Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Persian (patience), a card game; Persian (roll), a pastry native to Thunder Bay, Ontario; Persian (wine) Persian, Indonesia, on the island of Java; Persian cat, a long-haired breed of cat characterized by its round face and shortened muzzle; The Persian, a character from Gaston Leroux's The Phantom of the Opera
Quick Style or The Quick Style and also known as the Quick Crew, is a Norwegian hip-hop/urban dance group founded by two Norwegian-Pakistani twins, Suleman and Bilal Malik, and their Norwegian-Thai childhood friend Nasir Sirikhan.
David Blaine (born April 4, 1973) [2] is an American magician, mentalist, and endurance performer. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Born in New York City , Blaine became interested in magic at a very young age. He gained prominence in 1997, when his first television special, David Blaine: Street Magic , aired on ABC .
Bahram Gur killing a wolf, Harvard University Art Museum. The Great Mongol Shahnameh (persian: شاهنامه دموت) also known as the Demotte Shahnameh or Great Ilkhanid Shahnama, [1] is an illustrated manuscript of the Shahnameh, the national epic of Greater Iran, probably dating to the 1330s.
It was not until Nupedia and later Wikipedia that a stable free encyclopedia project was able to be established on the Internet. [citation needed] Wikipedia is one of the first "user generated content" encyclopedias. The English Wikipedia, which was started in 2001, became the world's largest encyclopedia in 2004 at the 300,000 article stage. [24]
Pages in category "Disputed territories in the Persian Gulf" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Food stuff ration coupons types I–V for direct laborers and workers in Vietnam, 1976–1986. In marketing, a coupon is a ticket or document that can be redeemed for a financial discount or rebate when purchasing a product.
David (Hebrew: דָּוִד, Modern: David, Tiberian: Dāwîḏ) means ' beloved ', derived from the root dôwd (דּוֹד), which originally meant ' to boil ', but survives in Biblical Hebrew only in the figurative usage ' to love '; specifically, it is a term for an uncle or figuratively, a lover/beloved (it is used in this way in the Song of Songs: אני לדודי ודודי לי, ' I am ...