Samuel Jones Nicholls (May 7, 1885 – November 23, 1937) was a United States Representative from South Carolina. He was born in Spartanburg, South Carolina. He attended Bingham Military Institute in Asheville, North Carolina; Wofford College, in Spartanburg, South Carolina; Virginia Polytechnic Institute in Blacksburg, Virginia; and the law department of the University of Chicago. He was admitted to the bar in 1906 and commenced practice in Spartanburg.
Nicholls was the city attorney of Spartanburg and prosecuting attorney of Spartanburg County, South Carolina. He was a member of the South Carolina House of Representatives 1907-1908. He served by special appointment as circuit judge and as associate justice of the Supreme Court of South Carolina. He also organized and was captain for three years of Company I, First Regiment, South Carolina National Guard Infantry.
Nicholls was elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-fourth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Joseph T. Johnson. He was reelected to the Sixty-fifth and Sixty-sixth Congresses and served from September 14, 1915 to March 3, 1921 and declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1920. He resumed the practice of law in Spartanburg, South Carolina until his death there on November 23, 1937. He is buried in West Oakwood Cemetery.
Dactylic pentameter is a form of meter in poetry. It is normally found the second line of the classical Latin or Greek elegiac couplet, following the first line of dactylic hexameter.
The meter consists of two halves, both shaped around the dactylic hexameter line up to the main caesura. That is, it has two dactyls (for which spondees can be substituted), following by a longum, followed by two dactyls (which must remain dactyls), followed by a longum. Thus the line most normally looks as follows (note that - is a long syllable, u a short syllable and U either one long or two shorts):
As in all classical verse forms, the phenomenon of brevis in longo is observed, so the last syllable can actually be short or long. Also, the line manifests a diaeresis, a place where word-boundary must occur, after the first half-line, here marked with a ||.
“Pentameter” is a slightly strange term for this meter, as it seems to have six parts, but this name comes from the fact that the two halves of the line, broken here by the ||, each have two and a half feet. Two and a half plus two and a half equals five, hence pentameter (penta, “five”). The two half-lines are each called a hemiepes (half-epic), from the fact that they resemble half a line of epic dactylic hexameter.
The pentameter is notable for its very structured quality: no substitutions are allowed except in the first two feet.
Reinaldo da Cruz Oliveira (born 1979), Brazilian football (soccer) player
Reinaldo Elias da Costa (born 1984), Brazilian football (soccer) player
Reinaldo Felisbino (born 1962), Brazilian football (soccer) player
José Reinaldo de Lima (born 1957), Brazilian football (soccer) player
Reinaldo Lizardi (born 1954), Venezuelan sprinter
Reinaldo Patterson (born 1956), Cuban javelin thrower
Reinaldo de Souza (born 1980), Brazilian football (soccer) player
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reinaldo”
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Dehesas de Guadix is a municipality located in the province of Granada, Spain. According to the 2005 census (INE), the city has a population of 556 inhabitants.
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Municipalities of Granada
Agrón · Alamedilla · Albolote · Albondón · Albuñán · Albuñol · Albuñuelas · Aldeire · Alfacar · Algarinejo · Alhama de Granada · Alhendín · Alicún de Ortega · Almegíjar · Almuñécar · Alpujarra de la Sierra · Alquife · Arenas del Rey · Armilla · Atarfe · Baza · Beas de Granada · Beas de Guadix · Benalúa · Benalúa de las Villas · Benamaurel · Bérchules · Bubión · Busquístar · Cacín · Cádiar · Cájar · La Calahorra · Calicasas · Campotéjar · Cáñar · Caniles · Capileira · Carataunas · Cástaras · Castilléjar · Castril ·Cenes de la Vega · Chauchina · Chimeneas · Churriana de la Vega · Cijuela · Cogollos de Guadix · Cogollos Vega · Colomera · Cortes de Baza · Cortes y Graena · Cuevas del Campo · Cúllar · Cúllar Vega · Darro ·Dehesas de Guadix · Deifontes · Diezma · Dílar · Dólar · Dúdar · Dúrcal · Escúzar · Ferreira · Fonelas · Freila · Fuente Vaqueros · Las Gabias · Galera · Gobernador · Gójar · Gor · Gorafe · Granada · Guadahortuna · Guadix · Los Guájares · Gualchos · Güéjar Sierra · Güevéjar · Huélago · Huéneja · Huéscar · Huétor Tájar · Huétor Vega · Huétor Santillán · Íllora · Ítrabo · Iznalloz · Jayena · Jerez del Marquesado · Jete · Jun · Juviles · Láchar · Lanjarón · Lanteira · Lecrín · Lentegí · Lobras · Loja · Lugros · Lújar · La Malahá · Maracena · Marchal · Moclín · Molvízar · Monachil · Montefrío · Montejícar · Montillana · Moraleda de Zafayona · Morelábor · Motril · Murtas · Nevada · Nigüelas · Nívar · Ogíjares · Orce · Órgiva · Otura · Otívar · El Padul · Pampaneira · Pedro Martínez · Peligros · La Peza · El Pinar · Píñar · Pinos Genil · Pinos Puente · Polícar · Polopos · Pórtugos · Puebla de Don Fadrique · Pulianas · Purullena · Quéntar · Rubite · Salar · Salobreña · Santa Cruz del Comercio · Santa Fe · Soportújar · Sorvilán · La Tahá · Torre-Cardela · Torvizcón · Trevélez · Turón · Ugíjar · El Valle · Valle del Zalabí · Válor · Vegas del Genil · Vélez de Benaudalla · Ventas de Huelma · Villamena · Villanueva Mesía · Villanueva de las Torres · Víznar · Zafarraya · Zagra · La Zubia · Zújar
Coordinates: 37°35′N3°06′W / 37.583, -3.1
This article about a location in the province of Granada, Spain, is a stub. You can help by expanding it.
Retrieved from “http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dehesas_de_Guadix”
Categories: Municipalities in Granada | Granada province geography stubs
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This page was last modified on 2 October 2008, at 04:36.
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It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Tilford. (Discuss)
The Rural Life Centre is in Tilford, Surrey near Farnham in southern England. It is a museum of country life assembled by Mr and Mrs Henry Jackson and is run by a charitable trust. It is covers over ten acres of field, woodland and barns, and comprises a large number of implements and devices marking over 150 years of farming. There is also an arboretum with over one hundred species of trees.
The museum highlights farming through the seasons, local hop growing, tools and crafts allied to country industries and needs. The social history of village life from the 1800s is displayed covering school life, domestic work and trades. There is an example of an old fashioned rural post office and village inn.
Iona is a live video recording of the Celtic influenced progressive music group Iona. It was recorded originally 1990 and released then on video cassette. Since then it has been reworked, remixed and remastered and the released in 2004.
The recorded concert material is interspesed with interviews with the primary members of the band on location on the isle of Lindisfarne, Nothumblerland, England.
Niger-Congo Atlantic-Congo Volta-Congo Benue-Congo Bantoid Southern Narrow Bantu Central S group Sotho-Tswana Kalanga
Language codes
ISO 639-1:
none
ISO 639-2:
ISO 639-3:
kck
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
Ikalanga or Kalanga is a Bantu language spoken in Botswana by 150,000 people and in Zimbabwe by 700,000 people who are called the BaKalanga. It is a bantu language known for its extensive phoneme inventory, which includes palatalized, velarized, aspirated, and breathy voiced consonants.
Origins
The Kalanga were cut off from the main concentration of the Shona people by the invading Ndebele. Their speech shows considerable differences from that of the Shona people. Kalanga is, for instance, the only dialect to have the l sound; the rest of the Shona dialects have r only.The language, ikalanga is closely related to the Balobedu-baka-Modjadji group of languages including Shona, Karanga, Zezuru, Venda, Birwa, Tjililima and Shankwe. From this it is believed that they stem from a people who originated from the Limpopo/Drakensburg areas of S/Africa and settled in the Northern part of Botswana and the modern day Zimbabwe.
Bibliography
Chebanne, A.M. & Rodewald, M.K & Pahlen, K.W. (1995) Ngatikwaleni iKalanga: a manual for writing Kalanga as spoken in Botswana. Gaborone: Botswana Society.
Mathangwane, Joyce T. (1999) Ikalanga phonetics and phonology: a synchronic and diachronic study. Stanford, CA: CSLI Publications.
Windsor Creek is a southward-flowing stream in Sonoma County, California, USA which rises near Healdsburg, California and feeds into Mark West Creek west of the Sonoma County Airport. Its waters reach the Pacific Ocean by way of the Russian River.
Contents
1Course
2Watershed
3Pollution
4Bridges
5Footnotes
6External links
7See also
Course
Windsor Creek rises about 5 mi (8 km) southeast of Healdsburg. It descends southward into the town of Windsor, paralleling Brooks Road to Hiram Lewis Park. It parallels Brooks Road South to U.S. Route 101, crossing under the freeway at milepost 29.5. It continues southwest through farmland to a confluence with Pool Creek east of Pratt Road. From there, it flows south to empty into Mark West Creek about 3 mi (5 km) northeast of Forestville.
Watershed
Pollution
The Community Clean Water Institute (CCWI) monitors pollutants in Windsor Creek and other Sonoma County streams. Their sampling showed that Windsor creek exceeded the North Coast Basin Plan Objectives for conductivity and dissolved oxygen in 2006. CCWI has also issued alerts for nitrates in Windsor Creek.
Bridges
Windsor Creek is crossed by at least five bridges:
at Old Redwood Highway, a 72-foot (22 m) prestressed concrete span built in 1995,
at Windsor Road north of Wilson Lane, a 67-foot (20 m) concrete slab built in 1967,
at Mark West Station Road, an 38-foot (12 m) concrete slab built in 1976,
at U.S. Route 101, a 35-foot (11 m) concrete culvert built in 1962, and
at Conde Lane east of Bell Avenue, a 26-foot (8 m) concrete culvert built in 1995.
Footnotes
^ ab USGS GNIS: Windsor Creek
^ “Annual Report 2006″. Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
^ “Community Clean Water Institute”. Retrieved on 2008-06-12.
The Bennett’s Woodpecker (Campethera bennettii) is a species of bird in the Picidae family. It is found in Angola, Botswana, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.
Cosimo Caliandro (born March 11, 1982 in Francavilla Fontana) is an Italian middle distance runner.
He won the 3000 metres final at the 2007 European Indoor Athletics Championships in Birmingham. His only participation at world senior level prior to this was a 44th place at the 2004 World Cross Country Championships.