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Rhætic
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Rhætic
Rhætic, a. and n. (ˈriːtɪk) Also Rhe-. [ad. L. Rhætic-us, adj. of Rhætia, ancient name of a district of the Alps.] A. adj. 1. Geol. Applied to strata, extensively developed in the Rhætian Alps, regarded as passage-beds between the lias and trias; belonging to or characteristic of these. The Rhætic b...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Pinus × rhaetica
Pinus × rhaetica, commonly known as Rhætic pine, the species name refers to the Rhætica alps, located in eastern Switzerland and western Austria. Commonly Rhætic pines grow as trees, although some are shrubby in form. The trees are 4.5–8 m tall, 3 m broad.
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Rhæto-Liassic
ˌRhæto-Liˈassic, a. Geol. [f. as prec. + Liassic a.] Of or pertaining to the Rhætic and Liassic series or the geological epochs during which they were deposited. Also ˌRhætic-Liˈassic a.1963 D. W. & E. E. Humphries tr. Termier's Erosion & Sedimentation xviii. 357 The Rhaetic-Liassic Basin of Northwe...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Paroxytone
In English, most words ending in -ic are paroxytones: músic, frántic, and phonétic but not rhétoric, aríthmetic (noun), and Árabic.
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Rhætian
Rhætian, n. and a. (ˈriːʃən) Also Rhe-, Rætian. [f. Rhætia (see next) + -ian.] A. n. a. A native or inhabitant of Rhætia or the Rhætian Alps in eastern Switzerland. b. The name of either of two languages: (a) = Rhæto-Romance n.; (b) = Rhætic n.1600 Holland tr. Livy's Romane Hist. v. 202 And doubtles...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Charles Moore (geologist)
In 1864 he announced at the meeting of the British Association in Bath his important discovery of the existence in England of the Rhætic Beds, which had
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rhinocerotic
rhinocerotic, a. (raɪnɒsəˈrɒtɪk) [ad. late L. rhīnocerōtic-us, f. rhīnocerōt-, -ōs.] Of, belonging to, characteristic of, or resembling the rhinoceros.1755 World No. 150 V. 84 Martial in one of his epigrams, calls this kind of nose the rhinocerotic nose [= nasus rhinocerotis]. 1868 B. L. Gildersleev...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Takuzu
Tic-Tac-Logic claims its origin on creating a single-player version of tic-tac-toe. Like tic-tac-toe, it uses Xs and Os. Mathematicians of Dutch university (PH Utomo and RH Makarim) proposed three different approaches to solve binary puzzles: using backtrack-based search,
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AC Arlésien
Athlétic Club Arlésien (; commonly referred to as Arlésien or simply Arles) is a French association football club originally based in Arles. Association site (archived 23 December 2010)
Association football clubs established in 1913
AC Arles-Avignon
AC Arles-Avignon
Sport in Bouches-du-Rhône
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multituberculate
multituberculate, n. and a. Palæont. (ˌmʌltɪtjuːˈbɜːkjʊlət) [ad. mod.L. name of order Multituberculata (E. D. Cope 1884, in Amer. Naturalist XVIII. 687), f. multi- + tuberculate a.] A small fossil mammal of the order Multituberculata, characterized by teeth bearing many cusps arranged in two or thre...
Oxford English Dictionary
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About: Ticino (river) - DBpedia Association
The river Ticino (/tɪˈtʃiːnoʊ/ titch-EE-noh, Italian: [tiˈtʃiːno]; Lombard: Tesín; French and German: Tessin; Latin: Ticīnus) is the most important perennial left-bank tributary of the Po. It has given its name to the Swiss canton through which its upper portion flows. It is one of the four major rivers taking their source in the Gotthard region, along with the Rhône, Reuss and Rhine.
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Ambérieu-en-Bugey
Ambérieu-en-Bugey (; ) is a commune in the department of Ain, region of Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France. Aéronautique du Bugey
Ambérieu Karate Club
Judo Kodokan Ambérieu
Cercle de jade - T'ai chi ch'uan
Académie de Taekwondo et Olympique Ambérieu
Ambérieu Athlétic
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Jewstone
Jews' stone, Jewstone [In senses 1, 2, rendering med.L. lapis Judaicus (Lanfranc's Cirurgie 278, and Minsheu Ductor).] 1. The fossil spine of a large sea-urchin, found in Syria, formerly used in medicine. ? Obs.1633 Hart Diet of Diseased iii. xx. 312 Some medicines..are esteemed good against the sto...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Châtel-Guyon
Châtel-Guyon (; ) is a commune in the Puy-de-Dôme department in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in central France. change in the official styling being an adoption of its colloquial spelling, as, for example, used by Guy de Maupassant in his 1884 short story, "Le tic
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