from 1824 to 1831 and built a brewery in 1830 in the Rosedale Valley, near Sherbourne Street.\n", "He sold the brewery in 1843 (John Rose operated it as Castle Frank Brewery until 1864 and the building was demolished by 1875), and purchased a stretch of land in nearby Yorkville, where he and William Botsford Jarvis laid out streets for residential development.\n", "The boundary of Yorkville and Toronto was named Bloor Street in his honour circa 1854. Bloor died at his home at 121 Bloor Street East, now demolished near Bloor and Church Street.\n", "He is buried at Necropolis Cemetery on Bayview Avenue and Rosedale Valley Road.\n", "While his tombstone, and those of his descendants, spell the family name \"Bloore\", this was a posthumous development. Period references such as city directories, tax assessment rolls and biographical publications all spell his name without an \"e\".\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Filey, Mike. \"Toronto Sketches: The Way We Were\". Dundurn, 1992. p 68-69.\n", "BULLET::::- Robertson, J.R. \"Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto: A Collection of Historical Sketches of the Old Town of York from 1792 Until 1837, and of Toronto from 1834 to 1904, Volume 1\". 1894. p 476-477.\n" ] }
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Immigrants to Upper Canada,English emigrants to pre-Confederation Ontario,Pre-Confederation Canadian businesspeople,1862 deaths,Businesspeople from Toronto,1789 births
{ "description": "Canadian businessman", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6281574", "wikidata_label": "Joseph Bloor", "wikipedia_title": "Joseph Bloor", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Joseph Bloore" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107213, "parentid": 907044900, "revid": 907044979, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-20T02:34:32Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph%20Bloor&oldid=907044979" }
22107218
22107218
First Ward, Binghamton
{ "paragraph": [ "First Ward, Binghamton\n", "The First Ward, as the name implies, is a neighborhood in the western section of the New York State city of Binghamton. It is primarily an urban residential neighborhood with retail along Clinton Street and pockets of industrial buildings along the train tracks.\n", "The First Ward can be defined as encompassing the area north of the Norfolk Southern tracks, east of the neighboring village of Johnson City along Market Street and Airport Road, west of the Chenango River and south of the Binghamton Ely Park neighborhood and the town of Dickinson.\n", "The area's \"main drag\" is Clinton Street, which runs from the foot of the East Clinton Street Bridge west and ends at Glenwood Avenue. The eastern section of Clinton Street is known as Antique Row due to the high concentration of antique shops in that short stretch. The remainder of the street is lined with retail, consisting of several large supermarkets, churches, pharmacies, bank branches, a few bars and restaurants as well as a few mom and pop shops which contrast the antique stores and provide such goods as video games and music.\n" ] }
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{ "description": "human settlement in Binghamton, New York, United States of America", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5454055", "wikidata_label": "First Ward", "wikipedia_title": "First Ward, Binghamton", "aliases": { "alias": [ "First Ward, Binghamton" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107218, "parentid": 784825056, "revid": 785866072, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-06-15T21:27:28Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=First%20Ward,%20Binghamton&oldid=785866072" }
22107146
22107146
Jardin botanique de Gondremer
{ "paragraph": [ "Jardin botanique de Gondremer\n", "The Jardin botanique de Gondremer is a private botanical garden with national collections of rhododendrons and azaleas, kalmia, heathers, and Japanese maples, classified as a \"Jardin Remarquable\" by the French ministry of culture. It is located several kilometers east of Autrey and Housseras, Vosges, Grand Est, France, and open at specific periods suitable for the collections; an admission fee is charged.\n", "The garden was begun by Michel and Gisèle Madre in 1974 in a wild and marshy valley, with ponds created for drainage and initial plantings in 1974-1975. Between 1975 and 1990, nearly 2000 plants were introduced, mainly rhododendrons, azaleas, and other \"Ericaceae\", and in 1990 the garden expanded into an adjacent forest area with the addition of a botanical trail about 1 km long. In 1998 its collections of rhododendrons and azaleas, kalmia, heathers, and Japanese maples were recognized as national collections by the \"Conservatoire Français des Collections Végétales Spécialisées\" (CCVS).\n", "Today the garden is divided into a botanical area, in the east, and a naturalistic area in the west. It contains about 4,000 plant taxa including 650 rhododendron species, 450 rhododendron hybrids, 500 azalea hybrids, 80 \"Calluna\", 80 \"Erica\", 40 \"Kalmia\", 35 \"Pieris\", 25 \"Vaccinium\", 20 \"Cassiope\", 20 \"Leucothoe\", 15 \"Andromeda\", 15 \"Phyllodoce\", 10 \"Ledum\", and 6 \"Menziesia\". It also contains about 160 varieties of maple trees including 130 cultivars of \"Acer japonicum\" and \"Acer palmatum\", 270 types of conifers, and a further 750 varieties of other trees and shrubs, as well as 50 types of vines, and 800 varieties of herbaceous plants.\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- List of botanical gardens in France\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Jardin botanique de Gondremer\n", "BULLET::::- Jardin botanique de Gondremer\n", "BULLET::::- Culture.fr entry\n", "BULLET::::- 1001 Fleurs entry\n", "BULLET::::- Parcs et Jardins entry\n" ] }
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Gardens in Vosges (department)
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3162397", "wikidata_label": "Jardin botanique de Gondremer", "wikipedia_title": "Jardin botanique de Gondremer", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107146, "parentid": 811564276, "revid": 877048323, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-01-06T06:18:05Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jardin%20botanique%20de%20Gondremer&oldid=877048323" }
22107229
22107229
1730 in Norway
{ "paragraph": [ "1730 in Norway\n", "Events in the year 1730 in Norway.\n", "Section::::Incumbents.\n", "BULLET::::- Monarch: Frederick IV (until 12 October); then Christian VI\n", "Section::::Births.\n", "Section::::Births.:Full date unknown.\n", "BULLET::::- Kristofer Sjursson Hjeltnes, farmer and businessperson (died 1804)\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 3, 3, 3, 6, 6 ], "start": [ 27, 12, 21, 59, 12, 73 ], "end": [ 33, 19, 33, 71, 39, 77 ], "text": [ "Norway", "Monarch", "Frederick IV", "Christian VI", "Kristofer Sjursson Hjeltnes", "1804" ], "href": [ "Norway", "List%20of%20Norwegian%20monarchs", "Frederick%20IV%20of%20Denmark", "Christian%20VI", "Kristofer%20Sjursson%20Hjeltnes", "1804%20in%20Norway" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "Norway-related events during the year of 1730", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4552630", "wikidata_label": "1730 in Norway", "wikipedia_title": "1730 in Norway", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107229, "parentid": 807620269, "revid": 807628823, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-10-29T04:21:06Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1730%20in%20Norway&oldid=807628823" }
22107239
22107239
Dennis, Murray County, Georgia
{ "paragraph": [ "Dennis, Murray County, Georgia\n", "Dennis is an unincorporated community in Murray County, in the U.S. state of Georgia. \n", "Section::::History.\n", "A post office called Dennis was established in 1882, and remained in operation until 1906. The community was named after Dennis Johnson, a local merchant.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 13, 41, 63, 77 ], "end": [ 37, 54, 73, 84 ], "text": [ "unincorporated community", "Murray County", "U.S. state", "Georgia" ], "href": [ "unincorporated%20community", "Murray%20County%2C%20Georgia", "U.S.%20state", "Georgia%20%28U.S.%20state%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Unincorporated communities in Murray County, Georgia,Unincorporated communities in Georgia (U.S. state)
{ "description": "human settlement in Georgia, United States of America", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5258107", "wikidata_label": "Dennis, Murray County, Georgia", "wikipedia_title": "Dennis, Murray County, Georgia", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107239, "parentid": 766988034, "revid": 837654702, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-04-22T04:56:20Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dennis,%20Murray%20County,%20Georgia&oldid=837654702" }
22107223
22107223
You Can't Turn Me Off (In the Middle of Turning Me On)
{ "paragraph": [ "You Can't Turn Me Off (In the Middle of Turning Me On)\n", "\"You Can't Turn Me Off (In the Middle of Turning Me On)\" is a 1977 single by girl group High Inergy. It was the first single off their debut album, \"Turnin' On\". The song reached #2 on the Billboard Black Singles chart, and #12 on the Hot 100 chart in December 1977.\n", "The song was written by Pam Sawyer and Marilyn McLeod. It was produced by Kent Washburn and arranged by Sylvester Rivers. The flipside, \"Save It for a Rainy Day\" was co-written by James Ingram.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2 ], "start": [ 77, 88, 149, 189, 24, 104, 126, 180 ], "end": [ 87, 99, 159, 198, 34, 120, 134, 192 ], "text": [ "girl group", "High Inergy", "Turnin' On", "Billboard", "Pam Sawyer", "Sylvester Rivers", "flipside", "James Ingram" ], "href": [ "girl%20group", "High%20Inergy", "Turnin%27%20On", "Billboard%20%28magazine%29", "Pam%20Sawyer", "Sylvester%20Rivers", "A-side%20and%20B-side", "James%20Ingram" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Songs written by Pam Sawyer,1977 singles,1977 songs,Gordy Records singles
{ "description": "1977 single by High Inergy", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q8057065", "wikidata_label": "You Can't Turn Me Off", "wikipedia_title": "You Can't Turn Me Off (In the Middle of Turning Me On)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107223, "parentid": 874993638, "revid": 874993739, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-12-23T01:06:54Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=You%20Can't%20Turn%20Me%20Off%20(In%20the%20Middle%20of%20Turning%20Me%20On)&oldid=874993739" }
22107309
22107309
Zaireichthys brevis
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys brevis\n", "Zaireichthys brevis is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Congo River Basin. It reaches a length of 3.4 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 36, 50, 65, 123 ], "end": [ 49, 57, 97, 140 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Democratic Republic of the Congo", "Congo River Basin" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo", "Congo%20River%20Basin" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1915,Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5422617", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys brevis", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys brevis", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107309, "parentid": 874086021, "revid": 906108214, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:14Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20brevis&oldid=906108214" }
22107286
22107286
West Kent Football Club
{ "paragraph": [ "West Kent Football Club\n", "The West Kent Football Club was a short-lived 19th century rugby football club that was notable for being one of the twenty-one founding members of the Rugby Football Union, as well as producing a number of international players in the sport's early international fixtures.\n", "Section::::History.\n", "West Kent were founded in 1867 by a core of Old Rugbeians including Arthur Guillemard. They used the ground of West Kent cricket club. The cricket club had been founded many years previously after members of the Prince's Plain Cricket Club from Bromley lost their ground in 1821 due to the enclosure of Bromley Common. They were saved by the Lord of the Manor of Chislehurst who gave them leave to create a new ground on eight acres of Chislehurst Common. Their first game took place on 20 July 1822. It played its home matches on the outlying part of the cricket ground. Initial objections to the playing of football on the cricket pitch due to fears of it injuring the turf were allayed by reports that the playing of football improved the turf by destroying the short heather.\n", "West Kent at first played football using both Association rules and Rugby School rules. They used the Imperial Arms at Chislehurst as their headquarters. However, in 1874 it became exclusively a rugby football club and changed its colours from orange and black to white jerseys with a Kentish Horse badge, white knickerbockers and blue stockings. The club changed its colours in 1881 to blue and white jerseys and in 1882 to blue and amber. Opponents on its extensive season list included Blackheath FC, Richmond FC, The Gipsies and Ravenscourt Park. In 1886 the members decided to give up rugby and played Association Football only.\n", "Section::::History.:Foundation of the RFU.\n", "On 26 January 1871, 32 members representing twenty-one London and suburban football clubs that followed Rugby School rules (Wasps were invited by failed to attend) assembled at the Pall Mall Restaurant in Regent Street. E.C. Holmes, captain of the Richmond Club assumed the presidency. It was resolved unanimously that the formation of a Rugby Football Society was desirable and thus the Rugby Football Union was formed. A president, a secretary and treasurer, and a committee of thirteen were elected, to whom was entrusted the drawing-up of the laws of the game upon the basis of the code in use at Rugby School. A. G. Guillemard represented West Kent and was one of the thirteen original committee members. He later became president of the RFU from 1878 to 1882.\n", "Section::::History.:The First Internationals.\n", "The first international rugby match was played between Scotland and England in 1871 and West Kent provided two players, A. G. Guillemard and Joseph Fletcher Green. A. G. Guillemard also played in the second match in 1872 along with former Blackheath player C. W. Sherrard.\n", "Section::::Notable players.\n", "A number of West Kent players represented England:\n", "BULLET::::- A. G. Guillemard \"(first capped 1871)\"\n", "BULLET::::- Joseph Green \"(first capped 1871)\"\n", "BULLET::::- Charles Sherrard \"(first capped 1871, but for West Kent in 1872)\"\n" ] }
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Defunct English rugby union teams,Rugby union clubs in London,Rugby clubs established in 1867,Association football clubs established in 1867,1867 establishments in England,English rugby union teams,Defunct football clubs in England
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7985608", "wikidata_label": "West Kent Football Club", "wikipedia_title": "West Kent Football Club", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107286, "parentid": 773654909, "revid": 793953954, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-08-04T22:56:48Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=West%20Kent%20Football%20Club&oldid=793953954" }
22107315
22107315
23rd Brigade Royal Field Artillery
{ "paragraph": [ "23rd Brigade Royal Field Artillery\n", "XXIII Brigade, Royal Field Artillery was a brigade of the Royal Field Artillery which served in the First World War.\n", "It was originally formed with 107th, 108th and 109th Batteries, and attached to 3rd Division. In August 1914 it mobilised and was sent to the Continent with the British Expeditionary Force, where it saw service with 3rd Division until 1917. 109th Battery left the brigade in mid-1916 to join CCLXXXI Brigade in 56th (London) Division.\n", "In 1917 it was withdrawn from 3rd Division, to operate under higher unit control, and served out the rest of the war in this role.\n", "Section::::Sources.\n", "BULLET::::- Maj A.F. Becke,\"History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 1: The Regular British Divisions\", London: HM Stationery Office, 1934/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, .\n", "BULLET::::- Maj A.F. Becke,\"History of the Great War: Order of Battle of Divisions, Part 2a: The Territorial Force Mounted Divisions and the 1st-Line Territorial Force Divisions (42–56)\", London: HM Stationery Office, 1935/Uckfield: Naval & Military Press, 2007, .\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Royal Field Artillery Brigades\n", "BULLET::::- 3rd Division Order of Battle\n" ] }
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Royal Field Artillery brigades
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4631614", "wikidata_label": "23rd Brigade Royal Field Artillery", "wikipedia_title": "23rd Brigade Royal Field Artillery", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107315, "parentid": 784018602, "revid": 860962373, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-09-24T07:19:47Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=23rd%20Brigade%20Royal%20Field%20Artillery&oldid=860962373" }
22107324
22107324
Zaireichthys camerunensis
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys camerunensis\n", "Zaireichthys camerunensis is a species of loach catfish found in Cameroon and Guinea in the Niger River basin. It reaches a length of 3.3 cm. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is short and without denticulations. The neural and hemal spines tend to be simple and slender.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1963,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758292", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys camerunensis", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys camerunensis", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107324, "parentid": 856378638, "revid": 906108225, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:18Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20camerunensis&oldid=906108225" }
22107086
22107086
Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier
{ "paragraph": [ "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\n", "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier is a third-person tactical shooter video game developed and published by Ubisoft for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Microsoft Windows. It was released in May and June 2012. \"Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\" was announced to be in development by Ubisoft on January 22, 2009. The game has a futuristic take on the \"Ghost Recon\" series. The campaign has settings such as Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, and Norway.\n", "Section::::Gameplay.\n", "The game is a third-person cover-based shooter. Pulling the left trigger causes the over-the-shoulder view to zoom in, allowing for more precise aiming. Clicking on the right analog stick causes the game to switch to a first-person camera, which lets the player look down the iron sights. Some cover can be partially destroyed, forcing players to seek other hiding spots. While taking cover, players can be suppressed by machine gun fire, which takes the effect of narrowing and shaking the player's field of vision, making it harder to return fire.\n", "A new feature in the series is adaptive camouflage, which allows the Ghosts to become partially invisible. In the game, it is explained that the processing power doesn't exist yet for the camouflage to keep up with quick movements, so it is only active when the player moves slowly. It's enabled automatically when the player crouches, and disengages when running, firing or taking damage.\n", "During firefights, the player can prioritize up to four targets by marking them, on which squad members will focus fire. Outside of firefights, marking targets prepares for a synchronized takedown, so long as the enemy is still unaware of the team's presence. This mechanic is referred to by the game as \"Sync Shot\". The player is shown icons signifying when the squad mates have moved into position and taken aim on marked targets. If the player marks up to three targets, the player can either order them to fire, or take aim himself on one of the targets and fire, at which point the squad mates fire simultaneously. If the player marks four targets, the player must aim at one of the targets and fire in order to take down all four targets. Sync Shot also happens to be the only squad command in this game.\n", "Gunsmith allows extensive customizations of weapons, whereafter the player can test them on a firing range before entering a mission. Parts that can be customized include: optics, triggers, magazines, under-barrel attachments (e.g. foregrip or bipod), side-rail attachments (e.g. aiming laser), gas systems (standard, \"over-gassed\" for increased fire rate/lower accuracy, or \"under-gassed\" for decreased fire rate/higher accuracy), barrels, muzzles, stocks and paint (cosmetic only). In single-player, advanced parts are unlocked by completing missions and in-mission achievements (called \"challenges\"). In multiplayer, players unlock weapons and earn credits as they advance the level of their character. On the Xbox 360, players can use Kinect to customize their weapons through hand gestures and voice commands.\n", "Players have use of drones that can be launched covertly and controlled remotely, hovering or moving over the playing field for a limited distance. The player can leave the drone hovering in the air indefinitely, so long as it is not spotted by the enemy, and switch between normal view and the drone camera view. The player can also order the drone to return. Drones can be spotted by enemies and shot, and if they take enough damage, they must be recalled for repair, which occurs automatically after a short period. The drone has a camera to provide an aerial view. Targets can be marked from the drone view. The drone can also be landed on the ground, at which point it maneuvers on wheels, has its own active camouflage, and a sonic blast that can be activated to disorient enemies.\n", "Another automated element is the War Hound, used only in one single-player mission, which is a heavy walking robot, similar to BigDog, which can be controlled by the player and fires mortar rounds and TV-guided missiles. It can be used as portable cover.\n", "Section::::Gameplay.:Multiplayer.\n", "The game has various multiplayer modes, including cooperative and competitive game types. \"Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\" features a fully cooperative campaign, as well as a new survival wave-based mode called Guerilla, which is also playable as a single-player mode. Also featured is competitive multiplayer, with the game types Conflict, Decoy, Saboteur, and Siege and characters-Scout, Engineer and Rifleman. A code is used for full-access online play, and is a one-time use code. Used copies of the game will not have full access to online play.\n", "Section::::Gameplay.:Downloadable content.\n", "There are three downloadable content (DLC) packs that have been released: Arctic Strike, Raven Strike and Khyber Strike.\n", "Section::::Plot.\n", "The game opens in the year 2024 with a four-Man Ghost Recon team call-signed \"Predator\", led by Joe Ramirez, deployed in Nicaragua to disrupt weapons trafficking in the region. Upon inspection of the convoy vehicles, a dirty bomb is remotely detonated, killing the team. Investigating the cause and tracking down the source of the bomb is tasked to another Ghost team call-signed \"Hunter\", consisting of Ghost Leader Captain Cedric Ferguson, Staff Sergeant John Kozak, Master Sergeant Robert \"Pepper\" Bonifacio, and Sergeant First Class Jimmy \"30K\" Ellison. The team ships out from Fort Bragg, North Carolina under the supervision of Major Scott Mitchell.\n", "Mitchell informs the team of their new mission to rescue an arms dealer named Paez in Sucre, Bolivia who has information about where the bomb came from. \"Hunter\" rescues Paez and then proceeds to follow the trail of weapons: First, to a refugee camp in Western Province, Zambia, where they eliminate local warlord Dede Macaba; to Nigeria, where they rescue CIA SAD agent Daniel Sykes from private military company Watchgate; to Peshawar, Pakistan, where they capture Russian arms dealer Katya Prugova; to the Kola Peninsula in Russia, where the team destroys an arms cache at a remote Arctic base; and finally to an airfield in Kaliningrad, where they intercept and destroy a missile guidance system, causing an international incident.\n", "Some time later, a nuclear missile fired from Russia impacts London, but the nuclear warhead is eliminated at the last minute by the American missile shield. The launch is traced to Dagestan and is believed to be the work of a rogue Russian special operations group known as Raven's Rock, of which Prugova was an associate, with ties to ultranationalist political elements in Russia. \"Hunter\" is ordered into Dagestan to rescue a Georgian Special Forces squad who went to investigate the launch site. During the rescue operation, the team is ambushed by Russian Spetsnaz that have access to high-tech equipment on the same level as the Ghosts, and it is later revealed that these soldiers are part of Russia's elite \"Bodark\" (\"werewolf\") unit, which have sided with Raven's Rock.\n", "A coup has been staged and Raven's Rock is now in charge of the majority of Russia with a few loyalist Russian forces opposing the new government scattered around the country. \"Hunter\" heads to northern Russia to secure some drilling ships so that the loyalist Russian forces can have a steady flow of oil. After accomplishing this, the team is assigned to rescue a loyalist general who is seen as the leader of the resistance. After destroying the artillery that was attacking the General's forces, the team is pinned down by overwhelming Russian forces, until air support arrives and eliminate all opposition. Kozak is then tasked with a solo operation to rescue deposed Russian President Volodin from a prison in Siberia. Kozak is successful, and then \"Hunter\" protects President Volodin in his return to Moscow, and eliminates the Raven's Rock General who was coordinating the city's defense. The Raven's Rock forces are overthrown and the crisis ends.\n", "While everyone else is celebrating, Major Mitchell gives \"Hunter\" intelligence on the location of the seven other leaders of Raven's Rock, which orchestrated the whole crisis. The team is sent in on a clandestine operation to eliminate the seven. After eliminating six of the seven, the team chases the last member, code-named \"Ace\", to a train station, where they wound him. The wounded Ace taunts the team that they will not kill him because the American government will stop them. Major Mitchell radios \"Hunter\" ordering them to stand down, stating that Ace is to be taken alive and brought back to United States, that the orders came \"from the top\", and that they are \"not to touch\" Ace. At that point a train comes, and Ace, who is wounded on the tracks, calls for the team to save him, reminding them that their orders were to keep him alive. Ferguson corrects him while \"Hunter\" leaves the area, saying that their orders were not to touch him, making Ace's death look like a train accident.\n", "Section::::Development.\n", "In December 2009, \"\"Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\"\" was trademarked by Ubisoft, raising speculation that this could be the name for the upcoming Ghost Recon 4. This was subsequently confirmed by an official announcement.\n", "The release of \"Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\" was initially targeted for the 2009–2010 fiscal year; publication was delayed to the 2010–2011 fiscal year, and then to the \"March quarter of 2011\" in May 2010, and then to the April 2011 – March 2012 fiscal period. The PC version was officially declared as cancelled in December 2011 and replaced by \"Ghost Recon Online\", citing piracy as the main reason. However, on January 10, 2012, the PC version was officially re-announced as being in development along with its console counterparts.\n", "Section::::Development.:Beta.\n", "On April 19, 2012, a closed multiplayer beta for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 was made available to those who have pre-ordered the game from GameStop, own a copy of \"\", or have a PlayStation Plus membership. Some selected users from Uplay were also able to enter the closed beta. No PC multiplayer date was ever set.\n", "Section::::Related media.\n", "Section::::Related media.:\"Believe in Ghosts\" miniseries.\n", "Richard Machowicz, one of the hosts of \"Deadliest Warrior\" and the host for \"Future Weapons\", hosted a three-part miniseries titled \"Believe in Ghosts\". Here Machowicz looks at elements in the game and compares them to real life operations performed by special forces.\n", "Section::::Related media.:\"Ghost Recon: Alpha\".\n", "In the short live action movie \"Ghost Recon: Alpha\", which is a prequel to the game, a Ghost team (consisting of Pepper, 30k, Chuck, and an unnamed Ghost Leader) was trying to secure a RSM-56 Bulava nuclear warhead. While trying to disarm the warhead, Chuck was shot in the head. Eventually the remaining Ghosts managed to fight off the attacking force, but the warhead was airlifted by a helicopter belonging to an unknown faction. The short movie ends with a view of London set in the time period of the video game.\n", "Section::::Reception.\n", "\"Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier\" received generally positive reviews from critics. Some reviewers, like IGN's, have praised the game's more thoughtful approach to cover-based shooting, scoring the game an 8.5 out of 10. GameSpot gave the game a 7.5 praising the lengthy campaign and multiplayer but criticizing the AI and combat. However, other sites such as Eurogamer Italy, Giant Bomb, Strategy Informer, and Cheat Code Central criticized \"Future Soldier\" for the streamlining and/or complete removal of many tactical shooter mechanics leaving many critics questioning whether or not it should even be considered a tactical shooter. The PC version suffered from lower ratings. Numerous bugs making the game unplayable, such as the interface ignoring keyboard and mouse inputs, were present in the game at launch. Ghost Recon Future Soldier on PC had huge issues with online PvP multiplayer due to peer-to-peer system that hosted games on people's computers instead of dedicated/cloud servers. Also, the game was locked at 60 fov as well as 60 fps.\n" ] }
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Fiction set in 2024,Cancelled Nintendo DS games,Dystopian video games,PlayStation 3 games,Video games developed in the People's Republic of China,Video games set in Pakistan,Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon games,Tom Clancy games,Video games developed in Canada,Video games set in Bolivia,Video games set in Nigeria,Video games set in Kazakhstan,Kinect games,Multiplayer and single-player video games,Video games set in Russia,Video games developed in France,War in North-West Pakistan fiction,Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon,Video games set in the Arctic,Cyberpunk video games,Video games set in Nicaragua,Futuristic shooting games,Third-person shooters,2012 video games,Video games developed in the United States,Video games set in the 2020s,Video games set in Norway,Video games set in Zambia,Ubisoft games,Multiplayer online games,Video games developed in Romania,Windows games,Tactical shooter video games,Cancelled PlayStation Portable games
{ "description": "2012 video game", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2313070", "wikidata_label": "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier", "wikipedia_title": "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Future Soldier", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107086, "parentid": 905097801, "revid": 906701061, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-17T16:38:44Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tom%20Clancy's%20Ghost%20Recon:%20Future%20Soldier&oldid=906701061" }
22107339
22107339
Zaireichthys dorae
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys dorae\n", "Zaireichthys dorae, the Chobe sand catlet, is a species of loach catfish endemic to Angola where it is only found in the Rio Luachimo. It reaches a length of 2.7 cm. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is moderately long with poorly developed or fine denticulations. The neural and hemal spines tend to be simple and slender. This species occurs over sand and is usually buried with just the eyes protruding.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 59, 73, 84, 121, 170, 193 ], "end": [ 72, 80, 90, 133, 185, 208 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Angola", "Rio Luachimo", "humeral process", "pectoral girdle" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Angola", "Rio%20Luachimo", "humeral%20process", "pectoral%20girdle" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1967,Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of Angola,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758626", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys dorae", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys dorae", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107339, "parentid": 856378666, "revid": 906108234, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:23Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20dorae&oldid=906108234" }
22107346
22107346
Paul III Šubić of Bribir
{ "paragraph": [ "Paul III Šubić of Bribir\n", "Paul III Šubić of Bribir () was a member of the Croatian Šubić noble family.\n", "Section::::Family Connections.\n", "Paul III Šubić was son of Juraj II Šubić, and grandson of Paul I Šubić of Bribir who was the most powerful Croatian noble at the end of the 13th century and beginning of the 14th century. His sister Jelena Šubić was married to Regent of Bosnia Vladislav Kotromanić. He married Venetian Catherina Dandolo.\n", "Paul III Šubić died in 1356 and was probably buried like his brother Mladen III Šubić in the Cathedral of St. Lawrence in Trogir.\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Šubić\n", "BULLET::::- Klis Fortress\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 6, 7 ], "start": [ 48, 57, 26, 58, 199, 244, 277, 286, 69, 93, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 56, 62, 40, 80, 211, 264, 285, 303, 85, 128, 17, 25 ], "text": [ "Croatian", "Šubić", "Juraj II Šubić", "Paul I Šubić of Bribir", "Jelena Šubić", "Vladislav Kotromanić", "Venetian", "Catherina Dandolo", "Mladen III Šubić", "Cathedral of St. Lawrence in Trogir", "Šubić", "Klis Fortress" ], "href": [ "Croats", "%C5%A0ubi%C4%87", "Juraj%20II%20%C5%A0ubi%C4%87", "Paul%20I%20%C5%A0ubi%C4%87%20of%20Bribir", "Jelena%20%C5%A0ubi%C4%87", "Vladislav%20Kotromani%C4%87", "Venice", "Catherina%20Dandolo", "Mladen%20III%20%C5%A0ubi%C4%87%20Bribirski", "Cathedral%20of%20St.%20Lawrence%2C%20Trogir", "%C5%A0ubi%C4%87", "Klis%20Fortress" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
1356 deaths,Šubić,Year of birth unknown
{ "description": "Croatian nobleman", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7151454", "wikidata_label": "Paul III Šubić of Bribir", "wikipedia_title": "Paul III Šubić of Bribir", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107346, "parentid": 797980685, "revid": 872314770, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-12-06T16:08:12Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul%20III%20Šubić%20of%20Bribir&oldid=872314770" }
22107350
22107350
Zaireichthys flavomaculatus
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys flavomaculatus\n", "Zaireichthys flavomaculatus is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is only found in the Lulua River. It reaches a length of 3.9 cm. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is moderately long with poorly developed or fine denticulations.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Fish described in 1926,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3759642", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys flavomaculatus", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys flavomaculatus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107350, "parentid": 856378701, "revid": 906108244, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:28Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20flavomaculatus&oldid=906108244" }
22107352
22107352
Chipstone Foundation
{ "paragraph": [ "Chipstone Foundation\n", "The Chipstone Foundation is a Wisconsin-based foundation dedicated to promoting American decorative arts scholarship. Originating from the private collection of Stanley and Polly Stone, the foundation uses its objects and resources to support decorative arts projects and publications at other institutions, seeking to find \"newer ways to look at old things.\". \n", "In 1999, the Chipstone Foundation partnered with the Milwaukee Art Museum, thereby making many of Chipstone's significant holdings on view for public display.\n", "The Chipstone Foundation publishes two significant annual scholarly journals: \"American Furniture\" and \"Ceramics in America\". The foundation also has an association with the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Together they created an academic program that explores multiple approaches to the study of American material culture by bringing together scholars from other departments at the University, including history, art, African studies, design, and literature.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Official website\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 2, 3, 5 ], "start": [ 30, 53, 174, 12 ], "end": [ 39, 73, 205, 28 ], "text": [ "Wisconsin", "Milwaukee Art Museum", "University of Wisconsin–Madison", "Official website" ], "href": [ "Wisconsin", "Milwaukee%20Art%20Museum", "University%20of%20Wisconsin%E2%80%93Madison", "http%3A//www.chipstone.org" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
Organizations based in Milwaukee
{ "description": "organization", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5101747", "wikidata_label": "Chipstone Foundation", "wikipedia_title": "Chipstone Foundation", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107352, "parentid": 794028750, "revid": 858728176, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-09-09T06:13:31Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chipstone%20Foundation&oldid=858728176" }
22107368
22107368
Zaireichthys heterurus
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys heterurus\n", "Zaireichthys heterurus is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Lualaba River. It reaches a length of 3.5 cm and has a broad, black collar just behind the head. The barbels are attenuate, with the maxillary barbels extending posteriorly to middle to end of the pectoral fin spine and the caudal peduncle is slender. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is long and stout without denticulations. The caudal fin is deeply forked, with the upper lobe much shorter and smaller than the lower lobe; also, the fin rays in lower lobe noticeable thicker than those in upper lobe.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Fish described in 2003,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758429", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys heterurus", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys heterurus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107368, "parentid": 856378729, "revid": 906108254, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:33Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20heterurus&oldid=906108254" }
22107383
22107383
Zaireichthys mandevillei
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys mandevillei\n", "Zaireichthys mandevillei is a species of loach catfish found in the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Congo River Basin. It grows to a length of 2.6 cm and has a broad, black collar just behind the head and a spotted colour pattern. The barbels are attenuate, with the maxillary barbels extending posteriorly to middle to end of the pectoral fin spine and the caudal peduncle is slender. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is short and without denticulations. The caudal fin is deeply forked, with the upper lobe much shorter and smaller than the lower lobe; also, the fin rays in lower lobe noticeable thicker than those in upper lobe.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1959,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3759809", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys mandevillei", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys mandevillei", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107383, "parentid": 856378765, "revid": 906108267, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:38Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20mandevillei&oldid=906108267" }
22107375
22107375
Ludwig Knoop
{ "paragraph": [ "Ludwig Knoop\n", "Johann Ludwig Knoop (15 May 1821 in Bremen - 14 August 1894 in Bremen) was a cotton merchant and entrepreneur from the city-state Free Hanseatic City of Bremen, who became one of the richest entrepreneurs in his time. He was created a Baron by Alexander II of Russia.\n", "He studied in Bremen, and learned the cotton business at Manchester with the Bremen-born cotton exporter Johan Frerichs's company De Jersey & Co. He went to Moscow as assistant to the firm's agent Franz Holzhauer in 1840. That year he established the first power-driven cotton mill in Russia.\n", "In 1842, the British ban on the export of cotton machinery, imposed in 1775 to protect the country's head start in technology, was lifted, allowing the manufacture of cotton to expand in Russia. Knoop used English credit to build and fit out mills with English equipment. The commissioning in 1847 of Morozov's Nikolsk mill at Orekhovo-Zuyevo, Knoop's sixth, was seen as a landmark in the industry's development in Russia.\n", "In 1852, he founded L Knoop & Co, in association with De Jersey and the machinery manufacturer Platt Brothers of Oldham, Lancashire. In 1857, he built the largest cotton spinning mill in Europe on the island of Kreenholm at Narva, Estonia, which employed 4500 people. The Krenholm Manufacturing Company's factory in Narva had nearly half a million spindles driven by water-power. It paid low wages, but took its responsibilities to its workforce seriously, introducing a health insurance scheme and supplying workers with dwellings, kindergartens, and schools.\n", "Eventually, he was responsible for equipping 187 cotton mills on Russian territory. However, Knoop came under attack from the Russian Technical Society for retarding industrial development in the country. This was because he relied exclusively on English machinery and also supplied the factories with English managers, technicians, and supervisors. He was created a baron by Tsar Alexander II in 1877. \n", "He died on 16 August 1894 at St Magnus, Bremen, where a city park created from his estate is named after him. His descendants include Ernst Albrecht, Hans-Holger Albrecht and Ursula von der Leyen.\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- The Russian Technical Society and British Textile Machinery Imports, by Stuart Thompstone\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 5, 6, 6, 6 ], "start": [ 36, 77, 130, 235, 244, 57, 157, 270, 285, 101, 327, 95, 113, 121, 211, 224, 231, 272, 471, 376, 134, 150, 175 ], "end": [ 42, 83, 159, 240, 266, 67, 163, 281, 291, 111, 342, 109, 119, 131, 220, 229, 238, 302, 487, 393, 148, 170, 195 ], "text": [ "Bremen", "cotton", "Free Hanseatic City of Bremen", "Baron", "Alexander II of Russia", "Manchester", "Moscow", "cotton mill", "Russia", "head start", "Orekhovo-Zuyevo", "Platt Brothers", "Oldham", "Lancashire", "Kreenholm", "Narva", "Estonia", "Krenholm Manufacturing Company", "health insurance", "Tsar Alexander II", "Ernst Albrecht", "Hans-Holger Albrecht", "Ursula von der Leyen" ], "href": [ "Bremen", "cotton", "Bremen%20%28state%29", "Baron", "Alexander%20II%20of%20Russia", "Manchester", "Moscow", "cotton%20mill", "Russia", "head%20start%20%28positioning%29", "Orekhovo-Zuyevo", "Platt%20Brothers", "Oldham", "Lancashire", "Kreenholm", "Narva", "Estonia", "Krenholm%20Manufacturing%20Company", "health%20insurance", "Alexander%20II%20of%20Russia", "Ernst%20Albrecht%20%28politician%29", "Hans-Holger%20Albrecht", "Ursula%20von%20der%20Leyen" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
1821 births,Russian businesspeople,German businesspeople
{ "description": "German entrepreneur and merchant", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q88310", "wikidata_label": "Ludwig Knoop", "wikipedia_title": "Ludwig Knoop", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Johann Ludwig von Knoop" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107375, "parentid": 836595906, "revid": 863068791, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-10-08T14:26:29Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ludwig%20Knoop&oldid=863068791" }
22107403
22107403
Zaireichthys wamiensis
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys wamiensis\n", "Zaireichthys wamiensis is a species of loach catfish endemic to Tanzania. It grows to a length of SL. Its natural habitat is rivers.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 39, 53, 64, 98, 114, 125 ], "end": [ 52, 60, 72, 100, 121, 130 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Tanzania", "SL", "habitat", "river" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Tanzania", "Fish%20measurement", "habitat", "river" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1989,Endemic freshwater fish of Tanzania,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5467596", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys wamiensis", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys wamiensis", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Catfish" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107403, "parentid": 840106247, "revid": 840106387, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-05-07T19:25:31Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20wamiensis&oldid=840106387" }
22107394
22107394
Zaireichthys rotundiceps
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys rotundiceps\n", "Zaireichthys rotundiceps, the Spotted sand catlet, is a species of loach catfish that occurs in the countries of Botswana, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe with uncertain records from Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. This species may actually consist of several species. It reaches a length of 3.8 cm. The colouration of \"Z. rotundiceps\" is highly variable, from abundant dark spots in several rows to a light pale spotting pattern; marks are often present on the head and fins as well as the body. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is moderately long with poorly developed or fine denticulations. The caudal fin shape is variable, from slightly forked through, emarginate, truncate, or even slightly rounded, but not deeply forked. The dorsal and pectoral fins have strong and stout spines. It inhabits fairly shallow water where it occur over sand, usually buried with just the eyes protruding. Its eggs are few (12–16) and large (3–5 millimetres diameter), which suggests that the parents may care for the eggs and young.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 67, 113, 123, 130, 138, 150, 159, 169, 180, 217, 233, 553, 576, 796, 807 ], "end": [ 80, 121, 128, 136, 148, 157, 167, 175, 188, 224, 265, 568, 591, 802, 819 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Botswana", "Kenya", "Malawi", "Mozambique", "Namibia", "Tanzania", "Zambia", "Zimbabwe", "Burundi", "Democratic Republic of the Congo", "humeral process", "pectoral girdle", "dorsal", "pectoral fin" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Botswana", "Kenya", "Malawi", "Mozambique", "Namibia", "Tanzania", "Zambia", "Zimbabwe", "Burundi", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo", "humeral%20process", "pectoral%20girdle", "dorsal%20fin", "pectoral%20fin" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1905,Fish of Tanzania,Fish of Africa,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3642461", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys rotundiceps", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys rotundiceps", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107394, "parentid": 856378806, "revid": 906108280, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:43Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20rotundiceps&oldid=906108280" }
22107408
22107408
Ballycarney
{ "paragraph": [ "Ballycarney\n", "Ballycarney (), County Wexford is on the R745 regional road on the east bank of the River Slaney. It is centered on \"All Saints Ballycarney \" Church of Ireland chapel which sits on a height overlooking the river. \n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- List of towns and villages in Ireland\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3 ], "start": [ 16, 41, 46, 84, 142, 12 ], "end": [ 30, 45, 59, 96, 159, 49 ], "text": [ "County Wexford", "R745", "regional road", "River Slaney", "Church of Ireland", "List of towns and villages in Ireland" ], "href": [ "County%20Wexford", "R745%20road", "Regional%20road%20%28Ireland%29", "River%20Slaney", "Church%20of%20Ireland", "List%20of%20towns%20and%20villages%20in%20the%20Republic%20of%20Ireland" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Towns and villages in County Wexford
{ "description": "town in Leinster, Ireland", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4076753", "wikidata_label": "Ballycarney", "wikipedia_title": "Ballycarney", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107408, "parentid": 769966027, "revid": 782176897, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-05-25T10:30:52Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ballycarney&oldid=782176897" }
22107412
22107412
Zaireichthys zonatus
{ "paragraph": [ "Zaireichthys zonatus\n", "Zaireichthys zonatus is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the rapids just below Pool Malebo. It grows to a length of 2.5 cm. Its body has vertical bands with darkened margins. The humeral process of the pectoral girdle is short and with a few fine denticulations at its tips. The dorsal and pectoral fins have strong and stout spines. \"Z. zonatus\" is found only at the edges of a sandy areas, although their habitat is very rocky.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 37, 51, 66, 142, 242, 265, 342, 353 ], "end": [ 50, 58, 98, 153, 257, 280, 348, 365 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Democratic Republic of the Congo", "Pool Malebo", "humeral process", "pectoral girdle", "dorsal", "pectoral fin" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo", "Pool%20Malebo", "humeral%20process", "pectoral%20girdle", "dorsal%20fin", "pectoral%20fin" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1967,Fish of Africa,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3759968", "wikidata_label": "Zaireichthys zonatus", "wikipedia_title": "Zaireichthys zonatus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107412, "parentid": 856378840, "revid": 906108296, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:47:48Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zaireichthys%20zonatus&oldid=906108296" }
22107427
22107427
Dennis, Putnam County, Georgia
{ "paragraph": [ "Dennis, Putnam County, Georgia\n", "Dennis is an unincorporated community in Putnam County, Georgia, United States. It lies at an elevation of 453 feet (138 m).\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 13, 41, 56 ], "end": [ 37, 54, 63 ], "text": [ "unincorporated community", "Putnam County", "Georgia" ], "href": [ "unincorporated%20community", "Putnam%20County%2C%20Georgia", "Georgia%20%28U.S.%20state%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "" ] }
Unincorporated communities in Putnam County, Georgia,Unincorporated communities in Georgia (U.S. state)
{ "description": "human settlement in Georgia, United States of America", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5258110", "wikidata_label": "Dennis, Putnam County, Georgia", "wikipedia_title": "Dennis, Putnam County, Georgia", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107427, "parentid": 603957113, "revid": 784777546, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-06-10T00:28:56Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dennis,%20Putnam%20County,%20Georgia&oldid=784777546" }
22107404
22107404
Hotel Waverly
{ "paragraph": [ "Hotel Waverly\n", "The Hotel Waverly was a four-storey low-rise hotel in downtown Toronto. Opened in 1900, the hotel was built for J.J. Powell. It was among one of the oldest Toronto hotels in continuous operation.\n", "Section::::Location.\n", "Hotel Waverly was at 484 Spadina Avenue on the northwest corner of Spadina Avenue and College Street, adjacent to Toronto's Chinatown. It was adjacent to The Silver Dollar Room, which was added to the hotel in 1958. The Scott Mission was next door.\n", "The hotel's central location was close to major attractions such as the Art Gallery of Ontario, Queen's Park, The Royal Ontario Museum and Kensington Market, making it a prime target for redevelopment.\n", "Section::::Accommodations.\n", "The Waverly's interior rooms were modest but comfortable. This accommodation provides low-cost housing benefiting Toronto's transient community as well as monthly residents. Its proximity to the mission has kept rental rates low, attracting customers who are looking for a deal in downtown. The hotel offers 24-hour laundry facilities, free parking and snack counter. \n", "Section::::Notability.\n", "Though he denied it, evidence points towards James Earl Ray staying at the Waverly while hiding out in Toronto after shooting Martin Luther King, Jr.. It was also the longtime home of poet Milton Acorn; several of his most acclaimed works depict the life in the neighbourhood. In popular culture the hotel was the setting for the opening scene of the Elmore Leonard novel \"Killshot\" and was also featured in the film version. The hotel is also briefly pictured in the music video for \"Games for Days\" by Julian Plenti (a.k.a. Paul Banks), and the music video for \"Man I Used to Be,\" by Canadian musician k-os.\n", "Section::::Future.\n", "The Wynn Group, a Toronto-based rental group and building developer, have proposed to construct a 20-storey building with 202 rental units aimed at Toronto's university students. The Silver Dollar Room would be reopened on the first floor.\n", "As of 2017, the hotel is permanently closed. \n", "In March 2018, Fitzrovia Real Estate acquired the approved plans and site, confirming that the new purpose-built rental tower would be called \"The Waverley\" \n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Waverly Hotel\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 4, 4, 4, 4, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 10, 14 ], "start": [ 36, 45, 63, 67, 86, 124, 154, 216, 72, 96, 110, 139, 45, 126, 189, 351, 373, 408, 526, 604, 179, 12 ], "end": [ 44, 50, 70, 81, 100, 133, 176, 233, 94, 108, 134, 156, 59, 149, 201, 365, 381, 424, 536, 608, 201, 25 ], "text": [ "low-rise", "hotel", "Toronto", "Spadina Avenue", "College Street", "Chinatown", "The Silver Dollar Room", "The Scott Mission", "Art Gallery of Ontario", "Queen's Park", "The Royal Ontario Museum", "Kensington Market", "James Earl Ray", "Martin Luther King, Jr.", "Milton Acorn", "Elmore Leonard", "Killshot", "the film version", "Paul Banks", "k-os", "The Silver Dollar Room", "Waverly Hotel" ], "href": [ "low-rise", "hotel", "Toronto", "Spadina%20Avenue", "College%20Street%20%28Toronto%29", "Chinatown", "The%20Silver%20Dollar%20Room", "The%20Scott%20Mission", "Art%20Gallery%20of%20Ontario", "Queen%27s%20Park%20%28Toronto%29", "Royal%20Ontario%20Museum", "Kensington%20Market", "James%20Earl%20Ray", "Martin%20Luther%20King%2C%20Jr.", "Milton%20Acorn", "Elmore%20Leonard", "Killshot%20%28novel%29", "Killshot%20%28film%29", "Paul%20Banks%20%28musician%2C%20born%201978%29", "k-os", "The%20Silver%20Dollar%20Room", "http%3A//www.hotelwaverley.com" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5912106", "wikidata_label": "Hotel Waverly", "wikipedia_title": "Hotel Waverly", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107404, "parentid": 907853947, "revid": 907853985, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-25T18:27:05Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hotel%20Waverly&oldid=907853985" }
22107465
22107465
William Leslie Hooper
{ "paragraph": [ "William Leslie Hooper\n", "William Leslie Hooper (August 2, 1855 – October 3, 1918) was the acting president of Tufts College (later Tufts University) from 1912 to 1914, between the terms of the fourth and fifth elected presidents.\n", "Section::::Early life and education.\n", "Hooper was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1855. He received a bachelor of arts degree from Tufts in 1877, and a master of arts degree from Tufts in 1878. He also received an honorary Ph.D. in 1898 and an LL.D. in 1915, both from Tufts. Hooper was instructor of Mathematics and Applied Physics at the Bromfield School and became its principal in 1880. While at Tufts, Hooper was initiated into Theta Delta Chi.\n", "Section::::Career.\n", "Hooper became assistant professor of physics at Tufts in 1883, and then professor of electrical engineering in 1890. Following the resignation of Frederick W. Hamilton, Hooper was made acting president in 1912, having been commended by the Trustees for his contributions to the engineering department and his successful fundraising abilities. He served in this role through the end of 1914 until Hermon Carey Bumpus took office, at which point he returned to the department of electrical engineering.\n", "Hooper built a residence at 124 Professors Row in 1892, known today as Hooper House, which currently houses the University Health Services. Additionally, the home of the department of electrical engineering was dedicated as the Hooper Laboratories for Electrical Engineering on June 5, 1940, and held that name until 1983, when it was rededicated as Halligan Hall.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 3, 3, 3, 5, 5 ], "start": [ 65, 106, 19, 302, 395, 146, 396 ], "end": [ 81, 122, 39, 318, 410, 167, 415 ], "text": [ "acting president", "Tufts University", "Halifax, Nova Scotia", "Bromfield School", "Theta Delta Chi", "Frederick W. Hamilton", "Hermon Carey Bumpus" ], "href": [ "acting%20president", "Tufts%20University", "City%20of%20Halifax", "Bromfield%20School", "Theta%20Delta%20Chi", "Frederick%20W.%20Hamilton", "Hermon%20Carey%20Bumpus" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
20th-century Christian universalists,19th-century Christian universalists,Members of the Universalist Church of America,1855 births,1918 deaths,Tufts University alumni
{ "description": "American academic administrator", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q8014512", "wikidata_label": "William Leslie Hooper", "wikipedia_title": "William Leslie Hooper", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107465, "parentid": 874946463, "revid": 874946559, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-12-22T17:59:51Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William%20Leslie%20Hooper&oldid=874946559" }
22107477
22107477
Belonoglanis brieni
{ "paragraph": [ "Belonoglanis brieni\n", "Belonoglanis brieni is a species of loach catfish that is probably endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found around Pool Malebo with questionable occurrence in the Republic of the Congo. It reaches a length of 5 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 36, 67, 82, 140, 188 ], "end": [ 49, 74, 114, 151, 209 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Democratic Republic of the Congo", "Pool Malebo", "Republic of the Congo" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20the%20Congo", "Pool%20Malebo", "Republic%20of%20the%20Congo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of Africa,Taxa named by Max Poll,Fish described in 1959,Amphiliidae,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758148", "wikidata_label": "Belonoglanis brieni", "wikipedia_title": "Belonoglanis brieni", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107477, "parentid": 823508741, "revid": 906086323, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T14:47:11Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Belonoglanis%20brieni&oldid=906086323" }
22107479
22107479
Perić
{ "paragraph": [ "Perić\n", "Perić or Peric is a surname, very common in Croatia, Serbia, and the Czech Republic.\n", "Notable people with the surname include:\n", "BULLET::::- Borislava Perić (born 1972), Serbian table tennis player\n", "BULLET::::- Darko Perić (born 1978), Croatian football player\n", "BULLET::::- Dragan Perić (born 1964), retired Serbian shot putter and discus thrower\n", "BULLET::::- Janko Peric (born 1949), former Canadian politician\n", "BULLET::::- Milan Perić (born 1986), Serbian footballer\n", "BULLET::::- Nedjeljko Perić (born 1950), Croatian engineer\n", "BULLET::::- Nicolás Peric (born 1978), Chilean goalkeeper of Croatian origin\n", "BULLET::::- Ozren Perić (born 1987), Bosnian footballer\n", "BULLET::::- Ratko Perić (born 1944), Bishop of Mostar-Duvno and Apostolic Administrator of Trebinje-Mrkan\n", "BULLET::::- Sladan Peric (born 1982), Danish professional football player\n", "BULLET::::- Stjepan Perić (born 1983), Croatian actor\n", "BULLET::::- Valter Perić (1919–1945), resistance leader in Sarajevo during World War II\n", "Another version of the same surname is Perich:\n", "BULLET::::- Anton Perich, American filmmaker, photographer, and video artist\n", "BULLET::::- Cheryl Perich, an American teacher whose wrongful termination lawsuit was the impetus for the U.S. Supreme Court case of \"Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC\"\n", "BULLET::::- Guillermo Perich, Cuban violinist\n", "BULLET::::- Tristan Perich, American contemporary composer\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Peri (name)\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21 ], "start": [ 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 27, 23, 24, 23, 23, 27, 25, 23, 23, 24, 25, 24, 24, 25, 28, 26, 23 ], "text": [ "Borislava Perić", "Darko Perić", "Dragan Perić", "Janko Peric", "Milan Perić", "Nedjeljko Perić", "Nicolás Peric", "Ozren Perić", "Ratko Perić", "Sladan Peric", "Stjepan Perić", "Valter Perić", "Anton Perich", "Cheryl Perich", "Guillermo Perich", "Tristan Perich", "Peri (name)" ], "href": [ "Borislava%20Peri%C4%87", "Darko%20Peri%C4%87", "Dragan%20Peri%C4%87", "Janko%20Peric", "Milan%20Peri%C4%87", "Nedjeljko%20Peri%C4%87", "Nicol%C3%A1s%20Peric", "Ozren%20Peri%C4%87", "Ratko%20Peri%C4%87", "Sladan%20Peric", "Stjepan%20Peri%C4%87", "Valter%20Peri%C4%87", "Anton%20Perich", "Cheryl%20Perich", "Guillermo%20Perich", "Tristan%20Perich", "Peri%20%28name%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Serbian-language surnames,Croatian-language surnames
{ "description": "family name", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7169000", "wikidata_label": "Perić", "wikipedia_title": "Perić", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107479, "parentid": 860540309, "revid": 902650963, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-06-20T09:35:03Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Perić&oldid=902650963" }
22107475
22107475
LeRoy S. Wirthlin
{ "paragraph": [ "LeRoy S. Wirthlin\n", "LeRoy S. Wirthlin (born 1935) was a professor at Harvard Medical School and later a practicing surgeon.\n", "Section::::Biography.\n", "Wirthlin received his bachelor's degree from the University of Utah and his medical degree from Harvard Medical School.\n", "Wirthlin is a Latter-day Saint. From 2002 to 2005 he served as president of the Germany Munich Austria Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.\n", "Wirthlin and his wife Mary are the parents of 17 children.\n", "Section::::Writings.\n", "Wirthlin has published papers on high altitude effects and also on the surgeries performed on Joseph Smith, Jr. This included an article about Nathan Smith published in the journal \"BYU Studies\" in 1977, followed by an article for more general readers in the \"Ensign\" magazine. Wirthlin got involved in the study of Smith's surgery due to interactions with his stake president Richard L. Bushman, who was an expert on Smith's life.\n", "Section::::Sources.\n", "BULLET::::- Scientific Commons entry\n", "BULLET::::- Archives of Surgery article co-authored by Wirthlin\n", "BULLET::::- Wirthlin's BYU studies article\n", "BULLET::::- \"Mormon Times\", Jul 21, 2008\n" ] }
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21st-century Mormon missionaries,Harvard Medical School faculty,Historians of the Latter Day Saint movement,American leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,American Mormon missionaries in Germany,American Mormon missionaries in Austria,Mission presidents (LDS Church),1936 births,University of Utah alumni,Harvard Medical School alumni,Living people,American surgeons
{ "description": "American surgeon", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6506451", "wikidata_label": "LeRoy S. Wirthlin", "wikipedia_title": "LeRoy S. Wirthlin", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107475, "parentid": 825016311, "revid": 906539817, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-16T14:19:45Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=LeRoy%20S.%20Wirthlin&oldid=906539817" }
22107505
22107505
Belonoglanis tenuis
{ "paragraph": [ "Belonoglanis tenuis\n", "Belonoglanis tenuis is a species of loach catfish found in the Congo Basin where it occurs in the Congo River basin. It reaches lengths up to 17.2 cm.\n", "Section::::Species Information.\n", "Section::::Species Information.:Size.\n", "The \"belonoglanis tenuis\" usually measures at around 17 centimeters.\n", "Section::::Species Information.:Identification.\n", "There is a single row of bony plates from the dorsal fin to the caudal peduncle on the top of the fishes body. The \"belonoglanis tenuis\" is long and thin. They are toothless.\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- https://www.aquaticrepublic.com/common/species.php?species_id=360\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 36, 63, 98 ], "end": [ 49, 74, 109 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Congo Basin", "Congo River" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Congo%20Basin", "Congo%20River" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "" ] }
Fish described in 1902,Fish of Africa,Taxa named by George Albert Boulenger,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3758644", "wikidata_label": "Belonoglanis tenuis", "wikipedia_title": "Belonoglanis tenuis", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107505, "parentid": 827594839, "revid": 906086343, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T14:47:16Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Belonoglanis%20tenuis&oldid=906086343" }
22107447
22107447
List of Danish composers
{ "paragraph": [ "List of Danish composers\n", "A list of notable Danish composers:\n", "A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z\n", "Section::::A.\n", "BULLET::::- Thorvald Aagaard\n", "BULLET::::- Truid Aagesen\n", "BULLET::::- David Abell\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Abrahamsen\n", "BULLET::::- Aksel Agerby\n", "BULLET::::- Harald Agersnap\n", "BULLET::::- Georg Frederik Ferdinand Allen\n", "BULLET::::- Robert William Otto Allen\n", "BULLET::::- Arthur Ivan Allin\n", "BULLET::::- Birgitte Alsted\n", "BULLET::::- Herman Amberg\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Amberg\n", "BULLET::::- Aksel Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Arvid Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Benny Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Daniel Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Eyvin Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Hakon Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Joachim Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Johannes Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Fritz Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Kai Normann Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Sophus Andersen\n", "BULLET::::- Lotte Anker\n", "Section::::B.\n", "BULLET::::- Erik Bach\n", "BULLET::::- Kasper Bai\n", "BULLET::::- Frans Bak\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Christian Nicolaj Balle\n", "BULLET::::- Harald Balslev\n", "BULLET::::- Emilius Bangert\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Barnekow\n", "BULLET::::- Sigurd Barrett\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Frederik Barth\n", "BULLET::::- Frederik Philip Carl August Barth\n", "BULLET::::- Wilhelm Herman Barth\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Bartholdy\n", "BULLET::::- Rudolph Bay\n", "BULLET::::- Julius Bechgaard\n", "BULLET::::- Victor Bendix\n", "BULLET::::- Jørgen Bentzon\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Viggo Bentzon\n", "BULLET::::- Nicolai Berendt\n", "BULLET::::- Gunnar Berg\n", "BULLET::::- Andreas Peter Berggreen\n", "BULLET::::- Ilja Bergh\n", "BULLET::::- Rudolph Sophus Bergh\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Bernhart\n", "BULLET::::- Viggo Bielefeldt\n", "BULLET::::- Ludvig Birkedal-Barfod\n", "BULLET::::- Erling Bjerno\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Blachman\n", "BULLET::::- Georg Carl Bohlmann\n", "BULLET::::- Elisabeth Boisen\n", "BULLET::::- Jørgen Ditleff Bondesen\n", "BULLET::::- Helge Bonnén\n", "BULLET::::- Melchior Borchgrevinck\n", "BULLET::::- Kim Borg\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Borup-Jørgensen\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Brachrogge\n", "BULLET::::- Steffen Brandt\n", "BULLET::::- Ivar Bredal\n", "BULLET::::- Erling Brene\n", "BULLET::::- Viggo Brodersen\n", "BULLET::::- Kai Aage Bruun\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Bruun\n", "BULLET::::- Ole Buck\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Busch\n", "BULLET::::- Volkmar Busch\n", "BULLET::::- Dietrich Buxtehude\n", "BULLET::::- Erik Bøgh\n", "BULLET::::- Hakon Børresen\n", "Section::::C.\n", "BULLET::::- Camillo Carlsen\n", "BULLET::::- Henrik Carlsen\n", "BULLET::::- Bernhard Christensen\n", "BULLET::::- Asger Lund Christiansen\n", "BULLET::::- Henning Christiansen\n", "BULLET::::- Karl Clausen\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Clemmensen\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Cohn Haste\n", "BULLET::::- Victor Cornelius\n", "BULLET::::- Fritz Crome\n", "BULLET::::- Simoni Dall Croubelis\n", "Section::::D.\n", "BULLET::::- Balduin Dahl\n", "BULLET::::- Nancy Dalberg\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Darbes\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Debois\n", "BULLET::::- Søffren Degen\n", "BULLET::::- Nathanael Diesel\n", "BULLET::::- Jean Baptiste Édouard Du Puy\n", "BULLET::::- Otto Dütsch\n", "Section::::E.\n", "BULLET::::- Adolph Julius Eggers\n", "BULLET::::- Søren Nils Eichberg\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Eje\n", "BULLET::::- Henning Elbirk\n", "BULLET::::- Ejnar Emborg\n", "BULLET::::- Harald Bjerg Emborg\n", "BULLET::::- Jens Laursøn Emborg\n", "BULLET::::- Jørgen Emborg\n", "BULLET::::- Aage Emborg\n", "BULLET::::- August Enna\n", "BULLET::::- Poul Allin Erichsen\n", "BULLET::::- Morten Eskesen\n", "Section::::F.\n", "BULLET::::- Jacob Christian Fabricius\n", "BULLET::::- Bent Fabricius-Bjerre\n", "BULLET::::- Frederik Foersom\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Christian Foersom\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Foltmar\n", "BULLET::::- Ida Henriette da Fonseca\n", "BULLET::::- Julius Foss\n", "BULLET::::- John Frandsen\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Frederiksen\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Henrik Freithoff\n", "BULLET::::- Ivar Frounberg\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Johan Frydensberg\n", "BULLET::::- Johannes Frederik Frølich\n", "BULLET::::- Frederik Christian Funck\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Ferdinand Funck\n", "BULLET::::- Fuzzy\n", "BULLET::::- Johanne Fenger\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Gottlob Füssel\n", "Section::::G.\n", "BULLET::::- Ingolf Gabold\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Gade\n", "BULLET::::- Jacob Gade\n", "BULLET::::- Niels W. Gade\n", "BULLET::::- Johann Christian Gebauer\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Geisler\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Geist\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Ludvig Gerlach\n", "BULLET::::- Georg Gerson\n", "BULLET::::- W.H.R.R. Giedde\n", "BULLET::::- Lennart Ginman\n", "BULLET::::- Nicolo Gistou\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Henrik Glass\n", "BULLET::::- Louis Glass\n", "BULLET::::- Franz Joseph Glæser\n", "BULLET::::- Joseph Glæser\n", "BULLET::::- Peder Gram\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Grandjean\n", "BULLET::::- Lars Graugaard\n", "BULLET::::- Tekla Griebel-Wandall\n", "BULLET::::- Michael Ehregott Grose\n", "BULLET::::- Heinrich Ernst Grosmann\n", "BULLET::::- Jacob Groth\n", "BULLET::::- Georg Grothe\n", "BULLET::::- Launy Grøndahl\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Grønland\n", "BULLET::::- Pelle Gudmundsen-Holmgreen\n", "BULLET::::- Bo Gunge\n", "BULLET::::- Cornelius Gurlitt\n", "BULLET::::- Hugo Gyldmark\n", "BULLET::::- Sven Gyldmark\n", "BULLET::::- Birger Wøllner Gaarn\n", "Section::::H.\n", "BULLET::::- Sophus Hagen\n", "BULLET::::- Mads Hak\n", "BULLET::::- Andreas Hallager\n", "BULLET::::- Sophus Halle\n", "BULLET::::- Povl Hamburger\n", "BULLET::::- Asger Hamerik\n", "BULLET::::- Ebbe Hamerik\n", "BULLET::::- Margaret Hamerik\n", "BULLET::::- Jodle Birge\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Julius Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Frants Johannes Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Nicolaj Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Robert Emil Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Thorvald Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Hansen\n", "BULLET::::- Egil Harder\n", "BULLET::::- Knud Harder\n", "BULLET::::- August Wilhelm Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- Emil Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- Emma Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- J.P.E. Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Ernst Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- Johann Hartmann\n", "BULLET::::- Lars Hegaard\n", "BULLET::::- Anton Hegner\n", "BULLET::::- Ludvig Hegner\n", "BULLET::::- Jørgen Heide\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Heise\n", "BULLET::::- Paul Hellmuth\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Helmig\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Helsted\n", "BULLET::::- Edvard Helsted\n", "BULLET::::- Gustav Helsted\n", "BULLET::::- Edgar Henrichsen\n", "BULLET::::- Roger Henrichsen\n", "BULLET::::- Fini Henriques\n", "BULLET::::- Bent Hesselmann\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Hildebrandt\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Peter Hillebrandt\n", "BULLET::::- Bjørn Hjelmborg\n", "BULLET::::- Ludvig Holm\n", "BULLET::::- Mogens Winkel Holm\n", "BULLET::::- Vilhelm Christian Holm\n", "BULLET::::- Vagn Holmboe\n", "BULLET::::- Bo Holten\n", "BULLET::::- C.F.E. Horneman\n", "BULLET::::- Emil Horneman\n", "BULLET::::- Bjarne Hoyer\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Hye-Knudsen\n", "BULLET::::- Otto Hænning\n", "BULLET::::- Georg Høeberg\n", "BULLET::::- Finn Høffding\n", "Section::::I.\n", "BULLET::::- Johannes Erasmus Iversen\n", "Section::::J.\n", "BULLET::::- Ejnar Jacobsen\n", "BULLET::::- Jens Bjerre Jacobsen\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Peter Jensen\n", "BULLET::::- Knud Jeppesen\n", "BULLET::::- Jørgen Jersild\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Jørgensen\n", "BULLET::::- C.V. Jørgensen\n", "Section::::K.\n", "BULLET::::- Leif Kayser\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Kjerulf\n", "BULLET::::- Charles Kjerulf\n", "BULLET::::- Povl Kjøller\n", "BULLET::::- Paul von Klenau\n", "BULLET::::- Werner Knudsen\n", "BULLET::::- Jesper Koch\n", "BULLET::::- Anders Koppel\n", "BULLET::::- Herman D. Koppel\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Koppel\n", "BULLET::::- Søren Kragh-Jacobsen\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Casper Krossing\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Ernst Krøyer\n", "BULLET::::- Friedrich Kuhlau\n", "BULLET::::- F.L.Æ. Kunzen\n", "BULLET::::- Jesper Kyd\n", "BULLET::::- Morten Kærså\n", "Section::::L.\n", "BULLET::::- Niels la Cour\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Erasmus Lange-Müller\n", "BULLET::::- Rued Langgaard\n", "BULLET::::- Lars Oluf Larsen\n", "BULLET::::- Søren Sebber Larsen\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Laub\n", "BULLET::::- Bernhard Lewkovitch\n", "BULLET::::- Axel Liebmann\n", "BULLET::::- Nanna Liebmann\n", "BULLET::::- Lars Lilholt\n", "BULLET::::- Anne Linnet\n", "BULLET::::- Martin Lohse\n", "BULLET::::- Bent Lorentzen\n", "BULLET::::- Jakob Lorentzen\n", "BULLET::::- Hans Christian Lumbye\n", "BULLET::::- Tom Lundén\n", "BULLET::::- Frederikke Løvenskiold\n", "Section::::M.\n", "BULLET::::- Frederik Magle\n", "BULLET::::- Otto Malling\n", "BULLET::::- Marilyn Mazur\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Viggo Meincke\n", "BULLET::::- Sextus Miskow\n", "BULLET::::- Benna Moe\n", "BULLET::::- John Mogensen\n", "BULLET::::- Otto Mortensen\n", "BULLET::::- Erik Moseholm\n", "Section::::N.\n", "BULLET::::- Joachim Neergaard\n", "BULLET::::- Franz Xaver Neruda\n", "BULLET::::- Ulrik Neumann\n", "BULLET::::- Andreas P. Nielsen\n", "BULLET::::- Carl Nielsen\n", "BULLET::::- Ludolf Nielsen\n", "BULLET::::- Erik Norby\n", "BULLET::::- Heinrich von Nutzhorn\n", "BULLET::::- Cora Nyegaard\n", "BULLET::::- Per Nørgård\n", "BULLET::::- Ib Nørholm\n", "Section::::O.\n", "BULLET::::- Morten Olsen\n", "Section::::P.\n", "BULLET::::- Else Marie Pade\n", "BULLET::::- Steen Pade\n", "BULLET::::- Holger Simon Paulli\n", "BULLET::::- Gunner Møller Pedersen\n", "BULLET::::- Ivan Pedersen\n", "BULLET::::- Mogens Pedersøn\n", "BULLET::::- James Price\n", "Section::::R.\n", "BULLET::::- Christian Joseph Rasmussen\n", "BULLET::::- Karl Aage Rasmussen\n", "BULLET::::- Emil Reesen\n", "BULLET::::- Jascha Richter\n", "BULLET::::- Knudåge Riisager\n", "BULLET::::- Oluf Ring\n", "BULLET::::- Kjell Roikjer\n", "BULLET::::- Leopold Rosenfeld\n", "BULLET::::- Poul Ruders\n", "BULLET::::- Frederik Rung\n", "BULLET::::- Henrik Rung\n", "BULLET::::- P. S. Rung-Keller\n", "BULLET::::- Hanne Rømer\n", "Section::::S.\n", "BULLET::::- Thomas Sandberg\n", "BULLET::::- Claus Schall\n", "BULLET::::- Peder Schall\n", "BULLET::::- Johann Adolph Scheibe\n", "BULLET::::- Poul Schierbeck\n", "BULLET::::- Poul Christian Schindler\n", "BULLET::::- Svend S. Schultz\n", "BULLET::::- Sebastian\n", "BULLET::::- Rudolph Simonsen\n", "BULLET::::- Svenn Skipper\n", "BULLET::::- Niels Skousen\n", "BULLET::::- Kira Skov\n", "BULLET::::- Bent Sørensen\n", "BULLET::::- Aage Stentoft\n", "BULLET::::- Bo Stief\n", "BULLET::::- Henrik Strube\n", "BULLET::::- John Sund\n", "Section::::T.\n", "BULLET::::- John Tchicai\n", "BULLET::::- Michael Teschl\n", "BULLET::::- Carl August Thielo\n", "BULLET::::- Knud Vad Thomsen\n", "BULLET::::- Kenneth Thordal\n", "BULLET::::- Peter Thorup\n", "BULLET::::- Leif Thybo\n", "Section::::V.\n", "BULLET::::- Karsten Vogel\n", "BULLET::::- Herman Friedrich Voltmar\n", "BULLET::::- Johan Voltmar\n", "Section::::W.\n", "BULLET::::- Morten Wedendahl\n", "BULLET::::- Flemming Weis\n", "BULLET::::- Tue West\n", "BULLET::::- Svend Westergaard\n", "BULLET::::- C. E. F. Weyse\n", "BULLET::::- Henriette Wienecke\n", "BULLET::::- K.A. Wieth-Knudsen\n", "BULLET::::- August Winding\n", "Section::::Z.\n", "BULLET::::- Hardenack Otto Conrad Zinck\n" ] }
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"Hanne%20R%C3%B8mer", "Thomas%20Sandberg", "Claus%20Schall", "Peder%20Schall", "Johann%20Adolph%20Scheibe", "Poul%20Schierbeck", "Poul%20Christian%20Schindler", "Svend%20S.%20Schultz", "Sebastian%20%28Danish%20musician%29", "Rudolph%20Simonsen", "Svenn%20Skipper", "Niels%20Skousen", "Kira%20Skov", "Bent%20S%C3%B8rensen%20%28composer%29", "Aage%20Stentoft", "Bo%20Stief", "Henrik%20Strube", "John%20Sund", "John%20Tchicai", "Michael%20Teschl", "Carl%20August%20Thielo", "Knud%20Vad%20Thomsen", "Kenneth%20Thordal", "Peter%20Thorup", "Leif%20Thybo", "Karsten%20Vogel", "Herman%20Friedrich%20Voltmar", "Johan%20Voltmar", "Morten%20Wedendahl", "Flemming%20Weis", "Tue%20West", "Svend%20Westergaard", "Christopher%20Ernst%20Friedrich%20Weyse", "Henriette%20Wienecke", "K.A.%20Wieth-Knudsen", "August%20Winding", "Hardenack%20Otto%20Conrad%20Zinck" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Danish composers,Lists of composers by nationality
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q11794342", "wikidata_label": "", "wikipedia_title": "", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107447, "parentid": 806725963, "revid": 814272754, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-12-07T20:33:57Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List%20of%20Danish%20composers&oldid=814272754" }
22107220
22107220
Roughtail stingray
{ "paragraph": [ "Roughtail stingray\n", "The roughtail stingray (\"Dasyatis centroura\") is a species of stingray in the family Dasyatidae, with separate populations in coastal waters of the northwestern, eastern, and southwestern Atlantic Ocean. This bottom-dwelling species typically inhabits sandy or muddy areas with patches of invertebrate cover, at a depth of . It is seasonally migratory, overwintering in offshore waters and moving into coastal habitats for summer. The largest whip-tail stingray in the Atlantic, the roughtail stingray grows up to across and in weight. It is plain in color, with an angular, diamond-shaped pectoral fin disc and a long, whip-tail tail bearing a subtle fin fold underneath. The many thorns on its back and tail serve to distinguish it from other stingrays that share its range.\n", "Often found lying on the bottom buried in sediment, the roughtail stingray is a generalist predator that feeds on a variety of benthic invertebrates and bony fishes. It is aplacental viviparous, with the embryos receiving nourishment initially from yolk, and later from histotroph (\"uterine milk\") produced by the mother. In the northwestern Atlantic, females bear an annual litter of 4–6 young in fall and early winter, after a gestation period of 9–11 months. By contrast, in the Mediterranean there is evidence that females bear two litters of 2–6 young per year after a gestation period of only four months. Rays in the northwestern Atlantic are also larger at birth and at sexual maturity than those from the Mediterranean. The venomous tail spine of the roughtail stingray is potentially dangerous to humans. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has listed this species under Least Concern overall and in the northwestern Atlantic, where it is not commercially utilized. However, in the Mediterranean and southwestern Atlantic it is subject to heavy fishing pressure and has been assessed as Near Threatened.\n", "Section::::Taxonomy and phylogeny.\n", "The first description of the roughtail stingray was published by American naturalist Samuel Mitchell in one of the earliest North American works on ichthyology, a short treatise on the fishes of New York in the 1815 first volume of \"Transactions of the Literary and Philosophical Society of New York\". Mitchell based his account on specimens caught off Long Island, though did not designate any types, and named the new species \"Raja centroura\", from the Greek \"centoro\" (\"pricker\") in reference to its thorns. Subsequent authors moved this species to the genus \"Dasyatis\". This ray may also be referred to as rough-tailed stingray, rough-tailed northern stingray, or thorny stingray.\n", "The taxonomy of the roughtail stingray is not fully resolved, with the disjunct northwestern Atlantic, southwestern Atlantic, and eastern Atlantic populations differing in life history and perhaps representing a complex of different species. Lisa Rosenberger's 2001 phylogenetic analysis of 14 \"Dasyatis\" species, based on morphology, found that the roughtail stingray is the sister species to the broad stingray (\"D. lata\"), and that they form a clade with the southern stingray (\"D. americana\") and the longtail stingray (\"D. longa\"). The close relationship between the roughtail and southern stingrays was upheld by a genetic analysis published by Leticia de Almeida Leao Vaz and colleagues in 2006. The roughtail and broad stingrays are found in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans respectively, and therefore likely diverged before or with the formation of the Isthmus of Panama (\"c.\" 3 Ma).\n", "Section::::Distribution and habitat.\n", "The roughtail stingray is broadly but discontinuously distributed in the coastal waters of the Atlantic Ocean. In the western Atlantic, it occurs from the Georges Bank off New England southward to Florida, the Bahamas, and the northeastern Gulf of Mexico; there are also scattered reports from Venezuela to Argentina and on the Barrier reef in Belize. In the eastern Atlantic, it occurs from the southern Bay of Biscay to Angola, including the Mediterranean Sea, Madeira, and the Canary Islands. A single record from Quilon, India was likely a misidentification.\n", "One of the deepest-diving stingrays, the roughtail stingray has been recorded to a depth of in the Bahamas and regularly occurs down to in the Mediterranean. However, it is most common at a depth of . This bottom-dwelling species favors live-bottom habitat (patches of rough terrain that are densely encrusted by sessile invertebrates), and also frequents adjacent open areas of sand or mud. Rays in the northwestern Atlantic do not usually enter brackish water, whereas those off West Africa have been recorded from the lower reaches of large rivers.\n", "The favored temperature range of the roughtail stingray is , which is the most important factor determining its distribution. It conducts seasonal migrations off the eastern United States: from December to May, this ray is found over the middle and outer parts of the continental shelf from Cape Hatteras in North Carolina to Florida, with larger rays occurring further south than smaller ones. In the spring, the population moves north of the Cape and towards the coast into bays, inlets, and saltier estuaries, though preserving the north-south gradient of body sizes. A similar migration, from shallow coastal waters in summer to deeper offshore waters in winter, apparently occurs in the Mediterranean. Pregnant females tend to be found apart from other individuals.\n", "Section::::Description.\n", "The roughtail stingray has a diamond-shaped pectoral fin disk 1.2–1.3 times as wide as long, with straight to gently sinuous margins, rather angular outer corners, and a moderately long, obtuse snout. The eyes are proportionally smaller than other stingrays in its range and immediately followed by larger spiracles. There is a curtain of skin between the nostrils with a finely fringed posterior margin. The mouth is bow-shaped with a row of six papillae (nipple-like structures) across the floor. The seven upper and 12–14 lower tooth rows at the center are functional, though the total number of tooth rows is much greater. The teeth are arranged with a quincunx pattern into flattened surfaces; each has a tetragonal base with a blunt crown in juveniles and females, and a pointed cusp in adult males.\n", "The pelvic fins have nearly straight margins and angular tips. The tail is long and whip-like, measuring some 2.5 times the length of the disc. A long, saw-toothed spine is placed atop the tail at around half a disc length back from the tail base; sometimes one or two replacement spines are also present in front of the existing one. Behind the spine, there is a long ventral fin fold that is much lower than that of the southern stingray. Individuals under across have completely smooth skin. Larger rays develop increasing numbers of distinctive tubercles or bucklers (flat-based thorns) over the middle of the back from the snout to the tail base, as well as dorsal and lateral rows of thorns on the tail. The bucklers vary in size, with the largest of equal diameter to the eye, and may bear up to three thorns each. This species is a uniform dark brown or olive above, and off-white below without dark fin margins. Among the largest members of its family, the roughtail stingray can reach across, long, and in weight. Females grow larger than males.\n", "Section::::Biology and ecology.\n", "The roughtail stingray is reportedly not highly active, spending much time buried in the sediment. It is a generalist predator whose diet generally reflects the most available prey in its environment. It mainly captures prey off the bottom, but also opportunistically takes free-swimming prey. A variety of invertebrates, as well as bony fishes such as sand lance and scup, are known to be consumed. Off Massachusetts, the main prey are crabs (\"Cancer\"), bivalves (\"Mya\"), gastropods (\"Polinices\"), squid (\"Loligo\") and annelid worms. In Delaware Bay, most of its diet consists of the shrimp \"Cragon septemspinosa\" and the blood worm \"Glycera dibranchiata\"; the overall dietary composition there is nearly identical to that of bluntnose stingrays (\"D. say\") that share the bay. The shrimp \"Upogebia affinis\" is a major food source off Virginia. Off Florida, crustaceans (\"Rananoides\", \"Ovalipes\", \"Sicyonia brevirostris\", and \"Portunus\") and polychaete worms are the most important prey.\n", "Sharks and other large fishes, in particular the great hammerhead (\"Sphyrna mokarran\"), prey upon the roughtail stingray. The live sharksucker (\"Echeneis naucrates\") is sometimes found attached to its body. Known parasites of this species include the tapeworms \"Acanthobothrium woodsholei\", \"Anthocephalum centrurum\", \"Lecanicephalum\" sp., \"Oncomegas wageneri\", \"Polypocephalus\" sp., \"Pterobothrium senegalense\", and \"Rhinebothrium maccallumi\", the monogenean \"Dendromonocotyle centrourae\", and the leech \"Branchellion torpedinis\".\n", "Like other stingrays, the roughtail stingray is aplacental viviparous: the developing embryo is initially sustained by yolk and later by histotroph (\"uterine milk\", containing proteins, lipids, and mucus) delivered by the mother through finger-like projections of the uterine epithelium called \"trophonemata\". Only the left ovary and uterus are functional in adult females. Off the eastern United States, reproduction occurs on an annual cycle with mating in winter and early spring. After a gestation period of 9–11 months, females give birth to 4–6 (typically five) young in fall or early winter. The newborns measure across. Off North Africa, birthing occurs in June and December, indicating either that females bear two litters per year with a four-month gestation period, or that there are two cohorts of females bearing one litter per year with a ten-month gestation period. The newborns are much smaller than those in the northwestern Atlantic at across, which would be consistent with a shorter gestation period. The size at maturity also differs between the two regions: off the eastern United States males and females mature at and across respectively, while off North Africa males and females mature at and across respectively.\n", "Section::::Human interactions.\n", "With its large size and long, venomous spine, the roughtail stingray can inflict a severe wound and can be very dangerous for fishers to handle. However, it is not aggressive and usually occurs too deep to be encountered by beachgoers. It has been reported to damage farmed shellfish beds. The pectoral fins or \"wings\" are sold for human consumption fresh, smoked, or dried and salted; the rest of the ray may also be processed to obtain fishmeal and liver oil. The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) has assessed the roughtail stingray as of Least Concern worldwide, while noting that as a large, slow-reproducing species it is susceptible to population depletion.\n", "In the northwestern Atlantic, the roughtail stingray is listed under Least Concern; it is not targeted or utilized by commercial fisheries, though inconsequential numbers are captured incidentally in trawls and on demersal longlines. Historically, it was sometimes ground up for fertilizer. In the Mediterranean, intensive fishing occurs in the habitat of the roughtail stingray, and it is caught incidentally by artisanal and commercial fishers using trawls, longlines, gillnets, and handlines. Though no specific data is available on this species, declines of other species and its intrinsic susceptibility to depletion have led it to be assessed as Near Threatened in the region. In the southwestern Atlantic, the roughtail stingray and other large rays are heavily fished using demersal trawls, gillnets, longlines, and hook-and-line; this fishing pressure is liable to increase due to growing commercial interest in using large stingrays for minced fish products. Anecdotal reports suggest that landings of this species are decreasing, leading to a regional assessment of Near Threatened.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- \"Dasyatis centroura\", Roughtail stingray at FishBase\n", "BULLET::::- \"Dasyatis centroura\" (Roughtail Stingray) at IUCN Red List\n", "BULLET::::- Biological Profiles: Roughtail Stingray at Florida Museum of Natural History Ichthyology Department\n" ] }
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384, 446, 460, 512, 575, 138, 196, 205, 222, 232, 289, 422, 478, 667, 1008, 52, 64, 53, 70, 51, 111 ], "text": [ "species", "stingray", "family", "Dasyatidae", "Atlantic Ocean", "bottom-dwelling", "invertebrate", "migratory", "habitat", "pectoral fin", "range", "generalist", "predator", "benthic", "invertebrate", "bony fish", "aplacental viviparous", "embryo", "yolk", "Mediterranean", "sexual maturity", "venom", "International Union for Conservation of Nature", "Least Concern", "Near Threatened", "naturalist", "North America", "ichthyology", "New York", "Long Island", "type", "Greek", "taxonomy", "disjunct", "complex", "phylogenetic", "morphology", "sister species", "broad stingray", "clade", "southern stingray", "longtail stingray", "diverged", "Isthmus of Panama", "Ma", "Georges Bank", "New England", "Florida", "Bahamas", "Gulf of Mexico", "Venezuela", "Argentina", "Barrier reef", "Belize", "Bay of Biscay", "Angola", "Mediterranean Sea", "Madeira", "Canary Islands", "Quilon", "India", "bottom-dwelling", "sessile", "invertebrate", "brackish water", "West Africa", "migrations", "United States", "continental shelf", "Cape Hatteras", "North Carolina", "bay", "inlet", "estuaries", "pectoral fin", "sinuous", "spiracle", "nostril", "quincunx", "pelvic fin", "tubercle", "generalist", "predator", "invertebrate", "bony fish", "sand lance", "scup", "Massachusetts", "crab", "Cancer", "bivalve", "Mya", "gastropod", "Polinices", "squid", "Loligo", "annelid worm", "Delaware Bay", "shrimp", "Cragon septemspinosa", "blood worm", "Glycera dibranchiata", "bluntnose stingray", "Upogebia affinis", "Virginia", "crustacean", "Rananoides", "Ovalipes", "Sicyonia brevirostris", "Portunus", "polychaete worm", "Shark", "great hammerhead", "live sharksucker", "parasite", "tapeworm", "monogenea", "leech", "aplacental viviparous", "embryo", "yolk", "histotroph", "protein", "lipid", "mucus", "uterine", "epithelium", "ovary", "uterus", "gestation period", "North Africa", "venom", "farmed shellfish", "smoked", "dried and salted", "fishmeal", "liver oil", "International Union for Conservation of Nature", "Least Concern", "commercial fisheries", "captured incidentally", "trawl", "demersal", "longlines", "fertilizer", "artisanal", "gillnet", "Near Threatened", "landings", "\"Dasyatis centroura\", Roughtail stingray", "FishBase", "\"Dasyatis centroura\" (Roughtail Stingray)", "IUCN Red List", "Biological Profiles: Roughtail Stingray", "Florida Museum of Natural History Ichthyology Department" ], "href": [ "species", "Myliobatiformes", "family%20%28biology%29", "Dasyatidae", "Atlantic%20Ocean", "benthic%20fish", "invertebrate", "fish%20migration", "habitat", "pectoral%20fin", "range%20%28biology%29", "generalist%20and%20specialist%20species", "predator", "benthic", "invertebrate", "bony%20fish", "aplacental%20viviparous", "embryo", "yolk", "Mediterranean", "sexual%20maturity", "venom", "International%20Union%20for%20Conservation%20of%20Nature", "Least%20Concern", "Near%20Threatened", "naturalist", "North%20America", "ichthyology", "New%20York%20%28state%29", "Long%20Island", "type%20specimen", "Greek%20language", "Taxonomy%20%28biology%29", "disjunct%20distribution", "species%20complex", "phylogenetic", "morphology%20%28biology%29", "sister%20species", "broad%20stingray", "clade", "southern%20stingray", "longtail%20stingray", "speciation", "Isthmus%20of%20Panama", "mya%20%28unit%29", "Georges%20Bank", "New%20England", "Florida", "Bahamas", "Gulf%20of%20Mexico", "Venezuela", "Argentina", "Belize%20Barrier%20Reef", "Belize", "Bay%20of%20Biscay", "Angola", "Mediterranean%20Sea", "Madeira", "Canary%20Islands", "Quilon", "India", "benthic", "sessility%20%28zoology%29", "invertebrate", "brackish%20water", "West%20Africa", "fish%20migration", "United%20States", "continental%20shelf", "Cape%20Hatteras", "North%20Carolina", "bay", "inlet", "estuaries", "pectoral%20fin", "wikt%3Asinuous", "spiracle", "nostril", "quincunx", "pelvic%20fin", "tubercle", "generalist%20and%20specialist%20species", "predator", "invertebrate", "bony%20fish", "sand%20lance", "scup", "Massachusetts", "crab", "Cancer%20%28genus%29", "bivalve", "Mya%20%28genus%29", "gastropod", "Polinices", "squid", "Loligo", "annelid%20worm", "Delaware%20Bay", "shrimp", "Cragon%20septemspinosa", "Glycera%20%28genus%29", "Glycera%20dibranchiata", "bluntnose%20stingray", "Upogebia%20affinis", "Virginia", "crustacean", "Rananoides", "Ovalipes", "Sicyonia%20brevirostris", "Portunus", "polychaete%20worm", "Shark", "great%20hammerhead", "live%20sharksucker", "parasite", "tapeworm", "monogenea", "leech", "aplacental%20viviparous", "embryo", "yolk", "histotroph", "protein", "lipid", "mucus", "uterus", "epithelium", "ovary", "uterus", "gestation%20period", "North%20Africa", "venom", "aquaculture", "smoking%20%28food%29", "salting%20%28food%29", "fishmeal", "shark%20liver%20oil", "International%20Union%20for%20Conservation%20of%20Nature", "Least%20Concern", "commercial%20fisheries", "bycatch", "trawl", "demersal", "longline%20fishing", "fertilizer", "artisan%20fishing", "gillnet", "Near%20Threatened", "fisheries%20glossary%23L", "http%3A//fishbase.org/Summary/speciesSummary.php%3FID%3D2572%26amp%3Bgenusname%3DDasyatis%26amp%3Bspeciesname%3Dcentroura%26amp%3Blang%3DEnglish", "http%3A//www.fishbase.org/search.php", "http%3A//www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/63152/0", "http%3A//www.iucnredlist.org/", "http%3A//www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/RtailStingray/RtailStingray.html", "http%3A//www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of the Mediterranean Sea,Fish of the Atlantic Ocean,Dasyatis
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q137628", "wikidata_label": "Roughtail stingray", "wikipedia_title": "Roughtail stingray", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Dasyatis centroura" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107220, "parentid": 887650499, "revid": 906255797, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-14T17:50:46Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Roughtail%20stingray&oldid=906255797" }
22107522
22107522
Nedre
{ "paragraph": [ "Nedre\n", "Nedre may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Eggedal, village in Sigdal municipality, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Eiker, municipality in Buskerud county, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Elvehavn, borough of Trondheim, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Fagervollvatnet, Norwegian lake that lies in Rana municipality in Nordland\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Fiplingvatnet, Norwegian lake that lies in Grane municipality in Nordland\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Heimdalsvatnet, lake which lies in Vågå and Øystre Slidre municipalities in Oppland county, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Roasten, lake in Femundsmarka National Park in Sør-Trøndelag county, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Stjørdal, former municipality in Nord-Trøndelag county, Norway\n", "BULLET::::- Nedre Veikvatnet, Norwegian lake that lies in Sørfold municipality in Nordland\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ], "start": [ 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 25, 23, 26, 33, 31, 32, 25, 26, 28 ], "text": [ "Nedre Eggedal", "Nedre Eiker", "Nedre Elvehavn", "Nedre Fagervollvatnet", "Nedre Fiplingvatnet", "Nedre Heimdalsvatnet", "Nedre Roasten", "Nedre Stjørdal", "Nedre Veikvatnet" ], "href": [ "Nedre%20Eggedal", "Nedre%20Eiker", "Nedre%20Elvehavn", "Nedre%20Fagervollvatnet", "Nedre%20Fiplingvatnet", "Nedre%20Heimdalsvatnet", "Nedre%20Roasten", "Nedre%20Stj%C3%B8rdal", "Nedre%20Veikvatnet" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "Wikipedia disambiguation page", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6986319", "wikidata_label": "Nedre", "wikipedia_title": "Nedre", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107522, "parentid": 281477790, "revid": 498831832, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2012-06-22T13:41:36Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nedre&oldid=498831832" }
22107514
22107514
Syn og Segn
{ "paragraph": [ "Syn og Segn\n", "Syn og Segn is a Norwegian quarterly cultural and political periodical published in Norway. \n", "Section::::History and profile.\n", "\"Syn og Segn\" was founded in 1894, and Rasmus Flo and Arne Garborg were the first editors. The magazine is published in Nynorsk quarterly by Det Norske Samlaget, and has been important for the development of the Nynorsk as a cultural language. Olav Midttun was the editor-in-chief for over fifty years, from 1908 to 1960. Fagernes-based Knut Aastad Bråten has edited the magazine since 2014; succeeding Bente Riise who had served in the post since 2006.\n", "The number of subscribers was largest in the 1960s when it reached about 13,000. In 2004 the number of subscribers was about 2,500. The circulation in 2004 was about 3,100.\n", "In 2010 the magazine was named \"Periodical of the Year\" in Norway by the Norwegian Association of Journals.\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- List of magazines in Norway\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Official website\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3, 5, 7, 9 ], "start": [ 17, 84, 39, 54, 120, 141, 244, 265, 322, 337, 403, 73, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 26, 90, 49, 66, 127, 160, 256, 280, 330, 355, 414, 106, 39, 28 ], "text": [ "Norwegian", "Norway", "Rasmus Flo", "Arne Garborg", "Nynorsk", "Det Norske Samlaget", "Olav Midttun", "editor-in-chief", "Fagernes", "Knut Aastad Bråten", "Bente Riise", "Norwegian Association of Journals", "List of magazines in Norway", "Official website" ], "href": [ "Norwegian%20language", "Norway", "Rasmus%20Flo", "Arne%20Garborg", "Nynorsk", "Det%20Norske%20Samlaget", "Olav%20Midttun", "editor-in-chief", "Fagernes", "Knut%20Aastad%20Br%C3%A5ten", "Bente%20Riise", "Norwegian%20Association%20of%20Journals", "List%20of%20magazines%20in%20Norway", "http%3A//www.synogsegn.no/" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Nynorsk,Quarterly magazines,Magazines established in 1894,1894 establishments in Norway,Norwegian magazines,Cultural magazines,Norwegian political magazines
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5237196", "wikidata_label": "Syn og Segn", "wikipedia_title": "Syn og Segn", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107514, "parentid": 817734318, "revid": 845172160, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-06-09T22:52:18Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Syn%20og%20Segn&oldid=845172160" }
22107518
22107518
Olav Midttun
{ "paragraph": [ "Olav Midttun\n", "Olav Midttun (8 April 1883 – 5 January 1972) was a Norwegian philologist, biographer, magazine editor, and the first national program director of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK).\n", "He was born in Mauranger as a son of teacher Jørgen Midttun (1855–1938) and Marta Øvrehus (1847–1920). He was a brother of Gisle Midttun. He was married twice, first from October 1909 to Mietze Bentsen, née Sandkuhl (1877–1942), then from 1950 to Borghild Skarmann.\n", "He edited the cultural magazine \"Syn og Segn\" for more than fifty years, from 1908 to 1960. He was program manager of NRK from its start in 1933. He was fired in 1940 by the Nazi regime during the occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany, and returned after the Second World War as program manager from 1945 to 1947. He was later a professor at the University of Oslo, and wrote several biographies. He was also a member of Bærum municipal council.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 3, 3 ], "start": [ 61, 117, 150, 15, 123, 33, 197, 345, 420, 426 ], "end": [ 72, 142, 184, 24, 136, 44, 233, 363, 425, 443 ], "text": [ "philologist", "national program director", "Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation", "Mauranger", "Gisle Midttun", "Syn og Segn", "occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany", "University of Oslo", "Bærum", "municipal council" ], "href": [ "philologist", "Director-General%20of%20the%20NRK", "Norwegian%20Broadcasting%20Corporation", "Mauranger", "Gisle%20Midttun", "Syn%20og%20Segn", "occupation%20of%20Norway%20by%20Nazi%20Germany", "University%20of%20Oslo", "B%C3%A6rum", "municipal%20council%20%28Norway%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Liberal Party (Norway) politicians,Norwegian biographers,1883 births,Norwegian philologists,Bærum politicians,Norwegian magazine editors,University of Oslo faculty,People from Kvinnherad,1972 deaths,Male biographers,Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation people,Norwegian male writers
{ "description": "Norwegian philologist", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3433303", "wikidata_label": "Olav Midttun", "wikipedia_title": "Olav Midttun", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107518, "parentid": 878919373, "revid": 878944623, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-01-17T23:05:30Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Olav%20Midttun&oldid=878944623" }
22107526
22107526
Congoglanis alula
{ "paragraph": [ "Congoglanis alula\n", "Congoglanis alula is a species of loach catfish found in the Congo River Basin in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo and possibly in Zambia. It reaches lengths up to SL.\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Ferraris, C.J. Jr., Vari, R.P. & Skelton, P.H. (2011): \"A new genus of African loach catfish (Siluriformes: Amphiliidae) from the Congo River basin, the sister-group to all other genera of the Doumeinae, with the description of two new species.\" Copeia, 2011: 477–489.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 34, 61, 82, 94, 139, 172 ], "end": [ 47, 78, 88, 122, 145, 174 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Congo River Basin", "Angola", "Democratic Republic of Congo", "Zambia", "SL" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Congo%20River%20Basin", "Angola", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20Congo", "Zambia", "Fish%20measurement" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Taxa named by John Treadwell Nichols,Taxa named by Ludlow Griscom,Fish described in 1917,Amphiliidae,Fish of Africa
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3764897", "wikidata_label": "Congoglanis alula", "wikipedia_title": "Congoglanis alula", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107526, "parentid": 825873453, "revid": 906091869, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:33:25Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Congoglanis%20alula&oldid=906091869" }
22107541
22107541
Doumea angolensis
{ "paragraph": [ "Doumea angolensis\n", "Doumea angolensis is a species of loach catfish endemic to Angola where it is found in the Benguela interior and the Kwanza River system.\n", "It reaches lengths of 7 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 34, 48, 59, 91, 117 ], "end": [ 47, 55, 65, 99, 129 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "endemic", "Angola", "Benguela", "Kwanza River" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "endemism", "Angola", "Benguela%20Province", "Kwanza%20River" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Endemic fauna of Angola,Catfish of Africa,Amphiliidae,Fish described in 1906,Freshwater fish of Angola
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3765713", "wikidata_label": "Doumea angolensis", "wikipedia_title": "Doumea angolensis", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107541, "parentid": 824809470, "revid": 906092722, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:40:41Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doumea%20angolensis&oldid=906092722" }
22107543
22107543
Trofeo
{ "paragraph": [ "Trofeo\n", "Trofeo (Italian and Spanish for trophy) may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Trofeo Maserati, a one-make racing series\n", "BULLET::::- Maserati Trofeo, a type of car raced in the series mentioned above\n", "BULLET::::- Oldsmobile Troféo, a variant of the fourth generation Oldsmobile Toronado\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ], "start": [ 32, 12, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 38, 27, 27, 29 ], "text": [ "trophy", "Trofeo Maserati", "Maserati Trofeo", "Oldsmobile Troféo" ], "href": [ "trophy", "Trofeo%20Maserati", "Maserati%20Coup%C3%A9%23Trofeo", "Oldsmobile%20Toronado%23Fourth%20generation%20%281986%E2%80%931992%29" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "" ] }
{ "description": "Wikimedia disambiguation page", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q48027617", "wikidata_label": "Trofeo", "wikipedia_title": "Trofeo", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107543, "parentid": 824265543, "revid": 824277522, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-02-06T11:32:11Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trofeo&oldid=824277522" }
22107555
22107555
Doumea chappuisi
{ "paragraph": [ "Doumea chappuisi\n", "Doumea chappuisi is a species of loach catfish found in the coastal rivers of Guinea, Ivory Coast, Liberia and Guinea-Bissau. It reaches a length of 11.4 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 33, 78, 86, 99, 111 ], "end": [ 46, 84, 97, 106, 124 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Guinea", "Ivory Coast", "Liberia", "Guinea-Bissau" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Guinea", "Ivory%20Coast", "Liberia", "Guinea-Bissau" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1933,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3765997", "wikidata_label": "Doumea chappuisi", "wikipedia_title": "Doumea chappuisi", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107555, "parentid": 856378942, "revid": 906092734, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:40:46Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doumea%20chappuisi&oldid=906092734" }
22107566
22107566
Doumea thysi
{ "paragraph": [ "Doumea thysi\n", "Doumea thysi is a species of loach catfish found in Nigeria where it is found in the Cross River and Cameroon where it is found in that country's section of the Cross River and Ndian Department. It reaches a length of 6.5 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 29, 52, 85, 101, 177 ], "end": [ 42, 59, 96, 109, 182 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Nigeria", "Cross River", "Cameroon", "Ndian" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Nigeria", "Cross%20River%20%28Nigeria%29", "Cameroon", "Ndian" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1989,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3765084", "wikidata_label": "Doumea thysi", "wikipedia_title": "Doumea thysi", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107566, "parentid": 829276905, "revid": 906092743, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:40:51Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doumea%20thysi&oldid=906092743" }
22107567
22107567
II (The Kinleys album)
{ "paragraph": [ "II (The Kinleys album)\n", "II is the second studio album by the American country music duo The Kinleys. It was released in 2000 (see 2000 in country music) as their second and final album for Epic Records.\n", "Section::::Background.\n", "The Kinleys worked with the producers of their debut album, Russ Zavitson and Tony Haselden, for their follow-up album, and released the single \"My Heart Is Still Beating\" in July 1999. The single, however, failed to reach the Country top 40, and the album, which was to be self-titled and released on October 6, 1999, was put on hold by Epic Records, who decided to bring in Country artist Radney Foster to produce songs on the album in order to broaden the duo's sound and regain chart appeal. In the end, half of the album was produced by Foster and the other half by Zavitson and Haselden.\n", "The record includes two songs co-written by Jennifer Kinley's husband, Adam Hughes, and also has the first lead vocal performance of Jennifer Kinley in a Kinleys song on \"I Need You Now\", the duo's usual way of singing consisting of Heather Kinley on lead with Jennifer on harmony vocals. The duo recorded a song titled \"If I Can Only Win Your Love\" with Vince Gill, but it was ultimately not used on the album as they felt it wasn't good enough.\n", "\"My Heart Is Still Beating\" was eventually not included on the album and the first single, the Foster-produced \"She Ain't The Girl For You\" was released in the Spring of 2000. It peaked at #34 in the Country charts.\n", "The next single, \"I'm In\" peaked at #35 in the Country charts. It was previously a single in 1998 for Foster from his album \"See What You Want to See\", and was covered by Keith Urban on his 2009 album \"Defying Gravity\". Also included on \"II\" is \"Somebody's Out There Watching\", a Top 20 hit for The Kinleys in 1998, which was previously included on the television for the series \"Touched by an Angel\".\n", "Section::::Track listing.\n", "BULLET::::1. \"She Ain't the Girl for You\" (Jon McElroy, Vince Melamed) – 3:32\n", "BULLET::::2. \"I'm In\" (Radney Foster, Georgia Middleman) – 4:55\n", "BULLET::::3. \"You're Still Here\" (Adam Hughes, Sarah Majors, D. Vincent Williams) – 3:11\n", "BULLET::::4. \"If Ever I Needed You\" (Foster, Heather Kinley, Jennifer Kinley) – 3:43\n", "BULLET::::5. \"That's Gonna Mess You Up\" (Hughes, Majors, H. Kinley, J. Kinley) – 2:58\n", "BULLET::::6. \"When the Blues and My Baby Collide\" (Bob DiPiero, Paul Nelson) – 3:28\n", "BULLET::::7. \"Me Too\" (Stan Munsey, Russ Zavitson) – 3:36\n", "BULLET::::8. \"Lovers\" (Leslie Satcher, Wynn Varble) – 2:56\n", "BULLET::::9. \"I'm Me With You\" (Marcus Hummon, H. Kinley, J. Kinley) – 3:00\n", "BULLET::::10. \"Yeah, Yeah, Yeah\" (Hummon, H. Kinley, J. Kinley) – 2:18\n", "BULLET::::11. \"Here\" (H. Kinley, J. Kinley, Sunny Russ) – 2:56\n", "BULLET::::12. \"I Need You Now\" (Tom Douglas, Michael Joyce) – 3:35\n", "BULLET::::13. \"Somebody's Out There Watching\" (Steve Booker, Franne Golde, Robin Lerner) – 3:19\n", "Section::::Personnel.\n", "Compiled from liner notes.\n", "Section::::Personnel.:Tracks 1-6.\n", "BULLET::::- Sam Bush — fiddle\n", "BULLET::::- Chad Cromwell — drums\n", "BULLET::::- Steve Fishell — pedal steel guitar, Dobro, Weissenborn\n", "BULLET::::- Pat Flynn — acoustic guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Tony Harrell — keyboards\n", "BULLET::::- Byron House — bass guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Craig Krampf — percussion\n", "BULLET::::- James Maddox — keyboards\n", "BULLET::::- Dennis Matkotsky — keyboards\n", "BULLET::::- Michael McAdam — electric guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Joe Pisapia — electric guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Chely Wright - background vocals on \"She Ain't the Girl for You\"\n", "Section::::Personnel.:Tracks 7-13.\n", "BULLET::::- Joe Chemay — bass guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Shannon Forrest — drums, percussion\n", "BULLET::::- Larry Franklin — fiddle\n", "BULLET::::- Sonny Garrish — steel guitar, Dobro\n", "BULLET::::- John Hobbs — synthesizer\n", "BULLET::::- Jerry Kimbrough — acoustic guitar, bouzouki\n", "BULLET::::- Marc Kunkel — harmonica\n", "BULLET::::- Steve Nathan — piano, Hammond B-3 organ\n", "BULLET::::- Michael Rhodes — bass guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Brent Rowan — electric guitar\n", "BULLET::::- Mitchell Shedd — percussion\n", "BULLET::::- Biff Watson — acoustic guitar, bouzouki\n", "BULLET::::- John Willis — electric guitar, banjo\n", "Section::::Personnel.:Strings on \"If Ever I Needed You\".\n", "BULLET::::- Anthony LaMarchina, John Catchings — cello\n", "BULLET::::- David Davidson, Conni Ellisor, Mary Kathryn VanOsdale, David Angell — violins\n", "Strings arranged by John Darnell.\n", "Tracks 1-6 produced by Radney Foster; tracks 7-13 produced by Tony Haselden and Russ Zavitson.\n" ] }
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2000 albums,Epic Records albums
{ "description": "second studio album by the American country music duo The Kinleys", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5971440", "wikidata_label": "II", "wikipedia_title": "II (The Kinleys album)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107567, "parentid": 894473368, "revid": 904814011, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-04T18:53:19Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=II%20(The%20Kinleys%20album)&oldid=904814011" }
22107574
22107574
Doumea typica
{ "paragraph": [ "Doumea typica\n", "Doumea typica is a species of loach catfish found in the Dja River and coastal rivers in Cameroon, the Republic of Congo and Gabon as well as possibly in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It reaches a length of 13.2 cm.\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1 ], "start": [ 30, 57, 89, 103, 125, 158 ], "end": [ 43, 66, 97, 120, 130, 186 ], "text": [ "loach catfish", "Dja River", "Cameroon", "Republic of Congo", "Gabon", "Democratic Republic of Congo" ], "href": [ "loach%20catfish", "Dja%20River", "Cameroon", "Republic%20of%20Congo", "Gabon", "Democratic%20Republic%20of%20Congo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1879,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q251877", "wikidata_label": "Doumea typica", "wikipedia_title": "Doumea typica", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107574, "parentid": 856378983, "revid": 906092751, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T15:40:56Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Doumea%20typica&oldid=906092751" }
22107585
22107585
Thorvald Aagaard
{ "paragraph": [ "Thorvald Aagaard\n", "Thorvald Aagaard (8 June 1877 in Rolsted – 22 March 1937 in Ringe) was a Danish composer, organist and college teacher.\n", "He wrote the music to several continually popular songs, such as \"Spurven sidder stum bag Kvist\" (Sparrow sits silent behind Kvist) and \"Jeg ser de bøgelyse Øer\" (I see the Light Beech Islands). Alongside such composers as Carl Nielsen, Oluf Ring and Thomas Laub, he is considered one of the innovators of Danish popular music.\n", "In memory of Aagaard, a statue was designed by Søren West and erected in Th. Aagaard Square, by Ryslinge's Valgmenighed (Voluntary Congregation), where Aagaard served as organist for several years.\n", "Section::::Bibliography.\n", "Section::::Bibliography.:Biographies.\n", "Ring, Frands Johann (1954). \"Thorvald Aagaard : Mennesket, Musikeren.\" Odense: Fyns Boghandels Forlag. OCLC 7341914 (dansk)\n", "Balslev, Povl Chr. (2009). \"Thorvald Aagaard: komponist og musikformidler i den folkelige sangs tjeneste.\" Odense : Odense Bys Museer. OCLC 476182051 (dansk)\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Article at the Odense Museum\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 6, 7, 9 ], "start": [ 33, 60, 73, 80, 90, 223, 237, 251, 96, 103, 135, 12 ], "end": [ 40, 65, 79, 88, 98, 235, 246, 262, 104, 115, 149, 40 ], "text": [ "Rolsted", "Ringe", "Danish", "composer", "organist", "Carl Nielsen", "Oluf Ring", "Thomas Laub", "Ryslinge", "OCLC 7341914", "OCLC 476182051", "Article at the Odense Museum" ], "href": [ "Rolsted", "Ringe%2C%20Denmark", "Denmark", "composer", "organist", "Carl%20Nielsen", "Oluf%20Ring", "Thomas%20Laub", "Ryslinge", "http%3A//www.worldcat.org/title/thorvald-aagaard-mennesket-musikeren/oclc/7341914", "https%3A//www.worldcat.org/title/thorvald-aagaard-komponist-og-musikformidler-i-den-folkelige-sangs-tjeneste/oclc/476182051%26amp%3Breferer%3Dbrief_results", "https%3A//web.archive.org/web/20120215002010/http%3A//museum.odense.dk/Aktuelt/Nyhedsbrev/Januar09/Bog_Aagaard.aspx" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Danish classical organists,1937 deaths,Danish classical composers,Male organists,1877 births,Pupils of Carl Nielsen,Danish male classical composers
{ "description": "Danish composer, organist and college teacher", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3364096", "wikidata_label": "Thorvald Aagaard", "wikipedia_title": "Thorvald Aagaard", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107585, "parentid": 848075878, "revid": 874806817, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-12-21T17:17:08Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thorvald%20Aagaard&oldid=874806817" }
22107570
22107570
Kate Stith
{ "paragraph": [ "Kate Stith\n", "Kate Stith (also known as Kate Stith-Cabranes) is the Lafayette S. Foster Professor of Law and the former acting dean of Yale Law School. Her appointment was announced on March 23, 2009, by Yale University President Richard Levin, when former dean Harold Koh was nominated to serve as Legal Adviser of the Department of State. Stith is a former Assistant United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York.\n", "Section::::Family.\n", "Stith is married to Judge Jose Cabranes of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and is the sister of Laura Denvir Stith, who serves on the Missouri Supreme Court.\n", "Section::::Education.\n", "Stith received a Bachelor's degree from Dartmouth College in 1973, a law degree from Harvard Law School in 1977 and a Masters of Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government also in 1977. She clerked for Judge Carl McGowan of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and for Supreme Court Justice Byron R. White.\n", "Section::::Career.\n", "Stith began teaching at Yale Law School (YLS) in 1985.\n", "Her interest in criminal procedure has led her to serve as an adviser to the American Law Institute's Model Penal Code Sentencing and, following an appointment by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, on the Advisory Committee for the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. She has also participated in the National Research Council's Committee on Law and Justice, the state of Connecticut's Professional Ethics Committee; the Permanent Commission on the Status of Women in Connecticut; the Women's Campaign School at Yale; and the Connecticut Bar Foundation (as President). Stith served on the Dartmouth College Board of Directors and as Deputy Dean of Yale Law School.\n", "On March 23, 2009, Stith was named Acting Dean of the Yale Law School, the first woman ever to be appointed to lead YLS. She was one of the witnesses who testified in favor of Sonia Sotomayor during her Supreme Court confirmation hearings. She served on the Board of Trustees of Dartmouth College from 1989 to 2000.\n", "Section::::Works.\n", "Stith has published extensively in law journals. Her book, \"Fear of Judging\", written with her husband, Jose Cabranes, won a Certificate of Merit from the American Bar Association in 1999.\n" ] }
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American lawyers,Yale Law School faculty,American legal writers,Women legal scholars,Deans of Yale Law School,Law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States,American women lawyers,American legal scholars,Dartmouth College alumni,John F. Kennedy School of Government alumni,Women academic administrators,Harvard Law School alumni,Living people,American academic administrators
{ "description": "American legal scholar", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q6375805", "wikidata_label": "Kate Stith", "wikipedia_title": "Kate Stith", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107570, "parentid": 879265136, "revid": 889518688, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-03-26T05:34:48Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kate%20Stith&oldid=889518688" }
22107611
22107611
10 years
{ "paragraph": [ "10 years\n", "10 Years or Ten Years may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Decade, a period of ten years\n", "Section::::Film and TV.\n", "BULLET::::- \"10 Years\" (2011 film), a 2011 film starring Channing Tatum\n", "BULLET::::- \"Ten Years\" (2015 film), a 2015 Hong Kong film\n", "Section::::Music.\n", "BULLET::::- 10 Years (band), an American alternative metal band\n", "BULLET::::- \"10 Years\" (Armin van Buuren album)\n", "BULLET::::- \"10 Years\" (Banco de Gaia album)\n", "BULLET::::- \"Ten Years\", an extended play record by Aly & AJ\n", "BULLET::::- \"Ten Years\", album by Petra Haden and Woody Jackson\n", "BULLET::::- \"Ten Years\", song by Jack Clement, 1958\n", "BULLET::::- \"Ten Years\", song by Buddy Williams, 1960\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Decade (disambiguation)\n", "BULLET::::- Ten Years Later by Alexandre Dumas\n" ] }
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{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q401860", "wikidata_label": "", "wikipedia_title": "", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107611, "parentid": 811774548, "revid": 829343680, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-03-08T01:31:40Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=10%20years&oldid=829343680" }
22107594
22107594
Beale Cottage
{ "paragraph": [ "Beale Cottage\n", "Beale Cottage is situated on the corner of Beale and Grey street in Hamilton, New Zealand. Constructed in 1872, it stands as one of Hamilton's oldest surviving homes. It was designed by one of Hamilton's first European settlers, Dr. Bernard Charles Beale and was used as his family residence, surgery and registry office. Its importance derives from its connection with Beale and the beginnings of modern medical practices in Hamilton, thus giving reason for the Hamilton City Council to later declare the cottage as an Historic Reserve in 1994. It is also a Category I listing with the New Zealand Historic Places Trust.\n", "Section::::Bernard Charles Beale.\n", "Bernard Charles Beale was born in London on 10 September 1830 to Thomas and Sophia Beale. Beale was a student at London Hospital from 1849 to 1852. Emigrating to Nelson, New Zealand in 1861, Beale arrived and settled in Hamilton four years later as fourth regiment of Waikato militia. During this time, militia men were granted land in return for their services and on 3 July 1872, Beale purchased land which is the site where Beale Cottage stands today. Beale became a member of Hamilton Borough Council in 1878, and later became Mayor. However his role as Mayor was short lived due to a confrontational and temperative attitude. Beale was declared bankrupt in 1879, and in 1880, Beale Cottage was sold to Edward Aeneus Harker in 1881. Beale left Hamilton in 1886, along with his wife and nine children for Auckland, where he retired and died in 1910, aged 79.\n", "Beale was a well-respected and honorable man. His efforts in his profession were noticed by the hundreds he treated throughout his time serving as a practitioner.\n", "Section::::Design.\n", "Designed by Beale, the cottage reflects a typical colonial cottage of the early settlement period. Since its erection Beale Cottage has stood the test of time and has conquered all environmental conditions. It's fair to say the house is in good condition, with most of its first structural fittings still remaining today. Designed by Beale himself, the home reflects the way of life of an early medical practitioner in his profession and home. The original layout is believed to have been a square plan with four rooms with a central hallway. The bedroom and lounge was located in the front two rooms with the surgery and kitchen located in the back rooms. Beale Cottage, was larger to that of most settlers' cottages of that period, which would usually have smaller sized rooms.\n", "Section::::History of site and owners.\n", "BULLET::::- 1872 — 3 July. Land granted to Bernard Charles Beale.\n", "BULLET::::- 1881 — Transfer of ownership to Edward Aeneus Harker.\n", "BULLET::::- 1887 — Transfer of ownership to John Sloper Edgecumbe.\n", "BULLET::::- 1919–1927 — Original allotment of land subdivided into four lots. Beale cottage is located on lot 4.\n", "BULLET::::- 1920 — Transfer of ownership to George Earnest Forrest.\n", "BULLET::::- 1927 — Transfer of ownership to G F E Edgecumbe and J H Edgecumbe.\n", "BULLET::::- 1927 — Transfer of ownership to George Earnest Forrest.\n", "BULLET::::- 1959 — Transmission to George Fredrick Forrest and Thomas Christopher.\n", "BULLET::::- 1961 — Transfer of ownership to Louisa May Forrest.\n", "BULLET::::- 1992 — Transfer of ownership to Hamilton City Council.\n", "Section::::Heritage information.\n", "In 1994 Hamilton City Council declared the site Beale cottage stands on as an Historic Reserve. This requires the Council to ensure the land is preserved in its original state.\n", "Section::::Future.\n", "Hamilton City Council will focus on the historical development of the place and people associated with it. The cottage could be used as a historical educational tool and low scale events.\n", "Section::::Tour.\n", "The cottage is open to the public by appointment only.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Hamilton City Council\n", "BULLET::::- Waikato Museum\n" ] }
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Tourist attractions in Hamilton, New Zealand,Historic house museums in New Zealand,Wooden buildings and structures in New Zealand,NZHPT Category I listings in Waikato,Houses completed in 1872,Museums in Waikato,1870s architecture in New Zealand,Buildings and structures in Hamilton, New Zealand
{ "description": "architectural structure", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4876124", "wikidata_label": "Beale Cottage", "wikipedia_title": "Beale Cottage", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107594, "parentid": 904377006, "revid": 904379853, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-01T19:44:10Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Beale%20Cottage&oldid=904379853" }
22107623
22107623
Mayra
{ "paragraph": [ "Mayra\n", "Mayra or Mäyrä may refer to:\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Parikh (Jinal) (born 2000),\n", "Mayra is interior designer and self lover.\n", "She is free minded.\n", "Naughtrious.\n", "Future business tycoon.\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Joli (born 1965), immigration attorney, mrs. world congeniality, mrs. universe super model, mrs. Dominican republic\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Andrade (born 1985), Cape Verdean singer who lives and records in Paris, France\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Conde (born 1969), professional Personal Trainer and mixed martial artist\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Gómez Kemp (born 1948), movie star\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra García (born 1972), female beach volleyball player from Mexico\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra González (born 1968), female rower from Cuba\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Huerta, (born 1970), female beach volleyball player from Mexico\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Matos (born 1988), beauty pageant contestant from Puerto Rico\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Montero (born 1952), Cuban-Puerto Rican writer\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Rosales (born 1980), was one of the heaviest living people in the world\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Santos-Febres (born 1966), Puerto Rican professor of literature, poet, novelist, and critic\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Suarez, Mexican fashion model\n", "BULLET::::- Mayra Verónica (born 1977), Cuban-American model who worked in the United States\n" ] }
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{ "description": "female given name", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q16279235", "wikidata_label": "Mayra", "wikipedia_title": "Mayra", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Mayra (given name)", "Mayra (first name)" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107623, "parentid": 900003872, "revid": 904764979, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-04T11:21:51Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mayra&oldid=904764979" }
22107613
22107613
Peltura
{ "paragraph": [ "Peltura\n", "Peltura is a genus of trilobites from the Upper Cambrian. The type specimen of \"Peltura scarabaeoides\", the type species of the genus, was discovered in the Alum Shale Formation of Sweden and described by the Swedish naturalist Göran Wahlenberg in 1818. Species of this genus have now been found throughout the Scandinavian and Baltic regions.\n" ] }
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Taxa named by Henri Milne-Edwards,Fossil taxa described in 1818,Ptychopariida genera,Olenina
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q48995706", "wikidata_label": "Peltura", "wikipedia_title": "Peltura", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107613, "parentid": 869144715, "revid": 902562696, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-06-19T17:32:05Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peltura&oldid=902562696" }
22107624
22107624
Arboretum Curie
{ "paragraph": [ "Arboretum Curie\n", "The Arboretum Curie, also known as the Arboretum du Col des Trois Soeurs, is a small arboretum located at 1470 metres altitude in the Col des Trois Soeurs near La Panouse, Lozère, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. It was created circa 1975 to study conifers suitable for reforestation, and according to Arbez et al., now contains 77 taxa (primarily conifers).\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Arboretum de Born\n", "BULLET::::- List of botanical gardens in France\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Michel Arbez et al., \"Les Ressources génétiques forestières en France\", Bureau des ressources génétiques, Institut national de la recherche agronomique (France), Editions Quae, 1987, pages 29–30.\n" ] }
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Gardens in Lozère,Arboreta in France
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4784793", "wikidata_label": "Arboretum Curie", "wikipedia_title": "Arboretum Curie", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107624, "parentid": 620259290, "revid": 782484835, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-05-27T05:39:13Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Arboretum%20Curie&oldid=782484835" }
22107632
22107632
Arboretum de Born
{ "paragraph": [ "Arboretum de Born\n", "The Arboretum de Born is a small arboretum located at 1400 metres altitude on the Plateau du Roi near Le Born, Lozère, Languedoc-Roussillon, France. It was created between 1964 and 1967 to study conifers suitable for reforestation, and according to Arbez et al., now contains 38 taxa (primarily conifers).\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Arboretum Curie\n", "BULLET::::- List of botanical gardens in France\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Michel Arbez et al., \"Les Ressources génétiques forestières en France\", Bureau des ressources génétiques, Institut national de la recherche agronomique (France), Editions Quae, 1987, pages 29–30.\n" ] }
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Gardens in Lozère,Arboreta in France
{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q4784812", "wikidata_label": "Arboretum de Born", "wikipedia_title": "Arboretum de Born", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107632, "parentid": 620259040, "revid": 782484850, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-05-27T05:39:23Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Arboretum%20de%20Born&oldid=782484850" }
22107573
22107573
Raymond de Roon
{ "paragraph": [ "Raymond de Roon\n", "Raymond de Roon (born 1 September 1952 in Amsterdam) is a Dutch politician and former prosecutor. As a member of the Party for Freedom (Partij voor de Vrijheid) he has been an MP since 30 November 2006. He focuses on matters of foreign policy, military operations and the European Union.\n", "In the 2006 general elections De Roon was third on the party list and in the 2010 general elections he was fourth.\n", "Section::::Biography.\n", "De Roon studied law at VU University Amsterdam and Leiden University. Afterwards, he was employed by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In 1983 he was deputy prosecutor in Leeuwarden. Later, he operated as a prosecutor in The Hague, the Netherlands Antilles, and Zutphen. His last job before his election to the House was as Advocate General at the Amsterdam court.\n", "De Roon currently lives in Almere, and is also a member of the city council there. He was the local list puller for his party. The PVV went on to become the biggest party in Almere, with 21.6% of the vote and 9 seats in the council.\n", "Section::::References.\n", "BULLET::::- Parlement.com biography\n", "BULLET::::- Geerts stille opportunisten (Gerectificeerd), \"de Volkskrant\", 16 December 2006\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- House of Representatives biography\n" ] }
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Municipal councillors in the Netherlands,People from Almere,Living people,Members of the House of Representatives (Netherlands),Dutch civil servants,1952 births,Leiden University alumni,People from Amsterdam,Party for Freedom politicians,Dutch prosecutors,Opposition to Islam in the Netherlands,21st-century Dutch politicians
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{ "pageid": 22107573, "parentid": 877937574, "revid": 903986997, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-06-29T06:50:11Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Raymond%20de%20Roon&oldid=903986997" }
22107634
22107634
El año de la peste
{ "paragraph": [ "El año de la peste\n", "El Año de la Peste () is a Mexican motion picture categorized as drama, thriller and Sci-Fi. It was filmed in 1978 and released in 1979. The production counted with the famous Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez for the adapted screenplay from the novel of Daniel Defoe \"A Journal of the Plague Year\" published in March 1722.\n", "Section::::Synopsis.\n", "A dreadful sickness is found in a Mexican town. A doctor tries to alert the authorities when he discovers its epidemic nature. No one listens to him and soon the illness spreads. The government tries to manage the information in order to prevent terror.\n", "Section::::Cast.\n", "BULLET::::- Alejandro Parodi\n", "BULLET::::- José Carlos Ruiz\n", "BULLET::::- Rebeca Silva\n", "BULLET::::- Narciso Busquets\n", "BULLET::::- Tito Junco\n", "BULLET::::- Ignacio Retes\n", "BULLET::::- Eduardo Alcaraz\n", "BULLET::::- Héctor Godoy\n", "BULLET::::- Humberto Elizondo\n", "BULLET::::- Zully Keith\n", "BULLET::::- Leonor Llausás\n", "BULLET::::- Arlette Pacheco\n", "BULLET::::- Daniela Romo\n", "BULLET::::- María Barber\n" ] }
{ "paragraph_id": [ 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 10, 17 ], "start": [ 27, 35, 65, 72, 85, 193, 224, 261, 275, 12, 12 ], "end": [ 34, 49, 70, 80, 91, 215, 242, 273, 303, 25, 24 ], "text": [ "Mexican", "motion picture", "drama", "thriller", "Sci-Fi", "Gabriel García Márquez", "adapted screenplay", "Daniel Defoe", "A Journal of the Plague Year", "Ignacio Retes", "Daniela Romo" ], "href": [ "Mexico", "motion%20picture", "Drama%20film", "Thriller%20%28genre%29", "Science%20fiction%20film", "Gabriel%20Garc%C3%ADa%20M%C3%A1rquez", "Film%20adaptation", "Daniel%20Defoe", "A%20Journal%20of%20the%20Plague%20Year", "Gabriel%20Retes", "Daniela%20Romo" ], "wikipedia_title": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ], "wikipedia_id": [ "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "", "" ] }
Spanish-language films,1970s drama films,Films directed by Felipe Cazals,Mexican films,Films set in Mexico,1978 films
{ "description": "1978 film by Felipe Cazals", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5350794", "wikidata_label": "El Año de la Peste", "wikipedia_title": "El año de la peste", "aliases": { "alias": [ "Año de la Peste", "El año de la peste" ] } }
{ "pageid": 22107634, "parentid": 764477963, "revid": 848012836, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2018-06-29T07:25:33Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=El%20año%20de%20la%20peste&oldid=848012836" }
22107638
22107638
Swamp kauri
{ "paragraph": [ "Swamp kauri\n", "Swamp kauri, sometimes marketed as \"ancient kauri\", are prehistoric kauri trees (\"Agathis australis\"), buried and preserved in peat up to 50,000 years ago in New Zealand's North Island. Buried under a peat swamp by an unexplained act of nature at the end of the last Ice Age, the trees have survived the centuries underground, sealed in a chemically balanced environment that has preserved the timber in perfect condition.\n", "The trees grew for nearly 2000 years before they were buried. Some have a girth of around 40 feet, and a total height of nearly 200 feet.\n", "Only the lower trunk section and ball-root structure is predominantly found. The trunk tends to taper to a \"V\" shape as the portion of the log lying above ground has decayed to ground level. Some logs are on a 20-degree angle into the ground suggesting they have fallen over with force, probably under a larger tree that has fallen on top. For this reason complete round logs lying deeper in the ground are occasionally found. \n", "Extraction of the logs is time consuming, expensive and technically difficult, requiring skilled operators of heavy machinery working in wet conditions. Each log must be carefully brought to the surface. If the log is salvaged from native forest or wetlands then after the log has been removed, the area is then restored to its original contours. \n", "The extracted kauri has become an alternative source for old-growth wood supply and often finds its way to furniture builders, boat makers, and wood artisans.\n", "A trademark of swamp kauri is deep, shimmering streaks of iridescence, called \"white bait\", found in some of the wilder grain patterns. This particular grain is named after schools of New Zealand whitebait fish that emit a similar pattern when swimming in one direction.\n" ] }
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{ "description": "", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q7653364", "wikidata_label": "Swamp kauri", "wikipedia_title": "Swamp kauri", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107638, "parentid": 719731264, "revid": 758412877, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2017-01-05T07:53:05Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Swamp%20kauri&oldid=758412877" }
22107652
22107652
Trachyglanis ineac
{ "paragraph": [ "Trachyglanis ineac\n", "Trachyglanis ineac is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Congo, Tshuapa, Lomela and Lomami Rivers. It grows to a length of 10.1 cm.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1954,Taxa named by Max Poll,Amphiliidae,Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3755576", "wikidata_label": "Trachyglanis ineac", "wikipedia_title": "Trachyglanis ineac", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107652, "parentid": 828116079, "revid": 906106904, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:36:20Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trachyglanis%20ineac&oldid=906106904" }
22107657
22107657
Trachyglanis intermedius
{ "paragraph": [ "Trachyglanis intermedius\n", "Trachyglanis intermedius is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Lulua River. It grows to a length of 9.0 cm.\n" ] }
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Endemic fauna of the Democratic Republic of the Congo,Fish described in 1928,Amphiliidae,Fish of Africa,Taxa named by Jacques Pellegrin
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3755904", "wikidata_label": "Trachyglanis intermedius", "wikipedia_title": "Trachyglanis intermedius", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107657, "parentid": 825298589, "revid": 906106913, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:36:24Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trachyglanis%20intermedius&oldid=906106913" }
22107669
22107669
Trachyglanis minutus
{ "paragraph": [ "Trachyglanis minutus\n", "Trachyglanis minutus is a species of loach catfish found in the Ubangi River in the Republic of the Congo and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It grows to a length of 5.0 cm.\n" ] }
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Fish described in 1902,Fish of Africa,Taxa named by George Albert Boulenger,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q2837818", "wikidata_label": "Trachyglanis minutus", "wikipedia_title": "Trachyglanis minutus", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107669, "parentid": 825300443, "revid": 906106926, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:36:29Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trachyglanis%20minutus&oldid=906106926" }
22107674
22107674
David Abell (composer)
{ "paragraph": [ "David Abell (composer)\n", "David Abell or Abel Ebel (died c. 1576) was a Danish-German composer and organist. He worked in the \"Kantoriet\" (the choir and orchestra of the Danish king) of Christian III.\n", "From 1555 to 1572 he was employed by the Marienkirche in Lübeck, after which he returned to Copenhagen on Frederick II's insistence. In the Kantoriet's records from 1541, there are four choral works by him.\n", "Section::::External links.\n", "BULLET::::- Article at the Odense Museum\n" ] }
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Danish classical organists,German classical composers,Danish classical composers,Renaissance composers,German male classical composers,Male organists,Year of birth missing,German classical organists,1576 deaths
{ "description": "Danish composer", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q5230572", "wikidata_label": "David Abell", "wikipedia_title": "David Abell (composer)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107674, "parentid": 874685048, "revid": 906750349, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-17T23:58:36Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=David%20Abell%20(composer)&oldid=906750349" }
22107681
22107681
Trachyglanis sanghensis
{ "paragraph": [ "Trachyglanis sanghensis\n", "Trachyglanis sanghensis is a species of loach catfish endemic to the Republic of the Congo where it is found in the Sangha River near Ouesso. It grows to a length of 5.0 cm.\n" ] }
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Fish of Africa,Fish described in 1925,Taxa named by Jacques Pellegrin,Amphiliidae
{ "description": "species of fish", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q3754705", "wikidata_label": "Trachyglanis sanghensis", "wikipedia_title": "Trachyglanis sanghensis", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107681, "parentid": 825485652, "revid": 906106936, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-13T17:36:34Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trachyglanis%20sanghensis&oldid=906106936" }
22107676
22107676
You Don't Mess Around with Jim (song)
{ "paragraph": [ "You Don't Mess Around with Jim (song)\n", "\"You Don't Mess Around with Jim\" is a 1972 single by Jim Croce from his album of the same name. The song was also Croce's debut single when it was released in June 1972 on ABC Records as ABC-11328. The song first aired on KHJ 930 AM in Los Angeles when ABC Records promotion man Marty Kupps took the single to the radio station, where it appeared on the KHJ \"30\" chart at number 27 during the week of June 6, 1972. After spending 11 weeks on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 chart, the song peaked at No. 8 on the week ending September 9, 1972. Croce performed the song on \"American Bandstand\" on August 12, 1972. \"Billboard\" ranked it as the No. 68 song for 1972.\n", "Section::::Content.\n", "The lyrics are set at an underground pool hall on 42nd Street in New York City. \"Big\" Jim Walker, a pool hustler who is not too bright but is respected because of his tough reputation, his considerable strength and size, and his skill at pool, has formed a sort of gang of \"bad folks\" who regularly gather at night in the pool hall. Their recurring word of advice is as follows:\n", "A fellow pool player named Willie \"Slim\" McCoy comes from south Alabama to the pool hall to get his money back from Jim after being hustled out of it the previous week. When Jim comes in, McCoy ambushes and kills him, stabbing him in \"about a hundred places\" (to the point where \"the only part that wasn't bloody was the soles of the big man's feet\") and shooting him \"in a couple more\". It is implied that McCoy now has his money back as well as the respect formerly granted to Jim, and the regulars at the pool hall have now changed their advice to strangers: \"You don't mess around with \"Slim\"\".\n", "The song is noted for its spoken recitation, which is heard following the third verse and chorus:\n", "This is followed by the repeat of the Chorus and the repeated Coda before the song's fade.\n", "Croce tells a similar story— a much-feared tough guy who gets his comeuppance from someone even tougher— in his later hit single \"Bad, Bad Leroy Brown\".\n", "Section::::In popular culture.\n", "BULLET::::- On an episode of the ABC drama \"Eli Stone\", Victor Garber performed this song in one of Eli's visions.\n", "BULLET::::- The song was featured in an episode of \"The Greatest American Hero\" \"Don't Mess Around With Jim\". It also inspired the episode title.\n", "BULLET::::- The song is featured in \"Stranger Things\" Seasons 2 and 3 as a favorite song of Hawkins sherriff Jim Hopper.\n", "Section::::Live performances.\n", "Live versions of the song have been released on both of Croce's live albums, \"\", and \"\".\n", "Section::::Track listing.\n", "7\" single (ABC-11328)\n", "BULLET::::1. \"You Don't Mess Around with Jim\" – 3:00\n", "BULLET::::2. \"Photographs and Memories\" – 2:03\n", "Section::::See also.\n", "BULLET::::- Billboard Year-End Hot 100 singles of 1972\n" ] }
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ABC Records singles,1972 songs,1972 singles,Jim Croce songs,Songs written by Jim Croce,Debut singles
{ "description": "1972 single by Jim Croce", "enwikiquote_title": "", "wikidata_id": "Q8057206", "wikidata_label": "You Don't Mess Around with Jim", "wikipedia_title": "You Don't Mess Around with Jim (song)", "aliases": { "alias": [] } }
{ "pageid": 22107676, "parentid": 908018854, "revid": 908018881, "pre_dump": true, "timestamp": "2019-07-26T21:17:50Z", "url": "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=You%20Don't%20Mess%20Around%20with%20Jim%20(song)&oldid=908018881" }