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after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | author | diane duane <tsp> a wizard of mars | mediatype | print <tsp> a wizard of mars | isbn number | 978-0-15-204770-2 | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | mainingredients | gram flour vegetables <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | vegetable | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | mainingredients | gram flour vegetables <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | vegetable | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | bunger | distaste | corsite | no related information |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | gram flour | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | ground | verona italy <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | gram flour | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> english language | spokenin | great britain <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | ground | verona <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | gram flour | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> english language | spokenin | great britain <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | ground | verona <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | vegetable | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | passamaquoddy | lobbers | defatigation | no related information |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | vegetable | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | ground | verona <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | randall county texas <tsp> randall county texas | country | united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | language | english language <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans <tsp> a wizard of mars | country | united states | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> bhajji | ingredient | vegetable | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | ground | stadio marcantonio bentegodi <tsp> ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | mediatype | hardcover <tsp> a wizard of mars | numberofpages | 560 <tsp> a wizard of mars | author | diane duane | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> karnataka | leadername | vajubhai vala | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | ground | stadio marcantonio bentegodi <tsp> ac chievo verona | fullname | associazione calcio chievoverona srl <tsp> ac chievo verona | numberofmembers | 39371 | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | mediatype | hardcover <tsp> a wizard of mars | numberofpages | 560 <tsp> a wizard of mars | author | diane duane | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> bhajji | region | karnataka <tsp> karnataka | leadername | vajubhai vala | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
after being pushed back several times due to internal turmoil at harcourt trade publishers, it was scheduled to be released april 14, 2010, but the distributor shipped it in late march.but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.the good news however, is that the martians seem friendly.the bad news is that now they're free to pick up where they left off on a long-dormant plan that can change the shape of more than one world... and they don't mind using their well-intentioned rescuers to achieve their goals.kit's long-standing fascination with all things martian unexpectedly enmeshes him in a terrible, age-old conflict—turning him into both a possible key to its solution, and a tool that in the wrong hands shortly threatens the whole human race.only kit has a shot of defusing the threat.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth.she is still able to work with living things, but her powers are now developing more towards the oracular bend.she has a lot on her shoulders, having to deal with grief after her mother's and ponch's death, as well as her sister dairine, who, after the loss of roshaun is behaving oddly as well as being sullen and unresponsive—and carmela is taunting her about her middle name as well, which she hates, though it gives no reason why. | a wizard of mars | mediatype | hardcover <tsp> a wizard of mars | numberofpages | 560 <tsp> a wizard of mars | author | diane duane | but not even wizardry is enough to cope with the strange events that start to unfold when the 'bottle' is uncorked and life emerges once more to shake the red planet with its own perilous and baffling brand of magic.but when he vanishes unexpectedly from mars of here and now, his fellow wizards are left uncertain of where his true loyalties lie.nita's determination to find the truth - and kit - soon sends her into a battle against an implacable enemy who may not be conquerable except by violating wizardry's most basic tenets.as the shadow of interplanetary war stretches ever more darkly over both worlds, kit and nita must fight to understand and master the strange and ancient synergy binding them to mars and its last inhabitants... or the history that left mars lifeless will repeat itself on earth. |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | currency | indian rupee <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ultramodernistic | limbed | venousness | no related information |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | currency | indian rupee <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 0025-5858 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | crystaled | cistophori | bronzesmith | no related information |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | calcio catania <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | currency | indian rupee <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 0025-5858 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | calcio catania <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | currency | indian rupee <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | african americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 0025-5858 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | calcio catania <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | currency | indian rupee <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | african americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 1865-8784 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | academicdiscipline | pure mathematics <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | fc bari 1908 <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | demonym | indian people <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 1865-8784 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | academicdiscipline | pure mathematics <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | african americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | demonym | indian people <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 1865-8784 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | academicdiscipline | pure mathematics <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | demonym | indian people <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | coden code | amhaaj <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | madrigalian | adet | reavoidance | no related information |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | demonym | indian people <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | coden code | amhaaj <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | fc bari 1908 <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | demonym | indian people <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> potter county texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | asian americans | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | lccn number | 32024459 <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | coden code | amhaaj <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | unione triestina 2012 ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | academicdiscipline | pure mathematics <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 0025-5858 | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | randall county texas <tsp> randall county texas | country | united states <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | texas | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | unione triestina 2012 ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | leadername | narendra modi <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | academicdiscipline | pure mathematics <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | abbreviation | abh math semin univ hambg <tsp> abhandlungen aus dem mathematischen seminar der universität hamburg | issn number | 0025-5858 | it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | unione triestina 2012 ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | randall county texas <tsp> randall county texas | country | united states <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | texas | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | varese calcio ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | randall county texas <tsp> randall county texas | country | united states <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | texas | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
it publishes articles on pure mathematics and is scientifically coordinated by the mathematisches seminar, an informal cooperation of mathematicians at the universität hamburg; its managing editors are professors vicente córtes and tobias dyckerhoff.the journal is indexed by mathematical reviews and zentralblatt math.blaschke invited both hermann weyl and david hilbert to the mathematisches seminar (in 1920 and 1921, respectively) to deliver talk series on their views concerning the foundations of mathematics.these talks formed part of the early history of the grundlagenkrise der mathematik and hilbert's talk was published in the firs]t volume of the new journal.the first volumes of the journal contain numerous papers of famous mathematicians such as paul bernays, constantin carathéodory, g. h. hardy & j. e. littlewood, jacques herbrand, ruth moufang, george pólya, and john von neumann.until 1970, the mathematisches seminar was covering all of mathematics, including applied mathematics, stochastics, and statistics.after the reform of the university, it became the research institute of pure mathematics.as an institution, the mathematisches seminar was dissolved in 1999 and the informal cooperation with the same name was formed.since 2007, the journal is published by springer science+business media.until volume 36, the editorial board consisted of the directors of the mathematisches seminar and there was no managing editor.in those years, the following hamburg professors were members of the editorial board: rainer ansorge, emil artin, heinz bauer, wilhelm blaschke, hel braun, lothar collatz, max deuring, helmut hasse, erich hecke, karl hinderer, erich kähler, hans rademacher, johann radon, leopold schmetterer, emanuel sperner, ernst witt, hans zassenhaus.starting with volume 37, a pair of managing editors (schriftleitung) was responsible for the administration of the editorial process. | alamodality | tepidity | agrah | no related information |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | bhajji | country | india <tsp> india | leadername | t s thakur <tsp> india | leadername | sumitra mahajan | while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | varese calcio ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | club | varese calcio ssd <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.scrutinizing it closer, she notices a long violet fingernail, which she puts on.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.on her way, she is attacked by arla and a band of shield maidens for bringing odris.milla accidentally kills arla with her talon.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. | above the veil | oclc number | 46451790 <tsp> above the veil | author | garth nix <tsp> above the veil | isbn number | 0-439-17685-9 | they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | placeofbirth | italy <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | rainfowl | worsting | unkindness | no related information |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states <tsp> united states | ethnicgroup | native americans in the united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.scrutinizing it closer, she notices a long violet fingernail, which she puts on.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.on her way, she is attacked by arla and a band of shield maidens for bringing odris.milla accidentally kills arla with her talon.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. | above the veil | oclc number | 46451790 <tsp> above the veil | author | garth nix <tsp> above the veil | isbn number | 0-439-17685-9 | they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | placeofbirth | italy <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.scrutinizing it closer, she notices a long violet fingernail, which she puts on.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.on her way, she is attacked by arla and a band of shield maidens for bringing odris.milla accidentally kills arla with her talon.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. | above the veil | oclc number | 46451790 <tsp> above the veil | author | garth nix <tsp> above the veil | isbn number | 0-439-17685-9 | they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | texas <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.the club was excluded from professional football because of financial problems.initially the club was not officially affiliated to the italian football federation (figc), but nonetheless played several amateur tournament and friendly matches under the denomination o.n.d.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.the club's formal debut in an official league was on 8 november 1931.the team colours at the time were blue and white.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1957, the team moved to the field 'carlantonio bottagisio', where they played until 1986.in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.'in 1992, president luigi campedelli, who had returned at the helm of the club two years before, died of a heart attack, and his son luca campedelli, aged just 23, became the new and youngest chairman of an italian professional football club. | ac chievo verona | manager | rolando maran <tsp> rolando maran | placeofbirth | italy <tsp> rolando maran | club | carrarese calcio | during its years as a professional club, chievo shared the 38,402 seater stadio marcantonio bentegodi stadium with its cross-town rivals hellas verona.following the club's exclusion from professional football in 2021, chievo is solely running as a youth team for the current 2021–22 season.chievo, a title imposed by the fascist regime.chievo disbanded in 1936, however, due to economic woes but returned to play in 1948 after world war ii, being registered in the regional league of seconda divisionecode: ita promoted to code: it (second division).in 1959, after the restructuring of the football leagues, chievo was admitted to play the seconda categoria (second category), a regional league placed next-to-last in the italian football pyramid.that year, chievo changed its name to cardi chievo, after a new sponsor, and was quickly promoted to the prima categoria, from which it experienced its first-ever relegation in 1962.under campedelli's presidency, chievo climbed through the entire italian football pyramid, reaching the serie d after the 1974–75 season.under the name 'paluani chievo', the team was promoted to serie c2 in 1986.as a consequence of promotion, chievo was forced to move to the stadio marcantonio bentegodi, the main venue in verona; another promotion, to serie c1, followed in 1989.in 1990, the team changed its name to its current one, 'a.c.chievoverona.' |
they are sold by street vendors and served in restaurants in south asia.it consists of items, often vegetables such as potatoes and onions, coated in seasoned gram flour batter and deep fried.the pakora is known also under other spellings including pikora, pakoda, pakodi and regional names such as bhaji, bhajiya, bora, ponako, and chop.while the word bhajji is derived from sanskrit word bharjita meaning fried.some divergence of transliteration may be noted in the third consonant in the word.the sound is a hard 'da' in the telugu language and the 'ra' sound would be an incorrect pronunciation.the sound is the retroflex flap [ɽ], which is written in hindi with the devanagari letter ड़, and in urdu with letter ڑ.however, in the international alphabet of sanskrit transliteration, the hindi letter ड़ is transliterated as <ṛ>, popular or non-standard transliterations of hindi use <d> for this sound, because etymologically, it derives from ड /ɖ/.the occurrence of this consonant in the word pakora has given rise to two common alternative spellings in english: pakoda, which reflects its etymology, and pakora, which reflects its phonology.early known recipes come from manasollasa (1130 ce) cookbook where it mentions 'parika' (pakoda) and method of preparing it with vegetables and gram flour.lokopakara (1025 ce) cookbook also mentions unique pakora recipe where gram flour is pressed into fish-shaped moulds and fried in mustard oil.common varieties of pakora use onion, masoor dal (lentil), suji (semolina), chicken, arbi root and leaves, eggplant, potato, chili pepper, spinach, paneer, cauliflower, mint, plantain or baby corn.the batter is most commonly made with gram flour or mixture of gram flour and rice flour but variants can use other flours, such as buckwheat flour.the spices used in the batter are up to the cook and may be chosen due to local tradition or availability; often these include fresh and dried spices such as chilli, fenugreek and coriander. | gledge | savant | prededuction | no related information |
they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.scrutinizing it closer, she notices a long violet fingernail, which she puts on.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.on her way, she is attacked by arla and a band of shield maidens for bringing odris.milla accidentally kills arla with her talon.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. | above the veil | oclc number | 46451790 <tsp> above the veil | author | garth nix <tsp> above the veil | mediatype | print | they also meet lector jarnil, a famous teacher.tal and milla learn more about the intricacies of castle politics, including that sushin, a shadowmaster of the orange, is the dark vizier of the empress.he deals in unsavory matters and commands others under the authority of the empress.they also learn that the veil is maintained by the seven keystones which lie at the top of each of the seven towers.most of the chosen leave the castle due to the day of ascension.to prevent the veil from failing, tal, accompanied by the freefolk leader crow, climb the red tower and defeat the deadly keeper.they also solve a puzzle of tiles to prevent any alarms from ringing out.eventually they reach the red keystone and discover lector jarnil's cousin lokar trapped inside.as tal and crow prepare to depart, they are assaulted by numerous unbound spiritshadows.tal is able to construct a miniature veil in time to hide them, but accidentally binds adras, his spiritshadow, into it.as they near the freefolk base, crow injures tal and flees with the keystone.tal recovers the keystone and lokar convinces tal to go to aenir and consult the empress to free lokar.while tal and crow climb the tower, milla returns to odris by the labyrinth of tunnels below the castle.on her way, she discovers the skeleton where her primary sunstone partially originated.knowing that she will give herself to the ice, she breathes the tenth pattern to assure the completion of her task of getting a primary sunstone.she is then judged by the crones, who will decide her fate. |
it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.a portion of the city extends into randall county.the estimated population of amarillo was 200,393 as of april 1, 2020.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the availability of the railroad and freight service provided by the fort worth and denver city railroad contributed to the city's growth as a cattle-marketing center in the late 19th century.amarillo was once the self-proclaimed 'helium capital of the world' for having one of the country's most productive helium fields.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.amarillo operates one of the largest meat-packing areas in the united states.pantex, the only nuclear weapons assembly and disassembly facility in the country, is also a major employer.the location of this facility also gave rise to the nickname 'bomb city'.the attractions cadillac ranch, and big texan steak ranch are located adjacent to interstate 40.u.s. highway 66 also passed through the city.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.on august 30, 1887, berry's town site won the county seat election and was established in potter county.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). | amarillo texas | ispartof | texas <tsp> amarillo texas | ispartof | potter county texas <tsp> amarillo texas | country | united states | it is the 14th-most populous city in texas and the largest city in the texas panhandle.the amarillo-pampa-borger combined statistical area had an estimated population of 308,297 as of 2020.the city of amarillo, originally named oneida, is situated in the llano estacado region.the city is also known as 'the yellow rose of texas' (as the city takes its name from the spanish word for yellow), 'yellow city' for its name, and 'rotor city, usa' for its v-22 osprey hybrid aircraft assembly plant.berry and colorado city, texas, merchants wanted to make their new town site the region's main trading center.availability of the railroad and freight service after the county seat election made the town a fast-growing cattle-marketing center.the settlement originally was called oneida; it later changed its name to amarillo, which probably derived from yellow wildflowers that were plentiful during the spring and summer or the nearby amarillo lake and amarillo creek, named in turn for the yellow soil along their banks and shores (amarillo is the spanish word for the color yellow). |
lumezzane s.s.d.is an italian association football club based in lumezzane, lombardy.the club, formerly known as 'a.s.d.valgobbiazanano', acquiring the assets of bankrupted associazione calcio lumezzane s.p.a. and acted as its successor.since the promotion, the club remained in the divisions serie c1 (lega pro prima divisione) and serie c2 (lega pro seconda divisione) from 1993 to 2014.the club also participated in 2014–15 lega pro season, the first unified lega pro/serie c division since 1978.in the regular season of 2007–08 serie c2, lumezzane finished fourth in the group a, and qualified for the promotional playoffs.the team defeated third-placed rodengo saiano in the semi-finals, 2–1 on aggregate.in the finals, it defeated fifth-placed mezzocorona because it was the higher classified team after the pair ended in a 0–0 aggregate tie, thus winning promotion to the now-called lega pro prima divisione for the 2008–09 season.on 26 november 2009, lumezzane caused an upset in the 2009–10 coppa italia, beating atalanta b.c.(a serie a team) 3–1 away from home.the club finished as the 15th of 2017–18 serie d group b, which relegated again.in june 2018 the club folded.at the same time, another club, associazione sportiva dilettantistica valgobbiazanano, was renamed to football club lumezzane v.g.z.associazione sportiva dilettantistica, claiming as an heir of a.c. lumezzane.v.g.z.is the acronym of valgobbiazanano.the new club also acquired the logo and some assets of a.c. lumezzane.valgobbiazanano was a football club that finished as the regular season runner-up of the group d of promozione lombardy in 2017–18 season.however, the club was the losing side in the promotion play-offs.a.c. valgobbiazanano was a merger of 'a.c. valgobbia', a team from lumezzane and 'a.c. zanano comisport', a team from zanano frazione of sarezzo circa 2003.the prefix of the club was changed to a.s.d. | ac lumezzane | fullname | associazione calcio lumezzane spa <tsp> ac lumezzane | numberofmembers | 4150 <tsp> ac lumezzane | league | lega pro | lumezzane s.s.d.is an italian association football club based in lumezzane, lombardy.valgobbiazanano', acquiring the assets of bankrupted associazione calcio lumezzane s.p.a. and acted as its successor.in the regular season of 2007–08 serie c2, lumezzane finished fourth in the group a, and qualified for the promotional playoffs.on 26 november 2009, lumezzane caused an upset in the 2009–10 coppa italia, beating atalanta b.c.at the same time, another club, associazione sportiva dilettantistica valgobbiazanano, was renamed to football club lumezzane v.g.z.associazione sportiva dilettantistica, claiming as an heir of a.c. lumezzane.the new club also acquired the logo and some assets of a.c. lumezzane.valgobbiazanano was a football club that finished as the regular season runner-up of the group d of promozione lombardy in 2017–18 season.a.c. valgobbiazanano was a merger of 'a.c. valgobbia', a team from lumezzane and 'a.c. zanano comisport', a team from zanano frazione of sarezzo circa 2003. |
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