The postalveolar ejective affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is .
Features
Features of the postalveolar ejective affricate:
Its manner of articulation is sibilant affricate, which means it is produced by first stopping the airflow entirely, then directing it through […]
The Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion (CNPP) is an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture created on December 1, 1994, and is the focal point within the USDA where scientific research is linked with the nutritional needs of the American public.
The creation of the Center came at a time when the American public […]
Wax has traditionally referred to a substance that is secreted by bees (beeswax) and used by them in constructing their honeycombs.
It is an imprecisely defined term generally understood to be a substance with properties similar to beeswax, namely
plastic (malleable) at normal ambient temperatures
a melting point above approximately 45 °C (113 °F) (which differentiates waxes from […]
Blyth, Inc. is a Greenwich, Connecticut based marketing and manufacturing company that sells personal and decorative products. The company reported having 4,000 employees as of January 2007 and is incorporated in Delaware. In 2001, it was the largest candlemaker in the United States.Michael Maiello, “Blyth: Blyth Spirit,” Forbes, Jan. 2001.
Subsidiaries include Candle Corporation Of America, […]
Chicken piccata is a dish made of chicken breast scaloppine (cutlets), capers, lemon, and white wine. The term piccata is also used for an Italian dish traditionally made with veal.
A chicken breast used to prepare chicken piccata is usually butterflied, or sliced along its width, and then flattened either with a tenderizer or between two […]
Burning Image are a deathrock band from Bakersfield, California, USA.
They were an anomaly in the punk pantheon of the 1980s. At the time, hardcore punk was the rage but was becoming formulaic and dumbed down as quickly as the songs were getting faster and shorter. Burning Image had more in common with the English “batcave” […]
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This is a redirect from a title that is an alternative name, a pseudonym, a nick name or a synonym.
It leads to the title in accordance with the naming conventions for common names and can help writing.
For more information, follow the category link.
In chemistry a protic solvent is a solvent that carries a hydrogen bond between an oxygen as in a hydroxyl group or a nitrogen as in an amine group. More generally, any molecular solvent which contains dissociable H+, such as hydrogen fluoride, is called a protic solvent. The molecules of such solvents can […]
Families USA is an American non-profit consumer health-care advocacy organization. It was founded by attorney Ron Pollack, its executive director.
Pollack was Dean of Antioch School of Law, and argued cases involving food aid for low-income Americans before the Supreme Court.
In 1997, President Clinton appointed Pollack as the sole consumer representative on the Presidential Advisory Commission […]
A wet cell is a galvanic electrochemical cell with a liquid electrolyte. A dry cell, on the other hand, is a cell with a pasty electrolyte. Wet cells were a precursor to dry cells and are commonly used as a learning tool for electrochemistry. It is often built with common laboratory supplies, like beakers, for […]
Local purchasing is a preference to buy locally produced goods and services over those produced more distantly. It is very often abbreviated as a positive goal ‘buy local’ to parallel the phrase think globally, act locally common in green politics.
On the national level, the equivalent of local purchasing is import substitution, the deliberate industrial policy […]
Released in 1985, Company of Justice would be Play Dead’s final studio album. After a series of signing with multiple flopping independent record labels, Play Dead created their own record label called Tanz in early 1985 just after the end of the From the Promised Land tour.
The songs “Last Degree” and “Burning Down (long version)” […]
Nude weather reports are weather reports performed in the nude, either on television or on radio, or in any other context.
Počasíčko (a diminutive of the Czech word for weather) is the name of a late-night weather report that ran on TV Nova in the Czech Republic. In this reverse strip tease, a model would appear […]
16 Questions On the Assassination was a paper by Bertrand Russell, published in the September 6, 1964 issue of M.S. Arnoni’s The Minority of One. Bertrand Russell, then in his nineties, wrote the paper questioning the conclusions of the Warren Commission on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It begins:
The Sixteen Questions
Why were […]
In photography, palladiotype is a monochrome printing process, a rather obscure variant of the platinotype.
The process was in use after World War I, because the platinum used in the fairly popular platinotype quickly became too expensive for use in photography.
Photographers tried to replace the platinum with the much cheaper palladium which gave similar effects. The […]
Many schools are named Washington School including:
Washington School (Appleton, Wisconsin), listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Washington School (Mississippi), Greenville, Mississippi
Washington School (Monroe City, Missouri), listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Washington School, North Las Vegas, Nevada, listed on the National Register of Historic Places
Washington School (Park City, Utah), listed on the National […]
Alternative Press EP, sometimes simply referred to as the “AP EP”, is an EP by AFI. Released by Alternative Press in mid 1999, this CD was a bonus when purchasing a copy of their magazine. Cardboard fold-out case. All of the songs on this EP were released on AFI’s fourth album Black Sails in the […]
Jacob SmithCalifornia Birth Index, 1905-1995. Center for Health Statistics, California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California. Ancestry.com (born January 21, 1990) is an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his role in the film Cheaper by the Dozen and its 2005 sequel.
Biography
Personal life
Jacob Smith was born in Monrovia, California. He has a brother, […]
Radio Yerevan, or Armenian Radio jokes have been very popular in the Soviet Union and in other Communist countries of the ex-Eastern bloc since the second half of the 20th century.
These jokes of Q&A type are allegedly from the Question & Answer series of the Armenian Radio. A typical format of a joke was:
The Armenian […]
Michael Cudahy may be:
Michael Cudahy (electronics) (born 1924)
Michael Cudahy (meat packing) (1841 - 1910)
Michael Cudahy, aka The Millionaire, member of musical group Combustible Edison
Michael Cudahy (politics/journalism) (born 1951)
Emel can refer to:
Emel Müftüoğlu - Turkish pop singer, popularly known as simply Emel
Emel magazine - British Muslim lifestyle magazine
The Sonic the Hedgehog character, Emerl is mistakenly referred to as “Emel” in the Sonic X English dub.
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link referred you here, you may […]
Michelina’s is an American frozen food company based in Duluth, Minnesota. Founded by frozen food tycoon Luigino Paulucci, the company is named after Paulucci’s mother, Michelina. Today, Michelina’s frozen foods has over 70 brands of food.
External links
Official Website
The casing of a submarine is a light metal structure, usually incorporating a deck, built-up and-over the upper surface of the vessel’s pressure hull.
The pressure hull of a submarine is usually cylindrical and possesses a low freeboard when in the water, which makes walking on the hull when on the surface dangerous in high seas […]
Pacific High School is an alternative high school in the Sitka School District located in Sitka, Alaska. It serves as an educational alternative to Sitka High School.
See also
List of high schools in Alaska
External links
Official page
Charles Delaunay (born January 18, 1911, in Vineuil-Saint-Firmin, France; died February 16, 1988, Paris was a French author, jazz expert, co-founder and long-term leader of the Hot club de France.
The son of painters Robert Delaunay and Sonia Delaunay, Charles Delaunay was one of the founders of the Hot Club de France. Together with Hugues Panassié […]
Synthonia is short for Synthetic Ammonia, a product produced by chemical company I.C.I.. ICI produced this product at one of its many plants in Billingham in the 20th century. Many local facilities took on the name due to sponsorship from this local firm including Billingham Synthonia F.C., Cricket Club and Synthonia Scout troop […]
An elastic modulus, or modulus of elasticity, is the mathematical description of an object or substance’s tendency to be deformed elastically (i.e. non-permanently) when a force is applied to it. The elastic modulus of an object is defined as the slope of its stress-strain curve in the elastic deformation region:
<math>\lambda \ \stackrel{\text{def}}{=}\ \frac […]
In the United States, the FDA approves drugs. Before a drug can be prescribed, it must undergo an extensive FDA approval process. This process involves first testing the drug on animals or in medical labs. If found to be safe by the FDA and approved for the next phase of study, the drug is then […]
Cooking With the Wolfman is a cooking series first produced for the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, an aboriginal television network in Canada.
Created, executive produced and hosted by chef David Wolfman and also executive produced by Heather Wakeling, this series combines traditional North American Native cuisine with modern dishes.
The series is now in its fifth season, […]
Everton Water Tower is a water tower situated in Everton, Liverpool. It is a Grade II listed building.The water tower is a well known landmark dating from 1864 and can be seen from most of Liverpool standing at the top of Everton brow.
Designed by the Liverpool’s first water engineer, Thomas Duncan, it is all that […]
CHOICE Magazine is a publication of the Australian Consumers’ Association (ACA), a non-profit organization founded in 1959 to research and advocate on behalf of Australian consumers, similar to Consumer Reports in the United States. The ACA has its headquarters in Marrickville, New South Wales, Australia.
The ACA tests and compares different consumer products and services […]
Wikipedia does not currently have an encyclopedia article for ‘.
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To begin an article here, feel free to [ edit this page], but please do not create a mere dictionary definition.
18 Candles: The Early Years is a CD released by Silverstein in 2006. It compiles their two previously released, then-out-of-print CD EPs Summer’s Stellar Gaze (2000) and When the Shadows Beam (2002) along with some newly recorded acoustic and live material as well as a remix of the Discovering the Waterfront album track “Smile In […]
The GRE subject test in mathematics is designed to assess a candidate’s potential for graduate study in the field of mathematics. It contains questions from many fields of mathematics but focuses on calculus and algebra (linear and abstract). The test also contains questions that focus on a broad variety of topics typically encountered […]
A brazier is a container for fire, generally taking the form of an upright standing or hanging metal bowl or box. Used for holding burning coal as well as fires, a brazier allows for a source of light, heat, or cooking. Braziers have been reported in many early archaeological excavations, for example the Nimrud brazier […]
Fanyang (Traditional Chinese: 范陽) is an ancient city in Northern China, somewhere around the modern-day city of Beijing. It is also known by its other names, Youzhou (Traditional Chinese: 幽州), used for administrative purposes, and Ji (Traditional Chinese: 薊), as the capital of the Yan.
Fanyang was founded during the Warring States Period by the state […]
Fullbore Target Rifle (TR) is a distinctively British and Commonwealth of Nations shooting discipline that evolved from Service rifle (SR) shooting in the late 1960s, and is governed by the rules of the National Rifle Association, UK (NRA).
Modern target rifles are extremely accurate, and have ‘iron’ aperture sights which are fully adjustable for elevation and […]
Lip balm or lip salve is a substance topically applied to the lips of the mouth to relieve chapped or dry lips, angular cheilitis or stomatitis, and cold sores. Lip gloss is similar, but generally has only cosmetic properties. The balm is usually manufactured from beeswax, petroleum jelly, menthol, camphor, scented oils, and various other […]
Protein methods are the techniques used to study proteins.
Other methods
Hydrogen-deuterium exchange
Mass spectrometry
Molecular dynamics
Protein structure prediction
Protein sequencing
Protein structural alignment
Protein ontology
Peptide mass fingerprinting
Ligand binding assay
metabolic labeling
heavy isotope labeling
radioactive isotope labeling
References
“Protein Methods”, 2nd Edition by Daniel M. Bollag, Michael D. Rozycki and Stuart J. Edelstein (1996) Published by Wiley […]
Edit Herczog (born May 5, 1961 in Budapest) is a Hungarian politician and Member of the European Parliament for the Hungarian Socialist Party, part of the Party of European Socialists. She is for software patents.
External links
http://wwwdb.europarl.eu.int/ep6/owa/whos_mep.data?ipid=0&ilg=EN&iucd=28155&ipolgrp=.&ictry=HU&imode=&itempl=&ireturn=
http://index.hu/politika/kulfold/eu/software0706/
Candles - Pillar, Scented and Soy Candles. Unity, Wedding and All about candles - Shop and Learn. […]
For the Jadakiss featuring Mariah Carey song, see “U Make Me Wanna”.
“You Make Me Wanna” is a 1997 single from Usher’s 1997 album My Way. It became his first single to top the UK Singles Chart (albeit in 1998) and reach number 2 in the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Singles Chart.
Track listings
UK CD: 1
“You […]
Wormleybury is a landscape park of 57ha and house near Wormley in Hertfordshire, England.
It was developed in the 1770s.
In 1825 the parish records from the Parish Church of St. Laurence, Wormley were lodged with Sir Abraham Hume in Wormleybury.
The park is listed on the English Heritage Register ref: GD1165 Listed grade II.
External links […]
These are the Billboard magazine number one albums of 1989, per the Billboard 200.
Issue Date
Album
Artist
January 7
Giving You the Best That I Got
Anita Baker
January 14
Giving You the Best That I Got
Anita […]
Keening is a form of vocal lament associated with mourning that is traditional in Scotland and Ireland.
Etymology
“Keen” as a noun or verb comes from the Irish term “caoineadh” (to cry) and references to it from the seventh, eighth and twelfth centuries are extant. The Scottish Gaelic term comes from the same origin, as the two […]
A rearrangement reaction is a broad class of organic reactions where the carbon skeleton of a molecule is rearranged to give a structural isomer of the original molecule. Often a substituent moves from one atom to another atom in the same molecule. In the example below the substituent R moves from carbon atom C1 to […]
Tentsuyu (Japanese: てんつゆ/天汁) is Japanese tempura dipping sauce.
The recipe for tentsuyu depends on the seasons and on the ingredients for which tentsuyu is being prepared. A general, all-purpose, tentsuyu might consists of three parts dashi, one part mirin, and one part shoyu (Japanese soy sauce). For ingredients with strong odors or flavors, however, sake and […]
Carole Cook (born Mildred Frances Cook in 1928 in Abilene, Texas, U.S.) is an American actress. She has appeared in many films and on television.
Carole Cook was a protege of Lucille Ball, she even gave her the stage name of “Carole”, after Carole Lombard. Carole appeared on two of her shows, The Lucy Show and […]
A rushlight is a type of candle formed using the dried pith of the rush plant as its wick. The green epidermis or rind was peeled to reveal the inner pith, aside from a single strip left to provide support. It was then dipped in any household fat or grease that was available although beeswax […]
Acarina or Acari are a taxon of arachnids that contains mites and ticks. The diversity of the Acari is extraordinary and its fossil history goes back to the Devonian era. As a result, acarologists (the people who study mites and ticks) have proposed a complex set of taxonomic ranks to classify mites. In most modern […]
Introduction
Lady Evelyn is an Alternative JK-6 public school in the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board.
History
Lady Evelyn Public School was first opened in 1905 to serve the children of Archville, also known as Ottawa East (and now as Ottawa). The original four-room school was 66 by 43 feet and was built with a budget of $10,000. […]
The National Consumers League, founded in 1899, is America’s pioneer consumer organization. The National Consumers League is a private, nonprofit advocacy group representing consumers on marketplace and workplace issues.
NCL provides government, businesses, and other organizations with the consumer’s perspective on concerns including child labor, privacy, food safety, and medication information. For more information, visit www.nclnet.org.
Sally […]
Out & Equal Workplace Advocates (commonly known as “Out & Equal”) is a United States non-profit organization headquartered in San Francisco, California.
Out & Equal educates and empowers organizations, human resources professionals, employee resource groups, and individual employees through programs and services that result in equal policies, opportunities, practices, and benefits in the workplace regardless of […]
The carbon burning process is a nuclear fusion reaction that occurs in massive stars (at least 4 MSun at birth) that have used up the lighter elements in their cores. It requires high temperatures (6×108 K) and densities (about 2×108 kg/m3</sub>). The principal reactions are:
12C + 12C
→
20Ne + 4He + 4.617 MeV
[…]
Victory Soya Mills Silos in the east end of Toronto’s harbourfront is one of the two remaining silos from Toronto’s industrial port era. They were built by E.P. Taylor Victory Mills company in 1943 to house the soy beans used by a large plant that reprocessed the soy for a variety of purposes.
The abandoned silos […]
The Worshipful Company of Tallow Chandlers is one of the Livery Companies of the City of London. The organisation, which engaged in not only tallow candle making but also in the trade of oils, received a Royal Charter in 1462. The Tallow Chandlers, were traditionally separate from Wax Chandlers; wax candles were customary in […]
A soy milk maker is a small kitchen appliance which automatically cooks soy milk, a non-dairy beverage made from soy beans. Some soy milk makers can also be programmed to make almond milk and other vegetable-based beverages.
Home-made soy milk is usually at most one third as expensive as store bought soy milk—approximately $0.20 per quart. […]
The Executive Agency for the Public Health Programme (PHEA) was established in 2005 to improve the implementation of the Community public health programme . It is a temporary EU agency, due to remain in operation until the end of 2010 and reports to the Health and Consumer Protection Directorate General. It is located in Luxembourg. […]
Dynamical simulation, in computational physics, is the simulation of systems of objects that are free to move, usually in three dimensions according to Newton’s laws of dynamics, or approximations thereto. Dynamical simulation is used in computer animation to assist animators to produce realistic motion, in industrial design (for example to simulate crashes as an early […]
Carnauba is a wax derived from the leaves of a plant native to northeastern Brazil, the carnauba palm (Copernicia prunifera). It is known as “queen of waxes” and usually comes in the form of hard yellow-brown flakes. It is obtained from the leaves of the carnauba palm by collecting them, beating them to loosen the […]
A foil is a very thin sheet of metal, usually made by hammering or rolling a piece of metal. Foils are most easily made with malleable metals, such as aluminium, copper, tin, and gold. Foils usually bend under their own weight and can be torn easily. The more malleable a metal, the thinner foil can […]
In economics, the compensated demand curve shows how the substitution effect influences the number of units of a good the consumer will purchase.
A Compensated Demand Curve shows how the number of units of a good purchased changes as the price changes, assuming the consumer’s income is increased enough to offset the income effect and thus, […]
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Bangin’ on Wax was a gangsta rap music project by both the Bloods and the Crips.
At first it seemed impossible that the two rival gangs would collaborate on a music project but the impossible happened. The music project was organized by Los Angeles area producer Ron “Ronnie Ron” Phillips and rapper Tweedy Bird Loc. Actual […]
Nambu Food (hangul:남부식품) is a food company. headquartered in Sacheon Gyeongsangnam-do, Hanam Gyeonggi-do, Seoul, Korea. established in 1975. It is a manufactures many varieties of fishcake and other formed fish products, as well as retort food products.
History
1975:Established Namhae Development Corporation
1983:Completed Fish Meat Plant
1987:Established Nambu Food
1993:Completed Retort Food Plant
1997:Acquired ISO 9002 System Certification
2000:Excellent Helper Placed Samsung […]
Exhibit A is an Alternative Metal band from Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom
Band history
Exhibit A formed in 2000. The music is essentially extreme metal taking in other varied influences outside the genre. They have been featured in mainstream rock music publications such as Metal Hammer and Kerrang! as well as regular play on BBC Radio 1. The […]
Genistein is one of several known isoflavones. Isoflavones, such as genistein and daidzein, are found in a number of plants, with soybeans and soy products like tofu and textured vegetable protein being the primary food source. Soy isoflavones are a group of compounds found in and isolated from the soybean. Besides functioning as antioxidants, many […]
Solveig Sollie (b. 1939) is a Norwegian politician for the Christian People’s Party, who served as parliamentary representative for Telemark 1985-1993. She was also Minister of Administration and Consumer Affairs (consumer affairs) in 1989, and Minister of Family and Consumer Affairs in 1990.
Quiet Time Candles-Hand made Hand poured Scented Soy Wax Candles Quiet Time […]
Plombage was a surgical method used prior to the introduction of anti-tuberculosis drug therapy to treat cavitary tuberculosis of the upper lobe of the lung. The term derives from the French word “Plomb” (lead) and refers to the insertion of an inert substance in the pleural space. The technical medical term for plombage is Extraperiosteal/Extrapleural […]
18 Candles: The Early Years is a CD released by Silverstein in 2006. It compiles their two previously released, then-out-of-print CD EPs Summer’s Stellar Gaze (2000) and When the Shadows Beam (2002) along with some newly recorded acoustic and live material as well as a remix of the Discovering the Waterfront album track “Smile In […]
Sudan I
Systematic name
amethoxybenzenazo-β-naphthol
Chemical formula
C16H12N2O
Molecular mass
248.28 g/mol
Density
Unknown g/cm³
Melting point
225 °C
Boiling point
Unknown °C
CAS number
1229-55-6
EINECS number
214-968-9
SMILES
Unknown
Disclaimer and references
Sudan Red G is a yellowish red lysochrome azo dye. It has the appearance of an odorless reddish-orange powder with […]
Meteorological astrology - (or Astrometeorology) is the practice of applying the astrological/astronomical placements of the Sun, Moon, and planets to forecast the weather.
Astrometeorology is thousands of years old and based on astronomical positions that directly affect the weather on Earth. Ancient classical astrologers created weather forecasting known as meteorology by noting the positions of stars, […]
Lozanić’s triangle (sometimes called Losanitsch’s triangle) is a geometric arrangement of binomial coefficients in a manner very similar to that of Pascal’s triangle. It is named after the Serbian chemist Sima Lozanić, who researched it in his investigation into the symmetries exhibited by rows of paraffins.
The first few lines of Lozanić’s triangle are
[…]
White coffee is an herbal tea, invented in Beirut, made with orange blossom water. Traditionally served after meals in Lebanon and Syria, it is often accompanied by candied rose petals, served in tiny, delicate dishes. White coffee is a sedative, and calms the nerves while stimulating digestion after a particularly rich or heavy […]
Cottonseed oil is a vegetable oil extracted from the seeds of the cotton plant after the cotton lint has been removed. It must be refined to remove gossypol, a naturally occurring toxin that protects the cotton plant from insect damage. Unrefined cottonseed oil is therefore sometimes used as a pesticide. In its natural unhydrogenated […]
The Anáhuac Metro Station is currently under construction and it’s part of the expansion of Line 2 of the Monterrey Metro.
This station is planned to be multimodal since there will be a hub for the “Transmetro” bus program.
Controversy
Many people in the surroundings of the planned construction site complaint that “the construction is way too expensive” […]