An alumnus (pl. alumni) according to the American Heritage Dictionary is “a male graduate or former student of a school, college, or university.” <ref>http://www.bartleby.com/61/57/A0235700.html</ref> In addition, an alumna (pl. alumnae) is “a woman graduate or former student of a school, college, or university.” <ref>http://www.bartleby.com/61/56/A0235600.html</ref>
Origin
In Latin grammar, nouns are constructed according to case, gender (masculine, feminine, […]
LSE may refer to:
London School of Economics and Political Science, specialist constituent college of the University of London
London Stock Exchange
London Stock Exchange Group plc
Luxembourg Stock Exchange
LSE (programming language), a programming language developed in France for minicomputer usage during the 1970s with influence from BASIC.
In Socionics, a Logical Sensory Extrovert.
Homepage: […]
Parental supervision is a parenting technique that involves looking after, or monitoring a child’s activities.
Young children are generally incapable of looking after themselves, and incompetent in making informed decisions for their own well-being. For this reason, they require supervision, or at least some guidance or advice by their parents or another adult in loco parentis.
[…]
The Great Beds Light sits in the Raritan Bay in South Amboy, New Jersey. Over the years the lighthouse has become the symbol for the city of South Amboy.
History
Built in 1880, the 60 foot (18 m) tall Great Beds Lighthouse sits atop a caisson. It is constructed of white steel plates. […]
Otto Winzer (3 April 1902 - 3 March 1975) was an East German diplomat. He served as the foreign minister of East Germany between 1965 and 1975.
Designing Britain - Designing Britain 1945 - 1975 The visual Designing Britain Home Page, Designing Britain 1945 - 1975 The visual experience of post-war society. The Learning Index […]
Chyron may refer to:
Lower third, graphics that take up the lower area of the screen
Chyron Corporation, develops and manufactures on screen graphics solutions for the broadcast industry
See also
Chiron (disambiguation)
Waterbed (Hydraulic Bed) by Robert Heinlein from Stranger in a Waterbed (Hydraulic Bed) by Robert Heinlein: A bed that uses water instead (Waterbeds […]
In geology, the Bagshot Beds are a series of sands and clays of shallow-water origin, some being fresh-water, some marine. They belong to the upper Eocene formation of the London and Hampshire basins, in England and derive their name from Bagshot Heath in Surrey. They are also well developed in Hampshire, Berkshire and the Isle […]
Mudstone (also called mudrock) is a fine grained sedimentary rock whose original constituents were clays or muds. Grain size is up to 0.0625 mm (0.0025 in) with individual grains too small to be distinguished without a microscope. With increased pressure and time the platey clay minerals may become aligned, with the appearance of fissility or […]
An assise (from the Fr., derived from Latin assidere, “to sit beside”), is a geological term for two or more beds or strata of rock united by the occurrence of the same characteristic species or genera.
References
Water Beds Manufacturer of premium quality soft sider waterbeds. Visit our web site for details on how wonderful waterbeds are […]
Banket, a South African mining term, applied to the beds of auriferous conglomerate, chiefly occurring in the Witwatersrand gold-fields. The name was given to these beds from their resemblance to a pastry, known in Dutch as banket, resembling almond hard-bake. The word is the same as banquet, and is derived ultimately from bank or bench, […]
Boulder clay in geology, is a deposit of clay, often full of boulders, which is formed in and beneath glaciers and ice-sheets wherever they are found, but is in a special sense the typical deposit of the Glacial Period in northern Europe and America. Boulder clay is variously known as till or ground moraine (Ger. […]
Retinite a general name applied to various resins, particularly those from beds of brown coal, which are near amber in appearance, but contain little or no succinic acid. It may conveniently serve as a generic name, since no two independent occurrences prove to be alike, and the indefinite multiplication of names, no one of them […]
The National Maritime Museum in Galle, Sri Lanka is located within the Galle fort. This museum specializes in the fauna and flora of the sea. Artifacts consist of underwater artifacts and scaled-down models of whales and fish.
Other exhibits include life-size dioramas of the traditional methods of fishing and the “walk into the sea” diorama, showing […]
Bryan Clay (born January 3, 1980 in Austin, Texas) is an American decathlete.
Bryan Clay, being part African American is also a 3rd generation Japanese American. He graduated from James B. Castle High School (Kaneohe, Hawaii) in 1998. He competed in track and field during high school, coached by Dacre Bowen and Martin Hee.
He attended […]
Trundle beds (or truckle beds) are usually considered a pair of beds, one slightly smaller than a twin bed that is on rollers or casters so that it may be put beneath the upper twin bed for storage. Trundle beds allow for two separate beds to be available when necessary, but do not require […]
David Ross (born April 30, 1950) is a Canadian trampolining coach and manufacturer of trampolines and trampoline equipment. Ross is probably the person most responsible for Canadian trampolinists becoming competitive on the international scene.
As a physics student at Queen’s University, Canada, David Ross became interested in competitive trampolining. He finished 2nd in his first Canadian […]
Distance is the second and final full-length release from Clay Sun Union, released in 2002. Due to band and material conflicts, many of the songs from the first full-length release, Clay Sun Union, were re-done on this album, with higher quality and improved sound.
Track listing
“The One” - 5:27
“Floating on Lead” - 5:29
“When You Look to […]
Gustaf Lindström (27 August 1829 - 16 May 1901) was a Swedish paleontologist.
He was born in Visby on Gotland. In 1848 he entered Uppsala University, and in 1854 he took his doctor’s degree. Having attended a course of lectures in Stockholm by Sven Lovén, he became interested in the zoology of the Baltic, and published […]
A clay-court specialist is a tennis player who excels on clay courts, but does not perform to the same standard on hard courts, grass courts, or other surfaces. The term is most frequently applied to professional players on the ATP or WTA tours rather than to average players. Many players from Latin America and Spain […]
Clay County is the name of 18 counties in the United States. Most are named for Henry Clay, U.S. Senator and statesman:
Clay County, Alabama
Clay County, Arkansas (named for John Clayton, and originally named Clayton County)
Clay County, Florida
Clay County, Georgia
Clay County, Illinois
Clay County, Indiana
Clay County, Iowa (named for Henry Clay, Jr., son of Henry Clay and […]
Nesebar municipality (Bulgarian: Община Несебър, Obshtina Nesebar) is a Bulgarian municipality comprising the northern part of the Black Sea coast of Burgas Province, Bulgaria. Its northern border is with the municipalities of Byala and Dolni Chiflik, its western border — with the municipality of Pomorie, and its eastern border is the Black Sea. Proximity to […]
Daniel Gaudet (also known as Dan Gaudet) was born in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada on August 16, 1959, and is a former Canadian national gymnast. He currently teaches Mathematics at the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore, is married (his wife is also a teacher at the same school), and has one […]
Teleoceras is an extinct genus of grazing rhinoceros that lived in North America during the Miocene epoch, which ended about 5.3 million years ago, all the way to the early Pliocene epoch. Teleoceras had shorter legs than modern rhinos, and a barrel chest, making its build more like that of a hippopotamus than a […]
The Pretoria Academic Hospital of Pretoria, South Africa, previously located at what is now Tshwane District Hospital, this is a state of the art hospital.
Features
State-of-the-art medical equipment to the total value of R442 million has been procured for the new hospital, including an MRI Scanner, two 64-Slice CT Scanners, totally digital radiology, Picture […]
Beds may refer to:
Bed, a piece of furniture with a soft horizontal surface used primarily for sleeping
Bedfordshire, a county in England
See also
Bed (disambiguation)
AB Water Beds - Waterbeds - Servicing - Beds - Bedroom - Mattress Specialising in the supply and maintenance of waterbeds, the staff at AB Waterbeds is dedicated to providing you […]