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<dbpedia:Notre-Dame-en-Vaux> | The Notre-Dame-en-Vaux at Châlons-en-Champagne and Verdun. It is a major masterpiece in Marne. |
<dbpedia:Buddy_Catlett> | George James Catlett (May 13, 1933 – November 12, 2014), better known as Buddy Catlett, was an American jazz multi-instrumentalist, best known for his work as a bassist. He also appeared in feature films including Sex and the Single Girl (1964), When the Boys Meet the Girls (1965), and others.A childhood friend of Quincy Jones, he had played with Jones in bands led by Charlie Taylor and Bumps Blackwell, as well as in a National Guard band. In 1959, he was hired by Cal Tjader. |
<dbpedia:The_Complete_Collected_Poems_of_Maya_Angelou> | The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou is author and poet Maya Angelou's collection of poetry, published by Random House in 1994. It is Angelou's first collection of poetry, published after she read her poem "On the Pulse of Morning" at President Bill Clinton's inauguration in 1993. It contains her previous five books of poetry, published between 1971—1990. Her prose works have been more successful than her poetry, which has received little serious attention by critics. |
<dbpedia:Ian_Munro_(computer_scientist)> | James Ian Munro (born July 10, 1947) is a Canadian computer scientist. |
<dbpedia:Brabrand_Lake> | Brabrand Lake (Danish: Brabrand-søen or Brabrand Sø) is a lake in the district of Brabrand (Gellerup), west of Aarhus city, Denmark. The Aarhus River passes through Brabrand Lake and it is possible to canoe all the way to the inner city from here. The lake is oblong-shaped.Within the last decade, Brabrand Lake has steadily been extended 3–4 km further west, with the new lake of Årslev Engsø (lit.: meadow lake of Årslev). |
<dbpedia:Bono_(footballer,_born_1991)> | Yassine Bounou (Arabic: ياسين بونو; born 5 April 1991), commonly known as Bono, is a Moroccan professional footballer who plays for Spanish club Real Zaragoza on loan from Atlético Madrid as a goalkeeper. |
<dbpedia:Belgian_Congo_in_World_War_II> | The involvement of the Belgian Congo (the modern-day Democratic Republic of Congo) in World War II began with the German invasion of Belgium in May 1940. |
<dbpedia:European_Lutheran_Conference> | The European Lutheran Conference (ELC) is an association of Confessional Lutheran churches in Europe. The full members of the conference are in altar and pulpit fellowship with one another. The members of the ELC are also members of the International Lutheran Council. |
<dbpedia:Shades_of_Grey:_Glasgow_1956-86> | Shades of Grey: Glasgow, 1956-86 is a book of photographs by Oscar Marzaroli with an essay by William McIlvanney.One of the photos from the book, a 1963 portrait of three young boys wearing their mother's high-heeled shoes playing in Kidson Street in the Gorbals area of Glasgow, was in 2005 made into a bronze statue installed in Queen Elizabeth Square. The statue was unveiled in August 2008 by Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland's Deputy First Minister. |
<dbpedia:Socialist_Autonomous_Province_of_Kosovo> | The Socialist Autonomous Province of Kosovo (Serbo-Croatian: Socijalistička Autonomna Pokrajina Kosovo, Социјалистичка Аутономна Покрајина Косово; Albanian: Krahina Socialiste Autonome e Kosovës; often abbreviated SAP Kosovo), comprising the Kosovo region, was one of the two autonomous provinces of Serbia within Yugoslavia (the other being Vojvodina), between 1946 and the breakup of Yugoslavia.Between 1946 and 1963 the province was named the Autonomous District of Kosovo and Metohija, and enjoyed a lower level of self-government than the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina. |
<dbpedia:Socialist_Autonomous_Province_of_Vojvodina> | The Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina (Serbo-Croatian: Socijalistička Autonomna Pokrajina Vojvodina, Социјалистичка Аутономна Покрајина Војводина; often abbreviated SAP Vojvodina) was one of political entities formed in Yugoslavia after World War II and one of the two autonomous provinces of Serbia within Yugoslavia (the other being Kosovo), between 1945 and the breakup of Yugoslavia. |
<dbpedia:List_of_heads_of_state_of_Sri_Lanka> | This is a list of the heads of state of Ceylon and Sri Lanka, from the foundation of the Dominion of Ceylon in 1948 to the present day.From 1948 to 1972 the head of state under the Ceylon Independence Act 1947 was the Monarch, who was the same person as the Monarch of the United Kingdom and of the other Dominions/Commonwealth realms. The monarch was represented in Ceylon by a Governor-General. |
<dbpedia:Collegiate_shag> | The Collegiate Shag (or "Shag") is a partner dance done primarily to uptempo swing and pre-swing jazz music (185-200+ beats per minute). It belongs to the swing family of American vernacular dances that arose in the 1920s and 30s. It is believed that the dance originated in the Carolinas in the late 1920s, later spreading across the United States during the 1930s. The shag is still danced today by swing dance enthusiasts worldwide. |
<dbpedia:National_Ligaen> | National Ligaen is an American football league in Denmark. It is organized by the Danish American Football Federation. The league finale and the winning trophy is called Mermaid Bowl. |
<dbpedia:Nasi_ambeng> | Nasi ambeng or Nasi ambang is a fragrant rice dish consists of white rice prepared with chicken curry or chicken cooked in soy sauce, vegetables, fried noodles, some salted fish, fried coconut flesh, and so on. It is a popular Javanese cuisine, especially in every Javanese-Malay communities in Malaysian states of Selangor and Johor, Singapore and also in Java, Indonesia. It is served during the festivities and served in a tray and enjoyed together in a tray by four to five people. |
<dbpedia:Getting_On_(U.S._TV_series)> | Getting On is an American television comedy series based on the British series of the same name, developed and written by Mark V. Olsen and Will Scheffer. The series premiered on HBO on November 24, 2013. The show has garnered positive reviews from critics. It stars Laurie Metcalf, Alex Borstein, Niecy Nash, and Mel Rodriguez. The series was renewed for a third and final six-episode season. |
<dbpedia:Quartier_des_Grandes-Carrières> | The Grandes-Carrières (Large Quarries) District is the 69th administrative district of Paris located in the west of the 18e Arrondissement.It gets its name from the former gypsum quarries, a basic component of plaster, that were located at the foot of Montmartre since the Middle Ages.The Montmartre Cemetery is the main vestige of the main gypsum quarry of Paris.The Grandes-Carrières District extends north from the Place de Clichy, bordered to the west by the Épinettes District and to the east by Montmartre and the Clignancourt District. |
<dbpedia:2013–14_Portland_Trail_Blazers_season> | The 2013–14 Portland Trail Blazers season was the franchise's 44th season in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Prior to this season, the Rose Garden was renamed as the Moda Center. The season saw the Blazers improve on their mediocre 2012-13 output, finishing with a 54-28 record, and finishing 5th in the West. After a three-year hiatus, the Blazers returned to the playoffs, facing the Houston Rockets, in the first round, their first meeting since 2009. |
<dbpedia:List_of_language_bindings_for_wxWidgets> | As shown in the table below, wxWidgets has a range of bindings for various programming languages that implement some or all of its feature set. |
<dbpedia:Benjamin_Franklin_in_popular_culture> | Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding fathers of the United States of America, has appeared in popular culture as a character in novels, films, musicals, comics and video games. His experiment, using a kite, to prove that lightning is a form of electricity has been an especially popular aspect of his biography in fictional depictions. |
<dbpedia:Janet_Leys_Shaw_Mactavish> | Janet Leys Shaw Mactavish (1925 - 1972) was a Canadian architect notable for her innovative design of schools and university buildings. Among her noteworthy works are two circular university buildings: Stirling Hall, the physics building at Queen's University in Ontario (1962); and the McIntyre Medical Sciences Building at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec (1965). |
<dbpedia:Tom_Sankey> | Tom Sankey is an American folk singer, playwright and actor known for the 1967 off Broadway production The Golden Screw.In 1962 Sankey contributed to the folksongs in Jonas Mekas's film of Allen Ginsberg, Guns of Trees.The Golden Screw was a folk rock musical documenting the progress of a Bob Dylanesque folk singer. The complete score for the show was recorded by Sankey on Atco Records (33-208, mono). |
<dbpedia:Jimmy_Rollins_(musician)> | Jimmy Rollins (né James Rollins) is an American guitarist, songwriter, audio engineer, and record producer from Dallas who flourished in the 1950s, playing guitar on recordings as sideman with Lefty Frizzell, Billy Walker, Marty Robbins, and Sid King and the Five Strings. Rollins composed songs recorded by Connie Smith, Jean Shepard, and Porter Wagoner. |
<dbpedia:Peter_Hedland> | Captain Peter Hedland (aka Headland) (? - 1881) was a 19th-century seafarer, explorer, pearling captain, and the master of the 16 ton cutter Mystery.He is credited with having explored the harbour of current day Port Hedland, Western Australia and originally named it Mangrove Harbour. Subsequently it was renamed Port Hedland, named in honour of the explorer. Captain Hedland was associated with the earliest settlement in the North and with the pearling industry |
<dbpedia:Gateway_Town_Center> | Gateway Town Center (commonly called Gateway Mall or Gateway) is an indoor/outdoor shopping center located in the Jacksonville, Florida neighborhood of Brentwood, just off of Interstate 95 (exit 355 and 356) at Golfair Boulevard and Norwood Avenue. Developed in the 1950s, it has over 70 stores, and is anchored by Publix. |
<dbpedia:Jennifer_(album)> | Jennifer is the third album by singer Jennifer Warnes, released on the Reprise Records label in 1972. It was produced by former The Velvet Underground member John Cale.It sold poorly and was deleted in 1973 or 1974 and remained completely unavailable until 2013 when Japanese Reprise finally reissued it on CD (WPCR-14865). |
<dbpedia:Presto_Tina-o> | "Presto Tina-o" is the 10th episode of the fourth season of the animated comedy series Bob's Burgers and the overall 55th episode, and is written by Kit Boss and directed by Chris Song. It aired on Fox in the United States on January 12, 2014. |
<dbpedia:Partition_of_Bosnia_and_Herzegovina> | The partition of Bosnia and Herzegovina was discussed and attempted during the 20th century. The issue came to prominence during the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s, involving Bosnia and Herzegovina's largest neighbors, Croatia and Serbia. As of 2015, the country remains undivided while internal political divisions of Bosnia and Herzegovina based on the 1995 Dayton Agreement remain in place. |
<dbpedia:List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_Samuel_L._Jackson> | The following is a list of awards and nominations received by the actor Samuel L. Jackson. |
<dbpedia:The_Coon_Rolled_Down_and_Ruptured_His_Larinks,_A_Squeezed_Novel_by_Mr._Skunk> | "The Coon Rolled Down and Ruptured his Larinks, a Squeezed Novel by Mr. Skunk" is a 1990 science fiction novelette by Dafydd ab Hugh. It was originally published in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in August 1990, and subsequently republished in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Eighth Annual Collection (edited by Gardner Dozois), in "Best New SF 5" (also edited by Dozois), and in Nebula Awards 26 (edited by James K. |
<dbpedia:Rio_(1939_film)> | Rio is a 1939 American film directed by John Brahm, starring Basil Rathbone and Victor McLaglen. |
<dbpedia:Emilio_Elizalde> | Emilio Elizalde (born March 8, 1950) is a Spanish physicist working in the fields of gravitational physics and general relativity.Of Basque heritage, he was born in Balaguer, about 25 km northeast of Lleida, the province capital. He finished double undergraduate majors in Physics and Mathematics at the University of Barcelona in 1972 and 1973, followed by a masters and later a Ph.D. (1976) degree at the same institution. |
<dbpedia:Michael_Williams_(guitarist)> | Michael Williams is an American guitarist. Mainly a Texas blues-style player, he has opened for Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Buddy Guy, George Thorogood, Jonny Lang, and others. His 2013 album Fire Red was produced by Eddie Kramer. Williams learned to love the blues from his father, who played with an Austin-based band called The Cobras, and was influenced early on by Stevie Ray Vaughan and (after he moved to Seattle) Jimi Hendrix. |
<dbpedia:Potion_(programming_language)> | potion is a tiny, fast dynamic, stack-oriented computer programming language with a JIT compiler, closures, continuations and exceptions, a Lua-based VM and an Io-based object model built around message passing, a MOP and mixins.It is technically a lexical-only Lisp-1 with two languages: one for code, one for data and it is written in under 10K lines of C. |
<dbpedia:Pius_XII_and_the_German_Resistance> | During the Second World War, Pope Pius XII maintained links to the German Resistance against Adolf Hitler's Nazi regime. Although remaining publicly neutral, Pius advised the British in 1940 of the readiness of certain German generals to overthrow Hitler if they could be assured of an honourable peace, offered assistance to the German resistance in the event of a coup and warned the Allies of the planned German invasion of the Low Countries in 1940. |
<dbpedia:Nashville_Airplane> | Nashville Airplane is the 27th album by Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs released in 1968 on the Columbia Limited Edition label. It was recorded shortly before their breakup in 1969. Lester Flatt resisted the change in direction (although Earl Scruggs embraced it) to a point that led to the breakup. |
<dbpedia:Bob_Dylan's_recording_sessions> | Bob Dylan is an American musician, singer-songwriter, music producer, artist, and writer. He has been an influential figure in popular music and culture for more than five decades. Much of his most celebrated work dates from the 1960s when he was an informal chronicler and a seemingly reluctant figurehead of social unrest.All songs written by Bob Dylan, except where noted. |
<dbpedia:Portrait_of_Mariana_of_Austria> | Portrait of Mariana of Austria is an oil-on-canvas painting by Diego Velázquez completed in 1652–53 when the subject was nineteen years old. Mariana was the daughter of Emperor Ferdinand III and the Infanta Maria and as the second wife of Philip IV was Queen consort of Spain. Mariana – known as Maria Anna to contemporaries – is shown as rather plain looking and wears an unhappy expression.Mariana is depicted in full length, in a black dress with silver braid and a close-fitting bodice. |
<dbpedia:Helge_Sunde> | Helge Sunde (born 9 June 1965 in Stryn, Norway) is a Norwegian composer and musician (trombone and multi-instrumentalist), known for his compositions in contemporary music and jazz for large ensembles and for his works as music arranger for symphony orchestras in collaboration with artists. |
<dbpedia:2015_NBA_All-Star_Game> | The 2015 NBA All-Star Game was the 64th edition of the NBA All-Star Game, an exhibition basketball game played on Sunday, February 15, 2015 in New York City and hosted by both of the city's teams, the New York Knicks and the Brooklyn Nets. The NBA awarded the game to New York City in 2013, and the logo for the 2015 All-Star Game was unveiled on July 10, 2014.The All-Star Game itself was played at the Knicks' home arena, Madison Square Garden. |
<dbpedia:Java,_Montana> | Java, Montana is a ghost town in Richland County near Mondak. Named for its first postmaster, Anton Jevnager, who owned a grocery and hardware store in the community when its post office was established in 1907, Java straddles the border with North Dakota, and was noteworthy among local North Dakota residents as the home of the Blind Pig Saloon on the Montana side. |
<dbpedia:Johanna_Holmström> | Johanna Holmström (born 1981) is a Finland-Swedish author.Holmström was born in Sipoo and lives in Helsinki. Her first publication was the short-story collection Inlåst och andra noveller (2003), from which the short story "Inlåst" ('Locked Up') was nominated for the Swedish Radio Short-story Prize in 2004. This was followed by the short story collection Tvåsamhet (‘Twosomeness’, 2005). Holmström's first novel was published in September 2007: Ur din längtan ('Out of your Longing'). |
<dbpedia:Hurley_Butte> | Hurley Butte is an elevated landform in the South Dakota Badlands that is the location of a Formerly Used Defense Site adjacent to the Pine Ridge Reservation and a few miles from Interior, South Dakota. The Strategic Air Command used Hurley Butte for the Interior Radar Bomb Scoring Site prior to establishing the Belle Fourche Strategic Training Range in the Devil's Tower/Black Hills area of Ellsworth Air Force Base. |
<dbpedia:List_of_Wolfblood_episodes> | Wolfblood is a UK teenager's supernatural-drama television series, broadcasts on the CBBC channel and also some other TV channels like Disney. Created by Debbie Moon, the series focuses on wolfbloods Maddy, Rhydian, their human friends Tom and Shannon, and later wolfblood Jana.A webisode titled The Scape Goat takes place between the first and second series, and a series of seven webisodes titled Jana Bites takes place between the second and third series. |
<dbpedia:1932_Monaco_Grand_Prix> | The 1932 Monaco Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at the Circuit de Monaco on 17 April 1932. Tazio Nuvolari, driving for the works Alfa Romeo team, won the race by just 2.8 seconds from the privateer Alfa of Rudolf Caracciola, who, despite having a contract for 1932, was not yet part of the official works team. |
<dbpedia:32nd_Venice_International_Film_Festival> | The 32nd Venice International Film Festival was held from 25 August to 6 September 1971. There was no jury because from 1969 to 1979 the festival was not competitive. |
<dbpedia:28th_Venice_International_Film_Festival> | The 28th Venice International Film Festival was held from 26 August to 8 September 1967. |
<dbpedia:2014_Austrian_Grand_Prix> | The 2014 Austrian Grand Prix (formally the Formula 1 Großer Preis Von Österreich 2014) was a Formula One motor race held on 22 June 2014 at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, Austria. It was the eighth round of the 2014 season and the 28th Austrian Grand Prix and the first to be held since 2003. The race, contested over 71 laps, was won by Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg after starting from third position. |
<dbpedia:William_H._Crook> | William H. Crook (October 15, 1839 – March 13, 1915) was one of President Abraham Lincoln's bodyguards in 1865. After Lincoln's assassination (while Crook was off duty), he continued to work in the White House, for a total of over 50 years, serving 12 presidents.Presidential security had been lax, even during the height of the American Civil War. Throngs of people entered the White House every day. |
<dbpedia:Luxembourgish_collaboration_with_Nazi_Germany> | During the German occupation of Luxembourg in World War II, some Luxembourgers collaborated with the country's Nazi occupiers. The term Gielemännchen "\yellow men") was adopted by many Luxembourgers, first to describe German Nazis in general, and later for Luxembourgish collaborators. The term came from the yellow uniforms of the Nazi Party. Their number, however, was limited. |
<dbpedia:Antón_Gazenbeek> | Antón Gazenbeek (dancer/choreographer/historian) is one of the leading experts in Argentine Tango today. Even at his young age he has taught, performed and choreographed on five continents, lectured at the foremost universities in the world including Stanford University, Harvard, MIT, as well as at the Juilliard School, the Argentine Embassy in Washington, D.C. and across North and South America, Asia and Europe. |
<dbpedia:The_Lion_of_St._Mark> | Il Leone di San Marco, internationally released as The Lion of St. Mark, is a 1963 Italian adventure film directed by Luigi Capuano. |
<dbpedia:Polyzoniida> | Polyzoniida is an order of millipedes in the subclass Colobognatha containing three families and at least 74 described species. |
<dbpedia:Twelve_Oaks_Lodge> | Twelve Oaks Lodge is a historic property located in Verdugo City, in the La Crescenta area of Glendale, California. Initially a private residence on 4 1/2 wooded acres, it was converted into a retirement home in 1935 and later functioned as an assisted living facility. In 2013 it was announced that the senior facility would be closed and the property sold to a housing developer, touching off a campaign to prevent the closure. |
<dbpedia:Requiem_(Jón_Leifs)> | Requiem, Op. 33b, is a short a cappella choral piece by Icelandic composer Jón Leifs (1899–1968), dedicated to the memory of his daughter who drowned in a swimming accident shortly before her 18th birthday. The piece has only the name in common with the traditional Latin Mass for the dead. It is composed to a text which is a collage of Icelandic folk poetry and selections from a poem by Jónas Hallgrímsson. |
<dbpedia:A_thoke> | Burmese salads, transliterated as a thoke, thohk or thouk, are part of Burmese cuisine. The salads include rice, noodle, potato, ginger, tomato, kaffir lime, long bean, lahpet (pickled tea leaves), and ngapi (fish paste) salads. They are popular as fast foods in Burmese cities. Burmese noodle salads include wheat noodles or rice noodles. Fermented tea leaf and pickled ginger are two classic dishes. |
<dbpedia:Khauk_swè> | Khauk swè are wheat noodles in Burmese cuisines. Dishes made with them include:Khauk swè thokePanthay khauk swè: Panthay-style fried noodlesSigyet khaukswè: literally "noodles laced in cooked oil," usually with chicken |
<dbpedia:List_of_short_stories_by_Alice_Munro> | This is a list of short stories written by Alice Munro. It includes stories that were published in single-author collections (books), the first story ever published, "The Dimensions of a Shadow" (1950), and other stories having appeared elsewhere. |
<dbpedia:2014_European_Formula_3_season> | The 2014 FIA European Formula 3 Championship season was a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seat open wheel formula racing cars that held across Europe. The championship featured drivers competing in two-litre Formula Three racing cars built by Italian constructor Dallara which conformed to the technical regulations, or formula, for the championship. |
<dbpedia:Batavia,_Montana> | Batavia is a census-designated place (CDP) in Flathead County, Montana, United States. The population was 385 at the 2010 census. |
<dbpedia:Lloyd_Goldman> | Lloyd Goldman is a New York real estate developer and founder of BLDG Management. |
<dbpedia:Williams_FW36> | The Williams FW36 is a Formula One racing car designed by Williams Grand Prix Engineering to compete in the 2014 Formula One season. It was driven by Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa, who replaced the departing Pastor Maldonado. The FW36 was the first car built by Williams to use a Mercedes engine, a 1.6-litre V6 turbocharged engine, known as the PU106A Hybrid.A computer-generated rendering of the car was released on 23 January, showing an extended nosecone dubbed the \anteater\"." |
<dbpedia:Mimene_miltias> | Mimene miltias is a butterfly of the Hesperiidae family. It is found in New Guinea. |
<dbpedia:Henry_Maxwell_Lefroy> | Henry Maxwell Lefroy (August 1818 – 18 July 1879) was a prominent explorer of the Mid West and Goldfields-Esperance regions of Western Australia.He was the son of Rev. John Henry George Lefroy, the rector of Compton and Ashe, who died when his son was five, leaving his widow and nine other children.He had studied at Guildford Grammar School in Surrey, where he became acquainted with the Stirling family and first developed an interest in the Swan River Colony in Western Australia. |
<dbpedia:Pierre-Joseph_Proudhon> | Pierre-Joseph Proudhon (French: [pjɛʁ ʒɔzɛf pʁudɔ̃]; 15 January 1809 – 19 January 1865) was a French politician and the founder of mutualist philosophy. He was the first person to declare himself an anarchist and is widely regarded as one of the ideology's most influential theorists. Proudhon is even considered by many to be the "father of anarchism". |
<dbpedia:Toast_of_London> | Toast of London is a British comedy series created by Arthur Mathews and Matt Berry and starring Berry as Steven Toast, an eccentric middle-aged actor with a chequered past who spends more time dealing with his problems off stage than performing on it. Two series have currently been broadcast and a third series was commissioned in December 2014. |
<dbpedia:Snake_soup> | Snake soup (Cantonese: 蛇羹, Pinyin: she geng) is a popular Cantonese delicacy and health supplement in Hong Kong, which contains the meats of at least two types of snakes as the main ingredients. |
<dbpedia:Ultimo_tango_a_Zagarol> | Ultimo tango a Zagarol (internationally released as The Last Italian Tango and Last Tango in Zagarol) is a 1973 Italian comedy film directed by Nando Cicero. |
<dbpedia:Datzzang> | Datzzang is a chain of donkas restaurants in South Korea. Founded in 2002 in Seoul, the business has grown and recently expanded out of the capital, opening a branch in Suwon, Gyeonggi-do. The menu includes a variety of meat and fish cutlets, and other Japanese food such as soba and udon. |
<dbpedia:Mercedes_F1_W05_Hybrid> | The Mercedes F1 W05 Hybrid, originally known as the Mercedes F1 W05, was a highly successful Formula One racing car designed by Mercedes to compete in the 2014 Formula One season. It was driven by 2008 and 2014 World Drivers' Champion Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg, both of whom remained with the team for a second and fifth season, respectively. The F1 W05 was designed to use Mercedes' new 1.6-litre V6 turbocharged engine, the PU106A Hybrid. |
<dbpedia:List_of_rulers_of_the_Netherlands> | The Netherlands, or Low Countries, possessed clearly delineated boundaries only after 1500. Still in many respects they demonstrated common traits and underwent similar development that differentiated them from surrounding countries. The social, economic and political similarities evident throughout most of the region stem from the High Middle Ages, when the Scheldt, Maas and Rhine delta area became an important center of trade. |
<dbpedia:Callipodida> | Callipodida (from Greek kallos "beauty" and podus "leg") is an order of millipedes containing around 130 species, many characterized by crests or ridges. |
<dbpedia:Ian_Sangalang> | Ian Paul Sangalang, (born December 20, 1991) is a Filipino professional basketball player currently playing for the Star Hotshots of the Philippine Basketball Association. He was drafted 2nd overall by the Mixers in the 2013 PBA draft.Sangalang stands at 6 feet and 8 inches,. He is a forward-center big man, and is dominant at the post. |
<dbpedia:Lake_Norconian> | Lake Norconian, is an artificial lake, in Norco, Riverside County, California.Lake Norconian was created in the early 1920s as part of the Norconian Resort. This 60-acre (24 ha) lake was equipped with a boat house and beautiful Pavilion. It was the site where a few 1930's movies were filmed. Acquired with the resort by the U. S. Navy in 1941, the lake is now part of the Naval Surface Warfare Assessment Center. |
<dbpedia:Morning_Phase> | Morning Phase is the ninth official studio album and twelfth overall by American recording artist Beck. The album was released in February 2014 through his new label, Capitol Records. According to a press release, Morning Phase is a "companion piece" to Beck's 2002 album Sea Change. |
<dbpedia:Some_Days_Are_Better_Than_Others_(U2_song)> | "Some Days Are Better Than Others" is a song by Irish rock band U2 off their 1993 album Zooropa. It is the only Zooropa song never to have been played live in concert. |
<dbpedia:List_of_shortest-lived_sovereign_states> | This is a list of the shortest-lived sovereign states. |
<dbpedia:Swabian_League_of_Cities> | Swabian League of Cities (or "Swabian Urban League", Schwäbischer Städtebund) was primarily a military alliance between a number of imperial cities in and around the area now defined as south-western Germany. Its objective was the maintenance of the privileges, rights and freedoms of its members, and it therefore also opposed the territorial ambitions of increasingly assertive surrounding states within the Holy Roman Empire such as Bavaria, Württemberg and Austria. |
<dbpedia:1989_British_Formula_3000_Championship_Rd.7> | The 7th round of the inaugural British Formula 3000 Championship, saw the series visit Silverstone, on 30 July. |
<dbpedia:James_Calvert_(explorer)> | James Snowden Calvert (13 July 1825 – 22 July 1884), was an explorer and botanist, active in colonial Australia. |
<dbpedia:Chasing_Nashville> | Chasing Nashville is an American reality television series that aired on Lifetime beginning on October 22, 2013, to November 12, 2013. Set in Appalachia, Kentucky, Chasing Nashville chronicles the lives of several girls who are in the pursuit of fame and fortune in country music industry. The series was canceled after four episodes with the remaining episodes uploaded to the series' official website. |
<dbpedia:Ciba_cake> | Ciba (Chinese: 糍粑) is traditional Chinese cuisine food of cooked glutinous rice pounded into paste. Ciba is popular in South China areas including Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Sichuan, Hunan and Hubei. Ciba isserved at festivals, especially for Spring Festival celebration.There are similar foods in Japan, Korea, Taiwan and other places, but producing and eating methods have some differences. |
<dbpedia:Ships_of_James_Cook> | Captain James Cook, FRS, RN (7 November 1728[NB 1] – 14 February 1779) was a British explorer, navigator, cartographer, and captain in the Royal Navy. Cook made detailed maps of Newfoundland prior to making three voyages to the Pacific Ocean, during which he achieved the first recorded European discovey of eastern Australia, Hawaii and undertook the first circumnavigation of New Zealand.During his long career he served on a number of British ships. |
<dbpedia:Acqua_Fuori_Dal_Ring> | Acqua Fuori Dal Ring (English: Ring of Water] is 2012 Italian film written and directed by Joel Stangle, and co-written by Esther Stangle in Arabic and Italian. The film uses a largely Cinéma vérité style, and the director employed non-professional actors and an improvised script, shooting in Catania, Sicily. The film parallels the lives of two boxers living in Catania, one a Sicilian native, and the other a Tunisian migrant. |
<dbpedia:Nam_tok_mu> | Nam tok mu (Thai: น้ำตกหมู, pronounced [nám tòk mǔː]) is one type of Thai salad, it is a native food of the northeast of Thailand (Isan) and it is a popular food because it is easy to cook. it is made from grilled pork that cut into thin pieces and flavored with chili powder, chopped shallots, ground roasted rice, lime juice, fish sauce. It tastes sour, salty and spicy like Lab. |
<dbpedia:Eagle_River_(Favorite_Channel)> | The Eagle River is a stream, 5 miles (8 km) long, in the borough of Juneau in the U.S. state of Alaska. Heading at Eagle Glacier in the Coast Mountains, it flows southwest into Favorite Channel, 20 miles (32 km) northeast of the city of Juneau. Alaska Route 7 (Glacier Highway) links the city to the river, a state recreation area, a church camp, and a boy scout camp near the river mouth.Hiking trails parallel the river for its entire course. |
<dbpedia:Powers_Butte_Wildlife_Area> | The Powers Butte Wildlife Area is located along the east side of the Gila River, about twenty miles north of Gila Bend, in Maricopa County, Arizona. It was founded in 1982 and spans 1,120 acres. |
<dbpedia:Aum_Programming_Language> | Aum Programming Language is a multi-paradigm programming language which has been an internal research project at IT Adapter since 2004. It is somewhat similar to modern C# in its feature set adding aspect-oriented-programming, message passing and pattern matching (a la Objective-C, Embarcadero Delphi and Erlang (programming language)).The main idea is to build everything around Abstract Syntax Tree. There is no intermediate code a-la Java bytecode or CIL or Dalvik (software) code. |
<dbpedia:Maverick_Jetpants_in_the_City_of_Quality> | Maverick Jetpants in the City of Quality is a novel by American author Bill Peters, published on October 9, 2012 by Black Balloon Publishing. It was an editor's choice in The New York Times Sunday Book Review, which claimed "... Bill Peters belongs in the ranks of serious literary artists." The book was also praised by Publishers Weekly as "by turns funny and moving ... |
<dbpedia:Tissø> | Tissø is the 4th largest freshwater lake in Denmark, at 12.3 km2. It is located on the western part of Zealand, in the municipality of Kalundborg.There are several small towns and villages near the lake, of which Sæby is the biggest at 343 citizens (2013). |
<dbpedia:Corruption_in_Slovenia> | Corruption in Slovenia is examined on this page. |
<dbpedia:List_of_accolades_received_by_American_Hustle> | American Hustle is a 2013 American crime comedy-drama film directed by David O. Russell. The screenplay, written by Eric Warren Singer and Russell, is based on the FBI ABSCAM operation of the late 1970s and early 1980s. It was filmed in Boston, Worcester, and New York City. It stars an ensemble cast of Christian Bale, Amy Adams, Bradley Cooper, Jeremy Renner and Jennifer Lawrence.Columbia Pictures initially provided a limited release to American Hustle at six theaters on December 13, 2013. |
<dbpedia:United_States_presidential_election_in_Maine,_1840> | The 1840 United States presidential election in Maine took place between October 30 and December 2, 1840, as part of the 1840 United States presidential election. Voters chose ten representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President.Maine voted for the Whig candidate, William Henry Harrison, over Democratic candidate Martin Van Buren. Harrison won Maine by a margin of 0.46%. |
<dbpedia:United_States_presidential_election_in_Virginia,_1840> | The 1840 United States presidential election in Virginia took place between October 30 and December 2, 1840, as part of the 1840 United States presidential election. Voters chose twenty-three representatives, or electors to the Electoral College, who voted for President and Vice President.Virginia voted for the Democratic candidate, incumbent President Martin Van Buren, over Whig candidate William Henry Harrison. Van Buren narrowly won Virginia by a margin of 1.3%, or 1,120 votes. |
<dbpedia:Nokia_Lumia_630> | The Nokia Lumia 630 is a smartphone developed by Nokia that runs Microsoft's Windows Phone 8.1 operating system. It was announced on April 2, 2014, at Microsoft Build 2014 and scheduled to be released in June 2014. It has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 SoC with a quad-core processor (MSM8226 or MSM8626) and Adreno 305 GPU. Additionally, it has a 4.5 in display and a 5 MP camera. |
<dbpedia:Roman_walls_of_Córdoba> | The Roman Walls which once surrounded Córdoba, Spain, were built after the Romans captured the city in 206 BC, making it part of the Roman Republic. The walls now form part of the historic centre of Córdoba, a UNESCO World Heritage site. |
<dbpedia:Boys_and_Girls_(short_story)> | "Boys and Girls" (1964 / 1968) is a short story by Alice Munro, the Canadian winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2013 which deals with the making of gender roles. |
<dbpedia:Roman_Monuments,_Cathedral_of_St._Peter_and_Church_of_Our_Lady_in_Trier_UNESCO_World_Heritage_Site> | The Roman Monuments, Cathedral of St. Peter and Church of Our Lady in Trier, Germany was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1986.From "NESCO/CLT/WHC:\Trier is an example of a large Roman capital after the division of the empire. The remains of the Imperial Palace, in addition to the Aula Palatina and the Imperial Thermae, are impressive in their dimensions. |
<dbpedia:Mie_koclok> | Mie koclok (lit: "shaked noodle"), is an Indonesian chicken noodle soup, a specialty of Cirebon city, West Java. The noodles come with a white-colored extra-thick porridge-like soup, made of chicken broth and coconut milk soup, which is coagulated with corn starch or tapioca. |
<dbpedia:Tróndur_Bogason> | Tróndur Bogason (born 5 April 1976 as Tróndur Bogason Hansen) is a Faroese composer and musician. He composes classical works, but he also arranges music for pop, rock and folk artists. He is married to the Faroese singer Eivør Pálsdóttir with whom he also co-works with, together they arranged her album Room. Bogason is educated from the Royal Danish Academy of Music. |