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In what country is Al-Fajr Arabsalim? | [
"Lebanon",
"🇱🇧",
"LBN",
"Lebanese Republic",
"lb",
"Republic of Lebanon"
] | country | Al Fajr Arabsalim SC | 3,250,671 | 44 | [
{
"id": "11715377",
"title": "Al Fajr Arabsalim SC",
"text": " Al Fajr Arabsalim Sporting Club (نادي الفجر الرياضي عربصاليم) is a football club based in Arabsalim, Nabatieh, Lebanon. They won the 2010–11 Lebanese Third Division with no losses in 21 consecutive games and were promoted to the Lebanese Second Division for the first time ever in their history.",
"score": "1.66712"
},
{
"id": "6696256",
"title": "Al Fajr",
"text": " Al Fajr (in Arabic الفجر meaning The Dawn in English) is an independent Arabic language daily newspaper published in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The daily is one of the oldest publications in the country.",
"score": "1.5113051"
},
{
"id": "3531781",
"title": "Ghazi Falah",
"text": " In recent years, Ghazi Falah has broadened his interests to include the geography of the media, focusing on the representation of Arabs and Muslims in daily newspapers in the U.S. His professional visits to Arab and Muslim countries include Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Lebanon, Syria, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, and Iran. At present, Ghazi Falah is a tenured Full Professor at the University of Akron and engaged in research on American bilateral relations with the Arab world. This new project is based on an extensive student opinion survey conducted at university campuses in Lebanon and Kuwait.",
"score": "1.4459677"
},
{
"id": "10102313",
"title": "Kul al-Arab",
"text": " Kul al-Arab (كل العرب, meaning All Arabs) is an Israeli Arabic-language weekly newspaper, founded in 1987. Based in Nazareth, the paper is Israel's most influential and widely read Arabic-language periodical. It is also distributed in the West Bank. Kul al-Arab has 70 employees and a circulation of 38,000. According to the BBC the paper \"is known primarily as a Christian paper\" but \"is trying to expand its Muslim audience.\" Most of the paper's revenue comes from advertising, and it is sometimes given away for free as a result. For some time the paper was edited by the poet Samih al-Qasim, who remains its honorary editor. In 2005, the BBC stated that the paper \"is scathing of Israeli and US policies, but can be equally critical ",
"score": "1.4214188"
},
{
"id": "16221517",
"title": "Al-Fakkah Field",
"text": " The Al-Fakkah Field, also known as Jebel Al-Fauqi or Jebal Al-Fauqi, is an oil field located in southern Iraq's Maysan Governorate and Khūzestān Province, Iran. The oil field produced 50000 oilbbl/d prior to the 2003 Iraq War and is part of the Maysan oilfield complex that altogether holds reserve of 2.5 Goilbbl. The oil field is considered shared but an area of dispute between Iraq and Iran. Iraq unsuccessfully put the oil field up for bidding in 2009.",
"score": "1.3892251"
},
{
"id": "11715378",
"title": "Al Fajr Arabsalim SC",
"text": "Lebanese Third Division ; Champions (1): 2010–11 ",
"score": "1.3827605"
},
{
"id": "478213",
"title": "Al-Fajaa (Mallah)",
"text": " Al-Fajaa (الفجة) is a village in Al Milah District, Lahij Governorate, Al Milah District, Yemen. According to the 2004 Yemeni Census, the population of the sub-district was 22 residents. As of 2014, the population of Al-Fajaa reached 29 residents.",
"score": "1.3827078"
},
{
"id": "6696257",
"title": "Al Fajr",
"text": " Al Fajr was launched by Obaid Humaid Al Mazrooei in 1974. Mazrooei was also the first editor of the daily. The publisher of the paper is Dar Al Fajr Printing, Publishing and Advertising which was founded in 1975. The headquarters of the paper is in Abu Dhabi. The daily, an independent publication, provides local, national and international news. In addition, the paper provides supplements for arts and women. The newspaper is considered loyalist and pro-government. As of 2013 Sherif Al Bassel was the editor-in-chief of the daily. The daily is a member of the ABC for its circulation records. The reported circulation of Al Fajr in 1994 was 4,284 copies. Its estimated circulation in 2003 was 28,000 copies.",
"score": "1.3805811"
},
{
"id": "5287403",
"title": "Al Liwaa",
"text": " Al Liwaa is distributed across both Arab countries such as Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Syria, and in Europe including France, Britain, Greece, Portugal, and Spain. Its circulation in 2003 was 26,000 copies.",
"score": "1.379287"
},
{
"id": "12063864",
"title": "Arabsalim",
"text": " Arabsalim (عرب صاليم) is a populated area in Nabatiyeh District, in southern Lebanon.",
"score": "1.3762931"
},
{
"id": "4770176",
"title": "Al Fakhro",
"text": " The Al Fakhro settled in both Qatar and Bahrain during the seventeenth century. This is because they were obliged to move from the Arabian Peninsula, passing by Iraq, then to some areas in the Persian gulf, including Bandar Deylam and Shatt Bani Tamim, and finally to Qatar and Bahrain. In Qatar they notably settled in the regions of Nozwah, Tembek, Tha'ayin, and Hawar Island where they built the famous wells which still exists in the Hawar island, and which dates back to the last three centuries. Moreover, the Al Fakhro is now distributed within Al-Khor, Al-Wakrah, Al-Jasra, and Doha. Some of them have settled in Al-Manama, and Muharraq, Bahrain; in ash-Sharqiyah, and Jubail, Saudi Arabia; and also in Kuwait and United Arab Emirates.",
"score": "1.3758092"
},
{
"id": "25336324",
"title": "Al-Awjam",
"text": " Al-Awjam (also written Al Awjām, Al Ājām, or Ajam al Qatif) is a small city located in the Eastern Province of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on the coast of the Persian Gulf. The village lies in far north-eastern corner of the Eastern Province, in a petroleum-rich region near the Ghawar and Qatif oilfields. It has a population of 11,460. Al-Awjam is located near Qatif, and, like most cities in the region, it is home to a large Shia Muslim population. This contrasts with the majority of Saudis, who are Sunni. As a result, sectarian tensions exist, especially during the Shia holy day of Ashoura. Conflict has reportedly eased since 2005.",
"score": "1.3708334"
},
{
"id": "15672841",
"title": "Bader Al-Fadhel",
"text": " Bader Tareq Al-Fadhel (born April 21, 1997) is a Kuwaiti football player playing for Al-Arabi SC in the VIVA Premier League and Kuwait national football team playing mainly as a Winger and Central attacking Midfielder.",
"score": "1.3619912"
},
{
"id": "3729297",
"title": "Al-Zamakhshari",
"text": " His full name was Abu Al-Qasim Mahmoud ibn Omar ibn Mohammed ibn Omar Al-Khawarizmi Al-Zamakhshari. He was also referred to as Fakhr Khawarizm ‘Khawarizm Pride’ because people travelled to Khawarizm, a large oasis in what is now the southwestern part of Turkmenistan, to learn from him about the Quran and Arabic language. He was born on Wednesday, March 18 of 1074 in Zamakhshar — which is a large city of Khawarizm .",
"score": "1.3532182"
},
{
"id": "16141864",
"title": "Qasim Al-Fahadawi",
"text": " Al-Fahadawi was born in Ramadi, in western Iraq's Al Anbar province. He graduated from the University of Baghdad in 1977 with a degree in engineering, and later studied in Germany. He left Iraq in 2006 due to the ongoing violence in the country and moved to the United Arab Emirates where he ran a construction company.",
"score": "1.3485984"
},
{
"id": "12995411",
"title": "Arab al-Fuqara",
"text": " Arab al-Fuqara (Arabic: عرب الفقراء) was a Palestinian Arab village in the Haifa Subdistrict. It was depopulated during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine on April 10, 1948. At that time, the land records of the village consisted of a total area of 2,714 dunams, of which 2,513 were owned by Jews, 15 owned by Arabs, and the remaining 186 dunams being public lands.",
"score": "1.3485649"
},
{
"id": "29719540",
"title": "Arabian Peninsula",
"text": " The Peninsula's constituent countries are (clockwise from north to south) Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on the east, Oman on the southeast, Yemen on the south, and Saudi Arabia at the center. The island country of Bahrain lies just off the east coast of the Peninsula. Due to Yemen's jurisdiction over the Socotra Archipelago, the Peninsula's geopolitical outline faces the Guardafui Channel and the Somali Sea to the south. The six countries of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE form the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia covers the greater part of the Peninsula. The majority of the population of the Peninsula lives in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The Peninsula contains the world's largest reserves of oil. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are economically the wealthiest in the region. Qatar, the only peninsular country in the Persian Gulf on the larger peninsula, is home to the Arabic-language television station Al Jazeera and its English-language subsidiary Al Jazeera English. Kuwait, on the border with Iraq, is an important country strategically, forming one of the main staging grounds for coalition forces mounting the United States-led 2003 invasion of Iraq.",
"score": "1.345537"
},
{
"id": "7378662",
"title": "Al Fadl",
"text": " Gradually, the enmity between the Al Fadl and the Al Mira dissipated as Ahmad was given virtual independence in the southern desert, while ʿIsa remained amir al-ʿarab. During the Mamluk era, the Al Fadl's territory spanned the area between Homs in the west to Qal'at Ja'bar in the northeast and all along the Euphrates valley through the countryside of Basra southward to the Washm region in central Najd. Mamluk patronage of the Al Fadl enabled them to dominate the other Bedouin tribes of the Syrian Desert. A rival sub-branch of Al Fadl, the Al ʿAli, controlled the Ghouta region of Damascus and the northern Arabian ",
"score": "1.3423505"
},
{
"id": "27095630",
"title": "Yemen Arab Republic",
"text": " The Yemen Arab Republic (YAR; الجمهورية العربية اليمنية al-Jumhūrīyah al-‘Arabīyah al-Yamanīyah), also known simply as North Yemen or Yemen (Sanaʽa), was a country from 1962 to 1990 in the northwestern part of what is now Yemen. Its capital was at Sanaʽa. It united with the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (commonly known as South Yemen) on May 22, 1990 to form the current Republic of Yemen.",
"score": "1.3409923"
},
{
"id": "12063865",
"title": "Arabsalim",
"text": " Arabsalim is located 87 km from Beirut, at an altitude of 700 meters above sea level",
"score": "1.3358188"
}
] | [
"Al Fajr Arabsalim SC\n Al Fajr Arabsalim Sporting Club (نادي الفجر الرياضي عربصاليم) is a football club based in Arabsalim, Nabatieh, Lebanon. They won the 2010–11 Lebanese Third Division with no losses in 21 consecutive games and were promoted to the Lebanese Second Division for the first time ever in their history.",
"Al Fajr\n Al Fajr (in Arabic الفجر meaning The Dawn in English) is an independent Arabic language daily newspaper published in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. The daily is one of the oldest publications in the country.",
"Ghazi Falah\n In recent years, Ghazi Falah has broadened his interests to include the geography of the media, focusing on the representation of Arabs and Muslims in daily newspapers in the U.S. His professional visits to Arab and Muslim countries include Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Tunisia, Lebanon, Syria, UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, and Iran. At present, Ghazi Falah is a tenured Full Professor at the University of Akron and engaged in research on American bilateral relations with the Arab world. This new project is based on an extensive student opinion survey conducted at university campuses in Lebanon and Kuwait.",
"Kul al-Arab\n Kul al-Arab (كل العرب, meaning All Arabs) is an Israeli Arabic-language weekly newspaper, founded in 1987. Based in Nazareth, the paper is Israel's most influential and widely read Arabic-language periodical. It is also distributed in the West Bank. Kul al-Arab has 70 employees and a circulation of 38,000. According to the BBC the paper \"is known primarily as a Christian paper\" but \"is trying to expand its Muslim audience.\" Most of the paper's revenue comes from advertising, and it is sometimes given away for free as a result. For some time the paper was edited by the poet Samih al-Qasim, who remains its honorary editor. In 2005, the BBC stated that the paper \"is scathing of Israeli and US policies, but can be equally critical ",
"Al-Fakkah Field\n The Al-Fakkah Field, also known as Jebel Al-Fauqi or Jebal Al-Fauqi, is an oil field located in southern Iraq's Maysan Governorate and Khūzestān Province, Iran. The oil field produced 50000 oilbbl/d prior to the 2003 Iraq War and is part of the Maysan oilfield complex that altogether holds reserve of 2.5 Goilbbl. The oil field is considered shared but an area of dispute between Iraq and Iran. Iraq unsuccessfully put the oil field up for bidding in 2009.",
"Al Fajr Arabsalim SC\nLebanese Third Division ; Champions (1): 2010–11 ",
"Al-Fajaa (Mallah)\n Al-Fajaa (الفجة) is a village in Al Milah District, Lahij Governorate, Al Milah District, Yemen. According to the 2004 Yemeni Census, the population of the sub-district was 22 residents. As of 2014, the population of Al-Fajaa reached 29 residents.",
"Al Fajr\n Al Fajr was launched by Obaid Humaid Al Mazrooei in 1974. Mazrooei was also the first editor of the daily. The publisher of the paper is Dar Al Fajr Printing, Publishing and Advertising which was founded in 1975. The headquarters of the paper is in Abu Dhabi. The daily, an independent publication, provides local, national and international news. In addition, the paper provides supplements for arts and women. The newspaper is considered loyalist and pro-government. As of 2013 Sherif Al Bassel was the editor-in-chief of the daily. The daily is a member of the ABC for its circulation records. The reported circulation of Al Fajr in 1994 was 4,284 copies. Its estimated circulation in 2003 was 28,000 copies.",
"Al Liwaa\n Al Liwaa is distributed across both Arab countries such as Jordan, Saudi Arabia and Syria, and in Europe including France, Britain, Greece, Portugal, and Spain. Its circulation in 2003 was 26,000 copies.",
"Arabsalim\n Arabsalim (عرب صاليم) is a populated area in Nabatiyeh District, in southern Lebanon.",
"Al Fakhro\n The Al Fakhro settled in both Qatar and Bahrain during the seventeenth century. This is because they were obliged to move from the Arabian Peninsula, passing by Iraq, then to some areas in the Persian gulf, including Bandar Deylam and Shatt Bani Tamim, and finally to Qatar and Bahrain. In Qatar they notably settled in the regions of Nozwah, Tembek, Tha'ayin, and Hawar Island where they built the famous wells which still exists in the Hawar island, and which dates back to the last three centuries. Moreover, the Al Fakhro is now distributed within Al-Khor, Al-Wakrah, Al-Jasra, and Doha. Some of them have settled in Al-Manama, and Muharraq, Bahrain; in ash-Sharqiyah, and Jubail, Saudi Arabia; and also in Kuwait and United Arab Emirates.",
"Al-Awjam\n Al-Awjam (also written Al Awjām, Al Ājām, or Ajam al Qatif) is a small city located in the Eastern Province of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia on the coast of the Persian Gulf. The village lies in far north-eastern corner of the Eastern Province, in a petroleum-rich region near the Ghawar and Qatif oilfields. It has a population of 11,460. Al-Awjam is located near Qatif, and, like most cities in the region, it is home to a large Shia Muslim population. This contrasts with the majority of Saudis, who are Sunni. As a result, sectarian tensions exist, especially during the Shia holy day of Ashoura. Conflict has reportedly eased since 2005.",
"Bader Al-Fadhel\n Bader Tareq Al-Fadhel (born April 21, 1997) is a Kuwaiti football player playing for Al-Arabi SC in the VIVA Premier League and Kuwait national football team playing mainly as a Winger and Central attacking Midfielder.",
"Al-Zamakhshari\n His full name was Abu Al-Qasim Mahmoud ibn Omar ibn Mohammed ibn Omar Al-Khawarizmi Al-Zamakhshari. He was also referred to as Fakhr Khawarizm ‘Khawarizm Pride’ because people travelled to Khawarizm, a large oasis in what is now the southwestern part of Turkmenistan, to learn from him about the Quran and Arabic language. He was born on Wednesday, March 18 of 1074 in Zamakhshar — which is a large city of Khawarizm .",
"Qasim Al-Fahadawi\n Al-Fahadawi was born in Ramadi, in western Iraq's Al Anbar province. He graduated from the University of Baghdad in 1977 with a degree in engineering, and later studied in Germany. He left Iraq in 2006 due to the ongoing violence in the country and moved to the United Arab Emirates where he ran a construction company.",
"Arab al-Fuqara\n Arab al-Fuqara (Arabic: عرب الفقراء) was a Palestinian Arab village in the Haifa Subdistrict. It was depopulated during the 1947–1948 Civil War in Mandatory Palestine on April 10, 1948. At that time, the land records of the village consisted of a total area of 2,714 dunams, of which 2,513 were owned by Jews, 15 owned by Arabs, and the remaining 186 dunams being public lands.",
"Arabian Peninsula\n The Peninsula's constituent countries are (clockwise from north to south) Kuwait, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on the east, Oman on the southeast, Yemen on the south, and Saudi Arabia at the center. The island country of Bahrain lies just off the east coast of the Peninsula. Due to Yemen's jurisdiction over the Socotra Archipelago, the Peninsula's geopolitical outline faces the Guardafui Channel and the Somali Sea to the south. The six countries of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE form the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia covers the greater part of the Peninsula. The majority of the population of the Peninsula lives in Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The Peninsula contains the world's largest reserves of oil. Saudi Arabia and the UAE are economically the wealthiest in the region. Qatar, the only peninsular country in the Persian Gulf on the larger peninsula, is home to the Arabic-language television station Al Jazeera and its English-language subsidiary Al Jazeera English. Kuwait, on the border with Iraq, is an important country strategically, forming one of the main staging grounds for coalition forces mounting the United States-led 2003 invasion of Iraq.",
"Al Fadl\n Gradually, the enmity between the Al Fadl and the Al Mira dissipated as Ahmad was given virtual independence in the southern desert, while ʿIsa remained amir al-ʿarab. During the Mamluk era, the Al Fadl's territory spanned the area between Homs in the west to Qal'at Ja'bar in the northeast and all along the Euphrates valley through the countryside of Basra southward to the Washm region in central Najd. Mamluk patronage of the Al Fadl enabled them to dominate the other Bedouin tribes of the Syrian Desert. A rival sub-branch of Al Fadl, the Al ʿAli, controlled the Ghouta region of Damascus and the northern Arabian ",
"Yemen Arab Republic\n The Yemen Arab Republic (YAR; الجمهورية العربية اليمنية al-Jumhūrīyah al-‘Arabīyah al-Yamanīyah), also known simply as North Yemen or Yemen (Sanaʽa), was a country from 1962 to 1990 in the northwestern part of what is now Yemen. Its capital was at Sanaʽa. It united with the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen (commonly known as South Yemen) on May 22, 1990 to form the current Republic of Yemen.",
"Arabsalim\n Arabsalim is located 87 km from Beirut, at an altitude of 700 meters above sea level"
] |
What is the capital of Yunguyo Province? | [
"Yunguyo"
] | capital | Yunguyo Province | 1,651,969 | 93 | [
{
"id": "9308170",
"title": "Yungay, Peru",
"text": " Yungay is located in the Callejón de Huaylas on Río Santa at an elevation of approximately 2,500 meters, 450 km north of Lima, the country's capital. East of the small town are the mountain ridges of snow-covered Cordillera Blanca, with Huascarán, Peru's highest mountain, no more than 15 km east of Yungay. Yungay is the capital of Yungay Province, as well as the main town in the Yungay District. While the town counts approximately 10,000 inhabitants (2010 projection based on 2007 census data ) Yungay Province has a population of 60,000 (2000 estimate). The Province of Yungay occupies part of the Callejón de Huaylas, the Conchucos Valley (Yanama), the coast of Ancash (Quillo) and the Huascarán National Park.",
"score": "1.530944"
},
{
"id": "1111644",
"title": "Yunyoo",
"text": " Yunyoo is the capital of the Yunyoo-Nasuan District in the North East Region of Ghana. The district was one of the new ones inaugurated on 15 March 2018 in Ghana. Yunyoo is linked by a road entering it from Bongpolugu in the east and running westwards and connecting to the N2 highway at its end. It is at an elevation of 252 metres. The nearest airport in Ghana is the Tamale Airport in the capital of the Northern Region. Nakpanduri is located to the north west, Nasuan to the west and Bunkpurugu to the east.",
"score": "1.4437888"
},
{
"id": "25793133",
"title": "Yungay Province",
"text": " The Yungay Province is one of twenty provinces of the Ancash Region in Peru.",
"score": "1.4408073"
},
{
"id": "25793136",
"title": "Yungay Province",
"text": " The people in the province are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (73.19%) learnt to speak in childhood, 26.48 \t% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).",
"score": "1.4375298"
},
{
"id": "25793135",
"title": "Yungay Province",
"text": " Yungay is divided into eight districts, which are:",
"score": "1.4181893"
},
{
"id": "6569865",
"title": "Yungay, Chile",
"text": " Yungay is a Chilean town and commune in Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region. The commune spans an area of 823.5 km.",
"score": "1.3710128"
},
{
"id": "9731876",
"title": "1970 Huascarán debris avalanche",
"text": " national government began the construction of a permanent town at Yungay Norte, with significant international assistance. By 1975, Yungay Norte was simply known as \"Yungay\", with the site of the destroyed town known as \"Yungay Viejo\". The new city already had electricity, running water, clinics, schools, a church, and permanent housing. By the early 1990s Yungay had recovered to its pre-avalanche population. The social composition of the town was completely changed, especially since a large number of old Yungay's survivors ended up moving to coastal cities, to be replaced by migrants from rural areas. The Peruvian government declared the site of Yungay a national cemetery, Campo Santo. Any excavation to recover the dead ",
"score": "1.3554969"
},
{
"id": "9731873",
"title": "1970 Huascarán debris avalanche",
"text": " Due to Yungay's cultural and economic importance as the capital of Yungay Province, many survivors not only from Yungay but the surrounding villages resisted government efforts to resettle them elsewhere. Within a year of the disaster, some 2,000 survivors had clustered in the refugee camp known as \"Yungay Norte\", only a few hundred metres north of the destroyed city. Although this location was much safer from landslides than old Yungay, it was geographically constrained – \"aid personnel speculated that if the capital of the province were relocated there, it would soon outgrow the safe area and spill over into dangerous zones.\" The national government created the Comisión de Reconstrucción y Rehabilitación de la Zona Afectada (CRYRZA) agency to oversee aid and reconstruction efforts in the areas affected by the Ancash earthquake. Soon after the disaster, authorities supervised ",
"score": "1.3524046"
},
{
"id": "31033334",
"title": "Yungay District",
"text": " 9° 8'21.38\"S, 77°44'43.88\"W Towards the west, at the cemetery at the back of the hill, a big sculpture of Jesus is located. Towards the East, the snow summit of the Huascarán appears. Huascarán was one of the sources of rock and snow that covered the town of Yungay in the 1970 earthquake. Continuing towards the north, in a space defended by the hills against possible new alluviums that might come from the Huascarán mountain, the new city of Yungay has been raised. In the surroundings, the Pan de Azúcar hill (Sugar loaf hill) raises, where in 1839 the Battle of Yungay ",
"score": "1.350002"
},
{
"id": "9308169",
"title": "Yungay, Peru",
"text": " Yungay is a town in the Ancash Region in north central Peru, South America.",
"score": "1.3490207"
},
{
"id": "9731875",
"title": "1970 Huascarán debris avalanche",
"text": " In November 1970, authorities announced plans to relocate the provincial capital itself to a place called Tingua, 15 km away. This plan was poorly received, being far from the peasant farmers who depended on Yungay markets to sell their products and came to town for religious functions. Such an arrangement would also leave the urban population without nearby sources of food, goods and revenue (from renting of farmland). \"The Tingua site for the new capital would have disrupted traditional social, economic and political patterns of interrelationships within the capital as well as between the rural and urban sectors of society. The Yungaino leaders were determined to avoid this disruptive project at all costs.\" Ultimately, ",
"score": "1.3387566"
},
{
"id": "31033331",
"title": "Yungay District",
"text": " Yungay district is a district in the Province of Yungay in the Ancash region, Peru. It was created by law on October 28, 1904.",
"score": "1.3377504"
},
{
"id": "9731855",
"title": "1970 Huascarán debris avalanche",
"text": " In the late 1960s, Yungay's permanent population was around 4,000 or 5,000, which swelled greatly on market and church days when thousands of visitors arrived from the surrounding villages. With the notable exception of the massive stone cathedral at the center of town, the city consisted predominantly of two or three-story adobe and wood structures with heavy tile roofs, dating from the Spanish colonial period. This fragile housing stock, typical of structures elsewhere in the Río Santa valley, was highly vulnerable to seismic activity. Other prominent features of Yungay included the central Plaza de Armas surrounded by palm trees, which hosted events including ",
"score": "1.3365707"
},
{
"id": "12353650",
"title": "Shimotsuke Provincial Capital",
"text": " The Shimotsuke Provincial Capital ruins (下野国庁跡) is an archaeological site with the ruins of a Nara to Heian period government administrative complex located in what is now part of the city of Tochigi, Tochigi prefecture in the northern Kantō region of Japan. Identified as the ruins of the kokufu (provincial capital) of Shimotsuke Province, the site is protected by the national government as a National Historic Site from 1982.",
"score": "1.3154862"
},
{
"id": "31033335",
"title": "Yungay District",
"text": " place, next to the stream of the Ancash river. In this place, the Peru-Bolivian Confederation was concluded, after the Bolivian general Santa Cruz's forces were defeated. This battle gave the name of Ancash to this region, which was previously called Huaylas.. The zone of Yungay, that has a moderate climate, is propitious for hunting tarucas, pigeons, vizcachas, and ducks, as well as for the fishing of trout. In Tingua, a suspension bridge that crosses the Santa river is raised, with a length of 75 m. This bridge and an access road join Tingua with the communities of Shupluy, Cascapara and Ecash.",
"score": "1.3060787"
},
{
"id": "32516031",
"title": "Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo District",
"text": " Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo District is a former district that was located in Northern Region, Ghana. Originally it was formerly part of the then-larger East Mamprusi District in 1988 (which it was elevated to municipal district assembly status on 18 March 2018 to become East Mamprusi Municipal District), which was created from the former Mamprusi District Council. However on 15 March 2018, it was split out into two new districts: Bunkpurugu-Nyankpanduri District (capital: Bunkpurugu) and Yunyoo-Nasuan District (capital: Yunyoo). The district assembly was located in the north east part of Northern Region and had Bunkpurugu as its capital town. It is currently part of the North East region of Ghana.",
"score": "1.3027228"
},
{
"id": "16324974",
"title": "Kibuye Province",
"text": " The Province of Kibuye was, between 2002 and 2006, one of the 12 provinces of Rwanda (known as prefectures before the administrative reform of 2002). Kibuye, Rwanda was the \"capital\" (or, in certain official Rwandan texts, the \"major city\"). The territorial reform on 1 January 2006 merged the province with the provinces of Cyangugu and Gisenyi, to create the new Western Province.",
"score": "1.3013806"
},
{
"id": "15552907",
"title": "Yauyos Province",
"text": " The capital of this province is the city of Yauyos. The province extends over an area of 6901.58 km2 and is divided into 33 districts:",
"score": "1.2998601"
},
{
"id": "31033336",
"title": "Yungay District",
"text": " The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (57.02%) learnt to speak in childhood, 42.80% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).",
"score": "1.2988324"
},
{
"id": "28753589",
"title": "Iyo Province",
"text": " The ancient provincial capital was near modern Imabari. During the Sengoku period it was split into several fiefs, the largest one usually being run from Matsuyama Castle in Matsuyama. It was briefly unified by the Chōsokabe clan of neighboring Tosa, but Toyotomi Hideyoshi invaded Shikoku in 1584 and reallocated the fiefs. During the Edo period the province was controlled by Uwajima Domain. The people spoke Iyo dialect.",
"score": "1.2966812"
}
] | [
"Yungay, Peru\n Yungay is located in the Callejón de Huaylas on Río Santa at an elevation of approximately 2,500 meters, 450 km north of Lima, the country's capital. East of the small town are the mountain ridges of snow-covered Cordillera Blanca, with Huascarán, Peru's highest mountain, no more than 15 km east of Yungay. Yungay is the capital of Yungay Province, as well as the main town in the Yungay District. While the town counts approximately 10,000 inhabitants (2010 projection based on 2007 census data ) Yungay Province has a population of 60,000 (2000 estimate). The Province of Yungay occupies part of the Callejón de Huaylas, the Conchucos Valley (Yanama), the coast of Ancash (Quillo) and the Huascarán National Park.",
"Yunyoo\n Yunyoo is the capital of the Yunyoo-Nasuan District in the North East Region of Ghana. The district was one of the new ones inaugurated on 15 March 2018 in Ghana. Yunyoo is linked by a road entering it from Bongpolugu in the east and running westwards and connecting to the N2 highway at its end. It is at an elevation of 252 metres. The nearest airport in Ghana is the Tamale Airport in the capital of the Northern Region. Nakpanduri is located to the north west, Nasuan to the west and Bunkpurugu to the east.",
"Yungay Province\n The Yungay Province is one of twenty provinces of the Ancash Region in Peru.",
"Yungay Province\n The people in the province are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (73.19%) learnt to speak in childhood, 26.48 \t% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).",
"Yungay Province\n Yungay is divided into eight districts, which are:",
"Yungay, Chile\n Yungay is a Chilean town and commune in Diguillín Province, Ñuble Region. The commune spans an area of 823.5 km.",
"1970 Huascarán debris avalanche\n national government began the construction of a permanent town at Yungay Norte, with significant international assistance. By 1975, Yungay Norte was simply known as \"Yungay\", with the site of the destroyed town known as \"Yungay Viejo\". The new city already had electricity, running water, clinics, schools, a church, and permanent housing. By the early 1990s Yungay had recovered to its pre-avalanche population. The social composition of the town was completely changed, especially since a large number of old Yungay's survivors ended up moving to coastal cities, to be replaced by migrants from rural areas. The Peruvian government declared the site of Yungay a national cemetery, Campo Santo. Any excavation to recover the dead ",
"1970 Huascarán debris avalanche\n Due to Yungay's cultural and economic importance as the capital of Yungay Province, many survivors not only from Yungay but the surrounding villages resisted government efforts to resettle them elsewhere. Within a year of the disaster, some 2,000 survivors had clustered in the refugee camp known as \"Yungay Norte\", only a few hundred metres north of the destroyed city. Although this location was much safer from landslides than old Yungay, it was geographically constrained – \"aid personnel speculated that if the capital of the province were relocated there, it would soon outgrow the safe area and spill over into dangerous zones.\" The national government created the Comisión de Reconstrucción y Rehabilitación de la Zona Afectada (CRYRZA) agency to oversee aid and reconstruction efforts in the areas affected by the Ancash earthquake. Soon after the disaster, authorities supervised ",
"Yungay District\n 9° 8'21.38\"S, 77°44'43.88\"W Towards the west, at the cemetery at the back of the hill, a big sculpture of Jesus is located. Towards the East, the snow summit of the Huascarán appears. Huascarán was one of the sources of rock and snow that covered the town of Yungay in the 1970 earthquake. Continuing towards the north, in a space defended by the hills against possible new alluviums that might come from the Huascarán mountain, the new city of Yungay has been raised. In the surroundings, the Pan de Azúcar hill (Sugar loaf hill) raises, where in 1839 the Battle of Yungay ",
"Yungay, Peru\n Yungay is a town in the Ancash Region in north central Peru, South America.",
"1970 Huascarán debris avalanche\n In November 1970, authorities announced plans to relocate the provincial capital itself to a place called Tingua, 15 km away. This plan was poorly received, being far from the peasant farmers who depended on Yungay markets to sell their products and came to town for religious functions. Such an arrangement would also leave the urban population without nearby sources of food, goods and revenue (from renting of farmland). \"The Tingua site for the new capital would have disrupted traditional social, economic and political patterns of interrelationships within the capital as well as between the rural and urban sectors of society. The Yungaino leaders were determined to avoid this disruptive project at all costs.\" Ultimately, ",
"Yungay District\n Yungay district is a district in the Province of Yungay in the Ancash region, Peru. It was created by law on October 28, 1904.",
"1970 Huascarán debris avalanche\n In the late 1960s, Yungay's permanent population was around 4,000 or 5,000, which swelled greatly on market and church days when thousands of visitors arrived from the surrounding villages. With the notable exception of the massive stone cathedral at the center of town, the city consisted predominantly of two or three-story adobe and wood structures with heavy tile roofs, dating from the Spanish colonial period. This fragile housing stock, typical of structures elsewhere in the Río Santa valley, was highly vulnerable to seismic activity. Other prominent features of Yungay included the central Plaza de Armas surrounded by palm trees, which hosted events including ",
"Shimotsuke Provincial Capital\n The Shimotsuke Provincial Capital ruins (下野国庁跡) is an archaeological site with the ruins of a Nara to Heian period government administrative complex located in what is now part of the city of Tochigi, Tochigi prefecture in the northern Kantō region of Japan. Identified as the ruins of the kokufu (provincial capital) of Shimotsuke Province, the site is protected by the national government as a National Historic Site from 1982.",
"Yungay District\n place, next to the stream of the Ancash river. In this place, the Peru-Bolivian Confederation was concluded, after the Bolivian general Santa Cruz's forces were defeated. This battle gave the name of Ancash to this region, which was previously called Huaylas.. The zone of Yungay, that has a moderate climate, is propitious for hunting tarucas, pigeons, vizcachas, and ducks, as well as for the fishing of trout. In Tingua, a suspension bridge that crosses the Santa river is raised, with a length of 75 m. This bridge and an access road join Tingua with the communities of Shupluy, Cascapara and Ecash.",
"Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo District\n Bunkpurugu-Yunyoo District is a former district that was located in Northern Region, Ghana. Originally it was formerly part of the then-larger East Mamprusi District in 1988 (which it was elevated to municipal district assembly status on 18 March 2018 to become East Mamprusi Municipal District), which was created from the former Mamprusi District Council. However on 15 March 2018, it was split out into two new districts: Bunkpurugu-Nyankpanduri District (capital: Bunkpurugu) and Yunyoo-Nasuan District (capital: Yunyoo). The district assembly was located in the north east part of Northern Region and had Bunkpurugu as its capital town. It is currently part of the North East region of Ghana.",
"Kibuye Province\n The Province of Kibuye was, between 2002 and 2006, one of the 12 provinces of Rwanda (known as prefectures before the administrative reform of 2002). Kibuye, Rwanda was the \"capital\" (or, in certain official Rwandan texts, the \"major city\"). The territorial reform on 1 January 2006 merged the province with the provinces of Cyangugu and Gisenyi, to create the new Western Province.",
"Yauyos Province\n The capital of this province is the city of Yauyos. The province extends over an area of 6901.58 km2 and is divided into 33 districts:",
"Yungay District\n The people in the district are mainly indigenous citizens of Quechua descent. Quechua is the language which the majority of the population (57.02%) learnt to speak in childhood, 42.80% of the residents started speaking using the Spanish language (2007 Peru Census).",
"Iyo Province\n The ancient provincial capital was near modern Imabari. During the Sengoku period it was split into several fiefs, the largest one usually being run from Matsuyama Castle in Matsuyama. It was briefly unified by the Chōsokabe clan of neighboring Tosa, but Toyotomi Hideyoshi invaded Shikoku in 1584 and reallocated the fiefs. During the Edo period the province was controlled by Uwajima Domain. The people spoke Iyo dialect."
] |
What is Jon Eikemo's occupation? | [
"actor",
"actress",
"actors",
"actresses"
] | occupation | Jon Eikemo | 3,154,588 | 75 | [
{
"id": "31930791",
"title": "Jon Eikemo",
"text": " Jon Eikemo (born 30 November 1939 in Åsane, Norway) is a Norwegian actor. He debuted on stage in 1961. He made his film debut in 1968, with the movie De ukjentes marked ('The Market of the Unknown'). Eikemo has been a minor political candidate for the Norwegian Centre Party.",
"score": "1.9179833"
},
{
"id": "30323607",
"title": "Eikemo",
"text": "Jon Eikemo (born 1939), Norwegian actor ; Olve Eikemo (born 1973), Norwegian musician Eikemo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.7562011"
},
{
"id": "16279916",
"title": "Jon Ewo",
"text": " Jon Ewo ( born 29 June 1957) is a Norwegian novelist, short story writer, crime fiction writer and children's writer. He was born in Oslo and educated as librarian. He made his literary debut in 1986 with the short story collection Det sies at oktober er en fin måned. His crime novels include Torpedo (1996), ''Hevn. Torpedo II (1997) and Gissel. Torpedo III'' (1998). He received the Brage Prize in 2007, for the biography Fortellingen om et mulig drap (jointly with illustrator Bjørn Ousland.",
"score": "1.5750715"
},
{
"id": "1648852",
"title": "Marit Eikemo",
"text": " Marit Eikemo (born 1971) is a Norwegian essayist, novelist, journalist and magazine editor. Eikemo was born in Odda. She edited the book Her, no: Møte med unge menneske in 1999, and contributed to the essay collection Synd.no from 2001. Her first novel was Mellom oss sagt from 2006. In 2008 she published the essay collection Samtidsruinar, and in 2009 the novel Arbeid pågår. She was awarded the Nynorsk Literature Prize for the novel Samtale ventar in 2011. Eikemo was co-editor of the cultural and political magazine Syn og Segn from 2003 to 2006, jointly with Hilde Sandvik.",
"score": "1.5734534"
},
{
"id": "437074",
"title": "Olav Eikeland",
"text": " Olav Eikeland (born 10 October 1955) is a Norwegian philosopher and working life researcher. Since 2008, he is professor of work research and research director for the Program for Research on Education and Work at Oslo Metropolitan University (formerly Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences). Since 2012, he is also vice dean of the Faculty of Education and International Studies. He was a researcher at the Work Research Institute from 1985 to 2008, and served as the institute's director 2003-2004.",
"score": "1.5338743"
},
{
"id": "29723170",
"title": "Jon Eirik Ødegaard",
"text": " Jon Eirik Ødegaard (born 29 September 1972) is a retired Norwegian footballer. Hailing from Røros, he failed to break through from the junior ranks to the senior team at Rosenborg and instead tried his luck in Hamkam. Following relegation from the 1995 Tippeligaen he moved back to Trondheim and took one year in Strindheim and Byåsen each. He was brought back to the first tier by Vålerenga, and played three seasons there and four in Moss. Originally a midfielder, he was converted to left back while at Moss. After quitting his professional career due to serious injury he had outings for low-league teams Rapid and Tronvik. The son of a camping site and hotel owner in Røros, Ødegaard elected not to take over the family business and instead settled at Jeløya in Moss. He coached Moss' junior team for four years before becoming Tor Thodesen's assistant manager ahead of the 2011 season. He was later a player developer in local minnows Sprint-Jeløy and used his chef training to lead a cafeteria.",
"score": "1.5280622"
},
{
"id": "10902812",
"title": "Efosa Ojomo",
"text": " Efosa was born in Nigeria. He attended Secondary School in Nigeria. After failing college entry exams twice, he proceeded to the Fisk University and later to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee where he obtained a bachelor's degree in computer engineering. He also holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he worked as a researcher under Late Professor Clayton Christensen at the Forum for Growth and Innovation. He also worked as an engineer for National Instruments right after graduation.",
"score": "1.5045593"
},
{
"id": "8348459",
"title": "Jon Reidar Øyan",
"text": " Jon Reidar Øyan (born 15 April 1981) is a Norwegian gay rights activist and politician for the Labour Party. He made his mark as leader of the Norwegian National Association for Lesbian and Gay Liberation, and stepped down in 2008. He was then hired as an advisor for the parliamentary group of the Norwegian Labour Party. He had a background as a member of Snillfjord municipal council. In October 2009 he was appointed political advisor in the Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. From November to December 2011 he was an acting State Secretary in the Ministry of Government Administration, Reform and Church Affairs. He was later a personal adviser to Helga Pedersen.",
"score": "1.4925078"
},
{
"id": "25621639",
"title": "Sten Ove Eike",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.471422"
},
{
"id": "10902811",
"title": "Efosa Ojomo",
"text": " Efosa Ojomo is a Nigerian author, researcher and speaker. He leads the Global Prosperity research group at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, a think tank based in Boston and Silicon Valley and is a senior research fellow at the Harvard Business School. Efosa speaks regularly on innovation and has presented his work at TED, the Aspen Ideas Festival, the World Bank, Harvard, Yale, Oxford and at several other conferences and institutions. In January 2019, Efosa and Harvard Business School professor, Clayton Christensen published \"The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty\".",
"score": "1.4577703"
},
{
"id": "26385636",
"title": "Jon Kvist",
"text": " Jon Kvist (born 6 January 1967) is a Danish researcher and author. He is a professor at the Institute of Society and Globalization, at the Roskilde University, as well as a member of the Nordic Centre of Excellence on Reassessing the Nordic Welfare Model.",
"score": "1.4454195"
},
{
"id": "5523503",
"title": "Ola Henmo",
"text": " Ola Henmo (born 1965) is a Norwegian journalist and non-fiction writer. Hailing from Grav in Bærum, he played football for the clubs Frigg, Fossum, Stabæk and then Fossum again. He became a journalist working 15 years in Aftenposten. As a journalist he worked extensively with the 2011 Norway attacks, and was a consultant for the television series Utøya. He published a book for the 75th anniversary of the Norwegian Cancer Society (2013) and portrait books about activist Kim Friele (2015) and disabled politician Torstein Lerhol (2019), the latter two on the publishing house Cappelen Damm.",
"score": "1.4371643"
},
{
"id": "11557674",
"title": "James Eike",
"text": " James W. Eike (September 29, 1911 – February 8, 1983) was a birdwatcher and former president of the Virginia Society of Ornithology. The James W. Eike Service Award was created by the Society in his honor in 1984. Eike was born in Woodbridge, Virginia. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1932 and began a federal career in 1934 with the U.S. Public Health Service. He later worked for the Civil Service Commission and joined the U.S. State Department in 1946. He retired in 1970 from the U.S. Information Agency. He lived in Northern Virginia around Falls Church and Fairfax. He kept detailed field notebooks which recorded his observation of birds, as well as weather conditions, for over 30 years, rarely missing a day. His observations were concentrated near his home in Northern Virginia, but also include Maryland, Washington D.C., and North Carolina. Eike joined the Virginia Society of Ornithology in 1933, and was an active member and officer of the Society for the rest of his life. Eike's personal papers are held by the Smithsonian Institution Archives. His collection of 111 field books are part of Smithsonian's Field Book Registry; they have been scanned and posted online.",
"score": "1.4227158"
},
{
"id": "10902813",
"title": "Efosa Ojomo",
"text": " Efosa Ojomo is the director of Global Prosperity at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation. He was formerly a senior research fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation at the Harvard Business School. He was mentored by Late Professor Clay Christensen, one of the world's top experts on strategy, growth, and innovation. Efosa's research examines how emerging economies, or what he now refers to as growth economies, including sub-Saharan Africa, can engender prosperity for their citizens by focusing on investments in market-creating innovations. He also works with firms to help them develop a market-creating innovation strategy. Efosa was also the President and co-founder of “Poverty Stops Here”. He was a Co-President, Harvard Business School Africa Business Club from 2014 till 2015. He worked as an engineer and in business development for National Instruments for eight years following graduation. He was named THINKER S50 Radar Class of 2020.",
"score": "1.4219942"
},
{
"id": "11383409",
"title": "Jon Asamoah",
"text": " Jonathan Yao-Lante Asamoah (born July 21, 1988) is a former offensive guard who played in the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the third round of the 2010 NFL Draft. He played college football at Illinois. Asamoah was considered one of the top interior offensive linemen for the 2010 NFL Draft. Asamoah has also played for the Atlanta Falcons.",
"score": "1.4194162"
},
{
"id": "10872321",
"title": "Arne Eidsmo",
"text": " Arne Eidsmo (4 April 1941 – 16 October 2011) was a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party. He hailed from Tromsø, and for 42 years he was the regional director of the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise in Northern Norway. He retired in April 2011. He also served as State Secretary in the Ministry of Fisheries from 1989 to 1990, in Syse's Cabinet. Eidsmo was also a freemason, since 1967, and the last two years of his life he was a \"Provincial Master\" in the organization. He died in October 2011 at the University Hospital of North Norway following short-term illness.",
"score": "1.4189136"
},
{
"id": "32083260",
"title": "Raimo Valle",
"text": " Raimo Valle (born 15 September 1965) is a Norwegian civil servant and politician for the Labour Party. He hails from Unjárga - Nesseby. He graduated as cand.mag. from the University of Tromsø in 1989. Outside politics he worked as a consultant in Troms County Municipality from 1993 to 2007. He was a board member of the Centre for Sami Studies, University of Tromsø after graduating, was the county leader of the Federation of Norwegian Professional Associations in Troms from 1999 to 2003 and from 2001 to 2007 he was a board member of the Association of Social Scientists. In 2007 he was appointed to Stoltenberg's Second Cabinet as a State Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. He left office in 2012.",
"score": "1.416105"
},
{
"id": "6303665",
"title": "John Eidsmoe",
"text": " John A. Eidsmoe is an attorney and a professor of constitutional law and related subjects. He has previously taught at the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law, Faulkner University, Montgomery, Alabama, the O. W. Coburn School of Law at Oral Roberts University and Oak Brook College of Law and Government Policy. He was in the US Air Force as a lieutenant colonel and is an Alabama State Defense Force colonel, headquarters judge advocate, deputy chaplain and training officer. He earned his J.D. from the University of Iowa, M.A. from Dallas Theological Seminary, M. Div. from Lutheran Brethren Seminary and D. Min. from O.R.U. In a 2001 interview, Eidsmoe said, \"When Biblical law conflicted with American law, O.R.U. students were generally taught that 'the first thing you should try ",
"score": "1.4132652"
},
{
"id": "29924689",
"title": "Frank Jonke",
"text": " Frank Jonke (born January 30, 1985) is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the USL Premier Development League, Canadian Soccer League, Kakkonen, Ykkönen, Veikkausliiga, and the North American Soccer League.",
"score": "1.4120677"
},
{
"id": "25621638",
"title": "Sten Ove Eike",
"text": " Eike was born in Skudenes, and played for the local club Skudenes UIL before he joined Haugesund in 2004. Eike suffered from a heart attack after a match against Stavanger on 27 September 2009, but he made his comeback in the 2011 Tippeligaen. He played 124 matches and scored 20 goals for Haugesund. On 15 August 2011, Eike signed a half-year contract with the 1. divisjon club Sandefjord. With the help of Eike's six goals in nine matches, Sandefjord came third in 2011 Norwegian First Division, but missed out on the promotion to Tippeligaen. After the season, he decided to step down from the professional football career, and got a job as director of football and janitor in his youth club Skudenes, but he admitted that he would probably play some matches for the team in the Norwegian Fifth Division. Until 2017 he played some Skudenes games every season, being a prolific goalscorer.",
"score": "1.4021623"
}
] | [
"Jon Eikemo\n Jon Eikemo (born 30 November 1939 in Åsane, Norway) is a Norwegian actor. He debuted on stage in 1961. He made his film debut in 1968, with the movie De ukjentes marked ('The Market of the Unknown'). Eikemo has been a minor political candidate for the Norwegian Centre Party.",
"Eikemo\nJon Eikemo (born 1939), Norwegian actor ; Olve Eikemo (born 1973), Norwegian musician Eikemo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Jon Ewo\n Jon Ewo ( born 29 June 1957) is a Norwegian novelist, short story writer, crime fiction writer and children's writer. He was born in Oslo and educated as librarian. He made his literary debut in 1986 with the short story collection Det sies at oktober er en fin måned. His crime novels include Torpedo (1996), ''Hevn. Torpedo II (1997) and Gissel. Torpedo III'' (1998). He received the Brage Prize in 2007, for the biography Fortellingen om et mulig drap (jointly with illustrator Bjørn Ousland.",
"Marit Eikemo\n Marit Eikemo (born 1971) is a Norwegian essayist, novelist, journalist and magazine editor. Eikemo was born in Odda. She edited the book Her, no: Møte med unge menneske in 1999, and contributed to the essay collection Synd.no from 2001. Her first novel was Mellom oss sagt from 2006. In 2008 she published the essay collection Samtidsruinar, and in 2009 the novel Arbeid pågår. She was awarded the Nynorsk Literature Prize for the novel Samtale ventar in 2011. Eikemo was co-editor of the cultural and political magazine Syn og Segn from 2003 to 2006, jointly with Hilde Sandvik.",
"Olav Eikeland\n Olav Eikeland (born 10 October 1955) is a Norwegian philosopher and working life researcher. Since 2008, he is professor of work research and research director for the Program for Research on Education and Work at Oslo Metropolitan University (formerly Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences). Since 2012, he is also vice dean of the Faculty of Education and International Studies. He was a researcher at the Work Research Institute from 1985 to 2008, and served as the institute's director 2003-2004.",
"Jon Eirik Ødegaard\n Jon Eirik Ødegaard (born 29 September 1972) is a retired Norwegian footballer. Hailing from Røros, he failed to break through from the junior ranks to the senior team at Rosenborg and instead tried his luck in Hamkam. Following relegation from the 1995 Tippeligaen he moved back to Trondheim and took one year in Strindheim and Byåsen each. He was brought back to the first tier by Vålerenga, and played three seasons there and four in Moss. Originally a midfielder, he was converted to left back while at Moss. After quitting his professional career due to serious injury he had outings for low-league teams Rapid and Tronvik. The son of a camping site and hotel owner in Røros, Ødegaard elected not to take over the family business and instead settled at Jeløya in Moss. He coached Moss' junior team for four years before becoming Tor Thodesen's assistant manager ahead of the 2011 season. He was later a player developer in local minnows Sprint-Jeløy and used his chef training to lead a cafeteria.",
"Efosa Ojomo\n Efosa was born in Nigeria. He attended Secondary School in Nigeria. After failing college entry exams twice, he proceeded to the Fisk University and later to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee where he obtained a bachelor's degree in computer engineering. He also holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he worked as a researcher under Late Professor Clayton Christensen at the Forum for Growth and Innovation. He also worked as an engineer for National Instruments right after graduation.",
"Jon Reidar Øyan\n Jon Reidar Øyan (born 15 April 1981) is a Norwegian gay rights activist and politician for the Labour Party. He made his mark as leader of the Norwegian National Association for Lesbian and Gay Liberation, and stepped down in 2008. He was then hired as an advisor for the parliamentary group of the Norwegian Labour Party. He had a background as a member of Snillfjord municipal council. In October 2009 he was appointed political advisor in the Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. From November to December 2011 he was an acting State Secretary in the Ministry of Government Administration, Reform and Church Affairs. He was later a personal adviser to Helga Pedersen.",
"Sten Ove Eike\n Source:",
"Efosa Ojomo\n Efosa Ojomo is a Nigerian author, researcher and speaker. He leads the Global Prosperity research group at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, a think tank based in Boston and Silicon Valley and is a senior research fellow at the Harvard Business School. Efosa speaks regularly on innovation and has presented his work at TED, the Aspen Ideas Festival, the World Bank, Harvard, Yale, Oxford and at several other conferences and institutions. In January 2019, Efosa and Harvard Business School professor, Clayton Christensen published \"The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty\".",
"Jon Kvist\n Jon Kvist (born 6 January 1967) is a Danish researcher and author. He is a professor at the Institute of Society and Globalization, at the Roskilde University, as well as a member of the Nordic Centre of Excellence on Reassessing the Nordic Welfare Model.",
"Ola Henmo\n Ola Henmo (born 1965) is a Norwegian journalist and non-fiction writer. Hailing from Grav in Bærum, he played football for the clubs Frigg, Fossum, Stabæk and then Fossum again. He became a journalist working 15 years in Aftenposten. As a journalist he worked extensively with the 2011 Norway attacks, and was a consultant for the television series Utøya. He published a book for the 75th anniversary of the Norwegian Cancer Society (2013) and portrait books about activist Kim Friele (2015) and disabled politician Torstein Lerhol (2019), the latter two on the publishing house Cappelen Damm.",
"James Eike\n James W. Eike (September 29, 1911 – February 8, 1983) was a birdwatcher and former president of the Virginia Society of Ornithology. The James W. Eike Service Award was created by the Society in his honor in 1984. Eike was born in Woodbridge, Virginia. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1932 and began a federal career in 1934 with the U.S. Public Health Service. He later worked for the Civil Service Commission and joined the U.S. State Department in 1946. He retired in 1970 from the U.S. Information Agency. He lived in Northern Virginia around Falls Church and Fairfax. He kept detailed field notebooks which recorded his observation of birds, as well as weather conditions, for over 30 years, rarely missing a day. His observations were concentrated near his home in Northern Virginia, but also include Maryland, Washington D.C., and North Carolina. Eike joined the Virginia Society of Ornithology in 1933, and was an active member and officer of the Society for the rest of his life. Eike's personal papers are held by the Smithsonian Institution Archives. His collection of 111 field books are part of Smithsonian's Field Book Registry; they have been scanned and posted online.",
"Efosa Ojomo\n Efosa Ojomo is the director of Global Prosperity at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation. He was formerly a senior research fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation at the Harvard Business School. He was mentored by Late Professor Clay Christensen, one of the world's top experts on strategy, growth, and innovation. Efosa's research examines how emerging economies, or what he now refers to as growth economies, including sub-Saharan Africa, can engender prosperity for their citizens by focusing on investments in market-creating innovations. He also works with firms to help them develop a market-creating innovation strategy. Efosa was also the President and co-founder of “Poverty Stops Here”. He was a Co-President, Harvard Business School Africa Business Club from 2014 till 2015. He worked as an engineer and in business development for National Instruments for eight years following graduation. He was named THINKER S50 Radar Class of 2020.",
"Jon Asamoah\n Jonathan Yao-Lante Asamoah (born July 21, 1988) is a former offensive guard who played in the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the third round of the 2010 NFL Draft. He played college football at Illinois. Asamoah was considered one of the top interior offensive linemen for the 2010 NFL Draft. Asamoah has also played for the Atlanta Falcons.",
"Arne Eidsmo\n Arne Eidsmo (4 April 1941 – 16 October 2011) was a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party. He hailed from Tromsø, and for 42 years he was the regional director of the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise in Northern Norway. He retired in April 2011. He also served as State Secretary in the Ministry of Fisheries from 1989 to 1990, in Syse's Cabinet. Eidsmo was also a freemason, since 1967, and the last two years of his life he was a \"Provincial Master\" in the organization. He died in October 2011 at the University Hospital of North Norway following short-term illness.",
"Raimo Valle\n Raimo Valle (born 15 September 1965) is a Norwegian civil servant and politician for the Labour Party. He hails from Unjárga - Nesseby. He graduated as cand.mag. from the University of Tromsø in 1989. Outside politics he worked as a consultant in Troms County Municipality from 1993 to 2007. He was a board member of the Centre for Sami Studies, University of Tromsø after graduating, was the county leader of the Federation of Norwegian Professional Associations in Troms from 1999 to 2003 and from 2001 to 2007 he was a board member of the Association of Social Scientists. In 2007 he was appointed to Stoltenberg's Second Cabinet as a State Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. He left office in 2012.",
"John Eidsmoe\n John A. Eidsmoe is an attorney and a professor of constitutional law and related subjects. He has previously taught at the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law, Faulkner University, Montgomery, Alabama, the O. W. Coburn School of Law at Oral Roberts University and Oak Brook College of Law and Government Policy. He was in the US Air Force as a lieutenant colonel and is an Alabama State Defense Force colonel, headquarters judge advocate, deputy chaplain and training officer. He earned his J.D. from the University of Iowa, M.A. from Dallas Theological Seminary, M. Div. from Lutheran Brethren Seminary and D. Min. from O.R.U. In a 2001 interview, Eidsmoe said, \"When Biblical law conflicted with American law, O.R.U. students were generally taught that 'the first thing you should try ",
"Frank Jonke\n Frank Jonke (born January 30, 1985) is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the USL Premier Development League, Canadian Soccer League, Kakkonen, Ykkönen, Veikkausliiga, and the North American Soccer League.",
"Sten Ove Eike\n Eike was born in Skudenes, and played for the local club Skudenes UIL before he joined Haugesund in 2004. Eike suffered from a heart attack after a match against Stavanger on 27 September 2009, but he made his comeback in the 2011 Tippeligaen. He played 124 matches and scored 20 goals for Haugesund. On 15 August 2011, Eike signed a half-year contract with the 1. divisjon club Sandefjord. With the help of Eike's six goals in nine matches, Sandefjord came third in 2011 Norwegian First Division, but missed out on the promotion to Tippeligaen. After the season, he decided to step down from the professional football career, and got a job as director of football and janitor in his youth club Skudenes, but he admitted that he would probably play some matches for the team in the Norwegian Fifth Division. Until 2017 he played some Skudenes games every season, being a prolific goalscorer."
] |
In what city was Bob Cremins born? | [
"Pelham Manor",
"Pelham Manor, New York"
] | place of birth | Bob Cremins | 3,531,642 | 51 | [
{
"id": "26279623",
"title": "Bob Cremins",
"text": " Robert Anthony Cremins (February 15, 1906 – March 27, 2004) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 1927 season. Listed at 5ft 11in, 178 lb., Cremins batted and threw left-handed. He was born in Pelham Manor, New York. In four relief appearances, Cremins posted a 5.04 earned run average without a decision in 5 ⅓ Innings pitched. According to Baseball Almanac, Cremins faced Babe Ruth once and retired him on a grounder to first base. His career ended in 1928 due to an arm injury. Following his baseball career, Cremins served in the military during World War II. After that, he worked as town supervisor and tax receiver for Pelham. Cremins died in his homeland of Pelham at the age of 98. At the time of his death, he was the second-oldest surviving person having been a baseball player; Ray Cunningham is No. 1.",
"score": "1.7286587"
},
{
"id": "4095984",
"title": "Bobby Cremins",
"text": " Cremins attended All Hallows High School in the Bronx, New York, where he was born to Irish immigrants from County Kerry. In 1966, he entered the University of South Carolina on a basketball scholarship, where he played under coach Frank McGuire. While Cremins was there, the South Carolina team won 61 games, with 17 losses, while Cremins was the starting point guard for three years for the Gamecocks. Cremins, known as \"Cakes\", was also the captain of South Carolina's 1969-70 team which went 25–3. He graduated from South Carolina in 1970 with a B.S. degree in marketing, before playing professional basketball for one year in Ecuador.",
"score": "1.66311"
},
{
"id": "27810534",
"title": "Gus Cremin",
"text": " Cremin was born in Lisselton in north Kerry where he lived with wife Celia and their extended family. He died on 13 November 2014.",
"score": "1.6490376"
},
{
"id": "32684127",
"title": "Bob Koester",
"text": " Koester was born in Wichita, Kansas, on October 30, 1932. He began collecting and trading classic 78 rpm records when he was in high school. He studied business and cinematography at Saint Louis University starting in 1951.",
"score": "1.6279976"
},
{
"id": "4095983",
"title": "Bobby Cremins",
"text": " Robert Joseph Cremins Jr. (born July 4, 1947) is an American retired college basketball coach. He served as a head coach at Appalachian State, Georgia Tech, and, most recently, the College of Charleston.",
"score": "1.6054382"
},
{
"id": "26279624",
"title": "Bob Cremins",
"text": "Nicknamed \"Lefty\" or \"Crooked Arm\" ",
"score": "1.5872664"
},
{
"id": "14905895",
"title": "Bob Stefik",
"text": " Stefik was born Robert Mathias Stefik on October 8, 1923, in Madison, Wisconsin.",
"score": "1.5781488"
},
{
"id": "7494315",
"title": "Bob DiLuca",
"text": " DiLuca was born in Italy and was raised in Belgium and Canada.",
"score": "1.5567651"
},
{
"id": "29881114",
"title": "Robert Niemi",
"text": " Robert James \"Bob\" Niemi (born April 1955 in Fitchburg, Massachusetts) is an American literary scholar, literary critic and author. Since 1990 he is professor of English at Saint Michael's College in Colchester.",
"score": "1.5518636"
},
{
"id": "30626091",
"title": "Bob Regan",
"text": " Regan was born in Sacramento, California, was raised in South Lake Tahoe.",
"score": "1.5430458"
},
{
"id": "9285320",
"title": "Bob Wade (artist)",
"text": " Robert Schrope Wade was born in Austin, Texas on January 6, 1943. Son of a hotel manager, Wade grew up in several Texas cities. This early hotel life contributed to Wade's interests in the American road and highway kitsch. As a boy he was able to visit with his cowboy hero, Roy Rogers, who was a first cousin of his mother. During high school in El Paso, Wade joined a car club and would go south of the border to Juarez to enlist skilled technicians to customize his hot rod. When Bob arrived Austin in 1961 to attend the University of Texas he was driving a decade-old, ",
"score": "1.5293776"
},
{
"id": "12025069",
"title": "Delmark Records",
"text": " Born in 1932 in Wichita, Kansas, Bob Koester was the son of a petroleum engineer. While in the hospital with polio when he was a child, he listened to the radio and was cheered up when he heard Eddie Condon and Benny Goodman. In his teens, he was a dedicated jazz fan who began buying old records from a Salvation Army store. At concerts in Kansas City, he heard Red Allen, Count Basie, Jimmy Rushing, Tommy Douglas, Lionel Hampton, and Jay McShann. Moving from Wichita to St. Louis to attend college, Koester began his career as a record trader in his dormitory room. Joining a local jazz club gave Koester his first taste of live jazz, seeing Clark Terry ",
"score": "1.5278091"
},
{
"id": "30768654",
"title": "Bob Kauffman",
"text": " Robert Alan Kauffman was born July 13, 1946 in Brooklyn, N.Y., to LeRoy and Anne Kauffman. He played at Scarsdale High School in Scarsdale, New York. The Kauffman family was in the saddle and bridle business. Kauffman’s Boots and Saddles was their business on East 24th Street in Manhattan.",
"score": "1.5273123"
},
{
"id": "2498614",
"title": "Bob Crampsey",
"text": " Crampsey was born in Glasgow. A graduate of the University of Glasgow and former head teacher of St. Ambrose High School in Coatbridge, Crampsey was 1965's \"Brain of Britain\". He followed this up eight years later by reaching the semi-finals of Mastermind, choosing the American Civil War as his specialist subject. He served in the Royal Air Force from 1952 to 1955.",
"score": "1.5269762"
},
{
"id": "9030345",
"title": "Bob Schloredt",
"text": " Schloredt was born in Deadwood, South Dakota in 1939 and attended Gresham High School in suburban Portland. He was blinded in his left eye from a fireworks injury suffered at the age of five.",
"score": "1.5206828"
},
{
"id": "27736969",
"title": "Bob Hagedorn",
"text": " Born in Elizabeth City, North Carolina to a military family, Hagedorn family settled in Aurora, Colorado in 1965 and he attended local schools, graduating from Aurora Central High School in 1970. He earned a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder in 1974 and a master's degree in urban affairs from the University of Colorado Denver in 1979.",
"score": "1.5094396"
},
{
"id": "4038840",
"title": "Bob Elkins",
"text": " Bob Elkins (born 1932) is an American character actor who has appeared in movies, plays and television productions. He is sometimes credited as Robert Elkins. Bob Elkins was born in 1932 in Mount Hope, West Virginia, the son of a struggling coal miner. At age four, he moved with his father, mother and two sisters to Muncie, Indiana, where his father took a job at a lawnmower company. At about that time, the elder Elkins inexplicably became withdrawn and stopped talking to his son. Bob Elkins now believes that the lack of communication with his father influenced his acting abilities, although he would ",
"score": "1.509068"
},
{
"id": "32465741",
"title": "Bob Gannon",
"text": " Gannon was born in Mequon, Wisconsin on January 6, 1959. He graduated from the West Bend High School in West Bend, Wisconsin and attended various colleges and vocational schools.",
"score": "1.5082463"
},
{
"id": "14433163",
"title": "Howard Cruse",
"text": " Cruse was born on May 2, 1944 in Birmingham, Alabama and raised in nearby Springville, the son of a preacher and a homemaker. His earliest published cartoons were in The Baptist Student when he was in high school. His work later appeared in Fooey and Sick. He attended high school at Indian Springs School in (what is now) Indian Springs, Alabama, and college at Birmingham-Southern College, where he studied drama. Cruse worked for about a decade in television. In 1977, Cruse moved to New York City, where he met Eddie Sedarbaum, his life partner, in April 1979. They married after moving to North Adams, Massachusetts.",
"score": "1.4978876"
},
{
"id": "32830451",
"title": "Bob Arno",
"text": " Bob Arno (born 1940 ) is a Swedish-American entertainer, known primarily as a comedy pickpocket, and more recently criminologist specializing in global street crime. He grew up in Stockholm, Sweden, and became a US citizen in 1992.",
"score": "1.493825"
}
] | [
"Bob Cremins\n Robert Anthony Cremins (February 15, 1906 – March 27, 2004) was a pitcher in Major League Baseball who played briefly for the Boston Red Sox during the 1927 season. Listed at 5ft 11in, 178 lb., Cremins batted and threw left-handed. He was born in Pelham Manor, New York. In four relief appearances, Cremins posted a 5.04 earned run average without a decision in 5 ⅓ Innings pitched. According to Baseball Almanac, Cremins faced Babe Ruth once and retired him on a grounder to first base. His career ended in 1928 due to an arm injury. Following his baseball career, Cremins served in the military during World War II. After that, he worked as town supervisor and tax receiver for Pelham. Cremins died in his homeland of Pelham at the age of 98. At the time of his death, he was the second-oldest surviving person having been a baseball player; Ray Cunningham is No. 1.",
"Bobby Cremins\n Cremins attended All Hallows High School in the Bronx, New York, where he was born to Irish immigrants from County Kerry. In 1966, he entered the University of South Carolina on a basketball scholarship, where he played under coach Frank McGuire. While Cremins was there, the South Carolina team won 61 games, with 17 losses, while Cremins was the starting point guard for three years for the Gamecocks. Cremins, known as \"Cakes\", was also the captain of South Carolina's 1969-70 team which went 25–3. He graduated from South Carolina in 1970 with a B.S. degree in marketing, before playing professional basketball for one year in Ecuador.",
"Gus Cremin\n Cremin was born in Lisselton in north Kerry where he lived with wife Celia and their extended family. He died on 13 November 2014.",
"Bob Koester\n Koester was born in Wichita, Kansas, on October 30, 1932. He began collecting and trading classic 78 rpm records when he was in high school. He studied business and cinematography at Saint Louis University starting in 1951.",
"Bobby Cremins\n Robert Joseph Cremins Jr. (born July 4, 1947) is an American retired college basketball coach. He served as a head coach at Appalachian State, Georgia Tech, and, most recently, the College of Charleston.",
"Bob Cremins\nNicknamed \"Lefty\" or \"Crooked Arm\" ",
"Bob Stefik\n Stefik was born Robert Mathias Stefik on October 8, 1923, in Madison, Wisconsin.",
"Bob DiLuca\n DiLuca was born in Italy and was raised in Belgium and Canada.",
"Robert Niemi\n Robert James \"Bob\" Niemi (born April 1955 in Fitchburg, Massachusetts) is an American literary scholar, literary critic and author. Since 1990 he is professor of English at Saint Michael's College in Colchester.",
"Bob Regan\n Regan was born in Sacramento, California, was raised in South Lake Tahoe.",
"Bob Wade (artist)\n Robert Schrope Wade was born in Austin, Texas on January 6, 1943. Son of a hotel manager, Wade grew up in several Texas cities. This early hotel life contributed to Wade's interests in the American road and highway kitsch. As a boy he was able to visit with his cowboy hero, Roy Rogers, who was a first cousin of his mother. During high school in El Paso, Wade joined a car club and would go south of the border to Juarez to enlist skilled technicians to customize his hot rod. When Bob arrived Austin in 1961 to attend the University of Texas he was driving a decade-old, ",
"Delmark Records\n Born in 1932 in Wichita, Kansas, Bob Koester was the son of a petroleum engineer. While in the hospital with polio when he was a child, he listened to the radio and was cheered up when he heard Eddie Condon and Benny Goodman. In his teens, he was a dedicated jazz fan who began buying old records from a Salvation Army store. At concerts in Kansas City, he heard Red Allen, Count Basie, Jimmy Rushing, Tommy Douglas, Lionel Hampton, and Jay McShann. Moving from Wichita to St. Louis to attend college, Koester began his career as a record trader in his dormitory room. Joining a local jazz club gave Koester his first taste of live jazz, seeing Clark Terry ",
"Bob Kauffman\n Robert Alan Kauffman was born July 13, 1946 in Brooklyn, N.Y., to LeRoy and Anne Kauffman. He played at Scarsdale High School in Scarsdale, New York. The Kauffman family was in the saddle and bridle business. Kauffman’s Boots and Saddles was their business on East 24th Street in Manhattan.",
"Bob Crampsey\n Crampsey was born in Glasgow. A graduate of the University of Glasgow and former head teacher of St. Ambrose High School in Coatbridge, Crampsey was 1965's \"Brain of Britain\". He followed this up eight years later by reaching the semi-finals of Mastermind, choosing the American Civil War as his specialist subject. He served in the Royal Air Force from 1952 to 1955.",
"Bob Schloredt\n Schloredt was born in Deadwood, South Dakota in 1939 and attended Gresham High School in suburban Portland. He was blinded in his left eye from a fireworks injury suffered at the age of five.",
"Bob Hagedorn\n Born in Elizabeth City, North Carolina to a military family, Hagedorn family settled in Aurora, Colorado in 1965 and he attended local schools, graduating from Aurora Central High School in 1970. He earned a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Colorado Boulder in 1974 and a master's degree in urban affairs from the University of Colorado Denver in 1979.",
"Bob Elkins\n Bob Elkins (born 1932) is an American character actor who has appeared in movies, plays and television productions. He is sometimes credited as Robert Elkins. Bob Elkins was born in 1932 in Mount Hope, West Virginia, the son of a struggling coal miner. At age four, he moved with his father, mother and two sisters to Muncie, Indiana, where his father took a job at a lawnmower company. At about that time, the elder Elkins inexplicably became withdrawn and stopped talking to his son. Bob Elkins now believes that the lack of communication with his father influenced his acting abilities, although he would ",
"Bob Gannon\n Gannon was born in Mequon, Wisconsin on January 6, 1959. He graduated from the West Bend High School in West Bend, Wisconsin and attended various colleges and vocational schools.",
"Howard Cruse\n Cruse was born on May 2, 1944 in Birmingham, Alabama and raised in nearby Springville, the son of a preacher and a homemaker. His earliest published cartoons were in The Baptist Student when he was in high school. His work later appeared in Fooey and Sick. He attended high school at Indian Springs School in (what is now) Indian Springs, Alabama, and college at Birmingham-Southern College, where he studied drama. Cruse worked for about a decade in television. In 1977, Cruse moved to New York City, where he met Eddie Sedarbaum, his life partner, in April 1979. They married after moving to North Adams, Massachusetts.",
"Bob Arno\n Bob Arno (born 1940 ) is a Swedish-American entertainer, known primarily as a comedy pickpocket, and more recently criminologist specializing in global street crime. He grew up in Stockholm, Sweden, and became a US citizen in 1992."
] |
What is Clement Baker's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | Clement Baker | 3,752,840 | 43 | [
{
"id": "28869128",
"title": "Clement Baker",
"text": " Clement Baker (by 1470 – 1516), of New Romney, Kent, was an English politician. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for New Romney in 1512 and 1515, and was chamberlain, commissioner of subsidy, and jurat of the town. He was also bailiff to Yarmouth.",
"score": "1.6295568"
},
{
"id": "16141794",
"title": "Allen Baker",
"text": " Joseph Allen Baker (10 April 1852 – 3 July 1918) was a Canadian-born British engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries and later in transportation systems, who was also a Liberal Party politician in London.",
"score": "1.5818316"
},
{
"id": "6033028",
"title": "Thomas Baker (artist)",
"text": " Thomas Baker (9 October 1809 – 10 August 1864) was a Midlands landscape painter and watercolourist often known as \"Baker of Leamington\" or \"Landscape Baker\". Born in Harborne, Birmingham, Baker was a student of Vincent Barber (1788–1838) at the Barber family's Charles Street Academy in Birmingham. Exhibiting publicly with the Birmingham Society of Artists from 1827 onwards, he painted landscapes throughout Warwickshire, the Midlands and the Welsh border regions and occasionally producing depictions of the Lake District, Scotland and Ireland. More often than not Baker's landscapes include cattle, although sheep and human figures are also fairly common in his works. Baker kept comprehensive ",
"score": "1.5423712"
},
{
"id": "894092",
"title": "Charles Baker (surveyor)",
"text": " Charles Baker (5 October 1743—19 February 1835) was born in Virginia, and was a surveyor in Canada as his first recorded profession. Baker was in Nova Scotia in 1765 as a deputy surveyor in the Chignecto region. After the American Revolution, he was active in the surveys which settled loyalists. In 1788 he settled in Amherst Township on an 800 acre land grant he had received. There he became a justice of the peace and a clerk of the courts and by 1802 was a judge. History records him as being a good magistrate and public servant. Through his various activities, he contributed significantly to the settlement and development of the areas where he lived.",
"score": "1.533845"
},
{
"id": "13250720",
"title": "Bobby Baker (artist)",
"text": " Bobby Baker (born 1950, Kent) is a multi-disciplinary artist and activist working across performance, drawing and multi-media. Baker is the artistic director of the arts organisation Daily Life Ltd. A hallmark of Baker's work is food being used as an artistic medium. As John Daniel writes, 'Food - shopping for it, cooking it, serving it, consuming it - is a consistent feature in Baker's work, which focuses on the seemingly mundane, everyday details of life' (2007:246) Drawing from her own personal and family experiences, her work explores the relationship between art and lived experience and addresses the splitting of women's domestic and professional lives. Claire MacDonald points out how her artistic trajectory - moving from early food sculptures to later performances and installations - reflects the changing agenda of women's movement.",
"score": "1.5208983"
},
{
"id": "13237892",
"title": "Gerard Baker",
"text": " Baker was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, United Kingdom and holds a degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (first class honors). Baker is a British citizen. He was left-of-center during his university years, and was elected as a Labour vice-president of the student union. He subsequently moved towards the right.",
"score": "1.5099729"
},
{
"id": "27737869",
"title": "Christopher Paul Baker",
"text": " Christopher P. Baker (born in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England, on 15 June 1955) is a professional travel writer and photographer, adventure motorcyclist, tour leader, and Cuba expert, and the 2008 Lowell Thomas Award 'Travel Journalist of the Year.' He is a contributor to magazines and other publications worldwide, and is the author of travel guidebooks for publishers such as Dorling Kindersley, Lonely Planet, Moon Publications, and National Geographic. He is best known for his award-winning literary travelog, Mi Moto Fidel: Motorcycling Through Castro's Cuba. Baker has appeared on dozens of radio and TV outlets as a Cuba expert, including on CCTV, CNN, Fox News Channel, NBC, NPR, and Travel with Rick Steves,. He is a public speaker and has twice addressed National Geographic Live! He is currently partnered with actor-singer David Soul in producing a cinematic documentary about the restoration of Ernest Hemingway's 1955 Chrysler New Yorker convertible, in Havana. He is also well known as an adventure moto-journalist specializing in travel reports on international motorcycling for such publications as Adventure Motorcyclist, CNN Travel, Motorcyclist, National Geographic Traveler, and Robb Report.",
"score": "1.5050814"
},
{
"id": "12939043",
"title": "Nathaniel B. Baker",
"text": " Baker was a co-owner of a Democratic newspaper, the New Hampshire Patriot. Originally, a Democrat, he served as Clerk of the Merrimack County Court of Common Pleas in 1845. The following year he became Merrimack County Clerk. Baker was also active in the New Hampshire Militia, serving as Quartermaster and later Adjutant of the 11th Regiment. He subsequently served as Aide-de-Camp to Governor John H. Steele with the rank of colonel. In 1851, Baker assumed the position of Chief Fire Engineer for Concord's Fire Department. He also served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1850 and 1851, and was elected Speaker of the House. In 1852 he was a Presidential Elector, and cast his ballot for Franklin Pierce and William R. King. From 1854 to 1859 Baker was a trustee of Norwich University, and he received an honorary Master of Arts degree from Norwich in 1855.",
"score": "1.5042682"
},
{
"id": "13439289",
"title": "Joby Baker",
"text": " Joseph N. \"Joby\" Baker (born March 26, 1934) is a Canadian-born actor and painter.",
"score": "1.5028746"
},
{
"id": "8204965",
"title": "John Holland Baker",
"text": " John Holland Baker (4 December 1841 – 5 February 1930) was a New Zealand surveyor and public servant. He was born in Chilcomb, Hampshire, England on 4 December 1841. A son of the Rev. Thomas Feilding Baker, Rector of Cressingham Parish, Norfolk, and Catherine Mathias, he was educated at Yarmouth Grammar School, and in Germany, where he lived with his parents in Königswinter. He left school at 15 after he punched a master. He was sent to New Zealand when his uncle, Octavius Mathias, offered to take one of the Baker sons. He arrived in Lyttelton on the Maori during 1857. In the following year, he started an apprenticeship as ",
"score": "1.5007559"
},
{
"id": "5915828",
"title": "Christopher W. Baker",
"text": " Christopher William Baker RBA (born 1956) is an English landscape painter, watercolourist, draughtsman and author from Sussex, England.",
"score": "1.4973347"
},
{
"id": "5500662",
"title": "Richard Thomas Baker",
"text": " Baker was born in Woolwich, England, son of Richard Thomas Baker, a blacksmith, and his wife Sarah, née Colkett. The boy was educated at Woolwich National School and Peterborough Training Institution, later gaining science and art certificates from South Kensington Museum. He was engaged as a senior assistant-master by the School Board for London in 1875 but resigned in July 1879 to emigrate to Australia.",
"score": "1.4968141"
},
{
"id": "27925646",
"title": "Carl Baker",
"text": " Baker's career was forged at Southport. Spotted playing for Prescot by Southport manager Liam Watson, Baker was quickly snapped up by the Merseyside club, and soon established himself as one of non-league's exciting talents. He was an important member of the Southport Conference North Championship winning team in the 2004–05 season. In 2005, he was a member of the Middlesex Wanderers F.C. that visited Japan. After again playing an important role in helping keep Southport in the Conference National in the 2005–06 season, Baker signed his first full-time contract, for the next season as the club turned fully professional, whilst much of the championship winning, and relegation surviving team, (fan favourites Steve Dickinson, ",
"score": "1.4889368"
},
{
"id": "2401545",
"title": "Bart Baker",
"text": " Bartholomew Baker (born May 5, 1986), is an American entertainer, web-based comedian, video producer, singer, rapper, and parody artist. He is best known for making parody videos of notable songs, which he would post on his YouTube channel. He was described as one of the most prolific makers of music parodies by Billboard. Besides being active on YouTube, where he has more than 10 million subscribers, (after leaving YouTube, his subscriber count fell back down to 9.95 Million Subscribers), Baker is known for his short videos on Vine and also Live.ly, where he was once a top-earning broadcaster. His videos have been described as 'high-quality parodies that keep to the originals very well'. In 2018, Baker was signed to World Star Hip Hop and released a song called \"Popper\" under the stage name of Lil Kloroxxx and started a life as a rapper.",
"score": "1.4877534"
},
{
"id": "3890054",
"title": "Charles S.L. Baker",
"text": " Baker was born into slavery on August 3, 1859, in Savannah, Missouri. His mother, Betsy Mackay, died when he was three months old, leaving him to be brought up by the wife of his owner, Sallie Mackay, and his father, Abraham Baker. He was the youngest of five children, Susie, Peter, Annie, and Ellen, all of whom were freed after the Civil War. Baker later received an education at Franklin College. His father was employed as an express agent, and once Baker turned fifteen, he became his assistant. Baker worked with wagons and linchpins, which sparked an interest in mechanical sciences.",
"score": "1.4867527"
},
{
"id": "29453657",
"title": "Frank Baker (politician)",
"text": " Baker is the 12th child of John and Eileen Baker, and was raised in Saint Margaret's Parish (now St. Teresa of Calcutta) area of Dorchester. He graduated in 1986 from Don Technical High School where he has studied printing trade. Between 1987 and 2010 he worked in the printing department at the City of Boston. He is a member of the CWA/Boston Typographical Union. He is married to his wife Today and they have two children.",
"score": "1.484382"
},
{
"id": "5915829",
"title": "Christopher W. Baker",
"text": " He trained at West Surrey College of Art and Design and at the University of Exeter, and has been the recipient of several awards and scholarships including a Royal Academy Landscape Scholarship and an Arts Council Grant. He has exhibited extensively in the UK and Canada. Baker has been a regular contributor to The Artist Magazine since 1987, and has contributed to art textbooks on painting technique. He played the part of an artist and painting tutor in Joanna Hogg's film Archipelago, shot on Tresco, Isles of Scilly in 2009. It was shown at the 2010 London Film Festival. and is released in the UK on 4 March 2011. He exhibited works ",
"score": "1.4825153"
},
{
"id": "5698846",
"title": "Samuel Baker",
"text": " Baker lived as a reputed Victorian Nimrod and was a milestone in the history of modern hunting through his works and deeds. He was proud of his British heritage and was an advocate of the virtues of his nation, and a fighter against slavery. An acclaimed sportsman, he likely started hunting in the Scottish Highlands; his skills were renowned, and he once gave a demonstration to friends in Scotland of how he could, with dogs, successfully hunt down a stag armed only with a knife, he did the same with the large boars in the jungles of Ceylon. He hunted consistently until his last years, in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. Baker forged his skills chasing Asian ",
"score": "1.4786909"
},
{
"id": "6094860",
"title": "Henry Baker (naturalist)",
"text": " He was born in Chancery Lane, London, 8 May 1698, the son of William Baker, a clerk in chancery. In his fifteenth year he was apprenticed to John Parker, a bookseller. At the close of his indentures in 1720, Baker went on a visit to John Forster, a relative, who had a deaf-mute daughter, then eight years old. As a successful therapist of deaf people, he went on to make money, by a system that he kept secret. His work as therapist caught the attention of Daniel Defoe, whose youngest daughter Sophia he married on 30 April 1729. In 1740 he was elected fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and of the Royal Society. In 1744 he received the Copley gold medal for microscopical observations on the crystallization of saline particles. He was one of the founders of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce in 1754 (later the Society of Arts), and for some time acted as its secretary. He died in London, and was buried at St Mary le Strand.",
"score": "1.4774902"
},
{
"id": "32639075",
"title": "1905 Finsbury East by-election",
"text": " The Conservatives selected Nathaniel Cohen as their candidate to defend the seat. He had contested the 1900 general election as Conservative candidate for Penryn and Falmouth. The local Liberal Association re-selected 53-year-old Allen Baker to challenge for the seat. He was a Canadian- born engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries. He was a Quaker. Baker followed his father's professional footsteps and entered the family engineering business. In 1879 they set up business in Finsbury. As Quakers, the Baker family tried to run a model business taking a paternal interest in the welfare of their workforce and introducing schemes such as shorter working days, encouraging employees to participate in health and insurance plans and fostering a relaxed approach on the shop floor, perhaps to the detriment of profits. Baker and Sons also had connections to the motor car industry and in around 1902, the company held an agency for the American car manufacturers Stevens-Duryea. Baker had represented East Finsbury on the London County Council (LCC) as a Progressive since 1895. During his time on the LCC he acted as Chairman of the Highways Committee.",
"score": "1.4758768"
}
] | [
"Clement Baker\n Clement Baker (by 1470 – 1516), of New Romney, Kent, was an English politician. He was a Member of Parliament (MP) for New Romney in 1512 and 1515, and was chamberlain, commissioner of subsidy, and jurat of the town. He was also bailiff to Yarmouth.",
"Allen Baker\n Joseph Allen Baker (10 April 1852 – 3 July 1918) was a Canadian-born British engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries and later in transportation systems, who was also a Liberal Party politician in London.",
"Thomas Baker (artist)\n Thomas Baker (9 October 1809 – 10 August 1864) was a Midlands landscape painter and watercolourist often known as \"Baker of Leamington\" or \"Landscape Baker\". Born in Harborne, Birmingham, Baker was a student of Vincent Barber (1788–1838) at the Barber family's Charles Street Academy in Birmingham. Exhibiting publicly with the Birmingham Society of Artists from 1827 onwards, he painted landscapes throughout Warwickshire, the Midlands and the Welsh border regions and occasionally producing depictions of the Lake District, Scotland and Ireland. More often than not Baker's landscapes include cattle, although sheep and human figures are also fairly common in his works. Baker kept comprehensive ",
"Charles Baker (surveyor)\n Charles Baker (5 October 1743—19 February 1835) was born in Virginia, and was a surveyor in Canada as his first recorded profession. Baker was in Nova Scotia in 1765 as a deputy surveyor in the Chignecto region. After the American Revolution, he was active in the surveys which settled loyalists. In 1788 he settled in Amherst Township on an 800 acre land grant he had received. There he became a justice of the peace and a clerk of the courts and by 1802 was a judge. History records him as being a good magistrate and public servant. Through his various activities, he contributed significantly to the settlement and development of the areas where he lived.",
"Bobby Baker (artist)\n Bobby Baker (born 1950, Kent) is a multi-disciplinary artist and activist working across performance, drawing and multi-media. Baker is the artistic director of the arts organisation Daily Life Ltd. A hallmark of Baker's work is food being used as an artistic medium. As John Daniel writes, 'Food - shopping for it, cooking it, serving it, consuming it - is a consistent feature in Baker's work, which focuses on the seemingly mundane, everyday details of life' (2007:246) Drawing from her own personal and family experiences, her work explores the relationship between art and lived experience and addresses the splitting of women's domestic and professional lives. Claire MacDonald points out how her artistic trajectory - moving from early food sculptures to later performances and installations - reflects the changing agenda of women's movement.",
"Gerard Baker\n Baker was educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, United Kingdom and holds a degree in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics (first class honors). Baker is a British citizen. He was left-of-center during his university years, and was elected as a Labour vice-president of the student union. He subsequently moved towards the right.",
"Christopher Paul Baker\n Christopher P. Baker (born in Pontefract, Yorkshire, England, on 15 June 1955) is a professional travel writer and photographer, adventure motorcyclist, tour leader, and Cuba expert, and the 2008 Lowell Thomas Award 'Travel Journalist of the Year.' He is a contributor to magazines and other publications worldwide, and is the author of travel guidebooks for publishers such as Dorling Kindersley, Lonely Planet, Moon Publications, and National Geographic. He is best known for his award-winning literary travelog, Mi Moto Fidel: Motorcycling Through Castro's Cuba. Baker has appeared on dozens of radio and TV outlets as a Cuba expert, including on CCTV, CNN, Fox News Channel, NBC, NPR, and Travel with Rick Steves,. He is a public speaker and has twice addressed National Geographic Live! He is currently partnered with actor-singer David Soul in producing a cinematic documentary about the restoration of Ernest Hemingway's 1955 Chrysler New Yorker convertible, in Havana. He is also well known as an adventure moto-journalist specializing in travel reports on international motorcycling for such publications as Adventure Motorcyclist, CNN Travel, Motorcyclist, National Geographic Traveler, and Robb Report.",
"Nathaniel B. Baker\n Baker was a co-owner of a Democratic newspaper, the New Hampshire Patriot. Originally, a Democrat, he served as Clerk of the Merrimack County Court of Common Pleas in 1845. The following year he became Merrimack County Clerk. Baker was also active in the New Hampshire Militia, serving as Quartermaster and later Adjutant of the 11th Regiment. He subsequently served as Aide-de-Camp to Governor John H. Steele with the rank of colonel. In 1851, Baker assumed the position of Chief Fire Engineer for Concord's Fire Department. He also served in the New Hampshire House of Representatives in 1850 and 1851, and was elected Speaker of the House. In 1852 he was a Presidential Elector, and cast his ballot for Franklin Pierce and William R. King. From 1854 to 1859 Baker was a trustee of Norwich University, and he received an honorary Master of Arts degree from Norwich in 1855.",
"Joby Baker\n Joseph N. \"Joby\" Baker (born March 26, 1934) is a Canadian-born actor and painter.",
"John Holland Baker\n John Holland Baker (4 December 1841 – 5 February 1930) was a New Zealand surveyor and public servant. He was born in Chilcomb, Hampshire, England on 4 December 1841. A son of the Rev. Thomas Feilding Baker, Rector of Cressingham Parish, Norfolk, and Catherine Mathias, he was educated at Yarmouth Grammar School, and in Germany, where he lived with his parents in Königswinter. He left school at 15 after he punched a master. He was sent to New Zealand when his uncle, Octavius Mathias, offered to take one of the Baker sons. He arrived in Lyttelton on the Maori during 1857. In the following year, he started an apprenticeship as ",
"Christopher W. Baker\n Christopher William Baker RBA (born 1956) is an English landscape painter, watercolourist, draughtsman and author from Sussex, England.",
"Richard Thomas Baker\n Baker was born in Woolwich, England, son of Richard Thomas Baker, a blacksmith, and his wife Sarah, née Colkett. The boy was educated at Woolwich National School and Peterborough Training Institution, later gaining science and art certificates from South Kensington Museum. He was engaged as a senior assistant-master by the School Board for London in 1875 but resigned in July 1879 to emigrate to Australia.",
"Carl Baker\n Baker's career was forged at Southport. Spotted playing for Prescot by Southport manager Liam Watson, Baker was quickly snapped up by the Merseyside club, and soon established himself as one of non-league's exciting talents. He was an important member of the Southport Conference North Championship winning team in the 2004–05 season. In 2005, he was a member of the Middlesex Wanderers F.C. that visited Japan. After again playing an important role in helping keep Southport in the Conference National in the 2005–06 season, Baker signed his first full-time contract, for the next season as the club turned fully professional, whilst much of the championship winning, and relegation surviving team, (fan favourites Steve Dickinson, ",
"Bart Baker\n Bartholomew Baker (born May 5, 1986), is an American entertainer, web-based comedian, video producer, singer, rapper, and parody artist. He is best known for making parody videos of notable songs, which he would post on his YouTube channel. He was described as one of the most prolific makers of music parodies by Billboard. Besides being active on YouTube, where he has more than 10 million subscribers, (after leaving YouTube, his subscriber count fell back down to 9.95 Million Subscribers), Baker is known for his short videos on Vine and also Live.ly, where he was once a top-earning broadcaster. His videos have been described as 'high-quality parodies that keep to the originals very well'. In 2018, Baker was signed to World Star Hip Hop and released a song called \"Popper\" under the stage name of Lil Kloroxxx and started a life as a rapper.",
"Charles S.L. Baker\n Baker was born into slavery on August 3, 1859, in Savannah, Missouri. His mother, Betsy Mackay, died when he was three months old, leaving him to be brought up by the wife of his owner, Sallie Mackay, and his father, Abraham Baker. He was the youngest of five children, Susie, Peter, Annie, and Ellen, all of whom were freed after the Civil War. Baker later received an education at Franklin College. His father was employed as an express agent, and once Baker turned fifteen, he became his assistant. Baker worked with wagons and linchpins, which sparked an interest in mechanical sciences.",
"Frank Baker (politician)\n Baker is the 12th child of John and Eileen Baker, and was raised in Saint Margaret's Parish (now St. Teresa of Calcutta) area of Dorchester. He graduated in 1986 from Don Technical High School where he has studied printing trade. Between 1987 and 2010 he worked in the printing department at the City of Boston. He is a member of the CWA/Boston Typographical Union. He is married to his wife Today and they have two children.",
"Christopher W. Baker\n He trained at West Surrey College of Art and Design and at the University of Exeter, and has been the recipient of several awards and scholarships including a Royal Academy Landscape Scholarship and an Arts Council Grant. He has exhibited extensively in the UK and Canada. Baker has been a regular contributor to The Artist Magazine since 1987, and has contributed to art textbooks on painting technique. He played the part of an artist and painting tutor in Joanna Hogg's film Archipelago, shot on Tresco, Isles of Scilly in 2009. It was shown at the 2010 London Film Festival. and is released in the UK on 4 March 2011. He exhibited works ",
"Samuel Baker\n Baker lived as a reputed Victorian Nimrod and was a milestone in the history of modern hunting through his works and deeds. He was proud of his British heritage and was an advocate of the virtues of his nation, and a fighter against slavery. An acclaimed sportsman, he likely started hunting in the Scottish Highlands; his skills were renowned, and he once gave a demonstration to friends in Scotland of how he could, with dogs, successfully hunt down a stag armed only with a knife, he did the same with the large boars in the jungles of Ceylon. He hunted consistently until his last years, in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. Baker forged his skills chasing Asian ",
"Henry Baker (naturalist)\n He was born in Chancery Lane, London, 8 May 1698, the son of William Baker, a clerk in chancery. In his fifteenth year he was apprenticed to John Parker, a bookseller. At the close of his indentures in 1720, Baker went on a visit to John Forster, a relative, who had a deaf-mute daughter, then eight years old. As a successful therapist of deaf people, he went on to make money, by a system that he kept secret. His work as therapist caught the attention of Daniel Defoe, whose youngest daughter Sophia he married on 30 April 1729. In 1740 he was elected fellow of the Society of Antiquaries and of the Royal Society. In 1744 he received the Copley gold medal for microscopical observations on the crystallization of saline particles. He was one of the founders of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce in 1754 (later the Society of Arts), and for some time acted as its secretary. He died in London, and was buried at St Mary le Strand.",
"1905 Finsbury East by-election\n The Conservatives selected Nathaniel Cohen as their candidate to defend the seat. He had contested the 1900 general election as Conservative candidate for Penryn and Falmouth. The local Liberal Association re-selected 53-year-old Allen Baker to challenge for the seat. He was a Canadian- born engineer, specialising in machinery for the confectionery and bakery industries. He was a Quaker. Baker followed his father's professional footsteps and entered the family engineering business. In 1879 they set up business in Finsbury. As Quakers, the Baker family tried to run a model business taking a paternal interest in the welfare of their workforce and introducing schemes such as shorter working days, encouraging employees to participate in health and insurance plans and fostering a relaxed approach on the shop floor, perhaps to the detriment of profits. Baker and Sons also had connections to the motor car industry and in around 1902, the company held an agency for the American car manufacturers Stevens-Duryea. Baker had represented East Finsbury on the London County Council (LCC) as a Progressive since 1895. During his time on the LCC he acted as Chairman of the Highways Committee."
] |
In what country is Lewałd Wielki? | [
"Poland",
"POL",
"Republic of Poland",
"PL",
"Polska"
] | country | Lewałd Wielki | 2,458,135 | 49 | [
{
"id": "1439283",
"title": "Lewałd Wielki",
"text": " Lewałd Wielki (Groß Lehwalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dąbrówno, within Ostróda County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km north-west of Dąbrówno, 28 km south of Ostróda, and 50 km south-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 240.",
"score": "1.6938739"
},
{
"id": "31642224",
"title": "Lewki, Bielsk County",
"text": " Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bielsk Podlaski, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Bielsk Podlaski and 43 km south of the regional capital Białystok.",
"score": "1.5213609"
},
{
"id": "32186081",
"title": "Lewki, Sokółka County",
"text": " Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dąbrowa Białostocka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km west of Dąbrowa Białostocka, 35 km north-west of Sokółka, and 60 km north of the regional capital Białystok.",
"score": "1.5146441"
},
{
"id": "31404700",
"title": "Lewsze",
"text": " Lewsze is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Michałowo, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in northeastern Poland, near the border with Belarus.",
"score": "1.4903302"
},
{
"id": "8798343",
"title": "Lewków",
"text": " Lewków is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostrów Wielkopolski, within Ostrów Wielkopolski County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 13 km north-east of Ostrów Wielkopolski and 102 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 3,670",
"score": "1.4188833"
},
{
"id": "2449887",
"title": "Lewików",
"text": " Lewików is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łaskarzew, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Łaskarzew, 14 km south-west of Garwolin, and 59 km south-east of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.4016194"
},
{
"id": "8084443",
"title": "Lewice, Greater Poland Voivodeship",
"text": " Lewice (Lewitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Międzychód, within Międzychód County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.",
"score": "1.3915474"
},
{
"id": "3241521",
"title": "Sandra Lewandowska",
"text": " Sandra Magdalena Lewandowska (born 8 June 1977) is a Polish parliamentarian who served in the national Parliament (Sejm) of the Republic of Poland of the V Sejm cadency from September 2005 to October 2007. As a Member of Parliament, she was a Member of Environmental Protection, Natural Resources and Forestry Committee, Enterprise Development Committee and Administration and Interior Affairs Committee. She was a Chairperson of Poland - USA Bilateral Parliamentary Group and a Member of Poland - Great Britain Bilateral Parliamentary Group. She specialized in Environmental Protection and Renewable Energy Resources. She was also a Vice-Chairperson of the Program Committee of the Polish Television S.A. in Opole 2006-2010.",
"score": "1.3912152"
},
{
"id": "16009465",
"title": "Szczepan Lewna",
"text": " Szczepan Lewna is a politician and Kashubian activist. He was the chairman of Kashubian-Pomeranian Association in the period 1983–1986.",
"score": "1.3821619"
},
{
"id": "31683292",
"title": "Nowe Lewkowo",
"text": " Nowe Lewkowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus, on the river Narewka. The village has a population of 300.",
"score": "1.381861"
},
{
"id": "8798344",
"title": "Lewkowiec",
"text": " Lewkowiec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostrów Wielkopolski, within Ostrów Wielkopolski County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-east of Ostrów Wielkopolski and 99 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań.",
"score": "1.3685052"
},
{
"id": "16539484",
"title": "Lewaszówka",
"text": " Lewaszówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jastrzębia, within Radom County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-east of Jastrzębia, 21 km north-east of Radom, and 78 km south of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.3639019"
},
{
"id": "27427234",
"title": "Lipiny Górne-Lewki",
"text": " Lipiny Górne-Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Potok Górny, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Potok Górny, 24 km south-west of Biłgoraj, and 95 km south of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 358.",
"score": "1.3523616"
},
{
"id": "8299069",
"title": "Lewiczynek",
"text": " Lewiczynek is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Miedzichowo, within Nowy Tomyśl County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 18 km north-west of Nowy Tomyśl and 65 km west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has an approximate population of 104.",
"score": "1.3522761"
},
{
"id": "2449591",
"title": "Łebki Wielkie",
"text": " Łebki Wielkie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ojrzeń, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Ojrzeń, 8 km south of Ciechanów, and 70 km north of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.3452047"
},
{
"id": "24990934",
"title": "Lewin Brzeski railway station",
"text": " Lewin Brzeski railway station is a station in Lewin Brzeski, Opole Voivodeship, Poland.",
"score": "1.3428009"
},
{
"id": "31683332",
"title": "Stare Lewkowo",
"text": " Stare Lewkowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus, on the river Narewka. It lies approximately 7 km north-west of Narewka, 19 km north-east of Hajnówka, and 45 km south-east of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 450.",
"score": "1.3414876"
},
{
"id": "3249001",
"title": "Lewiczyn, Mława County",
"text": " Lewiczyn is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lipowiec Kościelny, within Mława County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-east of Lipowiec Kościelny, 7 km west of Mława, and 114 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"score": "1.3403666"
},
{
"id": "16205884",
"title": "Wisłok Wielki",
"text": " Soviet Socialist Republic. Others who remained were subsequently deported to counties along Poland's Baltic coast, especially in the newly acquired former German territories in northwestern Poland, during the so-called Akcja Wisła organized by Polish communist authorities. During the mid-1950s, large investments in the State Farms (communal farms DG) were made in Wisłok Wielki. Major improvements in local communications and infrastructure were also undertaken. The Byzantine-styled village church in Lower Wisłok Wielki, originally built in 1785, was destroyed in 1946, although the remnants of a cemetery are still visible. The ecclesiastical structure in Upper Wisłok Wielki, on the other hand, has survived.",
"score": "1.3364356"
},
{
"id": "5950352",
"title": "Iwona Lewandowska",
"text": " Iwona Lewandowska-Bernardelli (born 19 February 1985) is a Polish long distance runner who specialises in the marathon. She competed in the women's marathon event at the 2016 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.3326273"
}
] | [
"Lewałd Wielki\n Lewałd Wielki (Groß Lehwalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dąbrówno, within Ostróda County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km north-west of Dąbrówno, 28 km south of Ostróda, and 50 km south-west of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 240.",
"Lewki, Bielsk County\n Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bielsk Podlaski, within Bielsk County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km south of Bielsk Podlaski and 43 km south of the regional capital Białystok.",
"Lewki, Sokółka County\n Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dąbrowa Białostocka, within Sokółka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km west of Dąbrowa Białostocka, 35 km north-west of Sokółka, and 60 km north of the regional capital Białystok.",
"Lewsze\n Lewsze is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Michałowo, within Białystok County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in northeastern Poland, near the border with Belarus.",
"Lewków\n Lewków is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostrów Wielkopolski, within Ostrów Wielkopolski County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 13 km north-east of Ostrów Wielkopolski and 102 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań. The village has a population of 3,670",
"Lewików\n Lewików is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Łaskarzew, within Garwolin County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Łaskarzew, 14 km south-west of Garwolin, and 59 km south-east of Warsaw.",
"Lewice, Greater Poland Voivodeship\n Lewice (Lewitz) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Międzychód, within Międzychód County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland.",
"Sandra Lewandowska\n Sandra Magdalena Lewandowska (born 8 June 1977) is a Polish parliamentarian who served in the national Parliament (Sejm) of the Republic of Poland of the V Sejm cadency from September 2005 to October 2007. As a Member of Parliament, she was a Member of Environmental Protection, Natural Resources and Forestry Committee, Enterprise Development Committee and Administration and Interior Affairs Committee. She was a Chairperson of Poland - USA Bilateral Parliamentary Group and a Member of Poland - Great Britain Bilateral Parliamentary Group. She specialized in Environmental Protection and Renewable Energy Resources. She was also a Vice-Chairperson of the Program Committee of the Polish Television S.A. in Opole 2006-2010.",
"Szczepan Lewna\n Szczepan Lewna is a politician and Kashubian activist. He was the chairman of Kashubian-Pomeranian Association in the period 1983–1986.",
"Nowe Lewkowo\n Nowe Lewkowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus, on the river Narewka. The village has a population of 300.",
"Lewkowiec\n Lewkowiec is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ostrów Wielkopolski, within Ostrów Wielkopolski County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-east of Ostrów Wielkopolski and 99 km south-east of the regional capital Poznań.",
"Lewaszówka\n Lewaszówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Jastrzębia, within Radom County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 9 km north-east of Jastrzębia, 21 km north-east of Radom, and 78 km south of Warsaw.",
"Lipiny Górne-Lewki\n Lipiny Górne-Lewki is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Potok Górny, within Biłgoraj County, Lublin Voivodeship, in eastern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Potok Górny, 24 km south-west of Biłgoraj, and 95 km south of the regional capital Lublin. The village has a population of 358.",
"Lewiczynek\n Lewiczynek is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Miedzichowo, within Nowy Tomyśl County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 18 km north-west of Nowy Tomyśl and 65 km west of the regional capital Poznań. The village has an approximate population of 104.",
"Łebki Wielkie\n Łebki Wielkie is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ojrzeń, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 6 km north-east of Ojrzeń, 8 km south of Ciechanów, and 70 km north of Warsaw.",
"Lewin Brzeski railway station\n Lewin Brzeski railway station is a station in Lewin Brzeski, Opole Voivodeship, Poland.",
"Stare Lewkowo\n Stare Lewkowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Narewka, within Hajnówka County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland, close to the border with Belarus, on the river Narewka. It lies approximately 7 km north-west of Narewka, 19 km north-east of Hajnówka, and 45 km south-east of the regional capital Białystok. The village has a population of 450.",
"Lewiczyn, Mława County\n Lewiczyn is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lipowiec Kościelny, within Mława County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately 7 km north-east of Lipowiec Kościelny, 7 km west of Mława, and 114 km north-west of Warsaw.",
"Wisłok Wielki\n Soviet Socialist Republic. Others who remained were subsequently deported to counties along Poland's Baltic coast, especially in the newly acquired former German territories in northwestern Poland, during the so-called Akcja Wisła organized by Polish communist authorities. During the mid-1950s, large investments in the State Farms (communal farms DG) were made in Wisłok Wielki. Major improvements in local communications and infrastructure were also undertaken. The Byzantine-styled village church in Lower Wisłok Wielki, originally built in 1785, was destroyed in 1946, although the remnants of a cemetery are still visible. The ecclesiastical structure in Upper Wisłok Wielki, on the other hand, has survived.",
"Iwona Lewandowska\n Iwona Lewandowska-Bernardelli (born 19 February 1985) is a Polish long distance runner who specialises in the marathon. She competed in the women's marathon event at the 2016 Summer Olympics."
] |
In what city was Phil Williams born? | [
"Birkenhead"
] | place of birth | Phil Williams (footballer, born 1958) | 5,440,620 | 23 | [
{
"id": "29193997",
"title": "Phil Williams (boxer)",
"text": " Phil Williams, alias The Drill, (born July 12, 1977) is an American cruiserweight southpaw professional boxer. Williams was born in Queens, New York City. He moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota as a child, and still lives in Minneapolis where he works as a barber.",
"score": "1.8638055"
},
{
"id": "3859212",
"title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)",
"text": " Williams was born in Tredegar in the industrial valleys of south Wales and grew up in Bargoed, another industrial town. He was educated at Lewis School, Pengam and Clare College, Cambridge, and became a leading space scientist. He was appointed Professor of Solar Terrestrial Physics at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and simultaneously became economic spokesman for Plaid Cymru.",
"score": "1.8574611"
},
{
"id": "3201508",
"title": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1963)",
"text": " Philip Williams (born 7 February 1963) is a footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Crewe Alexandra, Wigan Athletic and Chester City.",
"score": "1.7895253"
},
{
"id": "31850028",
"title": "Phil Williams (footballer, born 1958)",
"text": "For other people of the same name, see Phil Williams Philip Williams (born 5 April 1958, Birkenhead) is an English former footballer. A product of Chester's youth policy, Williams made a solitary appearance in The Football League for the club when wearing the number nine shirt during a 0–0 draw at home to Preston North End on 11 September 1976. He did not make any further first-team appearances for Chester and later played for Cray Wanderers.",
"score": "1.7418752"
},
{
"id": "4087121",
"title": "Phil Handy",
"text": " Born in San Leandro, California, he grew up in Hayward - Union City, California.",
"score": "1.6614459"
},
{
"id": "3859211",
"title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)",
"text": " Professor Philip James Stradling Williams (11 January 1939 – 10 June 2003) was a Welsh politician for Plaid Cymru and scientist.",
"score": "1.623678"
},
{
"id": "30826227",
"title": "Phil Williams (presenter)",
"text": " Phil Williams (born 2 August 1974) is a British radio news reporter and presenter who worked for 18 years on BBC Radio 5 Live until 2019. A graduate of the BBC trainee reporters scheme, Williams soon joined the corporation's Greater Manchester Radio (GMR) station as a newsreader and presenter. His time at the station included reporting in the immediate aftermath of a Provisional IRA bombing in the city. Three years in a similar role at BBC Radio 1 followed before Williams transferred to Radio 5 Live, initially as an entertainment reporter. He formerly hosted the Weekend Breakfast show, firstly with Anna Foster, and then with Eleanor Oldroyd on Saturdays and with Caroline Barker ",
"score": "1.6068029"
},
{
"id": "361209",
"title": "Phil Williams (Alabama senator)",
"text": " Phillip W. Williams Jr. (born March 20, 1965, in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey) is a Republican politician in the US state of Alabama. He was a member of the Alabama Senate, representing the 10th District, from 2010 until 2019.",
"score": "1.5930204"
},
{
"id": "32426802",
"title": "Phil Cushion",
"text": " Phil Cushion was born in Wigan, Greater Manchester, England.",
"score": "1.5873938"
},
{
"id": "3531871",
"title": "C. K. Williams",
"text": " The American poet C.K. Williams was born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 4, 1936. His parents were Paul B. Williams and Dossie Kasdin. His grandparents came to the USA from Kiev, then a Russian city, and Lvov, Ukraine. He went to Columbia High School in Maplewood, attended Bucknell University for one year, then moved on to and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. He started writing poetry during his second year at Penn, and half-way through junior year he left for Paris. At that time, he wrote \"I fell into a period of lacerating loneliness. I'd always been a little shy but now something, ",
"score": "1.5662718"
},
{
"id": "26470133",
"title": "Phil Buckman",
"text": " Originally from Queens, New York, Phil Buckman arrived in Los Angeles after living in Baltimore and Boston, and attending college in San Diego.",
"score": "1.5623028"
},
{
"id": "3859213",
"title": "Phil Williams (Welsh politician)",
"text": " He contested the 1968 Caerphilly by-election, where he came close to unseating Labour in a safe seat, and became the second Chairman of Plaid Cymru in 1970, a post he held until 1976; when he became Vice President of the party. He was responsible for policy and research in the party for many years. From 1999 to 2003, he was a Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the electoral region of South Wales East. Williams also stood for election in Blaenau Gwent in 1999 and got 21% of the vote.",
"score": "1.5537972"
},
{
"id": "9923641",
"title": "Phil Popham",
"text": " He was born in 1965 in Redditch, Worcestershire, England, and graduated with a BSc (Hons) in management studies from the University of Aston, Birmingham.",
"score": "1.5514653"
},
{
"id": "31651019",
"title": "Tad Williams",
"text": " Robert Paul \"Tad\" Williams was born in San Jose, California on March 14, 1957. He grew up in Palo Alto, the town that grew up around Stanford University. He attended Palo Alto Senior High School. His family was close, and he and his brothers were always encouraged in their creativity. His mother gave him the nickname \"Tad\" after the young characters in Walt Kelly's comic strip Pogo. The semi-autobiographical character Pogo Cashman, who appears in some of his stories, is a reference to the nickname. Before becoming a full time fiction author Williams held many jobs including delivering newspapers, food service, DJ and station music director for college radio station KFJC, shoe sales, branch manager ",
"score": "1.5486782"
},
{
"id": "5313927",
"title": "Phil Costa",
"text": " Costa was born on 24 July 1949 at Guildford, New South Wales. Prior to his election he was a primary school teacher and principal of public schools in the Oaks and Buxton. He was named the Citizen of the Year in Wollondilly Shire in 1984.",
"score": "1.548553"
},
{
"id": "9438272",
"title": "Phil Curls",
"text": " Curls was born in Kansas City, Missouri. His father helped found Freedom, Inc., the oldest African American political club in the country. He graduated from DeLaSalle High School and Rockhurst College in Kansas City.",
"score": "1.5470108"
},
{
"id": "33075105",
"title": "Neil Williams (artist)",
"text": " Williams was born in Bluff, Utah. He was in the process of moving to Brazil when he died in New York City at the age of 53. Williams graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1959; showed his work in 1959 at the City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco and moved to New York City that same year. He began exhibiting his paintings in New York in 1960. He was a regular patron of Max's Kansas City throughout the period of the mid-1960s and early 1970s when it belonged to his friend Mickey Ruskin. His paintings were exhibited at important art galleries in New York including solo exhibitions at the Green Gallery (1964), and the André Emmerich Gallery (1966 and 1968) both on 57th Street in Manhattan and at the Dwan Gallery in Los Angeles (1966). His work was included in several important group ",
"score": "1.5359421"
},
{
"id": "11418159",
"title": "Phil Vischer",
"text": " Phil Vischer was born June 16, 1966 in Muscatine, Iowa, United States, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois. For three semesters, Vischer attended St. Paul Bible College (currently known as Crown College); around that time, he also worked at a small Christian video production company.",
"score": "1.5314051"
},
{
"id": "32119613",
"title": "Jay Williams (author)",
"text": " Williams was born in Buffalo, New York, the son of Max and Lillian Jacobson. He cited the experience of growing up as the son of a vaudeville show producer as leading him to pursue his acting career as early as college. He attended both the University of Pennsylvania (1932–33) and Columbia University (1934), participating in amateur theatrical productions.",
"score": "1.526823"
},
{
"id": "6721492",
"title": "Karl Kani",
"text": " Carl Williams was born in Costa Rica to a Panamanian father and Costa Rican mother. The family migrated to the United States in the late 1960s, and he grew up in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn.",
"score": "1.5267334"
}
] | [
"Phil Williams (boxer)\n Phil Williams, alias The Drill, (born July 12, 1977) is an American cruiserweight southpaw professional boxer. Williams was born in Queens, New York City. He moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota as a child, and still lives in Minneapolis where he works as a barber.",
"Phil Williams (Welsh politician)\n Williams was born in Tredegar in the industrial valleys of south Wales and grew up in Bargoed, another industrial town. He was educated at Lewis School, Pengam and Clare College, Cambridge, and became a leading space scientist. He was appointed Professor of Solar Terrestrial Physics at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, and simultaneously became economic spokesman for Plaid Cymru.",
"Phil Williams (footballer, born 1963)\n Philip Williams (born 7 February 1963) is a footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Crewe Alexandra, Wigan Athletic and Chester City.",
"Phil Williams (footballer, born 1958)\nFor other people of the same name, see Phil Williams Philip Williams (born 5 April 1958, Birkenhead) is an English former footballer. A product of Chester's youth policy, Williams made a solitary appearance in The Football League for the club when wearing the number nine shirt during a 0–0 draw at home to Preston North End on 11 September 1976. He did not make any further first-team appearances for Chester and later played for Cray Wanderers.",
"Phil Handy\n Born in San Leandro, California, he grew up in Hayward - Union City, California.",
"Phil Williams (Welsh politician)\n Professor Philip James Stradling Williams (11 January 1939 – 10 June 2003) was a Welsh politician for Plaid Cymru and scientist.",
"Phil Williams (presenter)\n Phil Williams (born 2 August 1974) is a British radio news reporter and presenter who worked for 18 years on BBC Radio 5 Live until 2019. A graduate of the BBC trainee reporters scheme, Williams soon joined the corporation's Greater Manchester Radio (GMR) station as a newsreader and presenter. His time at the station included reporting in the immediate aftermath of a Provisional IRA bombing in the city. Three years in a similar role at BBC Radio 1 followed before Williams transferred to Radio 5 Live, initially as an entertainment reporter. He formerly hosted the Weekend Breakfast show, firstly with Anna Foster, and then with Eleanor Oldroyd on Saturdays and with Caroline Barker ",
"Phil Williams (Alabama senator)\n Phillip W. Williams Jr. (born March 20, 1965, in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey) is a Republican politician in the US state of Alabama. He was a member of the Alabama Senate, representing the 10th District, from 2010 until 2019.",
"Phil Cushion\n Phil Cushion was born in Wigan, Greater Manchester, England.",
"C. K. Williams\n The American poet C.K. Williams was born in Newark, New Jersey, on November 4, 1936. His parents were Paul B. Williams and Dossie Kasdin. His grandparents came to the USA from Kiev, then a Russian city, and Lvov, Ukraine. He went to Columbia High School in Maplewood, attended Bucknell University for one year, then moved on to and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania. He started writing poetry during his second year at Penn, and half-way through junior year he left for Paris. At that time, he wrote \"I fell into a period of lacerating loneliness. I'd always been a little shy but now something, ",
"Phil Buckman\n Originally from Queens, New York, Phil Buckman arrived in Los Angeles after living in Baltimore and Boston, and attending college in San Diego.",
"Phil Williams (Welsh politician)\n He contested the 1968 Caerphilly by-election, where he came close to unseating Labour in a safe seat, and became the second Chairman of Plaid Cymru in 1970, a post he held until 1976; when he became Vice President of the party. He was responsible for policy and research in the party for many years. From 1999 to 2003, he was a Member of the National Assembly for Wales for the electoral region of South Wales East. Williams also stood for election in Blaenau Gwent in 1999 and got 21% of the vote.",
"Phil Popham\n He was born in 1965 in Redditch, Worcestershire, England, and graduated with a BSc (Hons) in management studies from the University of Aston, Birmingham.",
"Tad Williams\n Robert Paul \"Tad\" Williams was born in San Jose, California on March 14, 1957. He grew up in Palo Alto, the town that grew up around Stanford University. He attended Palo Alto Senior High School. His family was close, and he and his brothers were always encouraged in their creativity. His mother gave him the nickname \"Tad\" after the young characters in Walt Kelly's comic strip Pogo. The semi-autobiographical character Pogo Cashman, who appears in some of his stories, is a reference to the nickname. Before becoming a full time fiction author Williams held many jobs including delivering newspapers, food service, DJ and station music director for college radio station KFJC, shoe sales, branch manager ",
"Phil Costa\n Costa was born on 24 July 1949 at Guildford, New South Wales. Prior to his election he was a primary school teacher and principal of public schools in the Oaks and Buxton. He was named the Citizen of the Year in Wollondilly Shire in 1984.",
"Phil Curls\n Curls was born in Kansas City, Missouri. His father helped found Freedom, Inc., the oldest African American political club in the country. He graduated from DeLaSalle High School and Rockhurst College in Kansas City.",
"Neil Williams (artist)\n Williams was born in Bluff, Utah. He was in the process of moving to Brazil when he died in New York City at the age of 53. Williams graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1959; showed his work in 1959 at the City Lights Bookstore in San Francisco and moved to New York City that same year. He began exhibiting his paintings in New York in 1960. He was a regular patron of Max's Kansas City throughout the period of the mid-1960s and early 1970s when it belonged to his friend Mickey Ruskin. His paintings were exhibited at important art galleries in New York including solo exhibitions at the Green Gallery (1964), and the André Emmerich Gallery (1966 and 1968) both on 57th Street in Manhattan and at the Dwan Gallery in Los Angeles (1966). His work was included in several important group ",
"Phil Vischer\n Phil Vischer was born June 16, 1966 in Muscatine, Iowa, United States, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois. For three semesters, Vischer attended St. Paul Bible College (currently known as Crown College); around that time, he also worked at a small Christian video production company.",
"Jay Williams (author)\n Williams was born in Buffalo, New York, the son of Max and Lillian Jacobson. He cited the experience of growing up as the son of a vaudeville show producer as leading him to pursue his acting career as early as college. He attended both the University of Pennsylvania (1932–33) and Columbia University (1934), participating in amateur theatrical productions.",
"Karl Kani\n Carl Williams was born in Costa Rica to a Panamanian father and Costa Rican mother. The family migrated to the United States in the late 1960s, and he grew up in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn."
] |
What is Kyaw Swe's occupation? | [
"film director",
"movie director",
"director",
"motion picture director",
"actor",
"actress",
"actors",
"actresses"
] | occupation | Kyaw Swe (actor) | 4,895,544 | 97 | [
{
"id": "3259638",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)",
"text": " Kyaw Swe was born in Myaing, Magway Region, Myanmar on 1 December 1960. He graduated with B.A (Myanmar). His former work is School teacher.",
"score": "1.9203317"
},
{
"id": "3259637",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)",
"text": " Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ; born 1 December 1979) is a Burmese politician who currently serves as a House of Nationalities member of parliament for Magway Region No. 11 constituency. He is a member of the National League for Democracy.",
"score": "1.9011418"
},
{
"id": "13490102",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (minister)",
"text": " Kyaw Swe was born on 27 November 1959 to Mya Soe and Daw Kyi in Thepyintaw, Kyaukpadaung Township, Mandalay Division (now Mandalay Region, Myanmar).",
"score": "1.8390934"
},
{
"id": "3259639",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)",
"text": " He is a member of the National League for Democracy Party politician. In the 2015 Myanmar general election, he was elected as Amyotha Hluttaw representative from Magway Region No. 11 parliamentary constituency.",
"score": "1.8347538"
},
{
"id": "2548609",
"title": "Kyaw Tint Swe",
"text": " Kyaw Tint Swe joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1968 and served in various positions in the embassies of Myanmar in Israel, Malaysia, Germany, Thailand and Japan. From 1990 to 1993, and from 1997 to 2001, he served as Secretary of Myanmar’s National Commission for Environmental Affairs. He also served as Chairman of the Senior Officials for the Environment for the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), From 2001 to 2010, he served as the Ambassador of Myanmar to the United Nations. He also served as Vice-Chairman of the Myanmar National Human Rights Commission from 2011 to 2013. In 2013, he worked closely with Aung San Suu Kyi on the Letpadaung Copper Mine Investigation Commission.",
"score": "1.7617055"
},
{
"id": "29312437",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)",
"text": " Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ; 10 February 1924 – 15 August 1982) was a Burmese actor and film director.",
"score": "1.7532425"
},
{
"id": "2548608",
"title": "Kyaw Tint Swe",
"text": " Kyaw Tint Swe (ကျော်တင့်ဆွေ; born 19 March 1945 ) is a Burmese politician and former Minister for the Office of the State Counsellor of Myanmar.",
"score": "1.7518752"
},
{
"id": "29312438",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)",
"text": " Kyaw Swe was born Maw Ni in 1924 in Yangon to U Ba Nit and Daw Ohn Sein. He attended the St. John's High School, and during World War II he was chief of law in Bago. He joined BDA during the war. He entered into film around 1945. He became a film actor, changing his name to Kyaw Swe, and appeared in the film Saw Ya San Sha, a silent film, directed by Ba Shin. It was produced by the British-Burma Film company (later, \"Nyunt Myanmar\" ). He moved to the A-One Film Company and he starred in the films of \"Bogyoke\", \"Ta Thwe Ta Mya\", and \"Ahtauttaw\" and \"Chit Ye Baw\" directed by Chin Sein (Shwe Nyar Maung). He also starred in \"Bo Aung Din\" and \"Thar Bo Aung Din\" directed by ",
"score": "1.7291453"
},
{
"id": "13490101",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (minister)",
"text": " Lt. General Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ) is the former Minister of Home Affairs of Myanmar, in office from 2016 to 2020. Previously, he served as Commander of South-west Command in Pathein, Ayeyarwady Region.",
"score": "1.7278459"
},
{
"id": "8712216",
"title": "Hla Myint Swe (artist)",
"text": " Hla Myint Swe (လှမြင့်ဆွေ ; born 1948) is an artist, photographer and author from Myanmar. He was born in Bamaw, Kachin State, Myanmar in 1948. He attended the Defence Services Academy, Pyin Oo Lwin and after graduating served in various positions as an army officer. As of 2010, he was head of the Public Relations and Information Department of the Yangon City Development Committee.",
"score": "1.7145084"
},
{
"id": "9351178",
"title": "Kyaw Kyaw",
"text": " He was born on 7 July 1950 in Mrauk U, Rakhine State, Burma(Myanmar). He graduated with B.A(L.L.B) from Yangon University. His previous job is a lawyer.",
"score": "1.6928955"
},
{
"id": "2262020",
"title": "Nanda Kyaw Swa",
"text": " Nanda Kyaw Swa (နန္ဒကျော်စွာ) was the Deputy Speaker of the Pyithu Hluttaw, the lower house of Burma's parliament, the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw. He was elected to the post from 31 January 2011 to 29 January 2016. He was also chair of the Rights Committee in the Lower House (2011–16). His father Tin Pe, is a retired Brigadier General.",
"score": "1.692842"
},
{
"id": "11186565",
"title": "Hla Swe",
"text": " Hla Swe joined the Myanmar Army in 1978 and most of his 25 years of service was spent fighting armed ethnic groups in border areas. In 2003, he took up an administrative role for the State Peace and Development Council military government in Gangaw Township, Magwe Region. In 2006, he was retired as a lieutenant colonel in Myanmar Army and took up the post of director of Myanmar Radio and Television.",
"score": "1.6857879"
},
{
"id": "6335185",
"title": "Myint Swe (born 1965)",
"text": " Myint Swe (born 18 March 1965) is a Burmese politician and military officer who currently serves as a military representative for Amyotha Hluttaw. He is a member of Amyotha Hluttaw Women and Children's Rights Committee.",
"score": "1.683677"
},
{
"id": "14002650",
"title": "Kyaw Soe",
"text": " Kyaw Soe (ကျော်စိုး; born on 16 October 1944 ) is a former Deputy Minister for Science and Technology, after his appointment on 15 November 2004. He was previously the Director General of Department of Technical and Vocational Education.",
"score": "1.6801727"
},
{
"id": "2262196",
"title": "Kyaw Swa Khaing",
"text": " Kyaw Swa Khaing (ကျော်စွာခိုင်, variously spelt Kyaw Swar Khaing, Kyaw Swar Khine) was the Minister of the President's Office of Myanmar (Burma) and a former Deputy Minister for Industry-2. He held the rank of Major General before resigning his military post to compete in the 2010 Burmese general election.",
"score": "1.6799576"
},
{
"id": "9033707",
"title": "Soe Kyaw Kyaw",
"text": " Soe Kyaw Kyaw (စိုးကျော်ကျော်; born 16 February 1991) is a footballer from Burma, and a striker for the Myanmar national football team and Ayeyawady United. He currently plays for Ayeyawady United in Myanmar National League.",
"score": "1.6731079"
},
{
"id": "29312440",
"title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)",
"text": "Saw Ya San Sha ; Bogyoke ; Ta Thwe Ta Mya ; Ahtauktaw ; Chit Ye Baw ; Son Bo Aung Din ; The Hsaung Hayman ; Phyay Yort Khway ; Min aung Min Naung ; Hpuza Nit Khine ; Pale Myetyay ; Chit Myitta ; Ma chu tar the ; the myat tar lane ; Sane ; Mwe Mwe chin Che Myin ; Thamudaya Thanyawzin (feat his own daughter) ; Poan Pamar ; Ta Char Gabar Ka Chitthu Ye Sein-ta-yit Mya-ta-yit ิิิ่*Kya-nor Ne Ko Ba Kyaw",
"score": "1.6726155"
},
{
"id": "3462745",
"title": "Kyaw Kyaw Win",
"text": " Kyaw Kyaw Win born on 10 December 1978 in Pauktaw Township, Rakhine State, Myanmar. He graduated with B.A (L.L.B) from distance education at Sittwe University. He worked Senior lawyer in the Maungdaw Township.",
"score": "1.6543381"
},
{
"id": "26056617",
"title": "Kyaw Tin",
"text": " Kyaw Tin was born on 31 October 1955 in Wuntho of Sagaing Division. He graduated with a masters degree with Mathematics from Yangon University and earned his post-graduate diploma in environmental management from Dresden University of Technology in Germany.",
"score": "1.6522865"
}
] | [
"Kyaw Swe (politician)\n Kyaw Swe was born in Myaing, Magway Region, Myanmar on 1 December 1960. He graduated with B.A (Myanmar). His former work is School teacher.",
"Kyaw Swe (politician)\n Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ; born 1 December 1979) is a Burmese politician who currently serves as a House of Nationalities member of parliament for Magway Region No. 11 constituency. He is a member of the National League for Democracy.",
"Kyaw Swe (minister)\n Kyaw Swe was born on 27 November 1959 to Mya Soe and Daw Kyi in Thepyintaw, Kyaukpadaung Township, Mandalay Division (now Mandalay Region, Myanmar).",
"Kyaw Swe (politician)\n He is a member of the National League for Democracy Party politician. In the 2015 Myanmar general election, he was elected as Amyotha Hluttaw representative from Magway Region No. 11 parliamentary constituency.",
"Kyaw Tint Swe\n Kyaw Tint Swe joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1968 and served in various positions in the embassies of Myanmar in Israel, Malaysia, Germany, Thailand and Japan. From 1990 to 1993, and from 1997 to 2001, he served as Secretary of Myanmar’s National Commission for Environmental Affairs. He also served as Chairman of the Senior Officials for the Environment for the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), From 2001 to 2010, he served as the Ambassador of Myanmar to the United Nations. He also served as Vice-Chairman of the Myanmar National Human Rights Commission from 2011 to 2013. In 2013, he worked closely with Aung San Suu Kyi on the Letpadaung Copper Mine Investigation Commission.",
"Kyaw Swe (actor)\n Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ; 10 February 1924 – 15 August 1982) was a Burmese actor and film director.",
"Kyaw Tint Swe\n Kyaw Tint Swe (ကျော်တင့်ဆွေ; born 19 March 1945 ) is a Burmese politician and former Minister for the Office of the State Counsellor of Myanmar.",
"Kyaw Swe (actor)\n Kyaw Swe was born Maw Ni in 1924 in Yangon to U Ba Nit and Daw Ohn Sein. He attended the St. John's High School, and during World War II he was chief of law in Bago. He joined BDA during the war. He entered into film around 1945. He became a film actor, changing his name to Kyaw Swe, and appeared in the film Saw Ya San Sha, a silent film, directed by Ba Shin. It was produced by the British-Burma Film company (later, \"Nyunt Myanmar\" ). He moved to the A-One Film Company and he starred in the films of \"Bogyoke\", \"Ta Thwe Ta Mya\", and \"Ahtauttaw\" and \"Chit Ye Baw\" directed by Chin Sein (Shwe Nyar Maung). He also starred in \"Bo Aung Din\" and \"Thar Bo Aung Din\" directed by ",
"Kyaw Swe (minister)\n Lt. General Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ) is the former Minister of Home Affairs of Myanmar, in office from 2016 to 2020. Previously, he served as Commander of South-west Command in Pathein, Ayeyarwady Region.",
"Hla Myint Swe (artist)\n Hla Myint Swe (လှမြင့်ဆွေ ; born 1948) is an artist, photographer and author from Myanmar. He was born in Bamaw, Kachin State, Myanmar in 1948. He attended the Defence Services Academy, Pyin Oo Lwin and after graduating served in various positions as an army officer. As of 2010, he was head of the Public Relations and Information Department of the Yangon City Development Committee.",
"Kyaw Kyaw\n He was born on 7 July 1950 in Mrauk U, Rakhine State, Burma(Myanmar). He graduated with B.A(L.L.B) from Yangon University. His previous job is a lawyer.",
"Nanda Kyaw Swa\n Nanda Kyaw Swa (နန္ဒကျော်စွာ) was the Deputy Speaker of the Pyithu Hluttaw, the lower house of Burma's parliament, the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw. He was elected to the post from 31 January 2011 to 29 January 2016. He was also chair of the Rights Committee in the Lower House (2011–16). His father Tin Pe, is a retired Brigadier General.",
"Hla Swe\n Hla Swe joined the Myanmar Army in 1978 and most of his 25 years of service was spent fighting armed ethnic groups in border areas. In 2003, he took up an administrative role for the State Peace and Development Council military government in Gangaw Township, Magwe Region. In 2006, he was retired as a lieutenant colonel in Myanmar Army and took up the post of director of Myanmar Radio and Television.",
"Myint Swe (born 1965)\n Myint Swe (born 18 March 1965) is a Burmese politician and military officer who currently serves as a military representative for Amyotha Hluttaw. He is a member of Amyotha Hluttaw Women and Children's Rights Committee.",
"Kyaw Soe\n Kyaw Soe (ကျော်စိုး; born on 16 October 1944 ) is a former Deputy Minister for Science and Technology, after his appointment on 15 November 2004. He was previously the Director General of Department of Technical and Vocational Education.",
"Kyaw Swa Khaing\n Kyaw Swa Khaing (ကျော်စွာခိုင်, variously spelt Kyaw Swar Khaing, Kyaw Swar Khine) was the Minister of the President's Office of Myanmar (Burma) and a former Deputy Minister for Industry-2. He held the rank of Major General before resigning his military post to compete in the 2010 Burmese general election.",
"Soe Kyaw Kyaw\n Soe Kyaw Kyaw (စိုးကျော်ကျော်; born 16 February 1991) is a footballer from Burma, and a striker for the Myanmar national football team and Ayeyawady United. He currently plays for Ayeyawady United in Myanmar National League.",
"Kyaw Swe (actor)\nSaw Ya San Sha ; Bogyoke ; Ta Thwe Ta Mya ; Ahtauktaw ; Chit Ye Baw ; Son Bo Aung Din ; The Hsaung Hayman ; Phyay Yort Khway ; Min aung Min Naung ; Hpuza Nit Khine ; Pale Myetyay ; Chit Myitta ; Ma chu tar the ; the myat tar lane ; Sane ; Mwe Mwe chin Che Myin ; Thamudaya Thanyawzin (feat his own daughter) ; Poan Pamar ; Ta Char Gabar Ka Chitthu Ye Sein-ta-yit Mya-ta-yit ิิิ่*Kya-nor Ne Ko Ba Kyaw",
"Kyaw Kyaw Win\n Kyaw Kyaw Win born on 10 December 1978 in Pauktaw Township, Rakhine State, Myanmar. He graduated with B.A (L.L.B) from distance education at Sittwe University. He worked Senior lawyer in the Maungdaw Township.",
"Kyaw Tin\n Kyaw Tin was born on 31 October 1955 in Wuntho of Sagaing Division. He graduated with a masters degree with Mathematics from Yangon University and earned his post-graduate diploma in environmental management from Dresden University of Technology in Germany."
] |
In what country is Lätäseno? | [
"Finland",
"Republic of Finland",
"Finnia",
"Land of Thousand Lakes",
"fi",
"Suomi",
"Suomen tasavalta",
"Republiken Finland",
"🇫🇮",
"FIN"
] | country | Lätäseno | 1,739,387 | 88 | [
{
"id": "28555236",
"title": "Lätäseno",
"text": " Lätäseno Leahttáseatnu (Northern Sami), is a river of Finland in Finnish Lapland. It is a tributary of Muonio River, which itself is a tributary of Torne River. The river is a popular fishing destination. It flows through the Lätäseno-Hietajoki wetland protection area. It is also part of the Poroeno-Lätäseno canoe route (which begins in the Käsivarsi Wilderness Area), and offers lean-to shelter and wilderness hut accommodation.",
"score": "1.5307052"
},
{
"id": "8125774",
"title": "Montelanico",
"text": "🇫🇷 Lagnes, France ",
"score": "1.4068358"
},
{
"id": "6807580",
"title": "Albano Laziale",
"text": "🇵🇱 Białogard, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇵🇱 Koszalin, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇱🇹 Alytus, Lithuania, since 2004 ; 🇮🇹 Savelli, Italy ; 🇩🇪 Teterow, Germany ",
"score": "1.3660169"
},
{
"id": "27344880",
"title": "La Serenísima",
"text": " brand name La Martona, which having been established in 1889, was the first dairy company of Argentina. La Martona had ceased operations in 1978, after it was declared bankruptcy due to its debts. Nevertheless, Mastellone Hnos. did not market La Martona products until 2019, when it released an economic line of milk. The company pioneered the sale of lactose-free milk in Argentina in 1984, became the market leader in the sale of yogurt (whose local consumption more than doubled between 1983 and 1988) and introduced cultured milk locally, in 1988. La Serenísima also introduced large-scale organic dairy farming in Argentina, in 1994, and became the first to fortify its products with iron sulfate.",
"score": "1.3552711"
},
{
"id": "1173441",
"title": "Lahnstein",
"text": "🏴 Kettering, England, since 1956 ; 🇫🇷 Vence, France, since 1967 ; 🇧🇫 Ouahigouya, Burkina Faso, since 1978 ; Hermsdorf, Thuringia, Germany, since December 1990 ; 🇮🇹 Montesilvano, Italy, since May 2016 ",
"score": "1.3450403"
},
{
"id": "9509609",
"title": "Crecchio",
"text": "🇮🇹 Lariano, Italy ",
"score": "1.3415301"
},
{
"id": "8126080",
"title": "Lariano",
"text": "🇷🇴 Victoria, since April 2007 ; 🇫🇷 Sausset-les-Pins, France ; 🇮🇹 Crecchio, Italy ; 🇮🇹 San Ferdinando di Puglia, Italy ",
"score": "1.3297937"
},
{
"id": "4428422",
"title": "Lago di Tenno",
"text": " Lago di Tenno is a lake at Tenno in Trentino, Italy. At an elevation of 550 m, its surface area is 2.5 km². The lake was formed around the year 1100 following a large landslide that blocked the course of the river Rì Sec, which is currently the main tributary of the lake. In the southern portion of the lake there is a small island. The level of the lake varies over the years depending on the flow rate of the tributaries. In the years when the level is low this island becomes a kind of promontory. This area is protected by the Autonomous Province of Trento as a biotope.",
"score": "1.3297695"
},
{
"id": "10393415",
"title": "La Strada International Association",
"text": " La Strada International (LSI) is an international NGO network addressing the trafficking of persons in Europe. The organisation was established in October 2004 and includes members from Belarus, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Moldova, the Netherlands, Poland, and Ukraine and an International Secretariat based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. In each of the eight member countries the programme is implemented by independent human rights non-governmental organizations, working within the La Strada philosophy. Cooperation among the members dates back to 1995, when the first La Strada project started. LSI develops activities in three interrelated areas: Information & Lobbying; Prevention & Education; and Social Assistance to trafficked persons. LSI's work ",
"score": "1.3220469"
},
{
"id": "9890601",
"title": "Lepe",
"text": "Lagoa, Portugal ; 🇪🇸 Tomelloso, Spain ; 🇷🇴 Fetești, România ",
"score": "1.3186468"
},
{
"id": "2996048",
"title": "Lataro",
"text": " Lataro (alternate names: Litaro or Pilot Island) is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. The island is now privately owned. The Shark Bay language is spoken in the regions surrounding the island.",
"score": "1.3127952"
},
{
"id": "32714957",
"title": "Lathraea clandestina",
"text": " Purple toothwort grows mainly in the West and South of Europe, especially Western and Central France, from Western Belgium, where it is locally abundant in the Flemish Ardennes, as far as Northern Spain, with localised populations in Central Italy. In France, it is found almost exclusively southwest of the Loire river to the Pyrenees, with an extension north of the Loire to the south-east of Brittany and the departments of Mayenne, Orne and Sarthe. It is protected in some departments, but is relatively common in the wetlands of the department of Charente and Charente-Maritime where it is not protected. In Spain, it occurs mainly ",
"score": "1.3116398"
},
{
"id": "5211713",
"title": "Lenola, Lazio",
"text": "🇮🇹 Grotte, Italy ; 🇫🇷 Mondragon, France ; 🇪🇸 Marmolejo, Spain ",
"score": "1.3105817"
},
{
"id": "911882",
"title": "La Carlota, Miranda",
"text": " La Carlota is a town of Venezuela located in Miranda. Located outside of Caracas, the town is one of the areas that most represents the Italian spirit in the capital and throughout Venezuela. Italian infrastructures of more than 50 years of creation are seen in this area of the Venezuelan capital, especially in the urbanization that surrounds La Casona, its architecture is typical of the towns and cities of Italy with wide sidewalks and outdoor café.",
"score": "1.306481"
},
{
"id": "12438439",
"title": "Conservative Laestadianism",
"text": " Conservative Laestadianism is located mainly in northern Europe and North America. Small congregations can be found in Africa, southern Europe and South America. There are about 115.000 Conservative Laestadians, most of them in Finland, United States and Sweden. Most (80,000-150,000) are in Finland. Conservative Laestadians organize big summer services every year. It is the biggest religious event in Nordic countries. About 70,000 guests come from all over the world. Conservative Laestadianism does mission work in 16 countries: Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Canada, Kenya, Latvia, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo and the United States. Congregations in North America are located in the following provinces and states: Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Saskatchewan. USA: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.",
"score": "1.3049295"
},
{
"id": "15313821",
"title": "La Rinascente",
"text": " (La) Rinascente is a collection of high-end stores with Italian and international brands in fashion, accessories, beauty, homeware, design and food. It operates eleven stores in Italy, including its general headquarters in Milan and two flagship stores in Rome. It was a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1959 to 2008, with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.",
"score": "1.3034432"
},
{
"id": "1837365",
"title": "Latiano",
"text": "🇮🇹 Pompei, Italy, since 1980 ",
"score": "1.3033268"
},
{
"id": "3463753",
"title": "Lataroa",
"text": " Lataroa is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. International company Singraphus in co-operation with Radisson Hotel Group has announced the development of a large resort – Radisson Lataroa Island.",
"score": "1.2984339"
},
{
"id": "6721621",
"title": "La Martona",
"text": " La Martona is an Argentine dairy brand, currently owned by La Serenísima. La Martona was originally the first dairy company of Argentina, established in 1889 by Vicente Lorenzo Casares in Cañuelas Partido. La Martona was a pionner in the local industry due to it controlled not only products manufacturing but distribution and commercialization. Thee company is regarded for its technological advancement in the pasteurization and other milk processing, with the acquisition of modern machinery from Europe and the U.S. and the development of rail lines for goods transport. La Martona operated until 1978, when it fell into bankruptcy and the brand name was acquired by rival company La Serenísima (legal name: \"Mastellone Hnos.\") in a judicial sale. Since then, the company has owned exclusive rights to La Martona brand name.",
"score": "1.2962406"
},
{
"id": "3782784",
"title": "Latin American Travel Association",
"text": " The LATA Foundation (Registered Charity number 1123580) is dedicated to promoting responsible business practices in the tourism industry as well as sustainable development, conservation and poverty relief in Latin America by funding, supporting and developing charitable projects throughout the region.",
"score": "1.2941991"
}
] | [
"Lätäseno\n Lätäseno Leahttáseatnu (Northern Sami), is a river of Finland in Finnish Lapland. It is a tributary of Muonio River, which itself is a tributary of Torne River. The river is a popular fishing destination. It flows through the Lätäseno-Hietajoki wetland protection area. It is also part of the Poroeno-Lätäseno canoe route (which begins in the Käsivarsi Wilderness Area), and offers lean-to shelter and wilderness hut accommodation.",
"Montelanico\n🇫🇷 Lagnes, France ",
"Albano Laziale\n🇵🇱 Białogard, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇵🇱 Koszalin, Poland, since 2004 ; 🇱🇹 Alytus, Lithuania, since 2004 ; 🇮🇹 Savelli, Italy ; 🇩🇪 Teterow, Germany ",
"La Serenísima\n brand name La Martona, which having been established in 1889, was the first dairy company of Argentina. La Martona had ceased operations in 1978, after it was declared bankruptcy due to its debts. Nevertheless, Mastellone Hnos. did not market La Martona products until 2019, when it released an economic line of milk. The company pioneered the sale of lactose-free milk in Argentina in 1984, became the market leader in the sale of yogurt (whose local consumption more than doubled between 1983 and 1988) and introduced cultured milk locally, in 1988. La Serenísima also introduced large-scale organic dairy farming in Argentina, in 1994, and became the first to fortify its products with iron sulfate.",
"Lahnstein\n🏴 Kettering, England, since 1956 ; 🇫🇷 Vence, France, since 1967 ; 🇧🇫 Ouahigouya, Burkina Faso, since 1978 ; Hermsdorf, Thuringia, Germany, since December 1990 ; 🇮🇹 Montesilvano, Italy, since May 2016 ",
"Crecchio\n🇮🇹 Lariano, Italy ",
"Lariano\n🇷🇴 Victoria, since April 2007 ; 🇫🇷 Sausset-les-Pins, France ; 🇮🇹 Crecchio, Italy ; 🇮🇹 San Ferdinando di Puglia, Italy ",
"Lago di Tenno\n Lago di Tenno is a lake at Tenno in Trentino, Italy. At an elevation of 550 m, its surface area is 2.5 km². The lake was formed around the year 1100 following a large landslide that blocked the course of the river Rì Sec, which is currently the main tributary of the lake. In the southern portion of the lake there is a small island. The level of the lake varies over the years depending on the flow rate of the tributaries. In the years when the level is low this island becomes a kind of promontory. This area is protected by the Autonomous Province of Trento as a biotope.",
"La Strada International Association\n La Strada International (LSI) is an international NGO network addressing the trafficking of persons in Europe. The organisation was established in October 2004 and includes members from Belarus, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Macedonia, Moldova, the Netherlands, Poland, and Ukraine and an International Secretariat based in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. In each of the eight member countries the programme is implemented by independent human rights non-governmental organizations, working within the La Strada philosophy. Cooperation among the members dates back to 1995, when the first La Strada project started. LSI develops activities in three interrelated areas: Information & Lobbying; Prevention & Education; and Social Assistance to trafficked persons. LSI's work ",
"Lepe\nLagoa, Portugal ; 🇪🇸 Tomelloso, Spain ; 🇷🇴 Fetești, România ",
"Lataro\n Lataro (alternate names: Litaro or Pilot Island) is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. The island is now privately owned. The Shark Bay language is spoken in the regions surrounding the island.",
"Lathraea clandestina\n Purple toothwort grows mainly in the West and South of Europe, especially Western and Central France, from Western Belgium, where it is locally abundant in the Flemish Ardennes, as far as Northern Spain, with localised populations in Central Italy. In France, it is found almost exclusively southwest of the Loire river to the Pyrenees, with an extension north of the Loire to the south-east of Brittany and the departments of Mayenne, Orne and Sarthe. It is protected in some departments, but is relatively common in the wetlands of the department of Charente and Charente-Maritime where it is not protected. In Spain, it occurs mainly ",
"Lenola, Lazio\n🇮🇹 Grotte, Italy ; 🇫🇷 Mondragon, France ; 🇪🇸 Marmolejo, Spain ",
"La Carlota, Miranda\n La Carlota is a town of Venezuela located in Miranda. Located outside of Caracas, the town is one of the areas that most represents the Italian spirit in the capital and throughout Venezuela. Italian infrastructures of more than 50 years of creation are seen in this area of the Venezuelan capital, especially in the urbanization that surrounds La Casona, its architecture is typical of the towns and cities of Italy with wide sidewalks and outdoor café.",
"Conservative Laestadianism\n Conservative Laestadianism is located mainly in northern Europe and North America. Small congregations can be found in Africa, southern Europe and South America. There are about 115.000 Conservative Laestadians, most of them in Finland, United States and Sweden. Most (80,000-150,000) are in Finland. Conservative Laestadians organize big summer services every year. It is the biggest religious event in Nordic countries. About 70,000 guests come from all over the world. Conservative Laestadianism does mission work in 16 countries: Ecuador, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Canada, Kenya, Latvia, Norway, Russia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo and the United States. Congregations in North America are located in the following provinces and states: Canada: Alberta, British Columbia, Ontario and Saskatchewan. USA: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.",
"La Rinascente\n (La) Rinascente is a collection of high-end stores with Italian and international brands in fashion, accessories, beauty, homeware, design and food. It operates eleven stores in Italy, including its general headquarters in Milan and two flagship stores in Rome. It was a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1959 to 2008, with various CEOs acting as presidents of the Association over time.",
"Latiano\n🇮🇹 Pompei, Italy, since 1980 ",
"Lataroa\n Lataroa is an uninhabited island in Sanma Province of Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean. International company Singraphus in co-operation with Radisson Hotel Group has announced the development of a large resort – Radisson Lataroa Island.",
"La Martona\n La Martona is an Argentine dairy brand, currently owned by La Serenísima. La Martona was originally the first dairy company of Argentina, established in 1889 by Vicente Lorenzo Casares in Cañuelas Partido. La Martona was a pionner in the local industry due to it controlled not only products manufacturing but distribution and commercialization. Thee company is regarded for its technological advancement in the pasteurization and other milk processing, with the acquisition of modern machinery from Europe and the U.S. and the development of rail lines for goods transport. La Martona operated until 1978, when it fell into bankruptcy and the brand name was acquired by rival company La Serenísima (legal name: \"Mastellone Hnos.\") in a judicial sale. Since then, the company has owned exclusive rights to La Martona brand name.",
"Latin American Travel Association\n The LATA Foundation (Registered Charity number 1123580) is dedicated to promoting responsible business practices in the tourism industry as well as sustainable development, conservation and poverty relief in Latin America by funding, supporting and developing charitable projects throughout the region."
] |
Who is the author of One of the Family? | [
"Monica Dickens",
"Monica Enid Dickens"
] | author | One of the Family | 5,343,324 | 70 | [
{
"id": "7470131",
"title": "One of the Family",
"text": " One of the Family (1993) was the last novel written by Monica Dickens, great granddaughter of Charles Dickens. It is set in Edwardian London where the world, like main character Leonard Morley's life, is changing. We start the book with a single note which seems to leave a smudge on Leonard and his family life. The book continues with himself, two sons, a daughter and a wife as well as a large extended family all making room for one more, when curiously charming 'Doctor' Tobias Taylor appears on the scene. However curiosity killed more than just a cat, as the family soon finds out. Leonard Morley, in the very first chapter, receives a threatening note, requesting blood ",
"score": "1.8037621"
},
{
"id": "30214585",
"title": "Who's in a Family?",
"text": " Robert Skutch is an American author born in 1925 and has published multiple books such as Journey Without Distance: The Story Behind a Course in Miracles, The Day the World Forgot, and another children's book named Albie's Trip to the Jumble Jungle. Skutch has also written for television and radio shows throughout his life In an NPR interview from 2005, Skutch says that his inspiration for writing this book was because his niece and her partner decided to start a family.",
"score": "1.551299"
},
{
"id": "13503",
"title": "Like One of the Family",
"text": " Like One of the Family is a novel by Alice Childress. It was originally published in 1956 by Independence Publishers in Brooklyn, New York. It was re-published by Beacon Press in Boston in 1986. Each chapter, 62 in all, is told from the perspective of Mildred, a domestic worker in New York City, to her friend Marge, also a domestic worker. The chapters originally appeared with the title \"Conversation from Life\" in the Black Marxist newspaper Freedom (founded by Paul Robeson), and later were published in the Baltimore Afro-American. Literary scholar Trudier Harris notes that, in creating Mildred, \"Childress may have been influenced by Langston Hughes's Jesse B. Simple... a gregarious, beer-loving, bar-hopping Harlemite who shared his adventures in the white world and his homely philosophies.\"",
"score": "1.5176479"
},
{
"id": "33043683",
"title": "Mary Scott (novelist)",
"text": " readable; they follow an easily foreseen pattern, evoke the expected reactions, and provide comedy without ever stretching the faculties too far\". Stevens highlighted One of the Family (1958) as one of the most successful of the novels, about an English uncle visiting New Zealand. They did, however, have an undercurrent of seriousness, due to Scott's family's experiences in the Great Depression; many of her stories featured themes of debt and poverty, or the failure of being forced to leave the backblocks and return to living in town. She also published three volumes of plays, and in the 1960s collaborated with fellow New Zealand writer Joyce West ",
"score": "1.4880791"
},
{
"id": "14347416",
"title": "A Friend of the Family",
"text": " A Friend of the Family was published by Algonquin Books in November 2009. The following November, the paperback was printed. A Friend of the Family, as well as Grodstein's other work, has been translated into German, Italian, French, Turkish, and other languages.",
"score": "1.4819732"
},
{
"id": "8611061",
"title": "The Whole Family",
"text": " The Whole Family: a Novel by Twelve Authors (1908) is a collaborative novel told in twelve chapters, each by a different author. This unusual project was conceived by novelist William Dean Howells and carried out under the direction of Harper's Bazaar editor Elizabeth Jordan, who (like Howells) would write one of the chapters herself. Howells' idea for the novel was to show how an engagement or marriage would affect and be affected by an entire family. The project became somewhat curious for the way the authors' contentious interrelationships mirrored the sometimes dysfunctional family they described in their chapters. Howells had hoped Mark Twain would be one of the authors, but Twain did not participate. Other than Howells himself, Henry James was probably the best-known author to contribute. The novel was serialized in Harper's Bazaar in 1907-08 and published as a book by Harpers in late 1908.",
"score": "1.4813187"
},
{
"id": "4163030",
"title": "The Family from One End Street",
"text": " The Family from One End Street is a realistic English children's novel, written and illustrated by Eve Garnett and published by Frederick Muller in 1937. It is \"a classic story of life in a big, happy family.\" set in a small Sussex town in the south east of England. It was regarded as innovative and groundbreaking for its portrayal of a working-class family at a time when children's books were dominated by stories about middle-class children. In 1938, Garnett won the second annual Carnegie Medal awarded by the Library Association for The Family from One End Street, recognising the best children's book by a British subject for ",
"score": "1.4679015"
},
{
"id": "25642194",
"title": "First Family",
"text": "First Family (King and Maxwell) (2010) is a novel by David Baldacci. ; The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder and The Birth of the American Mafia (2010) is a nonfiction book by Mike Dash. ; First Family is the second novel in Patrick Tilley's The Amtrak Wars series. ",
"score": "1.4671896"
},
{
"id": "30214623",
"title": "The Family Book",
"text": " The Family Book is a 2003 children's book written by Todd Parr that details the daily lives of all kinds of families.",
"score": "1.464791"
},
{
"id": "10135440",
"title": "Family (Cooper novel)",
"text": " Family, published in 1991, is a neo-slave narrative written by American playwright and author J. California Cooper. It tells the story of multiple generations of African-American slaves from the point of view of the dead Clora, who killed herself and tried to kill her four children in order to escape slavery. Clora follows her four children around the world through the years, but keeps a special eye on Always, her favorite child. The novel spans from 1840 through 1933, with Clora waking up and skipping to different time periods throughout the years. Academic James Weaver has noted that the novel \"has remained relatively understudied and undervalued for its contribution to the genre.\"",
"score": "1.46204"
},
{
"id": "13913415",
"title": "First Family (novel)",
"text": " First Family is a crime fiction novel written by the American writer David Baldacci. This is the fourth installment in the King and Maxwell book series. The book was published on April 21, 2009, by Grand Central Publishing.",
"score": "1.45326"
},
{
"id": "14605195",
"title": "The Royal Family (novel)",
"text": " The Royal Family is a novel by the American author William T. Vollmann. The novel centers around Henry Tyler's private investigative work and his personal desire to find the mysterious Queen of Whores, the matriarch of the prostitutes in the area of Tenderloin, San Francisco.",
"score": "1.4495814"
},
{
"id": "2071117",
"title": "Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street",
"text": " Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street is an English children's book by Eve Garnett which was first published by Heinemann in 1956. It is the first of two sequels to Garnett's Carnegie Prize-winning book, The Family from One End Street, which was published by Muller in 1937. Eve Garnett originally wrote The Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street shortly after The Family from One End Street had been published to general acclaim in 1937. However, before The Further Adventures could be published the manuscript was badly damaged in an accidental fire at her parents' home in ",
"score": "1.4403741"
},
{
"id": "31362400",
"title": "The Fall of the Families",
"text": " The Fall of the Families is a novel by Phillip Mann published in 1987.",
"score": "1.4389286"
},
{
"id": "31646652",
"title": "Charles Mulli",
"text": " He is the author of My Journey of Faith and the subject of Christian Heroes: Then and Now – Charles Mulli: We are Family, and also the subject of two other biographies and a children's book written by Paul H. Boge: Father to The Fatherless, Hope for The Hopeless, and The Biggest Family In The World.",
"score": "1.4361196"
},
{
"id": "8743314",
"title": "One of Ours",
"text": " One of Ours is a 1922 novel by Willa Cather that won the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for the Novel. It tells the story of the life of Claude Wheeler, a Nebraska native in the first decades of the 20th century. The son of a successful farmer and an intensely pious mother, he is guaranteed a comfortable livelihood. Nevertheless, Wheeler views himself as a victim of his father's success and his own inexplicable malaise.",
"score": "1.434568"
},
{
"id": "4163038",
"title": "The Family from One End Street",
"text": "ISBN: 0-14-030007-4 (Puffin, UK, late 1980s reprint) Eve Garnett herself wrote that The Family From One End Street was rejected as unsuitable by at least eight other publishers before being taken by Muller. The US Library of Congress gives a longer title, The Family from One End street and some of their adventures, for its oldest holding, a 1939 UK edition. Recent British editions have been published by Puffin. The Family first appeared as a Puffin Book in 1942, under the editorship of Eleanor Graham, only a year after Penguin Books introduced the imprint. ",
"score": "1.4311969"
},
{
"id": "571806",
"title": "All Families Are Psychotic",
"text": " All Families Are Psychotic is the seventh novel by Douglas Coupland, published in 2001. The novel is the fictional story of the dysfunctional Drummond family and their adventures on a trip to see their daughter's space shuttle launch.",
"score": "1.428702"
},
{
"id": "25557167",
"title": "One of Us (book)",
"text": "One of Us was shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association 2015 Non-Fiction Gold Dagger Award. ; One of Us was a finalist for the New York Public Library's 2016 Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism. ; One of Us was named one of the 10 best books of the 2015 by The New York Times Book Review. The English-language version of One of Us has been recognized by a number of institutions and publications.",
"score": "1.4237833"
},
{
"id": "4716058",
"title": "The Animal Family",
"text": " The Animal Family is a 1965 children's novel by American poet and critic Randall Jarrell and illustrated by noted children's book illustrator Maurice Sendak. It is a 1966 Newbery Honor book and has a significant following among adult readers.",
"score": "1.4232268"
}
] | [
"One of the Family\n One of the Family (1993) was the last novel written by Monica Dickens, great granddaughter of Charles Dickens. It is set in Edwardian London where the world, like main character Leonard Morley's life, is changing. We start the book with a single note which seems to leave a smudge on Leonard and his family life. The book continues with himself, two sons, a daughter and a wife as well as a large extended family all making room for one more, when curiously charming 'Doctor' Tobias Taylor appears on the scene. However curiosity killed more than just a cat, as the family soon finds out. Leonard Morley, in the very first chapter, receives a threatening note, requesting blood ",
"Who's in a Family?\n Robert Skutch is an American author born in 1925 and has published multiple books such as Journey Without Distance: The Story Behind a Course in Miracles, The Day the World Forgot, and another children's book named Albie's Trip to the Jumble Jungle. Skutch has also written for television and radio shows throughout his life In an NPR interview from 2005, Skutch says that his inspiration for writing this book was because his niece and her partner decided to start a family.",
"Like One of the Family\n Like One of the Family is a novel by Alice Childress. It was originally published in 1956 by Independence Publishers in Brooklyn, New York. It was re-published by Beacon Press in Boston in 1986. Each chapter, 62 in all, is told from the perspective of Mildred, a domestic worker in New York City, to her friend Marge, also a domestic worker. The chapters originally appeared with the title \"Conversation from Life\" in the Black Marxist newspaper Freedom (founded by Paul Robeson), and later were published in the Baltimore Afro-American. Literary scholar Trudier Harris notes that, in creating Mildred, \"Childress may have been influenced by Langston Hughes's Jesse B. Simple... a gregarious, beer-loving, bar-hopping Harlemite who shared his adventures in the white world and his homely philosophies.\"",
"Mary Scott (novelist)\n readable; they follow an easily foreseen pattern, evoke the expected reactions, and provide comedy without ever stretching the faculties too far\". Stevens highlighted One of the Family (1958) as one of the most successful of the novels, about an English uncle visiting New Zealand. They did, however, have an undercurrent of seriousness, due to Scott's family's experiences in the Great Depression; many of her stories featured themes of debt and poverty, or the failure of being forced to leave the backblocks and return to living in town. She also published three volumes of plays, and in the 1960s collaborated with fellow New Zealand writer Joyce West ",
"A Friend of the Family\n A Friend of the Family was published by Algonquin Books in November 2009. The following November, the paperback was printed. A Friend of the Family, as well as Grodstein's other work, has been translated into German, Italian, French, Turkish, and other languages.",
"The Whole Family\n The Whole Family: a Novel by Twelve Authors (1908) is a collaborative novel told in twelve chapters, each by a different author. This unusual project was conceived by novelist William Dean Howells and carried out under the direction of Harper's Bazaar editor Elizabeth Jordan, who (like Howells) would write one of the chapters herself. Howells' idea for the novel was to show how an engagement or marriage would affect and be affected by an entire family. The project became somewhat curious for the way the authors' contentious interrelationships mirrored the sometimes dysfunctional family they described in their chapters. Howells had hoped Mark Twain would be one of the authors, but Twain did not participate. Other than Howells himself, Henry James was probably the best-known author to contribute. The novel was serialized in Harper's Bazaar in 1907-08 and published as a book by Harpers in late 1908.",
"The Family from One End Street\n The Family from One End Street is a realistic English children's novel, written and illustrated by Eve Garnett and published by Frederick Muller in 1937. It is \"a classic story of life in a big, happy family.\" set in a small Sussex town in the south east of England. It was regarded as innovative and groundbreaking for its portrayal of a working-class family at a time when children's books were dominated by stories about middle-class children. In 1938, Garnett won the second annual Carnegie Medal awarded by the Library Association for The Family from One End Street, recognising the best children's book by a British subject for ",
"First Family\nFirst Family (King and Maxwell) (2010) is a novel by David Baldacci. ; The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder and The Birth of the American Mafia (2010) is a nonfiction book by Mike Dash. ; First Family is the second novel in Patrick Tilley's The Amtrak Wars series. ",
"The Family Book\n The Family Book is a 2003 children's book written by Todd Parr that details the daily lives of all kinds of families.",
"Family (Cooper novel)\n Family, published in 1991, is a neo-slave narrative written by American playwright and author J. California Cooper. It tells the story of multiple generations of African-American slaves from the point of view of the dead Clora, who killed herself and tried to kill her four children in order to escape slavery. Clora follows her four children around the world through the years, but keeps a special eye on Always, her favorite child. The novel spans from 1840 through 1933, with Clora waking up and skipping to different time periods throughout the years. Academic James Weaver has noted that the novel \"has remained relatively understudied and undervalued for its contribution to the genre.\"",
"First Family (novel)\n First Family is a crime fiction novel written by the American writer David Baldacci. This is the fourth installment in the King and Maxwell book series. The book was published on April 21, 2009, by Grand Central Publishing.",
"The Royal Family (novel)\n The Royal Family is a novel by the American author William T. Vollmann. The novel centers around Henry Tyler's private investigative work and his personal desire to find the mysterious Queen of Whores, the matriarch of the prostitutes in the area of Tenderloin, San Francisco.",
"Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street\n Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street is an English children's book by Eve Garnett which was first published by Heinemann in 1956. It is the first of two sequels to Garnett's Carnegie Prize-winning book, The Family from One End Street, which was published by Muller in 1937. Eve Garnett originally wrote The Further Adventures of the Family from One End Street shortly after The Family from One End Street had been published to general acclaim in 1937. However, before The Further Adventures could be published the manuscript was badly damaged in an accidental fire at her parents' home in ",
"The Fall of the Families\n The Fall of the Families is a novel by Phillip Mann published in 1987.",
"Charles Mulli\n He is the author of My Journey of Faith and the subject of Christian Heroes: Then and Now – Charles Mulli: We are Family, and also the subject of two other biographies and a children's book written by Paul H. Boge: Father to The Fatherless, Hope for The Hopeless, and The Biggest Family In The World.",
"One of Ours\n One of Ours is a 1922 novel by Willa Cather that won the 1923 Pulitzer Prize for the Novel. It tells the story of the life of Claude Wheeler, a Nebraska native in the first decades of the 20th century. The son of a successful farmer and an intensely pious mother, he is guaranteed a comfortable livelihood. Nevertheless, Wheeler views himself as a victim of his father's success and his own inexplicable malaise.",
"The Family from One End Street\nISBN: 0-14-030007-4 (Puffin, UK, late 1980s reprint) Eve Garnett herself wrote that The Family From One End Street was rejected as unsuitable by at least eight other publishers before being taken by Muller. The US Library of Congress gives a longer title, The Family from One End street and some of their adventures, for its oldest holding, a 1939 UK edition. Recent British editions have been published by Puffin. The Family first appeared as a Puffin Book in 1942, under the editorship of Eleanor Graham, only a year after Penguin Books introduced the imprint. ",
"All Families Are Psychotic\n All Families Are Psychotic is the seventh novel by Douglas Coupland, published in 2001. The novel is the fictional story of the dysfunctional Drummond family and their adventures on a trip to see their daughter's space shuttle launch.",
"One of Us (book)\nOne of Us was shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association 2015 Non-Fiction Gold Dagger Award. ; One of Us was a finalist for the New York Public Library's 2016 Helen Bernstein Book Award for Excellence in Journalism. ; One of Us was named one of the 10 best books of the 2015 by The New York Times Book Review. The English-language version of One of Us has been recognized by a number of institutions and publications.",
"The Animal Family\n The Animal Family is a 1965 children's novel by American poet and critic Randall Jarrell and illustrated by noted children's book illustrator Maurice Sendak. It is a 1966 Newbery Honor book and has a significant following among adult readers."
] |
What sport does Dan Parkinson play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Dan Parkinson (footballer) | 3,831,198 | 41 | [
{
"id": "15717483",
"title": "Dan Parkinson (footballer)",
"text": " Daniel James Parkinson is an English footballer who plays as a Midfielder. He currently plays for Barrow in the Conference North.",
"score": "1.8429582"
},
{
"id": "15717484",
"title": "Dan Parkinson (footballer)",
"text": " Parkinson came through the Morecambe youth academy to sign a one-year contract for the 2011–12 season. He made his first team debut as an 89th-minute substitute for Kevin Ellison in a 2–0 win over Aldershot Town at the Globe Arena on 20 August 2011. Three days later he was again a late replacement for Ellison in a 2–0 defeat to Millwall in a League Cup Second Round clash at The Den. Parkinson was released by Morecambe at the end of the 2012–13 season. He subsequently signed for Barrow of the Conference North.",
"score": "1.6631751"
},
{
"id": "28232480",
"title": "Andrew Parkinson (basketball)",
"text": " Andrew Parkinson (born 21 September 1967) is a former Australian former professional basketball player in the National Basketball League. Known as \"Parky\", he played for the Geelong Supercats (1988–1990), Southern Melbourne Saints (1991, when he was included in the NBL All-Star Southern team), and the South East Melbourne Magic (1992–1998). He won two NBL championships in 1992 & 1996 with the Magic. Other accolades include Most Improved Player in 1991 and Free Throw Percentage Leader in 1992. Following his basketball career, Parkinson was a media personality, hosting an early incarnation of World Sport Overnight on SEN 1116 in early 2004 and working with South Dragons NBL basketball team during their short reign. Parky now plays at MSAC and is regarded as the dirtiest player in K-grade. Parky plays in the Balwyn Championship league where his team were runners up to the Valhalla Vikings 37-40 who have been the dominate team in the league for many years.",
"score": "1.6426065"
},
{
"id": "4553182",
"title": "Dan Buckingham",
"text": " Dan first made the New Zealand team in 2001, playing a 5 test series against Australia for the Chris Handy Cup, held in Christchurch. He has competed in four World Championships: Gothenburg 2002, Christchurch 2006, Vancouver 2010 and Odense 2014. He was part of the team that won Silver at the Christchurch 2006 World Championships; the Wheel Blacks lost to the USA in the final. He competed as part of the Wheel Blacks in the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games where they won the gold medal, as well as the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games where they finished 5th. Dan captained the Wheel Blacks from 2007 - 2013, and again from 2015 - 2016. Dan has also competed for domestic clubs internationally, including Victoria in Australia, Denver and Lakeshore in the USA, and Quebec in Canada.",
"score": "1.6293814"
},
{
"id": "27728673",
"title": "Scott Parkinson",
"text": " Parkinson was an All-American player for the USAO Drovers men's soccer team.",
"score": "1.5974351"
},
{
"id": "13662481",
"title": "Dan Butler (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Butler finds hobbies in surfing and table tennis, the later of which lead him to a year-long competition with house and teammate Jason Castagna that resulted in the loser Castagna getting a tattoo of a table tennis bat with Butler's initials on this upper thigh. He is a life member at Richmond.",
"score": "1.5774124"
},
{
"id": "25217783",
"title": "Mitch Parkinson",
"text": " He took the sport of surfing at the age of 16 and competed at the international level from 2011. He finished fifth at the Gold Coast Open 2019 which was held in Australia. His best finish came at the So Sri Lanka Pro 2019 event, where he emerged as the winner of the tournament scoring a whopping 19.17 points. Following the tournament win, he jumped from 312th position to a career best 99th position in WSL world rankings.",
"score": "1.5761544"
},
{
"id": "4503680",
"title": "Jack Parkinson (basketball)",
"text": " Parkinson grew up in Yorktown, Indiana and attended Yorktown High School. A two-sport star, he earned varsity letters in baseball and basketball for all four years. In 1941–42, Parkinson's senior year, he led Delaware County in scoring for basketball and hit .500 in baseball. He also threw a no-hitter during the county baseball championship match. Parkinson was offered a contract by Major League Baseball's Cincinnati Reds, but his desire to play basketball for legendary Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball coach Adolph Rupp was so strong that he passed up a professional baseball opportunity to play for him.",
"score": "1.5743209"
},
{
"id": "3662633",
"title": "Gary Parkinson",
"text": " In June 2003 Parkinson played for Middlesbrough in the annual Northern Masters football tournament at the Metro Radio Arena in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, scoring two goals. He appeared again for Middlesbrough in the 2004 Northern Masters.",
"score": "1.5676067"
},
{
"id": "4553179",
"title": "Dan Buckingham",
"text": " Dan Buckingham (born 25 September 1980) is a wheelchair rugby player from New Zealand, and was a member of the national team, the Wheel Blacks for 16 years. He works as General Manager for the Television Production Company Attitude.",
"score": "1.5615153"
},
{
"id": "31456190",
"title": "Reuben Parkinson",
"text": " Parkinson first played as a flanker, then became a midfielder when he moved to Dunedin. He then joined Otago playing 49 games in 1998, including a NPC title. In that year, he was also a New Zealand Maori trialist and also played for the Highlanders in the Super 14. In 1999, he joined the Hurricanes for six matches. He continued his rugby union career after moving to Japan, playing for Munakata Sanix Blues for five years. Parkinson was also part of Japan's national team, first playing in Tokyo against Russia on 25 May 2003. He also played at the 2003 World Cup with Hurricanes midfielder George Konia. Parkinson left Japan in 2005, following a final cap on 19 June against Ireland. He moved back to New Zealand in that year to play for the Bay of Plenty Steamers. Like his brother, Matua also played for Sanix. His younger brother Matua Parkinson was also a Hurricanes team member since 2000, as well as a former All Blacks Sevens team member.",
"score": "1.5567524"
},
{
"id": "10135804",
"title": "Dan Shingles",
"text": " Dan Shingles (born 5 July 1986) is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder for Old Georgians. He represented the England and Great Britain national teams from 2012 to 2016.",
"score": "1.5480957"
},
{
"id": "4553181",
"title": "Dan Buckingham",
"text": " Dan began training with the Canterbury wheelchair rugby team while still in the Burwood hospital spinal injury rehabilitation unit in 1999. While living in Dunedin he continued to play for Canterbury in 2000, and played his first Nationals tournament for the province that year. He moved to Christchurch in 2001, and continued to play for the club until 2007. In 2008 Dan began playing for Auckland after moving to the city at the end of 2007. He coached the team from 2014 - 2016.",
"score": "1.5437226"
},
{
"id": "25541642",
"title": "Dan Hindmarsh",
"text": " Dan Hindmarsh (born 8 October 1998) is a professional rugby league footballer who plays as a or for the London Broncos in the Betfred Championship. He has spent time on loan from the Broncos at Oxford, London Skolars and the Coventry Bears in League 1, and the Sheffield Eagles in the Betfred Championship.",
"score": "1.538744"
},
{
"id": "25217782",
"title": "Mitch Parkinson",
"text": " Mitch Parkinson (born 1997) is an Australian surfer who competes on the WSL (World Surf League) World Tour. On 29 September 2019, he won the So Sri Lanka Pro 2019 title as a part of the World Surf League defeating Indonesia's Oney Anwar in the final. It was also his first career WSL title. His cousin Joel Parkinson is also a professional surfer and a former world champion.",
"score": "1.5206916"
},
{
"id": "13662457",
"title": "Dan Butler (Australian footballer)",
"text": " Butler spent his formative years playing football for a team in Lake Wendouree, a suburb of the Victorian country town of Ballarat. In 2014 he played TAC Cup football with the North Ballarat Rebels, kicking nine goals in 13 matches while playing predominately as an outside midfielder. In one match he recorded 17 tackles against Oakleigh. He also played one senior match with the North Ballarat Roosters in the VFL and represented Victoria's country team at the 2014 AFL Under 18 Championships. He attended secondary school at St Patrick's College in Ballarat. While at the school he featured in three state championship victories from 2012 to 2014 and was the team's vice-captain in the 2014 season.",
"score": "1.5083356"
},
{
"id": "3362203",
"title": "Dan Coleman (basketball)",
"text": " Daniel Coleman (born February 13, 1985) is an American former professional basketball player. In the 2013–14 season he played for the GasTerra Flames in the Netherlands.",
"score": "1.5072265"
},
{
"id": "733579",
"title": "Art Parkinson",
"text": " Art Parkinson (born 19 October 2001) is an Irish actor from Moville in Inishowen, County Donegal, in Ulster. He began his professional acting career at the age of seven. He is best known for his role as Rickon Stark on the HBO series Game of Thrones, and Kubo in the film Kubo and the Two Strings.",
"score": "1.5036349"
},
{
"id": "13537595",
"title": "Dan Highcock",
"text": " Highcock was introduced to wheelchair basketball by his physical education (PE) teacher at the age of 13, and has played ever since. He was selected for the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, but was dropped from the team shortly before they were meant to fly there. He was selected for the London 2012 Summer Paralympics after representing Great Britain at two World Championships. He first played for the Liverpool Meteors for five years. Since then he has played in Italian, Spanish, British and German wheelchair basketball teams. Highcock played his first championship in 2005, the European Championships, held in Paris, France. He finished in second-place position, winning ",
"score": "1.4974217"
},
{
"id": "2652504",
"title": "Colby Parkinson",
"text": " Parkinson attended Oaks Christian School in Westlake Village, California, where he played varsity football and basketball. In 2015, his junior football season, he caught 24 passes for 289 yards and four touchdowns. That December, he committed to play college football at Stanford University. During his senior year, he played in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl.",
"score": "1.4917132"
}
] | [
"Dan Parkinson (footballer)\n Daniel James Parkinson is an English footballer who plays as a Midfielder. He currently plays for Barrow in the Conference North.",
"Dan Parkinson (footballer)\n Parkinson came through the Morecambe youth academy to sign a one-year contract for the 2011–12 season. He made his first team debut as an 89th-minute substitute for Kevin Ellison in a 2–0 win over Aldershot Town at the Globe Arena on 20 August 2011. Three days later he was again a late replacement for Ellison in a 2–0 defeat to Millwall in a League Cup Second Round clash at The Den. Parkinson was released by Morecambe at the end of the 2012–13 season. He subsequently signed for Barrow of the Conference North.",
"Andrew Parkinson (basketball)\n Andrew Parkinson (born 21 September 1967) is a former Australian former professional basketball player in the National Basketball League. Known as \"Parky\", he played for the Geelong Supercats (1988–1990), Southern Melbourne Saints (1991, when he was included in the NBL All-Star Southern team), and the South East Melbourne Magic (1992–1998). He won two NBL championships in 1992 & 1996 with the Magic. Other accolades include Most Improved Player in 1991 and Free Throw Percentage Leader in 1992. Following his basketball career, Parkinson was a media personality, hosting an early incarnation of World Sport Overnight on SEN 1116 in early 2004 and working with South Dragons NBL basketball team during their short reign. Parky now plays at MSAC and is regarded as the dirtiest player in K-grade. Parky plays in the Balwyn Championship league where his team were runners up to the Valhalla Vikings 37-40 who have been the dominate team in the league for many years.",
"Dan Buckingham\n Dan first made the New Zealand team in 2001, playing a 5 test series against Australia for the Chris Handy Cup, held in Christchurch. He has competed in four World Championships: Gothenburg 2002, Christchurch 2006, Vancouver 2010 and Odense 2014. He was part of the team that won Silver at the Christchurch 2006 World Championships; the Wheel Blacks lost to the USA in the final. He competed as part of the Wheel Blacks in the Athens 2004 Paralympic Games where they won the gold medal, as well as the Beijing 2008 Paralympic Games where they finished 5th. Dan captained the Wheel Blacks from 2007 - 2013, and again from 2015 - 2016. Dan has also competed for domestic clubs internationally, including Victoria in Australia, Denver and Lakeshore in the USA, and Quebec in Canada.",
"Scott Parkinson\n Parkinson was an All-American player for the USAO Drovers men's soccer team.",
"Dan Butler (Australian footballer)\n Butler finds hobbies in surfing and table tennis, the later of which lead him to a year-long competition with house and teammate Jason Castagna that resulted in the loser Castagna getting a tattoo of a table tennis bat with Butler's initials on this upper thigh. He is a life member at Richmond.",
"Mitch Parkinson\n He took the sport of surfing at the age of 16 and competed at the international level from 2011. He finished fifth at the Gold Coast Open 2019 which was held in Australia. His best finish came at the So Sri Lanka Pro 2019 event, where he emerged as the winner of the tournament scoring a whopping 19.17 points. Following the tournament win, he jumped from 312th position to a career best 99th position in WSL world rankings.",
"Jack Parkinson (basketball)\n Parkinson grew up in Yorktown, Indiana and attended Yorktown High School. A two-sport star, he earned varsity letters in baseball and basketball for all four years. In 1941–42, Parkinson's senior year, he led Delaware County in scoring for basketball and hit .500 in baseball. He also threw a no-hitter during the county baseball championship match. Parkinson was offered a contract by Major League Baseball's Cincinnati Reds, but his desire to play basketball for legendary Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball coach Adolph Rupp was so strong that he passed up a professional baseball opportunity to play for him.",
"Gary Parkinson\n In June 2003 Parkinson played for Middlesbrough in the annual Northern Masters football tournament at the Metro Radio Arena in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, scoring two goals. He appeared again for Middlesbrough in the 2004 Northern Masters.",
"Dan Buckingham\n Dan Buckingham (born 25 September 1980) is a wheelchair rugby player from New Zealand, and was a member of the national team, the Wheel Blacks for 16 years. He works as General Manager for the Television Production Company Attitude.",
"Reuben Parkinson\n Parkinson first played as a flanker, then became a midfielder when he moved to Dunedin. He then joined Otago playing 49 games in 1998, including a NPC title. In that year, he was also a New Zealand Maori trialist and also played for the Highlanders in the Super 14. In 1999, he joined the Hurricanes for six matches. He continued his rugby union career after moving to Japan, playing for Munakata Sanix Blues for five years. Parkinson was also part of Japan's national team, first playing in Tokyo against Russia on 25 May 2003. He also played at the 2003 World Cup with Hurricanes midfielder George Konia. Parkinson left Japan in 2005, following a final cap on 19 June against Ireland. He moved back to New Zealand in that year to play for the Bay of Plenty Steamers. Like his brother, Matua also played for Sanix. His younger brother Matua Parkinson was also a Hurricanes team member since 2000, as well as a former All Blacks Sevens team member.",
"Dan Shingles\n Dan Shingles (born 5 July 1986) is an English field hockey player who plays as a midfielder for Old Georgians. He represented the England and Great Britain national teams from 2012 to 2016.",
"Dan Buckingham\n Dan began training with the Canterbury wheelchair rugby team while still in the Burwood hospital spinal injury rehabilitation unit in 1999. While living in Dunedin he continued to play for Canterbury in 2000, and played his first Nationals tournament for the province that year. He moved to Christchurch in 2001, and continued to play for the club until 2007. In 2008 Dan began playing for Auckland after moving to the city at the end of 2007. He coached the team from 2014 - 2016.",
"Dan Hindmarsh\n Dan Hindmarsh (born 8 October 1998) is a professional rugby league footballer who plays as a or for the London Broncos in the Betfred Championship. He has spent time on loan from the Broncos at Oxford, London Skolars and the Coventry Bears in League 1, and the Sheffield Eagles in the Betfred Championship.",
"Mitch Parkinson\n Mitch Parkinson (born 1997) is an Australian surfer who competes on the WSL (World Surf League) World Tour. On 29 September 2019, he won the So Sri Lanka Pro 2019 title as a part of the World Surf League defeating Indonesia's Oney Anwar in the final. It was also his first career WSL title. His cousin Joel Parkinson is also a professional surfer and a former world champion.",
"Dan Butler (Australian footballer)\n Butler spent his formative years playing football for a team in Lake Wendouree, a suburb of the Victorian country town of Ballarat. In 2014 he played TAC Cup football with the North Ballarat Rebels, kicking nine goals in 13 matches while playing predominately as an outside midfielder. In one match he recorded 17 tackles against Oakleigh. He also played one senior match with the North Ballarat Roosters in the VFL and represented Victoria's country team at the 2014 AFL Under 18 Championships. He attended secondary school at St Patrick's College in Ballarat. While at the school he featured in three state championship victories from 2012 to 2014 and was the team's vice-captain in the 2014 season.",
"Dan Coleman (basketball)\n Daniel Coleman (born February 13, 1985) is an American former professional basketball player. In the 2013–14 season he played for the GasTerra Flames in the Netherlands.",
"Art Parkinson\n Art Parkinson (born 19 October 2001) is an Irish actor from Moville in Inishowen, County Donegal, in Ulster. He began his professional acting career at the age of seven. He is best known for his role as Rickon Stark on the HBO series Game of Thrones, and Kubo in the film Kubo and the Two Strings.",
"Dan Highcock\n Highcock was introduced to wheelchair basketball by his physical education (PE) teacher at the age of 13, and has played ever since. He was selected for the 2000 Summer Paralympics in Sydney, but was dropped from the team shortly before they were meant to fly there. He was selected for the London 2012 Summer Paralympics after representing Great Britain at two World Championships. He first played for the Liverpool Meteors for five years. Since then he has played in Italian, Spanish, British and German wheelchair basketball teams. Highcock played his first championship in 2005, the European Championships, held in Paris, France. He finished in second-place position, winning ",
"Colby Parkinson\n Parkinson attended Oaks Christian School in Westlake Village, California, where he played varsity football and basketball. In 2015, his junior football season, he caught 24 passes for 289 yards and four touchdowns. That December, he committed to play college football at Stanford University. During his senior year, he played in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl."
] |
In what country is Anaikudam? | [
"India",
"Bharat",
"Hindustan",
"Bharatvarsh",
"in",
"IN",
"Republic of India",
"🇮🇳",
"IND",
"Aryavratt"
] | country | Anaikudam | 3,319,113 | 47 | [
{
"id": "9702409",
"title": "Anaikudam",
"text": " Anaikudam is a village in the Udayarpalayam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.",
"score": "1.8439939"
},
{
"id": "9702410",
"title": "Anaikudam",
"text": " As per the 2001 census, Anaikudam had a total population of 4182 with 2139 males and 2043 females.",
"score": "1.7462633"
},
{
"id": "11678822",
"title": "Anaikutiyur",
"text": " Anaikutiyur is a small village in Avudaiyanoor in Pavoorchatram. It is located in Tenkasi taluk of Tirunelveli district. PMGSY (Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojna) is making new roads in the village.",
"score": "1.5974435"
},
{
"id": "130375",
"title": "Anaikulam",
"text": " Anaikulam (ஆணைகுளம்) village is located in Radhapuram Taluka of Tirunelveli district of South Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is situated 20km away from Radhapuram and 60km away from district headquarter Tirunelveli. It is located less than 10 km away from Valliyur. Anaikulam is also a Gram Panchayat. Nearby villages of Anaikulam are Vaithiyalingapuram, Thangayam, Kizhavaneri, Thulukkarpatti, Cithoor Mylaputhur, Madapuram, Kallikulam, Kannanallur, Kovankulam, Dalapathi samudram, Pudhur.",
"score": "1.5444953"
},
{
"id": "5558962",
"title": "Parai",
"text": "thanjai veera chozha thappattam kalai kuzhu ; manvaasam parai isai payirchi maiyam, dharmapuri ; samar kalaikuzhu, alanganallur ,mathurai ; Ulaga marabu kalaikoodam -chennai, Tamil nadu,india ; Infinite performing art academy- chennai,india ; AathiTamilar Kalai Kuzhu, Ponneri ParramParra - Soul Of Sound, Tamil Nadu ; Tamizhi Kalaikalam- தமிழி கலைக்களம், Tamil Nadu ; Nayyappudai kalaikuzhu, chennai ; Maiyam Kalaikuzhu, Chennai ; Sakthi kalaikuzhu, Dindigul ; Nigar Kalaikoodam, Coimbatore ; Minnesota Parai Kuzhu, Minnesota (USA) ; Detroit Unaruyir kalaikoodam, Detroit ; Nimirvu Kalaiyagam, Coimbatore ; Chicago Tamil Sangam - PonParai Group [Chicago, Illinois], United States ; American Parai Team St. Louis, United States ; Manudam Parai Ani Connecticut, United States ; West Michigan Parai Isai Maiam Grand Rapids.. மேற்கு மிச்சிகன் பறையிசை மய்யம் ; New York Parai Isai Group (NYC). நியூயார்க் பறையிசை குழு(நியூயார்க் நகரம்). ; Ongu Parai Kuzhu, Charlotte, NC. ஓங்கு பறை குழு, சார்லட், வட கரோலினா ; Giramiya puthalvan kalainan kulu ;Coimbatore ; Iswara Group; Mauritius ; Cumming Tamil Palliyin -Maanavar visai Parai ,Cumming ,Georgia; Buddhar kalaikuzhu, Vedanthangal",
"score": "1.5089817"
},
{
"id": "4926669",
"title": "Irinjalakuda",
"text": " Irinjalakuda has a rich cultural history associated with the UNESCO- recognised classical dance form Koodiyattam. Natanakairali - Research Training and Performing Centre for Traditional Arts, Irinjalakuda, is a prominent institution that imparts training on this ancient art form. Government-aided Unnayi Warrier Smaraka Kalanilayam near Koodalmanikyam temple trains artistes on Kathakali. The town also has other institutions that give training on classical dance forms and theatre arts. Walden Pond House is another cultural space in the town where artists and movie makers gather for workshops and movie shoots.",
"score": "1.5005548"
},
{
"id": "30744989",
"title": "Anakkayam",
"text": " Anakkayam is an outgrowth of Malappuram city in Kerala, India. A major portion of Pandallur hills (a hill in the central part of Malappuram district, which was the boundary between Eranad and Walluvanad Taluks in Malabar District under British Raj) lie in this area. Anakkayam Grama Panchayat has two revenue villages -Anakkayam and Pandallur.",
"score": "1.4943752"
},
{
"id": "3738700",
"title": "Anaikuttam Dam",
"text": " Anaikuttam Dam is a dam situated in Tamil Nadu in Virudhunagar district. The dam is build on the Arjuna River. Anaikuttam Dam finished the construction in the year 1989. It is an earthen irrigation dam with a length of 2940 meters and height of 9.5 meters. The dam provides drinking water to the Virudhunagar district. According to a news article published in 2020, the dam had the capacity to give 2 million litres of water to Virudhunagar everyday. In 2015, an investigation was launched against the Public Work Department (PWD) officials for not maintaining the dam which was making all the water of the dam going to waste.",
"score": "1.4836268"
},
{
"id": "1100844",
"title": "Anikkattilammakshethram",
"text": " Anikkattilammakshethram is a Hindu Temple situated in Anicadu Village, 3.5 km from Mallappally in Pathanamthitta district in the southern part of Kerala, India. Here, Adiparasakthi Sivan and benign Parvathi are worshiped with equal significance in one Sreekovil, which is one of the rarest of its kind in Kerala. Agnimahakalan and Agniyekshi are symbolized in these idols, each measuring about 4 feet and installed side by side. The demon-shaped Lord Shiva (Kiratha) has bow and arrow in His arms and Parvati has sword in Her hand. The temple, situated by the bank of river Manimala, is estimated to have come into ",
"score": "1.4732563"
},
{
"id": "29267857",
"title": "Anaikkadu",
"text": " Anaikkadu is a village in the Pattukkottai taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India. An association in Singapore \"Anaikkadu White Cross\" was started with 25 people working in Singapore in January 2008 with an aim of developing this village in all aspects; however, the village was well developed even during the 1930s and 1940s during British rule.",
"score": "1.4727523"
},
{
"id": "4926663",
"title": "Irinjalakuda",
"text": " Irinjalakuda is a municipal town in Thrissur district, Kerala, India. It is the headquarters of Irinjalakuda Revenue Division and Mukundapuram Taluk. The place is well-known for Koodalmanikyam Temple and the Thachudaya Kaimals who had princely status until 1971.",
"score": "1.4708512"
},
{
"id": "1406411",
"title": "Eravimala",
"text": "Anamala ; Devimala ; Karimkulam ; Devicolam ; Kumarikkal ; Kattumala ; Perumal ; Ghudoor ; Sabarimala ; Kabula ; Karimala ; Anchanad ; Chentavara Eravimala (ഇരവിമല) is the highest peak located in the Anamalai Hills in the Western Ghats, India. It is situated at the Idukki District of Kerala, and stands at 7880 ft. It is one of the 14 highest peaks in the district which exceed a height of 2,000 m above sea level. The highest one is Anamala (Anamudi) at 8841 ft. It is the tenth highest peak in South India. Other prominent peaks (more than 2,000m) in the Idukki district are:",
"score": "1.4619551"
},
{
"id": "27139778",
"title": "Anantapuramu–Hindupur Urban Development Authority",
"text": " The Anantapuramu–Hindupur Urban Development Authority (AHUDA) is an urban planning agency in Anantapur district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It was constituted on 4 November 2017, under Andhra Pradesh Metropolitan Region and Urban Development Authority Act, 2016 with the headquarters located at Anantapuramu.",
"score": "1.4605764"
},
{
"id": "2536267",
"title": "Polichalur",
"text": " The previous AIADMK regime (2001–06) government had allotted 2,000 acres of land free for the AAI to carry out the expansion by taking lands from residents of Pozhichalur, Pammal and Anakaputhur. Under pressure from the opposition parties such as CPM, DMK, PMK, and MDMK, the government later decided to drop land acquisition in the said areas and identified alternative land at Manapakkam, Tharapakkam, Kolapakkam and Gerugambakkam.",
"score": "1.4559281"
},
{
"id": "4926665",
"title": "Irinjalakuda",
"text": " According to Hindu mythology, Irinjalakuda was created by sage Parasurama. According to Keralolpatthi, out of the 64 gramas (villages) established in Kerala (Out of these 32 Malayala Gramas & half Thulu grama viz. Manjeswaram are in the present Kerala and 31 1/2 Thulu gramas in the coastal Karnataka.), Irinjalakuda was the head of some of them. Irinjalakuda was one of the most prominent among these Gramas (village societies). Boundaries of this grama extends up to Aloor in the east and Kakkathuruthi in the west and later extended to Koodapuzha in the east. Like the other Gramas this 'Grama' also followed Sankara Smruthi (a modified form ",
"score": "1.4550564"
},
{
"id": "6807423",
"title": "Koodiyattam",
"text": " future generations and for the development of new audiences besides fostering greater academic research in it. Natanakairali in Irinjalakuda is one of the most prominent institutions in the field of koodiyattam revival. The Margi Theatre Group in Thiruvananthapuram is another organisation dedicated to the revival of kathakali and koodiyattom in Kerala. Also, Nepathya is an institution promoting koodiyattam and related art forms at Moozhikkulam. The Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama, has awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest award for performing artists, to kutiyattam artists like Kalamandalam Sivan Namboodiri (2007), Painkulam Raman Chakyar (2010) and Painkulam Damodara Chakyar (2012).",
"score": "1.4543688"
},
{
"id": "11678826",
"title": "Anaikutiyur",
"text": " The population consists of Hindus and Christians. Hindus are the majority of the population.",
"score": "1.4425802"
},
{
"id": "30901600",
"title": "Appakudal",
"text": " Appakudal (Aapakudal) is a panchayat town in the Erode district in the state of Tamil Nadu, India. Appakudal is an industrial centre. It has a sugar factory, viz., Sakthi Sugars Limited, the families of the workers of which form a major part of population of this town.",
"score": "1.4411486"
},
{
"id": "4454036",
"title": "Anaikarai",
"text": " Anaikarai is a village panchayat under Thiruvidaimarudur Taluk in Tanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India. Anaikarai connects with two major bridges. Nearly 1 km long on both sides. It is an island in the basin of Cauvery river. It is located at the distance of 260 km from Chennai and 25 km from Kumbakonam. The Lower Anaicut built by Sir Arthur Cotton in 19th century AD across Coleroon, the major distributary of Cauvery, is said to be a replicated structure of Kallanai. Nearly 2000 families live in Anaikarai with the main occupation of agriculture and fishing. It is well known and place for river fishes.",
"score": "1.4342208"
},
{
"id": "12566608",
"title": "Anamudi Shola National Park",
"text": " Anamudi Shola National Park is a protected area located along the Western Ghats of Idukki district in Kerala state, India. It is composed of Mannavan shola, Idivara shola and Pullardi shola, covering a total area of around 7.5 km². Draft notification of this new park was released on 21 November 2003. The park is administered by Munnar Wildlife Division, together with the nearby Mathikettan Shola National Park, Eravikulam National Park, Pampadum Shola National Park, Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary and the Kurinjimala Sanctuary. The Western Ghats, Anamalai Sub-Cluster, including all of Eravikulam National Park, is under consideration by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for selection as a World Heritage Site.",
"score": "1.4311193"
}
] | [
"Anaikudam\n Anaikudam is a village in the Udayarpalayam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.",
"Anaikudam\n As per the 2001 census, Anaikudam had a total population of 4182 with 2139 males and 2043 females.",
"Anaikutiyur\n Anaikutiyur is a small village in Avudaiyanoor in Pavoorchatram. It is located in Tenkasi taluk of Tirunelveli district. PMGSY (Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojna) is making new roads in the village.",
"Anaikulam\n Anaikulam (ஆணைகுளம்) village is located in Radhapuram Taluka of Tirunelveli district of South Indian state of Tamil Nadu. It is situated 20km away from Radhapuram and 60km away from district headquarter Tirunelveli. It is located less than 10 km away from Valliyur. Anaikulam is also a Gram Panchayat. Nearby villages of Anaikulam are Vaithiyalingapuram, Thangayam, Kizhavaneri, Thulukkarpatti, Cithoor Mylaputhur, Madapuram, Kallikulam, Kannanallur, Kovankulam, Dalapathi samudram, Pudhur.",
"Parai\nthanjai veera chozha thappattam kalai kuzhu ; manvaasam parai isai payirchi maiyam, dharmapuri ; samar kalaikuzhu, alanganallur ,mathurai ; Ulaga marabu kalaikoodam -chennai, Tamil nadu,india ; Infinite performing art academy- chennai,india ; AathiTamilar Kalai Kuzhu, Ponneri ParramParra - Soul Of Sound, Tamil Nadu ; Tamizhi Kalaikalam- தமிழி கலைக்களம், Tamil Nadu ; Nayyappudai kalaikuzhu, chennai ; Maiyam Kalaikuzhu, Chennai ; Sakthi kalaikuzhu, Dindigul ; Nigar Kalaikoodam, Coimbatore ; Minnesota Parai Kuzhu, Minnesota (USA) ; Detroit Unaruyir kalaikoodam, Detroit ; Nimirvu Kalaiyagam, Coimbatore ; Chicago Tamil Sangam - PonParai Group [Chicago, Illinois], United States ; American Parai Team St. Louis, United States ; Manudam Parai Ani Connecticut, United States ; West Michigan Parai Isai Maiam Grand Rapids.. மேற்கு மிச்சிகன் பறையிசை மய்யம் ; New York Parai Isai Group (NYC). நியூயார்க் பறையிசை குழு(நியூயார்க் நகரம்). ; Ongu Parai Kuzhu, Charlotte, NC. ஓங்கு பறை குழு, சார்லட், வட கரோலினா ; Giramiya puthalvan kalainan kulu ;Coimbatore ; Iswara Group; Mauritius ; Cumming Tamil Palliyin -Maanavar visai Parai ,Cumming ,Georgia; Buddhar kalaikuzhu, Vedanthangal",
"Irinjalakuda\n Irinjalakuda has a rich cultural history associated with the UNESCO- recognised classical dance form Koodiyattam. Natanakairali - Research Training and Performing Centre for Traditional Arts, Irinjalakuda, is a prominent institution that imparts training on this ancient art form. Government-aided Unnayi Warrier Smaraka Kalanilayam near Koodalmanikyam temple trains artistes on Kathakali. The town also has other institutions that give training on classical dance forms and theatre arts. Walden Pond House is another cultural space in the town where artists and movie makers gather for workshops and movie shoots.",
"Anakkayam\n Anakkayam is an outgrowth of Malappuram city in Kerala, India. A major portion of Pandallur hills (a hill in the central part of Malappuram district, which was the boundary between Eranad and Walluvanad Taluks in Malabar District under British Raj) lie in this area. Anakkayam Grama Panchayat has two revenue villages -Anakkayam and Pandallur.",
"Anaikuttam Dam\n Anaikuttam Dam is a dam situated in Tamil Nadu in Virudhunagar district. The dam is build on the Arjuna River. Anaikuttam Dam finished the construction in the year 1989. It is an earthen irrigation dam with a length of 2940 meters and height of 9.5 meters. The dam provides drinking water to the Virudhunagar district. According to a news article published in 2020, the dam had the capacity to give 2 million litres of water to Virudhunagar everyday. In 2015, an investigation was launched against the Public Work Department (PWD) officials for not maintaining the dam which was making all the water of the dam going to waste.",
"Anikkattilammakshethram\n Anikkattilammakshethram is a Hindu Temple situated in Anicadu Village, 3.5 km from Mallappally in Pathanamthitta district in the southern part of Kerala, India. Here, Adiparasakthi Sivan and benign Parvathi are worshiped with equal significance in one Sreekovil, which is one of the rarest of its kind in Kerala. Agnimahakalan and Agniyekshi are symbolized in these idols, each measuring about 4 feet and installed side by side. The demon-shaped Lord Shiva (Kiratha) has bow and arrow in His arms and Parvati has sword in Her hand. The temple, situated by the bank of river Manimala, is estimated to have come into ",
"Anaikkadu\n Anaikkadu is a village in the Pattukkottai taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India. An association in Singapore \"Anaikkadu White Cross\" was started with 25 people working in Singapore in January 2008 with an aim of developing this village in all aspects; however, the village was well developed even during the 1930s and 1940s during British rule.",
"Irinjalakuda\n Irinjalakuda is a municipal town in Thrissur district, Kerala, India. It is the headquarters of Irinjalakuda Revenue Division and Mukundapuram Taluk. The place is well-known for Koodalmanikyam Temple and the Thachudaya Kaimals who had princely status until 1971.",
"Eravimala\nAnamala ; Devimala ; Karimkulam ; Devicolam ; Kumarikkal ; Kattumala ; Perumal ; Ghudoor ; Sabarimala ; Kabula ; Karimala ; Anchanad ; Chentavara Eravimala (ഇരവിമല) is the highest peak located in the Anamalai Hills in the Western Ghats, India. It is situated at the Idukki District of Kerala, and stands at 7880 ft. It is one of the 14 highest peaks in the district which exceed a height of 2,000 m above sea level. The highest one is Anamala (Anamudi) at 8841 ft. It is the tenth highest peak in South India. Other prominent peaks (more than 2,000m) in the Idukki district are:",
"Anantapuramu–Hindupur Urban Development Authority\n The Anantapuramu–Hindupur Urban Development Authority (AHUDA) is an urban planning agency in Anantapur district of the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. It was constituted on 4 November 2017, under Andhra Pradesh Metropolitan Region and Urban Development Authority Act, 2016 with the headquarters located at Anantapuramu.",
"Polichalur\n The previous AIADMK regime (2001–06) government had allotted 2,000 acres of land free for the AAI to carry out the expansion by taking lands from residents of Pozhichalur, Pammal and Anakaputhur. Under pressure from the opposition parties such as CPM, DMK, PMK, and MDMK, the government later decided to drop land acquisition in the said areas and identified alternative land at Manapakkam, Tharapakkam, Kolapakkam and Gerugambakkam.",
"Irinjalakuda\n According to Hindu mythology, Irinjalakuda was created by sage Parasurama. According to Keralolpatthi, out of the 64 gramas (villages) established in Kerala (Out of these 32 Malayala Gramas & half Thulu grama viz. Manjeswaram are in the present Kerala and 31 1/2 Thulu gramas in the coastal Karnataka.), Irinjalakuda was the head of some of them. Irinjalakuda was one of the most prominent among these Gramas (village societies). Boundaries of this grama extends up to Aloor in the east and Kakkathuruthi in the west and later extended to Koodapuzha in the east. Like the other Gramas this 'Grama' also followed Sankara Smruthi (a modified form ",
"Koodiyattam\n future generations and for the development of new audiences besides fostering greater academic research in it. Natanakairali in Irinjalakuda is one of the most prominent institutions in the field of koodiyattam revival. The Margi Theatre Group in Thiruvananthapuram is another organisation dedicated to the revival of kathakali and koodiyattom in Kerala. Also, Nepathya is an institution promoting koodiyattam and related art forms at Moozhikkulam. The Sangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama, has awarded the Sangeet Natak Akademi Award, the highest award for performing artists, to kutiyattam artists like Kalamandalam Sivan Namboodiri (2007), Painkulam Raman Chakyar (2010) and Painkulam Damodara Chakyar (2012).",
"Anaikutiyur\n The population consists of Hindus and Christians. Hindus are the majority of the population.",
"Appakudal\n Appakudal (Aapakudal) is a panchayat town in the Erode district in the state of Tamil Nadu, India. Appakudal is an industrial centre. It has a sugar factory, viz., Sakthi Sugars Limited, the families of the workers of which form a major part of population of this town.",
"Anaikarai\n Anaikarai is a village panchayat under Thiruvidaimarudur Taluk in Tanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India. Anaikarai connects with two major bridges. Nearly 1 km long on both sides. It is an island in the basin of Cauvery river. It is located at the distance of 260 km from Chennai and 25 km from Kumbakonam. The Lower Anaicut built by Sir Arthur Cotton in 19th century AD across Coleroon, the major distributary of Cauvery, is said to be a replicated structure of Kallanai. Nearly 2000 families live in Anaikarai with the main occupation of agriculture and fishing. It is well known and place for river fishes.",
"Anamudi Shola National Park\n Anamudi Shola National Park is a protected area located along the Western Ghats of Idukki district in Kerala state, India. It is composed of Mannavan shola, Idivara shola and Pullardi shola, covering a total area of around 7.5 km². Draft notification of this new park was released on 21 November 2003. The park is administered by Munnar Wildlife Division, together with the nearby Mathikettan Shola National Park, Eravikulam National Park, Pampadum Shola National Park, Chinnar Wildlife Sanctuary and the Kurinjimala Sanctuary. The Western Ghats, Anamalai Sub-Cluster, including all of Eravikulam National Park, is under consideration by the UNESCO World Heritage Committee for selection as a World Heritage Site."
] |
In what country is Łodygowo, Pisz County? | [
"Poland",
"POL",
"Republic of Poland",
"PL",
"Polska"
] | country | Łodygowo, Pisz County | 6,251,694 | 23 | [
{
"id": "1439788",
"title": "Łodygowo, Pisz County",
"text": " Łodygowo (Lodigowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-east of Biała Piska, 26 km east of Pisz, and 114 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 100.",
"score": "1.8158925"
},
{
"id": "228568",
"title": "Łodygowo, Iława County",
"text": " Łodygowo (Groß Ludwigsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kisielice, within Iława County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Kisielice, 26 km west of Iława, and 89 km west of the regional capital Olsztyn.",
"score": "1.6198089"
},
{
"id": "32861964",
"title": "Pielgrzymowo, Braniewo County",
"text": " Pielgrzymowo (Pilgramsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Płoskinia, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Płoskinia, 15 km south-east of Braniewo, and 65 km north-west of the regional capital Olsztyn.",
"score": "1.5740473"
},
{
"id": "1487353",
"title": "Drozdowo, Pisz County",
"text": " Drozdowo (Drosdowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orzysz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 12 km north-west of Orzysz, 26 km north of Pisz, and 85 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4872932"
},
{
"id": "1487404",
"title": "Głodowo, Pisz County",
"text": " Głodowo (Glodowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ruciane-Nida, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 12 km north-east of Ruciane-Nida, 15 km north-west of Pisz, and 77 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 70.",
"score": "1.4698405"
},
{
"id": "455066",
"title": "Pielgrzymowo, Nidzica County",
"text": " Pielgrzymowo (Pilgramsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kozłowo, within Nidzica County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Kozłowo, 4 km south-west of Nidzica, and 51 km south of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 140.",
"score": "1.4624548"
},
{
"id": "1439684",
"title": "Jaśkowo-Leśniczówka",
"text": " Jaśkowo-Leśniczówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was called Jäskendorf and was part of East Prussia in Germany.",
"score": "1.4620879"
},
{
"id": "1439683",
"title": "Jaśkowo, Pisz County",
"text": " Jaśkowo (Reiherswalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-west of Pisz and 81 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4582179"
},
{
"id": "1487742",
"title": "Pilwa, Węgorzewo County",
"text": " Pilwa (Pilwe) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Węgorzewo, within Węgorzewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately 18 km south-west of Węgorzewo and 79 km north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4445617"
},
{
"id": "32857141",
"title": "Pilwa, Bartoszyce County",
"text": " Pilwa is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bartoszyce, within Bartoszyce County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia.",
"score": "1.440398"
},
{
"id": "30975123",
"title": "Zwoleń County",
"text": " Zwoleń County is one of the main areas of strawberry cultivation in Poland, which is one of the main strawberry producers in Europe. Zwoleń strawberries and konfitura truskawkowa (a type of traditional Polish strawberry jam) are officially protected traditional foods of the area, as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland.",
"score": "1.4285293"
},
{
"id": "1439755",
"title": "Grodzisko, Pisz County",
"text": " Grodzisko (Burgdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 13 km south-west of Biała Piska (Bialla), 16 km south-east of Pisz (Johannisburg), and 102 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn (Allenstein). Located right on the prewar (East Prussian) - (Polish border), which was demarcated by the Johannes Fluss (river). Before 1945 the area was part of (Germany).",
"score": "1.4276237"
},
{
"id": "4992833",
"title": "Rogowo, Łobez County",
"text": " Rogowo (Roggow A) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radowo Małe, within Łobez County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Radowo Małe, 17 km west of Łobez, and 57 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.",
"score": "1.4243383"
},
{
"id": "1439740",
"title": "Zawady, Pisz County",
"text": " Zawady (Ottenberg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4191077"
},
{
"id": "366288",
"title": "Głodowo, Mrągowo County",
"text": " Głodowo (Adlig Glodowen) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Sorkwity, within Mrągowo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south of Sorkwity, 12 km south-west of Mrągowo, and 43 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4188449"
},
{
"id": "8299025",
"title": "Posadowo, Nowy Tomyśl County",
"text": " Posadowo (Hermannsthal) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lwówek, within Nowy Tomyśl County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Lwówek, 18 km north of Nowy Tomyśl, and 47 km west of the regional capital Poznań.",
"score": "1.4136736"
},
{
"id": "11801732",
"title": "Electoral districts of Poland (1935–1939)",
"text": " County, Radziechów County, and Brody County, Counties of Brzeżany, Przemyslany County, and Zborow County, Counties of Buczacz, Trembowla County, and Podhajce County, Counties of Czortków, Kopczynce County, Borszczow County, and Zaleszczyki County, Counties of Stanisławów, Tlumacz County, and Nadworna County, Counties of Kolomyja, Horodenka County, Sniatyn County, and Kosow County, Counties of Kalusz, Rohatyn County, and Dolina County, Counties of Stryj, Zydaczow County, and Bobrka County, City of Lwów Police districts II, III, V, VIII, IXCity of Lwów Police districts I, IV, VI, VII, XCounties of Lwów – Land, Grodek Jagiellonski County, and Mosciska County, Counties of Sokal, Zolkiew County, Rawa Ruska County, and ",
"score": "1.410054"
},
{
"id": "1439814",
"title": "Włosty, Pisz County",
"text": " Włosty (Flosten) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-east of Biała Piska, 27 km east of Pisz, and 115 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 110.",
"score": "1.4063613"
},
{
"id": "26111413",
"title": "Rogowo, Rypin County",
"text": " Rogowo (Ragau) is a village in Rypin County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Rogowo. It lies approximately 11 km south-west of Rypin and 52 km east of Toruń.",
"score": "1.4063337"
},
{
"id": "1439806",
"title": "Sokoły, Pisz County",
"text": " Sokoły (Falkendorf, until 1935 Sokollen bei Kumilsko) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"score": "1.4061294"
}
] | [
"Łodygowo, Pisz County\n Łodygowo (Lodigowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 9 km south-east of Biała Piska, 26 km east of Pisz, and 114 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 100.",
"Łodygowo, Iława County\n Łodygowo (Groß Ludwigsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kisielice, within Iława County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 6 km west of Kisielice, 26 km west of Iława, and 89 km west of the regional capital Olsztyn.",
"Pielgrzymowo, Braniewo County\n Pielgrzymowo (Pilgramsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Płoskinia, within Braniewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Płoskinia, 15 km south-east of Braniewo, and 65 km north-west of the regional capital Olsztyn.",
"Drozdowo, Pisz County\n Drozdowo (Drosdowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Orzysz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 12 km north-west of Orzysz, 26 km north of Pisz, and 85 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"Głodowo, Pisz County\n Głodowo (Glodowen) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Ruciane-Nida, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 12 km north-east of Ruciane-Nida, 15 km north-west of Pisz, and 77 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 70.",
"Pielgrzymowo, Nidzica County\n Pielgrzymowo (Pilgramsdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Kozłowo, within Nidzica County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 8 km north-east of Kozłowo, 4 km south-west of Nidzica, and 51 km south of the regional capital Olsztyn. The village has a population of 140.",
"Jaśkowo-Leśniczówka\n Jaśkowo-Leśniczówka is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was called Jäskendorf and was part of East Prussia in Germany.",
"Jaśkowo, Pisz County\n Jaśkowo (Reiherswalde) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-west of Pisz and 81 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"Pilwa, Węgorzewo County\n Pilwa (Pilwe) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Węgorzewo, within Węgorzewo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia. It lies approximately 18 km south-west of Węgorzewo and 79 km north-east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945, the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"Pilwa, Bartoszyce County\n Pilwa is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Bartoszyce, within Bartoszyce County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland, close to the border with the Kaliningrad Oblast of Russia.",
"Zwoleń County\n Zwoleń County is one of the main areas of strawberry cultivation in Poland, which is one of the main strawberry producers in Europe. Zwoleń strawberries and konfitura truskawkowa (a type of traditional Polish strawberry jam) are officially protected traditional foods of the area, as designated by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development of Poland.",
"Grodzisko, Pisz County\n Grodzisko (Burgdorf) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 13 km south-west of Biała Piska (Bialla), 16 km south-east of Pisz (Johannisburg), and 102 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn (Allenstein). Located right on the prewar (East Prussian) - (Polish border), which was demarcated by the Johannes Fluss (river). Before 1945 the area was part of (Germany).",
"Rogowo, Łobez County\n Rogowo (Roggow A) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Radowo Małe, within Łobez County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland. It lies approximately 7 km west of Radowo Małe, 17 km west of Łobez, and 57 km north-east of the regional capital Szczecin. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany. For the history of the region, see History of Pomerania.",
"Zawady, Pisz County\n Zawady (Ottenberg) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Pisz, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"Głodowo, Mrągowo County\n Głodowo (Adlig Glodowen) is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Sorkwity, within Mrągowo County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 3 km south of Sorkwity, 12 km south-west of Mrągowo, and 43 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia).",
"Posadowo, Nowy Tomyśl County\n Posadowo (Hermannsthal) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Lwówek, within Nowy Tomyśl County, Greater Poland Voivodeship, in west-central Poland. It lies approximately 4 km north-east of Lwówek, 18 km north of Nowy Tomyśl, and 47 km west of the regional capital Poznań.",
"Electoral districts of Poland (1935–1939)\n County, Radziechów County, and Brody County, Counties of Brzeżany, Przemyslany County, and Zborow County, Counties of Buczacz, Trembowla County, and Podhajce County, Counties of Czortków, Kopczynce County, Borszczow County, and Zaleszczyki County, Counties of Stanisławów, Tlumacz County, and Nadworna County, Counties of Kolomyja, Horodenka County, Sniatyn County, and Kosow County, Counties of Kalusz, Rohatyn County, and Dolina County, Counties of Stryj, Zydaczow County, and Bobrka County, City of Lwów Police districts II, III, V, VIII, IXCity of Lwów Police districts I, IV, VI, VII, XCounties of Lwów – Land, Grodek Jagiellonski County, and Mosciska County, Counties of Sokal, Zolkiew County, Rawa Ruska County, and ",
"Włosty, Pisz County\n Włosty (Flosten) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. It lies approximately 10 km south-east of Biała Piska, 27 km east of Pisz, and 115 km east of the regional capital Olsztyn. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia). The village has a population of 110.",
"Rogowo, Rypin County\n Rogowo (Ragau) is a village in Rypin County, Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-central Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) called Gmina Rogowo. It lies approximately 11 km south-west of Rypin and 52 km east of Toruń.",
"Sokoły, Pisz County\n Sokoły (Falkendorf, until 1935 Sokollen bei Kumilsko) is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Biała Piska, within Pisz County, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, in northern Poland. Before 1945 the area was part of Germany (East Prussia)."
] |
What sport does Ye Zhibin play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ye Zhibin | 6,225,078 | 65 | [
{
"id": "13923366",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " Ye Zhibin (born October 3, 1971) is a Chinese assistant coach and a former professional football player. As a player, he spent his career playing for Guangzhou Songri and Guangzhou Apollo before moving into management where he spent several years with Guangzhou Pharmaceutical in numerous coaching positions before moving on to become an assistant coach at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"score": "1.8642275"
},
{
"id": "13923367",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " Ye Zhibin would play for his local second tier football club Guangzhou Songri and was part of the squad that won promotion to the top tier at the end of the 1995 league season when the club came second within the division. His time in the top tier was short lived and by the end of the 1996 league season the club finished bottom of the league and received subsequent relegation at the end of the season. When the club were unable to win immediate promotion back into the top tier the following season, Ye Zhibin was allowed to leave to join local rivals and ",
"score": "1.706169"
},
{
"id": "13923368",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " tier club Guangzhou Apollo at the beginning of the 1998 league season. In his short time at the club Ye quickly gained a reputation as tough tackling midfielder when on May 10, 1998 in a game against Shanghai Shenhua, Ye would fracture of the left leg of Claudio Lucio de Camargo, Moura and end the players career within China. By the end of the 1998 league season Guangzhou Apollo would finish bottom of the league and were relegated to the second tier. Li would remain faithful to the club and stayed with them until he retired at the end of the 2003 league season.",
"score": "1.5631808"
},
{
"id": "5080056",
"title": "Yevgeniy Zhilyayev",
"text": " Yevgeniy Zhilyayev (born 13 July 1973 in Almaty) is a Kazakhstani water polo player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Kazakhstan men's national water polo team in the men's event, but he has won no Olympic honor. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"score": "1.5324702"
},
{
"id": "31841879",
"title": "Yeh Ting-jen",
"text": " Yeh Ting-jen (born July 1, 1983 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese baseball player who currently plays for Brother Elephants of Chinese Professional Baseball League. He is a pitcher who throws and bats left-handed. He is 6'1\" and weighs 189 lbs. He pitched for the Lowell Spinners minor league team in the New York Penn league in 2006, playing in 9 games, with a record of 1-0 and an Earned run average of 9.53 and batted .400 as well. The Lowell Spinners are a minor-league affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.",
"score": "1.5261866"
},
{
"id": "5655645",
"title": "Gong Xiaobin",
"text": " Gong Xiaobin (born November 23, 1969 in Jinan, Shandong), is a retired Chinese professional basketball player, who enjoyed an outstanding career in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). At 2.03 m (6'8\"), and 104 kg (230 lbs.), he played at the power forward and center positions. In 1990, he was chosen as one of China's 50 all-time greatest basketball players.",
"score": "1.5036687"
},
{
"id": "10031724",
"title": "Irek Zinnurov",
"text": " Irek Khaydarovich Zinnurov (Ирек Хайдарович Зиннуров; born 11 January 1969) is a Russian water polo player of Tatar origin who played on the silver medal squad at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics. He won four Russian titles as a captain of the Kazan club Sintez. After retirement from competitions, in 2010, he became its vice-president, and in 2011 its head coach. Zinnurov is married to his schoolmate; they have a son Emil, who also plays water polo.",
"score": "1.5034809"
},
{
"id": "13923369",
"title": "Ye Zhibin",
"text": " After ending his playing career in 2003 he remained at Guangzhou Apollo where he was offered a youth team coaching position at the now renamed Guangzhou Rizhiquan in 2004. After taking different positions at the now renamed Guangzhou Pharmaceutical, Li would take on his first senior management position with Guangzhou City Transport and he led them into the National City Games. After the tournament finished Li would take an assistant coaching position at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"score": "1.4969747"
},
{
"id": "10423230",
"title": "Chen Zhibin",
"text": " Chen Zhibin (born 21 October 1962) is a Chinese former international table tennis player and current coach. He won a bronze medal at the 1989 World Table Tennis Championships in the mixed doubles with Gao Jun. In 2000, Chen Zhibin became a German citizen and represented Germany. From 2011-2014 he worked as national coach in the Netherlands for the women's and since 2016 he has been the national coach of the women's team in Singapore.",
"score": "1.4966273"
},
{
"id": "25845282",
"title": "Ye Chongqiu",
"text": " Ye Chongqiu (Chinese: 叶重秋; Pinyin: Yè Chóngqiū; born 29 September 1992 in Shanghai) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for Chinese Super League side Wuhan.",
"score": "1.4915543"
},
{
"id": "11312250",
"title": "Ren Ye",
"text": " Ren Ye (born July 13, 1986 in Fushun, Liaoning) is a field hockey player from China, who won a silver medal with the national women's hockey team at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"score": "1.4897699"
},
{
"id": "26958321",
"title": "Zhi Yaqi",
"text": " Zhi Yaqi (Chinese: 支雅琪; Pinyin: Zhī Yǎqí; born 27 March 1990) is a Chinese football player.",
"score": "1.4837229"
},
{
"id": "26227504",
"title": "Ye Chaoqun",
"text": " Ye Chaoqun (, born 7 October 1984 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He won a gold and a silver at the 2008 Summer Paralympics. Ye has congenital muscular dystrophy and hand/arm abnormalities.",
"score": "1.4802535"
},
{
"id": "8680868",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": " In 2013, Liu Libin got the champion of the junior event of volleyball in 2013 National Games of China with Jiang Chuan and Zhang Binglong as the main three wing spikers. In 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League, he made his debut and got the first champion of the senior event. After several seasons, he became the main OH of Beijing Baic Motor. In order to improve himself, he decided to join a foreign club and chose Tourcoing Lille Métropole Volley-Ball in 2017. Although he was always the substitute OH of Ukrainian OH, Oleksiy Klyamar, he also helped the club much. In 2018, Liu joined JT Thunders in 2018–19 V.League Division 1 Men's as the foreign player of AVC with his former clubmate, Thomas Edgar in Season 15/16 in Beijing Baic Motor. He was the main OH because he was good at the spike at Site 6, the block of the Euroamercian OP and the better serve.",
"score": "1.4675193"
},
{
"id": "8680871",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": "2013 National Games of China - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing Junior ; 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing ; 2014–2015 Chinese Volleyball League - [[Image:Med 3.png]] Bronze medal, with Beijing ; 2015–2016 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2016–2017 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017 National Games of China - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017–2018 French Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Tourcoing ; 2018 Emperor's Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with JT Thunders ; 2018–19 V.League Division 1 - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with JT Thunders ",
"score": "1.4626217"
},
{
"id": "29505479",
"title": "Liu Zhixin",
"text": " Liu Zhixin (born 25 April 1993) is a Chinese ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national team, currently with the KRS Vanke Rays Shenzhen of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL). She was the youngest member of the Chinese delegation at the 2010 Winter Olympics, where she represented the country in the women's ice hockey tournament. Liu previously played in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) with Kunlun Red Star WIH during the 2017–18 season and with the Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays during the 2018–19 season.",
"score": "1.461158"
},
{
"id": "32606045",
"title": "Wu Zhiyu",
"text": " Wu Zhiyu (born 9 September 1983 in Shanghai) is a Chinese water polo player who was a member of the gold medal-winning team at the 2006 Asian Games. Wu also competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4585354"
},
{
"id": "15313240",
"title": "Wang Libin",
"text": " Wang Libin (born March 21, 1963) is a former male Chinese basketball player and an active basketball coach. He was born in Shaanxi Province, People's Republic of China. Wang started his playing career at the age of 14 and was one of the most talented front court players in Asia. 6'8\", Wang was not only a powerful inside player with solid footwork and impressive mobility but also a stable long range shooter. Some dubbed him as \"Asia's number one centre\" during his prime in the 1980s. As a member of the China men's national basketball team he competed at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games and was the flag bearer of the Chinese Olympic Team at the opening ceremony. Due to power struggles within China's basketball authorities, however, he was banned from playing for the national team at the age of 25—shortly ",
"score": "1.458088"
},
{
"id": "8680869",
"title": "Liu Libin",
"text": " As a young player, Liu Libin participated in 2015 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship as his earliest International tournament. Later, due to injured Zhu Zhiyuan, Liu Libin participated in 2015 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship as the main OH and got the third place beyond the expectations of the Chinese U21 men's volleyball team. His International debut of the senior event is 2016 AVC Cup. Jiang Chuan and he played perfect and both got the best. Although he injured for many times, he just took part in 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League, 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League and 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship.",
"score": "1.4562564"
},
{
"id": "27652501",
"title": "Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy",
"text": " Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy (Яўген Шыдлоўскi; Евгений Шидловский; born 13 January 1991) is a Belarusian professional football player currently playing for Smolevichi. On 16 January 2020, the BFF banned Shidlovskiy for 12 months for his involvement in the match fixing.",
"score": "1.4560232"
}
] | [
"Ye Zhibin\n Ye Zhibin (born October 3, 1971) is a Chinese assistant coach and a former professional football player. As a player, he spent his career playing for Guangzhou Songri and Guangzhou Apollo before moving into management where he spent several years with Guangzhou Pharmaceutical in numerous coaching positions before moving on to become an assistant coach at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"Ye Zhibin\n Ye Zhibin would play for his local second tier football club Guangzhou Songri and was part of the squad that won promotion to the top tier at the end of the 1995 league season when the club came second within the division. His time in the top tier was short lived and by the end of the 1996 league season the club finished bottom of the league and received subsequent relegation at the end of the season. When the club were unable to win immediate promotion back into the top tier the following season, Ye Zhibin was allowed to leave to join local rivals and ",
"Ye Zhibin\n tier club Guangzhou Apollo at the beginning of the 1998 league season. In his short time at the club Ye quickly gained a reputation as tough tackling midfielder when on May 10, 1998 in a game against Shanghai Shenhua, Ye would fracture of the left leg of Claudio Lucio de Camargo, Moura and end the players career within China. By the end of the 1998 league season Guangzhou Apollo would finish bottom of the league and were relegated to the second tier. Li would remain faithful to the club and stayed with them until he retired at the end of the 2003 league season.",
"Yevgeniy Zhilyayev\n Yevgeniy Zhilyayev (born 13 July 1973 in Almaty) is a Kazakhstani water polo player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he competed for the Kazakhstan men's national water polo team in the men's event, but he has won no Olympic honor. He is 6 ft 3 inches tall.",
"Yeh Ting-jen\n Yeh Ting-jen (born July 1, 1983 in Taiwan) is a Taiwanese baseball player who currently plays for Brother Elephants of Chinese Professional Baseball League. He is a pitcher who throws and bats left-handed. He is 6'1\" and weighs 189 lbs. He pitched for the Lowell Spinners minor league team in the New York Penn league in 2006, playing in 9 games, with a record of 1-0 and an Earned run average of 9.53 and batted .400 as well. The Lowell Spinners are a minor-league affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.",
"Gong Xiaobin\n Gong Xiaobin (born November 23, 1969 in Jinan, Shandong), is a retired Chinese professional basketball player, who enjoyed an outstanding career in the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA). At 2.03 m (6'8\"), and 104 kg (230 lbs.), he played at the power forward and center positions. In 1990, he was chosen as one of China's 50 all-time greatest basketball players.",
"Irek Zinnurov\n Irek Khaydarovich Zinnurov (Ирек Хайдарович Зиннуров; born 11 January 1969) is a Russian water polo player of Tatar origin who played on the silver medal squad at the 2000 Summer Olympics and the bronze medal squad at the 2004 Summer Olympics. He won four Russian titles as a captain of the Kazan club Sintez. After retirement from competitions, in 2010, he became its vice-president, and in 2011 its head coach. Zinnurov is married to his schoolmate; they have a son Emil, who also plays water polo.",
"Ye Zhibin\n After ending his playing career in 2003 he remained at Guangzhou Apollo where he was offered a youth team coaching position at the now renamed Guangzhou Rizhiquan in 2004. After taking different positions at the now renamed Guangzhou Pharmaceutical, Li would take on his first senior management position with Guangzhou City Transport and he led them into the National City Games. After the tournament finished Li would take an assistant coaching position at Guangdong Sunray Cave.",
"Chen Zhibin\n Chen Zhibin (born 21 October 1962) is a Chinese former international table tennis player and current coach. He won a bronze medal at the 1989 World Table Tennis Championships in the mixed doubles with Gao Jun. In 2000, Chen Zhibin became a German citizen and represented Germany. From 2011-2014 he worked as national coach in the Netherlands for the women's and since 2016 he has been the national coach of the women's team in Singapore.",
"Ye Chongqiu\n Ye Chongqiu (Chinese: 叶重秋; Pinyin: Yè Chóngqiū; born 29 September 1992 in Shanghai) is a Chinese football player who currently plays for Chinese Super League side Wuhan.",
"Ren Ye\n Ren Ye (born July 13, 1986 in Fushun, Liaoning) is a field hockey player from China, who won a silver medal with the national women's hockey team at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.",
"Zhi Yaqi\n Zhi Yaqi (Chinese: 支雅琪; Pinyin: Zhī Yǎqí; born 27 March 1990) is a Chinese football player.",
"Ye Chaoqun\n Ye Chaoqun (, born 7 October 1984 ) is a Chinese para table tennis player. He won a gold and a silver at the 2008 Summer Paralympics. Ye has congenital muscular dystrophy and hand/arm abnormalities.",
"Liu Libin\n In 2013, Liu Libin got the champion of the junior event of volleyball in 2013 National Games of China with Jiang Chuan and Zhang Binglong as the main three wing spikers. In 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League, he made his debut and got the first champion of the senior event. After several seasons, he became the main OH of Beijing Baic Motor. In order to improve himself, he decided to join a foreign club and chose Tourcoing Lille Métropole Volley-Ball in 2017. Although he was always the substitute OH of Ukrainian OH, Oleksiy Klyamar, he also helped the club much. In 2018, Liu joined JT Thunders in 2018–19 V.League Division 1 Men's as the foreign player of AVC with his former clubmate, Thomas Edgar in Season 15/16 in Beijing Baic Motor. He was the main OH because he was good at the spike at Site 6, the block of the Euroamercian OP and the better serve.",
"Liu Libin\n2013 National Games of China - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing Junior ; 2013–2014 Chinese Volleyball League - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Beijing ; 2014–2015 Chinese Volleyball League - [[Image:Med 3.png]] Bronze medal, with Beijing ; 2015–2016 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2016–2017 Chinese Volleyball League - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017 National Games of China - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with Beijing ; 2017–2018 French Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with Tourcoing ; 2018 Emperor's Cup - Simple cup icon.svg Champion, with JT Thunders ; 2018–19 V.League Division 1 - Gorm silver cup.jpg Runner-Up, with JT Thunders ",
"Liu Zhixin\n Liu Zhixin (born 25 April 1993) is a Chinese ice hockey player and member of the Chinese national team, currently with the KRS Vanke Rays Shenzhen of the Zhenskaya Hockey League (ZhHL). She was the youngest member of the Chinese delegation at the 2010 Winter Olympics, where she represented the country in the women's ice hockey tournament. Liu previously played in the Canadian Women's Hockey League (CWHL) with Kunlun Red Star WIH during the 2017–18 season and with the Shenzhen KRS Vanke Rays during the 2018–19 season.",
"Wu Zhiyu\n Wu Zhiyu (born 9 September 1983 in Shanghai) is a Chinese water polo player who was a member of the gold medal-winning team at the 2006 Asian Games. Wu also competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics.",
"Wang Libin\n Wang Libin (born March 21, 1963) is a former male Chinese basketball player and an active basketball coach. He was born in Shaanxi Province, People's Republic of China. Wang started his playing career at the age of 14 and was one of the most talented front court players in Asia. 6'8\", Wang was not only a powerful inside player with solid footwork and impressive mobility but also a stable long range shooter. Some dubbed him as \"Asia's number one centre\" during his prime in the 1980s. As a member of the China men's national basketball team he competed at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games and was the flag bearer of the Chinese Olympic Team at the opening ceremony. Due to power struggles within China's basketball authorities, however, he was banned from playing for the national team at the age of 25—shortly ",
"Liu Libin\n As a young player, Liu Libin participated in 2015 Asian Men's U23 Volleyball Championship as his earliest International tournament. Later, due to injured Zhu Zhiyuan, Liu Libin participated in 2015 FIVB Volleyball Men's U21 World Championship as the main OH and got the third place beyond the expectations of the Chinese U21 men's volleyball team. His International debut of the senior event is 2016 AVC Cup. Jiang Chuan and he played perfect and both got the best. Although he injured for many times, he just took part in 2017 FIVB Volleyball World League, 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's Nations League and 2018 FIVB Volleyball Men's World Championship.",
"Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy\n Yevgeniy Shidlovskiy (Яўген Шыдлоўскi; Евгений Шидловский; born 13 January 1991) is a Belarusian professional football player currently playing for Smolevichi. On 16 January 2020, the BFF banned Shidlovskiy for 12 months for his involvement in the match fixing."
] |
In what country is Pir Hayati? | [
"Iran",
"Islamic Republic of Iran",
"Persia",
"ir",
"Islamic Rep. Iran",
"🇮🇷"
] | country | Pir Hayati, Kermanshah | 4,479,734 | 49 | [
{
"id": "10446139",
"title": "Pir Hayati-ye Sofla",
"text": " Pir Hayati-ye Sofla (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Soflá; also known as Pīr Ḩayātī, Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Pā’īn, Pīriāī, and Pīryal) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 210, in 47 families.",
"score": "1.79354"
},
{
"id": "33134200",
"title": "Pir Hayati, Lorestan",
"text": " Pir Hayati (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Robat Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 165, in 31 families.",
"score": "1.7176497"
},
{
"id": "10446140",
"title": "Pir Hayati-ye Vosta",
"text": " Pir Hayati-ye Vosta (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Vosţá) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 21 families.",
"score": "1.6968985"
},
{
"id": "11162357",
"title": "Pir Hayati, Kermanshah",
"text": " Pir Hayati (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Miyan Darband Rural District, in the Central District of Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 201, in 47 families.",
"score": "1.6707946"
},
{
"id": "32144178",
"title": "Tazehnab-e Mohammad Baqer",
"text": " Tazehnab-e Mohammad Baqer (, also Romanized as Tāzehnāb-e Moḩammad Bāqer; also known as Pīr Ḩayāmī and Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Shaban Rural District, in the Central District of Nahavand County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 18, in 4 families.",
"score": "1.5414546"
},
{
"id": "10446138",
"title": "Pir Hayati-ye Olya",
"text": " Pir Hayati-ye Olya (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye ‘Olyā; also known as Kahfri, Kofrī, and Pīr Hayātī-ye Bālā) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 20 families.",
"score": "1.5299821"
},
{
"id": "27562565",
"title": "Pir Badami",
"text": " Pir Badami (, also Romanized as Pīr Bādāmī) is a village in Dehdasht-e Gharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Kohgiluyeh County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 71, in 16 families.",
"score": "1.465034"
},
{
"id": "25477936",
"title": "Pir (Zoroastrianism)",
"text": " Pir refers to a site of pilgrimage, typically one of the Zoroastrian faith, in Persian. Pirs range from localized devotional sites to major centers of worship. Among the most well-known pirs are the six mountain pir which can be found in and around the city of Yazd, Iran: Seti Pir, Pir-e Sabz, Pir-e Nāraki, Pir-e Bānu, Pir-e Herisht, and Pir-e Nārestān. However, pirs can be found in cities throughout the Persian world including Kerman, Shiraz and Tehran.",
"score": "1.4390877"
},
{
"id": "4343636",
"title": "Hayatullah Hayat",
"text": " Hayatullah Hayat (حيات الله حيات) (born 1974) is a politician in Afghanistan and former Interior Minister. He previously served as Governor of Wardak, Helmand, Nangarhar and Kandahar provinces, and also as the Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development. Hayat was appointed as Minister of Interior Affairs in March 2021, replacing Masood Andrabi. He served as Minister of Interior Affairs until 19 June 2021.",
"score": "1.4280797"
},
{
"id": "31445632",
"title": "Gujrat, Pakistan",
"text": "🇮🇷 Piranshahr, Iran (since 2018) ",
"score": "1.4258902"
},
{
"id": "6008865",
"title": "Kuri Hayati",
"text": " Kuri Hayati (, also Romanized as Kūrī Ḩayātī and Kūrīḩayātī) is a village in Kuri Rural District, in the Central District of Jam County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 765 in 164 families.",
"score": "1.4249796"
},
{
"id": "27037820",
"title": "Pir Sohawa",
"text": " Pir Sohawa (ٗUrdu:پیر سوہاوہ)is a rapidly developing tourist resort located 17 km from Islamabad on top of Margalla Hills. It has a 3000 plus ft elevation and located in Monal village which is geographically part of Haripur District.On 6 January 2012, after almost six years, Pir Sohawa, the city’s highest tourist spot, received few inches of snowfall. Tourist attractions Bright hills is a holiday resorts at scenic views of canyons on Margalla hills at 4800 feet above sea level. 22 km from zoo islamabad.",
"score": "1.4186671"
},
{
"id": "10326060",
"title": "Eid al-Fitr",
"text": " Ramazon Hayit or Roʻza hayiti is a public holiday in Uzbekistan and widely celebrated. Traditional pastry such as kush-tili, plov and chak-chak are prepared by Uzbek families the day before Eid al-Fitr for consumption. Businesses tend to sell a high range of candies and children's toys during this period.",
"score": "1.4167148"
},
{
"id": "12169527",
"title": "Haiderzai, Pishin",
"text": " It is known for tobacco dealing and business all over the world. It has a bazaar known as Yaru which can supply items of everyday needs. Haiderzai has electricity, gas stations, and telephone and mobile phone services. It has famous hotels named the Ajwa Hotel Yaru and the Sharjah Hotel, which is most famous for its culture and spicy dishes, broast, rosh, saji, soap, chai and mustang cake.",
"score": "1.4133742"
},
{
"id": "31118695",
"title": "Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed railway station",
"text": " Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed railway station (, د حیات شیر پاؤ شہید اورګاډي سټيشن) is located in Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed village, Nowshera district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of the Pakistan.",
"score": "1.409868"
},
{
"id": "4609679",
"title": "Gulshani",
"text": " The Gulshani (Gülşenî) is a Halvati (Khalwati order) sub-order founded by Pir Ibrahim Gulshani, a Turkmen sufi sheikh from Eastern Anatolia, who died in Egypt. His family roots reaches to Oguzata shah in Azerbaijan. When the Ottomans conquered Egypt the Gulshani order became popular with serving soldiers of the Ottoman army in Egypt. The order was later carried back to Diyarbakir and Istanbul where several zawiyas or tekkes were established. One notable such tekke was that of the ancestor of Şamsettin Efendi, Pir Ikmalettin Efendi in Diyarbakir. Ibrahim Al-Gulshani is buried at the takiyyat in Cairo, which was built in 1519–1524. The building, now abandoned, is included on the World Monuments Fund's 2018 list of monuments at risk.",
"score": "1.4049563"
},
{
"id": "11784680",
"title": "Hayat-e-No",
"text": " Hayat-e-No was established in 2000 in Tehran following the closure of another reformist paper, Azad. The publisher of Hayat-e-No was Hadi Khamenei, brother of the Supreme Leader of Iran Ali Khamenei. Hameed Qazwini was the editor-in-chief of the paper. When Bahar, a reformist daily, was banned in August 2000 Hayat-e-No became one of the most significant media outlets for the reformist groups in the country. During this period Hayat-e-No sold 300,000 copies. In June 2005, before the presidential election, the paper along with other reformist papers, including Aftab Yazd and Eqbal, published the letter of presidential candidate Mahdi Karroubi to Ali Khamenei. Upon ",
"score": "1.4038398"
},
{
"id": "11784679",
"title": "Hayat-e-No",
"text": " Hayat-e-No ( meaning New Life in English) was a Persian reformist newspaper published in Tehran, Iran. The paper was in circulation from 2000 to December 2009 when it was closed by the Iranian authorities.",
"score": "1.4031355"
},
{
"id": "10910641",
"title": "Hafiz Hayat",
"text": " The shrine of Hafiz Hayat rests on a mound six feet high above the plain. The site consists of a haveli, baradari, mosque, four tombs of different proportions, some graves, seven waterholes and old trees. The place was initially the property of the then ruler Raja Kaladhvi.",
"score": "1.4010717"
},
{
"id": "1098051",
"title": "Pir of Pagaro VI",
"text": " Sibghatullah Shah Al-Rashidi II ((Sindhi) صبغت الله شاهه راشدي ), Pir Pagaro the sixth, was a spiritual leader of the Hur Movement during Sindh's involvement in the Indian independence movement. Hur (Arabic: حر meaning \"free\", \"not slave\") is a Sufi Muslim community in the province of Sindh, Pakistan. Soreh Badshah (شهيد سورهيه بادشاهه) (the Victorious King or the great king) was the title given him by his admirers. He was hanged by the colonial government on 20 March 1943 in the Central Jail Hyderabad, Sindh. His burial place remains unknown, despite requests to the government from people living in Sindh.",
"score": "1.399976"
}
] | [
"Pir Hayati-ye Sofla\n Pir Hayati-ye Sofla (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Soflá; also known as Pīr Ḩayātī, Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Pā’īn, Pīriāī, and Pīryal) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 210, in 47 families.",
"Pir Hayati, Lorestan\n Pir Hayati (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Robat Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 165, in 31 families.",
"Pir Hayati-ye Vosta\n Pir Hayati-ye Vosta (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye Vosţá) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 21 families.",
"Pir Hayati, Kermanshah\n Pir Hayati (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Miyan Darband Rural District, in the Central District of Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 201, in 47 families.",
"Tazehnab-e Mohammad Baqer\n Tazehnab-e Mohammad Baqer (, also Romanized as Tāzehnāb-e Moḩammad Bāqer; also known as Pīr Ḩayāmī and Pīr Ḩayātī) is a village in Shaban Rural District, in the Central District of Nahavand County, Hamadan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 18, in 4 families.",
"Pir Hayati-ye Olya\n Pir Hayati-ye Olya (, also Romanized as Pīr Ḩayātī-ye ‘Olyā; also known as Kahfri, Kofrī, and Pīr Hayātī-ye Bālā) is a village in Mahidasht Rural District, Mahidasht District, Kermanshah County, Kermanshah Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 91, in 20 families.",
"Pir Badami\n Pir Badami (, also Romanized as Pīr Bādāmī) is a village in Dehdasht-e Gharbi Rural District, in the Central District of Kohgiluyeh County, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 71, in 16 families.",
"Pir (Zoroastrianism)\n Pir refers to a site of pilgrimage, typically one of the Zoroastrian faith, in Persian. Pirs range from localized devotional sites to major centers of worship. Among the most well-known pirs are the six mountain pir which can be found in and around the city of Yazd, Iran: Seti Pir, Pir-e Sabz, Pir-e Nāraki, Pir-e Bānu, Pir-e Herisht, and Pir-e Nārestān. However, pirs can be found in cities throughout the Persian world including Kerman, Shiraz and Tehran.",
"Hayatullah Hayat\n Hayatullah Hayat (حيات الله حيات) (born 1974) is a politician in Afghanistan and former Interior Minister. He previously served as Governor of Wardak, Helmand, Nangarhar and Kandahar provinces, and also as the Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development. Hayat was appointed as Minister of Interior Affairs in March 2021, replacing Masood Andrabi. He served as Minister of Interior Affairs until 19 June 2021.",
"Gujrat, Pakistan\n🇮🇷 Piranshahr, Iran (since 2018) ",
"Kuri Hayati\n Kuri Hayati (, also Romanized as Kūrī Ḩayātī and Kūrīḩayātī) is a village in Kuri Rural District, in the Central District of Jam County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 765 in 164 families.",
"Pir Sohawa\n Pir Sohawa (ٗUrdu:پیر سوہاوہ)is a rapidly developing tourist resort located 17 km from Islamabad on top of Margalla Hills. It has a 3000 plus ft elevation and located in Monal village which is geographically part of Haripur District.On 6 January 2012, after almost six years, Pir Sohawa, the city’s highest tourist spot, received few inches of snowfall. Tourist attractions Bright hills is a holiday resorts at scenic views of canyons on Margalla hills at 4800 feet above sea level. 22 km from zoo islamabad.",
"Eid al-Fitr\n Ramazon Hayit or Roʻza hayiti is a public holiday in Uzbekistan and widely celebrated. Traditional pastry such as kush-tili, plov and chak-chak are prepared by Uzbek families the day before Eid al-Fitr for consumption. Businesses tend to sell a high range of candies and children's toys during this period.",
"Haiderzai, Pishin\n It is known for tobacco dealing and business all over the world. It has a bazaar known as Yaru which can supply items of everyday needs. Haiderzai has electricity, gas stations, and telephone and mobile phone services. It has famous hotels named the Ajwa Hotel Yaru and the Sharjah Hotel, which is most famous for its culture and spicy dishes, broast, rosh, saji, soap, chai and mustang cake.",
"Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed railway station\n Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed railway station (, د حیات شیر پاؤ شہید اورګاډي سټيشن) is located in Hayat Sher Pao Shaheed village, Nowshera district of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of the Pakistan.",
"Gulshani\n The Gulshani (Gülşenî) is a Halvati (Khalwati order) sub-order founded by Pir Ibrahim Gulshani, a Turkmen sufi sheikh from Eastern Anatolia, who died in Egypt. His family roots reaches to Oguzata shah in Azerbaijan. When the Ottomans conquered Egypt the Gulshani order became popular with serving soldiers of the Ottoman army in Egypt. The order was later carried back to Diyarbakir and Istanbul where several zawiyas or tekkes were established. One notable such tekke was that of the ancestor of Şamsettin Efendi, Pir Ikmalettin Efendi in Diyarbakir. Ibrahim Al-Gulshani is buried at the takiyyat in Cairo, which was built in 1519–1524. The building, now abandoned, is included on the World Monuments Fund's 2018 list of monuments at risk.",
"Hayat-e-No\n Hayat-e-No was established in 2000 in Tehran following the closure of another reformist paper, Azad. The publisher of Hayat-e-No was Hadi Khamenei, brother of the Supreme Leader of Iran Ali Khamenei. Hameed Qazwini was the editor-in-chief of the paper. When Bahar, a reformist daily, was banned in August 2000 Hayat-e-No became one of the most significant media outlets for the reformist groups in the country. During this period Hayat-e-No sold 300,000 copies. In June 2005, before the presidential election, the paper along with other reformist papers, including Aftab Yazd and Eqbal, published the letter of presidential candidate Mahdi Karroubi to Ali Khamenei. Upon ",
"Hayat-e-No\n Hayat-e-No ( meaning New Life in English) was a Persian reformist newspaper published in Tehran, Iran. The paper was in circulation from 2000 to December 2009 when it was closed by the Iranian authorities.",
"Hafiz Hayat\n The shrine of Hafiz Hayat rests on a mound six feet high above the plain. The site consists of a haveli, baradari, mosque, four tombs of different proportions, some graves, seven waterholes and old trees. The place was initially the property of the then ruler Raja Kaladhvi.",
"Pir of Pagaro VI\n Sibghatullah Shah Al-Rashidi II ((Sindhi) صبغت الله شاهه راشدي ), Pir Pagaro the sixth, was a spiritual leader of the Hur Movement during Sindh's involvement in the Indian independence movement. Hur (Arabic: حر meaning \"free\", \"not slave\") is a Sufi Muslim community in the province of Sindh, Pakistan. Soreh Badshah (شهيد سورهيه بادشاهه) (the Victorious King or the great king) was the title given him by his admirers. He was hanged by the colonial government on 20 March 1943 in the Central Jail Hyderabad, Sindh. His burial place remains unknown, despite requests to the government from people living in Sindh."
] |
Who is the author of O dia das calças roladas? | [
"Germano Almeida",
"Germano de Almeida"
] | author | O dia das calças roladas | 5,321,532 | 45 | [
{
"id": "28446428",
"title": "O dia das calças roladas",
"text": " O dia das calças roladas is a Capeverdean novel published in 1982 by Germano Almeida. The book was first published on Ilhéu Editora. The story is about an account of a strike that happened on the island of Santo Antão.",
"score": "2.048242"
},
{
"id": "13847851",
"title": "Germano Almeida",
"text": " His first work was O dia das calças roladas which was about an account of a strike on the island of Santo Antão, it was first written in 1982 and was published in 1983. He wrote the novel The Last Will and Testament of Senhor da Silva Araújo which was about businessman turned philanthropist who leaves his fortune to his illegitimate daughter. As independence comes he is shown up to be a relic of colonialism. A motion picture would be made about the novel in 1997 and was directed by the Portuguese director Francisco Manso, it won the award at the Brazil's largest film festival, the Festival de Cinema de Gramado. He later published Dona Pura e os Camaradas de Abril in 1999, a story about the 1974 Carnation revolution in Portugal. Cabo Verde – Viagem pela história das ilhas, published in 2003 was his historical presentation of all the nine inhabited islands that constitute Cape Verde. His recently published novels and works were Eva in 2006 and De Monte Cara vê-se o mundo in 2014.",
"score": "1.685568"
},
{
"id": "28485949",
"title": "Isabel da Nóbrega",
"text": " She adopted the pseudonym of Isabel da Nóbrega, and published several works, including plays, screenplays for film and television, novels, and other works under this name. She was a member of PEN Portugal, and the Portuguese Association of Writers. In 1974, she was one of the organizers of the 1st Portuguese Writers' Congress. Her first major published work was a novel, Os Anjos e os Homens (The Angels and Men) in 1952. It was followed by Viver com os outros (Living with others) in 1964, her best-known work. Her other books include Solo para gravador (1973), Cartas de Amor de Gente Famosa (2009). She also wrote a number of books for children, including Rama the Blue Elephant (1971). In 1954, her play O Filho Pródigo ou o Amor Difícil was produced at the Teatro Nacional D. Maria II by Rey Colaço-Robles Monteiro. Several of her other plays ",
"score": "1.5785472"
},
{
"id": "4523749",
"title": "Lídia Jorge",
"text": " Cucha Carvalhelho; the play was performed at Teatro da Trindade, Lisbon, and Cineteatro Louletano in 2011. On the 30th anniversary of the publication of O Dia dos Prodígios the Council of Loulé organised a commemorative exhibition of her work entitled 30 Anos de Escrita Publicada [30 Years of Published Writing]. The exhibition was open to the public between November 2010 and March 2011, during which a series of talks, discussions and guided tours took place. In 2005 Lídia Jorge became France Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In 2006 she attended a ceremony in Germany where she was awarded the first ever International Albatros Literature Prize by the Günter Grass Foundation ",
"score": "1.5757945"
},
{
"id": "1472410",
"title": "Prémio Leya",
"text": "2008: Murilo Antônio de Carvalho (Brazil), for O Rastro do Jaguar. ; 2009: João Paulo Borges Coelho (Mozambique), for O Olho de Hertzog. ; 2010: not assigned ; 2011: João Ricardo Pedro (Portugal), with the book O teu rosto será o último. ; 2012: Nuno Camarneiro (Portugal), for Debaixo de algum céu. ; 2013: Gabriela Ruivo Trindade, Uma Outra Voz. ; 2014: Afonso Reis Cabral (Portugal), O Meu Irmão. ; 2015: António Tavares (Portugal), O Coro dos Defuntos. ; 2016: not assigned ; 2017: João Pinto Coelho (Portugal), Os Loucos da Rua Mazur. ; 2018: Itamar Vieira Júnior (Brazil), Torto Arado. ",
"score": "1.5741575"
},
{
"id": "9507114",
"title": "List of Portuguese writers",
"text": "Luísa Dacosta (1927–2015) ; Júlio Dantas (1876–1962), journalist, writer ; João de Deus (1830–1896), poet, writer, teacher of a new read-learning method ; José António Duro (1875–1899), poet ",
"score": "1.5717528"
},
{
"id": "28566973",
"title": "António Tavares (writer)",
"text": " In 2013, he received an honorable mention in the Alves Redol Prize for the novel 'O Tempo Adormeceu sob o Sol da Tarde'. Tavares wrote the popular novel As Palavras que Me Deverão Guiar um Dia in which he was a finalist in the 2013 Leya Prize. However, in 2015 he won the Leya Award for the novel O Coro dos Defuntos (The Choir of the Dead). He also founded the regional newspaper 'A Linha do Oeste' and the magazine 'Litorais'.",
"score": "1.568362"
},
{
"id": "8333720",
"title": "A Voz dos Deuses",
"text": " In a 1984 interview in the Jornal de Letras, Aguiar revealed the reasons that led him to write the novel. He sought to recover a lost conscience of his Portuguese ancestry. \"\"I became tired at the small dimension we give to ourselves, at how lowly we regard ourselves. We lost the empire, poor of us; we never found comfort again; we accepted to be the dustbin of Europe, an anecdote of Europe. I had a burst of anger: is it so that we are nothing? We who own a palace are convinced that we own a pigpen!\" - Fernando Dacosta, Jornal de Letras, 1984",
"score": "1.5674492"
},
{
"id": "12916170",
"title": "Dulce Maria Cardoso",
"text": " Dulce Maria Cardoso (born 1964) is a Portuguese writer. She was born in Fonte Longa, Carrazeda de Ansiães, Trás-os-Montes but moved to Luanda, Angola as an infant. Her family came back to Portugal in 1975 along with half a million other retornados as Portugal's overseas colonies gained independence. She studied law at the University of Lisbon and worked as a lawyer before taking up writing on a full-time basis. Her fiction includes novels as well as short stories. Her debut novel Campo de Sangue (2002) won the Grand Prize \"Acontece de Romance\". Os Meus Sentimentos won the EU Prize for Literature, and O Chão dos Pardais (2009) won the Portuguese Pen Club Award. Her fourth novel O Retorno (2011) was also published to wide acclaim.",
"score": "1.5589452"
},
{
"id": "904958",
"title": "African literature",
"text": " dia das calças roladas, The Last Will and Testament of Senhor da Silva Araújo ; Elechi Amadi (Nigeria): The Concubine, The Great Ponds, Sunset in Biafra ; Ayi Kwei Armah (Ghana): The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born, Two Thousand Seasons ; Sefi Atta (Nigeria): Everything Good Will Come ; Ayesha Harruna Attah (Ghana): Harmattan Rain ; Mariama Bâ (Senegal): Une si longue lettre (So Long a Letter) ; Chris Barnard (South Africa): Bundu, Mahala ; Mongo Beti (Cameroon): The Poor Christ of Bomba ; André Brink (South Africa): 'n Droe Wit Seisoen (A Dry White Season), Gerugte van Reen (Rumours of Rain) ",
"score": "1.5581467"
},
{
"id": "4523745",
"title": "Lídia Jorge",
"text": " Lídia Jorge's first publication, the novel O Dia dos Prodígios [The Day of the Prodigies] (1980), is considered to be a major contribution to the new wave of modern Portuguese literature which followed the end of the Estado Novo regime in 1974. The two novels which followed, O Cais das Merendas [The Wharf of the Parties’ Remains] (1982) and Notícia da Cidade Silvestre [The Wild Town Remembering] (1984) both won the Literary Prize of the Lisbon Municipality. However, it was with A Costa dos Murmúrios [The Murmuring Coast] (1988), a book that draws upon her experiences in colonial Africa, that the author confirmed her status as one of the leading figures in modern Portuguese ",
"score": "1.5568142"
},
{
"id": "5053738",
"title": "Baltasar Lopes da Silva",
"text": " Baltasar Lopes da Silva (Caleijão, São Nicolau, 23 April 1907 - Lisbon, Portugal, 28 May 1989 ) was a writer, poet and linguist from Cape Verde, who wrote in both Portuguese and Cape Verdean Creole. With Manuel Lopes and Jorge Barbosa, he was the founder of Claridade. In 1947 he published Chiquinho, considered the greatest Cape Verdean novel and O dialecto crioulo de Cabo Verde which describes different dialects of creoles of Cape Verde. He sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Osvaldo Alcântara. Ressaca, his work of poems can be found on the CD Poesia de Cabo Verde e Sete Poemas de Sebastião da Gama by Afonso Dias.",
"score": "1.5507199"
},
{
"id": "3245492",
"title": "Sérgio Rodrigues (author)",
"text": " Sérgio Rodrigues (Brazil, 1962) is a Brazilian fiction writer, literary critic, columnist and journalist - winner of the 2014 Prêmio Portugal Telecom de Literatura for his book \"O drible\" (published by Companhia das Letras) [\"The Feint\"]. His books have been translated to English, French, Spanish and Danish.",
"score": "1.5439584"
},
{
"id": "11357571",
"title": "Ana Paula Maia",
"text": " She graduated in computer science and communication science. Maia's first book, O Habitante das falhas subterrâneas was published in 2003. She is the author of the Saga dos Brutos (Saga of Brutes) trilogy, started with the short novels Entre rinhas de cachorros e porcos abatidos (“Between Dog Fights and Pig Slaughter) and O Trabalho sujo dos outros (The dirty work of others) —published in a single volume— and concluded with the novel Carvão animal (carbo animalis).",
"score": "1.5425452"
},
{
"id": "5001010",
"title": "Marcos Losekann",
"text": " Marcos Losekann is also a writer. His first book, O Ronco da Pororoca, is inspired by the stories he gathered as a reporter in the Amazon. It was published by Editora Senac in 1999. The Entrevista com Deus trilogy marks his debut as a novelist. The Editora Planeta has published O Dossiê Iscariotes (2006), Segredo do Salão Verde (2007) and Entre a Cruz e a Suástica (2009). It is fiction, but with traces of reality. The writer-reporter is currently preparing to write about his experience in the Middle East, focusing on Gaza. The book, which is already under preparation and research.",
"score": "1.540736"
},
{
"id": "11139961",
"title": "Júlio Dinis",
"text": " Júlio Dinis, pseudonym of Joaquim Guilherme Gomes Coelho (14 November 1839 – 12 September 1871) was a Portuguese doctor and poet, playwright and novelist. He was the first great novelist of modern Portuguese middle-class society. His novels, extremely popular in his lifetime and still widely read in Portugal today, are written in a simple and direct style accessible to a large public. His first attacks of tuberculosis forced him to resign as deputy professor at the medical school of Porto. He had already published several tales of country life in the Jornal do Porto. Retiring to the coastal town of Ovar for his health, he wrote the novel for which he is best known, As Pupilas do Senhor Reitor (1867; \"The Pupils ",
"score": "1.5403523"
},
{
"id": "27349155",
"title": "Aydano Roriz",
"text": "Diamonds are Forgiving (Os Diamantes não são Eternos, 1998 – Brazil; 1999 – USA (in English translation); 2008 – Portugal; 2012 – English-language e-book) ; The Hope of Portugal (O Desejado, 2002 - Brazil; 2003 – Portugal) ; The First Governor (O Fundador, 2003 – Brazil; 2004 – Portugal) ; The Heretics in the New World (O Livro dos Hereges, 2004 – Brazil; 2006 – Portugal; 2012 – English-language e-book)) ; Van Dorth (Van Dorth, 2006 – Brazil; O Livro dos Hereges a Reconquista do Brasil, 2007 – Portugal) ; New Lusitania (Nova Lusitânia, 2007 – Portugal; 2008 – Brazil) ; The War of the Heretics (A Guerra dos Hereges, 2010 – Brazil) ",
"score": "1.5361955"
},
{
"id": "13223751",
"title": "São Paulo Prize for Literature",
"text": "Ronaldo Correia de Brito, Galiléia, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Objetiva, 2008. ISBN: 9788560281589 ; Carola Saavedra, Flores azuis, São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535913040 ; João Gilberto Noll, Acenos e Afagos, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Record, 2008. ISBN: 9788501082091 ; José Saramago, A Viagem do Elefante (English translation: The Elephant's Journey), São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535913415 ; Lívia Garcia-Roza, Milamor, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Record, 2008. ISBN: 9788501084415 ; Maria Esther Maciel, O Livro dos Nomes, São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535911640 ; Milton Hatoum, Órfãos do Eldorado (English translation: The ",
"score": "1.5257185"
},
{
"id": "4782708",
"title": "2014 Prémio Autores",
"text": "Best Children's and Juvenile Book ; O Senhor Pina, written by Álvaro Magalhães, illustrated by Luiz Darocha ; Irmão Lobo, written by Carla Maia de Almeida, illustrated by António Jorge Gonçalves ; O Rei Vai à Caça, written by Adélia Carvalho, illustrated by Marta Madureira ; Best Narrative Fiction Book ; Para Onde Vão os Guarda-Chuvas, by Afonso Cruz ; A Rocha Branca, by Fernando Campos ; No Labirinto de Centauro, by Rui Vieira ; Best Poetry Book ; Gaveta do Fundo, by A. M. Pires Cabral ; A Fome Apátrida das Aves, by Francisco Duarte Mangas ; Instituto de Antropologia, by Jorge Reis-Sá ",
"score": "1.5255127"
},
{
"id": "32964717",
"title": "Álvaro Cunhal",
"text": "Até Amanhã, Camaradas (adapted to television series in 2005). ; Cinco Dias, Cinco Noites (adapted to film in 1996). ; A Estrela de Seis Pontas. ; A Casa de Eulália. ; Lutas e Vidas. Um conto. ; Os Corrécios e outros Contos. ; Um Risco na Areia. ; Fronteiras. Cunhal was also a fiction writer, with several novels under the pseudonym Manuel Tiago, which he recognized as his own only in 1995. He also made the drawings for the original edition of Soeiro Pereira Gomes' book Esteiros. He published the following books under the pseudonym of Manuel Tiago: ",
"score": "1.5210145"
}
] | [
"O dia das calças roladas\n O dia das calças roladas is a Capeverdean novel published in 1982 by Germano Almeida. The book was first published on Ilhéu Editora. The story is about an account of a strike that happened on the island of Santo Antão.",
"Germano Almeida\n His first work was O dia das calças roladas which was about an account of a strike on the island of Santo Antão, it was first written in 1982 and was published in 1983. He wrote the novel The Last Will and Testament of Senhor da Silva Araújo which was about businessman turned philanthropist who leaves his fortune to his illegitimate daughter. As independence comes he is shown up to be a relic of colonialism. A motion picture would be made about the novel in 1997 and was directed by the Portuguese director Francisco Manso, it won the award at the Brazil's largest film festival, the Festival de Cinema de Gramado. He later published Dona Pura e os Camaradas de Abril in 1999, a story about the 1974 Carnation revolution in Portugal. Cabo Verde – Viagem pela história das ilhas, published in 2003 was his historical presentation of all the nine inhabited islands that constitute Cape Verde. His recently published novels and works were Eva in 2006 and De Monte Cara vê-se o mundo in 2014.",
"Isabel da Nóbrega\n She adopted the pseudonym of Isabel da Nóbrega, and published several works, including plays, screenplays for film and television, novels, and other works under this name. She was a member of PEN Portugal, and the Portuguese Association of Writers. In 1974, she was one of the organizers of the 1st Portuguese Writers' Congress. Her first major published work was a novel, Os Anjos e os Homens (The Angels and Men) in 1952. It was followed by Viver com os outros (Living with others) in 1964, her best-known work. Her other books include Solo para gravador (1973), Cartas de Amor de Gente Famosa (2009). She also wrote a number of books for children, including Rama the Blue Elephant (1971). In 1954, her play O Filho Pródigo ou o Amor Difícil was produced at the Teatro Nacional D. Maria II by Rey Colaço-Robles Monteiro. Several of her other plays ",
"Lídia Jorge\n Cucha Carvalhelho; the play was performed at Teatro da Trindade, Lisbon, and Cineteatro Louletano in 2011. On the 30th anniversary of the publication of O Dia dos Prodígios the Council of Loulé organised a commemorative exhibition of her work entitled 30 Anos de Escrita Publicada [30 Years of Published Writing]. The exhibition was open to the public between November 2010 and March 2011, during which a series of talks, discussions and guided tours took place. In 2005 Lídia Jorge became France Commandeur de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. In 2006 she attended a ceremony in Germany where she was awarded the first ever International Albatros Literature Prize by the Günter Grass Foundation ",
"Prémio Leya\n2008: Murilo Antônio de Carvalho (Brazil), for O Rastro do Jaguar. ; 2009: João Paulo Borges Coelho (Mozambique), for O Olho de Hertzog. ; 2010: not assigned ; 2011: João Ricardo Pedro (Portugal), with the book O teu rosto será o último. ; 2012: Nuno Camarneiro (Portugal), for Debaixo de algum céu. ; 2013: Gabriela Ruivo Trindade, Uma Outra Voz. ; 2014: Afonso Reis Cabral (Portugal), O Meu Irmão. ; 2015: António Tavares (Portugal), O Coro dos Defuntos. ; 2016: not assigned ; 2017: João Pinto Coelho (Portugal), Os Loucos da Rua Mazur. ; 2018: Itamar Vieira Júnior (Brazil), Torto Arado. ",
"List of Portuguese writers\nLuísa Dacosta (1927–2015) ; Júlio Dantas (1876–1962), journalist, writer ; João de Deus (1830–1896), poet, writer, teacher of a new read-learning method ; José António Duro (1875–1899), poet ",
"António Tavares (writer)\n In 2013, he received an honorable mention in the Alves Redol Prize for the novel 'O Tempo Adormeceu sob o Sol da Tarde'. Tavares wrote the popular novel As Palavras que Me Deverão Guiar um Dia in which he was a finalist in the 2013 Leya Prize. However, in 2015 he won the Leya Award for the novel O Coro dos Defuntos (The Choir of the Dead). He also founded the regional newspaper 'A Linha do Oeste' and the magazine 'Litorais'.",
"A Voz dos Deuses\n In a 1984 interview in the Jornal de Letras, Aguiar revealed the reasons that led him to write the novel. He sought to recover a lost conscience of his Portuguese ancestry. \"\"I became tired at the small dimension we give to ourselves, at how lowly we regard ourselves. We lost the empire, poor of us; we never found comfort again; we accepted to be the dustbin of Europe, an anecdote of Europe. I had a burst of anger: is it so that we are nothing? We who own a palace are convinced that we own a pigpen!\" - Fernando Dacosta, Jornal de Letras, 1984",
"Dulce Maria Cardoso\n Dulce Maria Cardoso (born 1964) is a Portuguese writer. She was born in Fonte Longa, Carrazeda de Ansiães, Trás-os-Montes but moved to Luanda, Angola as an infant. Her family came back to Portugal in 1975 along with half a million other retornados as Portugal's overseas colonies gained independence. She studied law at the University of Lisbon and worked as a lawyer before taking up writing on a full-time basis. Her fiction includes novels as well as short stories. Her debut novel Campo de Sangue (2002) won the Grand Prize \"Acontece de Romance\". Os Meus Sentimentos won the EU Prize for Literature, and O Chão dos Pardais (2009) won the Portuguese Pen Club Award. Her fourth novel O Retorno (2011) was also published to wide acclaim.",
"African literature\n dia das calças roladas, The Last Will and Testament of Senhor da Silva Araújo ; Elechi Amadi (Nigeria): The Concubine, The Great Ponds, Sunset in Biafra ; Ayi Kwei Armah (Ghana): The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born, Two Thousand Seasons ; Sefi Atta (Nigeria): Everything Good Will Come ; Ayesha Harruna Attah (Ghana): Harmattan Rain ; Mariama Bâ (Senegal): Une si longue lettre (So Long a Letter) ; Chris Barnard (South Africa): Bundu, Mahala ; Mongo Beti (Cameroon): The Poor Christ of Bomba ; André Brink (South Africa): 'n Droe Wit Seisoen (A Dry White Season), Gerugte van Reen (Rumours of Rain) ",
"Lídia Jorge\n Lídia Jorge's first publication, the novel O Dia dos Prodígios [The Day of the Prodigies] (1980), is considered to be a major contribution to the new wave of modern Portuguese literature which followed the end of the Estado Novo regime in 1974. The two novels which followed, O Cais das Merendas [The Wharf of the Parties’ Remains] (1982) and Notícia da Cidade Silvestre [The Wild Town Remembering] (1984) both won the Literary Prize of the Lisbon Municipality. However, it was with A Costa dos Murmúrios [The Murmuring Coast] (1988), a book that draws upon her experiences in colonial Africa, that the author confirmed her status as one of the leading figures in modern Portuguese ",
"Baltasar Lopes da Silva\n Baltasar Lopes da Silva (Caleijão, São Nicolau, 23 April 1907 - Lisbon, Portugal, 28 May 1989 ) was a writer, poet and linguist from Cape Verde, who wrote in both Portuguese and Cape Verdean Creole. With Manuel Lopes and Jorge Barbosa, he was the founder of Claridade. In 1947 he published Chiquinho, considered the greatest Cape Verdean novel and O dialecto crioulo de Cabo Verde which describes different dialects of creoles of Cape Verde. He sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Osvaldo Alcântara. Ressaca, his work of poems can be found on the CD Poesia de Cabo Verde e Sete Poemas de Sebastião da Gama by Afonso Dias.",
"Sérgio Rodrigues (author)\n Sérgio Rodrigues (Brazil, 1962) is a Brazilian fiction writer, literary critic, columnist and journalist - winner of the 2014 Prêmio Portugal Telecom de Literatura for his book \"O drible\" (published by Companhia das Letras) [\"The Feint\"]. His books have been translated to English, French, Spanish and Danish.",
"Ana Paula Maia\n She graduated in computer science and communication science. Maia's first book, O Habitante das falhas subterrâneas was published in 2003. She is the author of the Saga dos Brutos (Saga of Brutes) trilogy, started with the short novels Entre rinhas de cachorros e porcos abatidos (“Between Dog Fights and Pig Slaughter) and O Trabalho sujo dos outros (The dirty work of others) —published in a single volume— and concluded with the novel Carvão animal (carbo animalis).",
"Marcos Losekann\n Marcos Losekann is also a writer. His first book, O Ronco da Pororoca, is inspired by the stories he gathered as a reporter in the Amazon. It was published by Editora Senac in 1999. The Entrevista com Deus trilogy marks his debut as a novelist. The Editora Planeta has published O Dossiê Iscariotes (2006), Segredo do Salão Verde (2007) and Entre a Cruz e a Suástica (2009). It is fiction, but with traces of reality. The writer-reporter is currently preparing to write about his experience in the Middle East, focusing on Gaza. The book, which is already under preparation and research.",
"Júlio Dinis\n Júlio Dinis, pseudonym of Joaquim Guilherme Gomes Coelho (14 November 1839 – 12 September 1871) was a Portuguese doctor and poet, playwright and novelist. He was the first great novelist of modern Portuguese middle-class society. His novels, extremely popular in his lifetime and still widely read in Portugal today, are written in a simple and direct style accessible to a large public. His first attacks of tuberculosis forced him to resign as deputy professor at the medical school of Porto. He had already published several tales of country life in the Jornal do Porto. Retiring to the coastal town of Ovar for his health, he wrote the novel for which he is best known, As Pupilas do Senhor Reitor (1867; \"The Pupils ",
"Aydano Roriz\nDiamonds are Forgiving (Os Diamantes não são Eternos, 1998 – Brazil; 1999 – USA (in English translation); 2008 – Portugal; 2012 – English-language e-book) ; The Hope of Portugal (O Desejado, 2002 - Brazil; 2003 – Portugal) ; The First Governor (O Fundador, 2003 – Brazil; 2004 – Portugal) ; The Heretics in the New World (O Livro dos Hereges, 2004 – Brazil; 2006 – Portugal; 2012 – English-language e-book)) ; Van Dorth (Van Dorth, 2006 – Brazil; O Livro dos Hereges a Reconquista do Brasil, 2007 – Portugal) ; New Lusitania (Nova Lusitânia, 2007 – Portugal; 2008 – Brazil) ; The War of the Heretics (A Guerra dos Hereges, 2010 – Brazil) ",
"São Paulo Prize for Literature\nRonaldo Correia de Brito, Galiléia, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Objetiva, 2008. ISBN: 9788560281589 ; Carola Saavedra, Flores azuis, São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535913040 ; João Gilberto Noll, Acenos e Afagos, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Record, 2008. ISBN: 9788501082091 ; José Saramago, A Viagem do Elefante (English translation: The Elephant's Journey), São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535913415 ; Lívia Garcia-Roza, Milamor, Rio de Janeiro, RJ: Editora Record, 2008. ISBN: 9788501084415 ; Maria Esther Maciel, O Livro dos Nomes, São Paulo, SP: Companhia das Letras, 2008. ISBN: 9788535911640 ; Milton Hatoum, Órfãos do Eldorado (English translation: The ",
"2014 Prémio Autores\nBest Children's and Juvenile Book ; O Senhor Pina, written by Álvaro Magalhães, illustrated by Luiz Darocha ; Irmão Lobo, written by Carla Maia de Almeida, illustrated by António Jorge Gonçalves ; O Rei Vai à Caça, written by Adélia Carvalho, illustrated by Marta Madureira ; Best Narrative Fiction Book ; Para Onde Vão os Guarda-Chuvas, by Afonso Cruz ; A Rocha Branca, by Fernando Campos ; No Labirinto de Centauro, by Rui Vieira ; Best Poetry Book ; Gaveta do Fundo, by A. M. Pires Cabral ; A Fome Apátrida das Aves, by Francisco Duarte Mangas ; Instituto de Antropologia, by Jorge Reis-Sá ",
"Álvaro Cunhal\nAté Amanhã, Camaradas (adapted to television series in 2005). ; Cinco Dias, Cinco Noites (adapted to film in 1996). ; A Estrela de Seis Pontas. ; A Casa de Eulália. ; Lutas e Vidas. Um conto. ; Os Corrécios e outros Contos. ; Um Risco na Areia. ; Fronteiras. Cunhal was also a fiction writer, with several novels under the pseudonym Manuel Tiago, which he recognized as his own only in 1995. He also made the drawings for the original edition of Soeiro Pereira Gomes' book Esteiros. He published the following books under the pseudonym of Manuel Tiago: "
] |
In what city was Domenico Bologna born? | [
"Turin",
"Torino",
"Turin, Italy"
] | place of birth | Domenico Bologna | 924,447 | 27 | [
{
"id": "6373348",
"title": "Domenico Bologna",
"text": " Domenico Bologna (born in Turin August 22, 1845 – 1885) was an Italian painter, mainly of landscapes with figures. He trained under professors Antonio Fontanesi and Francesco Gamba in Accademia Albertina. Among his works are: Dopo Vespro, exhibited in 1875 at Milan; Tramonto, exhibited in 1881 at Milan; Il Tanaro, bought by the Società promotrice of Fine Arts in Genoa; Le sponde del Po at Turin, sold in 1878 at St Petersburg, Russia, Le sponde del Tanaro; Inverno ; Pascolo; and Tramonto, exhibited in 1883 at Rome.",
"score": "1.8773005"
},
{
"id": "11198357",
"title": "Bologna",
"text": " the Bologna Chamber Orchestra in 1946, 7 February 1915 – 13 December 2007) ; Umberto Eco (writer and academic, born in Alessandria, Piedmont, 1932–2016) ; Enzio of Sardinia (born c. 1218, King of Sardinia and illegitimate son of Emperor Frederick II, was imprisoned in Palazzo Re Enzo from 1249 until his death in 1272) ; Vasco Errani (politician, born 1955) ; William Girometti (painter, born in Milan, 1924–1998) ; Alfonso Lombardi (sculptor, born in Ferrara, c. 1497–1537) ; Niccolò dell'Arca (sculptor, born in Bari, c. 1435/1440–2 March 1494) ; Juan Ignacio Molina (naturalist, born in Chile, 1740–1829) ; Giovanni Pascoli (poet and ",
"score": "1.7231818"
},
{
"id": "11198358",
"title": "Bologna",
"text": " born in San Mauro di Romagna, 1855–1912) ; St. Petronius (San Petronio, bishop of Bologna and patron saint of the city, birthplace unknown, died c. 450 AD) ; Romano Prodi (economist, politician, born in Scandiano, Reggio Emilia, 1939) ; Gioachino Rossini (opera composer, born in Pesaro, 1792–1868) ; Giuseppe Torelli (composer, born in Verona, 1658–1709) ; Wu Ming (collective of writers, active since 2000) ; Farinelli (Carlo Broschi, castrato opera singer, 1705–1782) ; Giorgio Rosa (engineer, president of short-lived micronation Republic of Rose Island, 1925–2017) In addition to the natives of the city listed above, the following have made Bologna their home:",
"score": "1.6994522"
},
{
"id": "88614",
"title": "Domenico Pedrini",
"text": " Domenico Pedrini (Bologna, 1728 - Bologna, 1800) was an Italian painter. Fiercely provincial in his geographic activity, Pedrini's works were mainly completed in and around Bologna, and yet his atavistic style strayed far afield into Bologna's strong Baroque ancestry.",
"score": "1.6982138"
},
{
"id": "5590945",
"title": "Domenico Ferrabosco",
"text": " Born in Bologna, Domenico was one of four sons of Annibale Ferrabosco, members of a distinguished Bolognese family whose genealogical records date back to the middle of the 15th century. Domenico is the first of the family known to be a musician. Little is known about his early life. He was a singer at the cathedral of San Petronio, and by 1540 had established a high enough reputation for his various musical activities that the city officials gave him a lifetime stipend to oversee the palace musicians. Sometime in the 1540s he went to Rome, and he became magister puerorum (director of the boy's choir) for the Julian Chapel in 1546. However, due to family obligations he returned to Bologna in 1547, ",
"score": "1.689389"
},
{
"id": "8414599",
"title": "Domenico Guglielmini",
"text": " Born in Bologna within a well-off family, he graduated in medicine in 1678 with Marcello Malpighi at the University of Bologna, at the same time he studied mathematics with Geminiano Montanari and became a member of the Academia della Traccia o dei Filosofi. His first mathematical writings topic was astronomy, but later he focused his studies on hydraulics. In 1686 he was named \"Bologna General Water Administrator\", an important role due to the large number of watercourses existing in the area and the frequent flooding that required surveillance. The experience gave inspiration for his well known work \"Della natura dei fiumi\" which is considered a masterpiece of modern ",
"score": "1.6744441"
},
{
"id": "13978527",
"title": "Antonio Mosca",
"text": " Mosca was born in Pieve di Cento, and died in Bologna. Born to a humble family, he obtained a stipend from the Pious Legacy or Endowment by the Melloni family to attend the Academy of Fine Arts of Bologna during 1894 to 1896. He refined his ability to paint portraits. By 1900, Antonio had moved to Bologna, and established friendships with Francesco Fabbri and Cesare Mauro Trebbi, with whom he would collaborate in the decoration of the cupola of the church of Church of San Pietro in Castello d'Argile. In 1905, he was employed in collaboration with Domenico Ferri, in the decoration of the cupola and apse of the church of Santa Maria Magdalena in Bologna. He pursued this work in a number of churches in Northeast Italy, including the parish church of Tuenno in Trentino-Alto Adige and in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception in Borgo Valsugana, Trento. He wrote a treatise on perspective awarded at prizes in Milan, Paris, and Bologna in 1913. In 1912-1913 he painted a portrait of King Nikola I of Montenegro. Pieve di Cento in 1924 commissioned him to decorate the public clock in the Palazzo Comunale.",
"score": "1.6518312"
},
{
"id": "27894980",
"title": "Domenico Maria Viani",
"text": " He was born in Bologna, the son of Giovanni Maria Viani, and was educated there under his father, who kept a rival academy to that of Carlo Cignani. For the church of La Natività at Bologna, there is a series of Prophets and Evangelists by him; for the church of Santo Spirito, Bergamo, he painted a Miracle of St Antony of Padua. He disappeared in Pistoia where he is also thought to have died.",
"score": "1.6251092"
},
{
"id": "8414598",
"title": "Domenico Guglielmini",
"text": " Domenico Guglielmini (Bologna, 27 September 1655 - Padua, 27 July 1710) was an Italian mathematician, chemist and physician. He lived and worked with success in Bologna and Padua rising to a notable level of prominence.",
"score": "1.6187817"
},
{
"id": "12361001",
"title": "Giuseppe Antonio Caccioli",
"text": " Giuseppe Antonio Caccioli was born in Bologna. When he was three, his father the painter Giovanni Battista Caccioli died, and from a very early age he was taught to paint by his tutors. He later apprenticed with the brothers Giuseppe and Antonio Rolli who at the time were painting the ceiling of San Paolo Maggiore church in Bologna. Caccioli had a natural predisposition for the art of painting. He married Rosa Teresa Fontana with whom he had two boys. He died in Bologna at the age of 67 and was buried in Santa Maria Maggiore in Bologna.",
"score": "1.6170908"
},
{
"id": "3732319",
"title": "Domenico Canale",
"text": " Domenico was from San Pietro di Rovereto, a community within the municipality of Zoagli along the Italian Riviera, approximately 40 km southeast of Genoa. The son of Giovanni Canale and A. Vaccaro, Domenico sailed to America in February 1859 at sixteen years old. He landed in New Orleans after a 65-day voyage, and boarded the steamboat John Simon up the Mississippi River and settled in Memphis, Tennessee.",
"score": "1.6156633"
},
{
"id": "11968964",
"title": "Domenichino",
"text": " Domenichino was born in Bologna, son of a shoemaker, and there initially studied under Denis Calvaert. After quarreling with Calvaert, he left to work in the Accademia degli Incamminati of the Carracci where, because of his small stature, he was nicknamed Domenichino, meaning \"little Domenico\" in Italian. He left Bologna for Rome in 1602 and became one of the most talented apprentices to emerge from Annibale Carracci's supervision. As a young artist in Rome he lived with his slightly older Bolognese colleagues Albani and Guido Reni, and worked alongside Lanfranco, who later would become a chief rival. In addition to assisting Annibale with completion of ",
"score": "1.611721"
},
{
"id": "912695",
"title": "Domenico Galeazzi",
"text": " Domenico Galeazzi (Bologna, 20 May 1647 – Bologna, 9 April 1731) was an Italian painter.",
"score": "1.6113794"
},
{
"id": "8604144",
"title": "Giovanni Battista Guglielmini",
"text": " Guglielmini was born at Bologna, received the tonsure in early youth and was a secular priest (\"abate\"). His career in the Church is unknown; he died single. A protégé of Cardinal Ignazio Boncompagni, he pursued higher studies, and graduated in philosophy, in 1787, at the age of 24. If he was a relative of the famous engineer and physician, Domenico Guglielmini, who had been general superintendent of the Bologna waterworks a hundred years before, he was certainly not his direct descendant.",
"score": "1.5946724"
},
{
"id": "31589800",
"title": "Giovanni Battista Savelli",
"text": " He was born in Rome. There is no data about his education. As a young man, he was appointed protonotary apostolic. He was named governor of Bologna during 1468 - 1470.",
"score": "1.5940764"
},
{
"id": "3564966",
"title": "Paolo Negro",
"text": " Negro was born in Arzignano, Province of Vicenza. A youth player at Brescia Calcio, he joined Bologna in 1990, and made his Serie A debut against Genoa, on 28 October 1990, amassing over 50 overall appearances in his first two professional seasons, the latter spent in Serie B.",
"score": "1.589699"
},
{
"id": "11445167",
"title": "David Bologna",
"text": " Born and raised in New Orleans, Bologna is the son of Rick Bologna and Holly Bologna. Their home was flooded when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, and the family moved to Austin, Texas. He was active in local theatre productions, including Bye Bye Birdie at Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre, “Seussical the Musical” with Brandt Blocker Presents at Six Flags New Orleans, and Peter Pan, until Hurricane Katrina forced his family to relocate to Austin, Texas. In Texas he performed with the Zachary Scott Theatre and the youth theatre kidsActing Studio and appeared in multiple productions, including Beauty and the Beast, Grease, and Cabaret. He is a two-time winner of the North American Irish Dancing Championships and placed fifth in the World Irish Dance Championships. He also won the Big Easy ",
"score": "1.5879443"
},
{
"id": "12566230",
"title": "Pio Panfili",
"text": " He was born in Porto San Giorgio in the province of Fermo. He trained with Antiveduto Grammatica, Natale Ricci in Fermo, and finally in the Accademia Clementina of Bologna, and was awarded Bolognese citizenship. After painting throughout the region, he moved to Bologna in 1767. He died in 1812 in Bologna. He painted the ceiling of the staircase of the monastery of the Padri Conventuali of Montegiorgio and the refectory of the Augustinians in Rimini. Also painted for palaces, including the Palazzo Priorale, and the ceiling of the cathedral of Fermo. He published Vedute di Bologna with 52 engravings by himself and published by Petronio Dalla Volpe.",
"score": "1.5868609"
},
{
"id": "7080619",
"title": "Domenico Svampa",
"text": " Domenico Svampa (13 June 1851, in Montegranaro, Papal States – 10 August 1907, in Bologna, Kingdom of Italy) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate and cardinal who served as the Archbishop of Bologna from 1894 until his death.",
"score": "1.5844023"
},
{
"id": "11198356",
"title": "Bologna",
"text": " 1973) ; Vitale da Bologna (painter, fl. 1330, d. 1361) ; Anteo Zamboni (anarchist who at the age of 15 attempted to assassinate Benito Mussolini, 1911–1926) ; Alex Zanardi (racing driver, born 1966) ; Marco Aurelio Zani de Ferranti (writer, musician, and composer, 1801–1878) ; Alessandro Carloni (director, animator, artist who worked on films like Kung Fu Panda and The Croods, born 1978) ; Saint Catherine of Bologna (Caterina de' Vigri) (1413–1463) Poor Claire nun, writer, mystic, artist Giosuè Carducci (poet and academic, Nobel Prize for Literature, born near Lucca, Tuscany, 1835–1907) ; Carlo Felice Cillario (Italian conductor of international renown, founder ",
"score": "1.5838015"
}
] | [
"Domenico Bologna\n Domenico Bologna (born in Turin August 22, 1845 – 1885) was an Italian painter, mainly of landscapes with figures. He trained under professors Antonio Fontanesi and Francesco Gamba in Accademia Albertina. Among his works are: Dopo Vespro, exhibited in 1875 at Milan; Tramonto, exhibited in 1881 at Milan; Il Tanaro, bought by the Società promotrice of Fine Arts in Genoa; Le sponde del Po at Turin, sold in 1878 at St Petersburg, Russia, Le sponde del Tanaro; Inverno ; Pascolo; and Tramonto, exhibited in 1883 at Rome.",
"Bologna\n the Bologna Chamber Orchestra in 1946, 7 February 1915 – 13 December 2007) ; Umberto Eco (writer and academic, born in Alessandria, Piedmont, 1932–2016) ; Enzio of Sardinia (born c. 1218, King of Sardinia and illegitimate son of Emperor Frederick II, was imprisoned in Palazzo Re Enzo from 1249 until his death in 1272) ; Vasco Errani (politician, born 1955) ; William Girometti (painter, born in Milan, 1924–1998) ; Alfonso Lombardi (sculptor, born in Ferrara, c. 1497–1537) ; Niccolò dell'Arca (sculptor, born in Bari, c. 1435/1440–2 March 1494) ; Juan Ignacio Molina (naturalist, born in Chile, 1740–1829) ; Giovanni Pascoli (poet and ",
"Bologna\n born in San Mauro di Romagna, 1855–1912) ; St. Petronius (San Petronio, bishop of Bologna and patron saint of the city, birthplace unknown, died c. 450 AD) ; Romano Prodi (economist, politician, born in Scandiano, Reggio Emilia, 1939) ; Gioachino Rossini (opera composer, born in Pesaro, 1792–1868) ; Giuseppe Torelli (composer, born in Verona, 1658–1709) ; Wu Ming (collective of writers, active since 2000) ; Farinelli (Carlo Broschi, castrato opera singer, 1705–1782) ; Giorgio Rosa (engineer, president of short-lived micronation Republic of Rose Island, 1925–2017) In addition to the natives of the city listed above, the following have made Bologna their home:",
"Domenico Pedrini\n Domenico Pedrini (Bologna, 1728 - Bologna, 1800) was an Italian painter. Fiercely provincial in his geographic activity, Pedrini's works were mainly completed in and around Bologna, and yet his atavistic style strayed far afield into Bologna's strong Baroque ancestry.",
"Domenico Ferrabosco\n Born in Bologna, Domenico was one of four sons of Annibale Ferrabosco, members of a distinguished Bolognese family whose genealogical records date back to the middle of the 15th century. Domenico is the first of the family known to be a musician. Little is known about his early life. He was a singer at the cathedral of San Petronio, and by 1540 had established a high enough reputation for his various musical activities that the city officials gave him a lifetime stipend to oversee the palace musicians. Sometime in the 1540s he went to Rome, and he became magister puerorum (director of the boy's choir) for the Julian Chapel in 1546. However, due to family obligations he returned to Bologna in 1547, ",
"Domenico Guglielmini\n Born in Bologna within a well-off family, he graduated in medicine in 1678 with Marcello Malpighi at the University of Bologna, at the same time he studied mathematics with Geminiano Montanari and became a member of the Academia della Traccia o dei Filosofi. His first mathematical writings topic was astronomy, but later he focused his studies on hydraulics. In 1686 he was named \"Bologna General Water Administrator\", an important role due to the large number of watercourses existing in the area and the frequent flooding that required surveillance. The experience gave inspiration for his well known work \"Della natura dei fiumi\" which is considered a masterpiece of modern ",
"Antonio Mosca\n Mosca was born in Pieve di Cento, and died in Bologna. Born to a humble family, he obtained a stipend from the Pious Legacy or Endowment by the Melloni family to attend the Academy of Fine Arts of Bologna during 1894 to 1896. He refined his ability to paint portraits. By 1900, Antonio had moved to Bologna, and established friendships with Francesco Fabbri and Cesare Mauro Trebbi, with whom he would collaborate in the decoration of the cupola of the church of Church of San Pietro in Castello d'Argile. In 1905, he was employed in collaboration with Domenico Ferri, in the decoration of the cupola and apse of the church of Santa Maria Magdalena in Bologna. He pursued this work in a number of churches in Northeast Italy, including the parish church of Tuenno in Trentino-Alto Adige and in the Chapel of the Immaculate Conception in Borgo Valsugana, Trento. He wrote a treatise on perspective awarded at prizes in Milan, Paris, and Bologna in 1913. In 1912-1913 he painted a portrait of King Nikola I of Montenegro. Pieve di Cento in 1924 commissioned him to decorate the public clock in the Palazzo Comunale.",
"Domenico Maria Viani\n He was born in Bologna, the son of Giovanni Maria Viani, and was educated there under his father, who kept a rival academy to that of Carlo Cignani. For the church of La Natività at Bologna, there is a series of Prophets and Evangelists by him; for the church of Santo Spirito, Bergamo, he painted a Miracle of St Antony of Padua. He disappeared in Pistoia where he is also thought to have died.",
"Domenico Guglielmini\n Domenico Guglielmini (Bologna, 27 September 1655 - Padua, 27 July 1710) was an Italian mathematician, chemist and physician. He lived and worked with success in Bologna and Padua rising to a notable level of prominence.",
"Giuseppe Antonio Caccioli\n Giuseppe Antonio Caccioli was born in Bologna. When he was three, his father the painter Giovanni Battista Caccioli died, and from a very early age he was taught to paint by his tutors. He later apprenticed with the brothers Giuseppe and Antonio Rolli who at the time were painting the ceiling of San Paolo Maggiore church in Bologna. Caccioli had a natural predisposition for the art of painting. He married Rosa Teresa Fontana with whom he had two boys. He died in Bologna at the age of 67 and was buried in Santa Maria Maggiore in Bologna.",
"Domenico Canale\n Domenico was from San Pietro di Rovereto, a community within the municipality of Zoagli along the Italian Riviera, approximately 40 km southeast of Genoa. The son of Giovanni Canale and A. Vaccaro, Domenico sailed to America in February 1859 at sixteen years old. He landed in New Orleans after a 65-day voyage, and boarded the steamboat John Simon up the Mississippi River and settled in Memphis, Tennessee.",
"Domenichino\n Domenichino was born in Bologna, son of a shoemaker, and there initially studied under Denis Calvaert. After quarreling with Calvaert, he left to work in the Accademia degli Incamminati of the Carracci where, because of his small stature, he was nicknamed Domenichino, meaning \"little Domenico\" in Italian. He left Bologna for Rome in 1602 and became one of the most talented apprentices to emerge from Annibale Carracci's supervision. As a young artist in Rome he lived with his slightly older Bolognese colleagues Albani and Guido Reni, and worked alongside Lanfranco, who later would become a chief rival. In addition to assisting Annibale with completion of ",
"Domenico Galeazzi\n Domenico Galeazzi (Bologna, 20 May 1647 – Bologna, 9 April 1731) was an Italian painter.",
"Giovanni Battista Guglielmini\n Guglielmini was born at Bologna, received the tonsure in early youth and was a secular priest (\"abate\"). His career in the Church is unknown; he died single. A protégé of Cardinal Ignazio Boncompagni, he pursued higher studies, and graduated in philosophy, in 1787, at the age of 24. If he was a relative of the famous engineer and physician, Domenico Guglielmini, who had been general superintendent of the Bologna waterworks a hundred years before, he was certainly not his direct descendant.",
"Giovanni Battista Savelli\n He was born in Rome. There is no data about his education. As a young man, he was appointed protonotary apostolic. He was named governor of Bologna during 1468 - 1470.",
"Paolo Negro\n Negro was born in Arzignano, Province of Vicenza. A youth player at Brescia Calcio, he joined Bologna in 1990, and made his Serie A debut against Genoa, on 28 October 1990, amassing over 50 overall appearances in his first two professional seasons, the latter spent in Serie B.",
"David Bologna\n Born and raised in New Orleans, Bologna is the son of Rick Bologna and Holly Bologna. Their home was flooded when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, and the family moved to Austin, Texas. He was active in local theatre productions, including Bye Bye Birdie at Le Petit Theatre du Vieux Carre, “Seussical the Musical” with Brandt Blocker Presents at Six Flags New Orleans, and Peter Pan, until Hurricane Katrina forced his family to relocate to Austin, Texas. In Texas he performed with the Zachary Scott Theatre and the youth theatre kidsActing Studio and appeared in multiple productions, including Beauty and the Beast, Grease, and Cabaret. He is a two-time winner of the North American Irish Dancing Championships and placed fifth in the World Irish Dance Championships. He also won the Big Easy ",
"Pio Panfili\n He was born in Porto San Giorgio in the province of Fermo. He trained with Antiveduto Grammatica, Natale Ricci in Fermo, and finally in the Accademia Clementina of Bologna, and was awarded Bolognese citizenship. After painting throughout the region, he moved to Bologna in 1767. He died in 1812 in Bologna. He painted the ceiling of the staircase of the monastery of the Padri Conventuali of Montegiorgio and the refectory of the Augustinians in Rimini. Also painted for palaces, including the Palazzo Priorale, and the ceiling of the cathedral of Fermo. He published Vedute di Bologna with 52 engravings by himself and published by Petronio Dalla Volpe.",
"Domenico Svampa\n Domenico Svampa (13 June 1851, in Montegranaro, Papal States – 10 August 1907, in Bologna, Kingdom of Italy) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate and cardinal who served as the Archbishop of Bologna from 1894 until his death.",
"Bologna\n 1973) ; Vitale da Bologna (painter, fl. 1330, d. 1361) ; Anteo Zamboni (anarchist who at the age of 15 attempted to assassinate Benito Mussolini, 1911–1926) ; Alex Zanardi (racing driver, born 1966) ; Marco Aurelio Zani de Ferranti (writer, musician, and composer, 1801–1878) ; Alessandro Carloni (director, animator, artist who worked on films like Kung Fu Panda and The Croods, born 1978) ; Saint Catherine of Bologna (Caterina de' Vigri) (1413–1463) Poor Claire nun, writer, mystic, artist Giosuè Carducci (poet and academic, Nobel Prize for Literature, born near Lucca, Tuscany, 1835–1907) ; Carlo Felice Cillario (Italian conductor of international renown, founder "
] |
What sport does Barrie Aitchison play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Barrie Aitchison | 80,903 | 82 | [
{
"id": "9592274",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " Barrie George Aitchison (born 15 November 1937) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United, where he came through the youth ranks before joining Tottenham Hotspur, but failed to make a first-team appearance. His older brother Peter also played professionally for Colchester United.",
"score": "1.8204508"
},
{
"id": "9592277",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " As a result of his footballing and injury suffered while with Colchester United, Aitchison underwent a cartilage operation in 1970. Following his retirement from the professional game, he worked for Alston's in Colchester, a furniture upholsterers.",
"score": "1.7796715"
},
{
"id": "9948822",
"title": "Peter Aitchison",
"text": " Peter Munro Aitchison (born 19 September 1931) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United. His younger brother Barrie also played professionally for Colchester.",
"score": "1.6740711"
},
{
"id": "9584535",
"title": "Jack Aitchison",
"text": " Jack Aitchison (born 5 March 2000) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a forward for Forest Green Rovers on loan from Barnsley.",
"score": "1.6519892"
},
{
"id": "9592275",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " Born in Colchester, Aitchison followed in his brother Peter's footsteps by joining Colchester United from Border League football in 1953, but was considered too slight and was released in 1954, joining Tottenham Hotspur. He spent ten years with the club, mostly in the reserves and other minor sides, during which time they won the Football Combination twice. A fee of £750 brought Aitchison back to Layer Road in 1964 having failed to make a first-team breakthrough whilst at Tottenham. Aitchison made his Colchester debut on 22 August 1964 in a 1–0 defeat at home to Carlisle United. He scored his first professional goal on 2 ",
"score": "1.6301689"
},
{
"id": "6780026",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " Barrie made his international debut at the 2008 World U-17 Hockey Challenge with Team Canada Pacific. Barrie was first invited to partake in Canada's national junior team development camp in 2010. He was again included to take part in Canada's 2011 national junior team selection camp and was among the final names to make the team. He was among the team's top players during the tournament as Canada won the silver medal following a 5–3 collapse defeat against Russia in the tournament final. Barrie would win gold with team Canada in the 2015 IIHF World Championship, along with then Colorado Avalanche teammates Matt Duchene, Nathan MacKinnon and Ryan O'Reilly. Following Colorado's failure to qualify for the 2017 playoffs, Barrie was selected to the initial Canada roster for the 2017 IIHF World Championship held in Germany and France. He was among the tournament leaders with seven points in three games before he was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament after suffering a laceration to his leg while wrestling with a Canada teammate at the team hotel on May 11, 2017.",
"score": "1.6179936"
},
{
"id": "8860389",
"title": "Holly Aitchison",
"text": " Holly Aitchison (born 21 February 1997) is an English rugby union player. Born in Southport, she attended St Peter’s Primary School and Range High School in Formby where she was coached by Gill Burns. Aitchison is the daughter of former England Saxon and rugby coach Ian Aitchison. She played for Waterloo Ladies as a junior and Gloucester-Hartpury Women and Lichfield Ladies. She was a two-time U18 Rugby Europe Women's Sevens champion with England and a member of the squad that lifted the Challenge Trophy at the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens. In September 2020 she joined Saracens Women. In 2021 she played for the Great Britain Rugby Sevens squad in the delayed 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, where they finished fourth. In October 2021, she scored a try on her debut for the England 15s team.",
"score": "1.5721651"
},
{
"id": "9584536",
"title": "Jack Aitchison",
"text": " Aitchison graduated from Celtic's school of excellence at St Ninians High School in Kirkintilloch in February 2016, at which time he joined Celtic full-time and became part of their Under 17 squad. He played in the Celtic U17 side that defeated their Rangers counterparts 4–0 in the Glasgow Cup final in April 2016. At this time, he also signed a three-year contract. During his youth career he also appeared and scored in the 2015–16 and 2016–17 editions of the UEFA Youth League, found the net against senior clubs in the 2016–17 Scottish Challenge Cup, and won the Scottish Youth Cup in 2017. Aitchison made his first team debut on 15 May 2016, becoming the youngest player ever to represent the club in a competitive match at 16 years and 71 days. He scored with ",
"score": "1.5663743"
},
{
"id": "12721954",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " Aitchison played for Edinburgh Wanderers, one of the top teams in Scotland at the time.",
"score": "1.5557537"
},
{
"id": "9816034",
"title": "Jack Aitchison (Australian footballer)",
"text": " John Charles Aitchison (6 April 1911 – 3 September 1976) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"score": "1.5494955"
},
{
"id": "9592276",
"title": "Barrie Aitchison",
"text": " of the same year in a 1–1 League Cup draw with Torquay United, going on to score six goals in the Football League in 50 games for the club. In September 1965, during a 2–0 home victory over Rochdale, Aitchison suffered an injury that would ultimately lead to his retirement from the full-time game, as he went on to play his final Football League and final professional game on 28 May 1966, a 2–1 away defeat to Newport County. After declining Colchester's offer of a part-time contract for the 1966–67 season, Aitchison moved to non-league Cambridge City before transferring to Bury Town a season later.",
"score": "1.5486581"
},
{
"id": "14997408",
"title": "Helen Aitchison",
"text": " Frances Helen Aitchison (6 December 1881 – 26 May 1947) was a Sunderland-born tennis player who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. In 1912 she won the silver medal with her partner Herbert Barrett in the indoor mixed doubles competition. She also participated in the indoor singles event but was eliminated in the quarter-finals.",
"score": "1.5428392"
},
{
"id": "5286020",
"title": "John Aitchison (cricketer)",
"text": " John Edward Aitchison (27 December 1928 – 2 April 2009) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and a slow left-arm bowler who played for Kent County Cricket Club. He was born in Gillingham, Kent in 1928. Aitchison was taken on to the ground staff at Kent in 1946, living with an aunt in Whitstable. He made his debut for the Kent Second XI later in the year before playing for the county Second XI in the 1947 Minor Counties Championship. Aitchison did not play throughout 1948 when he was posted on National Service in Germany. He made his first-class cricket debut just three days after his first Second XI appearance of 1949, playing against Glamorgan at Gravesend. He took all three of his first-class wickets on his debut. Aitchison played two further matches for Kent's First XI in July 1950 against Worcestershire and Leicestershire. He was described by Derek Ufton, a contemporary on the Kent ground staff, as \"a left-arm bowler with a beautiful action\". He died at Sydenham in South London in 2009 aged 80.",
"score": "1.5317628"
},
{
"id": "6780006",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " Tyson Barrie (born July 26, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who is currently playing for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played for the Colorado Avalanche and Toronto Maple Leafs. He was drafted by the Avalanche in the third round, 64th overall, of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.5147506"
},
{
"id": "6780012",
"title": "Tyson Barrie",
"text": " After attending his third Avalanche training camp, Barrie made his professional debut in the 2011–12 season, assigned to the Avalanche's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lake Erie Monsters. As a defenceman, he impressively led the Monsters in scoring at the midpoint of the season and was selected in the AHL All-Star Game, scoring a goal and helping the Western Conference to victory. Shortly after, on February 4, 2012, he received his first NHL call-up by the Avalanche. He made his NHL debut three days later on February 7 in a 5–2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at the Pepsi Center. He appeared in four games before ",
"score": "1.5119867"
},
{
"id": "9948824",
"title": "Peter Aitchison",
"text": " Aitchison remained in the Colchester area following his retirement from the game, where he worked for BT until his retirement in September 1991.",
"score": "1.5092473"
},
{
"id": "30988192",
"title": "Barrie Central Collegiate Institute",
"text": "Kayla Alexander, WNBA player with Indiana Fever ; Emily Belchos, Canadian Women's 7's Rugby Team 2013–present ; Charles Drury, first Ontario Minister of Agriculture, 1888 ; E.C. Drury, Premier of Ontario, 1919-1923 ; William Gallie, Professor of Surgery, University of Toronto ; Ron Hoggarth, former NHL Referee 1971-1994 ; Afie Jurvanen, Canadian musician - Bahamas ; Janice Laking, Mayor of Barrie 1988-2000 ; Jeff Lehman, politician, Barrie Mayor 2010–present ; Megan Lukan, rugby union player, member of Canada's Women's rugby sevens team ; Steve Myddelton, CFL player ; Taylor Paris, Professional Rugby Player, Canadian Men's 7's and 15's Rugby Player, 2010–present ; Luke Tait, Professional Rugby Player, Former, Canadian Men's 15's Rugby Player, 2005-2011 ; Bobbie Rosenfeld, 1928 Olympian (Track and Field) ",
"score": "1.4968346"
},
{
"id": "4750512",
"title": "Len Barrie",
"text": " Leonard G. Barrie (born June 4, 1969 in Kimberley, British Columbia) is a retired professional ice hockey forward who played 184 games in the National Hockey League. He played for the Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Los Angeles Kings, and Florida Panthers. He was a co-owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, and was the president and coach of the Victoria Grizzlies of the British Columbia Hockey League.",
"score": "1.4912717"
},
{
"id": "12721953",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " George Aitchison (19 October 1864 – 25 January 1895) was a Scotland international rugby union player. He played as a halfback.",
"score": "1.4902861"
},
{
"id": "12721956",
"title": "George Aitchison (rugby union)",
"text": " He was called up to the Scotland squad for the Home Nations Championship and played Ireland at Belfast on 17 February 1883.",
"score": "1.4822443"
}
] | [
"Barrie Aitchison\n Barrie George Aitchison (born 15 November 1937) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United, where he came through the youth ranks before joining Tottenham Hotspur, but failed to make a first-team appearance. His older brother Peter also played professionally for Colchester United.",
"Barrie Aitchison\n As a result of his footballing and injury suffered while with Colchester United, Aitchison underwent a cartilage operation in 1970. Following his retirement from the professional game, he worked for Alston's in Colchester, a furniture upholsterers.",
"Peter Aitchison\n Peter Munro Aitchison (born 19 September 1931) is an English former footballer who played as a winger in the Football League for Colchester United. His younger brother Barrie also played professionally for Colchester.",
"Jack Aitchison\n Jack Aitchison (born 5 March 2000) is a Scottish professional footballer who plays as a forward for Forest Green Rovers on loan from Barnsley.",
"Barrie Aitchison\n Born in Colchester, Aitchison followed in his brother Peter's footsteps by joining Colchester United from Border League football in 1953, but was considered too slight and was released in 1954, joining Tottenham Hotspur. He spent ten years with the club, mostly in the reserves and other minor sides, during which time they won the Football Combination twice. A fee of £750 brought Aitchison back to Layer Road in 1964 having failed to make a first-team breakthrough whilst at Tottenham. Aitchison made his Colchester debut on 22 August 1964 in a 1–0 defeat at home to Carlisle United. He scored his first professional goal on 2 ",
"Tyson Barrie\n Barrie made his international debut at the 2008 World U-17 Hockey Challenge with Team Canada Pacific. Barrie was first invited to partake in Canada's national junior team development camp in 2010. He was again included to take part in Canada's 2011 national junior team selection camp and was among the final names to make the team. He was among the team's top players during the tournament as Canada won the silver medal following a 5–3 collapse defeat against Russia in the tournament final. Barrie would win gold with team Canada in the 2015 IIHF World Championship, along with then Colorado Avalanche teammates Matt Duchene, Nathan MacKinnon and Ryan O'Reilly. Following Colorado's failure to qualify for the 2017 playoffs, Barrie was selected to the initial Canada roster for the 2017 IIHF World Championship held in Germany and France. He was among the tournament leaders with seven points in three games before he was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament after suffering a laceration to his leg while wrestling with a Canada teammate at the team hotel on May 11, 2017.",
"Holly Aitchison\n Holly Aitchison (born 21 February 1997) is an English rugby union player. Born in Southport, she attended St Peter’s Primary School and Range High School in Formby where she was coached by Gill Burns. Aitchison is the daughter of former England Saxon and rugby coach Ian Aitchison. She played for Waterloo Ladies as a junior and Gloucester-Hartpury Women and Lichfield Ladies. She was a two-time U18 Rugby Europe Women's Sevens champion with England and a member of the squad that lifted the Challenge Trophy at the 2018 Rugby World Cup Sevens. In September 2020 she joined Saracens Women. In 2021 she played for the Great Britain Rugby Sevens squad in the delayed 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo, where they finished fourth. In October 2021, she scored a try on her debut for the England 15s team.",
"Jack Aitchison\n Aitchison graduated from Celtic's school of excellence at St Ninians High School in Kirkintilloch in February 2016, at which time he joined Celtic full-time and became part of their Under 17 squad. He played in the Celtic U17 side that defeated their Rangers counterparts 4–0 in the Glasgow Cup final in April 2016. At this time, he also signed a three-year contract. During his youth career he also appeared and scored in the 2015–16 and 2016–17 editions of the UEFA Youth League, found the net against senior clubs in the 2016–17 Scottish Challenge Cup, and won the Scottish Youth Cup in 2017. Aitchison made his first team debut on 15 May 2016, becoming the youngest player ever to represent the club in a competitive match at 16 years and 71 days. He scored with ",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n Aitchison played for Edinburgh Wanderers, one of the top teams in Scotland at the time.",
"Jack Aitchison (Australian footballer)\n John Charles Aitchison (6 April 1911 – 3 September 1976) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Hawthorn in the Victorian Football League (VFL).",
"Barrie Aitchison\n of the same year in a 1–1 League Cup draw with Torquay United, going on to score six goals in the Football League in 50 games for the club. In September 1965, during a 2–0 home victory over Rochdale, Aitchison suffered an injury that would ultimately lead to his retirement from the full-time game, as he went on to play his final Football League and final professional game on 28 May 1966, a 2–1 away defeat to Newport County. After declining Colchester's offer of a part-time contract for the 1966–67 season, Aitchison moved to non-league Cambridge City before transferring to Bury Town a season later.",
"Helen Aitchison\n Frances Helen Aitchison (6 December 1881 – 26 May 1947) was a Sunderland-born tennis player who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics. In 1912 she won the silver medal with her partner Herbert Barrett in the indoor mixed doubles competition. She also participated in the indoor singles event but was eliminated in the quarter-finals.",
"John Aitchison (cricketer)\n John Edward Aitchison (27 December 1928 – 2 April 2009) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and a slow left-arm bowler who played for Kent County Cricket Club. He was born in Gillingham, Kent in 1928. Aitchison was taken on to the ground staff at Kent in 1946, living with an aunt in Whitstable. He made his debut for the Kent Second XI later in the year before playing for the county Second XI in the 1947 Minor Counties Championship. Aitchison did not play throughout 1948 when he was posted on National Service in Germany. He made his first-class cricket debut just three days after his first Second XI appearance of 1949, playing against Glamorgan at Gravesend. He took all three of his first-class wickets on his debut. Aitchison played two further matches for Kent's First XI in July 1950 against Worcestershire and Leicestershire. He was described by Derek Ufton, a contemporary on the Kent ground staff, as \"a left-arm bowler with a beautiful action\". He died at Sydenham in South London in 2009 aged 80.",
"Tyson Barrie\n Tyson Barrie (born July 26, 1991) is a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who is currently playing for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). He has previously played for the Colorado Avalanche and Toronto Maple Leafs. He was drafted by the Avalanche in the third round, 64th overall, of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Tyson Barrie\n After attending his third Avalanche training camp, Barrie made his professional debut in the 2011–12 season, assigned to the Avalanche's American Hockey League (AHL) affiliate, the Lake Erie Monsters. As a defenceman, he impressively led the Monsters in scoring at the midpoint of the season and was selected in the AHL All-Star Game, scoring a goal and helping the Western Conference to victory. Shortly after, on February 4, 2012, he received his first NHL call-up by the Avalanche. He made his NHL debut three days later on February 7 in a 5–2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks at the Pepsi Center. He appeared in four games before ",
"Peter Aitchison\n Aitchison remained in the Colchester area following his retirement from the game, where he worked for BT until his retirement in September 1991.",
"Barrie Central Collegiate Institute\nKayla Alexander, WNBA player with Indiana Fever ; Emily Belchos, Canadian Women's 7's Rugby Team 2013–present ; Charles Drury, first Ontario Minister of Agriculture, 1888 ; E.C. Drury, Premier of Ontario, 1919-1923 ; William Gallie, Professor of Surgery, University of Toronto ; Ron Hoggarth, former NHL Referee 1971-1994 ; Afie Jurvanen, Canadian musician - Bahamas ; Janice Laking, Mayor of Barrie 1988-2000 ; Jeff Lehman, politician, Barrie Mayor 2010–present ; Megan Lukan, rugby union player, member of Canada's Women's rugby sevens team ; Steve Myddelton, CFL player ; Taylor Paris, Professional Rugby Player, Canadian Men's 7's and 15's Rugby Player, 2010–present ; Luke Tait, Professional Rugby Player, Former, Canadian Men's 15's Rugby Player, 2005-2011 ; Bobbie Rosenfeld, 1928 Olympian (Track and Field) ",
"Len Barrie\n Leonard G. Barrie (born June 4, 1969 in Kimberley, British Columbia) is a retired professional ice hockey forward who played 184 games in the National Hockey League. He played for the Philadelphia Flyers, Pittsburgh Penguins, Los Angeles Kings, and Florida Panthers. He was a co-owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, and was the president and coach of the Victoria Grizzlies of the British Columbia Hockey League.",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n George Aitchison (19 October 1864 – 25 January 1895) was a Scotland international rugby union player. He played as a halfback.",
"George Aitchison (rugby union)\n He was called up to the Scotland squad for the Home Nations Championship and played Ireland at Belfast on 17 February 1883."
] |
Who is the author of Turning On? | [
"Damon Knight",
"Damon Francis Knight",
"Stuart Fleming",
"Conanight"
] | author | Turning On | 6,046,335 | 69 | [
{
"id": "12762830",
"title": "Turning On",
"text": " Turning On is a collection of thirteen science fiction short stories by American writer Damon Knight. The stories were originally published between 1951 and 1965 in Galaxy, Analog and other science fiction magazines. An Ace paperback reprinting in 1967 omitted the story \"The Handler\". This story was also omitted in the 1966 reissue of the Doubleday hardback edition.",
"score": "1.6601295"
},
{
"id": "15533731",
"title": "Turning on the Girls",
"text": " Turning on the Girls is a 2001 American comedic dystopian science fiction novel written by Cheryl Benard.",
"score": "1.5771"
},
{
"id": "26434754",
"title": "Steve Perry (author)",
"text": "1) Turnabout (2008) ",
"score": "1.5714805"
},
{
"id": "5032565",
"title": "The Turning (play)",
"text": " The Turning is a play written by Bill McCluskey, based on The Turning, a publication of connected short stories by Australian writer Tim Winton. It spans from 1970–2001 in Western Australia, covering much of the life of protagonist Vic Lang.",
"score": "1.5059972"
},
{
"id": "1383825",
"title": "Lee Thomas (reporter)",
"text": " His book \"Turning White\" was taken from his personal journals and experiences from his disease. Lee had various television appearances to discuss his book, Turning White. He appeared on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos, Larry King Live, and 20/20.",
"score": "1.4805136"
},
{
"id": "30299270",
"title": "Patrick Califia",
"text": " arguments, but from his erotic fiction: \"they read Califia-Rice's S/M fantasies, got turned on and got over it.\" In 1979, as a student in psychology at San Francisco State University, his research was published in the Journal of Homosexuality. Califia co-founded Samois, a lesbian-feminist BDSM organization based in San Francisco that existed from 1978 to 1983, and shifted his focus to the lesbian experience of BDSM. The Samois Collective produced, with Califia's contributions, the book Coming to Power, published by Alyson Publications. Coming To Power, according to Heather Findlay, editor-in-chief of lesbian magazine Girlfriends, was \"one of the most transformative lesbian books, [foretelling] the end ",
"score": "1.4718957"
},
{
"id": "6242656",
"title": "The Turning (short story collection)",
"text": " The Turning is a collection of short stories by Australian author Tim Winton published in April 2005.",
"score": "1.4568244"
},
{
"id": "4568534",
"title": "Kate Devlin",
"text": " they be supplied to the elderly in residential care facilities for companionship and sex. Devlin was named one of London's most influential people of 2017 by the Progress 1000, London Evening Standard. In 2018 Devlin released her book, Turned On: Science, Sex and Robots. The book began as research into the technological development of sex robots and explores the relationship between technology and intimacy. Engineering & Technology (E&T) magazine described the book as \"a creative, optimistic, open-minded exploration of sex robots\", particularly in its discussion on current sex technology. The Times described it as \"illuminating, witty and written with a wide open mind\".",
"score": "1.4508798"
},
{
"id": "12957593",
"title": "Ron Terpening",
"text": " California. The Turning, a coming-of-age tale, tells the story of Artie Crenshaw, a teenager with an abusive father. At his job one night, Artie decides to postpone going home, and the events that follow as a result of this decision cause him more trouble but ultimately help spur his progression towards manhood. Karen Hoth, writing in the School Library Journal, praised the “well-written story,” proclaiming the characters “well developed” and the book itself “touching.” The book was selected for inclusion on The New York Public Library’s 2002 Books For The Teen Age List, the “best of the previous year’s publishing for teenagers,” by the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association for their Top Forty Young-Adult Novels for 2001, and by Appleton North High School (Appleton, Wisconsin) for their Top 25 Recommended Reading (2002).",
"score": "1.415215"
},
{
"id": "4070672",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " remaining material appeared in this companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out, and contained Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text. ; Change Your Brain. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001) ; Politics of Self-Determination. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510159. ; The Politics of Psychopharmacology. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510566. ; Musings on Human Metamorphoses (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2002). ISBN: 1579510582. ; Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. ",
"score": "1.3977203"
},
{
"id": "1183162",
"title": "The Cat Who Turned On and Off",
"text": " The Cat Who Turned On and Off is the third novel in a series of murder mystery novels by Lilian Jackson Braun.",
"score": "1.3941274"
},
{
"id": "4070671",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " contains chapters 1 to 11 of the original. The remaining material appears in a companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out containing Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text.\" ; The Delicious Grace of Moving One's Hand: The Collected Sex Writings. Thunder's Mouth Press (1999). ISBN: 1560251816. ; Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out. Ronin Publishing (1999). ISBN: 1579510094. ; The original edition of The Politics of Ecstasy was divided into two books by Ronin Publishing. The first abbreviated edition carried the original title of Politics of Ecstasy and contained chapters 1 to 11 of the original. ",
"score": "1.3918467"
},
{
"id": "1824526",
"title": "David Belbin",
"text": " and the Nottingham novel. In 2004, Belbin organised Turning Point, the UK's first national conference on Young Adult Fiction. It featured many significant Young Adult Fiction authors, including Kevin Brooks, Melvyn Burgess, Anne Cassidy, Keith Gray, Graham Marks, Nicola Morgan, Beverley Naidoo and Bali Rai. In 2012, he became a trustee of Nottingham Playhouse. He chairs the company that successfully bid for Nottingham to become a Unesco City of Literature, the city receiving the award in December, 2015. In 2011, Belbin began publishing a series of Nottingham-based novels about crime and politics, Bone And Cane, which follows a New Labour MP, Sarah Bone, and her ex-lover, convicted cannabis producer, Nick Cane, from ",
"score": "1.3916774"
},
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.390219"
},
{
"id": "11796324",
"title": "Turn On to Love",
"text": " Turn On to Love is a 1969 film directed by John G. Avildsen and starring Sharon Kent, Richard Michaels, and Luigi Mastroianni. The film marks Avildsen's directorial debut.",
"score": "1.3836641"
},
{
"id": "14104575",
"title": "Turn-On",
"text": " Turn-On is an American sketch comedy series that aired on ABC in February 1969. Only one episode was shown, leaving one episode unaired, and the show is considered one of the most infamous flops in TV history. Turn-On's sole broadcast episode was shown on Wednesday, February 5, 1969, at 8:30 pm ET. Among the cast were Teresa Graves (who would join the Laugh-In cast that fall), Hamilton Camp, and Chuck McCann. The writing staff included Albert Brooks. The guest host for the first episode was Tim Conway, who also participated in certain sketches.",
"score": "1.3784114"
},
{
"id": "578245",
"title": "Jaclyn Friedman",
"text": " the teacher young women need.” In 2017, Friedman published “Unscrewed: Women, Sex, Power, and How to Stop Letting the System Screw Us All” Kirkus called Unscrewed “a potent, convincing manifesto” and the text “lively, emboldening and nonjudgmental.” In 2020, Friedman and co-editor Jessica Valenti published a second anthology, Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World. Believe Me includes essays by Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, Tatiana Maslany, Samantha Irby, Dahlia Lithwick, Loretta Ross, Jamil Smith, Julia Serano, and more. Publishers Weekly wrote “Consistently well-written and soundly reasoned, these essays persuasively cast the tendency to doubt women as one of America’s greatest social ills. This illuminating call to action deserves a wide readership.” Friedman's writings have been published widely, including in The New York Times, Glamour The Guardian, The American Prospect, The Washington Post, The Nation and Salon.",
"score": "1.3779706"
},
{
"id": "31666317",
"title": "Rosebud Ben-Oni",
"text": "If This is the Age We End Discovery. Alice James Books, 2021. ISBN: 9781948579155 ; turn around, BRXGHT XYXS. Get Fresh LLC, 2019. ISBN: 9780998935898 ; Solecism: poems. Virtual Artists Collective, 2013. ISBN: 9780944048504, ",
"score": "1.3741765"
},
{
"id": "4070667",
"title": "Timothy Leary bibliography",
"text": " Ecstasy in 1990 and the final eleven chapters as Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out in 1999. ; High Priest (1968). ISBN: 0914171801. ; Jail Notes (1970). Preface by Allen Ginsberg. Douglas Book Corp. ; Confessions of a Hope Fiend. New York: Bantam Books (1973). ISBN: 978-0552680707.. ; Neurologic (with Joanna Leary) (1973) ; StarSeed (1973) ; Mystery, Magic & Miracle: Religion in a Post-Aquarian Age (with Edward F. Heenan and Jack Fritscher. Prentice-Hall (1973). ISBN: 013609032X. ; What Does WoMan Want?: Adventures Along the Schwarzchild Radius (1976) ; His only novel, revised and reprinted in 1987 by New Falcon ",
"score": "1.3738346"
},
{
"id": "8607183",
"title": "Turning Up and Turning On",
"text": " Turning Up and Turning On is a country album by Billy \"Crash\" Craddock. It was released in 1978 on the Capitol label.",
"score": "1.3714411"
}
] | [
"Turning On\n Turning On is a collection of thirteen science fiction short stories by American writer Damon Knight. The stories were originally published between 1951 and 1965 in Galaxy, Analog and other science fiction magazines. An Ace paperback reprinting in 1967 omitted the story \"The Handler\". This story was also omitted in the 1966 reissue of the Doubleday hardback edition.",
"Turning on the Girls\n Turning on the Girls is a 2001 American comedic dystopian science fiction novel written by Cheryl Benard.",
"Steve Perry (author)\n1) Turnabout (2008) ",
"The Turning (play)\n The Turning is a play written by Bill McCluskey, based on The Turning, a publication of connected short stories by Australian writer Tim Winton. It spans from 1970–2001 in Western Australia, covering much of the life of protagonist Vic Lang.",
"Lee Thomas (reporter)\n His book \"Turning White\" was taken from his personal journals and experiences from his disease. Lee had various television appearances to discuss his book, Turning White. He appeared on The Hour with George Stroumboulopoulos, Larry King Live, and 20/20.",
"Patrick Califia\n arguments, but from his erotic fiction: \"they read Califia-Rice's S/M fantasies, got turned on and got over it.\" In 1979, as a student in psychology at San Francisco State University, his research was published in the Journal of Homosexuality. Califia co-founded Samois, a lesbian-feminist BDSM organization based in San Francisco that existed from 1978 to 1983, and shifted his focus to the lesbian experience of BDSM. The Samois Collective produced, with Califia's contributions, the book Coming to Power, published by Alyson Publications. Coming To Power, according to Heather Findlay, editor-in-chief of lesbian magazine Girlfriends, was \"one of the most transformative lesbian books, [foretelling] the end ",
"The Turning (short story collection)\n The Turning is a collection of short stories by Australian author Tim Winton published in April 2005.",
"Kate Devlin\n they be supplied to the elderly in residential care facilities for companionship and sex. Devlin was named one of London's most influential people of 2017 by the Progress 1000, London Evening Standard. In 2018 Devlin released her book, Turned On: Science, Sex and Robots. The book began as research into the technological development of sex robots and explores the relationship between technology and intimacy. Engineering & Technology (E&T) magazine described the book as \"a creative, optimistic, open-minded exploration of sex robots\", particularly in its discussion on current sex technology. The Times described it as \"illuminating, witty and written with a wide open mind\".",
"Ron Terpening\n California. The Turning, a coming-of-age tale, tells the story of Artie Crenshaw, a teenager with an abusive father. At his job one night, Artie decides to postpone going home, and the events that follow as a result of this decision cause him more trouble but ultimately help spur his progression towards manhood. Karen Hoth, writing in the School Library Journal, praised the “well-written story,” proclaiming the characters “well developed” and the book itself “touching.” The book was selected for inclusion on The New York Public Library’s 2002 Books For The Teen Age List, the “best of the previous year’s publishing for teenagers,” by the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association for their Top Forty Young-Adult Novels for 2001, and by Appleton North High School (Appleton, Wisconsin) for their Top 25 Recommended Reading (2002).",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n remaining material appeared in this companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out, and contained Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text. ; Change Your Brain. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001) ; Politics of Self-Determination. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510159. ; The Politics of Psychopharmacology. (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2001). ISBN: 1579510566. ; Musings on Human Metamorphoses (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2002). ISBN: 1579510582. ; Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. Evolutionary Agents (with Beverly A. Potter). Ronin Publishing (2004). ISBN: 1579510647. ",
"The Cat Who Turned On and Off\n The Cat Who Turned On and Off is the third novel in a series of murder mystery novels by Lilian Jackson Braun.",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n contains chapters 1 to 11 of the original. The remaining material appears in a companion book entitled Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out containing Chapters 12 to 22 of the original text.\" ; The Delicious Grace of Moving One's Hand: The Collected Sex Writings. Thunder's Mouth Press (1999). ISBN: 1560251816. ; Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out. Ronin Publishing (1999). ISBN: 1579510094. ; The original edition of The Politics of Ecstasy was divided into two books by Ronin Publishing. The first abbreviated edition carried the original title of Politics of Ecstasy and contained chapters 1 to 11 of the original. ",
"David Belbin\n and the Nottingham novel. In 2004, Belbin organised Turning Point, the UK's first national conference on Young Adult Fiction. It featured many significant Young Adult Fiction authors, including Kevin Brooks, Melvyn Burgess, Anne Cassidy, Keith Gray, Graham Marks, Nicola Morgan, Beverley Naidoo and Bali Rai. In 2012, he became a trustee of Nottingham Playhouse. He chairs the company that successfully bid for Nottingham to become a Unesco City of Literature, the city receiving the award in December, 2015. In 2011, Belbin began publishing a series of Nottingham-based novels about crime and politics, Bone And Cane, which follows a New Labour MP, Sarah Bone, and her ex-lover, convicted cannabis producer, Nick Cane, from ",
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Turn On to Love\n Turn On to Love is a 1969 film directed by John G. Avildsen and starring Sharon Kent, Richard Michaels, and Luigi Mastroianni. The film marks Avildsen's directorial debut.",
"Turn-On\n Turn-On is an American sketch comedy series that aired on ABC in February 1969. Only one episode was shown, leaving one episode unaired, and the show is considered one of the most infamous flops in TV history. Turn-On's sole broadcast episode was shown on Wednesday, February 5, 1969, at 8:30 pm ET. Among the cast were Teresa Graves (who would join the Laugh-In cast that fall), Hamilton Camp, and Chuck McCann. The writing staff included Albert Brooks. The guest host for the first episode was Tim Conway, who also participated in certain sketches.",
"Jaclyn Friedman\n the teacher young women need.” In 2017, Friedman published “Unscrewed: Women, Sex, Power, and How to Stop Letting the System Screw Us All” Kirkus called Unscrewed “a potent, convincing manifesto” and the text “lively, emboldening and nonjudgmental.” In 2020, Friedman and co-editor Jessica Valenti published a second anthology, Believe Me: How Trusting Women Can Change the World. Believe Me includes essays by Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley, Tatiana Maslany, Samantha Irby, Dahlia Lithwick, Loretta Ross, Jamil Smith, Julia Serano, and more. Publishers Weekly wrote “Consistently well-written and soundly reasoned, these essays persuasively cast the tendency to doubt women as one of America’s greatest social ills. This illuminating call to action deserves a wide readership.” Friedman's writings have been published widely, including in The New York Times, Glamour The Guardian, The American Prospect, The Washington Post, The Nation and Salon.",
"Rosebud Ben-Oni\nIf This is the Age We End Discovery. Alice James Books, 2021. ISBN: 9781948579155 ; turn around, BRXGHT XYXS. Get Fresh LLC, 2019. ISBN: 9780998935898 ; Solecism: poems. Virtual Artists Collective, 2013. ISBN: 9780944048504, ",
"Timothy Leary bibliography\n Ecstasy in 1990 and the final eleven chapters as Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out in 1999. ; High Priest (1968). ISBN: 0914171801. ; Jail Notes (1970). Preface by Allen Ginsberg. Douglas Book Corp. ; Confessions of a Hope Fiend. New York: Bantam Books (1973). ISBN: 978-0552680707.. ; Neurologic (with Joanna Leary) (1973) ; StarSeed (1973) ; Mystery, Magic & Miracle: Religion in a Post-Aquarian Age (with Edward F. Heenan and Jack Fritscher. Prentice-Hall (1973). ISBN: 013609032X. ; What Does WoMan Want?: Adventures Along the Schwarzchild Radius (1976) ; His only novel, revised and reprinted in 1987 by New Falcon ",
"Turning Up and Turning On\n Turning Up and Turning On is a country album by Billy \"Crash\" Craddock. It was released in 1978 on the Capitol label."
] |
What is the religion of Benjamin Marc Ramaroson? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Benjamin Marc Ramaroson | 2,488,535 | 38 | [
{
"id": "3688659",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Ramaroson",
"text": " Benjamin Marc Ramaroson, C.M. (born 25 April 1955 in Manakara) is Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Antsiranana in Madagascar.",
"score": "1.7707295"
},
{
"id": "26208048",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson",
"text": " Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson (born 1955 in Manakara) is a Malagasy clergyman and prelate for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana, and later Antsiranana. He was appointed bishop in 2005. He moved dioceses in 2013.",
"score": "1.7556254"
},
{
"id": "3688660",
"title": "Benjamin Marc Ramaroson",
"text": " Ramaroson was ordained as a priest on 15 August 1984 for the Congregation of the Mission. He was appointed as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana by Pope Benedict XVI and consecrated in November 2005. As was appointed Archbishop of Antsiranana in November 2013 upon the retirement of Archbishop Michel Melo.",
"score": "1.6485188"
},
{
"id": "970986",
"title": "Jon Benjamin (Jewish leader)",
"text": " Marc Jonathan Benjamin (born 31 October 1964) is a qualified lawyer and has held various leadership positions in NGOs and Jewish communal organisations, including as Chief Executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews from January 2005 to May 2013 and Chief Operating Officer of World ORT from January 2014 to December 2015.",
"score": "1.4023981"
},
{
"id": "2433572",
"title": "Jonny Benjamin",
"text": "MBE ",
"score": "1.3705157"
},
{
"id": "25956279",
"title": "Benjamin Ramamonjisoa",
"text": " Benjamin Ramamonjisoa is a Malagasy politician. A member of the National Assembly of Madagascar, he was elected as a member of the Tiako I Madagasikara party; he represents the constituency of Antananarivo Atsimondrano.",
"score": "1.3643023"
},
{
"id": "31055803",
"title": "Marc Gafni",
"text": " Marc Gafni (born Marc Winiarz; 1960) is an American philosopher, author, and rabbi who became a New Age spiritual teacher with a focus on Integral Theory, Eros, and \"outrageous love\". Gafni is the author of over twelve books including the award-winning Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment. He hosted a National television show in Israel called Tachat Gafno from 1999-2002. He has been the subject of multiple allegations of sexual misconduct over many years, which he has denied.",
"score": "1.3636732"
},
{
"id": "29416193",
"title": "Benjamin Rabenorolahy",
"text": " Benjamin Rabenorolahy (born 21 January 1940 in Morombe – 14 July 2020) was a Malagasy politician and pastor. He was the president of the Malagasy Lutheran Church (FLM - Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy) for 16 years before 2004. He was a member of the Senate of Madagascar for the Northwest Region, and did not represent any party. He died on 14 July 2020, in Antananarivo during the COVID-19 pandemic in Madagascar.",
"score": "1.360781"
},
{
"id": "9686449",
"title": "Benjamin Berton",
"text": " . Benjamin Berton (born 1974, Valenciennes) is a French writer.",
"score": "1.3591444"
},
{
"id": "9686450",
"title": "Benjamin Berton",
"text": " Benjamin Berton is graduated from the Institut d’études politiques de Paris and holder of a D.E.A. of social and cultural history. Sauvageons, a chronicle of the lives of northern teenagers in need of reference points, won the prix Goncourt du premier roman in 2000 as well as the Prix littéraire de la vocation the same year. He lives in Le Mans, where the action of La Chambre à remonter le temps takes place.",
"score": "1.3527434"
},
{
"id": "8988582",
"title": "Benjamin Brown (scholar)",
"text": " Benjamin Brown (born July 1, 1966 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli professor, researcher of Judaism and Jewish thought, lecturer at the Department of Jewish thought at Hebrew University and a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute. Brown is known for his studies on Orthodox Judaism, especially the ultra-Orthodox community, from the theological, Jewish-legal and historical perspectives. Among other topics, he was the first to trace the development of the concept Daas Torah and its various usages in the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) world. In addition, he published many papers about the Jewish legal ruling system (Halakhah), the Musar movement and the Hasidic movement. In his studies, Brown incorporates concepts, models and analytical tools originating from general philosophy, including legal philosophy.",
"score": "1.34727"
},
{
"id": "9583187",
"title": "Carl Benjamin",
"text": " Benjamin lives with his family in Swindon. He has stated that he is an atheist.",
"score": "1.338949"
},
{
"id": "2400430",
"title": "Benjamin Du Plan",
"text": " Benjamin Ribot, Seigneur du Caila et Du Plan (13 March 1688 – July 1763) was a leader of the French Huguenots. He was born into a Protestant family at the Château de la Favède, northwest of Alès. Receiving a military education, he became an officer under the name of Du Caila, but abandoned this profession in 1710 in order to promote the Protestant faith. In 1715, the same year that Louis XIV died, he met Antoine Court; they became friends and worked together, occasionally clashing on the subject of the inspirés, whom Du Plan admired. At the Synod of Nîmes in 1725 he was named Deputy General of the Reformed Churches of France. He spent four years at Geneva and one in Lausanne, where ",
"score": "1.338247"
},
{
"id": "11499336",
"title": "Witz (novel)",
"text": " In Witz, Joshua Cohen calls all religious Jews \"Affiliated\". After the sabbath meal a week before Christmas, Benjamin is born to Israel and Hanna Israelien in Joysey, the first son after 12 girls. This winter is particularly hard and in fact persists year round. Benjamin is born full grown (by a method explored by Flann O'Brien in At Swim-Two-Birds), with a beard and glasses. His foreskin continually sheds itself and grows back. Already too big for his father's shirts, he takes to his mother's maternity robes. On Christmas Eve, all of the Affiliated die except first-born sons. The Israelien's maid, Wanda, drives Benjamin down to Florida to live with his grandfather, Isaac, who is Unaffiliated. Meanwhile, a cabal of government operatives ",
"score": "1.335701"
},
{
"id": "31055809",
"title": "Marc Gafni",
"text": " , Gafni is the author of over twelve books on spirituality and religion. He wrote Radical Kabbalah, a two-volume work published by Integral Publishers in 2012. In 2012, he published Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment with a foreword written by Wilber, which won a 2012 USA Best Book Awards in Spirituality: General category.",
"score": "1.3256752"
},
{
"id": "9583184",
"title": "Carl Benjamin",
"text": " Benjamin is an anti-feminist. He is also an advocate for Brexit and a critic of Islam. He has opposed online feminist movements such as the British group Reclaim the Internet, which he called \"social communism\". Following the 2014 Isla Vista killings, Benjamin said that social justice feminism was a \"disease of the modern age\" that had disenfranchised and radicalised young men, causing a rise in the number of mass murders. While on a panel in New York City in 2018, he said: \"Jewish people, unfortunately for them, have got to drop the identity politics. I'm sorry about the Holocaust but I don't give a shit. I'm sorry.\" In ",
"score": "1.3182164"
},
{
"id": "27831507",
"title": "Andrew S. Penson",
"text": " Penson is an Orthodox Jew. He observes the Jewish Sabbath and has raised funds for United Jewish Appeal. Penson and his wife Shannon are known for keeping a low profile and for not seeking publicity.",
"score": "1.3130673"
},
{
"id": "25195738",
"title": "Marc Michael Epstein",
"text": " Epstein is a scholar of religion, focusing on Jewish and Christian religious culture in the Middle Ages. The objects of his study are monuments of visual and material culture. He has written on various topics regarding Jewish visual and material culture, and many of his publications concern Medieval manuscript illumination. His book Skies of Parchment, Seas of Ink: Jewish Manuscript Illumination (2015) was awarded the Jewish Book Council's National Jewish Book Award (winner in Visual Arts and finalist in Scholarship. The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative and Religious Imagination (2011), was named one of the “Best Books of the Year” by the London ",
"score": "1.3109269"
},
{
"id": "7839678",
"title": "Benjamin Blech",
"text": " Benjamin Blech, born in Zurich in 1933, is an Orthodox rabbi who now lives in New York City. Blech is a Professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University where he has taught since 1966, and was the rabbi of Young Israel of Oceanside for 37 years. In addition to his work in the rabbinate, Blech has written many books on Judaism and the Jewish people and speaks on Jewish topics to communities around the world.",
"score": "1.310816"
},
{
"id": "4179144",
"title": "Benjamin Maio Mackay",
"text": " Mackay is an atheist. He is bisexual and has discussed his sexuality both in diversity panels and on an episode of his podcast with Maria Lewis. He has acknowledged the lack of bisexual representation is mainstream media and is a supporter of Stephanie Beatriz's Brooklyn Nine-Nine character, as well as the positive representation on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.",
"score": "1.3104118"
}
] | [
"Benjamin Marc Ramaroson\n Benjamin Marc Ramaroson, C.M. (born 25 April 1955 in Manakara) is Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Antsiranana in Madagascar.",
"Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson\n Benjamin Marc Balthason Ramaroson (born 1955 in Manakara) is a Malagasy clergyman and prelate for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana, and later Antsiranana. He was appointed bishop in 2005. He moved dioceses in 2013.",
"Benjamin Marc Ramaroson\n Ramaroson was ordained as a priest on 15 August 1984 for the Congregation of the Mission. He was appointed as bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Farafangana by Pope Benedict XVI and consecrated in November 2005. As was appointed Archbishop of Antsiranana in November 2013 upon the retirement of Archbishop Michel Melo.",
"Jon Benjamin (Jewish leader)\n Marc Jonathan Benjamin (born 31 October 1964) is a qualified lawyer and has held various leadership positions in NGOs and Jewish communal organisations, including as Chief Executive of the Board of Deputies of British Jews from January 2005 to May 2013 and Chief Operating Officer of World ORT from January 2014 to December 2015.",
"Jonny Benjamin\nMBE ",
"Benjamin Ramamonjisoa\n Benjamin Ramamonjisoa is a Malagasy politician. A member of the National Assembly of Madagascar, he was elected as a member of the Tiako I Madagasikara party; he represents the constituency of Antananarivo Atsimondrano.",
"Marc Gafni\n Marc Gafni (born Marc Winiarz; 1960) is an American philosopher, author, and rabbi who became a New Age spiritual teacher with a focus on Integral Theory, Eros, and \"outrageous love\". Gafni is the author of over twelve books including the award-winning Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment. He hosted a National television show in Israel called Tachat Gafno from 1999-2002. He has been the subject of multiple allegations of sexual misconduct over many years, which he has denied.",
"Benjamin Rabenorolahy\n Benjamin Rabenorolahy (born 21 January 1940 in Morombe – 14 July 2020) was a Malagasy politician and pastor. He was the president of the Malagasy Lutheran Church (FLM - Fiangonana Loterana Malagasy) for 16 years before 2004. He was a member of the Senate of Madagascar for the Northwest Region, and did not represent any party. He died on 14 July 2020, in Antananarivo during the COVID-19 pandemic in Madagascar.",
"Benjamin Berton\n . Benjamin Berton (born 1974, Valenciennes) is a French writer.",
"Benjamin Berton\n Benjamin Berton is graduated from the Institut d’études politiques de Paris and holder of a D.E.A. of social and cultural history. Sauvageons, a chronicle of the lives of northern teenagers in need of reference points, won the prix Goncourt du premier roman in 2000 as well as the Prix littéraire de la vocation the same year. He lives in Le Mans, where the action of La Chambre à remonter le temps takes place.",
"Benjamin Brown (scholar)\n Benjamin Brown (born July 1, 1966 in Tel Aviv) is an Israeli professor, researcher of Judaism and Jewish thought, lecturer at the Department of Jewish thought at Hebrew University and a researcher at the Israel Democracy Institute. Brown is known for his studies on Orthodox Judaism, especially the ultra-Orthodox community, from the theological, Jewish-legal and historical perspectives. Among other topics, he was the first to trace the development of the concept Daas Torah and its various usages in the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) world. In addition, he published many papers about the Jewish legal ruling system (Halakhah), the Musar movement and the Hasidic movement. In his studies, Brown incorporates concepts, models and analytical tools originating from general philosophy, including legal philosophy.",
"Carl Benjamin\n Benjamin lives with his family in Swindon. He has stated that he is an atheist.",
"Benjamin Du Plan\n Benjamin Ribot, Seigneur du Caila et Du Plan (13 March 1688 – July 1763) was a leader of the French Huguenots. He was born into a Protestant family at the Château de la Favède, northwest of Alès. Receiving a military education, he became an officer under the name of Du Caila, but abandoned this profession in 1710 in order to promote the Protestant faith. In 1715, the same year that Louis XIV died, he met Antoine Court; they became friends and worked together, occasionally clashing on the subject of the inspirés, whom Du Plan admired. At the Synod of Nîmes in 1725 he was named Deputy General of the Reformed Churches of France. He spent four years at Geneva and one in Lausanne, where ",
"Witz (novel)\n In Witz, Joshua Cohen calls all religious Jews \"Affiliated\". After the sabbath meal a week before Christmas, Benjamin is born to Israel and Hanna Israelien in Joysey, the first son after 12 girls. This winter is particularly hard and in fact persists year round. Benjamin is born full grown (by a method explored by Flann O'Brien in At Swim-Two-Birds), with a beard and glasses. His foreskin continually sheds itself and grows back. Already too big for his father's shirts, he takes to his mother's maternity robes. On Christmas Eve, all of the Affiliated die except first-born sons. The Israelien's maid, Wanda, drives Benjamin down to Florida to live with his grandfather, Isaac, who is Unaffiliated. Meanwhile, a cabal of government operatives ",
"Marc Gafni\n , Gafni is the author of over twelve books on spirituality and religion. He wrote Radical Kabbalah, a two-volume work published by Integral Publishers in 2012. In 2012, he published Your Unique Self: The Radical Path to Personal Enlightenment with a foreword written by Wilber, which won a 2012 USA Best Book Awards in Spirituality: General category.",
"Carl Benjamin\n Benjamin is an anti-feminist. He is also an advocate for Brexit and a critic of Islam. He has opposed online feminist movements such as the British group Reclaim the Internet, which he called \"social communism\". Following the 2014 Isla Vista killings, Benjamin said that social justice feminism was a \"disease of the modern age\" that had disenfranchised and radicalised young men, causing a rise in the number of mass murders. While on a panel in New York City in 2018, he said: \"Jewish people, unfortunately for them, have got to drop the identity politics. I'm sorry about the Holocaust but I don't give a shit. I'm sorry.\" In ",
"Andrew S. Penson\n Penson is an Orthodox Jew. He observes the Jewish Sabbath and has raised funds for United Jewish Appeal. Penson and his wife Shannon are known for keeping a low profile and for not seeking publicity.",
"Marc Michael Epstein\n Epstein is a scholar of religion, focusing on Jewish and Christian religious culture in the Middle Ages. The objects of his study are monuments of visual and material culture. He has written on various topics regarding Jewish visual and material culture, and many of his publications concern Medieval manuscript illumination. His book Skies of Parchment, Seas of Ink: Jewish Manuscript Illumination (2015) was awarded the Jewish Book Council's National Jewish Book Award (winner in Visual Arts and finalist in Scholarship. The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative and Religious Imagination (2011), was named one of the “Best Books of the Year” by the London ",
"Benjamin Blech\n Benjamin Blech, born in Zurich in 1933, is an Orthodox rabbi who now lives in New York City. Blech is a Professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University where he has taught since 1966, and was the rabbi of Young Israel of Oceanside for 37 years. In addition to his work in the rabbinate, Blech has written many books on Judaism and the Jewish people and speaks on Jewish topics to communities around the world.",
"Benjamin Maio Mackay\n Mackay is an atheist. He is bisexual and has discussed his sexuality both in diversity panels and on an episode of his podcast with Maria Lewis. He has acknowledged the lack of bisexual representation is mainstream media and is a supporter of Stephanie Beatriz's Brooklyn Nine-Nine character, as well as the positive representation on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend."
] |
In what country is Kalu? | [
"Iran",
"Islamic Republic of Iran",
"Persia",
"ir",
"Islamic Rep. Iran",
"🇮🇷"
] | country | Kalu, Varzaqan | 4,304,705 | 35 | [
{
"id": "2415381",
"title": "Kaluga",
"text": "🇺🇸 Clearwater, United States (1992) ; 🇨🇳 Xianyang, China (2000) ; 🇷🇺 Tula, Russia (2002) ; 🇷🇺 Oryol, Russia (2003) ; 🇷🇺 Smolensk, Russia (2003) ; 🇷🇺 Makhachkala, Russia (2012) ; 🇷🇺 Tsiolkovsky, Russia (2016) ; 🇷🇺 Ryazan, Russia (2017) ; 🇷🇺 Tambov, Russia (2017) ; 🇨🇿 Pardubice, Czech Republic (2019) In addition to twin towns, Kaluga cooperates with: ",
"score": "1.6594057"
},
{
"id": "2415380",
"title": "Kaluga",
"text": "🇩🇪 Suhl, Germany (1969) ; 🇫🇮 Lahti, Finland (1998) ; 🇲🇩 Tiraspol, Moldova (2005) ; 🇬🇷 Panorama, Greece (2011) ; 🇧🇾 Minsk, Belarus (2015) ; 🇨🇳 Binzhou, China (2015) ; 🇺🇦 Yalta, Ukraine (2016) ; 🇷🇸 Niš, Serbia (2017) Kaluga is twinned with: ",
"score": "1.548259"
},
{
"id": "7225218",
"title": "N. D. Kalu",
"text": " Kalu is of Nigerian descent. He is currently working at sports radio station KBME in Houston, hosting a Houston sports show called \"\"In The Trenches\". He also serves as an occasional analyst for CSN Houston, American Sports Network, and ESPN3.",
"score": "1.5312269"
},
{
"id": "7225215",
"title": "N. D. Kalu",
"text": " Ndukwe Dike \"N. D.\" Kalu (born August 3, 1975) is a former American football defensive end. He was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the fifth round of the 1997 NFL Draft. He played college football at Rice.",
"score": "1.5224555"
},
{
"id": "16513703",
"title": "Kalu dodol",
"text": " The Hambanthota area in southern Sri Lanka is famous for kalu dodol, and is sometimes referred to as the kalu dodol capital. The kalu dodol industry is a major source of income for many people in the area. The kalu dodol shops in Hambanthota are frequently visited by pilgrims coming to visit the nearby holy town of Kataragama. In 2011, the Sri Lankan government allocated Rs. 134 million for setting up kalu dodol sales centres in the Hambanthota area, in an effort to develop the industry.",
"score": "1.5203204"
},
{
"id": "25916950",
"title": "KALU",
"text": " KALU (89.3 FM) is a non-commercial educational radio station broadcasting an urban contemporary music format with some talk radio programming, licensed to Langston, Oklahoma, United States. Established in 1975, the station is owned by Langston University. KALU is operated by the University's Department of Broadcast Journalism and School of Arts and Sciences",
"score": "1.5140936"
},
{
"id": "4273767",
"title": "Kalutara",
"text": " Source:statistics.gov.lk",
"score": "1.5139842"
},
{
"id": "32765410",
"title": "Kalu (woreda)",
"text": " as their religion, while 1.17% of the population said they practised Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity. The 1994 national census reported a total population for this woreda of 170,523 in 34,681 households, of whom 85,326 were men and 85,197 were women; 9,897 or 5.8% of its population were urban dwellers. The largest ethnic group reported in Kalu was the Oromo (54.24%), followed by the Amhara (41.97%) and Argobba (3.79%). Amharic was spoken as a first language by 99.27%. The majority of the inhabitants were Muslim, with 96.76% of the population having reported they practised that belief, while 3.14% of the population said they professed Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity.",
"score": "1.5126615"
},
{
"id": "1231039",
"title": "Kalule",
"text": " The population of Kalule is not publicly known, as of November 2010.",
"score": "1.5114496"
},
{
"id": "32765409",
"title": "Kalu (woreda)",
"text": " Based on the 2007 national census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia (CSA), this woreda has a total population of 186,181, an increase of 9.18% over the 1994 census, of whom 94,187 are men and 91,994 women; 19,810 or 10.64% are urban inhabitants. With an area of 851.54 square kilometers, Kalu has a population density of 218.64, which is greater than the Zone average of 147.58 persons per square kilometre. A total of 41,648 households were counted in this woreda, resulting in an average of 4.47 persons to a household, and 40,115 housing units. The majority of the inhabitants were Muslim, with 98.73% reporting ",
"score": "1.5113065"
},
{
"id": "29171923",
"title": "Kalu, Kalat",
"text": " Kalu (, also Romanized as Kālū) is a village in Hezarmasjed Rural District, in the Central District of Kalat County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 594, in 140 families.",
"score": "1.5088172"
},
{
"id": "14149268",
"title": "Ifeanyi Kalu",
"text": " Kalu was born in Surulere, a suburb in Lagos State, southwestern Nigeria. Kalu is of Igbo heritage from Imo State in the eastern part of Nigeria. He studied Computer science in the University.",
"score": "1.5058023"
},
{
"id": "11111931",
"title": "Kalu Cheema",
"text": " Kalu Cheema has a population of 2,000.",
"score": "1.5056821"
},
{
"id": "9611090",
"title": "Kalu-Ayry",
"text": " Kalu-Ayry (Калу-Айры) is a rural locality (a village) in Kulguninsky Selsoviet, Ishimbaysky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 149 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.",
"score": "1.4924575"
},
{
"id": "6473650",
"title": "Kalu Ndukwe Kalu",
"text": " Kalu Ndukwe Kalu is a Nigerian-born American political scientist specializing in comparative institutional development, national security policy, and organizational systems. He is currently a Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science and National Security Policy at Auburn University Montgomery.; and Docent Professor at the University of Tampere, Finland",
"score": "1.4837978"
},
{
"id": "15998034",
"title": "Kalu, Hormozgan",
"text": " Kalu (, also Romanized as Kalū and Kolū) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 112, in 28 families.",
"score": "1.4837394"
},
{
"id": "26820167",
"title": "Joshua Kalu",
"text": " Joshua Elekwachi Kalu (born August 28, 1995) is an American football strong safety for the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He was signed by the Tennessee Titans as an undrafted free agent in 2018. He played college football at Nebraska.",
"score": "1.4809668"
},
{
"id": "32765407",
"title": "Kalu (woreda)",
"text": " Kalu (Amharic: ቃሉ) also known as Harbu is one of the woredas in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Debub Wollo Zone, Kalu is bordered on the west by Dessie Zuria, on the north by Were Babu, on the south and east by the Oromia Zone, on the southeast by Argobba special woreda, and on the southwest by Abuko. The administrative center for this woreda is Harbu; other towns in Kalu include Ancharo, Gerba, and Degan. A highway linking Kombolcha and Afar bisects Kalu to two parts.",
"score": "1.4702799"
},
{
"id": "650944",
"title": "Benjamin Kalu",
"text": " Kalu is from Bende, Abia State, Nigeria. He is married with five children.",
"score": "1.4572828"
},
{
"id": "24934901",
"title": "Kalu, Ramian",
"text": " Kalu (, also Romanized as Kalū) is a village in Daland Rural District, in the Central District of Ramian County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 700, in 162 families.",
"score": "1.4507544"
}
] | [
"Kaluga\n🇺🇸 Clearwater, United States (1992) ; 🇨🇳 Xianyang, China (2000) ; 🇷🇺 Tula, Russia (2002) ; 🇷🇺 Oryol, Russia (2003) ; 🇷🇺 Smolensk, Russia (2003) ; 🇷🇺 Makhachkala, Russia (2012) ; 🇷🇺 Tsiolkovsky, Russia (2016) ; 🇷🇺 Ryazan, Russia (2017) ; 🇷🇺 Tambov, Russia (2017) ; 🇨🇿 Pardubice, Czech Republic (2019) In addition to twin towns, Kaluga cooperates with: ",
"Kaluga\n🇩🇪 Suhl, Germany (1969) ; 🇫🇮 Lahti, Finland (1998) ; 🇲🇩 Tiraspol, Moldova (2005) ; 🇬🇷 Panorama, Greece (2011) ; 🇧🇾 Minsk, Belarus (2015) ; 🇨🇳 Binzhou, China (2015) ; 🇺🇦 Yalta, Ukraine (2016) ; 🇷🇸 Niš, Serbia (2017) Kaluga is twinned with: ",
"N. D. Kalu\n Kalu is of Nigerian descent. He is currently working at sports radio station KBME in Houston, hosting a Houston sports show called \"\"In The Trenches\". He also serves as an occasional analyst for CSN Houston, American Sports Network, and ESPN3.",
"N. D. Kalu\n Ndukwe Dike \"N. D.\" Kalu (born August 3, 1975) is a former American football defensive end. He was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in the fifth round of the 1997 NFL Draft. He played college football at Rice.",
"Kalu dodol\n The Hambanthota area in southern Sri Lanka is famous for kalu dodol, and is sometimes referred to as the kalu dodol capital. The kalu dodol industry is a major source of income for many people in the area. The kalu dodol shops in Hambanthota are frequently visited by pilgrims coming to visit the nearby holy town of Kataragama. In 2011, the Sri Lankan government allocated Rs. 134 million for setting up kalu dodol sales centres in the Hambanthota area, in an effort to develop the industry.",
"KALU\n KALU (89.3 FM) is a non-commercial educational radio station broadcasting an urban contemporary music format with some talk radio programming, licensed to Langston, Oklahoma, United States. Established in 1975, the station is owned by Langston University. KALU is operated by the University's Department of Broadcast Journalism and School of Arts and Sciences",
"Kalutara\n Source:statistics.gov.lk",
"Kalu (woreda)\n as their religion, while 1.17% of the population said they practised Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity. The 1994 national census reported a total population for this woreda of 170,523 in 34,681 households, of whom 85,326 were men and 85,197 were women; 9,897 or 5.8% of its population were urban dwellers. The largest ethnic group reported in Kalu was the Oromo (54.24%), followed by the Amhara (41.97%) and Argobba (3.79%). Amharic was spoken as a first language by 99.27%. The majority of the inhabitants were Muslim, with 96.76% of the population having reported they practised that belief, while 3.14% of the population said they professed Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity.",
"Kalule\n The population of Kalule is not publicly known, as of November 2010.",
"Kalu (woreda)\n Based on the 2007 national census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia (CSA), this woreda has a total population of 186,181, an increase of 9.18% over the 1994 census, of whom 94,187 are men and 91,994 women; 19,810 or 10.64% are urban inhabitants. With an area of 851.54 square kilometers, Kalu has a population density of 218.64, which is greater than the Zone average of 147.58 persons per square kilometre. A total of 41,648 households were counted in this woreda, resulting in an average of 4.47 persons to a household, and 40,115 housing units. The majority of the inhabitants were Muslim, with 98.73% reporting ",
"Kalu, Kalat\n Kalu (, also Romanized as Kālū) is a village in Hezarmasjed Rural District, in the Central District of Kalat County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 594, in 140 families.",
"Ifeanyi Kalu\n Kalu was born in Surulere, a suburb in Lagos State, southwestern Nigeria. Kalu is of Igbo heritage from Imo State in the eastern part of Nigeria. He studied Computer science in the University.",
"Kalu Cheema\n Kalu Cheema has a population of 2,000.",
"Kalu-Ayry\n Kalu-Ayry (Калу-Айры) is a rural locality (a village) in Kulguninsky Selsoviet, Ishimbaysky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 149 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.",
"Kalu Ndukwe Kalu\n Kalu Ndukwe Kalu is a Nigerian-born American political scientist specializing in comparative institutional development, national security policy, and organizational systems. He is currently a Distinguished Research Professor of Political Science and National Security Policy at Auburn University Montgomery.; and Docent Professor at the University of Tampere, Finland",
"Kalu, Hormozgan\n Kalu (, also Romanized as Kalū and Kolū) is a village in Howmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Minab County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 112, in 28 families.",
"Joshua Kalu\n Joshua Elekwachi Kalu (born August 28, 1995) is an American football strong safety for the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He was signed by the Tennessee Titans as an undrafted free agent in 2018. He played college football at Nebraska.",
"Kalu (woreda)\n Kalu (Amharic: ቃሉ) also known as Harbu is one of the woredas in the Amhara Region of Ethiopia. Part of the Debub Wollo Zone, Kalu is bordered on the west by Dessie Zuria, on the north by Were Babu, on the south and east by the Oromia Zone, on the southeast by Argobba special woreda, and on the southwest by Abuko. The administrative center for this woreda is Harbu; other towns in Kalu include Ancharo, Gerba, and Degan. A highway linking Kombolcha and Afar bisects Kalu to two parts.",
"Benjamin Kalu\n Kalu is from Bende, Abia State, Nigeria. He is married with five children.",
"Kalu, Ramian\n Kalu (, also Romanized as Kalū) is a village in Daland Rural District, in the Central District of Ramian County, Golestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 700, in 162 families."
] |
Who is the author of Endpeace? | [
"Jon Cleary",
"Jon Stephen Cleary"
] | author | Endpeace | 4,037,342 | 49 | [
{
"id": "29894953",
"title": "Jeff Goldberg (writer)",
"text": " Jeff Goldberg is an American writer, who has published on the cultural history of psychoactive drugs, and how they work in the brain. He is the author of Flowers in the Blood, a history of opium, and Anatomy of a Scientific Discovery, an account of the race to discover endorphins, the body's own morphine. He has also written numerous articles about science and medicine, for Life, Discover, Omni and other magazines internationally.",
"score": "1.4479055"
},
{
"id": "26377599",
"title": "Physician writer",
"text": " and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and The New Yorker medical writer ; Tess Gerritsen, novelist ; Paul Kalanithi, neurosurgeon and author of When Breath Becomes Air ; Perri Klass, journalist, pediatrician, New York University professor ; Vincent Lam, Canadian writer (Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures) ; Asael Lubotzky, Israeli pediatrician, writer, and scientist ; C. J. Lyons, former pediatrician and thriller writer ; Amit Majmudar, poet, novelist, practicing radiologist, 1st Ohio poet laureate ; William James Maloney, American dentist, author ; Howard Markel, physician, medical historian, journalist, editor, national best selling author, and professor at The University of Michigan ; Siddhartha Mukherjee, oncologist, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of ",
"score": "1.3618374"
},
{
"id": "25444476",
"title": "Jerry Avorn",
"text": " Avorn is the author of the 2004 book \"Powerful Medicines\".",
"score": "1.3570454"
},
{
"id": "15411098",
"title": "Gian Luigi Gessa",
"text": "Endorphines(1987),Pythagora Press. ; Psychopharmachology(1990),Collana manuali di medicina,Masson. ; Dopamine and Mental Depression (1990),Paperback. ; Dysthymia: Diagnosis and Treatment (1998),Mediserve. ; Interview on neuroscience (2003),CUEC. ; Cocaine (2008),Rubbettino. ",
"score": "1.3552155"
},
{
"id": "14256266",
"title": "Jonathan Ott",
"text": " Ott has written eight books, co-written five, and contributed to four others, and published many articles in the field of entheogens. He has collaborated with other researchers like Christian Rätsch, Jochen Gartz, and the late ethnomycologist R. Gordon Wasson. He translated Albert Hofmann's 1979 book LSD: My Problem Child (LSD: Mein Sorgenkind), and On Aztec Botanical Names by Blas Pablo Reko, into English. His articles have appeared in many publications, including The Entheogen Review, The Entheogen Law Reporter, the Journal of Cognitive Liberties, the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (AKA the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs), the MAPS Bulletin, Head, High Times, Curare, Eleusis, Integration, Lloydia, The Sacred Mushroom Seeker, and several Harvard Botanical Museum pamphlets. He is a co-editor of Eleusis: Journal of Psychoactive Plants & Compounds, along with Giorgio Samorini.",
"score": "1.3491973"
},
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.3428848"
},
{
"id": "5980375",
"title": "Anita Endrezze",
"text": "Here First, Arnold Krupat, Brian Swann (Editors), Random House ",
"score": "1.3425112"
},
{
"id": "29159316",
"title": "Akira Endo (biochemist)",
"text": " Akira Endo (遠藤 章) is a Japanese biochemist whose research into the relationship between fungi and cholesterol biosynthesis led to the development of statin drugs, which are some of the best-selling pharmaceuticals in history. He received the Japan Prize in 2006, the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 2008, the Canada Gairdner International Award in 2017.",
"score": "1.3371918"
},
{
"id": "27277215",
"title": "Jean-Charles Schwartz",
"text": " of neuropeptides, Jean-Charles Schwartz created the concept of \"inactivation neuropeptidases\" by identifying the enzymes responsible for the metabolic inactivation of enkephalins and cholecystokininin and developed the first selective inhibitors of these enzymes, the latters used as research tools and then, from one of them thas therapeutic agent. He has clinically developed racecadotril (Tiorfan®), a neprilysin (\"enkephalinase\") inhibitor, the first selective intestinal anti-secretory agent that has been used as an antidiarrheal agent by several million patients. He also discovered by cloning several subtypes of brain serotonin receptors (5HT6, 5HT7), and established the neurotransmitter role of anandamide, an endogenous ligand of cannabinoid receptors. He is the author of more than 700 publications.",
"score": "1.3336192"
},
{
"id": "7614699",
"title": "Irving Kirsch",
"text": " Irving Kirsch (born March 7, 1943) is Associate Director of the Program in Placebo Studies and a lecturer in medicine at the Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He is also professor emeritus of psychology at the Universities of Hull and Plymouth in the United Kingdom, and the University of Connecticut in the United States. Kirsch is a leading researcher within the field of placebo studies who is noted for his work on placebo effects, antidepressants, expectancy, and hypnosis. He is the originator of response expectancy theory, and his analyses of clinical trials of antidepressants have influenced official treatment guidelines in the United Kingdom. He is the author of the 2009 book, The Emperor's New Drugs.",
"score": "1.3330729"
},
{
"id": "14018981",
"title": "Peter Lehmann (author)",
"text": " Peter Lehmann has an academic education in pedagogy. Since the 1970s, he has represented positions of humanistic anti-psychiatry within the consumer/survivor/ex-patient movement and circles of humanistic professionals. In 1986, he founded Peter Lehmann Publishing and Mail-order Bookstore in Berlin and published his first book, Der chemische Knebel (The Chemical Gag) (Berlin: Antipsychiatrieverlag 1986) in German through his own Antipsychiatric Publishing House. In 2003, he founded a branch in United Kingdom and in 2004 in the United States of America. In 1980, Peter Lehmann was co-founder of a support group of (ex-) users and survivors of psychiatry and advised about psychiatric drugs and withdrawal until 1989. In 1987, he was co-founder of PSYCHEX (Switzerland), an alliance of lawyers, doctors and survivors of psychiatry to support people who are incarcerated in psychiatric institutions); since then, board member. In 1989, he ",
"score": "1.3305414"
},
{
"id": "8402394",
"title": "Jerome Groopman",
"text": " The first book written by Groopman was The Measure of Our Days, published in 1997. He also published Second Opinions in 2000 and Anatomy of Hope in 2004. His 2007 book How Doctors Think rapidly rose to the top of the New York Times bestseller list when it was released. He further wrote, with his wife, Pamela Hartzband, an endocrinologist, the book Your Medical Mind (2011). Groopman was the guest editor for the 2008 edition of the yearly anthology The Best American Science and Nature Writing.",
"score": "1.3273408"
},
{
"id": "7589885",
"title": "Scott Waldman",
"text": " Together with Andre Terzic, in 2009 Waldman was co-editor of the multi-author textbook Pharmacology and Therapeutics: Principles to Practice, ISBN: 978-1-4160-3291-5, (Saunders-Elsevier)",
"score": "1.3263744"
},
{
"id": "25241550",
"title": "David E. Smith",
"text": " Smith is the founder and publisher of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, which has been published since 1967. Additionally, he is co-author of the textbook Clinician's Guide to Substance Abuse (ISBN: 978-0-07-134713-6) and co-author with Daniel Amen of the book Unchain Your Brain (ISBN: 978-1-886554-38-2), which provides practical tools for addiction patients and addiction professionals.",
"score": "1.3221803"
},
{
"id": "26960110",
"title": "Robert Whitaker (author)",
"text": " Whitaker was a medical writer at the Albany Times Union newspaper in Albany, New York from 1989 to 1994. In 1992, he was a Knight Science Journalism fellow at MIT. Following that, he became director of publications at Harvard Medical School. In 1994, he co-founded a publishing company, CenterWatch, that covered the pharmaceutical clinical trials industry. CenterWatch was acquired by Medical Economics, a division of The Thomson Corporation, in 1998. In 2002, USA Today published Whitaker's article \"Mind drugs may hinder recovery\" in its editorial/opinion section. In 2004, Whitaker published a paper in the non-peer-reviewed journal Medical Hypotheses, titled \"The case against antipsychotic drugs: a 50-year record of doing more harm than good\". In 2005, he published his paper Anatomy of an Epidemic: Psychiatric Drugs and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America in the peer-reviewed journal Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry. In his book Anatomy of an Epidemic, published in 2010, Whitaker continued his work.",
"score": "1.3206664"
},
{
"id": "11080602",
"title": "David Healy (psychiatrist)",
"text": " David Healy, a professor of psychiatry at Bangor University in the United Kingdom, is a psychiatrist, psychopharmacologist, scientist and author. His main areas of research are the contribution of antidepressants to suicide, conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and academic medicine, and the history of pharmacology. Healy has written more than 150 peer-reviewed articles, 200 other articles, and 20 books, including The Antidepressant Era, The Creation of Psychopharmacology, The Psychopharmacologists Volumes 1–3, Let Them Eat Prozac and Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder. Healy has been involved as an expert witness in homicide and suicide trials involving psychotropic drugs, and has brought concerns about some medications to the attention of drug regulators. He has also said that pharmaceutical companies sell drugs by marketing diseases and co-opting academic opinion-leaders. In his 2012 book Pharmageddon he argues that pharmaceutical companies have dominated healthcare in America, often with life-threatening results for patients. Healy is a founder and chief executive officer of Data Based Medicine Limited, which aims to make medicines safer through \"online direct patient reporting of drug effects\".",
"score": "1.3200231"
},
{
"id": "10275843",
"title": "David Taylor (professor)",
"text": " Taylor was the originator of the idea of an evidenced-based mental health prescribing guideline along with the late professor Robert Kerwin and has made a major and unique contribution by writing the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines for 25 years. Taylor is the de facto editor of this publication and is the only author to be credited on all 14 editions. The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines have sold over 300,000 copies in thirteen languages. The 14th edition was published in June 2021. He has also co-written three other books in the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines series.",
"score": "1.3183262"
},
{
"id": "6519375",
"title": "Gary Wand",
"text": " Gary S. Wand is an American physician and an Alfredo Rivière and Norma Rodriguez de Rivière professor who specializes in endocrinology and metabolism. He is the Johns Hopkins University director and a recipient of the National Institutes of Health Merit Award. He is a member of both Endocrine and Pituitary Societies and also of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. In 2008 he wrote a research paper called The influence of stress on the transition from drug use to addiction which was published by the National Institutes of Health in one of their magazines. A year later he collaborated with M Uhart to an article called Stress, alcohol and drug interaction: An update of human research which was published by the Addiction Biology journal.",
"score": "1.3154793"
},
{
"id": "6879769",
"title": "Michael Pollan",
"text": " Pollan is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a former executive editor for Harper's Magazine. His first book, Second Nature: A Gardener's Education, was published in 1991. Pollan has contributed to Greater Good, a social psychology magazine published by the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley. His article \"Edible Ethics\" discusses the intersection of ethical eating and social psychology. In his 1998 book A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder, Pollan methodically traced the design and construction of the out-building where he writes. The 2008 re-release of this book was re-titled A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams. Pollan wrote and narrated an audiobook, Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World, for Audible.com In 2014, Pollan wrote ",
"score": "1.3143796"
},
{
"id": "4759530",
"title": "Stephen Stahl",
"text": " Stahl is author of over 500 articles and book chapters and more than 1600 scientific presentations and abstracts. He has written 35 text books and edited 12 others, including the best-selling and award-winning Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology, now in its fourth edition and Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide, now in its seventh edition. In 2015, he published the thriller novel Shell Shock. Stahl’s interests are dedicated to producing and disseminating educational information about diseases and their treatments in psychiatry and neurology, with a special emphasis on multimedia, the internet. Stahl had a major input related to revelations about inadequate mental health care in the US Army and at Fort Hood His role was to train caregivers of wounded soldiers and ensure that the current system was appropriate.",
"score": "1.3120925"
}
] | [
"Jeff Goldberg (writer)\n Jeff Goldberg is an American writer, who has published on the cultural history of psychoactive drugs, and how they work in the brain. He is the author of Flowers in the Blood, a history of opium, and Anatomy of a Scientific Discovery, an account of the race to discover endorphins, the body's own morphine. He has also written numerous articles about science and medicine, for Life, Discover, Omni and other magazines internationally.",
"Physician writer\n and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts, and The New Yorker medical writer ; Tess Gerritsen, novelist ; Paul Kalanithi, neurosurgeon and author of When Breath Becomes Air ; Perri Klass, journalist, pediatrician, New York University professor ; Vincent Lam, Canadian writer (Bloodletting & Miraculous Cures) ; Asael Lubotzky, Israeli pediatrician, writer, and scientist ; C. J. Lyons, former pediatrician and thriller writer ; Amit Majmudar, poet, novelist, practicing radiologist, 1st Ohio poet laureate ; William James Maloney, American dentist, author ; Howard Markel, physician, medical historian, journalist, editor, national best selling author, and professor at The University of Michigan ; Siddhartha Mukherjee, oncologist, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of ",
"Jerry Avorn\n Avorn is the author of the 2004 book \"Powerful Medicines\".",
"Gian Luigi Gessa\nEndorphines(1987),Pythagora Press. ; Psychopharmachology(1990),Collana manuali di medicina,Masson. ; Dopamine and Mental Depression (1990),Paperback. ; Dysthymia: Diagnosis and Treatment (1998),Mediserve. ; Interview on neuroscience (2003),CUEC. ; Cocaine (2008),Rubbettino. ",
"Jonathan Ott\n Ott has written eight books, co-written five, and contributed to four others, and published many articles in the field of entheogens. He has collaborated with other researchers like Christian Rätsch, Jochen Gartz, and the late ethnomycologist R. Gordon Wasson. He translated Albert Hofmann's 1979 book LSD: My Problem Child (LSD: Mein Sorgenkind), and On Aztec Botanical Names by Blas Pablo Reko, into English. His articles have appeared in many publications, including The Entheogen Review, The Entheogen Law Reporter, the Journal of Cognitive Liberties, the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (AKA the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs), the MAPS Bulletin, Head, High Times, Curare, Eleusis, Integration, Lloydia, The Sacred Mushroom Seeker, and several Harvard Botanical Museum pamphlets. He is a co-editor of Eleusis: Journal of Psychoactive Plants & Compounds, along with Giorgio Samorini.",
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Anita Endrezze\nHere First, Arnold Krupat, Brian Swann (Editors), Random House ",
"Akira Endo (biochemist)\n Akira Endo (遠藤 章) is a Japanese biochemist whose research into the relationship between fungi and cholesterol biosynthesis led to the development of statin drugs, which are some of the best-selling pharmaceuticals in history. He received the Japan Prize in 2006, the Lasker-DeBakey Clinical Medical Research Award in 2008, the Canada Gairdner International Award in 2017.",
"Jean-Charles Schwartz\n of neuropeptides, Jean-Charles Schwartz created the concept of \"inactivation neuropeptidases\" by identifying the enzymes responsible for the metabolic inactivation of enkephalins and cholecystokininin and developed the first selective inhibitors of these enzymes, the latters used as research tools and then, from one of them thas therapeutic agent. He has clinically developed racecadotril (Tiorfan®), a neprilysin (\"enkephalinase\") inhibitor, the first selective intestinal anti-secretory agent that has been used as an antidiarrheal agent by several million patients. He also discovered by cloning several subtypes of brain serotonin receptors (5HT6, 5HT7), and established the neurotransmitter role of anandamide, an endogenous ligand of cannabinoid receptors. He is the author of more than 700 publications.",
"Irving Kirsch\n Irving Kirsch (born March 7, 1943) is Associate Director of the Program in Placebo Studies and a lecturer in medicine at the Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He is also professor emeritus of psychology at the Universities of Hull and Plymouth in the United Kingdom, and the University of Connecticut in the United States. Kirsch is a leading researcher within the field of placebo studies who is noted for his work on placebo effects, antidepressants, expectancy, and hypnosis. He is the originator of response expectancy theory, and his analyses of clinical trials of antidepressants have influenced official treatment guidelines in the United Kingdom. He is the author of the 2009 book, The Emperor's New Drugs.",
"Peter Lehmann (author)\n Peter Lehmann has an academic education in pedagogy. Since the 1970s, he has represented positions of humanistic anti-psychiatry within the consumer/survivor/ex-patient movement and circles of humanistic professionals. In 1986, he founded Peter Lehmann Publishing and Mail-order Bookstore in Berlin and published his first book, Der chemische Knebel (The Chemical Gag) (Berlin: Antipsychiatrieverlag 1986) in German through his own Antipsychiatric Publishing House. In 2003, he founded a branch in United Kingdom and in 2004 in the United States of America. In 1980, Peter Lehmann was co-founder of a support group of (ex-) users and survivors of psychiatry and advised about psychiatric drugs and withdrawal until 1989. In 1987, he was co-founder of PSYCHEX (Switzerland), an alliance of lawyers, doctors and survivors of psychiatry to support people who are incarcerated in psychiatric institutions); since then, board member. In 1989, he ",
"Jerome Groopman\n The first book written by Groopman was The Measure of Our Days, published in 1997. He also published Second Opinions in 2000 and Anatomy of Hope in 2004. His 2007 book How Doctors Think rapidly rose to the top of the New York Times bestseller list when it was released. He further wrote, with his wife, Pamela Hartzband, an endocrinologist, the book Your Medical Mind (2011). Groopman was the guest editor for the 2008 edition of the yearly anthology The Best American Science and Nature Writing.",
"Scott Waldman\n Together with Andre Terzic, in 2009 Waldman was co-editor of the multi-author textbook Pharmacology and Therapeutics: Principles to Practice, ISBN: 978-1-4160-3291-5, (Saunders-Elsevier)",
"David E. Smith\n Smith is the founder and publisher of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs, which has been published since 1967. Additionally, he is co-author of the textbook Clinician's Guide to Substance Abuse (ISBN: 978-0-07-134713-6) and co-author with Daniel Amen of the book Unchain Your Brain (ISBN: 978-1-886554-38-2), which provides practical tools for addiction patients and addiction professionals.",
"Robert Whitaker (author)\n Whitaker was a medical writer at the Albany Times Union newspaper in Albany, New York from 1989 to 1994. In 1992, he was a Knight Science Journalism fellow at MIT. Following that, he became director of publications at Harvard Medical School. In 1994, he co-founded a publishing company, CenterWatch, that covered the pharmaceutical clinical trials industry. CenterWatch was acquired by Medical Economics, a division of The Thomson Corporation, in 1998. In 2002, USA Today published Whitaker's article \"Mind drugs may hinder recovery\" in its editorial/opinion section. In 2004, Whitaker published a paper in the non-peer-reviewed journal Medical Hypotheses, titled \"The case against antipsychotic drugs: a 50-year record of doing more harm than good\". In 2005, he published his paper Anatomy of an Epidemic: Psychiatric Drugs and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America in the peer-reviewed journal Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry. In his book Anatomy of an Epidemic, published in 2010, Whitaker continued his work.",
"David Healy (psychiatrist)\n David Healy, a professor of psychiatry at Bangor University in the United Kingdom, is a psychiatrist, psychopharmacologist, scientist and author. His main areas of research are the contribution of antidepressants to suicide, conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and academic medicine, and the history of pharmacology. Healy has written more than 150 peer-reviewed articles, 200 other articles, and 20 books, including The Antidepressant Era, The Creation of Psychopharmacology, The Psychopharmacologists Volumes 1–3, Let Them Eat Prozac and Mania: A Short History of Bipolar Disorder. Healy has been involved as an expert witness in homicide and suicide trials involving psychotropic drugs, and has brought concerns about some medications to the attention of drug regulators. He has also said that pharmaceutical companies sell drugs by marketing diseases and co-opting academic opinion-leaders. In his 2012 book Pharmageddon he argues that pharmaceutical companies have dominated healthcare in America, often with life-threatening results for patients. Healy is a founder and chief executive officer of Data Based Medicine Limited, which aims to make medicines safer through \"online direct patient reporting of drug effects\".",
"David Taylor (professor)\n Taylor was the originator of the idea of an evidenced-based mental health prescribing guideline along with the late professor Robert Kerwin and has made a major and unique contribution by writing the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines for 25 years. Taylor is the de facto editor of this publication and is the only author to be credited on all 14 editions. The Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines have sold over 300,000 copies in thirteen languages. The 14th edition was published in June 2021. He has also co-written three other books in the Maudsley Prescribing Guidelines series.",
"Gary Wand\n Gary S. Wand is an American physician and an Alfredo Rivière and Norma Rodriguez de Rivière professor who specializes in endocrinology and metabolism. He is the Johns Hopkins University director and a recipient of the National Institutes of Health Merit Award. He is a member of both Endocrine and Pituitary Societies and also of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology. In 2008 he wrote a research paper called The influence of stress on the transition from drug use to addiction which was published by the National Institutes of Health in one of their magazines. A year later he collaborated with M Uhart to an article called Stress, alcohol and drug interaction: An update of human research which was published by the Addiction Biology journal.",
"Michael Pollan\n Pollan is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and a former executive editor for Harper's Magazine. His first book, Second Nature: A Gardener's Education, was published in 1991. Pollan has contributed to Greater Good, a social psychology magazine published by the Greater Good Science Center at the University of California, Berkeley. His article \"Edible Ethics\" discusses the intersection of ethical eating and social psychology. In his 1998 book A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder, Pollan methodically traced the design and construction of the out-building where he writes. The 2008 re-release of this book was re-titled A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams. Pollan wrote and narrated an audiobook, Caffeine: How Caffeine Created the Modern World, for Audible.com In 2014, Pollan wrote ",
"Stephen Stahl\n Stahl is author of over 500 articles and book chapters and more than 1600 scientific presentations and abstracts. He has written 35 text books and edited 12 others, including the best-selling and award-winning Stahl’s Essential Psychopharmacology, now in its fourth edition and Essential Psychopharmacology Prescriber’s Guide, now in its seventh edition. In 2015, he published the thriller novel Shell Shock. Stahl’s interests are dedicated to producing and disseminating educational information about diseases and their treatments in psychiatry and neurology, with a special emphasis on multimedia, the internet. Stahl had a major input related to revelations about inadequate mental health care in the US Army and at Fort Hood His role was to train caregivers of wounded soldiers and ensure that the current system was appropriate."
] |
Who was the director of Pilot? | [
"Andy Ackerman",
"Robert Andrew Ackerman"
] | director | Pilot (Life on a Stick) | 5,453,504 | 46 | [
{
"id": "11645394",
"title": "Pilot (V)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ",
"score": "1.4781814"
},
{
"id": "14177516",
"title": "The Pilot (film)",
"text": " The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.",
"score": "1.4499825"
},
{
"id": "8602681",
"title": "Pilots (film)",
"text": " Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.",
"score": "1.4494889"
},
{
"id": "14985590",
"title": "Alan Smithee",
"text": " of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ",
"score": "1.4493661"
},
{
"id": "14920510",
"title": "Pilot (The Americans)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.",
"score": "1.4418707"
},
{
"id": "30220069",
"title": "Tucker Cawley",
"text": "\"Pilot\" ",
"score": "1.435677"
},
{
"id": "6731306",
"title": "Jay Sandrich",
"text": "Kuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ",
"score": "1.4349737"
},
{
"id": "6019210",
"title": "Pilot (Masters of Sex)",
"text": " The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ",
"score": "1.4300442"
},
{
"id": "13378281",
"title": "Pilot (studio)",
"text": " Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ",
"score": "1.4285988"
},
{
"id": "27706142",
"title": "Pilot (Homeland)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.",
"score": "1.4216971"
},
{
"id": "27932156",
"title": "Pilot (Person of Interest)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.",
"score": "1.4200339"
},
{
"id": "9331023",
"title": "John Hodge (engineer)",
"text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"score": "1.4185274"
},
{
"id": "14175622",
"title": "Pilot (Preacher)",
"text": " The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ",
"score": "1.4113898"
},
{
"id": "9073659",
"title": "Pilot Speed",
"text": " Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ",
"score": "1.4102072"
},
{
"id": "12877364",
"title": "The Flying Ace",
"text": " With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ",
"score": "1.4081718"
},
{
"id": "26447212",
"title": "Pilot (Revenge)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.",
"score": "1.4069793"
},
{
"id": "2971117",
"title": "Pilot (Lost)",
"text": " \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ",
"score": "1.4053873"
},
{
"id": "27683816",
"title": "Wes Archer",
"text": "\"Pilot\" ",
"score": "1.4042232"
},
{
"id": "26346022",
"title": "Pilot (The Deuce)",
"text": " by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.",
"score": "1.4006654"
},
{
"id": "8882905",
"title": "Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies",
"text": " Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, ",
"score": "1.3966904"
}
] | [
"Pilot (V)\n \"Pilot\" is the series premiere of the 2009 reimagining of the 1983 miniseries V created by Kenneth Johnson. The episode's teleplay was written by Scott Peters, with story credit going to Johnson and Peters. Yves Simoneau directed the episode, which originally aired in the United States on ABC on November 3, 2009. The episode sees spaceships appear over 29 of the world's major cities. Though the alien \"Visitors\" claim to come in peace, it transpires that they have been infiltrating the planet for decades, and are planning on enslaving the human species. Parallels have been drawn between the Visitors and US Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, though Peters and co-producer Jeffrey Bell refute that they were intentional. Bell feels that while the original series ",
"The Pilot (film)\n The Pilot (also known as Danger in the Skies) is a 1980 American action-drama film by director and star Cliff Robertson and is based on the novel of the same name by Robert P. Davis.",
"Pilots (film)\n Pilots is a 2000 Indian Malayalam-language drama film written and directed by Rajiv Anchal and produced by Menaka under Revathy Kalamandhir. Starring Suresh Gopi, Sreenivasan, and Praveena.",
"Alan Smithee\n of season 4 of American television series, believed to be directed by Joseph L. Scanlan. ; Riviera, 1987 ABC-TV movie intended as pilot, directed by John Frankenheimer. ; MacGyver, \"Pilot\", directed by Jerrold Freedman, and \"The Heist\", director unknown (1985). ; Moonlight, TV movie and pilot for an unsold series (1982) (not to be confused with the later CBS vampire series), directed by Jackie Cooper and Rod Holcomb. ; The Owl, 1991 television film credited to director Tom Holland when originally broadcast. Holland approved of the 46-minute television cut but disliked the extended 84-minute home video cut and credited it to \"Alan Smithee\". ",
"Pilot (The Americans)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the first season of the period drama television series The Americans. It originally aired on FX in the United States on January 30, 2013. The episode was written by series creator Joe Weisberg and directed by Gavin O'Connor. In 1981, shortly after the inauguration of President Ronald Reagan, Philip and Elizabeth Jennings (Matthew Rhys and Keri Russell) are undercover Soviet intelligence agents from the secretive Directorate S of the KGB sent to the U.S. 15 years ago to work deep cover in Washington, D.C. Their assumed identities are a married couple who run a travel agency, and even their own children Paige (Holly Taylor) and Henry (Keidrich Sellati) do not know their secret. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. Critics commented on the lead performances of Russell, Rhys, and Noah Emmerich. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 3.22 million.",
"Tucker Cawley\n\"Pilot\" ",
"Jay Sandrich\nKuney, Jack. Take One: Television Directors on Directing. ISBN: 978-0275935467 New York: Greenwood, 1990. ; Meisler, Andy. \"Jay Sandrich: Ace of Pilots.\" Channels magazine (New York), October 1986. ; Ravage, John W. Television: The Director's Viewpoint. Boulder, ISBN: 978-0891583370, Colorado: Westview, 1978. ",
"Pilot (Masters of Sex)\n The series opens in October 1956 at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri where Bill Masters (Michael Sheen) is honored for his work in obstetric surgery. While making a speech, Bill states that he has to go. Later, he watches through a peephole as Betty DiMello (Annaleigh Ashford), a prostitute whom he hired, has sex with Ernie (Steve Rosen). Afterwards, Bill talks with Betty at a bar where they discuss her sexual response. She tells him she faked her orgasm, a practice which Bill is unfamiliar with. A young doctor, Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto) speaks to Bill about a new female ",
"Pilot (studio)\n Aleksandr Tatarsky served as the Pilot's artistic director up until his death in 2007. He was replaced by Eduard Nazarov who held the position until 2013. Currently Igor Gelashvili serves as the studio's director. Pilot produced over 130 animated films. A subdivision called \"Pilot-TV\", founded in 1997, produced satirical animated series using 3D motion-captured characters, most famous of them being the studio's key mascots: the Pilot Brothers based on Chief and Colleague from the popular Soviet mini-series Investigation Held by Kolobki. The studio has received over 50 awards at international film festivals. It is best known for animating the popular Cartoon Network series Mike, Lu & Og outside of ",
"Pilot (Homeland)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the psychological thriller TV series Homeland. It originally aired on Showtime on October 2, 2011. The episode focuses on the return home of Marine Sergeant Nicholas Brody (Damian Lewis), rescued after eight years as a prisoner-of-war in Afghanistan. While Brody is celebrated as a hero, CIA officer Carrie Mathison (Claire Danes) believes Brody to actually be acting as a sleeper agent for al-Qaeda. The pilot was universally acclaimed by critics and was the highest-rated drama premiere on Showtime since 2003.",
"Pilot (Person of Interest)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the crime drama television series Person of Interest. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on September 22, 2011. The episode was written by series creator Jonathan Nolan and directed by David Semel. Reviews for the episode were largely positive. In the United States, the series premiere achieved a viewership of 13.33 million.",
"John Hodge (engineer)\n in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"Pilot (Preacher)\n The \"Pilot\" of Preacher was directed by series creators Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg, both first-time television directors. Prior to directing for the series, Rogen and Goldberg's directorial filmography included This Is the End (2013) and The Interview (2014). Shortly after the airing of the pilot, AMC released a featurette titled \"Directors' Commentary On “Pilot”\" which went into greater detail about the creation of the pilot episode, with both Rogen and Goldberg providing commentary and insight into its construction. The directors were intent on challenging themselves within the production, with the budget limitations helping in that regard, as it forced both ",
"Pilot Speed\n Pilot Speed (formerly known as Pilate) was a Canadian rock band, who were active in the early 2000s. Based in Toronto, Ontario, the band consisted of vocalist and pianist Todd Clark, guitarist Chris Greenough, bassist Ruby Bumrah and drummer Bill Keeley. Clark was a graduate of the music program at the University of Western Ontario, while all of the other three members were alumni of OCAD University. They released their debut EP, For All That's Given, Wasted, independently in 2001 before signing to MapleMusic Recordings, which released their full-length debut album Caught by the Window in 2003. The album was most noted for the single \"Into Your Hideout\"; the song's music video, directed by Maxime Giroux, won the MuchMusic Video Award for Best Independent Video at ",
"The Flying Ace\n With principal photography in Jacksonville, Florida, The Flying Ace was an example of producer Norman's \"home talent\" films, in which he would travel to various towns with stock footage and a basic script. After recruiting local celebrities for minor roles, they would film a small portion of footage (approximately 200 feet of new material) over the course of a few days. The films were processed at Norman's laboratory in Chicago. Once completed, the films would be screened and any funds raised would be split between Norman and the town where the scenes were shot. Norman cast J. Laurence Criner, a veteran of Harlem’s prestigious all-black theater troupe the Lafayette Players, in the leading role of Captain Billy Stokes, a black pilot who fought in France during World War I. While Eugene Bullard was a black pilot in the Lafayette Escadrille, African-Americans were not allowed to serve as ",
"Pilot (Revenge)\n \"Pilot\" is the first episode of the American television series Revenge. It premiered on ABC on September 21, 2011. The episode was written by Mike Kelley and directed by Phillip Noyce.",
"Pilot (Lost)\n \"Pilot\" is the two-part television pilot of the ABC television series Lost, with part 1 premiering on September 22, 2004, and part 2 one week later on September 29. Both parts were directed by J. J. Abrams, who co-wrote the script with Damon Lindelof. Jeffrey Lieber, who had been commissioned by ABC to write the first version of the script, earned a story credit. Filmed in Oahu, Hawaii, it was the most expensive pilot episode up to that time, costing between $10 and $14 million, largely due to the expense of purchasing, shipping, and dressing a decommissioned Lockheed 1011 to represent Flight 815's wreckage. Many changes were made during the casting ",
"Wes Archer\n\"Pilot\" ",
"Pilot (The Deuce)\n by a former adult film star who was working craft services for the shot. Of the project, Simon said \"We’re interested in what it means when profit is the primary metric for what we call society. In that sense, this story is intended as neither prurient nor puritan. It’s about a product, and those human beings who created, sold, profited from and suffered with that product... Porn, prostitution, pimps, the Mob, after-hours nightlife, institutional corruption, and New York in its Wild West heyday ... it’s a world rich in character, and a fascinating story we’re eager to tell.\" Filming began in October 2015, and in January, 2016, the pilot was picked up for series.",
"Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies\n Steven Spielberg had developed the story of a flyer with a young son, containing themes that interested him: aircraft and flying and parental responsibility. He developed the premise with fellow Cal State alumni Claudia Salter, and hoped to direct it himself, but Richard D. Zanuck, who was then the president of 20th Century Fox, declined to hire Spielberg as director. Producers Robert Fryer and James Cresson hired John Erman to direct because he was older. The film originally ended with Eli committing suicide, but the studio recut it to give it a happier ending. Spielberg was so displeased by the film that he publicly complained it had been \"turned into a really sick film. They should bury it.\" Spielberg would not make a film for Twentieth Century Fox until 2002's Minority Report (even then, this was a co-production with DreamWorks). Fryer, "
] |
What genre is Theatre? | [
"mathcore",
"math metal",
"noisecore"
] | genre | Theatre (band) | 5,966,775 | 92 | [
{
"id": "12353878",
"title": "Theatre-fiction",
"text": " Theatre-fiction refers to novels and short-stories that focus on theatre. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents. Common settings may include theatre auditoriums, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, or other places in which theatre is created and performed. Theatre-fiction may engage with and represent many different varieties of theatre, from performances of Shakespearean tragedy to Kabuki theatre to pantomime or marionette shows.",
"score": "1.5390906"
},
{
"id": "3471524",
"title": "Theatre (novel)",
"text": " Theatre is a novel by the British writer W. Somerset Maugham, first published in 1937 by William Heinemann (UK) and Doubleday Doran (US). The novel describes a successful actress and her husband, a theatre manager; her life and career is disturbed by a stormy affair with a young accountant.",
"score": "1.483495"
},
{
"id": "2228774",
"title": "Humanities",
"text": " Theatre (or theater) (Greek \"theatron\", θέατρον) is the branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle — indeed any one or more elements of the other performing arts. In addition to the standard narrative dialogue style, theatre takes such forms as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, classical Indian dance, Chinese opera, mummers' plays, and pantomime.",
"score": "1.4804121"
},
{
"id": "16285937",
"title": "Cumberland Theatre",
"text": " The Cumberland Theatre produces a variety of plays. The artistic director posts a brief synopsis of the play and usually a subjective rating, based on the language and themes contained in the shows. The wide variety of genres include, comedy, drama, horror/thriller, musical, colonial, autobiographical, romance, crime, and mystery. Over the years musicals have proven to be generally the most popular, followed by comedies and thrillers. Furthermore, the theatre has produced many shows featuring stories specific to different minorities. Some examples are: The Diary of Anne Frank, Ain't Misbehavin', Hairspray, The All Night Strut, and To Kill A Mockingbird.",
"score": "1.4644861"
},
{
"id": "30349592",
"title": "Teatro di narrazione",
"text": " Teatro di narrazione (narrative theatre) is a style of theatre, developed in Italy in the later decades of the 20th century, in which there are no actors or action, but only a \"narrattore\" (a neologism for narrator-actor, or \"narractor\") who tells the story in narrative form.",
"score": "1.4477257"
},
{
"id": "8527601",
"title": "The arts",
"text": " Theatre or theater (from Greek theatron (θέατρον); from theasthai, \"behold\" ) is the branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle – indeed, any one or more elements of the other performing arts. In addition to the standard narrative dialogue style, theatre takes such forms as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, classical Indian dance, Chinese opera and mummers' plays.",
"score": "1.4454434"
},
{
"id": "12353893",
"title": "Theatre-fiction",
"text": " Mona Awad, All’s Well (2021) The novels and stories in this list share a substantial and sustained focus on theatre. Many of them could be described as \"theatre-novels\" or \"theatre-stories\", as Graham Wolfe has defined these terms (Wolfe is referring to works whose engagement with theatre as artistic practice[s] or industry \"is sufficiently developed to become a dominant\" in the text ). In some cases (e.g. Twain's Huckleberry Finn or Tolstoy's War and Peace), only particular segments or chapters focus on theatrical performance or characters associated with theatre; in other cases, the novel or story is dominantly concerned with theatre. ",
"score": "1.440757"
},
{
"id": "12559808",
"title": "Music theatre",
"text": " Music theatre is a performance genre that emerged over the course of the 20th century, in opposition to more conventional genres like opera and musical theatre. The term came to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s to describe an avant-garde approach to instrumental and vocal composition that included non-sonic gesture, movement, costume and other visual elements within the score. These compositions (such as György Ligeti’s Aventures (1962), Mauricio Kagel’s Match (1964) and Peter Maxwell Davies’s Eight Songs for a Mad King (1968)) were intended to be performed on a concert hall stage, potentially as part of a longer programme of pieces. Since the ",
"score": "1.4360747"
},
{
"id": "13246403",
"title": "Youth Theatre on the Fontanka",
"text": " Labeling the genre in the program of performance under its name, the theatre often departs from the usual formula, offering spectators options such as, for example, \"nostalgia\", \"family history\", \"romantic metamorphosis\", \"an anthology of passion\", \"a vivid portrait of the play\", \"melodrama with quotations towards primitivism\", and others. The Theatre on the Fontanka never focuses on the tastes of the mass audience while selecting plays for performances. The theatre sees its goal as educate the taste of spectators. The theatre's mission can be characterized as: \"To talk easily and clearly about deep things. To help a person to find harmony. To spread light by art, to give spectators moral strength and hope, that are so scarce in modern society.\"",
"score": "1.4317473"
},
{
"id": "30178473",
"title": "The Kreep",
"text": " The Kreep was playwright in residence for the St. John's Conservatory Theater. SJCT's theatrical genres include musical theatre, satire, interactive theatre, improvisational theatre, variety show, circus, and vaudeville. St. John’s Conservatory Theater incorporates these genres in all-original musical comedies based on literature, folklore, and legend. Their production and costume design are \"reminiscent of Tim Burton’s Gothic ingenuity.\"",
"score": "1.4311503"
},
{
"id": "6068885",
"title": "Theatre (band)",
"text": " Theatre was an experimental mathcore outfit formed in the lower suburbs of Somerset West, South Africa in 2008. They bring genre-smashing music to the foreground that is both unique in construction and chaotic in design, which is brought forth by means of a notably destructive yet emotive performance, with \"live shows that truly defy the norm\".",
"score": "1.4307714"
},
{
"id": "3592874",
"title": "Theatre",
"text": " Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, usually actors or actresses, to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture, speech, song, music, and dance. Elements of art, such as painted scenery and stagecraft such as lighting are used to enhance the physicality, presence and immediacy of the experience. The specific place of the performance is also named by the word \"theatre\" as derived from the Ancient Greek θέατρον (théatron, \"a place for viewing\"), itself from θεάομαι (theáomai, \"to see\", ",
"score": "1.4267738"
},
{
"id": "13284162",
"title": "Physical theatre",
"text": " Physical theatre is a genre of theatrical performance that encompasses storytelling primarily through physical movement. Although several performance theatre disciplines are often described as \"physical theatre,\" the genre's characteristic aspect is a reliance on the performers' physical motion rather than, or combined with, text to convey storytelling. Performers can communicate through various body gestures (including using the body to portray emotions).",
"score": "1.4263821"
},
{
"id": "12348225",
"title": "Theatrical style",
"text": " that encourages the shock and horror of the audience, through the excessive use of light and sound, instead of active entertainment or emotional relaxation. Physical theatre A modernist approach to theatre which centralises a performer's movement as the key communicator of a play's storytelling. Poor theatre Developed by Jerzy Growotski, this genre believes in the stripping back of set, props, costume, light and sound to allow the focus to be placed solely upon the actors, their characterisation and the underlying human relationships. Immersive theatre Developed by Augusto Boal, these styles all place focus on the audience member's individuality: their personal decisions, opinions and emotions, and how that impacts those of the characters onstage. The audience firmly exists within the 'world of the play'. Links to Promenade and Forum theatre.",
"score": "1.4246771"
},
{
"id": "7926735",
"title": "Lists of theatres",
"text": " This is a list of theatre list articles on Wikipedia. Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of fine art that uses live performers to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture, speech, song, music, and dance. Elements of design and stagecraft are used to enhance the physicality, presence and immediacy of the experience.",
"score": "1.4208618"
},
{
"id": "2560251",
"title": "Theatre photography",
"text": " Theatre photography first took place in the photographer's studio before the photographer could come to the theatre with the appropriate technical equipment and take pictures on stage. Theatre photography is a genre of photography. Its Motiv (Fotografie) are performers on theatre stages as well as scenery or (rarely) prop or stage design. Trends in theatre photography are drama, opera, ballet, puppet theatre, cabaret, variety show and portraits of artists.",
"score": "1.4208531"
},
{
"id": "3592916",
"title": "Theatre",
"text": " includes drama—comedy, tragedy, and the satyr play—as well as lyric poetry, epic poetry, and the dithyramb). He examines its \"first principles\" and identifies its genres and basic elements; his analysis of tragedy constitutes the core of the discussion. Aristotle argues that tragedy consists of six qualitative parts, which are (in order of importance) mythos or \"plot\", ethos or \"character\", dianoia or \"thought\", lexis or \"diction\", melos or \"song\", and opsis or \"spectacle\". \"Although Aristotle's Poetics is universally acknowledged in the Western critical tradition\", Marvin Carlson explains, \"almost every detail about his seminal work has aroused divergent opinions.\" Important theatre practitioners of the 20th century include Konstantin Stanislavski, Vsevolod ",
"score": "1.4197788"
},
{
"id": "32303755",
"title": "Black Pearl Cabaret",
"text": " Black Pearl Cabaret genres: musical theatre, satire, interactive theatre, improvisational theatre, variety show, circus, and vaudeville. BPC incorporated these genres in all-original musical comedies penned by Richard O'Donnell under his nom de plume B. R. Kreep.",
"score": "1.4157665"
},
{
"id": "10127996",
"title": "Science fiction theatre",
"text": " Science fiction theatre includes live dramatic works, but generally not cinema or television programmes. It has long been overshadowed by its literary and broadcast counterparts, but has a long history, and via the play R.U.R. introduced the word robot into global usage.",
"score": "1.4137352"
},
{
"id": "12779057",
"title": "Documentary theatre",
"text": " Documentary theatre is theatre that uses pre-existing documentary material (such as newspapers, government reports, interviews, journals, and correspondences) as source material for stories about real events and people, frequently without altering the text in performance. The genre typically includes or is referred to as verbatim theatre, investigative theatre, theatre of fact, theatre of witness, autobiographical theatre, and ethnodrama.",
"score": "1.4127535"
}
] | [
"Theatre-fiction\n Theatre-fiction refers to novels and short-stories that focus on theatre. Characters often include actors, playwrights, directors, prompters, understudies, set designers, critics, or casting agents. Common settings may include theatre auditoriums, dressing rooms, rehearsal spaces, or other places in which theatre is created and performed. Theatre-fiction may engage with and represent many different varieties of theatre, from performances of Shakespearean tragedy to Kabuki theatre to pantomime or marionette shows.",
"Theatre (novel)\n Theatre is a novel by the British writer W. Somerset Maugham, first published in 1937 by William Heinemann (UK) and Doubleday Doran (US). The novel describes a successful actress and her husband, a theatre manager; her life and career is disturbed by a stormy affair with a young accountant.",
"Humanities\n Theatre (or theater) (Greek \"theatron\", θέατρον) is the branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle — indeed any one or more elements of the other performing arts. In addition to the standard narrative dialogue style, theatre takes such forms as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, classical Indian dance, Chinese opera, mummers' plays, and pantomime.",
"Cumberland Theatre\n The Cumberland Theatre produces a variety of plays. The artistic director posts a brief synopsis of the play and usually a subjective rating, based on the language and themes contained in the shows. The wide variety of genres include, comedy, drama, horror/thriller, musical, colonial, autobiographical, romance, crime, and mystery. Over the years musicals have proven to be generally the most popular, followed by comedies and thrillers. Furthermore, the theatre has produced many shows featuring stories specific to different minorities. Some examples are: The Diary of Anne Frank, Ain't Misbehavin', Hairspray, The All Night Strut, and To Kill A Mockingbird.",
"Teatro di narrazione\n Teatro di narrazione (narrative theatre) is a style of theatre, developed in Italy in the later decades of the 20th century, in which there are no actors or action, but only a \"narrattore\" (a neologism for narrator-actor, or \"narractor\") who tells the story in narrative form.",
"The arts\n Theatre or theater (from Greek theatron (θέατρον); from theasthai, \"behold\" ) is the branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle – indeed, any one or more elements of the other performing arts. In addition to the standard narrative dialogue style, theatre takes such forms as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, classical Indian dance, Chinese opera and mummers' plays.",
"Theatre-fiction\n Mona Awad, All’s Well (2021) The novels and stories in this list share a substantial and sustained focus on theatre. Many of them could be described as \"theatre-novels\" or \"theatre-stories\", as Graham Wolfe has defined these terms (Wolfe is referring to works whose engagement with theatre as artistic practice[s] or industry \"is sufficiently developed to become a dominant\" in the text ). In some cases (e.g. Twain's Huckleberry Finn or Tolstoy's War and Peace), only particular segments or chapters focus on theatrical performance or characters associated with theatre; in other cases, the novel or story is dominantly concerned with theatre. ",
"Music theatre\n Music theatre is a performance genre that emerged over the course of the 20th century, in opposition to more conventional genres like opera and musical theatre. The term came to prominence in the 1960s and 1970s to describe an avant-garde approach to instrumental and vocal composition that included non-sonic gesture, movement, costume and other visual elements within the score. These compositions (such as György Ligeti’s Aventures (1962), Mauricio Kagel’s Match (1964) and Peter Maxwell Davies’s Eight Songs for a Mad King (1968)) were intended to be performed on a concert hall stage, potentially as part of a longer programme of pieces. Since the ",
"Youth Theatre on the Fontanka\n Labeling the genre in the program of performance under its name, the theatre often departs from the usual formula, offering spectators options such as, for example, \"nostalgia\", \"family history\", \"romantic metamorphosis\", \"an anthology of passion\", \"a vivid portrait of the play\", \"melodrama with quotations towards primitivism\", and others. The Theatre on the Fontanka never focuses on the tastes of the mass audience while selecting plays for performances. The theatre sees its goal as educate the taste of spectators. The theatre's mission can be characterized as: \"To talk easily and clearly about deep things. To help a person to find harmony. To spread light by art, to give spectators moral strength and hope, that are so scarce in modern society.\"",
"The Kreep\n The Kreep was playwright in residence for the St. John's Conservatory Theater. SJCT's theatrical genres include musical theatre, satire, interactive theatre, improvisational theatre, variety show, circus, and vaudeville. St. John’s Conservatory Theater incorporates these genres in all-original musical comedies based on literature, folklore, and legend. Their production and costume design are \"reminiscent of Tim Burton’s Gothic ingenuity.\"",
"Theatre (band)\n Theatre was an experimental mathcore outfit formed in the lower suburbs of Somerset West, South Africa in 2008. They bring genre-smashing music to the foreground that is both unique in construction and chaotic in design, which is brought forth by means of a notably destructive yet emotive performance, with \"live shows that truly defy the norm\".",
"Theatre\n Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of performing art that uses live performers, usually actors or actresses, to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place, often a stage. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture, speech, song, music, and dance. Elements of art, such as painted scenery and stagecraft such as lighting are used to enhance the physicality, presence and immediacy of the experience. The specific place of the performance is also named by the word \"theatre\" as derived from the Ancient Greek θέατρον (théatron, \"a place for viewing\"), itself from θεάομαι (theáomai, \"to see\", ",
"Physical theatre\n Physical theatre is a genre of theatrical performance that encompasses storytelling primarily through physical movement. Although several performance theatre disciplines are often described as \"physical theatre,\" the genre's characteristic aspect is a reliance on the performers' physical motion rather than, or combined with, text to convey storytelling. Performers can communicate through various body gestures (including using the body to portray emotions).",
"Theatrical style\n that encourages the shock and horror of the audience, through the excessive use of light and sound, instead of active entertainment or emotional relaxation. Physical theatre A modernist approach to theatre which centralises a performer's movement as the key communicator of a play's storytelling. Poor theatre Developed by Jerzy Growotski, this genre believes in the stripping back of set, props, costume, light and sound to allow the focus to be placed solely upon the actors, their characterisation and the underlying human relationships. Immersive theatre Developed by Augusto Boal, these styles all place focus on the audience member's individuality: their personal decisions, opinions and emotions, and how that impacts those of the characters onstage. The audience firmly exists within the 'world of the play'. Links to Promenade and Forum theatre.",
"Lists of theatres\n This is a list of theatre list articles on Wikipedia. Theatre or theater is a collaborative form of fine art that uses live performers to present the experience of a real or imagined event before a live audience in a specific place. The performers may communicate this experience to the audience through combinations of gesture, speech, song, music, and dance. Elements of design and stagecraft are used to enhance the physicality, presence and immediacy of the experience.",
"Theatre photography\n Theatre photography first took place in the photographer's studio before the photographer could come to the theatre with the appropriate technical equipment and take pictures on stage. Theatre photography is a genre of photography. Its Motiv (Fotografie) are performers on theatre stages as well as scenery or (rarely) prop or stage design. Trends in theatre photography are drama, opera, ballet, puppet theatre, cabaret, variety show and portraits of artists.",
"Theatre\n includes drama—comedy, tragedy, and the satyr play—as well as lyric poetry, epic poetry, and the dithyramb). He examines its \"first principles\" and identifies its genres and basic elements; his analysis of tragedy constitutes the core of the discussion. Aristotle argues that tragedy consists of six qualitative parts, which are (in order of importance) mythos or \"plot\", ethos or \"character\", dianoia or \"thought\", lexis or \"diction\", melos or \"song\", and opsis or \"spectacle\". \"Although Aristotle's Poetics is universally acknowledged in the Western critical tradition\", Marvin Carlson explains, \"almost every detail about his seminal work has aroused divergent opinions.\" Important theatre practitioners of the 20th century include Konstantin Stanislavski, Vsevolod ",
"Black Pearl Cabaret\n Black Pearl Cabaret genres: musical theatre, satire, interactive theatre, improvisational theatre, variety show, circus, and vaudeville. BPC incorporated these genres in all-original musical comedies penned by Richard O'Donnell under his nom de plume B. R. Kreep.",
"Science fiction theatre\n Science fiction theatre includes live dramatic works, but generally not cinema or television programmes. It has long been overshadowed by its literary and broadcast counterparts, but has a long history, and via the play R.U.R. introduced the word robot into global usage.",
"Documentary theatre\n Documentary theatre is theatre that uses pre-existing documentary material (such as newspapers, government reports, interviews, journals, and correspondences) as source material for stories about real events and people, frequently without altering the text in performance. The genre typically includes or is referred to as verbatim theatre, investigative theatre, theatre of fact, theatre of witness, autobiographical theatre, and ethnodrama."
] |
In what city was Aleksandar Madžar born? | [
"Bar",
"Tivar",
"Tivari",
"Antivari",
"Antibari",
"Stari Bar"
] | place of birth | Aleksandar Madžar (soccer) | 3,270,447 | 58 | [
{
"id": "27021713",
"title": "Aleksandar Josipović",
"text": " Aleksandar was born on 15 January in 1981. in Lazarevac, former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His dancing career starts at age of 9, and during his career he won 9 national championships in ballroom dancing, he was a finalist in the Golden World Cup (England) and a semifinalist in the World Cup (Hungary). He has danced and performed for many royal families, as well as for some countries presidents. Aleksandar is one of the most successful of dancers but also of the pedagogues in the world that come from Yugoslavia. He holds French and Serbian citizenship.",
"score": "1.5792569"
},
{
"id": "7504809",
"title": "Aleksandar Tijanić",
"text": " Tijanić was born in Đakovica, FPR Yugoslavia. After finishing high school in his home town, he moved to Belgrade to study journalism at University of Belgrade's Faculty of Political Sciences. He did not complete his studies.",
"score": "1.5461514"
},
{
"id": "852695",
"title": "Aleksandar Nikolić",
"text": " Though his parents lived in Brčko, Nikolić was born in Sarajevo, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, due to his pregnant mother, Krista, suddenly going into labour while visiting her sister in Sarajevo. Young Aleksandar enjoyed a privileged upbringing courtesy of his wealthy father, Đorđe Nikolić, who had him at the age of 62. After spending the first few years of his life in Brčko, Nikolić moved with his family to the capital Belgrade, where he would grow up. Nikolić attended the Kralj Aleksandar Gymnasium at the Belgrade neighbourhood of Banovo Brdo. He then studied medicine and law at the University of Belgrade, graduating in 1946.",
"score": "1.5402299"
},
{
"id": "13075685",
"title": "Nenad Lazarevski",
"text": " Born in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, Lazarevski started playing for RFK Novi Sad. In 2006, he moved to Russia where he played with the B team of FC Lokomotiv Moscow and after half of year he moved to Bulgaria where he played with PFC Slavia Sofia in the PFG A. In 2007, he returned to Serbia and joined SuperLiga side FK Borac Čačak. In the summer of 2009 he signed with another SuperLiga side, OFK Beograd, but after a year was loaned to FK Radnički Sombor in the Serbian First League. Two years later he was released by OFK and he joined the club he had represented at the beginning of his career, RFK Novi Sad.",
"score": "1.5247002"
},
{
"id": "27964838",
"title": "Aleksandar Milutinović",
"text": " Milutinović was born in Belgrade, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He was a graduated engineer.",
"score": "1.5242712"
},
{
"id": "32338950",
"title": "Philip Zepter",
"text": " Philip Zepter was born in Kozarska Dubica (in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) on 23 November 1950. He is the son of Milisav Jankovic and Nada Reljan. From their union is born in addition to Philip, Gojko, the youngest son. Zepter's education was strict, focusing on mathematics lessons and intensive sports practice. He completed his secondary education at the secondary school of Bosanska Dubica (Bosnia and Herzegovina), then went to study Economics and graduated with a master's degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics. He is fluent in Serbian, German and English. On February 21, 1976, he married Madlena Horvat, professor of literature. They have a daughter Emma, born in 2000.",
"score": "1.5187681"
},
{
"id": "26565522",
"title": "Svetozar Marković",
"text": " Marković was born in the town of Zaječar on 9 September 1846, the son of a police clerk. Marković's childhood was spent in the village of Rekovac and then the town of Jagodina. The family moved to Kragujevac in 1856. He reached adolescence at about the time Mihailo Obrenović became the Prince of Serbia. In 1860 he began to study at the gymnasium in Belgrade and in 1863 at the Velika škola of Belgrade, the highest educational body in Serbia at that time, founded in 1808. While at the Velika škola he became interested in literature and politics, falling under the influences of Vuk Karadžić and Vladimir Jovanović, a leading Serbian Liberal. Because of his outstanding record as a student at the Belgrade college, his professors unanimously nominated him for a post-graduate scholarship to study abroad. He chose to study in Russia, in St. Petersburg in particular, at the Alexander I Institute of Communication Engineers.",
"score": "1.5143583"
},
{
"id": "30294477",
"title": "Svetozar Radojčić",
"text": " Born in Sremski Karlovci, Austria-Hungary (now Serbia), his father Nikola was a professor at the Karlovci gymnasium, where Svetozar finished primary school in 1920. The same year he began secondary education in Ljubljana, where his father was employed at the Ljubljana University. Upon completion of art studies, he studied archaeology at the Ljubljana University between 1928 and 1932. In 1930–31 he also studied at the Zagreb University and summer school at the Archaeology Institute in Feistritz (Bistrica). He also studied at Vienna and Prague (Institute of N. P. Kondakov and Karlov University), and in 1933 worked at archaeological sites and museums ",
"score": "1.5127344"
},
{
"id": "27139623",
"title": "Miroslav Aleksić (People's Party politician)",
"text": " Aleksić was born in Kruševac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He was raised in Trstenik, trained as an economist, and worked as a public sector manager in Trstenik from 2008 to 2012.",
"score": "1.5092287"
},
{
"id": "14045938",
"title": "Aleksandar Šešelj",
"text": " Šešelj was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in what was then the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He is a graduate student at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law.",
"score": "1.5074748"
},
{
"id": "9962064",
"title": "Aleksandar Džambazov",
"text": " Aleksandar Džambazov (Александар Џамбазов; born February 3, 1936, in the village Stapar, Vojvodina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a Macedonian conductor and composer. He finished Musical academy in Belgrade, and spent his work age at Macedonian Radio Television, as a conductor of the Dance and Special orchestra. Has made numerous recordings and live concerts, and has performed in North Macedonia and in many countries abroad (mostly in Slovenia). He has won many (around 50) awards.",
"score": "1.5050049"
},
{
"id": "12492630",
"title": "Bojan Aleksov",
"text": " Aleksov was born in Belgrade, Serbia. At the beginning of the war in Croatia in 1991, Aleksov was in the Yugoslav People's Army fulfilling his regular military service. In August, after trying to escape from the service, Aleksov was caught and sent to a military hospital in Sarajevo. He was later released after being certified as \"mentally unable to serve in the army.\" Aleksov received his Ph.D. in Comparative History of Central, Southern, and Eastern Europe at the Central European University in Budapest in 2005. His thesis was Religious Dissent in the Age of Modernization and Nationalism: Nazarenes in Hungary and Serbia 1850-1914. Aleksov completed his MA studies in Central European History at the Central European University, Budapest in 1999. His thesis was The Dynamics of Extinction: The Nazarene Religious Community in Yugoslavia after 1945. He received his B.A. degree in History from the University of Belgrade, Serbia in 1998. He was awarded Humboldt fellowship at the Free University of Berlin in 2004 and Max Weber fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence in 2006.",
"score": "1.5038154"
},
{
"id": "25226212",
"title": "Aleksandar Radenkovic",
"text": " Radenković was born on December 17, 1979, in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, Yugoslavia. He studied acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater \"Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy\". After finishing his studies Wolfgang Engel offered him to play at Schauspiel Leipzig. From the Season 2008/2009 he is going to play for Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg.",
"score": "1.5024214"
},
{
"id": "27411850",
"title": "House of Velimir Gjinovski",
"text": " 1886 from measles. ; Aleksandar \"Aleksa\" Gjinovski - son of Krste (1851-1894). He was interested in woodcutting and he mastered it. He followed his father's footsteps and became a photographer and he owned a photo studio in Vranje. He made a number of photos of Galičnik, and other places in Macedonia such as Skopje, Ohrid, Thessalonica, Bitola, Kališta, Serres, and also in Serbia. He also photographed the Bigorski Monastery. In 1872, he and his brothers moved for good to Podgorica. He died in 1984 at the age of 43. ; Dragiša Gjinoski - son of Aleksa. He worked a official in Podgorička banka. ; Milan Gjinoski - son of ",
"score": "1.5019811"
},
{
"id": "9094187",
"title": "Svetozar Pudarić",
"text": " Born in 1959 in Sarajevo, Pudarić completed his studies in archeology at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade in 1983. In 1984, he was employed at the Institute for the Protection of the Cultural, Historical and Natural Heritage of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He worked at the Institute until 1993. During 1991 and 1992, Pudarić was a member of the Assembly of the City of Sarajevo, and then a member of the War Presidency of the City of Sarajevo. He and his wife Sanda were married in a hospital bed in 1992, in the intensive care unit, after being wounded by the same grenade. They later had three children. After the war in Bosnia and ",
"score": "1.493642"
},
{
"id": "26347487",
"title": "Jakov Lazaroski",
"text": " Born in Oktisi in 1936, Lazaroski graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade in 1959. He earned a master's degree in 1970 and a doctorate in 1990. He began working as an industrial psychologist before moving to Skopje to work at the Service for Psychological Research at the Republic Secretariat for Internal Affairs. He became an assistant professor at the Institute for Sociological and Political-Legal Research in Skopje in 1966 and a research associate in 1969. In 1972, he became a lecturer at the Faculty of Philosophy in Skopje and a full professor of psychology in 1996. In addition to his academic work, Lazaroski served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Macedonia, of which he was president from 1986 to 1989. He also served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia. Jakov Lazaroski died on 16 May 2021 at the age of 84. The cause of death has not been disclosed.",
"score": "1.4931722"
},
{
"id": "5664354",
"title": "Nikola Madžirov",
"text": " Nikola was born on 27 May 1973 in Strumica, then in SFR Yugoslavia, now in North Macedonia. He has worked as an essayist and editor besides being a poet and is an international coordinator for Lyrikline, Haus für Poesie, Berlin. He won the Studentski Zbor award for best debut in Macedonia and subsequently the DJS award for contribution to international poetry in China.",
"score": "1.4911643"
},
{
"id": "32159788",
"title": "Veroljub Arsić",
"text": " Arsić was born in Požarevac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His graduated from the high school of electrical engineering in Kostolac, was appointed director of a business centre in Požarevac in January 1990, and has operated his own business in the city since 1992.",
"score": "1.4898964"
},
{
"id": "26728951",
"title": "Lazar Komarčić",
"text": " Lazar Komarčić was born in a small village of Komartica, near the town of Pljevlja, Montenegro (then part of the Ottoman Empire), on the ninth of January 1839, to Milenko and Spasenija Komorica of Gornja Maoca in northeastern Bosnia. Turks killed Lazar's uncle and Milenko (Lazar's father) took revenge. He was captured and imprisoned in Pljevlja. After Milenko escaped, he took his wife and children and moved with kin in Valjevo. It was at this time that the family changed their surname to Komarčić. In Valjevo Lazar started school, but his parents soon both died. He moved to Belgrade where he studied at the Grandes écoles (University of Belgrade). A defining incident of Komarčić's life was the Turkish bombardment of Belgrade in ",
"score": "1.4892738"
},
{
"id": "14324685",
"title": "Nikola Aleksić",
"text": " He came from a family of artists in Stari Bečej. He was taught painting at the studio of Arsenije Teodorović of Novi Sad until 1826. Then, he went to Vienna and enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts (1828–1830). Later, he traveled to Italy to broaden his art education. There he honed his craft for three years, getting to know the art of the Nazarene movement, and making a living from portrait painting. He also copied old masters in the city's galleries and painted portraits of Austrian officers of Serbian descent. In 1834 he left Italy for Novi Sad, then he went ",
"score": "1.4871337"
}
] | [
"Aleksandar Josipović\n Aleksandar was born on 15 January in 1981. in Lazarevac, former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His dancing career starts at age of 9, and during his career he won 9 national championships in ballroom dancing, he was a finalist in the Golden World Cup (England) and a semifinalist in the World Cup (Hungary). He has danced and performed for many royal families, as well as for some countries presidents. Aleksandar is one of the most successful of dancers but also of the pedagogues in the world that come from Yugoslavia. He holds French and Serbian citizenship.",
"Aleksandar Tijanić\n Tijanić was born in Đakovica, FPR Yugoslavia. After finishing high school in his home town, he moved to Belgrade to study journalism at University of Belgrade's Faculty of Political Sciences. He did not complete his studies.",
"Aleksandar Nikolić\n Though his parents lived in Brčko, Nikolić was born in Sarajevo, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, due to his pregnant mother, Krista, suddenly going into labour while visiting her sister in Sarajevo. Young Aleksandar enjoyed a privileged upbringing courtesy of his wealthy father, Đorđe Nikolić, who had him at the age of 62. After spending the first few years of his life in Brčko, Nikolić moved with his family to the capital Belgrade, where he would grow up. Nikolić attended the Kralj Aleksandar Gymnasium at the Belgrade neighbourhood of Banovo Brdo. He then studied medicine and law at the University of Belgrade, graduating in 1946.",
"Nenad Lazarevski\n Born in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, SFR Yugoslavia, Lazarevski started playing for RFK Novi Sad. In 2006, he moved to Russia where he played with the B team of FC Lokomotiv Moscow and after half of year he moved to Bulgaria where he played with PFC Slavia Sofia in the PFG A. In 2007, he returned to Serbia and joined SuperLiga side FK Borac Čačak. In the summer of 2009 he signed with another SuperLiga side, OFK Beograd, but after a year was loaned to FK Radnički Sombor in the Serbian First League. Two years later he was released by OFK and he joined the club he had represented at the beginning of his career, RFK Novi Sad.",
"Aleksandar Milutinović\n Milutinović was born in Belgrade, in what was then the People's Republic of Serbia in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. He was a graduated engineer.",
"Philip Zepter\n Philip Zepter was born in Kozarska Dubica (in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina) on 23 November 1950. He is the son of Milisav Jankovic and Nada Reljan. From their union is born in addition to Philip, Gojko, the youngest son. Zepter's education was strict, focusing on mathematics lessons and intensive sports practice. He completed his secondary education at the secondary school of Bosanska Dubica (Bosnia and Herzegovina), then went to study Economics and graduated with a master's degree from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics. He is fluent in Serbian, German and English. On February 21, 1976, he married Madlena Horvat, professor of literature. They have a daughter Emma, born in 2000.",
"Svetozar Marković\n Marković was born in the town of Zaječar on 9 September 1846, the son of a police clerk. Marković's childhood was spent in the village of Rekovac and then the town of Jagodina. The family moved to Kragujevac in 1856. He reached adolescence at about the time Mihailo Obrenović became the Prince of Serbia. In 1860 he began to study at the gymnasium in Belgrade and in 1863 at the Velika škola of Belgrade, the highest educational body in Serbia at that time, founded in 1808. While at the Velika škola he became interested in literature and politics, falling under the influences of Vuk Karadžić and Vladimir Jovanović, a leading Serbian Liberal. Because of his outstanding record as a student at the Belgrade college, his professors unanimously nominated him for a post-graduate scholarship to study abroad. He chose to study in Russia, in St. Petersburg in particular, at the Alexander I Institute of Communication Engineers.",
"Svetozar Radojčić\n Born in Sremski Karlovci, Austria-Hungary (now Serbia), his father Nikola was a professor at the Karlovci gymnasium, where Svetozar finished primary school in 1920. The same year he began secondary education in Ljubljana, where his father was employed at the Ljubljana University. Upon completion of art studies, he studied archaeology at the Ljubljana University between 1928 and 1932. In 1930–31 he also studied at the Zagreb University and summer school at the Archaeology Institute in Feistritz (Bistrica). He also studied at Vienna and Prague (Institute of N. P. Kondakov and Karlov University), and in 1933 worked at archaeological sites and museums ",
"Miroslav Aleksić (People's Party politician)\n Aleksić was born in Kruševac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He was raised in Trstenik, trained as an economist, and worked as a public sector manager in Trstenik from 2008 to 2012.",
"Aleksandar Šešelj\n Šešelj was born in Belgrade, Serbia, in what was then the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. He is a graduate student at the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law.",
"Aleksandar Džambazov\n Aleksandar Džambazov (Александар Џамбазов; born February 3, 1936, in the village Stapar, Vojvodina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) is a Macedonian conductor and composer. He finished Musical academy in Belgrade, and spent his work age at Macedonian Radio Television, as a conductor of the Dance and Special orchestra. Has made numerous recordings and live concerts, and has performed in North Macedonia and in many countries abroad (mostly in Slovenia). He has won many (around 50) awards.",
"Bojan Aleksov\n Aleksov was born in Belgrade, Serbia. At the beginning of the war in Croatia in 1991, Aleksov was in the Yugoslav People's Army fulfilling his regular military service. In August, after trying to escape from the service, Aleksov was caught and sent to a military hospital in Sarajevo. He was later released after being certified as \"mentally unable to serve in the army.\" Aleksov received his Ph.D. in Comparative History of Central, Southern, and Eastern Europe at the Central European University in Budapest in 2005. His thesis was Religious Dissent in the Age of Modernization and Nationalism: Nazarenes in Hungary and Serbia 1850-1914. Aleksov completed his MA studies in Central European History at the Central European University, Budapest in 1999. His thesis was The Dynamics of Extinction: The Nazarene Religious Community in Yugoslavia after 1945. He received his B.A. degree in History from the University of Belgrade, Serbia in 1998. He was awarded Humboldt fellowship at the Free University of Berlin in 2004 and Max Weber fellowship at the European University Institute in Florence in 2006.",
"Aleksandar Radenkovic\n Radenković was born on December 17, 1979, in Novi Sad, SR Serbia, Yugoslavia. He studied acting at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater \"Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy\". After finishing his studies Wolfgang Engel offered him to play at Schauspiel Leipzig. From the Season 2008/2009 he is going to play for Deutsches Schauspielhaus Hamburg.",
"House of Velimir Gjinovski\n 1886 from measles. ; Aleksandar \"Aleksa\" Gjinovski - son of Krste (1851-1894). He was interested in woodcutting and he mastered it. He followed his father's footsteps and became a photographer and he owned a photo studio in Vranje. He made a number of photos of Galičnik, and other places in Macedonia such as Skopje, Ohrid, Thessalonica, Bitola, Kališta, Serres, and also in Serbia. He also photographed the Bigorski Monastery. In 1872, he and his brothers moved for good to Podgorica. He died in 1984 at the age of 43. ; Dragiša Gjinoski - son of Aleksa. He worked a official in Podgorička banka. ; Milan Gjinoski - son of ",
"Svetozar Pudarić\n Born in 1959 in Sarajevo, Pudarić completed his studies in archeology at the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade in 1983. In 1984, he was employed at the Institute for the Protection of the Cultural, Historical and Natural Heritage of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He worked at the Institute until 1993. During 1991 and 1992, Pudarić was a member of the Assembly of the City of Sarajevo, and then a member of the War Presidency of the City of Sarajevo. He and his wife Sanda were married in a hospital bed in 1992, in the intensive care unit, after being wounded by the same grenade. They later had three children. After the war in Bosnia and ",
"Jakov Lazaroski\n Born in Oktisi in 1936, Lazaroski graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade in 1959. He earned a master's degree in 1970 and a doctorate in 1990. He began working as an industrial psychologist before moving to Skopje to work at the Service for Psychological Research at the Republic Secretariat for Internal Affairs. He became an assistant professor at the Institute for Sociological and Political-Legal Research in Skopje in 1966 and a research associate in 1969. In 1972, he became a lecturer at the Faculty of Philosophy in Skopje and a full professor of psychology in 1996. In addition to his academic work, Lazaroski served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Macedonia, of which he was president from 1986 to 1989. He also served on the Central Committee of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia. Jakov Lazaroski died on 16 May 2021 at the age of 84. The cause of death has not been disclosed.",
"Nikola Madžirov\n Nikola was born on 27 May 1973 in Strumica, then in SFR Yugoslavia, now in North Macedonia. He has worked as an essayist and editor besides being a poet and is an international coordinator for Lyrikline, Haus für Poesie, Berlin. He won the Studentski Zbor award for best debut in Macedonia and subsequently the DJS award for contribution to international poetry in China.",
"Veroljub Arsić\n Arsić was born in Požarevac, in what was then the Socialist Republic of Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. His graduated from the high school of electrical engineering in Kostolac, was appointed director of a business centre in Požarevac in January 1990, and has operated his own business in the city since 1992.",
"Lazar Komarčić\n Lazar Komarčić was born in a small village of Komartica, near the town of Pljevlja, Montenegro (then part of the Ottoman Empire), on the ninth of January 1839, to Milenko and Spasenija Komorica of Gornja Maoca in northeastern Bosnia. Turks killed Lazar's uncle and Milenko (Lazar's father) took revenge. He was captured and imprisoned in Pljevlja. After Milenko escaped, he took his wife and children and moved with kin in Valjevo. It was at this time that the family changed their surname to Komarčić. In Valjevo Lazar started school, but his parents soon both died. He moved to Belgrade where he studied at the Grandes écoles (University of Belgrade). A defining incident of Komarčić's life was the Turkish bombardment of Belgrade in ",
"Nikola Aleksić\n He came from a family of artists in Stari Bečej. He was taught painting at the studio of Arsenije Teodorović of Novi Sad until 1826. Then, he went to Vienna and enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts (1828–1830). Later, he traveled to Italy to broaden his art education. There he honed his craft for three years, getting to know the art of the Nazarene movement, and making a living from portrait painting. He also copied old masters in the city's galleries and painted portraits of Austrian officers of Serbian descent. In 1834 he left Italy for Novi Sad, then he went "
] |
Who is the author of Conan, Lord of the Black River? | [
"Leonard Carpenter",
"Leonard Paul Carpenter"
] | author | Conan, Lord of the Black River | 3,776,335 | 97 | [
{
"id": "30896211",
"title": "Conan, Lord of the Black River",
"text": " Conan, Lord of the Black River is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1996.",
"score": "2.082239"
},
{
"id": "7864083",
"title": "Beyond the Black River",
"text": " \"Beyond the Black River\" is one of the original short stories about Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine, v. 25, nos. 5-6, May-June 1935. The story was republished in the collections King Conan (Gnome Press, 1953) and Conan the Warrior (Lancer Books, 1967). It has more recently been published in the anthology The Mighty Swordsmen (Lancer Books, 1970), and the collections The Conan Chronicles Volume 2: The Hour of the Dragon (Gollancz, 2001) and Conan of Cimmeria: Volume Three (1935-1936) (Del Rey, 2005). It's set in the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age and concerns Conan's battle against a savage tribe of Picts in the unsettled lands beyond the infamous Black River.",
"score": "1.8483576"
},
{
"id": "7864091",
"title": "Beyond the Black River",
"text": "The story was adapted by Roy Thomas, John Buscema and Tony de Zuniga in Savage Sword of Conan #26 and #27. ; The story was also the basis for the GURPS: Conan adventure module \"Beyond Thunder River\". ; The Sword, on their album Gods of the Earth, based the song \"The Black River\" on this story. ",
"score": "1.7473052"
},
{
"id": "7863902",
"title": "Queen of the Black Coast",
"text": " \"Queen of the Black Coast\" is one of the original short stories about Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine c. May 1934. During the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, Conan becomes a notorious pirate plundering the coastal villages of Kush alongside Bêlit, a head-strong femme fatale. Due to its epic scope and atypical romance, the story is an undisputed classic of Conan lore and is often cited by Howard scholars as one of his most famous tales. Howard earned $115 selling this story to Weird Tales, and it is now in the public domain.",
"score": "1.7293996"
},
{
"id": "30896212",
"title": "Conan, Lord of the Black River",
"text": " After successfully fulfilling his commission to overthrow a tyrannical baron in Koth, Conan travels into Baalur, a city-state in Shem. The queen of Baalur, Rufia, needs his aid. Baalur is suffering from a plague cast upon it by Zeriti, an old enemy of his previously believed dead. Zeriti seeks to settle a score dating from Conan's previous encounter with the two women, told in the story \"Hawks Over Shem\", and her curse is transforming Rufia's subjects into hideous zombies. With an army of Baalurian soldiers, Conan begins his journey to retrieve a white lotus, the primary antidote for removing Zeriti's cruse, said to only bloom near the source of the Styx, the infamous black river. His army marches across the city-state ",
"score": "1.7226188"
},
{
"id": "5921612",
"title": "Queen of the Black Coast (collection)",
"text": " Queen of the Black Coast is a 1978 collection of two fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The book was published in 1978 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. as volume VII of their deluxe Conan set. The title story originally appeared in the magazine Weird Tales. \"The Vale of Lost Women\" first appeared in The Magazine of Horror.",
"score": "1.6545675"
},
{
"id": "7865928",
"title": "The Black Stranger",
"text": " \"The Black Stranger\" is a fantasy short story by American writer Robert E. Howard, one of his works featuring the sword & sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian. It was written in the 1930s, but not published in his lifetime. When the original Conan version of his story failed to find a publisher, Howard rewrote \"The Black Stranger\" into a piratical Terence Vulmea story entitled \"Swords of the Red Brotherhood\". The original version of the story was later rewritten by L. Sprague de Camp into a different Conan story and published in Fantasy Magazine in February 1953. It was retitled \"The Treasure of Tranicos\" for book publication later the ",
"score": "1.6475015"
},
{
"id": "25921899",
"title": "Gods of the Earth",
"text": " Several songs reference Conan the Barbarian stories by fantasy author Robert E. Howard. \"The Frost-Giant's Daughter\" is based on Howard's short story by the same name and \"The Black River\" was inspired by \"Beyond the Black River\", while \"How Heavy This Axe\" makes references to Howard's fictional Hyborian Age. \"To Take the Black\" is a direct reference to the Night's Watch in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire, while \"Maiden, Mother & Crone\" is a reference to the Faith of the Seven in the same series.",
"score": "1.6372114"
},
{
"id": "32976332",
"title": "Black Canaan",
"text": " The story was adapted by writer Roy Thomas and penciler Howard Chaykin, as other non-Conan material previously handled in Marvel Comics' and novel editions. The story was presented in two issues, Conan the Barbarian #82-83 (cover-dated Jan.-Feb. 1978), under the titles The Sorceress of the Swamp and The Dance of the Skull!.",
"score": "1.6283029"
},
{
"id": "30896213",
"title": "Conan, Lord of the Black River",
"text": " Nedrezzar before reaching the port city of Asgalun, where they set sail for the Styx, which serves as a boundary between Shem and the ancient kingdom of Stygia. The crew follow the river down a vast tributary to the east and travel south as it flows into the Black Kingdoms. The expedition encounter many dangers along the way, including pirates, hostile local rulers, religious cults, and cannibals before reaching the Styx's headwaters. At the source of the Styx, they face their worst and final challenge, Zeriti's bloodthirsty undead lover. However, the white lotus is finally secured and Conan's crewmembers return down the river. After a final encounter with Zeriti in Asgalun, they return to Baalur and cure the city's inhabitants.",
"score": "1.6282572"
},
{
"id": "25472959",
"title": "GURPS Conan",
"text": "GURPS Conan: Beyond Thunder River (1988, a solo adventure, based on the story Beyond the Black River) ; GURPS Conan (1989, the supplement setting for GURPS) ; GURPS Conan and the Queen of the Black Coast (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story Queen of the Black Coast) ; GURPS Conan: Moon of Blood (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story of the same name) ; GURPS Conan the Wyrmslayer (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story The Lair of the Ice Worm) GURPS Conan was one of the earliest licensed properties produced by Steve Jackson Games. The company, after launching GURPS in 1986, acquired a Conan game license ",
"score": "1.6262411"
},
{
"id": "7864084",
"title": "Beyond the Black River",
"text": " The story takes place in Conajohara, a newly established Aquilonian province recently annexed by King Numedides from the Picts. Balthus, a young settler on his way to Fort Tuscelan at the Black River, the province's border to the Pict Lands, encounters Conan in the forest slaying a Pict. Accompanying the young man back to the fort, Conan finds the corpse of a merchant left by a Pictish wizard named Zogar Sag and slain by a swamp demon. The fort's commander, Valannus, desperately asks Conan to slay Zogar Sag before he raises the Picts against the whole borderlands, especially since Tuscelan is vastly undermanned after Numedides foolishly decided to withdraw most of its garrison. Taking ",
"score": "1.6237481"
},
{
"id": "7865478",
"title": "Black Colossus",
"text": " \"Black Colossus\" is one of the original short stories starring the fictional sword and sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine, June 1933. Howard earned $130 for the sale of this story. During the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, Conan leads the army of Khoraja against an evil sorcerer named Natohk, \"the Veiled One.\" This story formed part of the basis for the later Conan novel, The Hour of the Dragon.",
"score": "1.617597"
},
{
"id": "7865634",
"title": "The Pool of the Black One",
"text": " \"The Pool of the Black One\" is one of the original short stories starring the sword and sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard. It's set in the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, and concerns Conan becoming the captain of a pirate vessel while encountering a remote island with a mysterious pool which has the power of transmutation. First published in Weird Tales in October 1933, the story was republished in the collections The Sword of Conan (Gnome Press, 1952) and Conan the Adventurer (Lancer Books, 1966). It has more recently been published in the collections The Conan Chronicles Volume 1: The People of the Black Circle (2000) and Conan of Cimmeria: Volume One (1932-1933) (Del Rey, 2003).",
"score": "1.6173911"
},
{
"id": "7864090",
"title": "Beyond the Black River",
"text": " In their book on Howard's work, Marc Cerasini and Charles E. Hoffman described \"Beyond the Black River\" as a \"transplanted Western\". They also noted that Howard had \" used the setting of Robert W. Chambers's Indian novel The Little Red Foot as a model for his Pictish Wilderness\".",
"score": "1.6148369"
},
{
"id": "5782992",
"title": "Conan the Hero",
"text": " Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"score": "1.6144288"
},
{
"id": "5923321",
"title": "The Pool of the Black One (collection)",
"text": " The Pool of the Black One is a collection of two fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The book was published in 1986 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. as volume X of their deluxe Conan set. The title story originally appeared in the magazine Weird Tales. \"Drums of Tombalku\" is the original fragment of a story that Howard never completed. It first appeared, completed by L. Sprague de Camp, in the collection Conan the Adventurer.",
"score": "1.5981858"
},
{
"id": "7863909",
"title": "Queen of the Black Coast",
"text": " The story was adapted and expanded by Roy Thomas, Mike Ploog and John Buscema in Conan the Barbarian (Marvel) issues #57, #58 and #100, which were first published in the mid to late 1970s. Petri Hiltunen made his own graphic novel adaptation in 1991. It has only been published in Finland. A role-playing game adaptation for GURPS named Conan and the Queen of the Black Coast was published by Steve Jackson Games in 1989. The concept of the woman who dies, but returns to help Conan in battle, was used in the 1982 movie Conan the Barbarian. The Dark Horse Comics series Conan the Barbarian (2012-2014) by writer Brian Wood and artist Becky Cloonan uses Queen of the Black Coast as the basis for the first three issues. The death of Bêlit is told in issues 22-25.",
"score": "1.5970359"
},
{
"id": "28317287",
"title": "Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza",
"text": " Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in January 1997.",
"score": "1.5966848"
},
{
"id": "31846677",
"title": "Savage Sword of Conan",
"text": " (the first parts having been printed in Giant-Size Conan #1-4); and the adaptation of \"Iron Shadows in the Moon\", by Buscema and Alcala, where Conan goes from chief of the Zuagirs to pirate captain of the Red Brotherhood. The next three years of the title featured numerous adaptations of Howard stories (many by the art team of Buscema and Alcala), including \"Shadows in Zamboula\", \"The Devil in Iron\", \"The People of the Black Circle\", \"The Slithering Shadow\", \"The Pool of the Black One\", \"The Tower of the Elephant\", \"Jewels of Gwahlur\", \"Beyond the Black River\", \"The Scarlet Citadel\", \"The Flame Knife\", \"Hawks Over Shem\", \"The Treasure of Tranicos\", and \"Wolves Beyond the Border\".",
"score": "1.5953336"
}
] | [
"Conan, Lord of the Black River\n Conan, Lord of the Black River is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1996.",
"Beyond the Black River\n \"Beyond the Black River\" is one of the original short stories about Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine, v. 25, nos. 5-6, May-June 1935. The story was republished in the collections King Conan (Gnome Press, 1953) and Conan the Warrior (Lancer Books, 1967). It has more recently been published in the anthology The Mighty Swordsmen (Lancer Books, 1970), and the collections The Conan Chronicles Volume 2: The Hour of the Dragon (Gollancz, 2001) and Conan of Cimmeria: Volume Three (1935-1936) (Del Rey, 2005). It's set in the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age and concerns Conan's battle against a savage tribe of Picts in the unsettled lands beyond the infamous Black River.",
"Beyond the Black River\nThe story was adapted by Roy Thomas, John Buscema and Tony de Zuniga in Savage Sword of Conan #26 and #27. ; The story was also the basis for the GURPS: Conan adventure module \"Beyond Thunder River\". ; The Sword, on their album Gods of the Earth, based the song \"The Black River\" on this story. ",
"Queen of the Black Coast\n \"Queen of the Black Coast\" is one of the original short stories about Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine c. May 1934. During the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, Conan becomes a notorious pirate plundering the coastal villages of Kush alongside Bêlit, a head-strong femme fatale. Due to its epic scope and atypical romance, the story is an undisputed classic of Conan lore and is often cited by Howard scholars as one of his most famous tales. Howard earned $115 selling this story to Weird Tales, and it is now in the public domain.",
"Conan, Lord of the Black River\n After successfully fulfilling his commission to overthrow a tyrannical baron in Koth, Conan travels into Baalur, a city-state in Shem. The queen of Baalur, Rufia, needs his aid. Baalur is suffering from a plague cast upon it by Zeriti, an old enemy of his previously believed dead. Zeriti seeks to settle a score dating from Conan's previous encounter with the two women, told in the story \"Hawks Over Shem\", and her curse is transforming Rufia's subjects into hideous zombies. With an army of Baalurian soldiers, Conan begins his journey to retrieve a white lotus, the primary antidote for removing Zeriti's cruse, said to only bloom near the source of the Styx, the infamous black river. His army marches across the city-state ",
"Queen of the Black Coast (collection)\n Queen of the Black Coast is a 1978 collection of two fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The book was published in 1978 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. as volume VII of their deluxe Conan set. The title story originally appeared in the magazine Weird Tales. \"The Vale of Lost Women\" first appeared in The Magazine of Horror.",
"The Black Stranger\n \"The Black Stranger\" is a fantasy short story by American writer Robert E. Howard, one of his works featuring the sword & sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian. It was written in the 1930s, but not published in his lifetime. When the original Conan version of his story failed to find a publisher, Howard rewrote \"The Black Stranger\" into a piratical Terence Vulmea story entitled \"Swords of the Red Brotherhood\". The original version of the story was later rewritten by L. Sprague de Camp into a different Conan story and published in Fantasy Magazine in February 1953. It was retitled \"The Treasure of Tranicos\" for book publication later the ",
"Gods of the Earth\n Several songs reference Conan the Barbarian stories by fantasy author Robert E. Howard. \"The Frost-Giant's Daughter\" is based on Howard's short story by the same name and \"The Black River\" was inspired by \"Beyond the Black River\", while \"How Heavy This Axe\" makes references to Howard's fictional Hyborian Age. \"To Take the Black\" is a direct reference to the Night's Watch in George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire, while \"Maiden, Mother & Crone\" is a reference to the Faith of the Seven in the same series.",
"Black Canaan\n The story was adapted by writer Roy Thomas and penciler Howard Chaykin, as other non-Conan material previously handled in Marvel Comics' and novel editions. The story was presented in two issues, Conan the Barbarian #82-83 (cover-dated Jan.-Feb. 1978), under the titles The Sorceress of the Swamp and The Dance of the Skull!.",
"Conan, Lord of the Black River\n Nedrezzar before reaching the port city of Asgalun, where they set sail for the Styx, which serves as a boundary between Shem and the ancient kingdom of Stygia. The crew follow the river down a vast tributary to the east and travel south as it flows into the Black Kingdoms. The expedition encounter many dangers along the way, including pirates, hostile local rulers, religious cults, and cannibals before reaching the Styx's headwaters. At the source of the Styx, they face their worst and final challenge, Zeriti's bloodthirsty undead lover. However, the white lotus is finally secured and Conan's crewmembers return down the river. After a final encounter with Zeriti in Asgalun, they return to Baalur and cure the city's inhabitants.",
"GURPS Conan\nGURPS Conan: Beyond Thunder River (1988, a solo adventure, based on the story Beyond the Black River) ; GURPS Conan (1989, the supplement setting for GURPS) ; GURPS Conan and the Queen of the Black Coast (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story Queen of the Black Coast) ; GURPS Conan: Moon of Blood (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story of the same name) ; GURPS Conan the Wyrmslayer (1989, a solo adventure, based on the story The Lair of the Ice Worm) GURPS Conan was one of the earliest licensed properties produced by Steve Jackson Games. The company, after launching GURPS in 1986, acquired a Conan game license ",
"Beyond the Black River\n The story takes place in Conajohara, a newly established Aquilonian province recently annexed by King Numedides from the Picts. Balthus, a young settler on his way to Fort Tuscelan at the Black River, the province's border to the Pict Lands, encounters Conan in the forest slaying a Pict. Accompanying the young man back to the fort, Conan finds the corpse of a merchant left by a Pictish wizard named Zogar Sag and slain by a swamp demon. The fort's commander, Valannus, desperately asks Conan to slay Zogar Sag before he raises the Picts against the whole borderlands, especially since Tuscelan is vastly undermanned after Numedides foolishly decided to withdraw most of its garrison. Taking ",
"Black Colossus\n \"Black Colossus\" is one of the original short stories starring the fictional sword and sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard and first published in Weird Tales magazine, June 1933. Howard earned $130 for the sale of this story. During the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, Conan leads the army of Khoraja against an evil sorcerer named Natohk, \"the Veiled One.\" This story formed part of the basis for the later Conan novel, The Hour of the Dragon.",
"The Pool of the Black One\n \"The Pool of the Black One\" is one of the original short stories starring the sword and sorcery hero Conan the Cimmerian, written by American author Robert E. Howard. It's set in the pseudo-historical Hyborian Age, and concerns Conan becoming the captain of a pirate vessel while encountering a remote island with a mysterious pool which has the power of transmutation. First published in Weird Tales in October 1933, the story was republished in the collections The Sword of Conan (Gnome Press, 1952) and Conan the Adventurer (Lancer Books, 1966). It has more recently been published in the collections The Conan Chronicles Volume 1: The People of the Black Circle (2000) and Conan of Cimmeria: Volume One (1932-1933) (Del Rey, 2003).",
"Beyond the Black River\n In their book on Howard's work, Marc Cerasini and Charles E. Hoffman described \"Beyond the Black River\" as a \"transplanted Western\". They also noted that Howard had \" used the setting of Robert W. Chambers's Indian novel The Little Red Foot as a model for his Pictish Wilderness\".",
"Conan the Hero\n Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"The Pool of the Black One (collection)\n The Pool of the Black One is a collection of two fantasy short stories written by Robert E. Howard featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The book was published in 1986 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. as volume X of their deluxe Conan set. The title story originally appeared in the magazine Weird Tales. \"Drums of Tombalku\" is the original fragment of a story that Howard never completed. It first appeared, completed by L. Sprague de Camp, in the collection Conan the Adventurer.",
"Queen of the Black Coast\n The story was adapted and expanded by Roy Thomas, Mike Ploog and John Buscema in Conan the Barbarian (Marvel) issues #57, #58 and #100, which were first published in the mid to late 1970s. Petri Hiltunen made his own graphic novel adaptation in 1991. It has only been published in Finland. A role-playing game adaptation for GURPS named Conan and the Queen of the Black Coast was published by Steve Jackson Games in 1989. The concept of the woman who dies, but returns to help Conan in battle, was used in the 1982 movie Conan the Barbarian. The Dark Horse Comics series Conan the Barbarian (2012-2014) by writer Brian Wood and artist Becky Cloonan uses Queen of the Black Coast as the basis for the first three issues. The death of Bêlit is told in issues 22-25.",
"Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza\n Conan and the Death Lord of Thanza is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in January 1997.",
"Savage Sword of Conan\n (the first parts having been printed in Giant-Size Conan #1-4); and the adaptation of \"Iron Shadows in the Moon\", by Buscema and Alcala, where Conan goes from chief of the Zuagirs to pirate captain of the Red Brotherhood. The next three years of the title featured numerous adaptations of Howard stories (many by the art team of Buscema and Alcala), including \"Shadows in Zamboula\", \"The Devil in Iron\", \"The People of the Black Circle\", \"The Slithering Shadow\", \"The Pool of the Black One\", \"The Tower of the Elephant\", \"Jewels of Gwahlur\", \"Beyond the Black River\", \"The Scarlet Citadel\", \"The Flame Knife\", \"Hawks Over Shem\", \"The Treasure of Tranicos\", and \"Wolves Beyond the Border\"."
] |
Who was the screenwriter for Impossible? | [
"Tom Spezialy",
"Marc Cherry"
] | screenwriter | Impossible (Desperate Housewives) | 5,470,706 | 28 | [
{
"id": "27965714",
"title": "Mission: Impossible (film)",
"text": " Vampire, Cruise met De Palma during a dinner with Steven Spielberg and was impressed by his filmography, so when he went back home, saw all De Palma's films and convinced himself to have De Palma hired to direct Mission: Impossible. They went through two screenplay drafts that no one liked. De Palma brought in screenwriters Steve Zaillian, David Koepp, and finally Robert Towne. When the film was green-lit Koepp was initially fired with Robert Towne being the lead writer and Koepp being brought back on later. According to the director, the goal of the script was to \"constantly surprise the audience.\" Reportedly, Koepp was paid $1 million to rewrite an original script ",
"score": "1.591804"
},
{
"id": "10521789",
"title": "Robert Towne",
"text": " Towne wrote the script for Days of Thunder (1990) and formed a close friendship with its star Tom Cruise. He was one of the writers on Cruise's The Firm (1993), then Beatty's Love Affair (1994). Cruise brought him on to Mission: Impossible (1996) and co-produced Towne's third film as director, Without Limits (1998). He also co-wrote Mission Impossible II (2000) for Cruise.",
"score": "1.5812004"
},
{
"id": "9608792",
"title": "The Impossible Years",
"text": " The 1968 film version, which premiered December 5, was adapted by George Wells and directed by Michael Gordon. It starred David Niven, Lola Albright, Chad Everett, Ozzie Nelson, Cristina Ferrare, Gale Dixon and Darlene Carr. The eponymous theme song was written by The Tokens and performed by The Cowsills.",
"score": "1.5203474"
},
{
"id": "603760",
"title": "Sandra Wollner",
"text": " Sandra Wollner (born 1983) is an Austrian film director and screenwriter. She made her feature directorial debut with The Impossible Picture (2016), and also directed and co-wrote The Trouble with Being Born (2020).",
"score": "1.5160573"
},
{
"id": "31315025",
"title": "The Saint of the Impossible",
"text": " The Saint of the Impossible is a 2020 Swiss drama film written by Lani-Rain Feltham and Marc Raymond Wilkins, who is also the director in his directional debut. The film stars Magaly Solier, Marcelo Durand, Adriano Durand, Tara Thaller and Simon Käser.",
"score": "1.5126888"
},
{
"id": "7375409",
"title": "Hogan Sheffer",
"text": " From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.",
"score": "1.4831977"
},
{
"id": "13338064",
"title": "Nabil Farouk",
"text": " Egyptian Central Intelligence agent called A.S. (alias: Adham Sabri). He was a doctor, but was not practising medicine, being devoted full-time to his writing. Other than his series, he wrote articles for two newspapers and three magazines, and started working on scripts for television series after finishing two films scripts, with a third one in progress. A new novel of (The Man of the Impossible) (Ragol Al Mostaheel) will be released titled ن-٣, which in arabic symbolizes the third best hero in the general intelligence, through which ن-٣ will reveal, with his unique skills and exceptional abilities, the answers to many questions related to the previous issues.",
"score": "1.4769467"
},
{
"id": "31098000",
"title": "Arthur Weiss",
"text": " Arthur Weiss (13 June 1912 – 26 August 1980) was an American script writer for two decades on action/adventure TV shows like Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Fugitive, Super Friends, The Time Tunnel and Sea Hunt. His most famous creation was the script for the movie Flipper in 1963, which became a TV series and was remade as a movie in 1996. He also worked alongside Irwin Allen as a writer and producer for \"disaster\" TV films including Flood! and Fire!. In 1969 Weiss published the novel O'Kelly's Eclipse about the undefeated British racehorse Eclipse. Weiss married actress Fay Baker on 3 August 1940. He divorced in 1965 and later married Patricia Jones.",
"score": "1.4734786"
},
{
"id": "15875301",
"title": "The Impossible Itself",
"text": " The documentary features interviews with former S.F. Actor's Workshop members Herbert Blau, Alan Mandell, Eugene Roche, Robert Symonds, Robin Wagner, Joseph Miksak, Tony Miksak, and David Irving as well as former prison inmates Rick Cluchey, Ed Reed, Professor John Irwin and Prison Recreation Supervisor Clem Swagerty.",
"score": "1.468674"
},
{
"id": "6639927",
"title": "The Impossible Object (novel)",
"text": " In 1973, a motion picture adaptation starring Alan Bates, and Dominique Sanda was released. The film was scripted by the novel's author, Nicholas Mosley.",
"score": "1.4636731"
},
{
"id": "9608795",
"title": "The Impossible Years",
"text": " MGM bought the film rights to the play in 1965 for $350,000. George Wells completed the script by March 1966. MGM announced it for production in August 1966. The movie was greenlit by the team of Robert O'Brien and Robert M. Weitman. Filming took place in October 1967. At one stage, Peter Sellers was announced for the lead but by May, David Niven had been signed. Christina Ferrare, who played Niven's nubile daughter, had been under contract to 20th Century Fox for a year. The film featured the final movie performance of Ozzie Nelson.",
"score": "1.4612014"
},
{
"id": "31574522",
"title": "Done the Impossible",
"text": "Orson Scott Card ; Keith R.A. DeCandido ; Tracy Hickman ; Margaret Weis ",
"score": "1.4581175"
},
{
"id": "14191418",
"title": "The Impossible (book)",
"text": " In 2018, 20th Century Fox announced plans to produce a movie adaptation of The Impossible, titled Breakthrough, working with director Roxann Dawson, executive producer Samuel Rodriguez and producer DeVon Franklin, who has worked on other faith drama titles such as Miracles from Heaven and Heaven Is for Real. The film was released on April 17, 2019. In March of 2018, it was announced that actor Topher Grace would star as Pastor Jason Noble, and first responder Tommy Shine would be portrayed by Mike Colter. Actress Chrissy Metz of NBC's This Is Us starred as Joyce Smith. Other lead roles include Josh Lucas, Sam Trammell, and Marcel Ruiz.",
"score": "1.4534454"
},
{
"id": "27421536",
"title": "Stuart Hagmann",
"text": " Stuart R. Hagmann (born in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin on September 2, 1942) is a television and film director primarily active from 1968 to 1977. His television work includes episodes of the series Mission: Impossible and Mannix. In film he is noted for directing The Strawberry Statement (1970), which was co-winner of the Cannes Film Festival's Jury Prize.",
"score": "1.451967"
},
{
"id": "14047164",
"title": "John Alton",
"text": " In 1966, Alton shot the pilot for Mission: Impossible, which became a successful television series.",
"score": "1.4487971"
},
{
"id": "28234032",
"title": "Allan Weisbecker",
"text": " Allan C. Weisbecker is a novelist, screenwriter, memoirist and surfer. He is the author of the \"cheerfully immoral novel\" Cosmic Banditos, the memoir In Search of Captain Zero and ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir and a Tale of a Lost Surfer's Paradise''. Allan has also written for several surfing magazines, including Surfer, Surfing and The Surfer's Journal, as well as scripting episodes of the television series Crime Story and Miami Vice. A movie version of Cosmic Banditos directed by John Cusack is currently in the works. In late 2006 his third book ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir ",
"score": "1.4475602"
},
{
"id": "5158960",
"title": "Minority Report (film)",
"text": " money. They should be prepared to do the same.\" Production was delayed for several years. The original plan was to begin filming after Cruise's Mission: Impossible 2 was finished, but that film ran over schedule, which also allowed Spielberg time to bring in screenwriter Scott Frank to rework Cohen's screenplay. John August did an uncredited draft to polish the script, and Frank Darabont was also invited to rewrite, but was by then busy with The Majestic. The film closely follows Scott Frank's final script (completed May 16, 2001), and contains much of Cohen's third draft (May 24, 1997). Frank removed the character of Senator Malcolm from Cohen's screenplay, and inserted Burgess, who ",
"score": "1.4463284"
},
{
"id": "30227029",
"title": "Frank Darabont",
"text": " can't really judge the script based on what you saw on the screen. It got rephrased and messed with every inch of the way.\" Guillermo del Toro has shown interest in adapting Darabont's draft of the Frankenstein script when he gets around to filming his own version of the story, calling the draft a \"near perfect\" adaptation of the original book. In 2004, he was hired by Tom Cruise to write Mission: Impossible III, but the script was later rewritten by J. J. Abrams, who directed the film. The same year, Darabont wrote the introduction for the Hellboy novel, Hellboy: Odder Jobs by Christopher Golden. In 2005, Cemetery Dance Publications published Darabont's novella ",
"score": "1.4461176"
},
{
"id": "2717712",
"title": "Mathew Klickstein",
"text": " Klickstein was the writer of the 2009 American horror film Against the Dark, starring Steven Seagal and served as a casting producer on Food Network's Restaurant: Impossible from 2013 until the series ended in 2016. Born in California, Mathew was a prolific writer at a young age, penning his first novel at 13. A high-achieving student in high school, Mathew formed and ran various academic clubs while working on local congressional campaigns and for the ACLU. In 2012 he co-produced, co-directed and co-wrote Phamaly Theatre Company's disLabled, a multimedia performance involving actors with disabilities. Klickstein's non-fiction book titled ''SLIMED! An Oral History of Nickelodeon's Golden Age, which ",
"score": "1.4446855"
},
{
"id": "4813361",
"title": "Screenwriting",
"text": " naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)—In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script — but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress ",
"score": "1.4423581"
}
] | [
"Mission: Impossible (film)\n Vampire, Cruise met De Palma during a dinner with Steven Spielberg and was impressed by his filmography, so when he went back home, saw all De Palma's films and convinced himself to have De Palma hired to direct Mission: Impossible. They went through two screenplay drafts that no one liked. De Palma brought in screenwriters Steve Zaillian, David Koepp, and finally Robert Towne. When the film was green-lit Koepp was initially fired with Robert Towne being the lead writer and Koepp being brought back on later. According to the director, the goal of the script was to \"constantly surprise the audience.\" Reportedly, Koepp was paid $1 million to rewrite an original script ",
"Robert Towne\n Towne wrote the script for Days of Thunder (1990) and formed a close friendship with its star Tom Cruise. He was one of the writers on Cruise's The Firm (1993), then Beatty's Love Affair (1994). Cruise brought him on to Mission: Impossible (1996) and co-produced Towne's third film as director, Without Limits (1998). He also co-wrote Mission Impossible II (2000) for Cruise.",
"The Impossible Years\n The 1968 film version, which premiered December 5, was adapted by George Wells and directed by Michael Gordon. It starred David Niven, Lola Albright, Chad Everett, Ozzie Nelson, Cristina Ferrare, Gale Dixon and Darlene Carr. The eponymous theme song was written by The Tokens and performed by The Cowsills.",
"Sandra Wollner\n Sandra Wollner (born 1983) is an Austrian film director and screenwriter. She made her feature directorial debut with The Impossible Picture (2016), and also directed and co-wrote The Trouble with Being Born (2020).",
"The Saint of the Impossible\n The Saint of the Impossible is a 2020 Swiss drama film written by Lani-Rain Feltham and Marc Raymond Wilkins, who is also the director in his directional debut. The film stars Magaly Solier, Marcelo Durand, Adriano Durand, Tara Thaller and Simon Käser.",
"Hogan Sheffer\n From 1986 to 1994, he worked as a freelancer and did script analysis for various production companies. He also worked for Mary Stuart Masterson at her production company. From 1997 to 2000, he was employed by DreamWorks as the Director of Screenplay Development under producers Mark Johnson and Elizabeth Cantillon. He was in charge of developing screenplays for films like My Dog Skip, Galaxy Quest, Home Fries, and What Lies Beneath.",
"Nabil Farouk\n Egyptian Central Intelligence agent called A.S. (alias: Adham Sabri). He was a doctor, but was not practising medicine, being devoted full-time to his writing. Other than his series, he wrote articles for two newspapers and three magazines, and started working on scripts for television series after finishing two films scripts, with a third one in progress. A new novel of (The Man of the Impossible) (Ragol Al Mostaheel) will be released titled ن-٣, which in arabic symbolizes the third best hero in the general intelligence, through which ن-٣ will reveal, with his unique skills and exceptional abilities, the answers to many questions related to the previous issues.",
"Arthur Weiss\n Arthur Weiss (13 June 1912 – 26 August 1980) was an American script writer for two decades on action/adventure TV shows like Mission: Impossible, Mannix, The Fugitive, Super Friends, The Time Tunnel and Sea Hunt. His most famous creation was the script for the movie Flipper in 1963, which became a TV series and was remade as a movie in 1996. He also worked alongside Irwin Allen as a writer and producer for \"disaster\" TV films including Flood! and Fire!. In 1969 Weiss published the novel O'Kelly's Eclipse about the undefeated British racehorse Eclipse. Weiss married actress Fay Baker on 3 August 1940. He divorced in 1965 and later married Patricia Jones.",
"The Impossible Itself\n The documentary features interviews with former S.F. Actor's Workshop members Herbert Blau, Alan Mandell, Eugene Roche, Robert Symonds, Robin Wagner, Joseph Miksak, Tony Miksak, and David Irving as well as former prison inmates Rick Cluchey, Ed Reed, Professor John Irwin and Prison Recreation Supervisor Clem Swagerty.",
"The Impossible Object (novel)\n In 1973, a motion picture adaptation starring Alan Bates, and Dominique Sanda was released. The film was scripted by the novel's author, Nicholas Mosley.",
"The Impossible Years\n MGM bought the film rights to the play in 1965 for $350,000. George Wells completed the script by March 1966. MGM announced it for production in August 1966. The movie was greenlit by the team of Robert O'Brien and Robert M. Weitman. Filming took place in October 1967. At one stage, Peter Sellers was announced for the lead but by May, David Niven had been signed. Christina Ferrare, who played Niven's nubile daughter, had been under contract to 20th Century Fox for a year. The film featured the final movie performance of Ozzie Nelson.",
"Done the Impossible\nOrson Scott Card ; Keith R.A. DeCandido ; Tracy Hickman ; Margaret Weis ",
"The Impossible (book)\n In 2018, 20th Century Fox announced plans to produce a movie adaptation of The Impossible, titled Breakthrough, working with director Roxann Dawson, executive producer Samuel Rodriguez and producer DeVon Franklin, who has worked on other faith drama titles such as Miracles from Heaven and Heaven Is for Real. The film was released on April 17, 2019. In March of 2018, it was announced that actor Topher Grace would star as Pastor Jason Noble, and first responder Tommy Shine would be portrayed by Mike Colter. Actress Chrissy Metz of NBC's This Is Us starred as Joyce Smith. Other lead roles include Josh Lucas, Sam Trammell, and Marcel Ruiz.",
"Stuart Hagmann\n Stuart R. Hagmann (born in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin on September 2, 1942) is a television and film director primarily active from 1968 to 1977. His television work includes episodes of the series Mission: Impossible and Mannix. In film he is noted for directing The Strawberry Statement (1970), which was co-winner of the Cannes Film Festival's Jury Prize.",
"John Alton\n In 1966, Alton shot the pilot for Mission: Impossible, which became a successful television series.",
"Allan Weisbecker\n Allan C. Weisbecker is a novelist, screenwriter, memoirist and surfer. He is the author of the \"cheerfully immoral novel\" Cosmic Banditos, the memoir In Search of Captain Zero and ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir and a Tale of a Lost Surfer's Paradise''. Allan has also written for several surfing magazines, including Surfer, Surfing and The Surfer's Journal, as well as scripting episodes of the television series Crime Story and Miami Vice. A movie version of Cosmic Banditos directed by John Cusack is currently in the works. In late 2006 his third book ''Can't You Get Along With Anyone? A Writer's Memoir ",
"Minority Report (film)\n money. They should be prepared to do the same.\" Production was delayed for several years. The original plan was to begin filming after Cruise's Mission: Impossible 2 was finished, but that film ran over schedule, which also allowed Spielberg time to bring in screenwriter Scott Frank to rework Cohen's screenplay. John August did an uncredited draft to polish the script, and Frank Darabont was also invited to rewrite, but was by then busy with The Majestic. The film closely follows Scott Frank's final script (completed May 16, 2001), and contains much of Cohen's third draft (May 24, 1997). Frank removed the character of Senator Malcolm from Cohen's screenplay, and inserted Burgess, who ",
"Frank Darabont\n can't really judge the script based on what you saw on the screen. It got rephrased and messed with every inch of the way.\" Guillermo del Toro has shown interest in adapting Darabont's draft of the Frankenstein script when he gets around to filming his own version of the story, calling the draft a \"near perfect\" adaptation of the original book. In 2004, he was hired by Tom Cruise to write Mission: Impossible III, but the script was later rewritten by J. J. Abrams, who directed the film. The same year, Darabont wrote the introduction for the Hellboy novel, Hellboy: Odder Jobs by Christopher Golden. In 2005, Cemetery Dance Publications published Darabont's novella ",
"Mathew Klickstein\n Klickstein was the writer of the 2009 American horror film Against the Dark, starring Steven Seagal and served as a casting producer on Food Network's Restaurant: Impossible from 2013 until the series ended in 2016. Born in California, Mathew was a prolific writer at a young age, penning his first novel at 13. A high-achieving student in high school, Mathew formed and ran various academic clubs while working on local congressional campaigns and for the ACLU. In 2012 he co-produced, co-directed and co-wrote Phamaly Theatre Company's disLabled, a multimedia performance involving actors with disabilities. Klickstein's non-fiction book titled ''SLIMED! An Oral History of Nickelodeon's Golden Age, which ",
"Screenwriting\n naïve New York playwright who comes to Hollywood with high hopes and great ambition. While there, he meets one of his writing idols, a celebrated novelist from the past who has become a drunken hack screenwriter (a character based on William Faulkner). ; Mistress (1992)—In this comedy written by Barry Primus and J. F. Lawton, Robert Wuhl is a screenwriter/director who's got integrity, vision, and a serious script — but no career. Martin Landau is a sleazy producer who introduces Wuhl to Robert De Niro, Danny Aiello and Eli Wallach - three guys willing to invest in the movie, but with one catch: each one wants his mistress "
] |
Who was the producer of The Thing We Love? | [
"Jesse Louis Lasky",
"Jesse L. Lasky",
"Jesse Lasky",
"Jesse Louis Lasky Sr."
] | producer | The Thing We Love | 5,959,504 | 58 | [
{
"id": "16124292",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": " The Thing We Love is a 1918 American silent drama film starring Wallace Reid, Kathlyn Williams, and Tully Marshall, produced by Jesse Lasky, distributed by Paramount Pictures, and directed by Lou Tellegen. This marked Tellegen's second foray into directing as he usually was a leading man in front of the camera like Reid.",
"score": "1.9008358"
},
{
"id": "16124294",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": " This film is now considered a lost film.",
"score": "1.7213116"
},
{
"id": "8563101",
"title": "A Lovesome Thing",
"text": "John Snyder – producer ; Jay Newland, Joe Lopes – engineer ",
"score": "1.6885784"
},
{
"id": "27021614",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " single, \"One Thing\", peaked at number 14 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. Due to the success of the song Murphy hired Opitz to produce three more songs. Murphy also approached WEA Australia with copies of the song, leading to INXS signing a recording deal in July 1982 with WEA for releases in Australia, South East Asia, Japan and New Zealand, Atco Records (a subsidiary of Atlantic Records) for North America and Polygram for Europe and the UK. Shabooh Shoobah was released in the United States in February 1983 and peaked at number 46 on the Billboard 200 album chart. \"The One Thing\" brought INXS their first Top 40 ",
"score": "1.5957866"
},
{
"id": "32899963",
"title": "The Thing at the Nursery Room Window",
"text": "Produced by Kerry Fahey ",
"score": "1.5822275"
},
{
"id": "27021612",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " \"The One Thing\" is a song by Australian rock group INXS, released in July 1982 as the first single ahead of their third studio album, Shabooh Shoobah, which appeared in October that year. At the 1982 Countdown Music Awards, the song was nominated for Best Australian Single.",
"score": "1.5567324"
},
{
"id": "31841978",
"title": "Dan Shea (producer)",
"text": "Sweet Thing ; Funky Xmas ",
"score": "1.5523664"
},
{
"id": "1360377",
"title": "This Thing of Ours (film)",
"text": " This Thing of Ours is an American 2003 crime/drama film directed by Danny Provenzano and starring him alongside Frank Vincent, Edward Lynch, Vincent Pastore and James Caan. The title is a reference to the Italian term Cosa Nostra, \"This Thing Of Ours\", which refers to the American Mafia. Colombo crime family underboss, John Franzese, was an associate producer of the film. The film garnered primarily negative reviews, earning a 40% score on Rotten Tomatoes and receiving a 36/100 on the review aggregator Metacritic, signifying generally unfavorable reviews.",
"score": "1.5188739"
},
{
"id": "13271145",
"title": "The Thing (The Thing album)",
"text": " The Thing is an album by saxophonist Mats Gustafsson, bassist Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and drummer Paal Nilssen-Love, who then took the album title as the name of their trio. The album was recorded in February 2000 and released that year by Crazy Wisdom, part of Universal.",
"score": "1.517576"
},
{
"id": "29840365",
"title": "Getting Our Thing Together",
"text": "Lew Futterman - Producer ; Richard Evans - Production Supervisor ; Jerry Griffith - Album Design ; Nancy Reiner - Cover Art ; Stu Black - Engineer ; Bill Ardis - Liner Notes ",
"score": "1.5127738"
},
{
"id": "14206961",
"title": "Things We Like",
"text": " Arranged and produced by Jack Bruce. Recorded at I.B.C. Studios, London, August 1968.",
"score": "1.5063175"
},
{
"id": "28672144",
"title": "This Thing Called Love (album)",
"text": "Tommy Sands – vocals ; Bob Bain – arranger ",
"score": "1.4916834"
},
{
"id": "16124293",
"title": "The Thing We Love",
"text": "Wallace Reid - Rodney Sheridan ; Kathlyn Williams - Margaret Kenwood ; Tully Marshall - Henry D. Kenwood ; Mayme Kelso - Mrs. Kenwood ; Charles Ogle - Adolph Weimer ; William Elmer - Kenwood's Agent (*billed Billy Elmer) ",
"score": "1.4869366"
},
{
"id": "27000362",
"title": "Love Is a Wonderful Thing (Michael Bolton song)",
"text": " The video was directed by Dominic Sena and shot in Phoenix, Arizona.",
"score": "1.4759398"
},
{
"id": "13271147",
"title": "The Thing (The Thing album)",
"text": " The album was first released in 2000 by Crazy Wisdon, part of Universal Group. It was also included in the box set Now and Forever in 2007.",
"score": "1.4705881"
},
{
"id": "4825494",
"title": "Our Thing (album)",
"text": " Our Thing is the second release by American jazz tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson on Blue Note. It features performances by Henderson, Kenny Dorham, Andrew Hill, Pete La Roca and Eddie Khan of originals by Henderson and Dorham. The CD reissue added a bonus take of \"Teeter Totter\".",
"score": "1.464778"
},
{
"id": "31841973",
"title": "Dan Shea (producer)",
"text": "Someone To Love You ",
"score": "1.4623231"
},
{
"id": "26040472",
"title": "Tom Shaw (producer)",
"text": " Beautiful thing, by Robert Delamere and Tom Shaw QNQ Productions 2013",
"score": "1.4593201"
},
{
"id": "27021615",
"title": "The One Thing (song)",
"text": " in the US, reaching number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May–June 1983. It was a big hit on album-oriented rock radio, reaching number 2 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart, and was also a top 20 hit in Canada. The music video for the song, directed by Soren Jensen, featured the band members having a decadent banquet with a number of beautiful models, including Hutchence's then girlfriend Michele Bennett, interspersed with clips of the band playing their instruments. Hutchence knew Jensen, who was an assistant director on the Australian soap opera, The Young Doctors, through his mother, Patricia, who was a make-up artist for the show. The models, Susan ",
"score": "1.4584174"
},
{
"id": "4825498",
"title": "Our Thing (album)",
"text": "Bob Blumenthal – liner notes ; Michael Cuscuna – reissue ; Kenny Dorham – liner notes ; Alfred Lion – producer ; Reid Miles – design, cover design ; Rudy Van Gelder – engineer, remastering, digital remastering ; Francis Wolff – photography, cover photo ",
"score": "1.4578427"
}
] | [
"The Thing We Love\n The Thing We Love is a 1918 American silent drama film starring Wallace Reid, Kathlyn Williams, and Tully Marshall, produced by Jesse Lasky, distributed by Paramount Pictures, and directed by Lou Tellegen. This marked Tellegen's second foray into directing as he usually was a leading man in front of the camera like Reid.",
"The Thing We Love\n This film is now considered a lost film.",
"A Lovesome Thing\nJohn Snyder – producer ; Jay Newland, Joe Lopes – engineer ",
"The One Thing (song)\n single, \"One Thing\", peaked at number 14 on the Australian Kent Music Report Singles Chart. Due to the success of the song Murphy hired Opitz to produce three more songs. Murphy also approached WEA Australia with copies of the song, leading to INXS signing a recording deal in July 1982 with WEA for releases in Australia, South East Asia, Japan and New Zealand, Atco Records (a subsidiary of Atlantic Records) for North America and Polygram for Europe and the UK. Shabooh Shoobah was released in the United States in February 1983 and peaked at number 46 on the Billboard 200 album chart. \"The One Thing\" brought INXS their first Top 40 ",
"The Thing at the Nursery Room Window\nProduced by Kerry Fahey ",
"The One Thing (song)\n \"The One Thing\" is a song by Australian rock group INXS, released in July 1982 as the first single ahead of their third studio album, Shabooh Shoobah, which appeared in October that year. At the 1982 Countdown Music Awards, the song was nominated for Best Australian Single.",
"Dan Shea (producer)\nSweet Thing ; Funky Xmas ",
"This Thing of Ours (film)\n This Thing of Ours is an American 2003 crime/drama film directed by Danny Provenzano and starring him alongside Frank Vincent, Edward Lynch, Vincent Pastore and James Caan. The title is a reference to the Italian term Cosa Nostra, \"This Thing Of Ours\", which refers to the American Mafia. Colombo crime family underboss, John Franzese, was an associate producer of the film. The film garnered primarily negative reviews, earning a 40% score on Rotten Tomatoes and receiving a 36/100 on the review aggregator Metacritic, signifying generally unfavorable reviews.",
"The Thing (The Thing album)\n The Thing is an album by saxophonist Mats Gustafsson, bassist Ingebrigt Håker Flaten and drummer Paal Nilssen-Love, who then took the album title as the name of their trio. The album was recorded in February 2000 and released that year by Crazy Wisdom, part of Universal.",
"Getting Our Thing Together\nLew Futterman - Producer ; Richard Evans - Production Supervisor ; Jerry Griffith - Album Design ; Nancy Reiner - Cover Art ; Stu Black - Engineer ; Bill Ardis - Liner Notes ",
"Things We Like\n Arranged and produced by Jack Bruce. Recorded at I.B.C. Studios, London, August 1968.",
"This Thing Called Love (album)\nTommy Sands – vocals ; Bob Bain – arranger ",
"The Thing We Love\nWallace Reid - Rodney Sheridan ; Kathlyn Williams - Margaret Kenwood ; Tully Marshall - Henry D. Kenwood ; Mayme Kelso - Mrs. Kenwood ; Charles Ogle - Adolph Weimer ; William Elmer - Kenwood's Agent (*billed Billy Elmer) ",
"Love Is a Wonderful Thing (Michael Bolton song)\n The video was directed by Dominic Sena and shot in Phoenix, Arizona.",
"The Thing (The Thing album)\n The album was first released in 2000 by Crazy Wisdon, part of Universal Group. It was also included in the box set Now and Forever in 2007.",
"Our Thing (album)\n Our Thing is the second release by American jazz tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson on Blue Note. It features performances by Henderson, Kenny Dorham, Andrew Hill, Pete La Roca and Eddie Khan of originals by Henderson and Dorham. The CD reissue added a bonus take of \"Teeter Totter\".",
"Dan Shea (producer)\nSomeone To Love You ",
"Tom Shaw (producer)\n Beautiful thing, by Robert Delamere and Tom Shaw QNQ Productions 2013",
"The One Thing (song)\n in the US, reaching number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100 in May–June 1983. It was a big hit on album-oriented rock radio, reaching number 2 on the Billboard Top Tracks chart, and was also a top 20 hit in Canada. The music video for the song, directed by Soren Jensen, featured the band members having a decadent banquet with a number of beautiful models, including Hutchence's then girlfriend Michele Bennett, interspersed with clips of the band playing their instruments. Hutchence knew Jensen, who was an assistant director on the Australian soap opera, The Young Doctors, through his mother, Patricia, who was a make-up artist for the show. The models, Susan ",
"Our Thing (album)\nBob Blumenthal – liner notes ; Michael Cuscuna – reissue ; Kenny Dorham – liner notes ; Alfred Lion – producer ; Reid Miles – design, cover design ; Rudy Van Gelder – engineer, remastering, digital remastering ; Francis Wolff – photography, cover photo "
] |
Who was the screenwriter for The Bride’s Journey? | [
"Sergio Rubini"
] | screenwriter | The Bride's Journey | 2,837,484 | 62 | [
{
"id": "2274938",
"title": "Alan Jay Lerner",
"text": "Royal Wedding, 1951 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; An American in Paris (1951) (writer) ; Brigadoon, 1954 (film) (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Gigi, 1958 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1960 (lyricist) ; My Fair Lady, 1964 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Camelot, 1967 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Paint Your Wagon, 1969 (producer/screenwriter/lyricist) ; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1970 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Little Prince, 1974 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Tribute, 1980 (\"It's All for the Best,\" lyricist) ; Secret Places, 1984 (title song lyricist) Source: TCM ",
"score": "1.5017788"
},
{
"id": "15256538",
"title": "John Farrow",
"text": " Farrow started writing while working as a sailor and became interested in screenwriting after a chance voyage in the South Seas with the film-maker Robert J. Flaherty. Re-entering the United States, allegedly by jumping ship at San Francisco, he found his way to Hollywood where from 1927, his nautical expertise brought him work as a script consultant and technical adviser. He had already earned minor recognition as a poet and writer of short stories. He soon established himself as a notable screenwriter. He worked for DeMille Productions, doing titles for White Gold (1927) and The Wreck of the Hesperus (1927). He adapted Richard Connell's 1923 short story \"A Friend of Napoleon\" but it does not appear to have been made. He also wrote the original story for The Blue Danube (1928) and the script for The Bride of the Colorado (1929). At Warner Bros he wrote A Sailor's Sweetheart (1927) for director Lloyd Bacon.",
"score": "1.5002687"
},
{
"id": "8937379",
"title": "Dana Fox",
"text": " Gough and Millar's agent, established screenwriter Jessica Bendinger sought after an unpublished writer who would work inexpensively on a screenplay. Fox had not yet written a sample screenplay, but Bendinger was so impressed with her ideas for the story that Fox was hired to write the script. The produced film was The Wedding Date, which ultimately was panned by critics but a financial success. After The Wedding Dates release, she was attached to three separate writing projects. Her next produced screenplay was What Happens in Vegas, which was bought by 20th Century Fox in a high six-figure deal for the script's first draft, and which stars Cameron Diaz and Ashton ",
"score": "1.4767599"
},
{
"id": "9220620",
"title": "Runaway Bride (film)",
"text": " Runaway Bride is a 1999 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall and starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The screenplay, written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon, is about a reporter (Gere) that is assigned to write a story about a woman (Roberts) who has left a string of fiancés at the altar. It is the second film to co-star Gere and Roberts, following Pretty Woman (1990). It received generally negative reviews from critics but was a commercial success, grossing $309 million worldwide.",
"score": "1.4713342"
},
{
"id": "13900836",
"title": "Alexis Zegerman",
"text": " Zegerman wrote the screenplay for The Honeymoon Suite (2010).",
"score": "1.465949"
},
{
"id": "972303",
"title": "Bridal Path (novel)",
"text": " The novel was adapted for film by the British Lion Film Corporation in 1959. It starred Bill Travers, George Cole and Gordon Jackson, it was produced and directed by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat. Geoffrey Willans co-wrote the screenplay, but died before the film was released. The film was shot on location around Oban, Easdale and Appin. It premiered in Edinburgh.",
"score": "1.4605005"
},
{
"id": "9700841",
"title": "N. Richard Nash",
"text": " 1956 Hollywood film starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, and a 1982 full-length TV production. The play was made into a Broadway musical, 110 in the Shade. Here Come the Brides (1968-1970, 52 episodes) was a Screen Gems television series developed by Nash; Nash wrote the series pilot of the same name. In the 1950s, Nash moved from New York to Hollywood to write the screenplay for The Rainmaker. However, it was the 1972 Broadway failure of Echoes (1972) and the novelization of a screenplay that led Nash to transition from writing screenplays to writing novels. After working on Echoes, he developed a screenplay entitled Macho which he could not sell. In overcoming this, Nash noted: \"It occurred to ",
"score": "1.4572933"
},
{
"id": "27451678",
"title": "Traveller Wedding",
"text": " Traveller Wedding is a 2009 novel by Irish filmmaker Graham Jones. The story is narrated by a nomadic woman called Christine who is furious at the release of a violent videogame about a traveller wedding and determined to tell the story of her people more authentically.",
"score": "1.4569538"
},
{
"id": "4607212",
"title": "Jo Swerling",
"text": " Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind.",
"score": "1.4564164"
},
{
"id": "30711702",
"title": "Géza von Cziffra",
"text": "Gulliver's Travels (screenplay and direction, 1924) ; The Copper (screenplay and assistance with direction, 1930), with Hans Albers ; Three Days Confined to Barracks (screenplay, 1930) ; Everything for the Woman (1934) ; A Night in Venice (1934) ; Villa for Sale (screenplay, 1935) ; Ball at the Savoy (screenplay, 1935) ; Where the Lark Sings (screenplay, 1936) ; St. Peter's Umbrella (1936) ; The Vagabonds (screenplay, 1937) ; The Green Emperor (1939) ; The Life and Loves of Tschaikovsky (screenplay, 1939), with Zarah Leander and Marika Rökk ; Melody of a Great City (screenplay, 1943) ; Love Premiere (screenplay, 1943) ; Women Are No Angels (screenplay, 1943) ; The White Dream (1943) ; The Wedding Hotel (screenplay, 1944) ; Liebe nach Noten (1945), ",
"score": "1.4531214"
},
{
"id": "30309057",
"title": "Josann McGibbon",
"text": " The team's first major success as a screenwriter was the early Brad Pitt film, The Favor. Their biggest hits since then include Three Men and a Little Lady and Runaway Bride. In 2007, McGibbon and Parriott co-wrote and produced the hit Debra Messing miniseries, The Starter Wife. The Starter Wife received 10 Emmy nominations in 2007, including for best screenwriting, and won one Emmy Award. It was also nominated for Golden Globe and Writers Guild awards, and was then produced as a series, also on USA Network. McGibbon and Parriott wrote and co-produced the Disney Channel movie, Descendants which was directed by Kenny Ortega and premiered in July, 2015. In February, 2016, it won the Writers ",
"score": "1.4527992"
},
{
"id": "7948014",
"title": "Barry Strugatz",
"text": " Strugatz got his start as a production assistant and location scout, working under the auspices of directors Miloš Forman (Hair) and Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo). He wrote the screenplay to 1988’s Married to the Mob, directed by a pre-Silence of the Lambs Jonathan Demme, but 1989’s She Devil endured a critical and commercial roasting. He spent the next decade writing for the likes of Bette Midler and Joe Pesci. He finally turned to directing in 2000 with a short film, The Transformation.",
"score": "1.4492371"
},
{
"id": "26216966",
"title": "John Wijngaards",
"text": "Grand Prix, as scriptwriter for Journey to the Centre of Love, Tenth International Catholic Film Festival, Warsaw 1995. ; The Bronze Award, for the same film at the Film Fest Houston 1997. ; The Chris Award, at the Columbus Film Festival 1997. ; The Marga Klompé Award, 2005. ; Lifetime Achievement Award, Christians for Biblical Equality 2021. ",
"score": "1.4490316"
},
{
"id": "29359407",
"title": "Bride Wars",
"text": " Raphael and Wilson completed the shooting script of Bride Wars, from an original screenplay by Greg DePaul, before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike began. Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith also contributed to the screenplay. Some principal photography took place at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts. Most filming occurred in Boston, New York City, and in Salem, Massachusetts.",
"score": "1.445717"
},
{
"id": "16244917",
"title": "Tiana Alexandra",
"text": " paid screenwriter\". Silliphant had written Lee into numerous TV shows, including Longstreet, and an original two hour TV pilot called The Way of the Intercepting Fist. He believed in Bruce so much that he wrote Lee into his script of Raymond Chandler's Marlowe. Silliphant had also written most of the episodes for the acclaimed television series Route 66, and won an Oscar for Best Screenplay on the feature film In the Heat of the Night. Alexandra and Stirling Silliphant were married in a ceremony at Chasen's Restaurant in West Hollywood on July 4, 1974. As reported by CBS News, the celebrity event included Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, William Holden and Henry Mancini.",
"score": "1.4444191"
},
{
"id": "10677255",
"title": "December Bride",
"text": " DaLonne Cooper was the script supervisor.",
"score": "1.4429951"
},
{
"id": "5232047",
"title": "Hagar Wilde",
"text": " Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.",
"score": "1.437787"
},
{
"id": "4063913",
"title": "The Time Traveler's Wife (film)",
"text": " because now the characters have an existence apart from me.\" In September 2003, the studio hired screenwriter Jeremy Leven to write an adapted screenplay of the novel. Directors Steven Spielberg and David Fincher briefly expressed interest in the project, though no negotiations took place. In March 2005, director Gus Van Sant entered negotiations with the studio to helm the project. The negotiations did not hold, and in November 2006, director Robert Schwentke was instead hired to take over the project. In January 2007, New Line hired screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin to rewrite Leven's script. Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams were cast in April 2007. Filming began in Toronto on September 10, 2007. It was ",
"score": "1.4375389"
},
{
"id": "8230142",
"title": "Kathryn Scola",
"text": " adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel, with writer Kubec Glasmon. In 1937, Scola and Darrell Ware collaborated to write the script for the film Second Honeymoon, directed by Walter Lang. In 1943, at the outset of the Second World War, Scola and Julien Josephson wrote the script for Happy Land, a 20th Century Fox production that was meant to prepare audiences for the losses of the war. During 1946, Scola wrote a screenplay for the Max Ophüls 1949 American film noir Caught, which would eventually be rejected by the censorship board due to what was deemed questionable material. Scola’s script was revised by various writers and eventually abandoned, leading to the final screenplay by playwright and screenwriter Arthur Laurents. Scola and Julien Josephson also worked together on the original screenplay for “In Times Like These” in 1956, a teleplay included in the anthology series The 20th Century Fox Hour.",
"score": "1.4370899"
},
{
"id": "32807534",
"title": "Sarah Kernochan",
"text": " (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); ",
"score": "1.4349086"
}
] | [
"Alan Jay Lerner\nRoyal Wedding, 1951 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; An American in Paris (1951) (writer) ; Brigadoon, 1954 (film) (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Gigi, 1958 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, 1960 (lyricist) ; My Fair Lady, 1964 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Camelot, 1967 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Paint Your Wagon, 1969 (producer/screenwriter/lyricist) ; On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, 1970 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; The Little Prince, 1974 (screenwriter/lyricist) ; Tribute, 1980 (\"It's All for the Best,\" lyricist) ; Secret Places, 1984 (title song lyricist) Source: TCM ",
"John Farrow\n Farrow started writing while working as a sailor and became interested in screenwriting after a chance voyage in the South Seas with the film-maker Robert J. Flaherty. Re-entering the United States, allegedly by jumping ship at San Francisco, he found his way to Hollywood where from 1927, his nautical expertise brought him work as a script consultant and technical adviser. He had already earned minor recognition as a poet and writer of short stories. He soon established himself as a notable screenwriter. He worked for DeMille Productions, doing titles for White Gold (1927) and The Wreck of the Hesperus (1927). He adapted Richard Connell's 1923 short story \"A Friend of Napoleon\" but it does not appear to have been made. He also wrote the original story for The Blue Danube (1928) and the script for The Bride of the Colorado (1929). At Warner Bros he wrote A Sailor's Sweetheart (1927) for director Lloyd Bacon.",
"Dana Fox\n Gough and Millar's agent, established screenwriter Jessica Bendinger sought after an unpublished writer who would work inexpensively on a screenplay. Fox had not yet written a sample screenplay, but Bendinger was so impressed with her ideas for the story that Fox was hired to write the script. The produced film was The Wedding Date, which ultimately was panned by critics but a financial success. After The Wedding Dates release, she was attached to three separate writing projects. Her next produced screenplay was What Happens in Vegas, which was bought by 20th Century Fox in a high six-figure deal for the script's first draft, and which stars Cameron Diaz and Ashton ",
"Runaway Bride (film)\n Runaway Bride is a 1999 American screwball romantic comedy film directed by Garry Marshall and starring Julia Roberts and Richard Gere. The screenplay, written by Sara Parriott and Josann McGibbon, is about a reporter (Gere) that is assigned to write a story about a woman (Roberts) who has left a string of fiancés at the altar. It is the second film to co-star Gere and Roberts, following Pretty Woman (1990). It received generally negative reviews from critics but was a commercial success, grossing $309 million worldwide.",
"Alexis Zegerman\n Zegerman wrote the screenplay for The Honeymoon Suite (2010).",
"Bridal Path (novel)\n The novel was adapted for film by the British Lion Film Corporation in 1959. It starred Bill Travers, George Cole and Gordon Jackson, it was produced and directed by Frank Launder and Sidney Gilliat. Geoffrey Willans co-wrote the screenplay, but died before the film was released. The film was shot on location around Oban, Easdale and Appin. It premiered in Edinburgh.",
"N. Richard Nash\n 1956 Hollywood film starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, and a 1982 full-length TV production. The play was made into a Broadway musical, 110 in the Shade. Here Come the Brides (1968-1970, 52 episodes) was a Screen Gems television series developed by Nash; Nash wrote the series pilot of the same name. In the 1950s, Nash moved from New York to Hollywood to write the screenplay for The Rainmaker. However, it was the 1972 Broadway failure of Echoes (1972) and the novelization of a screenplay that led Nash to transition from writing screenplays to writing novels. After working on Echoes, he developed a screenplay entitled Macho which he could not sell. In overcoming this, Nash noted: \"It occurred to ",
"Traveller Wedding\n Traveller Wedding is a 2009 novel by Irish filmmaker Graham Jones. The story is narrated by a nomadic woman called Christine who is furious at the release of a violent videogame about a traveller wedding and determined to tell the story of her people more authentically.",
"Jo Swerling\n Swerling was brought to Hollywood by Columbia Pictures chief Harry Cohn to work on the screenplay for Frank Capra's Ladies of Leisure (1930), the first of several collaborations with the director. His dozens of screenplays in the 1930s and 1940s include Platinum Blonde, Behind the Mask, Once to Every Woman, The Pride of the Yankees (for which he received an Academy Award nomination), Lifeboat, Leave Her to Heaven, and It's a Wonderful Life. He also provided some uncredited writing for Gone with the Wind.",
"Géza von Cziffra\nGulliver's Travels (screenplay and direction, 1924) ; The Copper (screenplay and assistance with direction, 1930), with Hans Albers ; Three Days Confined to Barracks (screenplay, 1930) ; Everything for the Woman (1934) ; A Night in Venice (1934) ; Villa for Sale (screenplay, 1935) ; Ball at the Savoy (screenplay, 1935) ; Where the Lark Sings (screenplay, 1936) ; St. Peter's Umbrella (1936) ; The Vagabonds (screenplay, 1937) ; The Green Emperor (1939) ; The Life and Loves of Tschaikovsky (screenplay, 1939), with Zarah Leander and Marika Rökk ; Melody of a Great City (screenplay, 1943) ; Love Premiere (screenplay, 1943) ; Women Are No Angels (screenplay, 1943) ; The White Dream (1943) ; The Wedding Hotel (screenplay, 1944) ; Liebe nach Noten (1945), ",
"Josann McGibbon\n The team's first major success as a screenwriter was the early Brad Pitt film, The Favor. Their biggest hits since then include Three Men and a Little Lady and Runaway Bride. In 2007, McGibbon and Parriott co-wrote and produced the hit Debra Messing miniseries, The Starter Wife. The Starter Wife received 10 Emmy nominations in 2007, including for best screenwriting, and won one Emmy Award. It was also nominated for Golden Globe and Writers Guild awards, and was then produced as a series, also on USA Network. McGibbon and Parriott wrote and co-produced the Disney Channel movie, Descendants which was directed by Kenny Ortega and premiered in July, 2015. In February, 2016, it won the Writers ",
"Barry Strugatz\n Strugatz got his start as a production assistant and location scout, working under the auspices of directors Miloš Forman (Hair) and Woody Allen (The Purple Rose of Cairo). He wrote the screenplay to 1988’s Married to the Mob, directed by a pre-Silence of the Lambs Jonathan Demme, but 1989’s She Devil endured a critical and commercial roasting. He spent the next decade writing for the likes of Bette Midler and Joe Pesci. He finally turned to directing in 2000 with a short film, The Transformation.",
"John Wijngaards\nGrand Prix, as scriptwriter for Journey to the Centre of Love, Tenth International Catholic Film Festival, Warsaw 1995. ; The Bronze Award, for the same film at the Film Fest Houston 1997. ; The Chris Award, at the Columbus Film Festival 1997. ; The Marga Klompé Award, 2005. ; Lifetime Achievement Award, Christians for Biblical Equality 2021. ",
"Bride Wars\n Raphael and Wilson completed the shooting script of Bride Wars, from an original screenplay by Greg DePaul, before the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike began. Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith also contributed to the screenplay. Some principal photography took place at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts. Most filming occurred in Boston, New York City, and in Salem, Massachusetts.",
"Tiana Alexandra\n paid screenwriter\". Silliphant had written Lee into numerous TV shows, including Longstreet, and an original two hour TV pilot called The Way of the Intercepting Fist. He believed in Bruce so much that he wrote Lee into his script of Raymond Chandler's Marlowe. Silliphant had also written most of the episodes for the acclaimed television series Route 66, and won an Oscar for Best Screenplay on the feature film In the Heat of the Night. Alexandra and Stirling Silliphant were married in a ceremony at Chasen's Restaurant in West Hollywood on July 4, 1974. As reported by CBS News, the celebrity event included Robert Wagner, Natalie Wood, William Holden and Henry Mancini.",
"December Bride\n DaLonne Cooper was the script supervisor.",
"Hagar Wilde\n Wilde was a prolific young short story writer and debut novelist when she was hired by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1931, to write dialogue for The Age for Love, starring Billie Dove. Her association with director Howard Hawks included co-writing (with Dudley Nichols) the screenplay for Bringing Up Baby (for which she had also written the original story, published in the magazine Collier's Weekly), and the screenplay for I Was a Male War Bride (1949). She also co-wrote the screenplay for The Unseen (1945), with Raymond Chandler, based on the novel Midnight House by Ethel Lina White. Wilde wrote two shows produced on Broadway. Her first stage success was a \"taut little horror drama\" titled Guest in the House (1942); she co-wrote the play with Dale Eunson, and it was adapted into a film in 1944. She also wrote Made in Heaven (1946–1947). In the 1950s she worked extensively in adapting scripts for television.",
"The Time Traveler's Wife (film)\n because now the characters have an existence apart from me.\" In September 2003, the studio hired screenwriter Jeremy Leven to write an adapted screenplay of the novel. Directors Steven Spielberg and David Fincher briefly expressed interest in the project, though no negotiations took place. In March 2005, director Gus Van Sant entered negotiations with the studio to helm the project. The negotiations did not hold, and in November 2006, director Robert Schwentke was instead hired to take over the project. In January 2007, New Line hired screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin to rewrite Leven's script. Eric Bana and Rachel McAdams were cast in April 2007. Filming began in Toronto on September 10, 2007. It was ",
"Kathryn Scola\n adaptation of the Dashiell Hammett novel, with writer Kubec Glasmon. In 1937, Scola and Darrell Ware collaborated to write the script for the film Second Honeymoon, directed by Walter Lang. In 1943, at the outset of the Second World War, Scola and Julien Josephson wrote the script for Happy Land, a 20th Century Fox production that was meant to prepare audiences for the losses of the war. During 1946, Scola wrote a screenplay for the Max Ophüls 1949 American film noir Caught, which would eventually be rejected by the censorship board due to what was deemed questionable material. Scola’s script was revised by various writers and eventually abandoned, leading to the final screenplay by playwright and screenwriter Arthur Laurents. Scola and Julien Josephson also worked together on the original screenplay for “In Times Like These” in 1956, a teleplay included in the anthology series The 20th Century Fox Hour.",
"Sarah Kernochan\n (about evangelist Marjoe Gortner), which won an Academy Award for Documentary Feature. Kernochan's first screen credit as a screenwriter came with the 1986 film 9½ Weeks. She followed that film with the script for Dancers (1987), starring Mikhail Baryshnikov and directed by Herbert Ross, which chronicled the backstage drama of a ballet company (played by American Ballet Theatre dancers) and their director during the staging of the ballet Giselle. By the time she was brought in to work on the 1993 film Sommersby, she had become known for a particular style of writing in Hollywood. She commented in an interview with Salon.com: Since then, she has been primarily a screenwriter for such films as Dancers (1987); "
] |
What is Jesús the capital of? | [
"Lauricocha Province"
] | capital of | Jesús, Peru | 351,646 | 66 | [
{
"id": "8051479",
"title": "Ecclesiastical capital",
"text": " The religious capital or ecclesiastical capital of a region is a place considered pre-eminent by the adherents of a particular religion within that region. This is most often significant for the region's predominant religion or state religion, if any. The administrative headquarters of an organised religion may be centralised in a particular location; for example, Rome for the Catholic Church, or Salt Lake City for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In an episcopal church, the site of the cathedral of the primate bishop of an area may be considered its ecclesiastical capital; for example, Armagh is the seat of the primate of All Ireland in both the Catholic church and the Anglican church. Other places may be considered religious capitals by being centres of learning, such as Qom for Shia Islam in Iran; or places of pilgrimage, such as Jerusalem for the Abrahamic religions and Varanasi for Hinduism.",
"score": "1.4106193"
},
{
"id": "11192417",
"title": "The Visual Bible: Matthew",
"text": " In Israel/Palestine/Jordan, then known as Judea (Roman province) of the Roman Empire, Jesus Christ of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples preaching to the people about God and salvation of their souls. He claims to be the son of God and the Messiah. He is arrested by the Romans and crucified. He rises from the dead after three days.",
"score": "1.367733"
},
{
"id": "11964881",
"title": "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament",
"text": " to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1-7, ESV).\"According to the Apostle Paul, the unjust death of the Son of God and His resurrection from the dead result in grace, peace, and an increasing faithful obedience among all nations through the proclamation of the Gospel. The Kingdom of the Son of David, Jesus Christ, is portrayed in the New Testament as being current as He reigns at the right hand of the Father (Hebrews 8:1; Revelation 2:26-27; 20:4-6). It should be no surprise to anyone familiar with the Scriptures that the Throne of the LORD is the ",
"score": "1.3612092"
},
{
"id": "9775851",
"title": "Christmas with a Capital C",
"text": " Christmas with a Capital C is a 2010 American Christian drama direct-to-DVD film directed by Helmut Schleppi. The film's plot was based on a song of the same name by Christian band Go Fish, whose name was inspired by one of actor Brad Stine's stand-up comedy routines. It centers on what, in recent years, has been dubbed the \"War on Christmas\" in the United States.",
"score": "1.3486245"
},
{
"id": "25530709",
"title": "Triumphal entry into Jerusalem",
"text": " On his entry into the city, Matthew's account suggests that Jesus evoked great excitement - \"all the city was moved\". The people of the city asked \"Who is this?\" and \"the multitudes\" answered, \"This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth of Galilee”. In Jesus and Judaism (1985), E. P. Sanders asked: 'If the entry was what we are told itwas, why did it take so long for the Romans to execute Jesus?' A large-scale event as portrayed in the Gospels, in which Jesus is loudly proclaimed to be the (future) king of Israel, would have been an act of rebellion that the ",
"score": "1.3437792"
},
{
"id": "27636510",
"title": "Capital Kings",
"text": "GMA Dove Awards ",
"score": "1.3422276"
},
{
"id": "6037657",
"title": "New Administrative Capital",
"text": " The Nativity of Christ is a mega-cathedral, the largest of its kind in Egypt and the Middle East.",
"score": "1.3401212"
},
{
"id": "11964876",
"title": "Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament",
"text": " of the Living God\" (Matthew 16:13), the Son of the Virgin and as God with us (Matthew 1:23). So in Orthodox Christian theology, Jesus Christ is both Most High and Son of Man, whose mystical Body is the Church, and \"of His Kingdom there shall be no end\" (Luke 1:33; Nicene Creed). According to Christian theology, the faithful of Christ will reign with Him over sin, death, and corruption both in this life and in the next (Romans 5:17; 2 Timothy 2:12). This unfolding kingdom is held by Christians to be the fulfillment of the Son-of-Man vision recorded in Daniel 7.",
"score": "1.32951"
},
{
"id": "27899007",
"title": "Caput Mundi",
"text": " was seen as the \"Capital of the World\" because of its prime trading position in the center of the medieval world. This privileged position continued after its Islamic conquest, even as the capital of the Ottoman Empire. The Patriarch of Constantinople has been designated Ecumenical Patriarch since the sixth century, and has come to be regarded as the leader of the today 300 million Orthodox Christians. Today, the city's name is Istanbul, based in Turkey. It is a megacity of 15 million people and the economic and cultural centre of Turkey, but not the capital, which is Ankara. Istanbul is one of the largest cities in the world.",
"score": "1.3219337"
},
{
"id": "26070944",
"title": "Threefold office",
"text": " The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: \"Jesus fulfilled the messianic hope of Israel in his threefold office of priest, prophet, and king.\" In his 5th century Gospel harmony book Harmony of the Gospels Saint Augustine viewed the variations in the gospel accounts in terms of the different focuses of the authors on Jesus: Matthew on royalty, Mark on humanity, Luke on priesthood and John on divinity.",
"score": "1.3196924"
},
{
"id": "12562909",
"title": "Jesus, King of the Jews",
"text": " Jesus, the title \"King of the Jews\" leads to charges against Jesus that result in his crucifixion. The initialism INRI (Iēsus Nazarēnus, Rēx Iūdaeōrum) represents the Latin inscription (in John 19:19), which in English translates to \"Jesus the Nazarene, King of the Jews\", and John 19:20 states that this was written in three languages—Hebrew, Latin, and Greek—during the crucifixion of Jesus. The title \"King of the Jews\" is only used in the New Testament by gentiles, namely by the Magi, Pontius Pilate, and the Roman soldiers. In contrast, the Jewish leaders use the designation \"Christ\", which means \"Messiah\" Although the phrase \"King of the Jews\" is used in most English translations, it has also been translated \"King of the Judeans\" (see Ioudaioi).",
"score": "1.3169651"
},
{
"id": "29408357",
"title": "Tourism in Israel",
"text": "Nazareth is known as the 'Arab capital of Israel'. ; Visit Nazareth's old city and historical sites around the city ; Jesus's hometown and the site of many of his reported acts and miracles. ; Many churches, including The Church of the Annunciation, the largest church building in the Middle East. In Roman Catholic tradition, it marks the site where the Archangel Gabriel announced the future birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:26–31). ; Starting point for the Jesus Trail, a network of hiking routes connecting many sites from Jesus's life and ministry. ",
"score": "1.3139675"
},
{
"id": "10010988",
"title": "!Hero",
"text": " !HERO is a rock opera modernizing Jesus's last two years of life, as narrated in the Bible. The story takes place in New York City, in Brooklyn. The world government in this near-future dystopic Earth is centered under the International Confederation of Nations (I.C.O.N.). Under the iron fist of I.C.O.N., nearly all religion in the world has been wiped out, except for small occult and mystic sects. Only one synagogue in Brooklyn exists. Currently, New York City is a police-occupied warzone between ethnic gangs and small, isolated revolutionary groups fighting I.C.O.N. Of all the ancient world religions, only Judaism survives and flourishes, at least, as much as it can. In Bethlehem, Pensilvania, a child named Jesus, but referred to as Hero, is born and forced to flee with his family to the small Jewish section of Brooklyn. Jesus grows up and begins ",
"score": "1.3137364"
},
{
"id": "12562908",
"title": "Jesus, King of the Jews",
"text": " In the New Testament, Jesus is referred to as the King of the Jews (or King of the Judeans), both at the beginning of his life and at the end. In the Koine Greek of the New Testament, e.g., in John 19:3, this is written as Basileus ton Ioudaion (βασιλεὺς τῶν Ἰουδαίων). Both uses of the title lead to dramatic results in the New Testament accounts. In the account of the nativity of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, the Biblical Magi who come from the east call Jesus the \"King of the Jews\", causing Herod the Great to order the Massacre of the Innocents. Towards the end of the accounts of all four canonical Gospels, in the narrative of the Passion ",
"score": "1.313282"
},
{
"id": "15064820",
"title": "A Capital",
"text": " A Capital (meaning The Capital [City] in English) was a Portuguese afternoon newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal, between 1968 and 2005.",
"score": "1.3117256"
},
{
"id": "32759982",
"title": "Jesus",
"text": " Jesus (c. 4 BC – AD 30 / 33), also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth or Jesus Christ, is the central figure of Christianity, the world's largest religion. He was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader. Most Christians believe he is the incarnation of God the Son and the awaited messiah (the Christ), in the Hebrew Bible. Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed historically. The quest for the historical Jesus has yielded some uncertainty on the historical reliability of the Gospels and on how closely the Jesus portrayed in the New Testament reflects the historical Jesus, as the only records of Jesus' life are contained in the Gospels. Jesus was a Galilean Jew, who was baptized by ",
"score": "1.3115555"
},
{
"id": "2451270",
"title": "Jesus in Manichaeism",
"text": " In Manichaeism, Jesus (Romanization of Parthian and Pahlavi: Yyšw '[Yišō] ) is considered one of the four prophets of this religion, along with Zoroaster, Gautama Buddha and Mani. is also a \"Guiding deity\" who greets the light bodies of the righteous after their deliverance. Before the introduction of Manichaeism to Central Asia, the number of prophets recognized by it was undetermined. After being introduced to Central Asia, it was determined to be five, that is, the above-mentioned four prophets plus the Hindu god Narayana, because Hinduism had a great influence in ancient Central Asia. Mani, the founder of the church, grew up in ",
"score": "1.308316"
},
{
"id": "6506959",
"title": "The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)",
"text": " In Galilee during the Roman Empire, Jesus of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples, healing the blind, raising the dead, exorcising demons and proclaiming the arrival of the Kingdom of God and the salvation of Israel. He claims to be the Son of God and so, therefore, the prophesied Messiah of Israel, which brings him into direct confrontation with the Jewish temple leaders. He is arrested, handed over to the Romans and charged with sedition against the Roman state, of which he is declared innocent by the Roman governor of Judea, but is, nevertheless, crucified at the behest of the Temple leaders. He rises from the dead after three days.",
"score": "1.3081586"
},
{
"id": "3391359",
"title": "Capital Kings (album)",
"text": " Capital Kings is the first studio album by Christian electronic pop band Capital Kings. The album was released on January 8, 2013 and with Gotee Records. Three songs on Capital Kings were released on their EP I Feel So Alive on September 25, 2012.",
"score": "1.3076606"
},
{
"id": "32759996",
"title": "Jesus",
"text": " few of Jesus' words or teachings. The Gospel of Matthew emphasizes that Jesus is the fulfillment of God's will as revealed in the Old Testament, and the Lord of the Church. He is the \"Son of David\", a \"king\", and the messiah. Luke presents Jesus as the divine-human savior who shows compassion to the needy. He is the friend of sinners and outcasts, come to seek and save the lost. This gospel includes well-known parables, such as the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son. The prologue to the Gospel of John identifies Jesus as an incarnation of the divine Word (Logos). As the Word, ",
"score": "1.303578"
}
] | [
"Ecclesiastical capital\n The religious capital or ecclesiastical capital of a region is a place considered pre-eminent by the adherents of a particular religion within that region. This is most often significant for the region's predominant religion or state religion, if any. The administrative headquarters of an organised religion may be centralised in a particular location; for example, Rome for the Catholic Church, or Salt Lake City for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In an episcopal church, the site of the cathedral of the primate bishop of an area may be considered its ecclesiastical capital; for example, Armagh is the seat of the primate of All Ireland in both the Catholic church and the Anglican church. Other places may be considered religious capitals by being centres of learning, such as Qom for Shia Islam in Iran; or places of pilgrimage, such as Jerusalem for the Abrahamic religions and Varanasi for Hinduism.",
"The Visual Bible: Matthew\n In Israel/Palestine/Jordan, then known as Judea (Roman province) of the Roman Empire, Jesus Christ of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples preaching to the people about God and salvation of their souls. He claims to be the son of God and the Messiah. He is arrested by the Romans and crucified. He rises from the dead after three days.",
"Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament\n to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ (Romans 1:1-7, ESV).\"According to the Apostle Paul, the unjust death of the Son of God and His resurrection from the dead result in grace, peace, and an increasing faithful obedience among all nations through the proclamation of the Gospel. The Kingdom of the Son of David, Jesus Christ, is portrayed in the New Testament as being current as He reigns at the right hand of the Father (Hebrews 8:1; Revelation 2:26-27; 20:4-6). It should be no surprise to anyone familiar with the Scriptures that the Throne of the LORD is the ",
"Christmas with a Capital C\n Christmas with a Capital C is a 2010 American Christian drama direct-to-DVD film directed by Helmut Schleppi. The film's plot was based on a song of the same name by Christian band Go Fish, whose name was inspired by one of actor Brad Stine's stand-up comedy routines. It centers on what, in recent years, has been dubbed the \"War on Christmas\" in the United States.",
"Triumphal entry into Jerusalem\n On his entry into the city, Matthew's account suggests that Jesus evoked great excitement - \"all the city was moved\". The people of the city asked \"Who is this?\" and \"the multitudes\" answered, \"This is Jesus, the prophet from Nazareth of Galilee”. In Jesus and Judaism (1985), E. P. Sanders asked: 'If the entry was what we are told itwas, why did it take so long for the Romans to execute Jesus?' A large-scale event as portrayed in the Gospels, in which Jesus is loudly proclaimed to be the (future) king of Israel, would have been an act of rebellion that the ",
"Capital Kings\nGMA Dove Awards ",
"New Administrative Capital\n The Nativity of Christ is a mega-cathedral, the largest of its kind in Egypt and the Middle East.",
"Names and titles of Jesus in the New Testament\n of the Living God\" (Matthew 16:13), the Son of the Virgin and as God with us (Matthew 1:23). So in Orthodox Christian theology, Jesus Christ is both Most High and Son of Man, whose mystical Body is the Church, and \"of His Kingdom there shall be no end\" (Luke 1:33; Nicene Creed). According to Christian theology, the faithful of Christ will reign with Him over sin, death, and corruption both in this life and in the next (Romans 5:17; 2 Timothy 2:12). This unfolding kingdom is held by Christians to be the fulfillment of the Son-of-Man vision recorded in Daniel 7.",
"Caput Mundi\n was seen as the \"Capital of the World\" because of its prime trading position in the center of the medieval world. This privileged position continued after its Islamic conquest, even as the capital of the Ottoman Empire. The Patriarch of Constantinople has been designated Ecumenical Patriarch since the sixth century, and has come to be regarded as the leader of the today 300 million Orthodox Christians. Today, the city's name is Istanbul, based in Turkey. It is a megacity of 15 million people and the economic and cultural centre of Turkey, but not the capital, which is Ankara. Istanbul is one of the largest cities in the world.",
"Threefold office\n The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: \"Jesus fulfilled the messianic hope of Israel in his threefold office of priest, prophet, and king.\" In his 5th century Gospel harmony book Harmony of the Gospels Saint Augustine viewed the variations in the gospel accounts in terms of the different focuses of the authors on Jesus: Matthew on royalty, Mark on humanity, Luke on priesthood and John on divinity.",
"Jesus, King of the Jews\n Jesus, the title \"King of the Jews\" leads to charges against Jesus that result in his crucifixion. The initialism INRI (Iēsus Nazarēnus, Rēx Iūdaeōrum) represents the Latin inscription (in John 19:19), which in English translates to \"Jesus the Nazarene, King of the Jews\", and John 19:20 states that this was written in three languages—Hebrew, Latin, and Greek—during the crucifixion of Jesus. The title \"King of the Jews\" is only used in the New Testament by gentiles, namely by the Magi, Pontius Pilate, and the Roman soldiers. In contrast, the Jewish leaders use the designation \"Christ\", which means \"Messiah\" Although the phrase \"King of the Jews\" is used in most English translations, it has also been translated \"King of the Judeans\" (see Ioudaioi).",
"Tourism in Israel\nNazareth is known as the 'Arab capital of Israel'. ; Visit Nazareth's old city and historical sites around the city ; Jesus's hometown and the site of many of his reported acts and miracles. ; Many churches, including The Church of the Annunciation, the largest church building in the Middle East. In Roman Catholic tradition, it marks the site where the Archangel Gabriel announced the future birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary (Luke 1:26–31). ; Starting point for the Jesus Trail, a network of hiking routes connecting many sites from Jesus's life and ministry. ",
"!Hero\n !HERO is a rock opera modernizing Jesus's last two years of life, as narrated in the Bible. The story takes place in New York City, in Brooklyn. The world government in this near-future dystopic Earth is centered under the International Confederation of Nations (I.C.O.N.). Under the iron fist of I.C.O.N., nearly all religion in the world has been wiped out, except for small occult and mystic sects. Only one synagogue in Brooklyn exists. Currently, New York City is a police-occupied warzone between ethnic gangs and small, isolated revolutionary groups fighting I.C.O.N. Of all the ancient world religions, only Judaism survives and flourishes, at least, as much as it can. In Bethlehem, Pensilvania, a child named Jesus, but referred to as Hero, is born and forced to flee with his family to the small Jewish section of Brooklyn. Jesus grows up and begins ",
"Jesus, King of the Jews\n In the New Testament, Jesus is referred to as the King of the Jews (or King of the Judeans), both at the beginning of his life and at the end. In the Koine Greek of the New Testament, e.g., in John 19:3, this is written as Basileus ton Ioudaion (βασιλεὺς τῶν Ἰουδαίων). Both uses of the title lead to dramatic results in the New Testament accounts. In the account of the nativity of Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew, the Biblical Magi who come from the east call Jesus the \"King of the Jews\", causing Herod the Great to order the Massacre of the Innocents. Towards the end of the accounts of all four canonical Gospels, in the narrative of the Passion ",
"A Capital\n A Capital (meaning The Capital [City] in English) was a Portuguese afternoon newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal, between 1968 and 2005.",
"Jesus\n Jesus (c. 4 BC – AD 30 / 33), also referred to as Jesus of Nazareth or Jesus Christ, is the central figure of Christianity, the world's largest religion. He was a first-century Jewish preacher and religious leader. Most Christians believe he is the incarnation of God the Son and the awaited messiah (the Christ), in the Hebrew Bible. Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed historically. The quest for the historical Jesus has yielded some uncertainty on the historical reliability of the Gospels and on how closely the Jesus portrayed in the New Testament reflects the historical Jesus, as the only records of Jesus' life are contained in the Gospels. Jesus was a Galilean Jew, who was baptized by ",
"Jesus in Manichaeism\n In Manichaeism, Jesus (Romanization of Parthian and Pahlavi: Yyšw '[Yišō] ) is considered one of the four prophets of this religion, along with Zoroaster, Gautama Buddha and Mani. is also a \"Guiding deity\" who greets the light bodies of the righteous after their deliverance. Before the introduction of Manichaeism to Central Asia, the number of prophets recognized by it was undetermined. After being introduced to Central Asia, it was determined to be five, that is, the above-mentioned four prophets plus the Hindu god Narayana, because Hinduism had a great influence in ancient Central Asia. Mani, the founder of the church, grew up in ",
"The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)\n In Galilee during the Roman Empire, Jesus of Nazareth travels around the country with his disciples, healing the blind, raising the dead, exorcising demons and proclaiming the arrival of the Kingdom of God and the salvation of Israel. He claims to be the Son of God and so, therefore, the prophesied Messiah of Israel, which brings him into direct confrontation with the Jewish temple leaders. He is arrested, handed over to the Romans and charged with sedition against the Roman state, of which he is declared innocent by the Roman governor of Judea, but is, nevertheless, crucified at the behest of the Temple leaders. He rises from the dead after three days.",
"Capital Kings (album)\n Capital Kings is the first studio album by Christian electronic pop band Capital Kings. The album was released on January 8, 2013 and with Gotee Records. Three songs on Capital Kings were released on their EP I Feel So Alive on September 25, 2012.",
"Jesus\n few of Jesus' words or teachings. The Gospel of Matthew emphasizes that Jesus is the fulfillment of God's will as revealed in the Old Testament, and the Lord of the Church. He is the \"Son of David\", a \"king\", and the messiah. Luke presents Jesus as the divine-human savior who shows compassion to the needy. He is the friend of sinners and outcasts, come to seek and save the lost. This gospel includes well-known parables, such as the Good Samaritan and the Prodigal Son. The prologue to the Gospel of John identifies Jesus as an incarnation of the divine Word (Logos). As the Word, "
] |
What is the religion of Ricardo Watty Urquidi? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Ricardo Watty Urquidi | 461,016 | 75 | [
{
"id": "9143726",
"title": "Ricardo Watty Urquidi",
"text": " Ricardo Watty Urquidi (July 16, 1938 – November 1, 2011) was the Roman Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Tepic in Nayarit, Mexico. Born in San Diego, California, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1968. In 1980 he was named bishop. He died in Tepic on November 1, 2011, aged 73, from pancreatic cancer.",
"score": "1.7966602"
},
{
"id": "25865552",
"title": "Luis Urquidi",
"text": " Luis Enrique Urquidi Holberton (3 October 1935−3 March 1994) was a Chilean musician and folklorist. Despite he was born in Antofagasta, Urquidi was grew up in Valparaíso, where then joined the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso School of Law, career which he didn't end. Similarly, he was part of the nationalist band Los Cuatro Cuartos in the 1960s, decade where he helped to Willy Bascuñán to compose Los Viejos Estandartes («The Old Military Banners»), song which later was officialy established as the anthem of the Chilean Army (1976). A strong oppositor to the socialist president Salvador Allende, after the 1973 coup d'état, he supported the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet through the creation of other marches like «Alborada», which honored the coup with allusions to September 11th. By the other hand, in 1971 he already was ruler of Santiago and in 1989 he failed to be elected as deputy for the 19th District composed by Independencia and Recoleta.",
"score": "1.4123249"
},
{
"id": "27402765",
"title": "Roman Catholic Diocese of Nuevo Laredo",
"text": "Ricardo Watty Urquidi, M.Sp.S. (1989–2008), appointed Bishop of Tepic, Nayarit ; Gustavo Rodríguez Vega (2008-2015), appointed Archbishop of Yucatán ; Enrique Sanchez Martinez (2015- ) ",
"score": "1.3778638"
},
{
"id": "2088736",
"title": "Mestre Irineu",
"text": " Raimundo Irineu Serra, also known as Mestre (Master) Irineu, (December 15, 1892 São Vicente Ferrer, Maranhão, Brazil — July 6, 1971) was the founder of a syncretic religion known as Santo Daime. Irineu was raised Roman Catholic. He later moved to the state of Acre where he worked on rubber plantations. In the city of Brasiléia, which is close to the border of Bolivia, he was in contact with other people from his home state of Maranhão as well as Bolivians, from whom he learned the use of ayahuasca. In these early experiences he encountered the Virgin Mary (the Queen of the Forest) and began receiving the guidance which developed into a religious doctrine throughout the remainder of his long life.",
"score": "1.3411654"
},
{
"id": "1623014",
"title": "Ricardo Duchesne",
"text": " Ricardo Duchesne is a Puerto Rican-born Canadian historical sociologist and former professor at the University of New Brunswick. His main research interests are Western civilization, the rise of the West, and multiculturalism. Duchesne's views on immigration and multiculturalism have been described as racist and white nationalist. He has denied being a racist to the mainstream press, but has described himself as being \"the only academic in Canada, and possibly the Western world, who questions the ideology of diversity while advocating white identity politics.\"",
"score": "1.3194581"
},
{
"id": "6572833",
"title": "Religion in Argentina",
"text": " Besides mainstream religious practices, there are also a number of unconventional practices, usually part of local folklore. One of the most famous is the veneration of La Difunta Correa (\"The Deceased Correa\"). Many other beliefs in advocations of the Virgin, saints and other religious characters exist throughout the country, which are locally or regionally popular and church-endorsed. Another popular cult is that of the Gauchito Gil (\"the little gaucho Gil\", Antonio Mamerto Gil Núñez), born in the province of Corrientes (allegedly in 1847). Gil was forced to enlist to fight in the civil war, but he deserted and became an outlaw à la Robin Hood. From the Río Negro Province, Ceferino Namuncurá, son of the Mapuche cacique Manuel Namuncurá, is also ",
"score": "1.3142867"
},
{
"id": "28332079",
"title": "Evo Morales and the Catholic Church",
"text": " In June 2006, Felix Patzi incurred organizational opposition against the Morales government's ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" Patzi said that he wanted to end \"the religious monopoly\" of the Catholic faith in schools and allow all faiths to be taught, \"from oriental religions to those practiced by our native peoples.\" He said he would end the policy that made Catholic religious classes obligatory for students, and called the existing system \"colonial\". In an interview with the newspaper La Razon, Patz said, \"In Bolivia the people are not only Catholic, but also of other religious faiths.\" He stated ",
"score": "1.3116865"
},
{
"id": "9446502",
"title": "Domestic policy of the Evo Morales administration",
"text": " In June 2005, Minister Felix Patzi brought organizational opposition against the Morales governments' ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" After mass protests led by the Catholic hierarchy this proposal was shelved by Morales.",
"score": "1.3058836"
},
{
"id": "4544296",
"title": "Religious syncretism",
"text": " Many historical Native American religious movements have incorporated Christian European influence, like the Native American Church, the Ghost Dance, and the religion of Handsome Lake. Santo Daime is a syncretic religion founded in Brazil that incorporates elements of several religious or spiritual traditions including Folk Catholicism, Kardecist Spiritism, African animism and indigenous South American shamanism, including vegetalismo. Unitarian Universalism also provides an example of a modern syncretic religion. It traces its roots to Universalist and Unitarian Christian congregations. However, modern Unitarian Universalism freely incorporates elements from other religious and non-religious traditions, so that it no longer identifies as \"Christian.\" The Theosophical Society professes to go beyond being a syncretic movement that combines deities into an elaborate Spiritual Hierarchy, and assembles evidence that points to ",
"score": "1.2992032"
},
{
"id": "8944865",
"title": "Religion in South America",
"text": " Brazil is the country with more practitioners in the world of Allan Kardec's codification of the Spiritism, followed by over 12 million people, with 30 to 45 million sympathizers. Most followers of the Spiritism are people that were mostly Catholic, Protestants and Atheists respectively. Chico Xavier wrote over 490 books, which complements the spiritualist doctrine.",
"score": "1.29562"
},
{
"id": "3388528",
"title": "Republicans (Brazil)",
"text": " and Candomblé religions. Edir Macedo considered participating in presidential elections in order to transform Brazil into a theocratic state. As mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Crivella called the Carnival of Rio de Janeiro an \"un-Christian excess\" and ordered severe financial cuts for the organisers. Furthermore, he is known for statements of religious intolerance. In his 1999 book Evangelizing Africa, he claimed that homosexuality is a \"terrible evil,\" that Catholics are \"demonic\", that African religions are based on \"evil spirits,\" and that Hindus drink their children's blood. He has since tried to distance himself from the book, saying that it was the work of a young, immature missionary.",
"score": "1.2914405"
},
{
"id": "2993256",
"title": "Mestre Gabriel",
"text": " José Gabriel da Costa, later known as Mestre Gabriel, (1922–1971), is the founder of the União do Vegetal, a Christian religious sect that considers Hoasca (more commonly referred to as \"ayahuasca\") to be its main sacrament. This beverage is made by boiling two plants, Mariri (Banisteriopsis caapi) and Chacrona (Psychotria viridis), both of which are found in the Amazon rainforest. Mestre Gabriel was born on February 10 in Coração de Maria, in the state of Bahia, Brazil. He received minimal education and moved to Acre, Brazil, later becoming a rubber tapper in the Amazon region. It was through his work as a rubber tapper that Mestre Gabriel first encountered Hoasca; receiving what he believed to be revelations, he created the UDV on July 22, 1961, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, organizing a coherent ",
"score": "1.2885977"
},
{
"id": "4995411",
"title": "Diablada",
"text": " animals that appear in Uru mythology such as ants, lizards, toads, and snakes. Bolivian anthropologist Milton Eyzaguirre adds that the ancient cultures of the Bolivian Andes practiced a death cult called cupay, with that term eventually evolving into supay or the devil figure in the modern Diablada. Due to syncretism caused by Spanish influence in later centuries, Tiw was eventually associated with the devil; Spanish authorities also outlawed several of the ancient traditions but incorporated others into Christian theology. Local and regional Diablada festivals arose during the Spanish colonial period and were eventually consolidated as the Carnaval de Oruro in the modern city of that name. ...The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but ",
"score": "1.2776415"
},
{
"id": "804858",
"title": "Ricardo Forster",
"text": " Ricardo Forster (born 26 September 1957) is an Argentine philosopher, historian of ideas and political critic. He is professor and researcher at Universidad de Buenos Aires and University of Maryland. He is also member of the editorial board of Pensamiento de los Confines magazine. Along with Horacio Verbitsky, Nicolás Casullo and others created Espacio Carta Abierta (\"Open Letter Spot\"), a propagandistic group in defense of the Kirchner government, in 2008, after an attempt to raise taxes on agricultural exports led to large street protests. He also had a small incursion in television as presenter of \"Grandes pensadores del siglo XX\" (\"Greatest thinkers of 20th-century\") in Encuentro, in years 2009–2010. In 2013, he ran for National Deputy representing the city of Buenos Aires. He was fourth on the list ",
"score": "1.2768849"
},
{
"id": "28332058",
"title": "Evo Morales and the Catholic Church",
"text": " a Catholic. Morales, like many rural Bolivians, was raised with a combination of Catholicism and belief in the Pachamama in addition to Ekeko. Other indigenous leaders, such as Felix Patzi, follow a pure indigenous faith and reject Christianity. Even though there are leaders within this faith, there has not been a shift amongst Bolivians to become 'indigenous-belief only'. Morales later commented that he is only a Roman Catholic in order to attend wedding ceremonies and when asked if he believed in God, he responded: \"I believe in the land. In my father and my mother. And in cuchi-cuchi (sexual activity).\" The special status that used to be given to Catholicism in Bolivia can be seen in Article 3 of the former Bolivian Constitution (1967), which says, ",
"score": "1.2768567"
},
{
"id": "3306241",
"title": "Manuel Jacques",
"text": " Manuel Jacques Parraguez, is a Chilean lawyer, academic and politician. He is President of the Izquierda Cristiana (Christian Left Party of Chile) and a professor at the Universidad Bolivariana de Chile. For the 2005 Chilean presidential election he competed in the primary election for the Juntos Podemos Más electoral pact. The pact was ultimately represented by Tomás Hirsch, who won around 5% of the vote.",
"score": "1.2766374"
},
{
"id": "2399487",
"title": "Baháʼí Faith in Paraguay",
"text": " joined the religion in 1964. Segundo was a member of a Guarani tribe, the Chaco . In 1965 actual contact with the Chaco tribe began. In 1966 a Paraguayan pioneer reached a goal location - Ushuaia. By 1968 there were 8 local assemblies and in 1969 members of the Chulupi speaking and Lengua tribes had converted to the religion and first all-Indian institute in northern Gran Chaco area, in Paraguay with members of the Guarani, Guasurango, (a Tapieté speaking) and Chulupi attending. In 1970 the first Yanaigua (another Tapieté speaking) tribe member joined the religion and that year was first time an indigenous Baháʼí was elected to the national assembly, (in 1982 there were three indigenous members of the national assembly.) And in 1977 a radio campaign began.",
"score": "1.2763159"
},
{
"id": "28764965",
"title": "José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes",
"text": " José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes (born 9 October 1968) is a Spanish philosopher of law and politician of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) who has been serving as Minister of Culture and Sport in the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez since 2020. He is also a member of the PSOE's federal executive board. Rodríguez Uribes was a member of the Assembly of Madrid from 2019 to 2020. He served as Government Delegate in the Community of Madrid between 2018 and 2019.",
"score": "1.2714233"
},
{
"id": "6795718",
"title": "Juan Francisco Urquidi",
"text": " Urquidi was born on 16 July 1881 in Mexico City into a wealthy family with ancestry in Chihuahua. His father was Francisco de Paula Urquidi Cárdeña (1821-1881) and his mother Catalina Márquez Barraza (1835-1896). He completed high school at Dean Academy in Franklin, Massachusetts, and eventually graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. He died on 14 December 1938 in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.2709332"
},
{
"id": "7508008",
"title": "Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant",
"text": " The movement has been described as being syncretic in nature, combining Jewish and Adventist theology with Inca mysticism and spirituality together with a Maoist view on politics and economics. During his lifetime Atacusi gradually diminished the spiritual importance of Jesus Christ in the religion and elevated his own. The Guardian described him as \"a self-styled spiritual leader who called himself the 'Christ of the west'\". The movement has also had strong apocalyptic beliefs, as Ataucusi would often state that the end of the world was nearing and would preach that he had personally delayed such end-of-the-world events. Members of the Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant adhere to strict interpretation of the Old Testament, and observe the Shabbat, ceasing all secular actives such as business or sports from sunset on Friday to sunset on Saturday. In addition to following the dress code prescribed in the Bible, they also believe in the separation of sexes, including at religious services. They also believe in offering animal sacrifices in their religious ceremonies. Similar to other followers of Incan spirituality, many ascribe mystical qualities to the coca plant, although members may not smoke tobacco or drink alcohol.",
"score": "1.2707851"
}
] | [
"Ricardo Watty Urquidi\n Ricardo Watty Urquidi (July 16, 1938 – November 1, 2011) was the Roman Catholic bishop of the Diocese of Tepic in Nayarit, Mexico. Born in San Diego, California, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1968. In 1980 he was named bishop. He died in Tepic on November 1, 2011, aged 73, from pancreatic cancer.",
"Luis Urquidi\n Luis Enrique Urquidi Holberton (3 October 1935−3 March 1994) was a Chilean musician and folklorist. Despite he was born in Antofagasta, Urquidi was grew up in Valparaíso, where then joined the Pontifical Catholic University of Valparaíso School of Law, career which he didn't end. Similarly, he was part of the nationalist band Los Cuatro Cuartos in the 1960s, decade where he helped to Willy Bascuñán to compose Los Viejos Estandartes («The Old Military Banners»), song which later was officialy established as the anthem of the Chilean Army (1976). A strong oppositor to the socialist president Salvador Allende, after the 1973 coup d'état, he supported the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet through the creation of other marches like «Alborada», which honored the coup with allusions to September 11th. By the other hand, in 1971 he already was ruler of Santiago and in 1989 he failed to be elected as deputy for the 19th District composed by Independencia and Recoleta.",
"Roman Catholic Diocese of Nuevo Laredo\nRicardo Watty Urquidi, M.Sp.S. (1989–2008), appointed Bishop of Tepic, Nayarit ; Gustavo Rodríguez Vega (2008-2015), appointed Archbishop of Yucatán ; Enrique Sanchez Martinez (2015- ) ",
"Mestre Irineu\n Raimundo Irineu Serra, also known as Mestre (Master) Irineu, (December 15, 1892 São Vicente Ferrer, Maranhão, Brazil — July 6, 1971) was the founder of a syncretic religion known as Santo Daime. Irineu was raised Roman Catholic. He later moved to the state of Acre where he worked on rubber plantations. In the city of Brasiléia, which is close to the border of Bolivia, he was in contact with other people from his home state of Maranhão as well as Bolivians, from whom he learned the use of ayahuasca. In these early experiences he encountered the Virgin Mary (the Queen of the Forest) and began receiving the guidance which developed into a religious doctrine throughout the remainder of his long life.",
"Ricardo Duchesne\n Ricardo Duchesne is a Puerto Rican-born Canadian historical sociologist and former professor at the University of New Brunswick. His main research interests are Western civilization, the rise of the West, and multiculturalism. Duchesne's views on immigration and multiculturalism have been described as racist and white nationalist. He has denied being a racist to the mainstream press, but has described himself as being \"the only academic in Canada, and possibly the Western world, who questions the ideology of diversity while advocating white identity politics.\"",
"Religion in Argentina\n Besides mainstream religious practices, there are also a number of unconventional practices, usually part of local folklore. One of the most famous is the veneration of La Difunta Correa (\"The Deceased Correa\"). Many other beliefs in advocations of the Virgin, saints and other religious characters exist throughout the country, which are locally or regionally popular and church-endorsed. Another popular cult is that of the Gauchito Gil (\"the little gaucho Gil\", Antonio Mamerto Gil Núñez), born in the province of Corrientes (allegedly in 1847). Gil was forced to enlist to fight in the civil war, but he deserted and became an outlaw à la Robin Hood. From the Río Negro Province, Ceferino Namuncurá, son of the Mapuche cacique Manuel Namuncurá, is also ",
"Evo Morales and the Catholic Church\n In June 2006, Felix Patzi incurred organizational opposition against the Morales government's ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" Patzi said that he wanted to end \"the religious monopoly\" of the Catholic faith in schools and allow all faiths to be taught, \"from oriental religions to those practiced by our native peoples.\" He said he would end the policy that made Catholic religious classes obligatory for students, and called the existing system \"colonial\". In an interview with the newspaper La Razon, Patz said, \"In Bolivia the people are not only Catholic, but also of other religious faiths.\" He stated ",
"Domestic policy of the Evo Morales administration\n In June 2005, Minister Felix Patzi brought organizational opposition against the Morales governments' ideas when he declared that \"Catholicism would no longer be 'the official' religion taught at schools.\" After mass protests led by the Catholic hierarchy this proposal was shelved by Morales.",
"Religious syncretism\n Many historical Native American religious movements have incorporated Christian European influence, like the Native American Church, the Ghost Dance, and the religion of Handsome Lake. Santo Daime is a syncretic religion founded in Brazil that incorporates elements of several religious or spiritual traditions including Folk Catholicism, Kardecist Spiritism, African animism and indigenous South American shamanism, including vegetalismo. Unitarian Universalism also provides an example of a modern syncretic religion. It traces its roots to Universalist and Unitarian Christian congregations. However, modern Unitarian Universalism freely incorporates elements from other religious and non-religious traditions, so that it no longer identifies as \"Christian.\" The Theosophical Society professes to go beyond being a syncretic movement that combines deities into an elaborate Spiritual Hierarchy, and assembles evidence that points to ",
"Religion in South America\n Brazil is the country with more practitioners in the world of Allan Kardec's codification of the Spiritism, followed by over 12 million people, with 30 to 45 million sympathizers. Most followers of the Spiritism are people that were mostly Catholic, Protestants and Atheists respectively. Chico Xavier wrote over 490 books, which complements the spiritualist doctrine.",
"Republicans (Brazil)\n and Candomblé religions. Edir Macedo considered participating in presidential elections in order to transform Brazil into a theocratic state. As mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Crivella called the Carnival of Rio de Janeiro an \"un-Christian excess\" and ordered severe financial cuts for the organisers. Furthermore, he is known for statements of religious intolerance. In his 1999 book Evangelizing Africa, he claimed that homosexuality is a \"terrible evil,\" that Catholics are \"demonic\", that African religions are based on \"evil spirits,\" and that Hindus drink their children's blood. He has since tried to distance himself from the book, saying that it was the work of a young, immature missionary.",
"Mestre Gabriel\n José Gabriel da Costa, later known as Mestre Gabriel, (1922–1971), is the founder of the União do Vegetal, a Christian religious sect that considers Hoasca (more commonly referred to as \"ayahuasca\") to be its main sacrament. This beverage is made by boiling two plants, Mariri (Banisteriopsis caapi) and Chacrona (Psychotria viridis), both of which are found in the Amazon rainforest. Mestre Gabriel was born on February 10 in Coração de Maria, in the state of Bahia, Brazil. He received minimal education and moved to Acre, Brazil, later becoming a rubber tapper in the Amazon region. It was through his work as a rubber tapper that Mestre Gabriel first encountered Hoasca; receiving what he believed to be revelations, he created the UDV on July 22, 1961, on the border between Brazil and Bolivia, organizing a coherent ",
"Diablada\n animals that appear in Uru mythology such as ants, lizards, toads, and snakes. Bolivian anthropologist Milton Eyzaguirre adds that the ancient cultures of the Bolivian Andes practiced a death cult called cupay, with that term eventually evolving into supay or the devil figure in the modern Diablada. Due to syncretism caused by Spanish influence in later centuries, Tiw was eventually associated with the devil; Spanish authorities also outlawed several of the ancient traditions but incorporated others into Christian theology. Local and regional Diablada festivals arose during the Spanish colonial period and were eventually consolidated as the Carnaval de Oruro in the modern city of that name. ...The Spanish banned these ceremonies in the seventeenth century, but ",
"Ricardo Forster\n Ricardo Forster (born 26 September 1957) is an Argentine philosopher, historian of ideas and political critic. He is professor and researcher at Universidad de Buenos Aires and University of Maryland. He is also member of the editorial board of Pensamiento de los Confines magazine. Along with Horacio Verbitsky, Nicolás Casullo and others created Espacio Carta Abierta (\"Open Letter Spot\"), a propagandistic group in defense of the Kirchner government, in 2008, after an attempt to raise taxes on agricultural exports led to large street protests. He also had a small incursion in television as presenter of \"Grandes pensadores del siglo XX\" (\"Greatest thinkers of 20th-century\") in Encuentro, in years 2009–2010. In 2013, he ran for National Deputy representing the city of Buenos Aires. He was fourth on the list ",
"Evo Morales and the Catholic Church\n a Catholic. Morales, like many rural Bolivians, was raised with a combination of Catholicism and belief in the Pachamama in addition to Ekeko. Other indigenous leaders, such as Felix Patzi, follow a pure indigenous faith and reject Christianity. Even though there are leaders within this faith, there has not been a shift amongst Bolivians to become 'indigenous-belief only'. Morales later commented that he is only a Roman Catholic in order to attend wedding ceremonies and when asked if he believed in God, he responded: \"I believe in the land. In my father and my mother. And in cuchi-cuchi (sexual activity).\" The special status that used to be given to Catholicism in Bolivia can be seen in Article 3 of the former Bolivian Constitution (1967), which says, ",
"Manuel Jacques\n Manuel Jacques Parraguez, is a Chilean lawyer, academic and politician. He is President of the Izquierda Cristiana (Christian Left Party of Chile) and a professor at the Universidad Bolivariana de Chile. For the 2005 Chilean presidential election he competed in the primary election for the Juntos Podemos Más electoral pact. The pact was ultimately represented by Tomás Hirsch, who won around 5% of the vote.",
"Baháʼí Faith in Paraguay\n joined the religion in 1964. Segundo was a member of a Guarani tribe, the Chaco . In 1965 actual contact with the Chaco tribe began. In 1966 a Paraguayan pioneer reached a goal location - Ushuaia. By 1968 there were 8 local assemblies and in 1969 members of the Chulupi speaking and Lengua tribes had converted to the religion and first all-Indian institute in northern Gran Chaco area, in Paraguay with members of the Guarani, Guasurango, (a Tapieté speaking) and Chulupi attending. In 1970 the first Yanaigua (another Tapieté speaking) tribe member joined the religion and that year was first time an indigenous Baháʼí was elected to the national assembly, (in 1982 there were three indigenous members of the national assembly.) And in 1977 a radio campaign began.",
"José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes\n José Manuel Rodríguez Uribes (born 9 October 1968) is a Spanish philosopher of law and politician of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) who has been serving as Minister of Culture and Sport in the government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez since 2020. He is also a member of the PSOE's federal executive board. Rodríguez Uribes was a member of the Assembly of Madrid from 2019 to 2020. He served as Government Delegate in the Community of Madrid between 2018 and 2019.",
"Juan Francisco Urquidi\n Urquidi was born on 16 July 1881 in Mexico City into a wealthy family with ancestry in Chihuahua. His father was Francisco de Paula Urquidi Cárdeña (1821-1881) and his mother Catalina Márquez Barraza (1835-1896). He completed high school at Dean Academy in Franklin, Massachusetts, and eventually graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a bachelor's degree in civil engineering. He died on 14 December 1938 in Mexico City.",
"Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant\n The movement has been described as being syncretic in nature, combining Jewish and Adventist theology with Inca mysticism and spirituality together with a Maoist view on politics and economics. During his lifetime Atacusi gradually diminished the spiritual importance of Jesus Christ in the religion and elevated his own. The Guardian described him as \"a self-styled spiritual leader who called himself the 'Christ of the west'\". The movement has also had strong apocalyptic beliefs, as Ataucusi would often state that the end of the world was nearing and would preach that he had personally delayed such end-of-the-world events. Members of the Evangelical Association of the Israelite Mission of the New Universal Covenant adhere to strict interpretation of the Old Testament, and observe the Shabbat, ceasing all secular actives such as business or sports from sunset on Friday to sunset on Saturday. In addition to following the dress code prescribed in the Bible, they also believe in the separation of sexes, including at religious services. They also believe in offering animal sacrifices in their religious ceremonies. Similar to other followers of Incan spirituality, many ascribe mystical qualities to the coca plant, although members may not smoke tobacco or drink alcohol."
] |
What is Jean-Marie-Victor Viel's occupation? | [
"architect"
] | occupation | Jean-Marie-Victor Viel | 1,484,274 | 74 | [
{
"id": "6627017",
"title": "Jean-Marie-Victor Viel",
"text": " Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863) was a French architect who designed the Palais de l'Industrie, an exhibition hall located between the Seine River and the Champs-Élysées which was erected for the Paris World Fair in 1855.",
"score": "1.5050858"
},
{
"id": "14800830",
"title": "Viel (name)",
"text": "Alain Viel, French educator ; Cristián Viel (born 1967), Argentine rugby union player ; Felipe Viel (born 1971), Chilean actor ; Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863), French architect ; Marguerite Viel, French screenwriter and film director ; Mattia Viel (born 1995), Italian cyclist ; Nicolas Viel (died 1625), French missionary ; Placide Viel (1815–1877), French nun and mother general ; Roger Viel (1902–1981), French athlete ; Sabrina Viel (born 1973), Italian ice hockey player ; Tanguy Viel (born 1973), French writer ",
"score": "1.4761181"
},
{
"id": "13509025",
"title": "Jeffrey Viel",
"text": " Viel was born on January 28, 1997, in Rimouski, Quebec, Canada.",
"score": "1.4513865"
},
{
"id": "14800829",
"title": "Viel (name)",
"text": "Viel Bjerkeset Andersen (born 1963), Norwegian artist ",
"score": "1.4374986"
},
{
"id": "12059208",
"title": "Joseph-Marie Vien",
"text": " Joseph-Marie Vien (sometimes anglicised as Joseph-Mary Wien; 18 June 1716 – 27 March 1809) was a French painter. He was the last holder of the post of Premier peintre du Roi, serving from 1789 to 1791.",
"score": "1.4373686"
},
{
"id": "12428310",
"title": "Jean-Marie",
"text": " Catholic Church ; Jean-Marie Atangana Mebara, a Cameroonian politician ; Jean-Marie Messier (born 1956), a French businessman ; Jean-Marie Mokole, a member of the Pan-African Parliament ; Jean-Marie Mondelet (circa 1771–1843), a notary and political figure in Lower Canada ; Jean-Marie Morel (1728–1810), a French architect ; Jean-Marie Musy (1876–1952), a Swiss politician ; Jean-Marie Neff (born 1961), a French racewalker ; Jean-Marie Pallardy (born 1940), a French film director ; Jean-Marie Pelt (born 1933), a French botanist ; Jean-Marie Peretti, a French researcher and teacher in human resources management ; Jean-Marie Perrot (1877–1943), a Breton priest ; Jean-Marie Pfaff (born 1953), a Belgian former football goalkeeper ; Jean-Marie Poiré (born 1945), a ",
"score": "1.411268"
},
{
"id": "28089652",
"title": "Jean-Marie Poumeyrol",
"text": " Jean-Marie Poumeyrol (born at Libourne on June 8, 1946) is a French artist. Much of his early work consisted of erotica and hallucinogenic art, but as his art has developed he has shown a great interest in landscapes as well. He is an exponent of the fantastic realism movement.",
"score": "1.4025325"
},
{
"id": "29649743",
"title": "Victorin Lurel",
"text": " Victorin Lurel (born 20 August 1951 in Vieux-Habitants, Guadeloupe) is a French politician who represented the 4th district of Guadeloupe in the French National Assembly from 2002 to 2012. He also served as the President of the Regional Council of the French overseas department of Guadeloupe from 2004 until 2015. His term began on 22 April 2004 and was renewed on 14 March 2010. In May 2012, he was made the Minister of Overseas France in Jean-Marc Ayrault's cabinet and was replaced in the national assembly by his supplementary candidate Hélène Vainqueur-Christophe. However, on 23 March 2014, he lost the local elections in Vieux-Habitants, and as of 2 April 2014, he was not reappointed to the Valls Cabinet. On December 13, 2015, he lost the regional elections in Guadeloupe.",
"score": "1.4002552"
},
{
"id": "32322315",
"title": "Victor-Jean Nicolle",
"text": " Victor-Jean Nicolle (1754–1826) was a French artist. Nicolle was born in the city of Paris. He revealed his talent for landscape compositions at an early age when, in 1771, as a pupil of the Royal School of Drawing he won the Perspective Prize. He acquired a passion for depicting the architecture of classical ruins and in pursuit of this passion he embarked on a journey throughout southern Europe- Italy (Venice, Bologna, Florence, Naples and Rome) as well as France. Fascinated by Rome, he made two trips there, 1787–1789 and 1806–1811, to draw the buildings. Victor-Jean Nicolle's compositions include such works as the Pont Neuf seen through a circular window in the Louvre (shortly after 1808) which illustrates the view taken from one of the circular windows behind the colonnade of the east front of the Louvre, in Paris, hence the title of his work. His work forms a significant historic and topographical record of urban settings.",
"score": "1.3956639"
},
{
"id": "12428307",
"title": "Jean-Marie",
"text": "Jean-Marie Abgrall (born 1950), a French psychiatrist, criminologist, specialist in forensic medicine, cult expert, and graduate in criminal law ; Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879–1962), a French Admiral and Minister of Marine of France ; Jean-Marie Andre (born 1944), a Belgian scientist ; Jean-Marie Auberson (1920–2004), a Swiss conductor and violinist ; Jean-Marie Balestre (born 1921), a president of FISA ; Jean-Marie Basset (born 1943), a French chemist ; Jean-Marie Beaupuy (born 1943), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Benjamin, a priest ; Jean-Marie Beurel (1813–1872), a French Roman Catholic priest ; Jean-Marie Bockel (born 1950), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Buchet, a Belgian film director ; Jean-Marie Cavada (born 1940), a French politician ; ",
"score": "1.3853632"
},
{
"id": "8796124",
"title": "Jean-Victor Schnetz",
"text": " Jean-Victor Schnetz (April 14, 1787 in Versailles – March 15, 1870 in Paris) was a French academic painter well regarded for his historical and genre paintings.",
"score": "1.3748698"
},
{
"id": "2313247",
"title": "Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron",
"text": " Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron was born in 1944. He entered the École normale supérieure de Saint-Cloud in 1965. He received the Agrégation in 1969 and a Doctorate in Philosophy in 1976.",
"score": "1.374255"
},
{
"id": "4873194",
"title": "Nicolas Sansu",
"text": " Pascal Blanc was born in Vierzon, France on 1968. He announced in October 2019 to be a candidate for the 3rd time in the municipal election in Vierzon. He also member of the UNEF-SE national office during his studies, he holds a diploma of advanced studies in economic sciences. He is elected mayor by the new municipal council.",
"score": "1.3731594"
},
{
"id": "2313246",
"title": "Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron",
"text": " Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron (born 19 April 1944) is a French Roman Catholic philosopher. He is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Poitiers and Professor of the Philosophy of Religion at the Institut Catholique de Paris. He is the author of many books about Bergson and Hegel. He is an expert on spiritualism.",
"score": "1.3574071"
},
{
"id": "11951127",
"title": "Victor-Charles Mahillon",
"text": " Victor-Charles Mahillon (March 10, 1841 in Brussels – June 17, 1924 in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France) was a Belgian musician, instrument builder and writer on musical topics. He was the founder and first curator of the Musée instrumental du Conservatoire Royal de Musique, known today as the Musical Instrument Museum. He built, collected, and described more than 1500 musical instruments.",
"score": "1.3554258"
},
{
"id": "31950771",
"title": "Nicolas Viel",
"text": " Father Nicolas Viel, O.M.R., (died 25 June 1625) was a French Recollect missionary to the Hurons from 1623 to 1625.",
"score": "1.3539295"
},
{
"id": "14057521",
"title": "Vierzon",
"text": "Félix Pyat (1810–1889), politician and journalist ; Édouard Vaillant (1840–1915), politician ; Eugène Baudin (1853–1918), porcelain worker and left-wing politician Jacques Brel, a Belgian singer, made the city famous with his song \"Vesoul\" (1968).",
"score": "1.352056"
},
{
"id": "16401415",
"title": "Jean Glénisson",
"text": "Degree in literature at the Faculty of Arts of Poitiers, (1940) ; Studies at the École nationale des chartes ; Archivist paleographer (1946) ; Member of the École française de Rome (1946–1948) ; Curator at the Archives nationales (1950–1952), responsible for the Trésor des Chartes ; Head of the Archives of the French Equatorial Africa library in Brazzaville (1952–1957) ; Professor of historiography at the University of São Paulo in Brazil ; Chargé de conférences (1959–1963) then director of studies at the VIe section of the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE) (1963) ; Director of the (1964 to 1986) ; Member of the International Committee of Latin paleography, successor of Jeanne Vielliard as director of the IRHT (1966–1992). A text editor, historian of medieval administration, including papal but also from Aunis and Saintonge, Glénisson also supported the introduction of laboratory techniques and computer analysis in order to study manuscript books.",
"score": "1.3470261"
},
{
"id": "12633094",
"title": "Alain Viel",
"text": " Alain Viel is the director of Northwest Undergraduate Laboratories and senior lecturer in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University.",
"score": "1.3457804"
},
{
"id": "29563249",
"title": "Jean-François Roux",
"text": " Jean-François Roux (born February 19, 1973) is a politician from Quebec, Canada. He was an Action démocratique du Québec Member of the National Assembly for the electoral district of Arthabaska from 2007 to 2008. Roux was born in Victoriaville, Quebec. He studied psychology and philosophy at Bishop's University but did not complete a degree. He worked as a director for several small businesses in Victoriaville including a director for sales and director for projects. He was also a football instructor for two secondary school football team as well as a community radio host for Bishop's University's CJMQ-FM. He was also the founder of the pastoral collegiate council at the Cégep de Victoriaville. He was first elected in the 2007 election with 42% of the vote. Liberal incumbent Claude Bachand, finished second with 30% of the vote. Roux took office on April 12, 2007 and was named the critic for regions until May 2008.",
"score": "1.3453796"
}
] | [
"Jean-Marie-Victor Viel\n Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863) was a French architect who designed the Palais de l'Industrie, an exhibition hall located between the Seine River and the Champs-Élysées which was erected for the Paris World Fair in 1855.",
"Viel (name)\nAlain Viel, French educator ; Cristián Viel (born 1967), Argentine rugby union player ; Felipe Viel (born 1971), Chilean actor ; Jean-Marie-Victor Viel (1796–1863), French architect ; Marguerite Viel, French screenwriter and film director ; Mattia Viel (born 1995), Italian cyclist ; Nicolas Viel (died 1625), French missionary ; Placide Viel (1815–1877), French nun and mother general ; Roger Viel (1902–1981), French athlete ; Sabrina Viel (born 1973), Italian ice hockey player ; Tanguy Viel (born 1973), French writer ",
"Jeffrey Viel\n Viel was born on January 28, 1997, in Rimouski, Quebec, Canada.",
"Viel (name)\nViel Bjerkeset Andersen (born 1963), Norwegian artist ",
"Joseph-Marie Vien\n Joseph-Marie Vien (sometimes anglicised as Joseph-Mary Wien; 18 June 1716 – 27 March 1809) was a French painter. He was the last holder of the post of Premier peintre du Roi, serving from 1789 to 1791.",
"Jean-Marie\n Catholic Church ; Jean-Marie Atangana Mebara, a Cameroonian politician ; Jean-Marie Messier (born 1956), a French businessman ; Jean-Marie Mokole, a member of the Pan-African Parliament ; Jean-Marie Mondelet (circa 1771–1843), a notary and political figure in Lower Canada ; Jean-Marie Morel (1728–1810), a French architect ; Jean-Marie Musy (1876–1952), a Swiss politician ; Jean-Marie Neff (born 1961), a French racewalker ; Jean-Marie Pallardy (born 1940), a French film director ; Jean-Marie Pelt (born 1933), a French botanist ; Jean-Marie Peretti, a French researcher and teacher in human resources management ; Jean-Marie Perrot (1877–1943), a Breton priest ; Jean-Marie Pfaff (born 1953), a Belgian former football goalkeeper ; Jean-Marie Poiré (born 1945), a ",
"Jean-Marie Poumeyrol\n Jean-Marie Poumeyrol (born at Libourne on June 8, 1946) is a French artist. Much of his early work consisted of erotica and hallucinogenic art, but as his art has developed he has shown a great interest in landscapes as well. He is an exponent of the fantastic realism movement.",
"Victorin Lurel\n Victorin Lurel (born 20 August 1951 in Vieux-Habitants, Guadeloupe) is a French politician who represented the 4th district of Guadeloupe in the French National Assembly from 2002 to 2012. He also served as the President of the Regional Council of the French overseas department of Guadeloupe from 2004 until 2015. His term began on 22 April 2004 and was renewed on 14 March 2010. In May 2012, he was made the Minister of Overseas France in Jean-Marc Ayrault's cabinet and was replaced in the national assembly by his supplementary candidate Hélène Vainqueur-Christophe. However, on 23 March 2014, he lost the local elections in Vieux-Habitants, and as of 2 April 2014, he was not reappointed to the Valls Cabinet. On December 13, 2015, he lost the regional elections in Guadeloupe.",
"Victor-Jean Nicolle\n Victor-Jean Nicolle (1754–1826) was a French artist. Nicolle was born in the city of Paris. He revealed his talent for landscape compositions at an early age when, in 1771, as a pupil of the Royal School of Drawing he won the Perspective Prize. He acquired a passion for depicting the architecture of classical ruins and in pursuit of this passion he embarked on a journey throughout southern Europe- Italy (Venice, Bologna, Florence, Naples and Rome) as well as France. Fascinated by Rome, he made two trips there, 1787–1789 and 1806–1811, to draw the buildings. Victor-Jean Nicolle's compositions include such works as the Pont Neuf seen through a circular window in the Louvre (shortly after 1808) which illustrates the view taken from one of the circular windows behind the colonnade of the east front of the Louvre, in Paris, hence the title of his work. His work forms a significant historic and topographical record of urban settings.",
"Jean-Marie\nJean-Marie Abgrall (born 1950), a French psychiatrist, criminologist, specialist in forensic medicine, cult expert, and graduate in criminal law ; Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879–1962), a French Admiral and Minister of Marine of France ; Jean-Marie Andre (born 1944), a Belgian scientist ; Jean-Marie Auberson (1920–2004), a Swiss conductor and violinist ; Jean-Marie Balestre (born 1921), a president of FISA ; Jean-Marie Basset (born 1943), a French chemist ; Jean-Marie Beaupuy (born 1943), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Benjamin, a priest ; Jean-Marie Beurel (1813–1872), a French Roman Catholic priest ; Jean-Marie Bockel (born 1950), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Buchet, a Belgian film director ; Jean-Marie Cavada (born 1940), a French politician ; ",
"Jean-Victor Schnetz\n Jean-Victor Schnetz (April 14, 1787 in Versailles – March 15, 1870 in Paris) was a French academic painter well regarded for his historical and genre paintings.",
"Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron\n Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron was born in 1944. He entered the École normale supérieure de Saint-Cloud in 1965. He received the Agrégation in 1969 and a Doctorate in Philosophy in 1976.",
"Nicolas Sansu\n Pascal Blanc was born in Vierzon, France on 1968. He announced in October 2019 to be a candidate for the 3rd time in the municipal election in Vierzon. He also member of the UNEF-SE national office during his studies, he holds a diploma of advanced studies in economic sciences. He is elected mayor by the new municipal council.",
"Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron\n Jean-Louis Vieillard-Baron (born 19 April 1944) is a French Roman Catholic philosopher. He is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Poitiers and Professor of the Philosophy of Religion at the Institut Catholique de Paris. He is the author of many books about Bergson and Hegel. He is an expert on spiritualism.",
"Victor-Charles Mahillon\n Victor-Charles Mahillon (March 10, 1841 in Brussels – June 17, 1924 in Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat, France) was a Belgian musician, instrument builder and writer on musical topics. He was the founder and first curator of the Musée instrumental du Conservatoire Royal de Musique, known today as the Musical Instrument Museum. He built, collected, and described more than 1500 musical instruments.",
"Nicolas Viel\n Father Nicolas Viel, O.M.R., (died 25 June 1625) was a French Recollect missionary to the Hurons from 1623 to 1625.",
"Vierzon\nFélix Pyat (1810–1889), politician and journalist ; Édouard Vaillant (1840–1915), politician ; Eugène Baudin (1853–1918), porcelain worker and left-wing politician Jacques Brel, a Belgian singer, made the city famous with his song \"Vesoul\" (1968).",
"Jean Glénisson\nDegree in literature at the Faculty of Arts of Poitiers, (1940) ; Studies at the École nationale des chartes ; Archivist paleographer (1946) ; Member of the École française de Rome (1946–1948) ; Curator at the Archives nationales (1950–1952), responsible for the Trésor des Chartes ; Head of the Archives of the French Equatorial Africa library in Brazzaville (1952–1957) ; Professor of historiography at the University of São Paulo in Brazil ; Chargé de conférences (1959–1963) then director of studies at the VIe section of the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE) (1963) ; Director of the (1964 to 1986) ; Member of the International Committee of Latin paleography, successor of Jeanne Vielliard as director of the IRHT (1966–1992). A text editor, historian of medieval administration, including papal but also from Aunis and Saintonge, Glénisson also supported the introduction of laboratory techniques and computer analysis in order to study manuscript books.",
"Alain Viel\n Alain Viel is the director of Northwest Undergraduate Laboratories and senior lecturer in the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University.",
"Jean-François Roux\n Jean-François Roux (born February 19, 1973) is a politician from Quebec, Canada. He was an Action démocratique du Québec Member of the National Assembly for the electoral district of Arthabaska from 2007 to 2008. Roux was born in Victoriaville, Quebec. He studied psychology and philosophy at Bishop's University but did not complete a degree. He worked as a director for several small businesses in Victoriaville including a director for sales and director for projects. He was also a football instructor for two secondary school football team as well as a community radio host for Bishop's University's CJMQ-FM. He was also the founder of the pastoral collegiate council at the Cégep de Victoriaville. He was first elected in the 2007 election with 42% of the vote. Liberal incumbent Claude Bachand, finished second with 30% of the vote. Roux took office on April 12, 2007 and was named the critic for regions until May 2008."
] |
In what city was Florence Marie Harsant born? | [
"New Plymouth"
] | place of birth | Florence Harsant | 4,118,504 | 27 | [
{
"id": "6353789",
"title": "Florence Harsant",
"text": " Florence Marie Harsant (née Woodhead, 19 September 1891 – 19 June 1994) was a New Zealand temperance worker, nurse, community leader and writer. She was born in New Plymouth, New Zealand, on 19 September 1891. In the 1981 Queen's Birthday Honours, Harsant was awarded the Queen's Service Medal for community service.",
"score": "1.9957552"
},
{
"id": "9648669",
"title": "Florence LeSueur",
"text": " She was born as Florence Ruth Barrett on March 17, 1898 to Frank C. and Maude (née Lawson) Barrett in Pennsylvania. She attended Wilberforce University and later moved to Boston in 1935. LeSueur had been a long-time resident of the South End, a neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts.",
"score": "1.6148044"
},
{
"id": "27865447",
"title": "Philip Sargant Florence",
"text": " Born in Nutley, New Jersey in the United States, he was the son of Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician, and Mary Sargant Florence, a British painter. His sister was Alix Strachey. He was educated at Windlesham House School, Rugby School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, before studying for his PhD at Columbia University in New York City. In 1917 he married the writer and birth control advocate Lella Faye Secor. In 1921 he was appointed as a lecturer in economics at the University of Cambridge, and in 1929 he was made Professor of Commerce at the University of Birmingham, where he remained until his retirement in 1955. He was a friend of Robert Dudley Best, and a mentor of Hilde Behrend.",
"score": "1.6010469"
},
{
"id": "5976438",
"title": "Florence Knoll",
"text": " Florence Marguerite Schust was born in Saginaw, Michigan, to Frederick Emanuel (1881–1923) and Mina Matilda (Haist) Schust (1884–1931), and was known in familiar circles as \"Shu\". Frederick Schust was born about 1882 in either Switzerland or Germany and was a native German speaker. The 1920 United States Federal Census describes him as the superintendent of a commercial bakery. Mina was born about 1887 in Michigan, and her parents had been born in Canada. Knoll was orphaned at a young age, her father died when she was 5, her mother died when she was 12. She was placed under the care of Emile Tessin, who had been designated by Mina Schust as ",
"score": "1.5708005"
},
{
"id": "5380183",
"title": "Florence Rose",
"text": " Florence Rose, born in New York City on June 20, 1903, was the youngest of three children and the only daughter of Jewish Hungarian immigrants, Charles and Katie Rosebaum. Rose was raised along with her brothers Felix and Leon in Brooklyn. In addition to secretarial training, her education included study at both Hunter College and Columbia University, but it is not clear whether she ever completed a degree.",
"score": "1.5615683"
},
{
"id": "32681814",
"title": "Florence Fernet-Martel",
"text": " Florence Fernet-Martel (July 25, 1892 – February 5, 1986) was an American-born Canadian educator and feminist living in Quebec. She was born Florence Fernet in Woonsocket, Rhode Island and was educated at the Jésus-Marie convent there, in Berthierville and at the Académie Saint-Denis in Montreal. She went on to earn a diploma in French literature and a Bachelor of Arts from the Université Laval. She taught English for the Montreal Catholic School Commission and then worked as a secretary and translator for an insurance company. With Thérèse Casgrain, she fought for women's rights, including the right to vote. She was one of the first people to receive a diploma in the social sciences from the Université de Montréal. She provided shelter for students attending the ",
"score": "1.5595179"
},
{
"id": "26385428",
"title": "Marie Goodman Hunter",
"text": " Marie Goodman Hunter (born October 16, 1929; adopted and named Florence Marie Goodman) is an American actor, singer, and educator. She was adopted when young and grew up in Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. She taught Music and Speech for 30 years at John Marshall High School. A mezzo soprano, she also performed as a soloist in Richmond churches. Beginning in the late 1950s, she began to act in the Virginia Museum Theater, a community theater. When it became an Equity/LORT in 1969, she was among those invited to join as an Equity actor and become a professional in the company. From 1976 to 2001 she won six Phoebe awards from Richmond newspapers for her acting, a record in the city. She also had the opportunity to act with other companies, including at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey; the Alabama Shakespeare Festival; and in Caux, Switzerland. While retired from full seasons, Goodman Hunter continues to perform in special concerts or events. ",
"score": "1.5515251"
},
{
"id": "4102547",
"title": "Marie Haps",
"text": " Marie Haps (1879–1939) was a Luxembourg-born Belgian educationalist, the founder of what subsequently became the Institut Libre Marie Haps (now part of the Haute École Léonard de Vinci) and the Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting (Saint-Louis University, Brussels).",
"score": "1.5490334"
},
{
"id": "13647282",
"title": "Florence Golson Bateman",
"text": " Florence Golson Bateman (December 4, 1891 – January 20, 1987) was an American soprano, composer and educator. She was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 2000. The daughter of Howell Rose Golson, a lawyer, and Alabama \"Bama\" Goldsmith, she was born Florence Golson in Lowndes County, Alabama. She moved to Wetumpka with her family in 1895. At the age of nine, she had an accident that resulted in her becoming completely blind by the time that she was fifteen. She was educated at the Tennessee School for the Blind and at the Women's College of Alabama in Montgomery. She continued with studies in voice and composition at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, graduating in 1920. She moved to New York City, where she studied voice with Walter Golde and orchestration with Frederick Jacobi, also touring over the next three years as a soprano. ",
"score": "1.5468888"
},
{
"id": "32552808",
"title": "Richard and Florence Atwater",
"text": " Florence Hasseltine Atwater (née Carroll; September 13, 1896 – August 23, 1979) was born in Chicago, the last child of Mary Josephine (\"Minnie\") Delany, a former concert pianist with the Philadelphia Conservatory, and James Carroll, a Philadelphia publisher. As Florence Carroll, she obtained her AB and MA in French literature at the University of Chicago (1920) where she was co-editor of The Chicago Literary Monthly, and student of Richard Atwater. They married in 1921 and had two children, Doris (1922–2000) and Carroll (1925–2013). After her husband's stroke in 1934, Florence Atwater started teaching high school French, English and Latin, and ",
"score": "1.5440422"
},
{
"id": "26998057",
"title": "Florence Fowle Adams",
"text": " She was born Florence Adelaide Fowle in Chelsea, Massachusetts, the only child of the artist Edward Augustus Fowle. She attended the Chelsea public school, the Girls' Latin School in Boston, and the Boston School of Oratory, from which she graduated in 1884. Fowle joined the faculty of the Boston School of Oratory, where she taught the Delsarte method of dramatic expression developed by the teacher François Delsarte. Feeling the lack of a textbook for beginning students that clearly set forth the principles of the Delsarte method, she published her own book on the Delsarte method, Gestures and Pantomimic Action (1891), using herself as the model for the volume's many illustrations. She occasionally appeared on stage in dramatic roles; for example, as Julie de Mortemar in Edward Bulwer-Lytton's play Richelieu. She also organized her own company of young women for staging tableaux vivants, the Boston Ideal Tableaux Company.",
"score": "1.535299"
},
{
"id": "1661088",
"title": "Florence Lina Mouissou",
"text": " Mouissou was born in 1972. After completing her primary and secondary schooling at Pointe-Noire, she travelled to Paris to study literature. She also received a screenwriting diploma from Cinécours in Quebec.",
"score": "1.5346439"
},
{
"id": "4729471",
"title": "Mary Sargant Florence",
"text": " She was born in London, née Sargant. Her father, Henry Sargant, was a barrister and her mother, Catherine Emma Beale. Her siblings included: judge Charles Henry Sargant, botanist Ethel Sargant, headmaster Walter Lee Sargant and the sculptor Francis William Sargant. She studied in Paris under Luc-Olivier Merson, and, at the Slade School under Alphonse Legros. She was a member of the New English Art Club and the Society of Painters in Tempera. In 1888 she married Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician. They had two children: Philip Sargant Florence, the economist, and Alix Strachey, the psychoanalyst and translator of Freud. She lived in Nutley, New Jersey in a carriage house that became a studio used by other local artists. After ",
"score": "1.5326251"
},
{
"id": "16511784",
"title": "Mary Florence Curran",
"text": " Mary Florence Curran was born in 1885, to Dr. Charles J. Curran and Katherine Lally of North Adams, Massachusetts. She attended the College of New Rochelle, where she received an A.B. in English Literature with a minor in history in 1908. She went on to study at Radcliffe College in Cambridge, the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and Boston College. She took classes in creative writing and psychology, contemporary painting and sculpture, and the history of art.",
"score": "1.5308197"
},
{
"id": "7778991",
"title": "Florence McClung",
"text": " Florence McClung (July 12, 1894 – 1992) was an American painter, printmaker, and art teacher. She was the daughter of Charles W. and Minerva (McCoy) White and was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She moved to Dallas, Texas, as a child with her family in 1899 and lived there until her death. She later was associated with the Dallas Nine, an influential group of Dallas-based artists.",
"score": "1.5267541"
},
{
"id": "1168541",
"title": "Florence Hein",
"text": " Florence was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, to Gustav Hein and Laura Hyde. Her father taught German at a girls' high school in Aberdeen. and was a member of the Aberdeen Philosophical Society. The Hein family immigrated to the United States when Florence was a girl.",
"score": "1.518024"
},
{
"id": "4102548",
"title": "Marie Haps",
"text": " Born at Diekirch, Luxembourg on 29 April 1879, Marie Julie Frauenberg married the Belgian financier Joseph Haps and moved to Brussels. In 1914, she set up a soup kitchen, and in 1920 was one of the founders of a seaside resort for working-class women in De Panne. The achievement for which she is best remembered is the establishment in 1919 of a school of higher education for young women. In 1930 this school took her name as its own, and in 1932 it was accredited by the University of Louvain. Marie Haps died 14 March 1939.",
"score": "1.5157796"
},
{
"id": "15322427",
"title": "Marie-Madeleine Hachard",
"text": " Marie-Madeleine Hachard née Hennebont (17 February 1704, Rouen - 9 August 1760, New Orleans) was a French letter writer and abbess of the Ursuline order. She was one of the first members of the first Ursuline Convent in New Orleans in French Louisiana in 1727. Her letters home to her father in France have been preserved, published, and are valued as a source of historical documentation.",
"score": "1.5135475"
},
{
"id": "8669762",
"title": "Milicent Patrick",
"text": " Mildred Elizabeth Fulvia di Rossi was born on November 11, 1915, in El Paso, Texas, the second of three children. Her father, Camille Charles Rossi, was superintendent of construction at Hearst Castle, working under Julia Morgan, the first licensed female architect in the state of California. The family moved from San Francisco to San Simeon, California when Patrick was six. During her childhood Patrick grew close with William Hearst's wife, Millicent Hearst, who would become the model for Patrick's later name change. In 1932 Julia Morgan and Camille Rossi's contentious working relationship caused Morgan to appeal to Hearst that Rossi be removed from the project, uprooting the Rossi family from the grounds at Hearst Castle. The Rossi family then moved to Glendale, California and in 1933 Mildred started attending Glendale Junior College, but left in 1935 without graduating. She went on to study at Chouniard Art Institute for three years, where she focused on illustration and drawing, receiving three scholarships based on her talent.",
"score": "1.5118344"
},
{
"id": "2054243",
"title": "Marie Layet",
"text": " Marie was born in Mobile, Alabama, to George Layet and his wife Josephine Garner. Her parents were reportedly respected and well-known, but she was orphaned at a young age, and was raised primarily by her grandmother. After her grandmother died, she studied art in New Jersey and Ohio. At the age of 24, she returned to Mobile and opened her own art studio, and she wrote silent films in order to pay her bills after answering an advertisement. Her earliest known effort was on 1913's The Clown's Daughter. She'd go on to write at least a half-dozen more films before marrying prominent lumberman Stanley Sheip in 1917. After her marriage, she turned her attention to the local theater scene, co-founding the Mobile Little Theatre and working on stage plays. Her novel Gulf Stream was published to a mix of acclaim and controversy in 1930. In 1937, reeling from her publisher rejecting her second novel (Penhazard) and dealing with the effects of long-term alcoholism, she died at her home in Florida. She was survived by her husband; the pair had no children.",
"score": "1.5114692"
}
] | [
"Florence Harsant\n Florence Marie Harsant (née Woodhead, 19 September 1891 – 19 June 1994) was a New Zealand temperance worker, nurse, community leader and writer. She was born in New Plymouth, New Zealand, on 19 September 1891. In the 1981 Queen's Birthday Honours, Harsant was awarded the Queen's Service Medal for community service.",
"Florence LeSueur\n She was born as Florence Ruth Barrett on March 17, 1898 to Frank C. and Maude (née Lawson) Barrett in Pennsylvania. She attended Wilberforce University and later moved to Boston in 1935. LeSueur had been a long-time resident of the South End, a neighborhood in Boston, Massachusetts.",
"Philip Sargant Florence\n Born in Nutley, New Jersey in the United States, he was the son of Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician, and Mary Sargant Florence, a British painter. His sister was Alix Strachey. He was educated at Windlesham House School, Rugby School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, before studying for his PhD at Columbia University in New York City. In 1917 he married the writer and birth control advocate Lella Faye Secor. In 1921 he was appointed as a lecturer in economics at the University of Cambridge, and in 1929 he was made Professor of Commerce at the University of Birmingham, where he remained until his retirement in 1955. He was a friend of Robert Dudley Best, and a mentor of Hilde Behrend.",
"Florence Knoll\n Florence Marguerite Schust was born in Saginaw, Michigan, to Frederick Emanuel (1881–1923) and Mina Matilda (Haist) Schust (1884–1931), and was known in familiar circles as \"Shu\". Frederick Schust was born about 1882 in either Switzerland or Germany and was a native German speaker. The 1920 United States Federal Census describes him as the superintendent of a commercial bakery. Mina was born about 1887 in Michigan, and her parents had been born in Canada. Knoll was orphaned at a young age, her father died when she was 5, her mother died when she was 12. She was placed under the care of Emile Tessin, who had been designated by Mina Schust as ",
"Florence Rose\n Florence Rose, born in New York City on June 20, 1903, was the youngest of three children and the only daughter of Jewish Hungarian immigrants, Charles and Katie Rosebaum. Rose was raised along with her brothers Felix and Leon in Brooklyn. In addition to secretarial training, her education included study at both Hunter College and Columbia University, but it is not clear whether she ever completed a degree.",
"Florence Fernet-Martel\n Florence Fernet-Martel (July 25, 1892 – February 5, 1986) was an American-born Canadian educator and feminist living in Quebec. She was born Florence Fernet in Woonsocket, Rhode Island and was educated at the Jésus-Marie convent there, in Berthierville and at the Académie Saint-Denis in Montreal. She went on to earn a diploma in French literature and a Bachelor of Arts from the Université Laval. She taught English for the Montreal Catholic School Commission and then worked as a secretary and translator for an insurance company. With Thérèse Casgrain, she fought for women's rights, including the right to vote. She was one of the first people to receive a diploma in the social sciences from the Université de Montréal. She provided shelter for students attending the ",
"Marie Goodman Hunter\n Marie Goodman Hunter (born October 16, 1929; adopted and named Florence Marie Goodman) is an American actor, singer, and educator. She was adopted when young and grew up in Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia. She taught Music and Speech for 30 years at John Marshall High School. A mezzo soprano, she also performed as a soloist in Richmond churches. Beginning in the late 1950s, she began to act in the Virginia Museum Theater, a community theater. When it became an Equity/LORT in 1969, she was among those invited to join as an Equity actor and become a professional in the company. From 1976 to 2001 she won six Phoebe awards from Richmond newspapers for her acting, a record in the city. She also had the opportunity to act with other companies, including at the McCarter Theatre in Princeton, New Jersey; the Alabama Shakespeare Festival; and in Caux, Switzerland. While retired from full seasons, Goodman Hunter continues to perform in special concerts or events. ",
"Marie Haps\n Marie Haps (1879–1939) was a Luxembourg-born Belgian educationalist, the founder of what subsequently became the Institut Libre Marie Haps (now part of the Haute École Léonard de Vinci) and the Marie Haps Faculty of Translation and Interpreting (Saint-Louis University, Brussels).",
"Florence Golson Bateman\n Florence Golson Bateman (December 4, 1891 – January 20, 1987) was an American soprano, composer and educator. She was inducted into the Alabama Women's Hall of Fame in 2000. The daughter of Howell Rose Golson, a lawyer, and Alabama \"Bama\" Goldsmith, she was born Florence Golson in Lowndes County, Alabama. She moved to Wetumpka with her family in 1895. At the age of nine, she had an accident that resulted in her becoming completely blind by the time that she was fifteen. She was educated at the Tennessee School for the Blind and at the Women's College of Alabama in Montgomery. She continued with studies in voice and composition at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, graduating in 1920. She moved to New York City, where she studied voice with Walter Golde and orchestration with Frederick Jacobi, also touring over the next three years as a soprano. ",
"Richard and Florence Atwater\n Florence Hasseltine Atwater (née Carroll; September 13, 1896 – August 23, 1979) was born in Chicago, the last child of Mary Josephine (\"Minnie\") Delany, a former concert pianist with the Philadelphia Conservatory, and James Carroll, a Philadelphia publisher. As Florence Carroll, she obtained her AB and MA in French literature at the University of Chicago (1920) where she was co-editor of The Chicago Literary Monthly, and student of Richard Atwater. They married in 1921 and had two children, Doris (1922–2000) and Carroll (1925–2013). After her husband's stroke in 1934, Florence Atwater started teaching high school French, English and Latin, and ",
"Florence Fowle Adams\n She was born Florence Adelaide Fowle in Chelsea, Massachusetts, the only child of the artist Edward Augustus Fowle. She attended the Chelsea public school, the Girls' Latin School in Boston, and the Boston School of Oratory, from which she graduated in 1884. Fowle joined the faculty of the Boston School of Oratory, where she taught the Delsarte method of dramatic expression developed by the teacher François Delsarte. Feeling the lack of a textbook for beginning students that clearly set forth the principles of the Delsarte method, she published her own book on the Delsarte method, Gestures and Pantomimic Action (1891), using herself as the model for the volume's many illustrations. She occasionally appeared on stage in dramatic roles; for example, as Julie de Mortemar in Edward Bulwer-Lytton's play Richelieu. She also organized her own company of young women for staging tableaux vivants, the Boston Ideal Tableaux Company.",
"Florence Lina Mouissou\n Mouissou was born in 1972. After completing her primary and secondary schooling at Pointe-Noire, she travelled to Paris to study literature. She also received a screenwriting diploma from Cinécours in Quebec.",
"Mary Sargant Florence\n She was born in London, née Sargant. Her father, Henry Sargant, was a barrister and her mother, Catherine Emma Beale. Her siblings included: judge Charles Henry Sargant, botanist Ethel Sargant, headmaster Walter Lee Sargant and the sculptor Francis William Sargant. She studied in Paris under Luc-Olivier Merson, and, at the Slade School under Alphonse Legros. She was a member of the New English Art Club and the Society of Painters in Tempera. In 1888 she married Henry Smyth Florence, an American musician. They had two children: Philip Sargant Florence, the economist, and Alix Strachey, the psychoanalyst and translator of Freud. She lived in Nutley, New Jersey in a carriage house that became a studio used by other local artists. After ",
"Mary Florence Curran\n Mary Florence Curran was born in 1885, to Dr. Charles J. Curran and Katherine Lally of North Adams, Massachusetts. She attended the College of New Rochelle, where she received an A.B. in English Literature with a minor in history in 1908. She went on to study at Radcliffe College in Cambridge, the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and Boston College. She took classes in creative writing and psychology, contemporary painting and sculpture, and the history of art.",
"Florence McClung\n Florence McClung (July 12, 1894 – 1992) was an American painter, printmaker, and art teacher. She was the daughter of Charles W. and Minerva (McCoy) White and was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She moved to Dallas, Texas, as a child with her family in 1899 and lived there until her death. She later was associated with the Dallas Nine, an influential group of Dallas-based artists.",
"Florence Hein\n Florence was born in Aberdeen, Scotland, to Gustav Hein and Laura Hyde. Her father taught German at a girls' high school in Aberdeen. and was a member of the Aberdeen Philosophical Society. The Hein family immigrated to the United States when Florence was a girl.",
"Marie Haps\n Born at Diekirch, Luxembourg on 29 April 1879, Marie Julie Frauenberg married the Belgian financier Joseph Haps and moved to Brussels. In 1914, she set up a soup kitchen, and in 1920 was one of the founders of a seaside resort for working-class women in De Panne. The achievement for which she is best remembered is the establishment in 1919 of a school of higher education for young women. In 1930 this school took her name as its own, and in 1932 it was accredited by the University of Louvain. Marie Haps died 14 March 1939.",
"Marie-Madeleine Hachard\n Marie-Madeleine Hachard née Hennebont (17 February 1704, Rouen - 9 August 1760, New Orleans) was a French letter writer and abbess of the Ursuline order. She was one of the first members of the first Ursuline Convent in New Orleans in French Louisiana in 1727. Her letters home to her father in France have been preserved, published, and are valued as a source of historical documentation.",
"Milicent Patrick\n Mildred Elizabeth Fulvia di Rossi was born on November 11, 1915, in El Paso, Texas, the second of three children. Her father, Camille Charles Rossi, was superintendent of construction at Hearst Castle, working under Julia Morgan, the first licensed female architect in the state of California. The family moved from San Francisco to San Simeon, California when Patrick was six. During her childhood Patrick grew close with William Hearst's wife, Millicent Hearst, who would become the model for Patrick's later name change. In 1932 Julia Morgan and Camille Rossi's contentious working relationship caused Morgan to appeal to Hearst that Rossi be removed from the project, uprooting the Rossi family from the grounds at Hearst Castle. The Rossi family then moved to Glendale, California and in 1933 Mildred started attending Glendale Junior College, but left in 1935 without graduating. She went on to study at Chouniard Art Institute for three years, where she focused on illustration and drawing, receiving three scholarships based on her talent.",
"Marie Layet\n Marie was born in Mobile, Alabama, to George Layet and his wife Josephine Garner. Her parents were reportedly respected and well-known, but she was orphaned at a young age, and was raised primarily by her grandmother. After her grandmother died, she studied art in New Jersey and Ohio. At the age of 24, she returned to Mobile and opened her own art studio, and she wrote silent films in order to pay her bills after answering an advertisement. Her earliest known effort was on 1913's The Clown's Daughter. She'd go on to write at least a half-dozen more films before marrying prominent lumberman Stanley Sheip in 1917. After her marriage, she turned her attention to the local theater scene, co-founding the Mobile Little Theatre and working on stage plays. Her novel Gulf Stream was published to a mix of acclaim and controversy in 1930. In 1937, reeling from her publisher rejecting her second novel (Penhazard) and dealing with the effects of long-term alcoholism, she died at her home in Florida. She was survived by her husband; the pair had no children."
] |
In what city was Roger McCardell born? | [
"Baltimore County",
"County of Maryland",
"Baltimore County, Maryland"
] | place of birth | Roger McCardell | 5,621,482 | 78 | [
{
"id": "455239",
"title": "Roger McCardell",
"text": " Roger Morton McCardell (August 29, 1932 – November 13, 1996) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the San Francisco Giants in.",
"score": "2.0104117"
},
{
"id": "455240",
"title": "Roger McCardell",
"text": " McCardell was born in Gorsuch Mills in Baltimore County, Maryland, and attended Boston University. He threw and batted right-handed and was listed at 6 ft tall and 200 lb. McCardell's professional career began in 1950 and he spent 11 seasons (and played in 911 games) in minor league baseball. His lone big-league trial occurred at the outset of the 1959 season. McCardell was the starting catcher in his MLB debut on May 8, and went hitless in two at bats against Danny McDevitt of the Los Angeles Dodgers before being removed for a pinch hitter. He went hitless in his two subsequent MLB at bats as well. He was traded by the Giants to the Baltimore Orioles on November 30, in a transaction headlined by Billy O'Dell and Jackie Brandt, but never appeared in a Major League game with his hometown club. McCardell retired from baseball after the 1962 season and died in Wilmington, Delaware, at the age of 64.",
"score": "1.8699695"
},
{
"id": "1058483",
"title": "Archie McCardell",
"text": " Archie McCardell was born in Hazel Park, Michigan in August 1926. He served in the United States Army Air Forces in World War II. Following his time in the service, he attended the University of Michigan (he was the first person in his family to attend college), where he earned a bachelor's degree and a Master of Business Administration.",
"score": "1.7338424"
},
{
"id": "29076395",
"title": "Roger Bushell",
"text": " Bushell was born in Springs, Transvaal, South Africa, on 30 August 1910 to English parents, Benjamin Daniel and Dorothy Wingate Bushell (née White). His father, a mining engineer, had emigrated to the country from Britain and he used his wealth to ensure that Roger received a first-class education. He was first schooled in Johannesburg, then aged 14 went to Wellington College in Berkshire, England. In 1929, Bushell then went to Pembroke College, Cambridge, to study law. Keen on pursuing non-academic interests from an early age, Bushell excelled in rugby and cricket and skied for Cambridge in races between 1930 and 1932, captaining the team in 1931.",
"score": "1.6578939"
},
{
"id": "33077467",
"title": "Roger Erell",
"text": " Erell was born Roger Lelièvre in Mansle (Charente) in 1907.",
"score": "1.6308405"
},
{
"id": "9292162",
"title": "Roger McClay",
"text": " McClay was born in 1945. He attended secondary school at Wesley College, Auckland.",
"score": "1.6281705"
},
{
"id": "1058494",
"title": "Archie McCardell",
"text": " McCardell was married to Margaret (née Martin). The couple had children: Sandra, Laurie and Clay. He died at his home in Casper, Wyoming on July 10, 2008, of complications from heart failure.; His children and two brothers and a sister survived him.",
"score": "1.6170866"
},
{
"id": "26159108",
"title": "John McCardell Jr.",
"text": " McCardell was born on June 17, 1949 in Maryland. He graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1971. He earned a PhD in History from Harvard University in 1976. For his dissertation, The Idea of a Southern Nation, he was awarded the 1977 Allan Nevins Prize by the Society of American Historians.",
"score": "1.5986376"
},
{
"id": "2485726",
"title": "Roger Brown (artist)",
"text": " Roger Brown was born on December 10, 1941, and raised in Hamilton and Opelika, Alabama. He was described in his formative years as a creative child, an inclination his parents are said to have encouraged. Brown took art classes from second to ninth grade, and won first prize in a statewide poster competition in tenth grade. After high school Brown left the South. Although he lived much of his adult life elsewhere, he maintained his connection to the region both in his artwork and research, and later with his plan to purchase the \"Rock House\" in Beulah, Alabama.",
"score": "1.5954632"
},
{
"id": "27885299",
"title": "Claire McCardell",
"text": " McCardell was the eldest of four children born to Eleanor and Adrian McCardell in Frederick, Maryland. Adrian was a Maryland state senator and president of the Frederick County National Bank. As a child, McCardell earned the nickname \"Kick\" for her ability to keep the boys from pushing her around. Fascinated by fashion from a young age, McCardell wanted to move to New York City to study fashion design at age 16. Unwilling to send a teenager so far away, McCardell's father convinced her to enroll in the home economics program at Hood College instead. After two years of study in Maryland, McCardell moved to New York and ",
"score": "1.5933197"
},
{
"id": "27885298",
"title": "Claire McCardell",
"text": " Claire McCardell (May 24, 1905 – March 22, 1958) was an American fashion designer of ready-to-wear clothing in the twentieth century. She is credited with the creation of American sportswear.",
"score": "1.5768516"
},
{
"id": "13057232",
"title": "Roger McCorley",
"text": " Roger McCorley was an Irish republican activist. Roger Edmund McCorley was born into a Roman Catholic family at 67 Hillman Street in Belfast on 6 September 1901, one of three children born to Roger Edmund McCorley, a meat carver in a hotel, and Agnes Liggett; he had two elder brothers, Vincent and Felix. He joined the Fianna in his teens. His family had a very strong republican tradition and he claimed to be the great-grandson of the United Irishmen folk hero Roddy McCorley, who was executed for his part in the 1798 rebellion.",
"score": "1.5676775"
},
{
"id": "28279286",
"title": "Henry McCardie",
"text": " McCardie was born on 19 July 1869 in Edgbaston to Joseph McCardie, an Irish merchant and button maker, and his English wife Jane Hunt. His father died when McCardie was eight, and as a result he and his six siblings were raised by their mother alone. He was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham and was noted as intelligent but lazy. He left the school when he was sixteen to get a job and for several years worked in an auctioneers office before being admitted to the Middle Temple in 1891. He was called to the bar on 18 April 1894 and almost immediately began work at the chambers of James Parfit (known as J.J. Parfit) in Birmingham.",
"score": "1.5655098"
},
{
"id": "8419761",
"title": "Roger McLachlan",
"text": " McLachlan was born on 15 January 1954 in the small town of Riverton, near Invercargill, New Zealand. He came to Australia in 1974 to join the touring band for the stage musical Godspell.",
"score": "1.5594482"
},
{
"id": "27885307",
"title": "Claire McCardell",
"text": " In 1943, McCardell married the Texas-born architect, Irving Drought Harris, who had two children by an earlier marriage, and established a home base in Manhattan. McCardell’s life and work were cut short by a diagnosis of terminal colon cancer in 1957. With the help of long-time friend and classmate, Mildred Orrick, McCardell completed her final collection from her hospital bed. She checked out of the hospital in order to make the introductions for her final runway show. McCardell died on March 22, 1958 at the age of 52. She is buried in the family plot at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick, Maryland. After her death, McCardell's family decided to close the label. Her brother explained, \"It wasn't that difficult [to close the label]. Claire's ideas were always her own.\"",
"score": "1.5562701"
},
{
"id": "30179709",
"title": "Roger Hampson",
"text": " Roger Hampson was born in Union Street, Tyldesley, and moved to Johnson Street when he was three. He attended Leigh Grammar School and served in the Royal Navy during World War II. After the war he attended Manchester School of Art before becoming a teacher.",
"score": "1.5542355"
},
{
"id": "5434732",
"title": "E. Roger Mitchell",
"text": " Mitchell was born in Miami, Florida. He graduated in 1993 from Claflin University in South Carolina with B.A.s in English and Drama. He was named in the Who's Who Among Americas Colleges and Universities in 1992. Mitchell later studied at Alliance Theatre Professional Actor Internship and earned a Master of Fine Arts from City University of New York's Brooklyn campus in 1999.",
"score": "1.5529513"
},
{
"id": "5692486",
"title": "Roger Fan",
"text": " Fan, a Taiwanese American, was born in Baltimore, Maryland and raised in Southern California, growing up in Upland, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He graduated from the Webb Schools of California and also graduated with a degree in economics from Brown University. He initially worked on Wall Street and in San Francisco as a financial consultant, but spent his off time acting in theatre.",
"score": "1.5465986"
},
{
"id": "1712763",
"title": "Keenan McCardell",
"text": " Keenan Wayne McCardell (born January 6, 1970) is an American football coach and former wide receiver who is the wide receivers coach for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL). He previously served as the wide receivers coach for the Jacksonville Jaguars, University of Maryland, College Park and Washington Redskins. McCardell played college football for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) and was drafted by the Washington Redskins in the 12th round of the 1991 NFL Draft. He played for 17 seasons in the NFL and also played for the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, San Diego Chargers and Houston Texans. A two-time Pro Bowl selection, McCardell won two Super Bowl rings, with the Redskins in 1991 and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2002.",
"score": "1.546352"
},
{
"id": "24963464",
"title": "Roger Williams (American politician)",
"text": " Williams was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1949 and raised in Fort Worth. He played college baseball for the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs (TCU) from 1968 to 1971 and was selected in the 25th round of the 1971 MLB Draft by the Atlanta Braves, playing in the farm system and reaching the Class A Western Carolinas League. He coached TCU's baseball team. Williams inherited the family's automobile dealership from his father, who founded the business in 1939.",
"score": "1.5409284"
}
] | [
"Roger McCardell\n Roger Morton McCardell (August 29, 1932 – November 13, 1996) was an American professional baseball player. He played in Major League Baseball as a catcher for the San Francisco Giants in.",
"Roger McCardell\n McCardell was born in Gorsuch Mills in Baltimore County, Maryland, and attended Boston University. He threw and batted right-handed and was listed at 6 ft tall and 200 lb. McCardell's professional career began in 1950 and he spent 11 seasons (and played in 911 games) in minor league baseball. His lone big-league trial occurred at the outset of the 1959 season. McCardell was the starting catcher in his MLB debut on May 8, and went hitless in two at bats against Danny McDevitt of the Los Angeles Dodgers before being removed for a pinch hitter. He went hitless in his two subsequent MLB at bats as well. He was traded by the Giants to the Baltimore Orioles on November 30, in a transaction headlined by Billy O'Dell and Jackie Brandt, but never appeared in a Major League game with his hometown club. McCardell retired from baseball after the 1962 season and died in Wilmington, Delaware, at the age of 64.",
"Archie McCardell\n Archie McCardell was born in Hazel Park, Michigan in August 1926. He served in the United States Army Air Forces in World War II. Following his time in the service, he attended the University of Michigan (he was the first person in his family to attend college), where he earned a bachelor's degree and a Master of Business Administration.",
"Roger Bushell\n Bushell was born in Springs, Transvaal, South Africa, on 30 August 1910 to English parents, Benjamin Daniel and Dorothy Wingate Bushell (née White). His father, a mining engineer, had emigrated to the country from Britain and he used his wealth to ensure that Roger received a first-class education. He was first schooled in Johannesburg, then aged 14 went to Wellington College in Berkshire, England. In 1929, Bushell then went to Pembroke College, Cambridge, to study law. Keen on pursuing non-academic interests from an early age, Bushell excelled in rugby and cricket and skied for Cambridge in races between 1930 and 1932, captaining the team in 1931.",
"Roger Erell\n Erell was born Roger Lelièvre in Mansle (Charente) in 1907.",
"Roger McClay\n McClay was born in 1945. He attended secondary school at Wesley College, Auckland.",
"Archie McCardell\n McCardell was married to Margaret (née Martin). The couple had children: Sandra, Laurie and Clay. He died at his home in Casper, Wyoming on July 10, 2008, of complications from heart failure.; His children and two brothers and a sister survived him.",
"John McCardell Jr.\n McCardell was born on June 17, 1949 in Maryland. He graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1971. He earned a PhD in History from Harvard University in 1976. For his dissertation, The Idea of a Southern Nation, he was awarded the 1977 Allan Nevins Prize by the Society of American Historians.",
"Roger Brown (artist)\n Roger Brown was born on December 10, 1941, and raised in Hamilton and Opelika, Alabama. He was described in his formative years as a creative child, an inclination his parents are said to have encouraged. Brown took art classes from second to ninth grade, and won first prize in a statewide poster competition in tenth grade. After high school Brown left the South. Although he lived much of his adult life elsewhere, he maintained his connection to the region both in his artwork and research, and later with his plan to purchase the \"Rock House\" in Beulah, Alabama.",
"Claire McCardell\n McCardell was the eldest of four children born to Eleanor and Adrian McCardell in Frederick, Maryland. Adrian was a Maryland state senator and president of the Frederick County National Bank. As a child, McCardell earned the nickname \"Kick\" for her ability to keep the boys from pushing her around. Fascinated by fashion from a young age, McCardell wanted to move to New York City to study fashion design at age 16. Unwilling to send a teenager so far away, McCardell's father convinced her to enroll in the home economics program at Hood College instead. After two years of study in Maryland, McCardell moved to New York and ",
"Claire McCardell\n Claire McCardell (May 24, 1905 – March 22, 1958) was an American fashion designer of ready-to-wear clothing in the twentieth century. She is credited with the creation of American sportswear.",
"Roger McCorley\n Roger McCorley was an Irish republican activist. Roger Edmund McCorley was born into a Roman Catholic family at 67 Hillman Street in Belfast on 6 September 1901, one of three children born to Roger Edmund McCorley, a meat carver in a hotel, and Agnes Liggett; he had two elder brothers, Vincent and Felix. He joined the Fianna in his teens. His family had a very strong republican tradition and he claimed to be the great-grandson of the United Irishmen folk hero Roddy McCorley, who was executed for his part in the 1798 rebellion.",
"Henry McCardie\n McCardie was born on 19 July 1869 in Edgbaston to Joseph McCardie, an Irish merchant and button maker, and his English wife Jane Hunt. His father died when McCardie was eight, and as a result he and his six siblings were raised by their mother alone. He was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham and was noted as intelligent but lazy. He left the school when he was sixteen to get a job and for several years worked in an auctioneers office before being admitted to the Middle Temple in 1891. He was called to the bar on 18 April 1894 and almost immediately began work at the chambers of James Parfit (known as J.J. Parfit) in Birmingham.",
"Roger McLachlan\n McLachlan was born on 15 January 1954 in the small town of Riverton, near Invercargill, New Zealand. He came to Australia in 1974 to join the touring band for the stage musical Godspell.",
"Claire McCardell\n In 1943, McCardell married the Texas-born architect, Irving Drought Harris, who had two children by an earlier marriage, and established a home base in Manhattan. McCardell’s life and work were cut short by a diagnosis of terminal colon cancer in 1957. With the help of long-time friend and classmate, Mildred Orrick, McCardell completed her final collection from her hospital bed. She checked out of the hospital in order to make the introductions for her final runway show. McCardell died on March 22, 1958 at the age of 52. She is buried in the family plot at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Frederick, Maryland. After her death, McCardell's family decided to close the label. Her brother explained, \"It wasn't that difficult [to close the label]. Claire's ideas were always her own.\"",
"Roger Hampson\n Roger Hampson was born in Union Street, Tyldesley, and moved to Johnson Street when he was three. He attended Leigh Grammar School and served in the Royal Navy during World War II. After the war he attended Manchester School of Art before becoming a teacher.",
"E. Roger Mitchell\n Mitchell was born in Miami, Florida. He graduated in 1993 from Claflin University in South Carolina with B.A.s in English and Drama. He was named in the Who's Who Among Americas Colleges and Universities in 1992. Mitchell later studied at Alliance Theatre Professional Actor Internship and earned a Master of Fine Arts from City University of New York's Brooklyn campus in 1999.",
"Roger Fan\n Fan, a Taiwanese American, was born in Baltimore, Maryland and raised in Southern California, growing up in Upland, California, a suburb of Los Angeles. He graduated from the Webb Schools of California and also graduated with a degree in economics from Brown University. He initially worked on Wall Street and in San Francisco as a financial consultant, but spent his off time acting in theatre.",
"Keenan McCardell\n Keenan Wayne McCardell (born January 6, 1970) is an American football coach and former wide receiver who is the wide receivers coach for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL). He previously served as the wide receivers coach for the Jacksonville Jaguars, University of Maryland, College Park and Washington Redskins. McCardell played college football for the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) and was drafted by the Washington Redskins in the 12th round of the 1991 NFL Draft. He played for 17 seasons in the NFL and also played for the Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, San Diego Chargers and Houston Texans. A two-time Pro Bowl selection, McCardell won two Super Bowl rings, with the Redskins in 1991 and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in 2002.",
"Roger Williams (American politician)\n Williams was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1949 and raised in Fort Worth. He played college baseball for the Texas Christian University Horned Frogs (TCU) from 1968 to 1971 and was selected in the 25th round of the 1971 MLB Draft by the Atlanta Braves, playing in the farm system and reaching the Class A Western Carolinas League. He coached TCU's baseball team. Williams inherited the family's automobile dealership from his father, who founded the business in 1939."
] |
Who was the director of Vanity? | [
"Adrian Brunel",
"Adrian Hope Brunel"
] | director | Vanity (1935 film) | 311,014 | 54 | [
{
"id": "4794483",
"title": "Vanity (1935 film)",
"text": " Vanity is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Jane Cain, Percy Marmont and John Counsell. The plot concerns a conceited actress, convinced of the general adoration in which she is held, faking her own death in order to gratify herself by observing the depth of grief caused by her demise. However the actual reactions to the \"news\" prove to be far from what she had expected.",
"score": "1.5065199"
},
{
"id": "10597097",
"title": "The Vanity Pool",
"text": " The Vanity Pool is a lost 1918 American silent film drama directed by Ida May Park and starring Mary MacLaren, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Thomas Holding. The script was based on a short story by Nalbro Bartley that was originally published in Young's Magazine. The film was produced and distributed by Universal Film Manufacturing Company. The film centered around a female lobbyist who becomes involved in political intrigue when she begins lobbying for the election of her friend's husband.",
"score": "1.449697"
},
{
"id": "27794293",
"title": "Vanity (singer)",
"text": "1982: \"Nasty Girl\", \"He's So Dull\", and \"Drive Me Wild\" ; 1984: \"Pretty Mess\" ; 1985: \"7th Heaven\" (video clips were from the movie The Last Dragon) ; 1986: \"Under the Influence\" ; 1988: \"He Turned Me Out\", a song performed by The Pointer Sisters from the soundtrack of Action Jackson. Vanity's co-star in the movie, Carl Weathers, appears alongside her in the video. Vanity appeared in seven released music videos: ",
"score": "1.4411335"
},
{
"id": "400873",
"title": "Kenelm Foss",
"text": " Kenelm Foss (13 December 1885 – 28 November 1963) was a British actor, theatre director, author, screenwriter and film director. He was born in Croydon, Surrey and studied art at the Wellesley School of Art and in Paris. He was, however, more interested in theatre and in 1903 made his first appearance on the London stage at the Royal Court Theatre. He then spent four years at the Glasgow Repertory Theatre producing plays and acting before returning to London to manage the Lyric Theatre in the Strand. He directed the play Magic by G.K.Chesterton, which had been written specially for him in 1913, and which title was the caption to the Vanity ",
"score": "1.4270041"
},
{
"id": "4976773",
"title": "Vanity (1947 film)",
"text": " Vanity (Italian:Vanità) is a 1947 Italian historical melodrama film directed by Giorgio Pastina and starring Walter Chiari, Liliana Laine and Dina Galli. The film is based on a play by Carlo Bertolazzi. Chiari was awarded a Nastro d'Argento for best debut performance. It was made at the Icet Studios in Milan. The film is set in nineteenth century Milan.",
"score": "1.4248884"
},
{
"id": "29904058",
"title": "Vanity (1927 film)",
"text": "Leatrice Joy as Barbara Fiske ; Charles Ray as Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland ; Alan Hale as 'Happy' Dan Morgan ; Mayme Kelso as Mrs. Fiske ; Noble Johnson as Bimbo, ship's cook ; Helen Lee Worthing as Tess Ramsay ; Louis Payne as Butler ",
"score": "1.4178212"
},
{
"id": "29904057",
"title": "Vanity (1927 film)",
"text": " Vanity is a 1927, American silent drama film directed by Donald Crisp and starring Leatrice Joy. The film was written by Douglas Doty, produced by DeMille Pictures Corporation and distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation.",
"score": "1.4147143"
},
{
"id": "29526996",
"title": "Purple Rain (film)",
"text": " disliked Blinn's script for lacking \"truth\", and was then hired to direct and edit after delivering a pitch on the spot to Cavallo. Prince intended to cast Vanity, leader of the girl group Vanity 6, but she left the group before filming began. Her role was initially offered to Jennifer Beals (who turned it down because she wanted to concentrate on college) before going to Kotero, who was then virtually unknown. Prince had seen her appearance on the February 1983 episode of Tales of the Gold Monkey, in which she played a saucy island girl (inspired by Jamie Muller, the only ",
"score": "1.4142869"
},
{
"id": "10415240",
"title": "Colin Graham",
"text": "Benjamin Britten, The Golden Vanity ; Richard Rodney Bennett, Penny for a Song ; Stephen Paulus, The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1982 ; Minoru Miki, Jōruri ; Minoru Miki, The Tale of Genji, 1999 ; Bright Sheng, Madame Mao, 2003 ; David Carlson, Anna Karenina, 2007 Colin Graham OBE (22 September 1931 in Hove, England – 6 April 2007 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a stage director of opera, theatre, and television. Graham was educated at Northaw School (Hertfordshire), Stowe School and RADA. Early in his career, he began a long association with Benjamin Britten, for whom he directed all but one of the composer's stage works, including ",
"score": "1.4053428"
},
{
"id": "27106401",
"title": "Vanity Fair (novel)",
"text": "Vanity Fair (1911), directed by Charles Kent ; Vanity Fair (1915), directed by Charles Brabin ; Vanity Fair (1922), directed by W. Courtney Rowden ; Vanity Fair (1923), directed by Hugo Ballin ",
"score": "1.403126"
},
{
"id": "27106402",
"title": "Vanity Fair (novel)",
"text": "Vanity Fair (1932), directed by Chester M. Franklin and starring Myrna Loy, updating the story to make Becky Sharp a social-climbing governess ; Becky Sharp (1935), starring Miriam Hopkins and Frances Dee, the first feature film shot in full-spectrum Technicolor ; Vanity Fair (2004), directed by Mira Nair and starring Reese Witherspoon as Becky Sharp and Natasha Little, who had played Becky Sharp in the earlier television miniseries of Vanity Fair, as Lady Jane Sheepshanks ",
"score": "1.3850992"
},
{
"id": "4794485",
"title": "Vanity (1935 film)",
"text": " The film was a quota quickie production, made at Nettlefold Studios in Walton-on-Thames for distribution by Columbia Pictures. It was based on a play by Ernest Denny. It is now considered to be a lost film. The film is the only known screen credit of Cain, who went on to achieve a degree of immortality in British culture after being chosen as \"the girl with the golden voice\", becoming the original voice of the speaking clock in the United Kingdom between 1936 and 1963.",
"score": "1.3818942"
},
{
"id": "10360991",
"title": "List of film director and editor collaborations",
"text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ",
"score": "1.3803005"
},
{
"id": "781786",
"title": "Simon Dormandy",
"text": " Simon Dormandy was, as an actor, known largely for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1988 and 1995. Over the period he worked with many well known directors, including Adrian Noble, Sam Mendes, Deborah Warner, Katie Mitchell and Max Stafford-Clark. He also took part in several films and television series. He was perhaps best known for his performances in Little Dorrit (as Sparkler) and Vanity Fair (as Dobbin). He was also known for his work with the theatre company Cheek By Jowl. He taught Drama and English at Eton College for fifteen years from 1997 to 2012, where he was Director of Drama and Head of ",
"score": "1.3793244"
},
{
"id": "27794291",
"title": "Vanity (singer)",
"text": "Vanity 6 (1982) ",
"score": "1.3741848"
},
{
"id": "29904059",
"title": "Vanity (1927 film)",
"text": " Leatrice Joy had impulsively cut her hair short in 1926, and Cecil B. DeMille, whom Joy had followed when he set up Producers Distributing Corporation, was publicly angry as it prevented her from portraying traditional feminine roles. The studio developed projects with roles suitable for her “Leatrice Joy bob”, and Vanity was the final of five films shot before she regrew her hair. Despite this, a professional dispute would end the Joy / Demille partnership in 1928.",
"score": "1.3723826"
},
{
"id": "27554059",
"title": "Vanity 6",
"text": "Vanity 6 (1982) ",
"score": "1.3719182"
},
{
"id": "27794294",
"title": "Vanity (singer)",
"text": "1985: The Last Dragon; \"7th Heaven\" ; 1988: Action Jackson; \"Undress\", \"Faraway Eyes\", and \"Shotgun\" with David Koz and featuring vocalist Kareem ",
"score": "1.3681457"
},
{
"id": "4794484",
"title": "Vanity (1935 film)",
"text": "Jane Cain as Vanity Faire ; Percy Marmont as Jefferson Brown ; H.F. Maltby as Lord Cazalet ; John Counsell as Dick Broderick ",
"score": "1.3604276"
},
{
"id": "15402879",
"title": "Vanity Fair (1911 film)",
"text": " The Moving Picture World reported in October 1911 that the film was nearly completed. The film was directed by Charles Kent.",
"score": "1.3563703"
}
] | [
"Vanity (1935 film)\n Vanity is a 1935 British comedy film directed by Adrian Brunel and starring Jane Cain, Percy Marmont and John Counsell. The plot concerns a conceited actress, convinced of the general adoration in which she is held, faking her own death in order to gratify herself by observing the depth of grief caused by her demise. However the actual reactions to the \"news\" prove to be far from what she had expected.",
"The Vanity Pool\n The Vanity Pool is a lost 1918 American silent film drama directed by Ida May Park and starring Mary MacLaren, Anna Q. Nilsson, and Thomas Holding. The script was based on a short story by Nalbro Bartley that was originally published in Young's Magazine. The film was produced and distributed by Universal Film Manufacturing Company. The film centered around a female lobbyist who becomes involved in political intrigue when she begins lobbying for the election of her friend's husband.",
"Vanity (singer)\n1982: \"Nasty Girl\", \"He's So Dull\", and \"Drive Me Wild\" ; 1984: \"Pretty Mess\" ; 1985: \"7th Heaven\" (video clips were from the movie The Last Dragon) ; 1986: \"Under the Influence\" ; 1988: \"He Turned Me Out\", a song performed by The Pointer Sisters from the soundtrack of Action Jackson. Vanity's co-star in the movie, Carl Weathers, appears alongside her in the video. Vanity appeared in seven released music videos: ",
"Kenelm Foss\n Kenelm Foss (13 December 1885 – 28 November 1963) was a British actor, theatre director, author, screenwriter and film director. He was born in Croydon, Surrey and studied art at the Wellesley School of Art and in Paris. He was, however, more interested in theatre and in 1903 made his first appearance on the London stage at the Royal Court Theatre. He then spent four years at the Glasgow Repertory Theatre producing plays and acting before returning to London to manage the Lyric Theatre in the Strand. He directed the play Magic by G.K.Chesterton, which had been written specially for him in 1913, and which title was the caption to the Vanity ",
"Vanity (1947 film)\n Vanity (Italian:Vanità) is a 1947 Italian historical melodrama film directed by Giorgio Pastina and starring Walter Chiari, Liliana Laine and Dina Galli. The film is based on a play by Carlo Bertolazzi. Chiari was awarded a Nastro d'Argento for best debut performance. It was made at the Icet Studios in Milan. The film is set in nineteenth century Milan.",
"Vanity (1927 film)\nLeatrice Joy as Barbara Fiske ; Charles Ray as Lt. Lloyd Van Courtland ; Alan Hale as 'Happy' Dan Morgan ; Mayme Kelso as Mrs. Fiske ; Noble Johnson as Bimbo, ship's cook ; Helen Lee Worthing as Tess Ramsay ; Louis Payne as Butler ",
"Vanity (1927 film)\n Vanity is a 1927, American silent drama film directed by Donald Crisp and starring Leatrice Joy. The film was written by Douglas Doty, produced by DeMille Pictures Corporation and distributed by Producers Distributing Corporation.",
"Purple Rain (film)\n disliked Blinn's script for lacking \"truth\", and was then hired to direct and edit after delivering a pitch on the spot to Cavallo. Prince intended to cast Vanity, leader of the girl group Vanity 6, but she left the group before filming began. Her role was initially offered to Jennifer Beals (who turned it down because she wanted to concentrate on college) before going to Kotero, who was then virtually unknown. Prince had seen her appearance on the February 1983 episode of Tales of the Gold Monkey, in which she played a saucy island girl (inspired by Jamie Muller, the only ",
"Colin Graham\nBenjamin Britten, The Golden Vanity ; Richard Rodney Bennett, Penny for a Song ; Stephen Paulus, The Postman Always Rings Twice, 1982 ; Minoru Miki, Jōruri ; Minoru Miki, The Tale of Genji, 1999 ; Bright Sheng, Madame Mao, 2003 ; David Carlson, Anna Karenina, 2007 Colin Graham OBE (22 September 1931 in Hove, England – 6 April 2007 in St. Louis, Missouri) was a stage director of opera, theatre, and television. Graham was educated at Northaw School (Hertfordshire), Stowe School and RADA. Early in his career, he began a long association with Benjamin Britten, for whom he directed all but one of the composer's stage works, including ",
"Vanity Fair (novel)\nVanity Fair (1911), directed by Charles Kent ; Vanity Fair (1915), directed by Charles Brabin ; Vanity Fair (1922), directed by W. Courtney Rowden ; Vanity Fair (1923), directed by Hugo Ballin ",
"Vanity Fair (novel)\nVanity Fair (1932), directed by Chester M. Franklin and starring Myrna Loy, updating the story to make Becky Sharp a social-climbing governess ; Becky Sharp (1935), starring Miriam Hopkins and Frances Dee, the first feature film shot in full-spectrum Technicolor ; Vanity Fair (2004), directed by Mira Nair and starring Reese Witherspoon as Becky Sharp and Natasha Little, who had played Becky Sharp in the earlier television miniseries of Vanity Fair, as Lady Jane Sheepshanks ",
"Vanity (1935 film)\n The film was a quota quickie production, made at Nettlefold Studios in Walton-on-Thames for distribution by Columbia Pictures. It was based on a play by Ernest Denny. It is now considered to be a lost film. The film is the only known screen credit of Cain, who went on to achieve a degree of immortality in British culture after being chosen as \"the girl with the golden voice\", becoming the original voice of the speaking clock in the United Kingdom between 1936 and 1963.",
"List of film director and editor collaborations\n (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ",
"Simon Dormandy\n Simon Dormandy was, as an actor, known largely for his work with the Royal Shakespeare Company between 1988 and 1995. Over the period he worked with many well known directors, including Adrian Noble, Sam Mendes, Deborah Warner, Katie Mitchell and Max Stafford-Clark. He also took part in several films and television series. He was perhaps best known for his performances in Little Dorrit (as Sparkler) and Vanity Fair (as Dobbin). He was also known for his work with the theatre company Cheek By Jowl. He taught Drama and English at Eton College for fifteen years from 1997 to 2012, where he was Director of Drama and Head of ",
"Vanity (singer)\nVanity 6 (1982) ",
"Vanity (1927 film)\n Leatrice Joy had impulsively cut her hair short in 1926, and Cecil B. DeMille, whom Joy had followed when he set up Producers Distributing Corporation, was publicly angry as it prevented her from portraying traditional feminine roles. The studio developed projects with roles suitable for her “Leatrice Joy bob”, and Vanity was the final of five films shot before she regrew her hair. Despite this, a professional dispute would end the Joy / Demille partnership in 1928.",
"Vanity 6\nVanity 6 (1982) ",
"Vanity (singer)\n1985: The Last Dragon; \"7th Heaven\" ; 1988: Action Jackson; \"Undress\", \"Faraway Eyes\", and \"Shotgun\" with David Koz and featuring vocalist Kareem ",
"Vanity (1935 film)\nJane Cain as Vanity Faire ; Percy Marmont as Jefferson Brown ; H.F. Maltby as Lord Cazalet ; John Counsell as Dick Broderick ",
"Vanity Fair (1911 film)\n The Moving Picture World reported in October 1911 that the film was nearly completed. The film was directed by Charles Kent."
] |
In what country is Konjsko Brdo? | [
"Croatia",
"Republic of Croatia",
"HR",
"HRV",
"hr",
"🇭🇷",
"CRO"
] | country | Konjsko Brdo | 2,096,935 | 90 | [
{
"id": "27638444",
"title": "Konjsko Brdo",
"text": " The population in 2011 was 118.",
"score": "1.7778201"
},
{
"id": "27638443",
"title": "Konjsko Brdo",
"text": " Konjsko Brdo is a village in the municipality of Perušić, Lika-Senj County, Croatia.",
"score": "1.6314652"
},
{
"id": "31326330",
"title": "Visočica hill",
"text": " Visočica (also known as Brdo Grad (Bosnian: Hill Town) is a 213-metre-high hill in Bosnia and Herzegovina famous as the site of the Old town of Visoki. The hill has for more than a decade been the subject of a pseudoarchaeological belief that it is part of an ancient man-made pyramid complex. This notion is rejected by Western archaeologists and geologists.",
"score": "1.45594"
},
{
"id": "9571300",
"title": "Brdo, Slovenske Konjice",
"text": " Brdo is a settlement in the Municipality of Slovenske Konjice in eastern Slovenia. Traditionally the entire area around Slovenske Konjice was part of Styria. It is now included in the Savinja Statistical Region.",
"score": "1.4386412"
},
{
"id": "30938622",
"title": "Dindo, Konjic",
"text": " Dindo is a village in the municipality of Konjic, in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dindo is located in a mountainous rural area in the south-eastern part of Konjic Municipality on the border with Kalinovik Municipality, which also marks the Inter-Entity Boundary Line (IEBL) between the two constituent entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, FB&H and RS. A bridge carrying an important road across the Ljuta, a right tributary of the Neretva, was destroyed in 1995 during the last days of the Bosnian War before the signing of the Dayton Agreement. The destroyed bridge was replaced with a Bailey bridge in 2002. The work was undertaken by a Spanish Engineering Unit of SFOR based in Mostar. As well as restoring road communications the replacement of the bridge was intended to make it easier for displaced persons to return to their pre-war homes, to support agriculture and to contribute to economic prosperity in the region, encouraging trade between the two entities.",
"score": "1.4317737"
},
{
"id": "10376400",
"title": "Konjsko, Resen",
"text": " Konjsko (Коњско) is a village in the Resen Municipality of North Macedonia. Located on the western shore of Lake Prespa, Konjsko is just east of the Albania–North Macedonia border, with the village of Tuminec being the nearest settlement on the opposite side of the border. Konjsko is also the nearest settlement to the island of Golem Grad.",
"score": "1.4189619"
},
{
"id": "4632657",
"title": "Banjsko Brdo",
"text": " Banjsko Brdo (Serbian Cyrillic: Бањско брдо) is a mountain in southwestern Serbia, above the town of Priboj. Its highest peak has an elevation of 1,282 meters above sea level.",
"score": "1.4183478"
},
{
"id": "28861145",
"title": "Brda, Konjic",
"text": " Brda is a village in the municipality of Kalinovik, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"score": "1.4127293"
},
{
"id": "2745942",
"title": "Drinovačko Brdo",
"text": " Drinovačko Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Grude. It is located at the Bosnia-Croatia border.",
"score": "1.3942723"
},
{
"id": "5027937",
"title": "Banj brdo",
"text": " Banj brdo (Serbian Cyrilic: Бањ брдо, translated as Banj hill), before known as Šehitluci (Serbian Cyrilic: Шехитлуци) is a 431 meter hill and tourist and recreation place in Banja Luka, part of Bjeljavina mountain. On top of the hill there is Monument to fallen Krajina soldiers, work of Antun Augustinčić dedicated to dead soldiers of People Liberation War in Bosanska Krajina and it is possible to see whole city from that place. Serpentine road on Banj brdo that leads to the monument is made in years 1932 and 1933 on which today small tourist bus is circulating between Day of the City of Banja Luka (April 22) and September 30.",
"score": "1.387493"
},
{
"id": "10376401",
"title": "Konjsko, Resen",
"text": " Konjsko has almost no permanent residents.",
"score": "1.3870828"
},
{
"id": "7423386",
"title": "Kruševo Brdo",
"text": " Kruševo Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska, municipality Kotor Varoš in geographical region Bosanska Krajina. It is administratively divided into Krševo Brdo I and II.",
"score": "1.378871"
},
{
"id": "4688909",
"title": "Konjsko Tunnel",
"text": " The Konjsko Tunnel is located between Vučevica and Dugopolje interchanges of the A1 motorway, in the central Dalmatia region of Croatia. The tunnel tubes vary in length, and are 1262 m and 1122 m long respectively. The tunnel tubes were completed simultaneously. Its construction has been completed in 2004. The northern portal of the tunnel is at elevation of 343.7 m.a.s.l., while the southern one is found at 338.7 m.a.s.l. The maximum permitted driving speed in the tunnel is 100 km/h. The tunnel is operated and maintained by Hrvatske autoceste.",
"score": "1.3656964"
},
{
"id": "12117871",
"title": "Kanarevo Brdo",
"text": " Kanarevo Brdo developed on the right bank of the Topčiderka river, in southern section of the large park-woods Košutnjak and Topčider, on the road connecting downtown Belgrade to, at that time, industrial suburb of Rakovica. It still remains mainly residential area, with two elementary schools (Đura Jakšić and Ivo Andrić), a medical centre, soccer field of the FK Rakovica and an open green market, with a population of 11,320 in 2011 (combined population of the local communities of Kanarevo Brdo, 6,376 and Košutnjak, 4,944).",
"score": "1.3656354"
},
{
"id": "2214535",
"title": "Brdo pri Lukovici",
"text": " Brdo Castle (Grad Brdo), also known as the Kersnik Manor (Kersnikova graščina), is located in the settlement. A castle was first mentioned at Brdo in the 15th century but was destroyed in the peasant uprising of 1515. The current structure is a 16th-century castle that was built by the Counts of Lamberg. A plaque above the entry is dated 1552 and bears the Lamberg coat of arms and a German inscription: \"The noble Hans von Lamberg, owner of Črnelo and Mengeš, started building this castle, and then by God's will it was completed by his son Andreas von Lamberg of Črnelo ",
"score": "1.3632482"
},
{
"id": "2794547",
"title": "Konjsko, Posušje",
"text": " Konjsko is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Posušje.",
"score": "1.361818"
},
{
"id": "8916077",
"title": "NAAI",
"text": "🇲🇪 Breznica ; 🇷🇸 Rad ",
"score": "1.3591379"
},
{
"id": "7768609",
"title": "Jagodnja",
"text": " Jagodnja (Serbian Cyrillic: Јагодња) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Krupanj. Its highest peak Košutnja Stopa has an elevation of 939 meters above sea level. The peak of Mačkov kamen (923 m, 44.32889°N, 19.2925°W) was the site of one of bloodiest battles in World War I between Serbian and Austro-Hungarian army, during the Battle of Drina. There is a monument (Memorial ossuary Mačkov kamen) dedicated to the fallen Serbian soldiers.",
"score": "1.3555827"
},
{
"id": "26447251",
"title": "Konjsko, Sevnica",
"text": " Konjsko (Roßbach ) is a small settlement in the hills above the right bank of the Sava River south of Boštanj in the Municipality of Sevnica in central Slovenia. The area is part of the historical region of Lower Carniola. The municipality is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.",
"score": "1.3518231"
},
{
"id": "32945452",
"title": "Konjšica",
"text": " Konjšica (in older sources also Košica, Koschza ) is a settlement in the hills on the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Litija in central Slovenia. A small part of the settlement also lies in the Municipality of Zagorje ob Savi. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region; until January 2014 the municipality was part of the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. The local church is dedicated to Saint Bartholomew (sveti Jernej) and belongs to the Parish of Podkum. It dates to 1780. The conductor Carlos Kleiber and his wife Stanislava Brezovar are buried at the local cemetery.",
"score": "1.3511742"
}
] | [
"Konjsko Brdo\n The population in 2011 was 118.",
"Konjsko Brdo\n Konjsko Brdo is a village in the municipality of Perušić, Lika-Senj County, Croatia.",
"Visočica hill\n Visočica (also known as Brdo Grad (Bosnian: Hill Town) is a 213-metre-high hill in Bosnia and Herzegovina famous as the site of the Old town of Visoki. The hill has for more than a decade been the subject of a pseudoarchaeological belief that it is part of an ancient man-made pyramid complex. This notion is rejected by Western archaeologists and geologists.",
"Brdo, Slovenske Konjice\n Brdo is a settlement in the Municipality of Slovenske Konjice in eastern Slovenia. Traditionally the entire area around Slovenske Konjice was part of Styria. It is now included in the Savinja Statistical Region.",
"Dindo, Konjic\n Dindo is a village in the municipality of Konjic, in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Dindo is located in a mountainous rural area in the south-eastern part of Konjic Municipality on the border with Kalinovik Municipality, which also marks the Inter-Entity Boundary Line (IEBL) between the two constituent entities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, FB&H and RS. A bridge carrying an important road across the Ljuta, a right tributary of the Neretva, was destroyed in 1995 during the last days of the Bosnian War before the signing of the Dayton Agreement. The destroyed bridge was replaced with a Bailey bridge in 2002. The work was undertaken by a Spanish Engineering Unit of SFOR based in Mostar. As well as restoring road communications the replacement of the bridge was intended to make it easier for displaced persons to return to their pre-war homes, to support agriculture and to contribute to economic prosperity in the region, encouraging trade between the two entities.",
"Konjsko, Resen\n Konjsko (Коњско) is a village in the Resen Municipality of North Macedonia. Located on the western shore of Lake Prespa, Konjsko is just east of the Albania–North Macedonia border, with the village of Tuminec being the nearest settlement on the opposite side of the border. Konjsko is also the nearest settlement to the island of Golem Grad.",
"Banjsko Brdo\n Banjsko Brdo (Serbian Cyrillic: Бањско брдо) is a mountain in southwestern Serbia, above the town of Priboj. Its highest peak has an elevation of 1,282 meters above sea level.",
"Brda, Konjic\n Brda is a village in the municipality of Kalinovik, Bosnia and Herzegovina.",
"Drinovačko Brdo\n Drinovačko Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Grude. It is located at the Bosnia-Croatia border.",
"Banj brdo\n Banj brdo (Serbian Cyrilic: Бањ брдо, translated as Banj hill), before known as Šehitluci (Serbian Cyrilic: Шехитлуци) is a 431 meter hill and tourist and recreation place in Banja Luka, part of Bjeljavina mountain. On top of the hill there is Monument to fallen Krajina soldiers, work of Antun Augustinčić dedicated to dead soldiers of People Liberation War in Bosanska Krajina and it is possible to see whole city from that place. Serpentine road on Banj brdo that leads to the monument is made in years 1932 and 1933 on which today small tourist bus is circulating between Day of the City of Banja Luka (April 22) and September 30.",
"Konjsko, Resen\n Konjsko has almost no permanent residents.",
"Kruševo Brdo\n Kruševo Brdo is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska, municipality Kotor Varoš in geographical region Bosanska Krajina. It is administratively divided into Krševo Brdo I and II.",
"Konjsko Tunnel\n The Konjsko Tunnel is located between Vučevica and Dugopolje interchanges of the A1 motorway, in the central Dalmatia region of Croatia. The tunnel tubes vary in length, and are 1262 m and 1122 m long respectively. The tunnel tubes were completed simultaneously. Its construction has been completed in 2004. The northern portal of the tunnel is at elevation of 343.7 m.a.s.l., while the southern one is found at 338.7 m.a.s.l. The maximum permitted driving speed in the tunnel is 100 km/h. The tunnel is operated and maintained by Hrvatske autoceste.",
"Kanarevo Brdo\n Kanarevo Brdo developed on the right bank of the Topčiderka river, in southern section of the large park-woods Košutnjak and Topčider, on the road connecting downtown Belgrade to, at that time, industrial suburb of Rakovica. It still remains mainly residential area, with two elementary schools (Đura Jakšić and Ivo Andrić), a medical centre, soccer field of the FK Rakovica and an open green market, with a population of 11,320 in 2011 (combined population of the local communities of Kanarevo Brdo, 6,376 and Košutnjak, 4,944).",
"Brdo pri Lukovici\n Brdo Castle (Grad Brdo), also known as the Kersnik Manor (Kersnikova graščina), is located in the settlement. A castle was first mentioned at Brdo in the 15th century but was destroyed in the peasant uprising of 1515. The current structure is a 16th-century castle that was built by the Counts of Lamberg. A plaque above the entry is dated 1552 and bears the Lamberg coat of arms and a German inscription: \"The noble Hans von Lamberg, owner of Črnelo and Mengeš, started building this castle, and then by God's will it was completed by his son Andreas von Lamberg of Črnelo ",
"Konjsko, Posušje\n Konjsko is a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census, the village is located in the municipality of Posušje.",
"NAAI\n🇲🇪 Breznica ; 🇷🇸 Rad ",
"Jagodnja\n Jagodnja (Serbian Cyrillic: Јагодња) is a mountain in western Serbia, near the town of Krupanj. Its highest peak Košutnja Stopa has an elevation of 939 meters above sea level. The peak of Mačkov kamen (923 m, 44.32889°N, 19.2925°W) was the site of one of bloodiest battles in World War I between Serbian and Austro-Hungarian army, during the Battle of Drina. There is a monument (Memorial ossuary Mačkov kamen) dedicated to the fallen Serbian soldiers.",
"Konjsko, Sevnica\n Konjsko (Roßbach ) is a small settlement in the hills above the right bank of the Sava River south of Boštanj in the Municipality of Sevnica in central Slovenia. The area is part of the historical region of Lower Carniola. The municipality is now included in the Lower Sava Statistical Region.",
"Konjšica\n Konjšica (in older sources also Košica, Koschza ) is a settlement in the hills on the right bank of the Sava River in the Municipality of Litija in central Slovenia. A small part of the settlement also lies in the Municipality of Zagorje ob Savi. The area is part of the traditional region of Lower Carniola. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region; until January 2014 the municipality was part of the Central Slovenia Statistical Region. The local church is dedicated to Saint Bartholomew (sveti Jernej) and belongs to the Parish of Podkum. It dates to 1780. The conductor Carlos Kleiber and his wife Stanislava Brezovar are buried at the local cemetery."
] |
In what city was Gary Freear born? | [
"King's Lynn",
"Lynn",
"Bishop's Lynn"
] | place of birth | Gary Freear | 4,192,425 | 38 | [
{
"id": "29080394",
"title": "Gary Freear",
"text": " Gary David Freear (born 4 May 1982) is an English cricketer. Freear is a right-handed batsman. He was born in King's Lynn, Norfolk. Freear made his debut for Cambridgeshire County Cricket Club in the 2000 Minor Counties Championship against Suffolk. In 2001, he made his List A cricket debut against Somerset in the 2001 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. He played three further List A matches for Cambridgeshire, the last coming against Northamptonshire in the 2004 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. He played for Cambridgeshire until the end of the 2014 season. In his spare time Gary works as a carpenter for his family business. More recently he has founded GDF Bats and makes and sells cricket bats and other equipment to the buyers specifications. Gary for many years has been a groundsman at Wisbech Cricket Club, where he resided on the grounds in the ‘chod shack’. This was until he found his girlfriend Heidi Allen.",
"score": "1.9681871"
},
{
"id": "32094083",
"title": "Louie Freear",
"text": " Louisa Freear (26 November 1871–23 March 1939) was an English actress and comedienne. She was born in Lambeth, London, and was part of the Freear theatrical family; her parents were actor Henry Butler Freear and Mary Jane Freear ( Burke), a vocalist. Her brother Walter Freear was an actor, dancer and comedian, and brother Alfred worked as a musician. Described as \"vital and diminutive\", she performed the role Flo Honeydew in The Lady Slavey (1894) and Puck in Herbert Beerbohm Tree's lavish 1900 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. She was also a success in George Dance's comic opera, A Chinese Honeymoon, in 1901. In 1912, she married Charles Shepherd. She died in London in 1939.",
"score": "1.6850321"
},
{
"id": "25941850",
"title": "Gary Dee",
"text": " Dee was born in Hope, Arkansas. His father was a sharecropper who moved the family to Exeter, California when Dee was 11. There his father became a fire chief. He went on to spend three semesters at the University of California, Berkeley, studying accounting. He dropped out and went on to enter the College of the Sequoias. He then finished his degree in radio and speech at Fresno State College while living in a funeral home rent-free in exchange for answering the phones at night; or at least that was the deal. Gary sublet two of his three rooms and had the other college students do the work. While in Fresno, he was on-air at KYNO, the Gene Chenault-owned Top-40 station that was an ",
"score": "1.6725392"
},
{
"id": "7142482",
"title": "Jim Gary",
"text": " While still at grammar school, at the age of eleven, he moved out of his parents' Colts Neck home and began making his own living. He supported himself by doing odd jobs and selling his handmade seasonal decorations. For almost a year he secretly slept in the garage of the Sterner family, a prominent Monmouth County couple in the same community, who employed him regularly. Once the family discovered this, they provided space in their home for him. He remained close to them until they died. Gary attended Freehold High School, where he developed an interest in sculpting with wood; he was inducted into the school's hall ",
"score": "1.6545267"
},
{
"id": "1925965",
"title": "Gary Frisch",
"text": " Frisch was born in Johannesburg South Africa. His father, Eric, was an entrepreneur, and his mother, Rhona, was a bookkeeper. He was educated at Boksburg High School and studied computer science at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg while working for De Beers' industrial diamond division.",
"score": "1.6432881"
},
{
"id": "13042207",
"title": "Freehold High School",
"text": "Daniel Boyarin (born 1946, class of 1964), historian of religion who is Professor of Talmudic Culture at University of California, Berkeley. ; Charles H. Brower (1901-1984, class of 1920), advertising executive, copywriter and author. ; Scott Conover (born 1968), former Detroit Lions offensive tackle (1991–96) ; Michele Fitzgerald (born 1990), winner of Survivor: Kaôh Rōng in 2016, the 32nd season of the reality series. ; David Garrison (born 1952, class of 1970), actor best known as the character Steve Rhoades in the television series, Married... with Children. ; Jim Gary (1939-2006), sculptor known for his large, colorful creations of dinosaurs made from discarded automobile parts. ; Jason Kutney (born 1981), soccer midfielder who played for the Pittsburgh ",
"score": "1.6228099"
},
{
"id": "13477596",
"title": "Gary Blair",
"text": " Gary Blair is the son of Lee, a plaster foreman, and Jean, a housewife. He was raised in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Dallas. He grew up playing baseball, and as a 128-pound center fielder at Bryan Adams High School, he received all-city honors in 1963. Following his high school graduation in 1963, he enrolled at Texas Tech University, where he failed out of architecture, and moved to California to become a restaurant manager. He got a U.S. Army draft notice in 1969, and decided to enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps, completing a two-year tour of duty. He was stationed in Okinawa during his duty. After his tour, he lived in ",
"score": "1.6175668"
},
{
"id": "4262597",
"title": "Mike Freer",
"text": " Mike Freer was born in Manchester on 29 May 1960. Part of his childhood was spent in council accommodation, which was then bought by his parents following the Conservative government's Right to Buy policy. He was state educated at the Chadderton Grammar School for Boys and subsequently at St Aidan's County High School (now Richard Rose Central Academy) in Carlisle. He read accountancy and business law at the University of Stirling but did not graduate with a degree. Freer worked for a number of fast-food chains, including Pizzaland, Pizza Hut and KFC, prior to a management career in the financial sector. Freer worked for Barclays Bank as an \"Area Performance Manager\".",
"score": "1.6148133"
},
{
"id": "3804450",
"title": "Gary Fildes",
"text": " Fildes was born in Sunderland in 1965. Growing up in Grindon, a council estate on the outskirts of Sunderland, he left school at the age of sixteen to work as a bricklayer. Not formally trained in astronomy or academia, in 2012 Fildes was given an honorary master's degree from Durham University.",
"score": "1.6123859"
},
{
"id": "9481473",
"title": "Doug Free",
"text": " Douglas Free (born January 16, 1984) is a former American football offensive tackle in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys. He was drafted by the Cowboys in the fourth round of the 2007 NFL Draft. He played college football at Northern Illinois University.",
"score": "1.6004128"
},
{
"id": "10707679",
"title": "Gary Thain",
"text": "Bright City (1971) ",
"score": "1.5947735"
},
{
"id": "12939107",
"title": "Dave Freer",
"text": " Freer was born and educated in South Africa. He grew up on the edge of a city next to a ~500-acre nature preserve of coastal bush. His father crewed on a commercial fishing boat on weekends. After a stint in boarding school, where he learned \"Smoking, strong drink and pursuit of wild women\", he was conscripted at the age of 17 into the South African Defence Force and sent to the Angolan border as a medic (his last choice). \"My choices were five years in jail, leave the country, or go in for a year. I'm a strong swimmer, but the Atlantic seemed too ",
"score": "1.592911"
},
{
"id": "6886166",
"title": "Gary Berkovich",
"text": " Gary Berkovich, AIA, NCARB (born May 26, 1935, in Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union) is an American and Soviet architect, and the first Soviet architect of 1960s – 1980s immigration wave, who had opened his office (Gary A. Berkovich Associates, 1987) in the United States. Author of about 200 projects of residential and public buildings in the USSR and in the USA. He is a winner of the architectural competitions in the Soviet Union and in the United States. He is also an author of books and professional articles.",
"score": "1.5901806"
},
{
"id": "32105326",
"title": "Gary Kurfirst",
"text": " Kurfirst was born in Forest Hills, Queens. He started promoting dances while he was still a student at Forest Hills High School in Queens. He rapidly moved on to organizing and promoting shows at the tennis stadium at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills and moving across the East River to promoting gigs in Manhattan. Kurfirst helped arrange the first East Coast performances of acts including Jimi Hendrix and The Who.",
"score": "1.5883135"
},
{
"id": "10423408",
"title": "Gary Gannon",
"text": " Gannon was born in Dublin's North Inner City and now lives in Glasnevin. The son of a street trader, he left school to train as a plumber. He later studied History and Politics at Trinity College Dublin.",
"score": "1.5872116"
},
{
"id": "2933640",
"title": "Gary Spatz",
"text": " Gary Spatz was born in New York on April 1, 1951, and raised in New York and Miami, Florida. He then moved to Washington D.C. where he attended the American University and studied history. After attending a summer acting program at the Arena Stage Theater in D.C. he decided to move to Los Angeles in 1977. In Los Angeles, Gary Spatz continued to study acting with Paul Sills and American Theater Arts from 1978 through 1985.",
"score": "1.5836501"
},
{
"id": "7196458",
"title": "Gary McSpadden",
"text": " Gary McSpadden was born to Boyd and Helen McSpadden. The family later moved to Lubbock, Texas where Gary's father was pastor of Faith Temple. McSpadden grew up in a musical family. His mother and father were songwriters, and at least one of their songs, \"Heaven\", became popular after it was recorded by George Beverly Shea and others. As a young boy, McSpadden sang in the church and was singing solos by the age of ten.",
"score": "1.5816348"
},
{
"id": "27282026",
"title": "Gary Pomerantz",
"text": " Pomerantz was born in North Tarrytown, New York, the youngest of three boys. His family moved to Orlando, Florida when he was a boy, and then to Los Angeles, California in 1971. He studied history at the University of California, Berkeley, served for a time as sports editor of the student newspaper, The Daily Californian, and graduated in 1982.",
"score": "1.5808334"
},
{
"id": "29511989",
"title": "Micki Free",
"text": " Micki Free, a \"mixed-blood\" Native American, was born in West Texas and moved to Germany soon afterward. He claims Irish, Comanche, and Cherokee descent. His stepfather, a U.S. Army sergeant, was stationed in Germany, and Free was introduced to rock 'n' roll there as a child, when one of his five sisters received tickets to a Jimi Hendrix concert and took him along to the show. \"It just blew my mind\", Free remembered. His family later moved to Illinois, where Free joined the rock band Smokehouse. When he was 17, he was discovered by Gene Simmons of KISS, during a concert at which Smokehouse was the opening act for KISS, Ted Nugent, and REO Speedwagon. After Simmons' encouragement, Free joined Shalamar in 1984, ",
"score": "1.5804956"
},
{
"id": "30285746",
"title": "Gary Tharaldson",
"text": " Gary Tharaldson (born 1945) is an American entrepreneur and founder of the Tharaldson Companies. As of 2019, Tharaldson is the wealthiest individual in North Dakota, and the state's only billionaire. Gary Tharaldson was born in and grew up in Dazey, North Dakota. He graduated from Valley City State University with degrees in Business Administration and Physical Education. He did graduate work at North Dakota State University in Fargo and taught school in Leonard, North Dakota for two years. He has been extensively involved at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota, lending his name and acumen to the University's \"Gary Tharaldson School of Business\", serving for a time on the University's Board of Trustees, and receiving an honorary doctorate from the University in 2018. Tharaldson Hospitality builds and operates hotels across the United States. Tharaldson Companies was established in 1982 ",
"score": "1.580099"
}
] | [
"Gary Freear\n Gary David Freear (born 4 May 1982) is an English cricketer. Freear is a right-handed batsman. He was born in King's Lynn, Norfolk. Freear made his debut for Cambridgeshire County Cricket Club in the 2000 Minor Counties Championship against Suffolk. In 2001, he made his List A cricket debut against Somerset in the 2001 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. He played three further List A matches for Cambridgeshire, the last coming against Northamptonshire in the 2004 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. He played for Cambridgeshire until the end of the 2014 season. In his spare time Gary works as a carpenter for his family business. More recently he has founded GDF Bats and makes and sells cricket bats and other equipment to the buyers specifications. Gary for many years has been a groundsman at Wisbech Cricket Club, where he resided on the grounds in the ‘chod shack’. This was until he found his girlfriend Heidi Allen.",
"Louie Freear\n Louisa Freear (26 November 1871–23 March 1939) was an English actress and comedienne. She was born in Lambeth, London, and was part of the Freear theatrical family; her parents were actor Henry Butler Freear and Mary Jane Freear ( Burke), a vocalist. Her brother Walter Freear was an actor, dancer and comedian, and brother Alfred worked as a musician. Described as \"vital and diminutive\", she performed the role Flo Honeydew in The Lady Slavey (1894) and Puck in Herbert Beerbohm Tree's lavish 1900 production of A Midsummer Night's Dream. She was also a success in George Dance's comic opera, A Chinese Honeymoon, in 1901. In 1912, she married Charles Shepherd. She died in London in 1939.",
"Gary Dee\n Dee was born in Hope, Arkansas. His father was a sharecropper who moved the family to Exeter, California when Dee was 11. There his father became a fire chief. He went on to spend three semesters at the University of California, Berkeley, studying accounting. He dropped out and went on to enter the College of the Sequoias. He then finished his degree in radio and speech at Fresno State College while living in a funeral home rent-free in exchange for answering the phones at night; or at least that was the deal. Gary sublet two of his three rooms and had the other college students do the work. While in Fresno, he was on-air at KYNO, the Gene Chenault-owned Top-40 station that was an ",
"Jim Gary\n While still at grammar school, at the age of eleven, he moved out of his parents' Colts Neck home and began making his own living. He supported himself by doing odd jobs and selling his handmade seasonal decorations. For almost a year he secretly slept in the garage of the Sterner family, a prominent Monmouth County couple in the same community, who employed him regularly. Once the family discovered this, they provided space in their home for him. He remained close to them until they died. Gary attended Freehold High School, where he developed an interest in sculpting with wood; he was inducted into the school's hall ",
"Gary Frisch\n Frisch was born in Johannesburg South Africa. His father, Eric, was an entrepreneur, and his mother, Rhona, was a bookkeeper. He was educated at Boksburg High School and studied computer science at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg while working for De Beers' industrial diamond division.",
"Freehold High School\nDaniel Boyarin (born 1946, class of 1964), historian of religion who is Professor of Talmudic Culture at University of California, Berkeley. ; Charles H. Brower (1901-1984, class of 1920), advertising executive, copywriter and author. ; Scott Conover (born 1968), former Detroit Lions offensive tackle (1991–96) ; Michele Fitzgerald (born 1990), winner of Survivor: Kaôh Rōng in 2016, the 32nd season of the reality series. ; David Garrison (born 1952, class of 1970), actor best known as the character Steve Rhoades in the television series, Married... with Children. ; Jim Gary (1939-2006), sculptor known for his large, colorful creations of dinosaurs made from discarded automobile parts. ; Jason Kutney (born 1981), soccer midfielder who played for the Pittsburgh ",
"Gary Blair\n Gary Blair is the son of Lee, a plaster foreman, and Jean, a housewife. He was raised in the Forest Hills neighborhood of Dallas. He grew up playing baseball, and as a 128-pound center fielder at Bryan Adams High School, he received all-city honors in 1963. Following his high school graduation in 1963, he enrolled at Texas Tech University, where he failed out of architecture, and moved to California to become a restaurant manager. He got a U.S. Army draft notice in 1969, and decided to enlist in the U.S. Marine Corps, completing a two-year tour of duty. He was stationed in Okinawa during his duty. After his tour, he lived in ",
"Mike Freer\n Mike Freer was born in Manchester on 29 May 1960. Part of his childhood was spent in council accommodation, which was then bought by his parents following the Conservative government's Right to Buy policy. He was state educated at the Chadderton Grammar School for Boys and subsequently at St Aidan's County High School (now Richard Rose Central Academy) in Carlisle. He read accountancy and business law at the University of Stirling but did not graduate with a degree. Freer worked for a number of fast-food chains, including Pizzaland, Pizza Hut and KFC, prior to a management career in the financial sector. Freer worked for Barclays Bank as an \"Area Performance Manager\".",
"Gary Fildes\n Fildes was born in Sunderland in 1965. Growing up in Grindon, a council estate on the outskirts of Sunderland, he left school at the age of sixteen to work as a bricklayer. Not formally trained in astronomy or academia, in 2012 Fildes was given an honorary master's degree from Durham University.",
"Doug Free\n Douglas Free (born January 16, 1984) is a former American football offensive tackle in the National Football League for the Dallas Cowboys. He was drafted by the Cowboys in the fourth round of the 2007 NFL Draft. He played college football at Northern Illinois University.",
"Gary Thain\nBright City (1971) ",
"Dave Freer\n Freer was born and educated in South Africa. He grew up on the edge of a city next to a ~500-acre nature preserve of coastal bush. His father crewed on a commercial fishing boat on weekends. After a stint in boarding school, where he learned \"Smoking, strong drink and pursuit of wild women\", he was conscripted at the age of 17 into the South African Defence Force and sent to the Angolan border as a medic (his last choice). \"My choices were five years in jail, leave the country, or go in for a year. I'm a strong swimmer, but the Atlantic seemed too ",
"Gary Berkovich\n Gary Berkovich, AIA, NCARB (born May 26, 1935, in Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union) is an American and Soviet architect, and the first Soviet architect of 1960s – 1980s immigration wave, who had opened his office (Gary A. Berkovich Associates, 1987) in the United States. Author of about 200 projects of residential and public buildings in the USSR and in the USA. He is a winner of the architectural competitions in the Soviet Union and in the United States. He is also an author of books and professional articles.",
"Gary Kurfirst\n Kurfirst was born in Forest Hills, Queens. He started promoting dances while he was still a student at Forest Hills High School in Queens. He rapidly moved on to organizing and promoting shows at the tennis stadium at the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills and moving across the East River to promoting gigs in Manhattan. Kurfirst helped arrange the first East Coast performances of acts including Jimi Hendrix and The Who.",
"Gary Gannon\n Gannon was born in Dublin's North Inner City and now lives in Glasnevin. The son of a street trader, he left school to train as a plumber. He later studied History and Politics at Trinity College Dublin.",
"Gary Spatz\n Gary Spatz was born in New York on April 1, 1951, and raised in New York and Miami, Florida. He then moved to Washington D.C. where he attended the American University and studied history. After attending a summer acting program at the Arena Stage Theater in D.C. he decided to move to Los Angeles in 1977. In Los Angeles, Gary Spatz continued to study acting with Paul Sills and American Theater Arts from 1978 through 1985.",
"Gary McSpadden\n Gary McSpadden was born to Boyd and Helen McSpadden. The family later moved to Lubbock, Texas where Gary's father was pastor of Faith Temple. McSpadden grew up in a musical family. His mother and father were songwriters, and at least one of their songs, \"Heaven\", became popular after it was recorded by George Beverly Shea and others. As a young boy, McSpadden sang in the church and was singing solos by the age of ten.",
"Gary Pomerantz\n Pomerantz was born in North Tarrytown, New York, the youngest of three boys. His family moved to Orlando, Florida when he was a boy, and then to Los Angeles, California in 1971. He studied history at the University of California, Berkeley, served for a time as sports editor of the student newspaper, The Daily Californian, and graduated in 1982.",
"Micki Free\n Micki Free, a \"mixed-blood\" Native American, was born in West Texas and moved to Germany soon afterward. He claims Irish, Comanche, and Cherokee descent. His stepfather, a U.S. Army sergeant, was stationed in Germany, and Free was introduced to rock 'n' roll there as a child, when one of his five sisters received tickets to a Jimi Hendrix concert and took him along to the show. \"It just blew my mind\", Free remembered. His family later moved to Illinois, where Free joined the rock band Smokehouse. When he was 17, he was discovered by Gene Simmons of KISS, during a concert at which Smokehouse was the opening act for KISS, Ted Nugent, and REO Speedwagon. After Simmons' encouragement, Free joined Shalamar in 1984, ",
"Gary Tharaldson\n Gary Tharaldson (born 1945) is an American entrepreneur and founder of the Tharaldson Companies. As of 2019, Tharaldson is the wealthiest individual in North Dakota, and the state's only billionaire. Gary Tharaldson was born in and grew up in Dazey, North Dakota. He graduated from Valley City State University with degrees in Business Administration and Physical Education. He did graduate work at North Dakota State University in Fargo and taught school in Leonard, North Dakota for two years. He has been extensively involved at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota, lending his name and acumen to the University's \"Gary Tharaldson School of Business\", serving for a time on the University's Board of Trustees, and receiving an honorary doctorate from the University in 2018. Tharaldson Hospitality builds and operates hotels across the United States. Tharaldson Companies was established in 1982 "
] |
In what country is Idlorpait? | [
"Greenland",
"gl",
"🇬🇱"
] | country | Idlorpait | 4,542,442 | 82 | [
{
"id": "7453030",
"title": "Idlorpait",
"text": " Idlorpait is a former Moravian mission in southernmost Greenland located between the missions at Lichtenau and Friedrichsthal. It was founded in 1864 and operated until 1900, when it was surrendered to the Lutheran Church of Denmark.",
"score": "1.8642116"
},
{
"id": "32987185",
"title": "ICITAP",
"text": "Bangladesh ; Indonesia ; Nepal ; Pakistan ; Philippines ; Thailand ",
"score": "1.3221304"
},
{
"id": "8862564",
"title": "Scriptonite",
"text": " Adil Oralbekovich Zhalelov, - Kulmagambetov (Әdil Oralbekuly Jalelov (Kulmagambetov); born June 3, 1990, Leninskoye, Kazakh SSR), better known by his stage name Skriptonit (Scriptonite) is a Kazakh performer and music producer, founder of the Musica36. First loudly announced himself in 2013 with a video for the song \"VBVVCTND\", a year and a half later he released his debut album \"House with Normal Phenomena\", which became one of the most successful Russian-language rap albums in 2015. In 2018, he split his work into two projects: Skryptonite and Gruppa Skryptonite. As Adil himself explained, this distinction concerns not only the recording of songs, but also concerts. Thus, Gruppa Skryptonite concerts are an eight-person music band and new arrangements, while Skryptonite concerts are a \"rapper + DJ\" format and perform to minusovki. He is the most listened to artist in CIS for 2021 according to Music of the First.",
"score": "1.2938833"
},
{
"id": "5758530",
"title": "Yuthlert Sippapak",
"text": " Yuthlert Sippapak (ยุทธเลิศ สิปปภาค, born November 8, 1966 in Loei, Thailand) is a Thai film director, screenwriter and producer. He is best known for his genre-blending films Killer Tattoo (comedy and action) and Buppah Rahtree (comedy and horror).",
"score": "1.2788757"
},
{
"id": "1756486",
"title": "Apichat Pakwan",
"text": " in The Hague and Blierock in Venlo. In 2018 Thai singer Wimonmat ‘Wiw’ Kangjantha joined the group, shifting the focus from instrumental music to more songs, sung in the Isan language. With Kangjantha they recorded their third single Leh Dub, which was chosen as one of the best singles of 2018 by The Bangkok Post. They toured in Singapore, Thailand and Laos, with highlights performing on the Jim Thompson Molam Bus stage of the Jai Thep Festival in Chiang Mai, and a live performance on Thai national TV-station Workpoint. 2019 brought more concerts in Thailand, followed by a tour in Europe, including shows on Fusion Festival (Germany), World Experience Festival (Romania), Na Fir Bolg (Belgium), Amsterdam Roots, and the Houtfestival (both in The Netherlands). Together ",
"score": "1.2693021"
},
{
"id": "28889801",
"title": "Zülpich",
"text": "🇫🇷 Blaye, France ; 🇫🇮 Kangasala, Finland ; Elst, Netherlands ",
"score": "1.2641764"
},
{
"id": "29827234",
"title": "DJ Hidden",
"text": " In addition to a busy production schedule, DJ Hidden still finds the time to regularly perform at events across the world, both as DJ Hidden and as part of The Outside Agency. In the Netherlands, DJ Hidden and Eye-D are frequent guests at prominent underground club nights \"PRSPCT\" and \"Smackdown\". Wessels has performed in Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Czech Republic, England, Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Lithuania, Latvia, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Scotland, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, Bulgaria and the United States.",
"score": "1.262711"
},
{
"id": "32987183",
"title": "ICITAP",
"text": " Currently, the I.C.I.T.A.P. is in 44 countries and maintains 16 field offices all over the globe. Through its assistance and quality training it has made a difference in the countries they partnered with.",
"score": "1.25907"
},
{
"id": "1575627",
"title": "Djolpa McKenzie",
"text": " Paul Djolpa McKenzie is a musician and educator from Maningrida, Australia in the Arnhem Land. McKenzie is a VET teacher at Maningrida Community Education Centre. In 2008 he got a Deadly Award for Outstanding Achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education. McKenzie fronts Wild Water, a band which plays a mix of reggae, rock, dub and funk. He sing in Brarra, Kriol and English. Wild Water has toured nationally And released two albums, Baltpa (1996) and Rrawa (2007). McKenzie was a part of The Black Arm Band, performing in their Hidden Republic and dirtsong shows.",
"score": "1.2540677"
},
{
"id": "32987187",
"title": "ICITAP",
"text": "Albania ; Armenia ; Azerbaijan ; Bosnia-Herzegovina ; Bulgaria ; Croatia ; Georgia ; Kazakhstan ; Kosovo ; Kyrgyzstan ; Macedonia ; Moldova ; Montenegro ; Serbia ; Tajikistan ; Ukraine ; U.S.–GUAM ",
"score": "1.2486031"
},
{
"id": "29908941",
"title": "Rigspolitiet",
"text": " The National Police of Denmark (Rigspolitiet, Landløgregla, Naalagaaffiup Politiivi) is the upper most level of the Police of Denmark within the Kingdom (The unity of the Realm: Denmark (proper), Greenland, Faroe Islands). Administered by a framework of laws dictated by the Folketing (Danish Parliament) and the government's Minister for Justice, Rigspolitiet polices all regions governed by Denmark, including the Faroe Islands and Greenland.",
"score": "1.2445992"
},
{
"id": "9783030",
"title": "Baktruppen",
"text": " Norway, CCA, Glasgow / Scotland, Nordic Excellence, Kulturhuset, Stockholm / Sweden. Autonnale / BIT – Teatergarasjen, Bergen / Norway, Uganda National Theatre, Kampala / Uganda, Perfect Performance Festival, Stockholm / Sweden, Parkteateret, Oslo / Norway, Stamsund International Theatre Festival / Norway, Kunstbanken, Hamar / Norway, Limelight, Kortrijk / Belgium, Montemor-o-Novo Theatre, City Hall / Portugal, Norwegian Touring Exhibitions, Morokulien, border of Norway/Sweden. Co-producer: Autonnale Bergen Contemporary Music Festival. Rui Hortas Centro Coreográfico de Montemor – o Novo /Portugal. Baktruppen Camp Kortrijk Uncover Operation (BACKUNCOP). Site Specific, Limelight, Kortrijk / Belgium BALD KOMMT DIE GANZE GESICHTE VON IDENTITÄT UND IDENTITOT Live radio play ",
"score": "1.2426293"
},
{
"id": "26702189",
"title": "Yeniceoba",
"text": "🇩🇰 Ishøj in Denmark since 2006. ",
"score": "1.2417548"
},
{
"id": "24986920",
"title": "FrieslandCampina Germany",
"text": " • Alpa • Axel Frischmilch • Ayyo (Ayran) • Fruttis • Landliebe • Mark Brandenburg • Milbona • Milfina • Optiwell • Puddis • Südmilch • Tuffi • Yazoo",
"score": "1.2408235"
},
{
"id": "29137406",
"title": "Neo-Gaeltacht",
"text": " a predominantly working-class area in Dublin, had, in conjunction with the local branch of Glór na nGael, received planning permission to build 40 homes for people who want to live in an Irish-speaking community in the heart of the city. There is no evidence that this project is still considered viable. Gaelscoileanna and Gaelcholáistí are now well established in the Republic of Ireland, especially in Dublin and Cork, and Ballymun now has two Gaelscoileanna. In 2018 Foras na Gaeilge announced that under the Gaeltacht Act 2012 Loughrea, Ennis and Clondalkin in the Republic of Ireland were going to be officially recognised among the first five Líonraí Gaeilge (Irish Language Networks) on the island of Ireland along with Belfast and Carn Tóchair in Northern Ireland.",
"score": "1.2372094"
},
{
"id": "32543567",
"title": "Bright Igbinadolor",
"text": " Igbinadolor has played professionally in Nigeria, Spain, Switzerland, Finland and Myanmar for Bendel Insurance, Sporting de Gijón B, Stade Nyonnais, Jokerit and Southern Myanmar United. He participated at the 2000 Summer Olympics, and earned one senior cap for Nigeria in 2002.",
"score": "1.2347503"
},
{
"id": "32631625",
"title": "Mxit",
"text": " Mxit operated in many international markets. Mxit was officially supported in Malaysia, India, Indonesia, United Kingdom, United States, Nigeria, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and South Africa. In August 2007 Mxit commissioned their European Data Centre located in Frankfurt, Germany. The purpose of this server farm was to take over most of the international traffic from the South African servers. In September 2010, Mxit launched in Kenya, making it the first country outside of South Africa to have access to the full range of features.",
"score": "1.2342427"
},
{
"id": "8439214",
"title": "Cypa decolor",
"text": " It is found in northeastern India, Nepal, Myanmar, southwestern China, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia (Sarawak) and Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo, Kalimantan, Papua New Guinea).",
"score": "1.2338872"
},
{
"id": "28138112",
"title": "Sarek National Park",
"text": " are found at the lower altitudes, while the Eurasian teal, the Eurasian wigeon, the greater scaup, the red-breasted merganser, the sedge warbler and the common reed bunting are common in the Laitaure delta and around Pårekjaure Lake. At higher altitudes, Vardojaure Lake is rich with birds, mostly ducks and also the European golden plover, characteristic of the alpine zone and sometimes found in the humid zones. Låotakjaure Lake, on the border of Padjelanta, is interesting from an ornithological point of view. Other rare species are also present, such as the lesser white-fronted goose, the great snipe, the red-throated pipit, the long-tailed duck and the bar-tailed godwit. The Luottolako Plateau is also considered to be interesting, with the most significant concentration of purple sandpipers in Sweden. Arctic chars, trouts and common minnows are found in the park's lakes, rivers and streams.",
"score": "1.2302082"
},
{
"id": "10581862",
"title": "Law enforcement in Greenland",
"text": " Law enforcement in Greenland, an autonomous country of the Kingdom of Denmark, is provided by Kalaallit Nunaanni Politiit (Greenland Police, Grønlands Politi) an independent police district of Naalagaaffiup Politiivi (The National Police of Denmark, Rigspolitiet), within the National Police of Denmark. Since 2006, Greenland has constituted one of the 12 police districts of the Rigspolitiet, headed by the chief constable known as the 'Politiit Pisortaat' based in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland.",
"score": "1.2283326"
}
] | [
"Idlorpait\n Idlorpait is a former Moravian mission in southernmost Greenland located between the missions at Lichtenau and Friedrichsthal. It was founded in 1864 and operated until 1900, when it was surrendered to the Lutheran Church of Denmark.",
"ICITAP\nBangladesh ; Indonesia ; Nepal ; Pakistan ; Philippines ; Thailand ",
"Scriptonite\n Adil Oralbekovich Zhalelov, - Kulmagambetov (Әdil Oralbekuly Jalelov (Kulmagambetov); born June 3, 1990, Leninskoye, Kazakh SSR), better known by his stage name Skriptonit (Scriptonite) is a Kazakh performer and music producer, founder of the Musica36. First loudly announced himself in 2013 with a video for the song \"VBVVCTND\", a year and a half later he released his debut album \"House with Normal Phenomena\", which became one of the most successful Russian-language rap albums in 2015. In 2018, he split his work into two projects: Skryptonite and Gruppa Skryptonite. As Adil himself explained, this distinction concerns not only the recording of songs, but also concerts. Thus, Gruppa Skryptonite concerts are an eight-person music band and new arrangements, while Skryptonite concerts are a \"rapper + DJ\" format and perform to minusovki. He is the most listened to artist in CIS for 2021 according to Music of the First.",
"Yuthlert Sippapak\n Yuthlert Sippapak (ยุทธเลิศ สิปปภาค, born November 8, 1966 in Loei, Thailand) is a Thai film director, screenwriter and producer. He is best known for his genre-blending films Killer Tattoo (comedy and action) and Buppah Rahtree (comedy and horror).",
"Apichat Pakwan\n in The Hague and Blierock in Venlo. In 2018 Thai singer Wimonmat ‘Wiw’ Kangjantha joined the group, shifting the focus from instrumental music to more songs, sung in the Isan language. With Kangjantha they recorded their third single Leh Dub, which was chosen as one of the best singles of 2018 by The Bangkok Post. They toured in Singapore, Thailand and Laos, with highlights performing on the Jim Thompson Molam Bus stage of the Jai Thep Festival in Chiang Mai, and a live performance on Thai national TV-station Workpoint. 2019 brought more concerts in Thailand, followed by a tour in Europe, including shows on Fusion Festival (Germany), World Experience Festival (Romania), Na Fir Bolg (Belgium), Amsterdam Roots, and the Houtfestival (both in The Netherlands). Together ",
"Zülpich\n🇫🇷 Blaye, France ; 🇫🇮 Kangasala, Finland ; Elst, Netherlands ",
"DJ Hidden\n In addition to a busy production schedule, DJ Hidden still finds the time to regularly perform at events across the world, both as DJ Hidden and as part of The Outside Agency. In the Netherlands, DJ Hidden and Eye-D are frequent guests at prominent underground club nights \"PRSPCT\" and \"Smackdown\". Wessels has performed in Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Czech Republic, England, Estonia, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Japan, Lithuania, Latvia, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Scotland, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine, Bulgaria and the United States.",
"ICITAP\n Currently, the I.C.I.T.A.P. is in 44 countries and maintains 16 field offices all over the globe. Through its assistance and quality training it has made a difference in the countries they partnered with.",
"Djolpa McKenzie\n Paul Djolpa McKenzie is a musician and educator from Maningrida, Australia in the Arnhem Land. McKenzie is a VET teacher at Maningrida Community Education Centre. In 2008 he got a Deadly Award for Outstanding Achievement in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Education. McKenzie fronts Wild Water, a band which plays a mix of reggae, rock, dub and funk. He sing in Brarra, Kriol and English. Wild Water has toured nationally And released two albums, Baltpa (1996) and Rrawa (2007). McKenzie was a part of The Black Arm Band, performing in their Hidden Republic and dirtsong shows.",
"ICITAP\nAlbania ; Armenia ; Azerbaijan ; Bosnia-Herzegovina ; Bulgaria ; Croatia ; Georgia ; Kazakhstan ; Kosovo ; Kyrgyzstan ; Macedonia ; Moldova ; Montenegro ; Serbia ; Tajikistan ; Ukraine ; U.S.–GUAM ",
"Rigspolitiet\n The National Police of Denmark (Rigspolitiet, Landløgregla, Naalagaaffiup Politiivi) is the upper most level of the Police of Denmark within the Kingdom (The unity of the Realm: Denmark (proper), Greenland, Faroe Islands). Administered by a framework of laws dictated by the Folketing (Danish Parliament) and the government's Minister for Justice, Rigspolitiet polices all regions governed by Denmark, including the Faroe Islands and Greenland.",
"Baktruppen\n Norway, CCA, Glasgow / Scotland, Nordic Excellence, Kulturhuset, Stockholm / Sweden. Autonnale / BIT – Teatergarasjen, Bergen / Norway, Uganda National Theatre, Kampala / Uganda, Perfect Performance Festival, Stockholm / Sweden, Parkteateret, Oslo / Norway, Stamsund International Theatre Festival / Norway, Kunstbanken, Hamar / Norway, Limelight, Kortrijk / Belgium, Montemor-o-Novo Theatre, City Hall / Portugal, Norwegian Touring Exhibitions, Morokulien, border of Norway/Sweden. Co-producer: Autonnale Bergen Contemporary Music Festival. Rui Hortas Centro Coreográfico de Montemor – o Novo /Portugal. Baktruppen Camp Kortrijk Uncover Operation (BACKUNCOP). Site Specific, Limelight, Kortrijk / Belgium BALD KOMMT DIE GANZE GESICHTE VON IDENTITÄT UND IDENTITOT Live radio play ",
"Yeniceoba\n🇩🇰 Ishøj in Denmark since 2006. ",
"FrieslandCampina Germany\n • Alpa • Axel Frischmilch • Ayyo (Ayran) • Fruttis • Landliebe • Mark Brandenburg • Milbona • Milfina • Optiwell • Puddis • Südmilch • Tuffi • Yazoo",
"Neo-Gaeltacht\n a predominantly working-class area in Dublin, had, in conjunction with the local branch of Glór na nGael, received planning permission to build 40 homes for people who want to live in an Irish-speaking community in the heart of the city. There is no evidence that this project is still considered viable. Gaelscoileanna and Gaelcholáistí are now well established in the Republic of Ireland, especially in Dublin and Cork, and Ballymun now has two Gaelscoileanna. In 2018 Foras na Gaeilge announced that under the Gaeltacht Act 2012 Loughrea, Ennis and Clondalkin in the Republic of Ireland were going to be officially recognised among the first five Líonraí Gaeilge (Irish Language Networks) on the island of Ireland along with Belfast and Carn Tóchair in Northern Ireland.",
"Bright Igbinadolor\n Igbinadolor has played professionally in Nigeria, Spain, Switzerland, Finland and Myanmar for Bendel Insurance, Sporting de Gijón B, Stade Nyonnais, Jokerit and Southern Myanmar United. He participated at the 2000 Summer Olympics, and earned one senior cap for Nigeria in 2002.",
"Mxit\n Mxit operated in many international markets. Mxit was officially supported in Malaysia, India, Indonesia, United Kingdom, United States, Nigeria, Brazil, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, and South Africa. In August 2007 Mxit commissioned their European Data Centre located in Frankfurt, Germany. The purpose of this server farm was to take over most of the international traffic from the South African servers. In September 2010, Mxit launched in Kenya, making it the first country outside of South Africa to have access to the full range of features.",
"Cypa decolor\n It is found in northeastern India, Nepal, Myanmar, southwestern China, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia (Sarawak) and Indonesia (Sumatra, Borneo, Kalimantan, Papua New Guinea).",
"Sarek National Park\n are found at the lower altitudes, while the Eurasian teal, the Eurasian wigeon, the greater scaup, the red-breasted merganser, the sedge warbler and the common reed bunting are common in the Laitaure delta and around Pårekjaure Lake. At higher altitudes, Vardojaure Lake is rich with birds, mostly ducks and also the European golden plover, characteristic of the alpine zone and sometimes found in the humid zones. Låotakjaure Lake, on the border of Padjelanta, is interesting from an ornithological point of view. Other rare species are also present, such as the lesser white-fronted goose, the great snipe, the red-throated pipit, the long-tailed duck and the bar-tailed godwit. The Luottolako Plateau is also considered to be interesting, with the most significant concentration of purple sandpipers in Sweden. Arctic chars, trouts and common minnows are found in the park's lakes, rivers and streams.",
"Law enforcement in Greenland\n Law enforcement in Greenland, an autonomous country of the Kingdom of Denmark, is provided by Kalaallit Nunaanni Politiit (Greenland Police, Grønlands Politi) an independent police district of Naalagaaffiup Politiivi (The National Police of Denmark, Rigspolitiet), within the National Police of Denmark. Since 2006, Greenland has constituted one of the 12 police districts of the Rigspolitiet, headed by the chief constable known as the 'Politiit Pisortaat' based in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland."
] |
What genre is In Deep? | [
"science fiction",
"SF",
"scifi",
"sci Fi",
"sci-Fi",
"science-fiction",
"sci fi",
"sciencefiction",
"short story",
"tale",
"pripovijetka"
] | genre | In Deep (book) | 4,552,086 | 71 | [
{
"id": "278546",
"title": "In the Deep (album)",
"text": " In The Deep is an album by Norwegian singer-songwriter Maria Solheim released October 12, 2012 by Universal Music Group.",
"score": "1.7924664"
},
{
"id": "278548",
"title": "In the Deep (album)",
"text": " The reviewer Julia Pettersen of the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet, awarded the album dice 4.",
"score": "1.7356913"
},
{
"id": "278551",
"title": "In the Deep (album)",
"text": "Produced by Nick Terry ",
"score": "1.6883395"
},
{
"id": "278547",
"title": "In the Deep (album)",
"text": " On this fifth solo album release, Solheim show her considerable abilities. In the studio sessions she was joined by Henry Olsen (Primal Scream, Nico, The Velvet Underground, John Cale and others), Emil Nikolaisen (Serena Maneesh), among other stellar musicians, resulting in a record with songs spanning from quiet, simple guitar-based tunes, through rock, and all the way to pop. This is an album you even can dance to.",
"score": "1.5726681"
},
{
"id": "29597068",
"title": "In Deep (Argent album)",
"text": " In Deep is the fourth studio album by Argent, originally released by Epic Records in October 1973. It features the original full-length recording of \"God Gave Rock and Roll to You\", which reached No. 18 in the UK charts (U.S. No. 114) when released in edited form as a single later the same year. It was later remade by Kiss as \"God Gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II\" for the film Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey in 1991.",
"score": "1.5722167"
},
{
"id": "26345212",
"title": "Deep Calleth Upon Deep",
"text": " Deep Calleth Upon Deep is the ninth studio album by Norwegian black metal band Satyricon. It was released on 22 September 2017 under Napalm Records. A music video was made for \"To Your Brethren in the Dark\", directed by Laban Pheidias. The video (the first from the band in nine years), features American actresses Tonya Cornelisse, Jesse Hotchkiss, Diana Wyenn and Shawn Kathryn Kane. In January 2018, the album was nominated in Norway for the Spellemann Award for best metal album. However, the winner was E of Enslaved.",
"score": "1.5506556"
},
{
"id": "14011276",
"title": "Deep in 2 The Cut",
"text": " AllMusic awarded the album three out of five stars and said \"the sounds on ;;Deep Into the Cut;; do retain a substantial amount of harsh aggression, with Mills and Srock favoring rude, dark sounds -- a style of heavy metal without guitars but rather malicious machines and a sense of nihilism.\"",
"score": "1.5443617"
},
{
"id": "9776398",
"title": "Into the Deep (album)",
"text": " Into the Deep is an album by the band Galactic. It was released on July 17, 2015. Galactic formed in New Orleans in 1994. Their music combines funk, jazz, and other genres, and is heavily influenced by the musical heritage of their home city. Into the Deep is the band's eighth studio album. It includes songs featuring different guest vocalists, such as Macy Gray, Mavis Staples, and Brushy One String, along with several instrumental tracks. It peaked at #22 on the Billboard 200, and at #1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Albums chart.",
"score": "1.5307325"
},
{
"id": "16324200",
"title": "In Deep (Tina Arena album)",
"text": " In Deep has sold over 1.5 million copies worldwide. The album is the highest selling album in France by an Australian female singer and is currently the 181st best-selling album in France.",
"score": "1.5263088"
},
{
"id": "4562649",
"title": "Rolling in the Deep",
"text": " }}",
"score": "1.5026712"
},
{
"id": "9316612",
"title": "The Deep (Katsu novel)",
"text": " The Deep is a 2020 historical fiction horror novel written by Alma Katsu. It was published in the United Kingdom on through Bantam Press and in the United States through G.P. Putnam's Sons. Katsu came up with the idea for The Deep after viewing a documentary on a dive to the HMHS Britannic.",
"score": "1.4992104"
},
{
"id": "16271771",
"title": "Into the Deep (film)",
"text": " Into the Deep is a Danish documentary film that premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival on January 24, 2020. It was directed by Emma Sullivan and filmed in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was planned to be released on Netflix, but the release was postponed indefinitely when some participants stated that they had not given their consent to participate in the film. Before a subsequent release, Netflix, Plus Pictures and Sullivan agreed to re-edit the film to remove those participants who did not wish to appear. It runs for 90 minutes.",
"score": "1.4981401"
},
{
"id": "26512647",
"title": "Deep Black (video game)",
"text": " Deep Black is a video game, developed by Biart and published by 505 Games for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Initially entitled U-WARS and Underwater Wars, Russian studio Biart announced their publishing deal with 505 Games in July 2010, with a planned Q1 2011 release. At the time it was only announced for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, however a second announcement in October 2011 confirmed the game for OnLive. Deep Black was released on Steam on April 12, 2012 as Deep Black: Reloaded, and for consoles on April 25 as Deep Black: Episode 1. The game features an orchestral score written by Jeremy Soule, best known for his work in the Elder Scrolls and Guild Wars series.",
"score": "1.4854803"
},
{
"id": "9776400",
"title": "Into the Deep (album)",
"text": " also includes liberal doses of hip-hop, jazz, soul, blues and even electronica. Galactic is blissfully unconcerned that every track is different enough to almost obscure their own identity as they continue to create music that's fun, superbly crafted and wildly eclectic.\" In AllMusic, James Christopher Monger wrote, \"More song-oriented than ever, Into the Deep does a nice job showcasing both the band and the guest vocalists.... Throughout it all, co-founders, producers, and arrangers Ben Ellman and Robert Mercurio sonically map out a NOLA that's as vibrant and forward thinking as it is steeped in the region's rich culture, cementing the band's reputation (20 years in) as both innovators and stalwart defenders of tradition.\" In ",
"score": "1.4821168"
},
{
"id": "4219195",
"title": "Deeplight",
"text": " Deeplight is a young adult horror fantasy novel by Frances Hardinge, published October 31, 2019 by Macmillan Children's Books.",
"score": "1.4812388"
},
{
"id": "12929189",
"title": "Kathleen York",
"text": " Musically, York achieved global recognition with her song \"In the Deep\", on whose writing and composition she collaborated with Michael Becker. It appears on her album Wicked Little High, and it was written for the 2005 film Crash. \"In the Deep\" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, with York performing the song live at the 78th Academy Awards in 2006. Her other music credits include the main theme song of the Sony Picture Seven Pounds, the Felicity Huffman indie Tammy's Always Dying (2019), as well as featured song placements in American Idol, Nip/Tuck, CSI: NY, In Justice, Warehouse 13, House, Army Wives and So You Think You Can Dance. She was the in-house song writer/composer for Season Two of the CBS series Family Law. Her earlier releases include the self-titled Bird York. Her EP Have No Fear was released independently in 2008.",
"score": "1.4807689"
},
{
"id": "30795675",
"title": "The Deep (novella)",
"text": " The Deep is a 2019 fantasy book by Rivers Solomon, with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson and Jonathan Snipes. It depicts a utopian underwater society built by the water-breathing descendants of pregnant slaves thrown overboard from slave ships. The book was developed from a song by the same name by clipping., an experimental hip-hop trio. It won the Lambda Literary Award, and was nominated for Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards.",
"score": "1.4783986"
},
{
"id": "30008452",
"title": "In Too Deep (1989 film)",
"text": " In Too Deep is a 1989 erotic thriller film.",
"score": "1.477587"
},
{
"id": "2075606",
"title": "Deep in the Darkness",
"text": " Deep in the Darkness is the name of a 2004 novel by American writer Michael Laimo and a film adaptation by the same name. The novel was nominated for a 2004 Bram Stoker Award for Novel. While writing the book Laimo was influenced by the 1973 made-for-television film Don't Be Afraid of the Dark. Laimo wrote a sequel to Deep in the Darkness entitled Return to Darkness, which he released in 2011.",
"score": "1.4775183"
},
{
"id": "28062585",
"title": "Deep Down (video game)",
"text": " Deep Down is a single-player or (up to four player) co-op multiplayer dungeon crawl. Gameplay has been described as similar to both Capcom's own Dragon's Dogma; as well as the Dark Souls series, though with a lesser difficulty. The historical sections of the game take place in a medieval/fantasy setting in procedurally generated dungeons, with the player equipped with suits of armor, swords, pikes, shields etc. Creatures encountered are from the fantasy trope, including ogres, shapeshifters similar to mimics (D&D), and dragons.",
"score": "1.4765196"
}
] | [
"In the Deep (album)\n In The Deep is an album by Norwegian singer-songwriter Maria Solheim released October 12, 2012 by Universal Music Group.",
"In the Deep (album)\n The reviewer Julia Pettersen of the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet, awarded the album dice 4.",
"In the Deep (album)\nProduced by Nick Terry ",
"In the Deep (album)\n On this fifth solo album release, Solheim show her considerable abilities. In the studio sessions she was joined by Henry Olsen (Primal Scream, Nico, The Velvet Underground, John Cale and others), Emil Nikolaisen (Serena Maneesh), among other stellar musicians, resulting in a record with songs spanning from quiet, simple guitar-based tunes, through rock, and all the way to pop. This is an album you even can dance to.",
"In Deep (Argent album)\n In Deep is the fourth studio album by Argent, originally released by Epic Records in October 1973. It features the original full-length recording of \"God Gave Rock and Roll to You\", which reached No. 18 in the UK charts (U.S. No. 114) when released in edited form as a single later the same year. It was later remade by Kiss as \"God Gave Rock 'n' Roll to You II\" for the film Bill & Ted's Bogus Journey in 1991.",
"Deep Calleth Upon Deep\n Deep Calleth Upon Deep is the ninth studio album by Norwegian black metal band Satyricon. It was released on 22 September 2017 under Napalm Records. A music video was made for \"To Your Brethren in the Dark\", directed by Laban Pheidias. The video (the first from the band in nine years), features American actresses Tonya Cornelisse, Jesse Hotchkiss, Diana Wyenn and Shawn Kathryn Kane. In January 2018, the album was nominated in Norway for the Spellemann Award for best metal album. However, the winner was E of Enslaved.",
"Deep in 2 The Cut\n AllMusic awarded the album three out of five stars and said \"the sounds on ;;Deep Into the Cut;; do retain a substantial amount of harsh aggression, with Mills and Srock favoring rude, dark sounds -- a style of heavy metal without guitars but rather malicious machines and a sense of nihilism.\"",
"Into the Deep (album)\n Into the Deep is an album by the band Galactic. It was released on July 17, 2015. Galactic formed in New Orleans in 1994. Their music combines funk, jazz, and other genres, and is heavily influenced by the musical heritage of their home city. Into the Deep is the band's eighth studio album. It includes songs featuring different guest vocalists, such as Macy Gray, Mavis Staples, and Brushy One String, along with several instrumental tracks. It peaked at #22 on the Billboard 200, and at #1 on the Billboard Contemporary Jazz Albums chart.",
"In Deep (Tina Arena album)\n In Deep has sold over 1.5 million copies worldwide. The album is the highest selling album in France by an Australian female singer and is currently the 181st best-selling album in France.",
"Rolling in the Deep\n }}",
"The Deep (Katsu novel)\n The Deep is a 2020 historical fiction horror novel written by Alma Katsu. It was published in the United Kingdom on through Bantam Press and in the United States through G.P. Putnam's Sons. Katsu came up with the idea for The Deep after viewing a documentary on a dive to the HMHS Britannic.",
"Into the Deep (film)\n Into the Deep is a Danish documentary film that premiered at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival on January 24, 2020. It was directed by Emma Sullivan and filmed in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was planned to be released on Netflix, but the release was postponed indefinitely when some participants stated that they had not given their consent to participate in the film. Before a subsequent release, Netflix, Plus Pictures and Sullivan agreed to re-edit the film to remove those participants who did not wish to appear. It runs for 90 minutes.",
"Deep Black (video game)\n Deep Black is a video game, developed by Biart and published by 505 Games for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. Initially entitled U-WARS and Underwater Wars, Russian studio Biart announced their publishing deal with 505 Games in July 2010, with a planned Q1 2011 release. At the time it was only announced for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, however a second announcement in October 2011 confirmed the game for OnLive. Deep Black was released on Steam on April 12, 2012 as Deep Black: Reloaded, and for consoles on April 25 as Deep Black: Episode 1. The game features an orchestral score written by Jeremy Soule, best known for his work in the Elder Scrolls and Guild Wars series.",
"Into the Deep (album)\n also includes liberal doses of hip-hop, jazz, soul, blues and even electronica. Galactic is blissfully unconcerned that every track is different enough to almost obscure their own identity as they continue to create music that's fun, superbly crafted and wildly eclectic.\" In AllMusic, James Christopher Monger wrote, \"More song-oriented than ever, Into the Deep does a nice job showcasing both the band and the guest vocalists.... Throughout it all, co-founders, producers, and arrangers Ben Ellman and Robert Mercurio sonically map out a NOLA that's as vibrant and forward thinking as it is steeped in the region's rich culture, cementing the band's reputation (20 years in) as both innovators and stalwart defenders of tradition.\" In ",
"Deeplight\n Deeplight is a young adult horror fantasy novel by Frances Hardinge, published October 31, 2019 by Macmillan Children's Books.",
"Kathleen York\n Musically, York achieved global recognition with her song \"In the Deep\", on whose writing and composition she collaborated with Michael Becker. It appears on her album Wicked Little High, and it was written for the 2005 film Crash. \"In the Deep\" was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song, with York performing the song live at the 78th Academy Awards in 2006. Her other music credits include the main theme song of the Sony Picture Seven Pounds, the Felicity Huffman indie Tammy's Always Dying (2019), as well as featured song placements in American Idol, Nip/Tuck, CSI: NY, In Justice, Warehouse 13, House, Army Wives and So You Think You Can Dance. She was the in-house song writer/composer for Season Two of the CBS series Family Law. Her earlier releases include the self-titled Bird York. Her EP Have No Fear was released independently in 2008.",
"The Deep (novella)\n The Deep is a 2019 fantasy book by Rivers Solomon, with Daveed Diggs, William Hutson and Jonathan Snipes. It depicts a utopian underwater society built by the water-breathing descendants of pregnant slaves thrown overboard from slave ships. The book was developed from a song by the same name by clipping., an experimental hip-hop trio. It won the Lambda Literary Award, and was nominated for Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards.",
"In Too Deep (1989 film)\n In Too Deep is a 1989 erotic thriller film.",
"Deep in the Darkness\n Deep in the Darkness is the name of a 2004 novel by American writer Michael Laimo and a film adaptation by the same name. The novel was nominated for a 2004 Bram Stoker Award for Novel. While writing the book Laimo was influenced by the 1973 made-for-television film Don't Be Afraid of the Dark. Laimo wrote a sequel to Deep in the Darkness entitled Return to Darkness, which he released in 2011.",
"Deep Down (video game)\n Deep Down is a single-player or (up to four player) co-op multiplayer dungeon crawl. Gameplay has been described as similar to both Capcom's own Dragon's Dogma; as well as the Dark Souls series, though with a lesser difficulty. The historical sections of the game take place in a medieval/fantasy setting in procedurally generated dungeons, with the player equipped with suits of armor, swords, pikes, shields etc. Creatures encountered are from the fantasy trope, including ogres, shapeshifters similar to mimics (D&D), and dragons."
] |
Who is the author of Only Human? | [
"Eileen Wilks"
] | author | Only Human (short story) | 5,343,876 | 75 | [
{
"id": "31835194",
"title": "Only Human (novel)",
"text": " Only Human is a BBC Books original novel written by Gareth Roberts and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on 8 September 2005, alongside The Deviant Strain and The Stealers of Dreams. It features the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler and Captain Jack.",
"score": "1.7318809"
},
{
"id": "15734994",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " Only Human by Eileen Wilks is a short story in the Lover Beware anthology. It is also the first story in the World of the Lupi series. It came out in July 2003.",
"score": "1.713872"
},
{
"id": "3762478",
"title": "Human?",
"text": " Human? is an anthology of science fiction and fantasy stories edited by Judith Merril, published as a paperback original by Lion Books in 1954. No further editions were issued.",
"score": "1.5628743"
},
{
"id": "13042909",
"title": "Ted Poley",
"text": "Only Human (2008) ",
"score": "1.4976113"
},
{
"id": "15734997",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " This romantic suspense novel is the first novel Eileen Wilks wrote set in the World of the Lupi. After her editor (and the fans) enjoyed it so much Eileen asked if she could expand this short story into a full-blown series. Tempting Danger expands on this story and ends up taking the characters in different directions than the original short story.",
"score": "1.4892281"
},
{
"id": "2802717",
"title": "Being Human novels",
"text": " The Being Human novels are a series of three fantasy novels written by Simon Guerrier, Mark Michalowski and James Goss. The novels are based on the British television series Being Human, created by Toby Whithouse.",
"score": "1.4834585"
},
{
"id": "15734995",
"title": "Only Human (short story)",
"text": " Eileen's story in the Lover Beware anthology is entitled Only Human. In it Lily is a Chinese-American detective working with the city of San Diego on a murder that appears to be the work of a werewolf. But, if she wants to find out who the killer is, she'll have to get inside the clans. She enlists the help of a were named Rule, though she detests his species. Will her prejudices hold up under the heat of passion?",
"score": "1.4788677"
},
{
"id": "7203365",
"title": "North East Humanists",
"text": "Modern Humanism by Alfred Hoburn and Neil Jenkins. First published in 1989 by Dene Books and updated by NEH. ",
"score": "1.477829"
},
{
"id": "3753171",
"title": "Gareth Roberts (writer)",
"text": " and in 2005 writing another Doctor Who novel, Only Human, based on the characters from the new series launched that year, for BBC Books' New Series Adventures range. A further novel, I am a Dalek, was released in 2006 and featured the Tenth Doctor. I am a Dalek is part of a Government \"Quick Reads initiative\". He also co-wrote The New Gods with Rebecca Levene, the first Tomorrow People audio drama for Big Finish. Roberts appeared as a contributor to the documentary Serial Thrillers, exploring the popular Philip Hinchcliffe era of Doctor Who between 1975 and 1977, which featured as an extra on the 2004 DVD release of the serial Pyramids of ",
"score": "1.460664"
},
{
"id": "3762479",
"title": "Human?",
"text": "\"Introduction\", Fredric Brown ; \"I: As Others See Us…\", Judith Merril ; \"The Big Contest\", John D. MacDonald (Worlds Beyond 1950) ; \"The Boy Next Door\", Chad Oliver (F&SF 1951) ; \"Take a Seat\", Eric Frank Russell (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"An Egg a Month from All Over\", Idris Seabright (F&SF 1952) ; \"Riya’s Foundling\", Algis Budrys (Science Fiction Stories #1 1953) ; \"II: Earthlings All\", Judith Merril ; \"ghosts\", Don Marquis (Archy and Mehitabel, 1927) ; \"Smoke Ghost\", Fritz Leiber (Unknown 1941) ; \"Who Shall I Say Is Calling?\", August Derleth (F&SF 1952) ; \"The Gnarly Man\", L. Sprague de Camp (Unknown 1939) ; \"The Temptation of Harringay\", H. G. Wells (The St. James’s Gazette 1895) ; \"The Ultimate Egoist\", Theodore Sturgeon (Unknown 1941) ; \"Rope Enough\", John Collier (The New Yorker 1939) ; \"III: Tomorrow Will Be Better?\", Judith Merril ; \"Liar!\", Isaac Asimov (Astounding 1941) ; \"Who Knows His Brother\", Graham Doar (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"Crucifixus Etiam\", Walter M. Miller, Jr. (Astounding 1953) ",
"score": "1.4525155"
},
{
"id": "14492515",
"title": "Human Enhancement",
"text": " Human Enhancement (2009) is a non-fiction book edited by philosopher Nick Bostrom and philosopher and bioethicist Julian Savulescu. Savulescu and Bostrom write about the ethical implications of human enhancement and to what extent it is worth striving towards.",
"score": "1.4495858"
},
{
"id": "26141287",
"title": "Only Human (Cheryl song)",
"text": " \"Only Human\" is a song by English recording artist Cheryl from her fourth studio album of the same name (2014). It was released on 22 March 2015 through Polydor Records as the third single from the album. \"Only Human\" is an electronic ballad, written by Matt Schwartz, Jo Perry and Cass Lowe, whilst produced by Schwartz. Lyrically, it finds Cheryl singing about the inspiration to forgive yourself for being human and live your best life in spite of everything. \"Only Human\" received positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its production and called it her best ballad to date. \"Only Human\" was remixed for ",
"score": "1.4443953"
},
{
"id": "6759717",
"title": "Team Human",
"text": " Team Human is a young adult novel co-written by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan. It was published in 2012 by Harper Teen, a division of Harper Collins. The book came out of the authors' shared love of vampire stories, and is both parody and celebration of the genre. The book is dedicated to a long list of authors who have written in the genre, including Stephen King, Stephenie Meyer, Anne Rice, Bram Stoker, and Larbalestier's husband Scott Westerfeld.",
"score": "1.4434507"
},
{
"id": "91871",
"title": "Human Is",
"text": " \"Human Is\" is a science fiction short story by American writer Philip K. Dick. It was first published in Startling Stories, Winter 1955. The plot centers on the crisis facing a woman whose cold and emotionally abusive husband returns from a survey mission to the dying planet Rexor IV, changed for the better—his psyche was replaced by a Rexorian, glad to have escaped the confines of its dying planet. The story was adapted by Jessica Mecklenburg for an episode of the 2017 TV series, Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams.",
"score": "1.4431999"
},
{
"id": "30005845",
"title": "The World Without Us",
"text": " The book was first published on July 10, 2007, as a hardback in the United States by St. Martin's Thomas Dunne Books, in United Kingdom by Virgin Books and in Canada by HarperCollins. The paperback was released in July 2008. It has been translated and published in Denmark by Borgen as Verden uden os, France by Groupe Flammarion as Homo disparitus, in Germany by Piper as Die Welt ohne uns, in Portugal by Estrela Polar as O Mundo Sem Nós, in Italy by Einaudi as Il mondo senza di noi, in Poland by CKA as Świat bez nas, and in Japan by Hayakawa Publishing as Jinrui ga kieta sekai (人類が消えた世界; \"A World where the Human Race has Disappeared\"). Pete Garceau designed the cover art for the American release, which one critic said was \"a ",
"score": "1.4376745"
},
{
"id": "31835195",
"title": "Only Human (novel)",
"text": " The presence of a Neanderthal on present-day Earth alerts the Doctor, Rose and Jack to the fact that someone is meddling with time. In order to learn the truth, they must travel back 28,000 years, where they meet humans of the past and future — and something far, far worse.",
"score": "1.4331416"
},
{
"id": "430729",
"title": "Only Human (Example song)",
"text": " \"Only Human\" is a song by British singer Example. It was released through Epic Records as an instant download when pre-ordering his fifth studio album Live Life Living. The song is written and produced by Example, Sheldrake and Alf Bamford.",
"score": "1.4282997"
},
{
"id": "10030298",
"title": "Christopher Potter (author)",
"text": " His first book, You Are Here, was published in 2009 by Hutchinson (Random House) in the UK and HarperCollins in America. It was translated into 15 languages. \"One of the best popular science books I have ever read,\" wrote Stuart Jeffries in the Guardian. The Sunday Times described it as \"One of the most entertaining and thoughtful pop-science books to be published for years.\" Potter's second book, How to Make a Human Being, was published in 2014 by Fourth Estate. \"A sort of commonplace book full of paradox and conflicting ideas, shocking facts and redemptive anecdotes, turbulent with two or three millennia of human thought,\" wrote The Guardian. His third book, The Earth Gazers, was published in 2018 by Head of Zeus in the UK and Pegasus in America. The Times described it as \"A fresh and elegantly wrought account of mankind’s journey from firing lumps of jerry-rigged metal from cabbage fields to crunching around in the dust of another world.\"",
"score": "1.4215393"
},
{
"id": "32186581",
"title": "Matt Ridley",
"text": " is often impeded by politicians. Ridley makes his case by examining historical examples, rather than appealing solely to abstract principles. Written jointly with Alina Chan, it was published in November 2021. Ridley is best known as the author of a number of popular science books, listed below. The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature, 1993 The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation, 1996 Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters, 1999 Nature via Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human, 2003 (also later released under the title The Agile Gene: How ",
"score": "1.4176595"
},
{
"id": "1486295",
"title": "The One and Only Ivan",
"text": " The One and Only Ivan is a 2012 novel written by Katherine Applegate and illustrated by Patricia Castelao. It is about a silverback gorilla named Ivan who lived in a cage at a mall, and is written from Ivan's point of view. In 2013 it was named the winner of the Newbery Medal. It has won several other awards and is currently nominated to several reading lists. It was followed in 2020 by The One and Only Bob, presented from the point of view of Ivan's best friend, the dog Bob.",
"score": "1.4141617"
}
] | [
"Only Human (novel)\n Only Human is a BBC Books original novel written by Gareth Roberts and based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was published on 8 September 2005, alongside The Deviant Strain and The Stealers of Dreams. It features the Ninth Doctor, Rose Tyler and Captain Jack.",
"Only Human (short story)\n Only Human by Eileen Wilks is a short story in the Lover Beware anthology. It is also the first story in the World of the Lupi series. It came out in July 2003.",
"Human?\n Human? is an anthology of science fiction and fantasy stories edited by Judith Merril, published as a paperback original by Lion Books in 1954. No further editions were issued.",
"Ted Poley\nOnly Human (2008) ",
"Only Human (short story)\n This romantic suspense novel is the first novel Eileen Wilks wrote set in the World of the Lupi. After her editor (and the fans) enjoyed it so much Eileen asked if she could expand this short story into a full-blown series. Tempting Danger expands on this story and ends up taking the characters in different directions than the original short story.",
"Being Human novels\n The Being Human novels are a series of three fantasy novels written by Simon Guerrier, Mark Michalowski and James Goss. The novels are based on the British television series Being Human, created by Toby Whithouse.",
"Only Human (short story)\n Eileen's story in the Lover Beware anthology is entitled Only Human. In it Lily is a Chinese-American detective working with the city of San Diego on a murder that appears to be the work of a werewolf. But, if she wants to find out who the killer is, she'll have to get inside the clans. She enlists the help of a were named Rule, though she detests his species. Will her prejudices hold up under the heat of passion?",
"North East Humanists\nModern Humanism by Alfred Hoburn and Neil Jenkins. First published in 1989 by Dene Books and updated by NEH. ",
"Gareth Roberts (writer)\n and in 2005 writing another Doctor Who novel, Only Human, based on the characters from the new series launched that year, for BBC Books' New Series Adventures range. A further novel, I am a Dalek, was released in 2006 and featured the Tenth Doctor. I am a Dalek is part of a Government \"Quick Reads initiative\". He also co-wrote The New Gods with Rebecca Levene, the first Tomorrow People audio drama for Big Finish. Roberts appeared as a contributor to the documentary Serial Thrillers, exploring the popular Philip Hinchcliffe era of Doctor Who between 1975 and 1977, which featured as an extra on the 2004 DVD release of the serial Pyramids of ",
"Human?\n\"Introduction\", Fredric Brown ; \"I: As Others See Us…\", Judith Merril ; \"The Big Contest\", John D. MacDonald (Worlds Beyond 1950) ; \"The Boy Next Door\", Chad Oliver (F&SF 1951) ; \"Take a Seat\", Eric Frank Russell (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"An Egg a Month from All Over\", Idris Seabright (F&SF 1952) ; \"Riya’s Foundling\", Algis Budrys (Science Fiction Stories #1 1953) ; \"II: Earthlings All\", Judith Merril ; \"ghosts\", Don Marquis (Archy and Mehitabel, 1927) ; \"Smoke Ghost\", Fritz Leiber (Unknown 1941) ; \"Who Shall I Say Is Calling?\", August Derleth (F&SF 1952) ; \"The Gnarly Man\", L. Sprague de Camp (Unknown 1939) ; \"The Temptation of Harringay\", H. G. Wells (The St. James’s Gazette 1895) ; \"The Ultimate Egoist\", Theodore Sturgeon (Unknown 1941) ; \"Rope Enough\", John Collier (The New Yorker 1939) ; \"III: Tomorrow Will Be Better?\", Judith Merril ; \"Liar!\", Isaac Asimov (Astounding 1941) ; \"Who Knows His Brother\", Graham Doar (Startling Stories 1952) ; \"Crucifixus Etiam\", Walter M. Miller, Jr. (Astounding 1953) ",
"Human Enhancement\n Human Enhancement (2009) is a non-fiction book edited by philosopher Nick Bostrom and philosopher and bioethicist Julian Savulescu. Savulescu and Bostrom write about the ethical implications of human enhancement and to what extent it is worth striving towards.",
"Only Human (Cheryl song)\n \"Only Human\" is a song by English recording artist Cheryl from her fourth studio album of the same name (2014). It was released on 22 March 2015 through Polydor Records as the third single from the album. \"Only Human\" is an electronic ballad, written by Matt Schwartz, Jo Perry and Cass Lowe, whilst produced by Schwartz. Lyrically, it finds Cheryl singing about the inspiration to forgive yourself for being human and live your best life in spite of everything. \"Only Human\" received positive reviews from music critics, who complimented its production and called it her best ballad to date. \"Only Human\" was remixed for ",
"Team Human\n Team Human is a young adult novel co-written by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan. It was published in 2012 by Harper Teen, a division of Harper Collins. The book came out of the authors' shared love of vampire stories, and is both parody and celebration of the genre. The book is dedicated to a long list of authors who have written in the genre, including Stephen King, Stephenie Meyer, Anne Rice, Bram Stoker, and Larbalestier's husband Scott Westerfeld.",
"Human Is\n \"Human Is\" is a science fiction short story by American writer Philip K. Dick. It was first published in Startling Stories, Winter 1955. The plot centers on the crisis facing a woman whose cold and emotionally abusive husband returns from a survey mission to the dying planet Rexor IV, changed for the better—his psyche was replaced by a Rexorian, glad to have escaped the confines of its dying planet. The story was adapted by Jessica Mecklenburg for an episode of the 2017 TV series, Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams.",
"The World Without Us\n The book was first published on July 10, 2007, as a hardback in the United States by St. Martin's Thomas Dunne Books, in United Kingdom by Virgin Books and in Canada by HarperCollins. The paperback was released in July 2008. It has been translated and published in Denmark by Borgen as Verden uden os, France by Groupe Flammarion as Homo disparitus, in Germany by Piper as Die Welt ohne uns, in Portugal by Estrela Polar as O Mundo Sem Nós, in Italy by Einaudi as Il mondo senza di noi, in Poland by CKA as Świat bez nas, and in Japan by Hayakawa Publishing as Jinrui ga kieta sekai (人類が消えた世界; \"A World where the Human Race has Disappeared\"). Pete Garceau designed the cover art for the American release, which one critic said was \"a ",
"Only Human (novel)\n The presence of a Neanderthal on present-day Earth alerts the Doctor, Rose and Jack to the fact that someone is meddling with time. In order to learn the truth, they must travel back 28,000 years, where they meet humans of the past and future — and something far, far worse.",
"Only Human (Example song)\n \"Only Human\" is a song by British singer Example. It was released through Epic Records as an instant download when pre-ordering his fifth studio album Live Life Living. The song is written and produced by Example, Sheldrake and Alf Bamford.",
"Christopher Potter (author)\n His first book, You Are Here, was published in 2009 by Hutchinson (Random House) in the UK and HarperCollins in America. It was translated into 15 languages. \"One of the best popular science books I have ever read,\" wrote Stuart Jeffries in the Guardian. The Sunday Times described it as \"One of the most entertaining and thoughtful pop-science books to be published for years.\" Potter's second book, How to Make a Human Being, was published in 2014 by Fourth Estate. \"A sort of commonplace book full of paradox and conflicting ideas, shocking facts and redemptive anecdotes, turbulent with two or three millennia of human thought,\" wrote The Guardian. His third book, The Earth Gazers, was published in 2018 by Head of Zeus in the UK and Pegasus in America. The Times described it as \"A fresh and elegantly wrought account of mankind’s journey from firing lumps of jerry-rigged metal from cabbage fields to crunching around in the dust of another world.\"",
"Matt Ridley\n is often impeded by politicians. Ridley makes his case by examining historical examples, rather than appealing solely to abstract principles. Written jointly with Alina Chan, it was published in November 2021. Ridley is best known as the author of a number of popular science books, listed below. The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature, 1993 The Origins of Virtue: Human Instincts and the Evolution of Cooperation, 1996 Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters, 1999 Nature via Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human, 2003 (also later released under the title The Agile Gene: How ",
"The One and Only Ivan\n The One and Only Ivan is a 2012 novel written by Katherine Applegate and illustrated by Patricia Castelao. It is about a silverback gorilla named Ivan who lived in a cage at a mall, and is written from Ivan's point of view. In 2013 it was named the winner of the Newbery Medal. It has won several other awards and is currently nominated to several reading lists. It was followed in 2020 by The One and Only Bob, presented from the point of view of Ivan's best friend, the dog Bob."
] |
Who is the author of Panic? | [
"Archibald MacLeish"
] | author | Panic (play) | 1,338,998 | 75 | [
{
"id": "32745408",
"title": "Panic Nation",
"text": " The book comprises a series of essays written by individuals working in related fields. These writers address the state of knowledge in the specific fields and how this conflicts with common knowledge. The contributors are Stanley Feldman, Vincent Marks, Michael Fizpatrick, Maurice Hanssen, John Henry, Mick Hume, Lakshman Karalliedde, Malcolm Kendrick, Peter Lachmann, James Le Fanu, Sandy Macnair, Sam Shuster and Dick Taverne QC.",
"score": "1.7228193"
},
{
"id": "5097401",
"title": "A Few Seconds of Panic",
"text": " A Few Seconds of Panic is a nonfiction first-person narrative by Stefan Fatsis, published in 2008. The book chronicles Fatsis, a professional 43-year-old sportswriter working for The Wall Street Journal, and his attempt to play in the National Football League. Along the way, he relates the personal stories and struggles that professional football players face in the league. After some setbacks, Fatsis eventually finds some success as a backup placekicker for the Denver Broncos. The book's title comes from Jason Elam's description of being a kicker as \"hours and hours of boredom surrounded by a few seconds of panic.\" A Few Seconds of Panic has been compared to George Plimpton's Paper Lion, a 1966 book wherein the author joins the Detroit Lions as a backup quarterback.",
"score": "1.6711459"
},
{
"id": "30066527",
"title": "Reneau Z. Peurifoy",
"text": " His first book, Anxiety, Phobias & Panic: Taking Charge and Conquering Fear currently has over 180,000 copies in print. Originally published in 1988. A revised second edition was released by Warner Books in 1995. It was again updated and released in its third edition in 2005. It has a UK edition as well as editions in German, Spanish, and Hungarian. His second book, Overcoming Anxiety: From Short-Term Fixes to Long-Term Recovery, was released in 1997 by Henry Holt. It also has a Spanish edition and will soon be released in a German edition. His third book, Anger: Taming the Beast, was released in June 1999 by Kodansha America. It also has a Dutch edition and will soon be released in a German edition by Hans Huber. Mr. Peurifoy's fourth book, Why Did God Give Us Emotions? was released in September 2009.",
"score": "1.6088896"
},
{
"id": "3407794",
"title": "Panic (novel)",
"text": " RTÉ.ie described the book as an \"absorbing thriller\" that is \"a fast, furious and fun read\". Oline Cogdill of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel said that Abbott takes the novel \"just to the boundaries of disbelief\", but still manages to make it \"credible\" and \"still a shocker\".",
"score": "1.6040629"
},
{
"id": "14819948",
"title": "The Panic Zone",
"text": " The Panic Zone is a thriller novel by Canadian author Rick Mofina released on June 30, 2010. It is a Globe and Mail Canadian bestseller.",
"score": "1.6029835"
},
{
"id": "654725",
"title": "Alan Knott-Craig",
"text": " In April 2008, he published Don’t Panic, based on an e-mail he sent to his staff aimed at persuading South Africans to stay in the country and contribute positively. The book became the best selling book in South Africa for 2008. In 2019 he wrote a follow-up article. This was followed in 2012 by Mobinomics: Mxit and South Africa’s Mobile Revolution which he co-authored with Gus Silber. Really, Don’t Panic and Moenie Stres nie a follow-up of Don’t Panic was published in 2014. In 2015 he co-authored So, You Want To Be A Hero, a collection of essays, tips and cartoons targeted at young people looking to fast track their careers.",
"score": "1.6015916"
},
{
"id": "29977370",
"title": "Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity",
"text": " Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity is a non-fiction book by Michael Lewis about the most important and severe upheavals in past financial history. The book was published on November 2, 2009 by W. W. Norton & Company. The text, Lewis writes, is an effort \"to recreate the more recent financial panics, in an attempt to show how financial markets now operate.\"",
"score": "1.559715"
},
{
"id": "6245974",
"title": "Panic (comics)",
"text": " Panic was a bi-monthly humor comic that was published by Bill Gaines' EC Comics line during the mid-1950s as a companion to Harvey Kurtzman's Mad, which was being heavily imitated by other comic publishers. Panic was edited by Al Feldstein (who became the editor of Mad a few years later). Beginning with its first issue (February–March 1954), Panic had a 12-issue run over two years. Feldstein was the primary cover artist, with stories illustrated by Jack Davis, Will Elder, Jack Kamen, Joe Orlando, Basil Wolverton and Wally Wood. Some story ideas were by Nick Meglin, later the co-editor of Mad. Scripts were by Feldstein, Elder and Jack Mendelsohn, later a co-screenwriter of Yellow Submarine (1968) and an Emmy-nominated TV comedy writer. EC dubbed Panic the \"only authorized imitation\" of Mad, but Mad's creator didn't enjoy the joke. Almost thirty years later, Harvey Kurtzman told an interviewer, \"Panic was another sore point. Gaines, by some convoluted reasoning, decided to double the profit of Mad by doing a Feldstein version of Mad and he just plundered all of my techniques and artists. For this there was a real conflict of interests.\"",
"score": "1.5552984"
},
{
"id": "32745406",
"title": "Panic Nation",
"text": " Panic Nation: Unpicking the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, also published as Panic Nation: Exposing the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, is a nonfiction book by Stanley Feldman and Vincent Marks. It was published by John Blake in 2005.",
"score": "1.551328"
},
{
"id": "26445097",
"title": "Panic Spring",
"text": " Panic Spring is a novel by Lawrence Durrell, published in 1937 by Faber and Faber in Britain and Covici-Friede in the United States under the pseudonym Charles Norden. It is set on a fictional Greek Island, Mavrodaphne, in the Ionian Sea somewhere between Patras, Kephalonia, and Ithaca. The island, however, resembles Corfu strongly, and in at least one inscribed copy of the novel, Durrell includes a map of Corfu identified as Mavrodaphne. The novel progresses through multiple perspectives in the successive chapters, each focusing on a different character. As a whole, the novel shows Durrell's myriad influences of this period, ranging from Remy de Gourmont to Richard Aldington, D. H. Lawrence, and several Elizabethan writers.",
"score": "1.5493039"
},
{
"id": "32745407",
"title": "Panic Nation",
"text": " This book focuses on debunking many popular misconceptions about food and health that are common in the world today, in line with the introduction to the book that quotes Frederick II of the Holy Roman Empire who wrote in the thirteenth century: 'One ought not to believe anything, save that which can be proven by nature and the force of reason.'",
"score": "1.5379958"
},
{
"id": "3407793",
"title": "Panic (novel)",
"text": " Panic is a 2005 thriller by Jeff Abbott about an unsuspecting young documentary film maker, Evan, whose life is turned upside down when he realizes that his parents have been working as spies throughout their lives. One morning his mother phones him and asks him to come to her urgently, but when he arrives at her home she has just been murdered and he barely manages to escape with his life. Evan is suspected of having received from his mother a copy of a list of members and clients of a secret organisation called \"The Deeps\" and the chase is on. Evan must struggle through his mother's death and meets C.I.A. agents, cold-hearted killers, and double-crossers, and friends – trying to find his father, get his revenge on the people who murdered his mother, and uncover all the secrets about the lie he believed was his life. He also tries to save a lovely girl named Carrie whom he has recently met and fallen in love with, but doesn't know whose side she is on, \"The Deeps\" or the C.I.A. Panic was to be made into a film in 2011, but no such film ever materialized.",
"score": "1.5306582"
},
{
"id": "8818322",
"title": "Jeff Abbott",
"text": "Panic (Aug 2005)—nominated for the Thriller Award (given by the International Thriller Writers). Panic, has been optioned for film by The Weinstein Company and is in development. ; Fear (Aug 2006) ; Collision (Jul 2008)—known as Run in the United Kingdom Collision, has been optioned for film by Twentieth Century Fox. ; Trust Me (Jul 2009) ; Blame (Jul 2017) ; The Three Beths (October 2018) ; Never Ask Me (July 2020) === Anthologies and Collections ===",
"score": "1.5272362"
},
{
"id": "8979485",
"title": "Jason Starr",
"text": " Max. The fourth novel in the series, PIMP, was published in 2016. Panic Attack, Starr's thriller about the aftermath of a shooting in suburban New York City, was published in 2009 by St. Martin's Press. The German/ Diogenes Verlag edition (Panik) was a major bestseller in Austria. It was optioned by David Fincher's production company Panic Pictures with Ocean's Eleven scribe Ted Griffin adapting. In 2010, Starr's first graphic novel, The Chill, was published by Vertigo Crime, with art by Mick Bertilorenzi. Starr also wrote many comics for DC Comics (Justice, Inc.). In 2011, The Chill won the Anthony Award ",
"score": "1.5258862"
},
{
"id": "13418094",
"title": "Sean D. Carr",
"text": " Sean D. Carr (born January 21, 1969) is the Executive Director of Batten Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at the University of Virginia. He is also co-author, along with Robert F. Bruner, of the book The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm. The book focuses on the early 20th Century financial disaster known as the Panic of 1907.",
"score": "1.5251155"
},
{
"id": "29138597",
"title": "Charlie Vázquez",
"text": " Mensbook Journal. He is also a former contributor to the Village Voice blog Naked City. Vázquez hosts a monthly reading series called PANIC! at Nowhere in the East Village, Manhattan, where he first witnessed punk rock, Gothic rock and queer culture in the 1980s. The series features both published and unpublished queer, female and transsexual writers of erotica, horror and unusual fiction and poetry. Vázquez cites Edgar Allan Poe, James Baldwin, Serge Gainsbourg, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Celia Cruz, Arsenio Rodríguez, Celina y Reutilio, Diamanda Galás and Joy Division as cultural influences. Starting in 2016, novelist Álvaro Enrigue, and writers ",
"score": "1.5139954"
},
{
"id": "27464671",
"title": "Lauren Oliver",
"text": " Lauren Oliver (born Laura Suzanne Schechter; November 8, 1982) is an American author of numerous young adult novels including Panic; the Delirium trilogy: Delirium, Pandemonium, and Requiem; and Before I Fall, which became a major motion picture in 2017. Panic was also turned into a series by Amazon studios. She served as creator, writer and showrunner on the project. Her novels have been translated into more than thirty languages internationally. Oliver is a 2012 E.B. White Read-Aloud Award nominee for her middle-grade novel Liesl & Po, as well as author of the middle-grade fantasy novel The Spindlers. Oliver graduated from the University of Chicago, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and also received a Master of Fine Arts degree from New York University. In 2010, Oliver co-founded Paper Lantern Lit, a literary “incubator”/ development company now called Glasstown Entertainment with Razorbill editor and poet Lexa Hillyer.",
"score": "1.5033245"
},
{
"id": "6245982",
"title": "Panic (comics)",
"text": " Panic has been reprinted by publisher Russ Cochran several times. In 1985, it formed part of his Complete EC Library, published (in black and white) as a slipcased hardcover two-volume set. Panic was also reprinted issue-by-issue between March 1997 and December 1999 by Cochran (in association with Gemstone Publishing). This complete run was later rebound, with covers included, in three softcover EC Annuals. Dark Horse Comics subsequently published two hardback volumes of reprints as part of their EC Archives series, with volume 1 (issues 1 to 6) published in 2016 and volume 2 (issues 7 to 12) published in 2017.",
"score": "1.4923456"
},
{
"id": "16396228",
"title": "Panic × Panic",
"text": " Panic × Panic (ぱにっく×ぱにっく) is a shōjo manga by Mika Kawamura, published in Kodansha's Nakayoshi and collected into two volumes. It is licensed in English by Del Rey Manga.",
"score": "1.4889005"
},
{
"id": "26650770",
"title": "Michael J. Socolow",
"text": " Socolow, often working in collaboration with Jefferson Pooley, has written several articles (both scholarly and popular) dispelling the myth of The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) mass panic. Their collaborative work argues that the panic was “almost non-existent” and significantly overstated by contemporaneous sensational press reporting, and, later, in academic scholarship. In a 2013 interview with Gizmodo, Socolow denied the idea that he and Pooley originated this mass panic revisionism, citing at least four previous scholars who arrived at the same conclusion about the mass panic being largely a myth. Yet Pooley and Socolow’s scholarship has been cited by Snopes, Time, National Geographic, and others ",
"score": "1.4880943"
}
] | [
"Panic Nation\n The book comprises a series of essays written by individuals working in related fields. These writers address the state of knowledge in the specific fields and how this conflicts with common knowledge. The contributors are Stanley Feldman, Vincent Marks, Michael Fizpatrick, Maurice Hanssen, John Henry, Mick Hume, Lakshman Karalliedde, Malcolm Kendrick, Peter Lachmann, James Le Fanu, Sandy Macnair, Sam Shuster and Dick Taverne QC.",
"A Few Seconds of Panic\n A Few Seconds of Panic is a nonfiction first-person narrative by Stefan Fatsis, published in 2008. The book chronicles Fatsis, a professional 43-year-old sportswriter working for The Wall Street Journal, and his attempt to play in the National Football League. Along the way, he relates the personal stories and struggles that professional football players face in the league. After some setbacks, Fatsis eventually finds some success as a backup placekicker for the Denver Broncos. The book's title comes from Jason Elam's description of being a kicker as \"hours and hours of boredom surrounded by a few seconds of panic.\" A Few Seconds of Panic has been compared to George Plimpton's Paper Lion, a 1966 book wherein the author joins the Detroit Lions as a backup quarterback.",
"Reneau Z. Peurifoy\n His first book, Anxiety, Phobias & Panic: Taking Charge and Conquering Fear currently has over 180,000 copies in print. Originally published in 1988. A revised second edition was released by Warner Books in 1995. It was again updated and released in its third edition in 2005. It has a UK edition as well as editions in German, Spanish, and Hungarian. His second book, Overcoming Anxiety: From Short-Term Fixes to Long-Term Recovery, was released in 1997 by Henry Holt. It also has a Spanish edition and will soon be released in a German edition. His third book, Anger: Taming the Beast, was released in June 1999 by Kodansha America. It also has a Dutch edition and will soon be released in a German edition by Hans Huber. Mr. Peurifoy's fourth book, Why Did God Give Us Emotions? was released in September 2009.",
"Panic (novel)\n RTÉ.ie described the book as an \"absorbing thriller\" that is \"a fast, furious and fun read\". Oline Cogdill of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel said that Abbott takes the novel \"just to the boundaries of disbelief\", but still manages to make it \"credible\" and \"still a shocker\".",
"The Panic Zone\n The Panic Zone is a thriller novel by Canadian author Rick Mofina released on June 30, 2010. It is a Globe and Mail Canadian bestseller.",
"Alan Knott-Craig\n In April 2008, he published Don’t Panic, based on an e-mail he sent to his staff aimed at persuading South Africans to stay in the country and contribute positively. The book became the best selling book in South Africa for 2008. In 2019 he wrote a follow-up article. This was followed in 2012 by Mobinomics: Mxit and South Africa’s Mobile Revolution which he co-authored with Gus Silber. Really, Don’t Panic and Moenie Stres nie a follow-up of Don’t Panic was published in 2014. In 2015 he co-authored So, You Want To Be A Hero, a collection of essays, tips and cartoons targeted at young people looking to fast track their careers.",
"Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity\n Panic: The Story of Modern Financial Insanity is a non-fiction book by Michael Lewis about the most important and severe upheavals in past financial history. The book was published on November 2, 2009 by W. W. Norton & Company. The text, Lewis writes, is an effort \"to recreate the more recent financial panics, in an attempt to show how financial markets now operate.\"",
"Panic (comics)\n Panic was a bi-monthly humor comic that was published by Bill Gaines' EC Comics line during the mid-1950s as a companion to Harvey Kurtzman's Mad, which was being heavily imitated by other comic publishers. Panic was edited by Al Feldstein (who became the editor of Mad a few years later). Beginning with its first issue (February–March 1954), Panic had a 12-issue run over two years. Feldstein was the primary cover artist, with stories illustrated by Jack Davis, Will Elder, Jack Kamen, Joe Orlando, Basil Wolverton and Wally Wood. Some story ideas were by Nick Meglin, later the co-editor of Mad. Scripts were by Feldstein, Elder and Jack Mendelsohn, later a co-screenwriter of Yellow Submarine (1968) and an Emmy-nominated TV comedy writer. EC dubbed Panic the \"only authorized imitation\" of Mad, but Mad's creator didn't enjoy the joke. Almost thirty years later, Harvey Kurtzman told an interviewer, \"Panic was another sore point. Gaines, by some convoluted reasoning, decided to double the profit of Mad by doing a Feldstein version of Mad and he just plundered all of my techniques and artists. For this there was a real conflict of interests.\"",
"Panic Nation\n Panic Nation: Unpicking the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, also published as Panic Nation: Exposing the Myths We're Told About Food and Health, is a nonfiction book by Stanley Feldman and Vincent Marks. It was published by John Blake in 2005.",
"Panic Spring\n Panic Spring is a novel by Lawrence Durrell, published in 1937 by Faber and Faber in Britain and Covici-Friede in the United States under the pseudonym Charles Norden. It is set on a fictional Greek Island, Mavrodaphne, in the Ionian Sea somewhere between Patras, Kephalonia, and Ithaca. The island, however, resembles Corfu strongly, and in at least one inscribed copy of the novel, Durrell includes a map of Corfu identified as Mavrodaphne. The novel progresses through multiple perspectives in the successive chapters, each focusing on a different character. As a whole, the novel shows Durrell's myriad influences of this period, ranging from Remy de Gourmont to Richard Aldington, D. H. Lawrence, and several Elizabethan writers.",
"Panic Nation\n This book focuses on debunking many popular misconceptions about food and health that are common in the world today, in line with the introduction to the book that quotes Frederick II of the Holy Roman Empire who wrote in the thirteenth century: 'One ought not to believe anything, save that which can be proven by nature and the force of reason.'",
"Panic (novel)\n Panic is a 2005 thriller by Jeff Abbott about an unsuspecting young documentary film maker, Evan, whose life is turned upside down when he realizes that his parents have been working as spies throughout their lives. One morning his mother phones him and asks him to come to her urgently, but when he arrives at her home she has just been murdered and he barely manages to escape with his life. Evan is suspected of having received from his mother a copy of a list of members and clients of a secret organisation called \"The Deeps\" and the chase is on. Evan must struggle through his mother's death and meets C.I.A. agents, cold-hearted killers, and double-crossers, and friends – trying to find his father, get his revenge on the people who murdered his mother, and uncover all the secrets about the lie he believed was his life. He also tries to save a lovely girl named Carrie whom he has recently met and fallen in love with, but doesn't know whose side she is on, \"The Deeps\" or the C.I.A. Panic was to be made into a film in 2011, but no such film ever materialized.",
"Jeff Abbott\nPanic (Aug 2005)—nominated for the Thriller Award (given by the International Thriller Writers). Panic, has been optioned for film by The Weinstein Company and is in development. ; Fear (Aug 2006) ; Collision (Jul 2008)—known as Run in the United Kingdom Collision, has been optioned for film by Twentieth Century Fox. ; Trust Me (Jul 2009) ; Blame (Jul 2017) ; The Three Beths (October 2018) ; Never Ask Me (July 2020) === Anthologies and Collections ===",
"Jason Starr\n Max. The fourth novel in the series, PIMP, was published in 2016. Panic Attack, Starr's thriller about the aftermath of a shooting in suburban New York City, was published in 2009 by St. Martin's Press. The German/ Diogenes Verlag edition (Panik) was a major bestseller in Austria. It was optioned by David Fincher's production company Panic Pictures with Ocean's Eleven scribe Ted Griffin adapting. In 2010, Starr's first graphic novel, The Chill, was published by Vertigo Crime, with art by Mick Bertilorenzi. Starr also wrote many comics for DC Comics (Justice, Inc.). In 2011, The Chill won the Anthony Award ",
"Sean D. Carr\n Sean D. Carr (born January 21, 1969) is the Executive Director of Batten Institute for Entrepreneurship & Innovation at the University of Virginia. He is also co-author, along with Robert F. Bruner, of the book The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm. The book focuses on the early 20th Century financial disaster known as the Panic of 1907.",
"Charlie Vázquez\n Mensbook Journal. He is also a former contributor to the Village Voice blog Naked City. Vázquez hosts a monthly reading series called PANIC! at Nowhere in the East Village, Manhattan, where he first witnessed punk rock, Gothic rock and queer culture in the 1980s. The series features both published and unpublished queer, female and transsexual writers of erotica, horror and unusual fiction and poetry. Vázquez cites Edgar Allan Poe, James Baldwin, Serge Gainsbourg, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Celia Cruz, Arsenio Rodríguez, Celina y Reutilio, Diamanda Galás and Joy Division as cultural influences. Starting in 2016, novelist Álvaro Enrigue, and writers ",
"Lauren Oliver\n Lauren Oliver (born Laura Suzanne Schechter; November 8, 1982) is an American author of numerous young adult novels including Panic; the Delirium trilogy: Delirium, Pandemonium, and Requiem; and Before I Fall, which became a major motion picture in 2017. Panic was also turned into a series by Amazon studios. She served as creator, writer and showrunner on the project. Her novels have been translated into more than thirty languages internationally. Oliver is a 2012 E.B. White Read-Aloud Award nominee for her middle-grade novel Liesl & Po, as well as author of the middle-grade fantasy novel The Spindlers. Oliver graduated from the University of Chicago, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and also received a Master of Fine Arts degree from New York University. In 2010, Oliver co-founded Paper Lantern Lit, a literary “incubator”/ development company now called Glasstown Entertainment with Razorbill editor and poet Lexa Hillyer.",
"Panic (comics)\n Panic has been reprinted by publisher Russ Cochran several times. In 1985, it formed part of his Complete EC Library, published (in black and white) as a slipcased hardcover two-volume set. Panic was also reprinted issue-by-issue between March 1997 and December 1999 by Cochran (in association with Gemstone Publishing). This complete run was later rebound, with covers included, in three softcover EC Annuals. Dark Horse Comics subsequently published two hardback volumes of reprints as part of their EC Archives series, with volume 1 (issues 1 to 6) published in 2016 and volume 2 (issues 7 to 12) published in 2017.",
"Panic × Panic\n Panic × Panic (ぱにっく×ぱにっく) is a shōjo manga by Mika Kawamura, published in Kodansha's Nakayoshi and collected into two volumes. It is licensed in English by Del Rey Manga.",
"Michael J. Socolow\n Socolow, often working in collaboration with Jefferson Pooley, has written several articles (both scholarly and popular) dispelling the myth of The War of the Worlds (1938 radio drama) mass panic. Their collaborative work argues that the panic was “almost non-existent” and significantly overstated by contemporaneous sensational press reporting, and, later, in academic scholarship. In a 2013 interview with Gizmodo, Socolow denied the idea that he and Pooley originated this mass panic revisionism, citing at least four previous scholars who arrived at the same conclusion about the mass panic being largely a myth. Yet Pooley and Socolow’s scholarship has been cited by Snopes, Time, National Geographic, and others "
] |
Who was the composer of Nozze istriane? | [
"Antonio Smareglia"
] | composer | Nozze istriane | 6,512,081 | 96 | [
{
"id": "29743040",
"title": "Nozze istriane",
"text": " Nozze istriane (An Istrian wedding) is an opera in three acts by Antonio Smareglia to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. It premiered on 28 March 1895 at the Teatro Comunale in Trieste.",
"score": "1.8921034"
},
{
"id": "29743042",
"title": "Nozze istriane",
"text": "Antonio Smareglia: Nozze istriane – Ian Storey (tenor), Katia Lytting (mezzo-soprano), Svetla Vassileva (soprano), Enzo Capuano (baritone), Giorgio Surjan (bass), Alberto Mastromarino (baritone); Teatro Verdi di Trieste Orchestra and Chorus; Tiziano Severini (conductor). Live performance recording from the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi, December 1999. Label: Bongiovanni BGV 2265 king ",
"score": "1.6453278"
},
{
"id": "32352207",
"title": "List of people from Italy",
"text": " his era ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990), leading Italian composer of electronic, aleatory, and serial music ; Goffredo Petrassi (1904–2003), composer of modern classical music, conductor, and teacher ; Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), composer of operas. His finest operas, La bohème (1896), Tosca (1900), Madama Butterfly (1904), and Turandot (produced posthumously in 1926) ; Ottorino Respighi (1879–1936), composer, known for colourful tone poems The Fountains of Rome (1916) and The Pines of Rome (1924) ; Nino Rota (1911–1979), composer of film scores, notably for the films of Federico Fellini and Luchino Visconti ; John Serry Sr. (1915–2003), Italian-American composer of music for the Free-bass system Accordion including American Rhapsody (1955) and Concerto for Free Bass Accordion (1964) ",
"score": "1.6135037"
},
{
"id": "9643875",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Đelo Jusić (1939–2019) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (Zagreb, 1912 – Zagreb, 1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian Movement\" • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar ",
"score": "1.5992783"
},
{
"id": "4755804",
"title": "List of Croatian composers",
"text": " • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar (1929–2008) • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late–romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Berislav Šipuš (born 1958) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Franz von Suppé (1819–1895) • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"score": "1.5594764"
},
{
"id": "28520317",
"title": "Marij Kogoj",
"text": " Marij Julij Kogoj (Trieste, 20 September 1892 – Ljubljana, 25 February 1956) was a Slovenian composer. He was a pupil of Schoenberg and Franz Schreker, and immensely popular during the 1920s, culminating with his opera Črne maske (Black masks). His career ended in 1932, when he was institutionalized for schizophrenia. He remained there until his death in 1956.",
"score": "1.5432708"
},
{
"id": "16057820",
"title": "List of Italian composers",
"text": "Giovanni Bernardino Nanino (c. 1560–1623) ; Giovanni Maria Nanino (1543/44–1607), also Nanini ; Gianna Nannini (born 1954) ; Pietro Nardini (1722–1793) ; Mario Nascimbene (1913–2002) ; Mariella Nava (born 1960) ; Marcantonio Negri (?–1624) ; Giovanni Cesare Netti (1649–1686) ; Niccolò da Perugia (later 14th century) ; Bruno Nicolai (1926–1991) ; Giuseppe Nicolini (1762–1842) ; Piero Niro (born 1957) ; Giovanni Domenico da Nola (c. 1510/20–1592), also known as Nolla ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) ; Michele Novaro (1818–1885), composed national anthem of the current Italian Republic ; Emanuele Nutile (1862–1932) ",
"score": "1.53647"
},
{
"id": "10121579",
"title": "Ferdo Livadić",
"text": " Ferdo Livadić (Ferdinand Wiesner) (30 May 1799 – 8 January 1879) was a Croatian composer. Livadić was born in Celje, in present-day Slovenia. A leader of the 19th-century Croatian national revival, he wrote the tune for Još Hrvatska ni propala, the anthem of the Illyrian movement. He frequently invited many of the movement's most important members, together with such celebrities as Franz Liszt, to his property at Samobor. He also composed numerous art songs in Croatian, Slovenian, and German, as well as marches, dances and scherzi for piano. Probably the best of these piano works is a Nocturne in F sharp minor. His work prepared the way for the nationalist Croatian composers Vatroslav Lisinski and Ivan Zajc. He died, aged 79, in Samobor.",
"score": "1.5283897"
},
{
"id": "531088",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " occhi Sarajevo, for ensemble with piano, concertante guitar and electric bass (2002) ; Epifania dell’eterno, for solo violin (2002) ; Suono a cielo aperto, for soprano and strings (2002) ; In Badia fiesolana 1980 n. 1, for ensemble (2002) ; La terra del tramonto Live-Symphony n. 1, for large orchestra and live electronics (2003) ; Salmo n. 50, for voices and orchestra (2003) ; Stagioni, Dura stagion, dal sole accesa... for flute, violin and strings (2003) ; Sospeso d’incanto N. 2, for piano (2003) ; La città capovolta, for amplified guitar and recitation voice (2003) ; Sull’onda notturna del mare infinito, to Roberto Fabbriciani for bass ",
"score": "1.5238547"
},
{
"id": "9643876",
"title": "List of composers by nationality",
"text": " • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late-romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (composer) (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"score": "1.5189977"
},
{
"id": "16057821",
"title": "List of Italian composers",
"text": "Nino Oliviero (1918–1980) ; Giacomo Orefice (1865–1922) ; Ferdinando Orlandi (1774–1848) ; Nora Orlandi (born 1933) ; Alessandro Orologio (1550–1633) ; Riz Ortolani (1926–2014) ; Bernardo Ottani (1736–1827) ",
"score": "1.5179195"
},
{
"id": "29693132",
"title": "Antonio Nola",
"text": " Antonio Nola (1642-after 1715) was a Neapolitan composer of whom little biographical information or music survives. He is to be distinguished from the better known Giovanni Domenico da Nola born 130 years earlier (died 1592). Antonio Nola was a minor figure among the Neapolitan composers who collaborated with musicians from the church of the Girolamini, which included Giovanni Maria Trabaci, Scipione Dentice (nephew of Fabrizio Dentice), Giovanni Maria Sabino, Giovanni Salvatore, master of the royal chapel Filippo Coppola and, foremost among them, Erasmo di Bartolo (\"Padre Raimo\") author of the monumental Mottetti per le quarant' ore. His only recorded work, in comparison with the Magnificat a 5 composed in the same year by his colleague Francesco Provenzale (1624–1704), shows a less sophisticated compositional level.",
"score": "1.5127879"
},
{
"id": "28506337",
"title": "Italian opera",
"text": "Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882–1973) whose 19 operas include L'Orfeide and Torneo notturno ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975) whose operas include Ulisse, Volo di notte and Il prigioniero ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) who wrote Al gran sole carico d'amore, Intolleranza 1960, and Prometeo ; Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) whose prolific compositional output includes La Passion selon Sade, La Racine, pianobar pour Phèdre, Nympheo, Bozzetto siciliano ; Salvatore Sciarrino (born 1947) who wrote several operas including Luci mie traditrici Some of the greatest Italian operas of the 20th century were written by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924). These include Manon Lescaut, La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, La fanciulla del West, La rondine and Turandot, the last two being left unfinished. In 1926 and in 2002 Franco Alfano and Luciano Berio respectively attempted a completion of Turandot, and in 1994 Lorenzo Ferrero completed the orchestration of the third version of La rondine. Berio himself wrote two operas, Un re in ascolto and Opera. Ferrero likewise has composed several operas including Salvatore Giuliano, La Conquista, and his 2011 Risorgimento! Other 20th-century Italian opera composers are:",
"score": "1.5115747"
},
{
"id": "531077",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " thought of as a synthesis of a fluid episodic multiplicity. Through his Pierrot series he was able to reveal a ‘melodic’ component of his music which broadens in the opera Trionfo della notte (1986–87 season at the Teatro Comunale di Bologna), which won the Premio Abbiati as the best composition of the year. Among his later works are Romanza alla notte No. 2, for violin and orchestra (Parma, June 20, 1991), proof of the deep relationship existing between the composer and Pier Paolo Pasolini's poetics. He dedicated to Pasolini Il glicine, for soprano, reciting voice, amplified flute and violin (Milan, July 2, 1993). In Orfeo cantando... tolse..., ten lyric actions based on text freely taken by Poliziano’s Orfeo ",
"score": "1.50657"
},
{
"id": "4755803",
"title": "List of Croatian composers",
"text": " This is a list of Croatian composers. • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Ivan Božičević (born 1961) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Darko Hajsek (born 1959) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Stanko Horvat (1930–2006), 20th-century composer • Ivan Mane Jarnović (1747–1804) • Đelo Jusić (born 1939) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (1912–1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian ",
"score": "1.5007093"
},
{
"id": "30347220",
"title": "List of compositions by Salvatore Sciarrino",
"text": " ; 2 Arie notturne dal campo (2001) ; In nomine nominis (2001) ; La perfidia (2002) ; Cavatina e i gridi (2002) ; Allegro KV 15 (2003) ; Due smarrimenti (2003) ; Sestetto (2003) ; Quaderno di strada (2003) ; Scena di vento (2004) ; Il legno e la parola (2004) ; Vento d'ombra (2005) ; Archeologia del telefono (2005) ; Tre duetti con l'eco (2006) ; Dita unite a quattro mani (2006) ; Le stagioni artificiali (2006) ; 12 Madrigali (2007) ; Quartetto n. 8 (2008) ; Il giardino di Sara (2008) ; Adagio (2009) ; L'altro giardino (2009) ; Adagio di Mozart (2010) ; Fanofania (2010) ; Cantiere del poema (2011) ",
"score": "1.495435"
},
{
"id": "31949684",
"title": "Giulio Alary",
"text": " Giulio Alary (sometimes Alari) (1814-1891) was an Italian composer. Born in Mantua, he was a student at the Milan Conservatory before relocating to Paris, where he died, in 1891. He wrote three operas, as well as some orchestral and chamber music, arias, and melodies. He also served as a conductor and singing teacher. An excerpt from Le tre nozze, a polka with variations, is said to have been a particular favorite of Henriette Sontag.",
"score": "1.4948082"
},
{
"id": "3355958",
"title": "Music of Croatia",
"text": " unknown to the public, and yet need to be explored by musicologists and than published. ; Josip Hatze is the author of the first Croatian mass (ca. 1895) and the first Croatian cantata (Night on Una, 1902). ; Dora Pejačević (born as Theodora Pejacsevich) – one of the composers to introduce the orchestral song to Croatian music. Her Symphony in F-sharp minor is considered by scholars to be the first modern symphony in Croatian Music. ; Blagoje Bersa (born as Benito Bersa) is a typical figure of late Romantic stylistic crisis, the author of 'futuristic' opera Der Eisenhammer / Oganj (Zagreb, 1911). ; Fran Lhotka ",
"score": "1.4899735"
},
{
"id": "531086",
"title": "Adriano Guarnieri (composer)",
"text": " occhi, Sarajevo...” for amplified piano and two pianos on tape (1995) ; Il pianto della scavatrice for amplified female voice, flute, bass clarinet, violin and cello (1996) ; Omaggio a Mina 6 songs for light voice, soprano and orchestra (1996) ; A Giacomo Manzoni o delle dissolvenze sonore for alto flute and soprano (amplified) (1997) ; Blandine Ballata for piano and spoken voices (1997) ; “... Uno spazio che tremola celeste...” for string quartet (1997) ; Traviata. Preludio Atto III for quartet and string orchestra (transcription) (1997) ; Pensieri canuti for soloists, chorus, two ensemble on double choir and live electronics (1998) ; “...canto un ricordo...” ",
"score": "1.486275"
},
{
"id": "31313617",
"title": "List of Istrians",
"text": "Andrea Antico, music printer, editor, publisher and composer of the Renaissance, who is regarded as the first significant music printer. ; Franka Batelić, singer and songwriter, who won the first edition of Showtime and represented Croatia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2018. ; Michael Bublé, Canadian singer, songwriter, and record producer. His grandparents were Istrians, both Slavic and Italian. ; Tony Cetinski, pop singer, one of the most popular musicians in Croatia and countries of former Yugoslavia. ; Luigi Dallapiccola, composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions. ; Sergio Endrigo, singer-songwriter, who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1968, and represented Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 1968. ; Gustafi, Porin Award-winning folk rock band. ; Lidija Percan, singer, famous for her songs in the Italian ",
"score": "1.4857496"
}
] | [
"Nozze istriane\n Nozze istriane (An Istrian wedding) is an opera in three acts by Antonio Smareglia to an Italian libretto by Luigi Illica. It premiered on 28 March 1895 at the Teatro Comunale in Trieste.",
"Nozze istriane\nAntonio Smareglia: Nozze istriane – Ian Storey (tenor), Katia Lytting (mezzo-soprano), Svetla Vassileva (soprano), Enzo Capuano (baritone), Giorgio Surjan (bass), Alberto Mastromarino (baritone); Teatro Verdi di Trieste Orchestra and Chorus; Tiziano Severini (conductor). Live performance recording from the Teatro Lirico Giuseppe Verdi, December 1999. Label: Bongiovanni BGV 2265 king ",
"List of people from Italy\n his era ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990), leading Italian composer of electronic, aleatory, and serial music ; Goffredo Petrassi (1904–2003), composer of modern classical music, conductor, and teacher ; Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924), composer of operas. His finest operas, La bohème (1896), Tosca (1900), Madama Butterfly (1904), and Turandot (produced posthumously in 1926) ; Ottorino Respighi (1879–1936), composer, known for colourful tone poems The Fountains of Rome (1916) and The Pines of Rome (1924) ; Nino Rota (1911–1979), composer of film scores, notably for the films of Federico Fellini and Luchino Visconti ; John Serry Sr. (1915–2003), Italian-American composer of music for the Free-bass system Accordion including American Rhapsody (1955) and Concerto for Free Bass Accordion (1964) ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Đelo Jusić (1939–2019) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (Zagreb, 1912 – Zagreb, 1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian Movement\" • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar ",
"List of Croatian composers\n • Ferdo Livadić (1799–1879) • Nada Ludvig-Pečar (1929–2008) • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late–romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Berislav Šipuš (born 1958) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Franz von Suppé (1819–1895) • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"Marij Kogoj\n Marij Julij Kogoj (Trieste, 20 September 1892 – Ljubljana, 25 February 1956) was a Slovenian composer. He was a pupil of Schoenberg and Franz Schreker, and immensely popular during the 1920s, culminating with his opera Črne maske (Black masks). His career ended in 1932, when he was institutionalized for schizophrenia. He remained there until his death in 1956.",
"List of Italian composers\nGiovanni Bernardino Nanino (c. 1560–1623) ; Giovanni Maria Nanino (1543/44–1607), also Nanini ; Gianna Nannini (born 1954) ; Pietro Nardini (1722–1793) ; Mario Nascimbene (1913–2002) ; Mariella Nava (born 1960) ; Marcantonio Negri (?–1624) ; Giovanni Cesare Netti (1649–1686) ; Niccolò da Perugia (later 14th century) ; Bruno Nicolai (1926–1991) ; Giuseppe Nicolini (1762–1842) ; Piero Niro (born 1957) ; Giovanni Domenico da Nola (c. 1510/20–1592), also known as Nolla ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) ; Michele Novaro (1818–1885), composed national anthem of the current Italian Republic ; Emanuele Nutile (1862–1932) ",
"Ferdo Livadić\n Ferdo Livadić (Ferdinand Wiesner) (30 May 1799 – 8 January 1879) was a Croatian composer. Livadić was born in Celje, in present-day Slovenia. A leader of the 19th-century Croatian national revival, he wrote the tune for Još Hrvatska ni propala, the anthem of the Illyrian movement. He frequently invited many of the movement's most important members, together with such celebrities as Franz Liszt, to his property at Samobor. He also composed numerous art songs in Croatian, Slovenian, and German, as well as marches, dances and scherzi for piano. Probably the best of these piano works is a Nocturne in F sharp minor. His work prepared the way for the nationalist Croatian composers Vatroslav Lisinski and Ivan Zajc. He died, aged 79, in Samobor.",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n occhi Sarajevo, for ensemble with piano, concertante guitar and electric bass (2002) ; Epifania dell’eterno, for solo violin (2002) ; Suono a cielo aperto, for soprano and strings (2002) ; In Badia fiesolana 1980 n. 1, for ensemble (2002) ; La terra del tramonto Live-Symphony n. 1, for large orchestra and live electronics (2003) ; Salmo n. 50, for voices and orchestra (2003) ; Stagioni, Dura stagion, dal sole accesa... for flute, violin and strings (2003) ; Sospeso d’incanto N. 2, for piano (2003) ; La città capovolta, for amplified guitar and recitation voice (2003) ; Sull’onda notturna del mare infinito, to Roberto Fabbriciani for bass ",
"List of composers by nationality\n • Ivan Lukačić (1584–1648), renaissance composer • Ivan Matetić Ronjgov (1880–1960) • Boris Papandopulo (1914–1986), 20th-century composer • Dora Pejačević (1885–1923), late-romantic composer • Dragan Plamenac (1895–1983) • Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) • Vjekoslav Rosenberg-Ružić (1870–1954) • Marko Rothmüller (1908–1993) • Josif Runjanin (1821–1878) • Milan Sachs (1884–1968) • Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) • Luka Sorkočević (1734–1789) • Josip Štolcer-Slavenski (1896–1955) • Stjepan Šulek (1906–1991), 20th-century composer • Ivo Tijardović (1895–1976) • Marko Tomasović (composer) (born 1976), 21st-century composer • Marcel Tyberg (1893–1944), composer who lived in Abbazia (formerly in Italy), now called Opatija, Croatia • Albe Vidaković (1914–1964) • Ivan Zajc (1832–1914)",
"List of Italian composers\nNino Oliviero (1918–1980) ; Giacomo Orefice (1865–1922) ; Ferdinando Orlandi (1774–1848) ; Nora Orlandi (born 1933) ; Alessandro Orologio (1550–1633) ; Riz Ortolani (1926–2014) ; Bernardo Ottani (1736–1827) ",
"Antonio Nola\n Antonio Nola (1642-after 1715) was a Neapolitan composer of whom little biographical information or music survives. He is to be distinguished from the better known Giovanni Domenico da Nola born 130 years earlier (died 1592). Antonio Nola was a minor figure among the Neapolitan composers who collaborated with musicians from the church of the Girolamini, which included Giovanni Maria Trabaci, Scipione Dentice (nephew of Fabrizio Dentice), Giovanni Maria Sabino, Giovanni Salvatore, master of the royal chapel Filippo Coppola and, foremost among them, Erasmo di Bartolo (\"Padre Raimo\") author of the monumental Mottetti per le quarant' ore. His only recorded work, in comparison with the Magnificat a 5 composed in the same year by his colleague Francesco Provenzale (1624–1704), shows a less sophisticated compositional level.",
"Italian opera\nGian Francesco Malipiero (1882–1973) whose 19 operas include L'Orfeide and Torneo notturno ; Luigi Dallapiccola (1904–1975) whose operas include Ulisse, Volo di notte and Il prigioniero ; Luigi Nono (1924–1990) who wrote Al gran sole carico d'amore, Intolleranza 1960, and Prometeo ; Sylvano Bussotti (born 1931) whose prolific compositional output includes La Passion selon Sade, La Racine, pianobar pour Phèdre, Nympheo, Bozzetto siciliano ; Salvatore Sciarrino (born 1947) who wrote several operas including Luci mie traditrici Some of the greatest Italian operas of the 20th century were written by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924). These include Manon Lescaut, La bohème, Tosca, Madama Butterfly, La fanciulla del West, La rondine and Turandot, the last two being left unfinished. In 1926 and in 2002 Franco Alfano and Luciano Berio respectively attempted a completion of Turandot, and in 1994 Lorenzo Ferrero completed the orchestration of the third version of La rondine. Berio himself wrote two operas, Un re in ascolto and Opera. Ferrero likewise has composed several operas including Salvatore Giuliano, La Conquista, and his 2011 Risorgimento! Other 20th-century Italian opera composers are:",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n thought of as a synthesis of a fluid episodic multiplicity. Through his Pierrot series he was able to reveal a ‘melodic’ component of his music which broadens in the opera Trionfo della notte (1986–87 season at the Teatro Comunale di Bologna), which won the Premio Abbiati as the best composition of the year. Among his later works are Romanza alla notte No. 2, for violin and orchestra (Parma, June 20, 1991), proof of the deep relationship existing between the composer and Pier Paolo Pasolini's poetics. He dedicated to Pasolini Il glicine, for soprano, reciting voice, amplified flute and violin (Milan, July 2, 1993). In Orfeo cantando... tolse..., ten lyric actions based on text freely taken by Poliziano’s Orfeo ",
"List of Croatian composers\n This is a list of Croatian composers. • Andrea Antico (c. 1480–1538) • Krešimir Baranović (1894–1975) • Blagoje Bersa (1873–1934) • Rudolf Brucci (1917–2002) • Bruno Bjelinski (1909–1992) • Ivan Božičević (born 1961) • Arsen Dedić (1938–2015) • Dubravko Detoni (born 1937) • Jakov Gotovac (1895–1982) • Darko Hajsek (born 1959) • Josip Hatze (1879–1959) • Žiga Hirschler (1894–1941) • Stanko Horvat (1930–2006), 20th-century composer • Ivan Mane Jarnović (1747–1804) • Đelo Jusić (born 1939) • Alfi Kabiljo (born 1935) • Milko Kelemen (1924–2018), contemporary composer • Ivana Kiš (born 1979) • Franjo Krežma (1862–1881) • Igor Kuljerić (1938–2006) • Ivana Lang (1912–1982), composer, pianist and piano teacher. • Vatroslav Lisinski (1819–1854), 19th-century composer and co–founder of \"Illyrian ",
"List of compositions by Salvatore Sciarrino\n ; 2 Arie notturne dal campo (2001) ; In nomine nominis (2001) ; La perfidia (2002) ; Cavatina e i gridi (2002) ; Allegro KV 15 (2003) ; Due smarrimenti (2003) ; Sestetto (2003) ; Quaderno di strada (2003) ; Scena di vento (2004) ; Il legno e la parola (2004) ; Vento d'ombra (2005) ; Archeologia del telefono (2005) ; Tre duetti con l'eco (2006) ; Dita unite a quattro mani (2006) ; Le stagioni artificiali (2006) ; 12 Madrigali (2007) ; Quartetto n. 8 (2008) ; Il giardino di Sara (2008) ; Adagio (2009) ; L'altro giardino (2009) ; Adagio di Mozart (2010) ; Fanofania (2010) ; Cantiere del poema (2011) ",
"Giulio Alary\n Giulio Alary (sometimes Alari) (1814-1891) was an Italian composer. Born in Mantua, he was a student at the Milan Conservatory before relocating to Paris, where he died, in 1891. He wrote three operas, as well as some orchestral and chamber music, arias, and melodies. He also served as a conductor and singing teacher. An excerpt from Le tre nozze, a polka with variations, is said to have been a particular favorite of Henriette Sontag.",
"Music of Croatia\n unknown to the public, and yet need to be explored by musicologists and than published. ; Josip Hatze is the author of the first Croatian mass (ca. 1895) and the first Croatian cantata (Night on Una, 1902). ; Dora Pejačević (born as Theodora Pejacsevich) – one of the composers to introduce the orchestral song to Croatian music. Her Symphony in F-sharp minor is considered by scholars to be the first modern symphony in Croatian Music. ; Blagoje Bersa (born as Benito Bersa) is a typical figure of late Romantic stylistic crisis, the author of 'futuristic' opera Der Eisenhammer / Oganj (Zagreb, 1911). ; Fran Lhotka ",
"Adriano Guarnieri (composer)\n occhi, Sarajevo...” for amplified piano and two pianos on tape (1995) ; Il pianto della scavatrice for amplified female voice, flute, bass clarinet, violin and cello (1996) ; Omaggio a Mina 6 songs for light voice, soprano and orchestra (1996) ; A Giacomo Manzoni o delle dissolvenze sonore for alto flute and soprano (amplified) (1997) ; Blandine Ballata for piano and spoken voices (1997) ; “... Uno spazio che tremola celeste...” for string quartet (1997) ; Traviata. Preludio Atto III for quartet and string orchestra (transcription) (1997) ; Pensieri canuti for soloists, chorus, two ensemble on double choir and live electronics (1998) ; “...canto un ricordo...” ",
"List of Istrians\nAndrea Antico, music printer, editor, publisher and composer of the Renaissance, who is regarded as the first significant music printer. ; Franka Batelić, singer and songwriter, who won the first edition of Showtime and represented Croatia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2018. ; Michael Bublé, Canadian singer, songwriter, and record producer. His grandparents were Istrians, both Slavic and Italian. ; Tony Cetinski, pop singer, one of the most popular musicians in Croatia and countries of former Yugoslavia. ; Luigi Dallapiccola, composer known for his lyrical twelve-tone compositions. ; Sergio Endrigo, singer-songwriter, who won the Sanremo Music Festival in 1968, and represented Italy at the Eurovision Song Contest 1968. ; Gustafi, Porin Award-winning folk rock band. ; Lidija Percan, singer, famous for her songs in the Italian "
] |
In what city was Johann Gregor Memhardt born? | [
"Linz"
] | place of birth | Johann Gregor Memhardt | 6,336,815 | 71 | [
{
"id": "26969442",
"title": "Johann Gregor Memhardt",
"text": " Johann Gregor Memhardt or Memhard (1607 in Linz an der Donau – 1678 in Berlin) was a master builder, architect and politician.",
"score": "1.8947577"
},
{
"id": "26969443",
"title": "Johann Gregor Memhardt",
"text": " Memhardt emigrated from Linz to the Netherlands in 1622, where he probably learned the art of fortification. He served as a military engineer with George William, Elector of Brandenburg from 1638 onwards and in 1641 was appointed court engineer. Under his leadership the Residenzschloss was repaired and a chapel built for crown princess Louise Henriette. In the Lustgarten he built a 'Lusthaus'. From 1651 the Schloss Oranienburg and its gardens were built to Memhardt's designs, known from the plan of Berlin published in 1652.",
"score": "1.7039914"
},
{
"id": "8046940",
"title": "August Ferdinand Mehren",
"text": " Mehren was born in Helsingør, the son of merchant Johann Friedrich van Mehren (1789-1853) and Claudine Amalie Liebmann (1791-1852). He studied at the Universities of Copenhagen, Leipzig and Kiel, obtaining his doctorate in 1845. In Leipzig he was a student of Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer (1801-1888), and in Kiel he studied under Justus Olshausen (1800-1882).",
"score": "1.6330581"
},
{
"id": "14444587",
"title": "Johann Christian Dieterich",
"text": " Dieterich was born in Stendal. He began his career as proprietor of a silk shop in Berlin, which he moved to Gotha. In 1749 he married the daughter of the bookseller Mevius and began running his shop for him.",
"score": "1.6037657"
},
{
"id": "2545538",
"title": "Johann Andreas Schubert",
"text": " Schubert was born on 19 March 1808 in Wernesgrün (Vogtland) in the Kingdom of Saxony in Germany. He was the son of a day labourer (Tagelöhner) and was brought up by foster parents, who enabled him to have a sound education at the St Thomas School in Leipzig, at the garrison school at Königstein Fortress and at the Freemasons Institute in Dresden's Friedrichstadt. He studied civil and structural engineering (architecture) at the architecture school in the academy of Fine Arts in Dresden and in 1828 (at the age of 20 ) was given a post as a lecturer with the recently founded Royal Institute ",
"score": "1.6004052"
},
{
"id": "31886050",
"title": "Johann Georg Bergmüller",
"text": " Bergmüller was born in Türkheim near Buchloe (now in Bavaria) and received his first artistic education at his father's cabinet making workshop. From 1702 until 1708 he was apprentice to court painter Johann Andreas Wolff in Munich. In 1711 he went on cultural journey to the Netherlands in order to broaden his horizon. He became master painter and received the citizenship of Augsburg in 1711. In the same year he married Barbara Kreutzerin with whom he had ten children, one of which, Johann Baptist Konrad Bergmüller, became a fresco painter too, and also a renowned copperplate engraver and art theorist. Bergmüller ",
"score": "1.5817318"
},
{
"id": "28012408",
"title": "Johann Bernhard Basedow",
"text": " Basedow was born in Hamburg, the son of a wigmaker. His father (Heinrich Basedau) has been described as \"severe almost to brutality\", and his mother, Anna Maria Leonhard, as suffering from \"melancholy almost to madness\", which made his childhood a less than happy one. It was planned that he should follow his father's profession, but, at the age of 14, he ran away from home, finding employment as a servant of a country physician in Holstein. His employer recognized Johann's extraordinary intellectual gifts and sent him back home to his parents with a letter which persuaded them to allow their son ",
"score": "1.5749685"
},
{
"id": "5171065",
"title": "Johann Georg Veit Engelhardt",
"text": " He was born at Neustadt-on-the-Aisch. He and was educated at Erlangen, where he afterwards taught in the gymnasium (1817), and became professor of theology in the university (1821). During the years 1845, 1847 and 1848 was the representative of his university in the diet at Munich.",
"score": "1.5637698"
},
{
"id": "1779582",
"title": "Jakob Erhardt",
"text": " Erhardt was born on 17 April 1823 in Bönnigheim, then in the Kingdom of Württemberg. He was the son of a master tailor, and was apprenticed to a cooper. He worked with the Boennigheim Pietists, then joined the Basel Mission, where he was trained as a missionary until 1846. From 1846 to 1848 he studied with the Church Mission Society in London, where he was ordained in 1848.",
"score": "1.5519879"
},
{
"id": "32485766",
"title": "Johann Jakob Balmer",
"text": " Balmer was born in Lausen, Switzerland, the son of a chief justice also named Johann Jakob Balmer. His mother was Elizabeth Rolle Balmer, and he was the oldest son. During his schooling he excelled in mathematics, and so decided to focus on that field when he attended university. He studied at the University of Karlsruhe and the University of Berlin, then completed his Ph.D. from the University of Basel in 1849 with a dissertation on the cycloid. Johann then spent his entire life in Basel, where he taught at a school for girls. He also lectured at the University of Basel. In 1868 he married Christine Pauline Rinck at the age of ",
"score": "1.5499861"
},
{
"id": "28514147",
"title": "House of Soterius von Sachsenheim",
"text": " Johann Michael (the Elder) was born in Schellenberg on 25 November 1742 and started his studies at the Hermannstadt (Sibiu) gymnasium. In 1770, he married Anna Mara Filtsch, the daughter of the Hermannstadt parish pastor. Their first child, Anna Maria, was born in 1771. Later, two boys were born, Johann Michael (the Younger) and Charles. In 1771, he became Gubernialkonzipist and, in 1786, Gubernialsekretär in the administrative system of Transylvania. Following the Edict of Restitution in 1790, a decision was made in 1791 to send a delegation to the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, on behalf of the Transylvanian Saxons as they wanted to put forward their own proposal for regulation. Mayor Rosenfeld of Hermannstadt and Johann Michael headed the delegation and in January 1792 they travelled to Vienna to ",
"score": "1.5457342"
},
{
"id": "399741",
"title": "Georg Schmitt",
"text": " Johann Georg Gerhard Schmitt was born at Zurlaubenen, a riverside fishing hamlet on the northern edge of Trier (into which it has subsequently been subsumed). His birth took place in the little hotel run by his parents, Johann Georg Schmitt (1787-1832) and his wife, born Catharina Marx (1809-1868). Two hundred years later, there is still a hotel on the site: it is now named \"Gasthaus Mosellied\", after a song which during the nineteenth century became one of Schmitt's more widely appreciated compositions. The elder Johann Georg Schmitt combined his business as an hotelier with the post of cathedral organist between 1810 and ",
"score": "1.5448751"
},
{
"id": "16384715",
"title": "Johann Martin Miller",
"text": " Miller, the son of the Evangelical pastor Johann Michael Miller (1722–1774), was born in Jungingen, nowadays part of the city of Ulm. From 15 October 1770, he studied theology at the University of Göttingen, where he helped to establish the Göttinger Hainbund. Through this literary group, founded in 1772, Miller became acquainted with Matthias Claudius, Gottfried August Bürger, Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty, Johann Heinrich Voss, and Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock. In 1774 he accompanied Klopstock from Göttingen to Hamburg. In 1774 and 1775 he studied in Leipzig. During his years in Göttingen, Miller mainly wrote folk songs, many of which were set to music during his lifetime and are still found ",
"score": "1.5405486"
},
{
"id": "5928198",
"title": "Johann Christian Eberlein",
"text": " Johann Christian Eberlein (1770–1815), a German painter, was born at Göttingen about 1770, and died there in 1815. An Italian Landscape by him is in the Modern Gallery at Munich.",
"score": "1.5370193"
},
{
"id": "11669051",
"title": "Johann Heinrich Schröder",
"text": " Schröder was born on 12 December 1784 in Hamburg to the prominent merchant (and First Mayor of Hamburg) Christian Matthias Schröder and his wife, Luise Mutzenbecher, from the notable Mutzenbecher family. Schröder's family was Lutheran.",
"score": "1.5351311"
},
{
"id": "28708053",
"title": "Johann Georg Fischer",
"text": " Fischer was born in Groß-Süßen, Württemberg. His father was a carpenter, who died early. After Johann finished his studies in Tübingen between 1831 and 1833, he began to work as a teacher assistant at different places, including Langenau and Ulm. After a further study as a school teacher, he went to Stuttgart in 1845 to teach at the elementary school. He became school master as well as the leader of the economic school in the city. In 1857 he gained the title of Doctor of Philosophy. Between 1862 and 1885, he worked as a professor later as a master professor at the Oberen Stuttgarter Realschule. As a poet, Fischer may be regarded as the last noteworthy representative of the traditional Swabian School. He was not in sympathy with the naturalism of his ",
"score": "1.534691"
},
{
"id": "14473736",
"title": "Neckarsulm",
"text": "1766, November 3, Franz Simon Molitor, † 21 February 1848 in Vienna, musician 1902, 7 August, August Herold, † 8 January 1973 by Neckarsulm; vine growers ",
"score": "1.5334488"
},
{
"id": "33129257",
"title": "Johann Beckmann",
"text": " He was born on June 4, 1739, at Hoya in Hanover, where his father was postmaster and receiver of taxes. He was educated at Stade and the university of Göttingen, where he studied theology, mathematics, physics, natural history, and public finance and administration. After completing his studies, in 1762 he made a study tour through Brunswick and the Dutch Republic examining mines, factories, natural history museums, private collections, universities and their professors. The death of his mother in 1762 having deprived him of his means of support, he went in 1763 on the invitation of the pastor of the Lutheran community, Anton Friedrich Büsching, the ",
"score": "1.5326226"
},
{
"id": "7211214",
"title": "Johann Georg Rist",
"text": " Johann Georg Rist was born in Niendorf, at that time a prosperous village on the edge of Altona in Holstein, and today a quarter in Hamburg. His father was the minister-preacher at the Lutheran Ninedorf Market Church, Johann Christoph Friedrich Rist (1735-1807). They were both directly descended from the poet-dramatist Johann Rist 1607-1667. Rist received his education at home from his father until 1794 when for a year he attended the prestigious Johanneum (school) in Hamburg. In the Easter term of 1795 he moved to the University of Jena where he studied Law and where contemporaries whom he got to know included, Johann Diederich Gries and Johann Friedrich Herbart. He also found time for frequent visits ",
"score": "1.5310266"
},
{
"id": "9252941",
"title": "Christian Gregor",
"text": " Christian Gregor (January 1, 1723 - November 6, 1801) was a Moravian composer and bishop. Gregor was born to a peasant family living in the Silesian village of Dirsdorf, near Peilau and became a member of the Moravian Church when he was seventeen. He moved to Herrnhut, Germany in 1742, where he soon became organist and director of congregational music. He later served similar roles in Herrnhaag (1748) and Zeist (1749). He was ordained a Deacon in 1756, and was appointed to several administrative posts within the Moravian Church during which time he traveled extensively: Riga (1744) where he met Nicolaus Zinzendorf, North America (1770-1772), and a trip to Old Sarepta, Russia ",
"score": "1.529902"
}
] | [
"Johann Gregor Memhardt\n Johann Gregor Memhardt or Memhard (1607 in Linz an der Donau – 1678 in Berlin) was a master builder, architect and politician.",
"Johann Gregor Memhardt\n Memhardt emigrated from Linz to the Netherlands in 1622, where he probably learned the art of fortification. He served as a military engineer with George William, Elector of Brandenburg from 1638 onwards and in 1641 was appointed court engineer. Under his leadership the Residenzschloss was repaired and a chapel built for crown princess Louise Henriette. In the Lustgarten he built a 'Lusthaus'. From 1651 the Schloss Oranienburg and its gardens were built to Memhardt's designs, known from the plan of Berlin published in 1652.",
"August Ferdinand Mehren\n Mehren was born in Helsingør, the son of merchant Johann Friedrich van Mehren (1789-1853) and Claudine Amalie Liebmann (1791-1852). He studied at the Universities of Copenhagen, Leipzig and Kiel, obtaining his doctorate in 1845. In Leipzig he was a student of Heinrich Leberecht Fleischer (1801-1888), and in Kiel he studied under Justus Olshausen (1800-1882).",
"Johann Christian Dieterich\n Dieterich was born in Stendal. He began his career as proprietor of a silk shop in Berlin, which he moved to Gotha. In 1749 he married the daughter of the bookseller Mevius and began running his shop for him.",
"Johann Andreas Schubert\n Schubert was born on 19 March 1808 in Wernesgrün (Vogtland) in the Kingdom of Saxony in Germany. He was the son of a day labourer (Tagelöhner) and was brought up by foster parents, who enabled him to have a sound education at the St Thomas School in Leipzig, at the garrison school at Königstein Fortress and at the Freemasons Institute in Dresden's Friedrichstadt. He studied civil and structural engineering (architecture) at the architecture school in the academy of Fine Arts in Dresden and in 1828 (at the age of 20 ) was given a post as a lecturer with the recently founded Royal Institute ",
"Johann Georg Bergmüller\n Bergmüller was born in Türkheim near Buchloe (now in Bavaria) and received his first artistic education at his father's cabinet making workshop. From 1702 until 1708 he was apprentice to court painter Johann Andreas Wolff in Munich. In 1711 he went on cultural journey to the Netherlands in order to broaden his horizon. He became master painter and received the citizenship of Augsburg in 1711. In the same year he married Barbara Kreutzerin with whom he had ten children, one of which, Johann Baptist Konrad Bergmüller, became a fresco painter too, and also a renowned copperplate engraver and art theorist. Bergmüller ",
"Johann Bernhard Basedow\n Basedow was born in Hamburg, the son of a wigmaker. His father (Heinrich Basedau) has been described as \"severe almost to brutality\", and his mother, Anna Maria Leonhard, as suffering from \"melancholy almost to madness\", which made his childhood a less than happy one. It was planned that he should follow his father's profession, but, at the age of 14, he ran away from home, finding employment as a servant of a country physician in Holstein. His employer recognized Johann's extraordinary intellectual gifts and sent him back home to his parents with a letter which persuaded them to allow their son ",
"Johann Georg Veit Engelhardt\n He was born at Neustadt-on-the-Aisch. He and was educated at Erlangen, where he afterwards taught in the gymnasium (1817), and became professor of theology in the university (1821). During the years 1845, 1847 and 1848 was the representative of his university in the diet at Munich.",
"Jakob Erhardt\n Erhardt was born on 17 April 1823 in Bönnigheim, then in the Kingdom of Württemberg. He was the son of a master tailor, and was apprenticed to a cooper. He worked with the Boennigheim Pietists, then joined the Basel Mission, where he was trained as a missionary until 1846. From 1846 to 1848 he studied with the Church Mission Society in London, where he was ordained in 1848.",
"Johann Jakob Balmer\n Balmer was born in Lausen, Switzerland, the son of a chief justice also named Johann Jakob Balmer. His mother was Elizabeth Rolle Balmer, and he was the oldest son. During his schooling he excelled in mathematics, and so decided to focus on that field when he attended university. He studied at the University of Karlsruhe and the University of Berlin, then completed his Ph.D. from the University of Basel in 1849 with a dissertation on the cycloid. Johann then spent his entire life in Basel, where he taught at a school for girls. He also lectured at the University of Basel. In 1868 he married Christine Pauline Rinck at the age of ",
"House of Soterius von Sachsenheim\n Johann Michael (the Elder) was born in Schellenberg on 25 November 1742 and started his studies at the Hermannstadt (Sibiu) gymnasium. In 1770, he married Anna Mara Filtsch, the daughter of the Hermannstadt parish pastor. Their first child, Anna Maria, was born in 1771. Later, two boys were born, Johann Michael (the Younger) and Charles. In 1771, he became Gubernialkonzipist and, in 1786, Gubernialsekretär in the administrative system of Transylvania. Following the Edict of Restitution in 1790, a decision was made in 1791 to send a delegation to the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II, on behalf of the Transylvanian Saxons as they wanted to put forward their own proposal for regulation. Mayor Rosenfeld of Hermannstadt and Johann Michael headed the delegation and in January 1792 they travelled to Vienna to ",
"Georg Schmitt\n Johann Georg Gerhard Schmitt was born at Zurlaubenen, a riverside fishing hamlet on the northern edge of Trier (into which it has subsequently been subsumed). His birth took place in the little hotel run by his parents, Johann Georg Schmitt (1787-1832) and his wife, born Catharina Marx (1809-1868). Two hundred years later, there is still a hotel on the site: it is now named \"Gasthaus Mosellied\", after a song which during the nineteenth century became one of Schmitt's more widely appreciated compositions. The elder Johann Georg Schmitt combined his business as an hotelier with the post of cathedral organist between 1810 and ",
"Johann Martin Miller\n Miller, the son of the Evangelical pastor Johann Michael Miller (1722–1774), was born in Jungingen, nowadays part of the city of Ulm. From 15 October 1770, he studied theology at the University of Göttingen, where he helped to establish the Göttinger Hainbund. Through this literary group, founded in 1772, Miller became acquainted with Matthias Claudius, Gottfried August Bürger, Ludwig Christoph Heinrich Hölty, Johann Heinrich Voss, and Friedrich Gottlieb Klopstock. In 1774 he accompanied Klopstock from Göttingen to Hamburg. In 1774 and 1775 he studied in Leipzig. During his years in Göttingen, Miller mainly wrote folk songs, many of which were set to music during his lifetime and are still found ",
"Johann Christian Eberlein\n Johann Christian Eberlein (1770–1815), a German painter, was born at Göttingen about 1770, and died there in 1815. An Italian Landscape by him is in the Modern Gallery at Munich.",
"Johann Heinrich Schröder\n Schröder was born on 12 December 1784 in Hamburg to the prominent merchant (and First Mayor of Hamburg) Christian Matthias Schröder and his wife, Luise Mutzenbecher, from the notable Mutzenbecher family. Schröder's family was Lutheran.",
"Johann Georg Fischer\n Fischer was born in Groß-Süßen, Württemberg. His father was a carpenter, who died early. After Johann finished his studies in Tübingen between 1831 and 1833, he began to work as a teacher assistant at different places, including Langenau and Ulm. After a further study as a school teacher, he went to Stuttgart in 1845 to teach at the elementary school. He became school master as well as the leader of the economic school in the city. In 1857 he gained the title of Doctor of Philosophy. Between 1862 and 1885, he worked as a professor later as a master professor at the Oberen Stuttgarter Realschule. As a poet, Fischer may be regarded as the last noteworthy representative of the traditional Swabian School. He was not in sympathy with the naturalism of his ",
"Neckarsulm\n1766, November 3, Franz Simon Molitor, † 21 February 1848 in Vienna, musician 1902, 7 August, August Herold, † 8 January 1973 by Neckarsulm; vine growers ",
"Johann Beckmann\n He was born on June 4, 1739, at Hoya in Hanover, where his father was postmaster and receiver of taxes. He was educated at Stade and the university of Göttingen, where he studied theology, mathematics, physics, natural history, and public finance and administration. After completing his studies, in 1762 he made a study tour through Brunswick and the Dutch Republic examining mines, factories, natural history museums, private collections, universities and their professors. The death of his mother in 1762 having deprived him of his means of support, he went in 1763 on the invitation of the pastor of the Lutheran community, Anton Friedrich Büsching, the ",
"Johann Georg Rist\n Johann Georg Rist was born in Niendorf, at that time a prosperous village on the edge of Altona in Holstein, and today a quarter in Hamburg. His father was the minister-preacher at the Lutheran Ninedorf Market Church, Johann Christoph Friedrich Rist (1735-1807). They were both directly descended from the poet-dramatist Johann Rist 1607-1667. Rist received his education at home from his father until 1794 when for a year he attended the prestigious Johanneum (school) in Hamburg. In the Easter term of 1795 he moved to the University of Jena where he studied Law and where contemporaries whom he got to know included, Johann Diederich Gries and Johann Friedrich Herbart. He also found time for frequent visits ",
"Christian Gregor\n Christian Gregor (January 1, 1723 - November 6, 1801) was a Moravian composer and bishop. Gregor was born to a peasant family living in the Silesian village of Dirsdorf, near Peilau and became a member of the Moravian Church when he was seventeen. He moved to Herrnhut, Germany in 1742, where he soon became organist and director of congregational music. He later served similar roles in Herrnhaag (1748) and Zeist (1749). He was ordained a Deacon in 1756, and was appointed to several administrative posts within the Moravian Church during which time he traveled extensively: Riga (1744) where he met Nicolaus Zinzendorf, North America (1770-1772), and a trip to Old Sarepta, Russia "
] |
Who is the author of With? | [
"Donald Harington",
"Donald Douglas Harington"
] | author | With (novel) | 1,123,565 | 40 | [
{
"id": "14834083",
"title": "Barbara Love",
"text": "Editor Author Co-author ",
"score": "1.5102427"
},
{
"id": "11073695",
"title": "Kate Millett",
"text": "Author Co-author ",
"score": "1.4941559"
},
{
"id": "3052784",
"title": "Charles Gramlich",
"text": "Write With Fire, Borgo Press, 2009. ; Writing in Psychology, (With Y. Du Bois Irvin & Elliott Hammer), Borgo Press. ",
"score": "1.4581871"
},
{
"id": "4367505",
"title": "Brinsley Ford",
"text": "Author Co-author ",
"score": "1.4471796"
},
{
"id": "5773435",
"title": "Kenneth Paul Rosenberg",
"text": " Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"score": "1.4405736"
},
{
"id": "12730829",
"title": "Ethan Watters",
"text": "With co-author Richard Ofshe With co-author Richard Ofshe With co-author Richard Ofshe ",
"score": "1.4134287"
},
{
"id": "16112175",
"title": "Author! Author! (film)",
"text": " 'Author! Author!' is a 1982 American autobiographical film directed by Arthur Hiller, written by Israel Horovitz and starring Al Pacino.",
"score": "1.3984281"
},
{
"id": "9016363",
"title": "Carlos Martínez Shaw",
"text": "Author Co-author Editor ",
"score": "1.3942609"
},
{
"id": "14622975",
"title": "Someone to Run With",
"text": " Someone to Run With ([מישהו לרוץ איתו / Mishehu laruts ito, 2000]) is a thriller novel by Israeli writer David Grossman. The English edition was published by London by Bloomsbury in 2003, ISBN: 0-7475-6207-5. The book has received several reviews in international press. The book was adapted into a film in 2006 of the same name. In 2019 the book was banned in Russia.",
"score": "1.3883313"
},
{
"id": "2849432",
"title": "José María Portillo Valdés",
"text": "Author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author ",
"score": "1.3778384"
},
{
"id": "25027428",
"title": "David Sington",
"text": " He has co-written the following books: ",
"score": "1.3708467"
},
{
"id": "13830665",
"title": "Jot Agyeman",
"text": "I Have the Power, Destiny Books (2003); ; The Concept of Love in Relationships, Temple Publishing (2003). As a writer, Agyeman served as the Director of publishing with Eagle Media House, London, UK, he a considerable part of his career as an editor and book writer for the firm for many years. He wrote and edited various books, some of which include; War on Poverty and The Concept of Love in Relationships. He is also the author of; ",
"score": "1.370773"
},
{
"id": "26377589",
"title": "Physician writer",
"text": " (born 1942) author of 13 novels, often called the Medical thrillers series ; Miodrag Pavlović (1928–1914) Serbian writer and physician. ; M. Scott Peck (1936–2005), American psychiatrist whose The Road Less Traveled sold more than seven million copies and was on The New York Times best-seller list for over six years ; Walker Percy (1916–1990) American Southern author whose interests included philosophy and semiotics ; Lenrie Leopold Wilfred Peters (born 1932) Gambian novelist and poet ; Steve Pieczenik (born 1943) is author of psycho-political thrillers and the co-creator of the best-selling Tom Clancy's Op-Center and Tom Clancy's Net Force paperback series ; ",
"score": "1.3651775"
},
{
"id": "29378772",
"title": "With (album)",
"text": " With (stylized as WITH) is the eighth Japanese studio album (fifteenth overall) by South Korean pop duo Tohoshinki, released by Avex Trax on December 17, 2014. The record was released in four physical versions – Version A, a CD+DVD version with music videos and live performances; Version B, another CD+DVD version with off-shot movies; Version C, a CD only version with two bonus tracks; and Version D, a fan club limited edition with a CD-Extra. Recording and writing for the album roughly began in the summer of 2013. With is described to be an album composed of nostalgic dance-pop songs that are influenced ",
"score": "1.3607965"
},
{
"id": "26304576",
"title": "Suzanne Finstad",
"text": " Finstad wrote the national bestseller Sleeping with the Devil (1991), a non-fiction novel about the murder-for-hire of Barbra Piotrowski, a California beauty queen in a destructive love triangle with a married Texas health club tycoon named Richard Minns, who was alleged to have hired the assassins who shot and paralyzed Piotrowski. The book was excerpted in Cosmopolitan and published in France, Italy, and Germany. One critic called Sleeping With the Devil \"a true American tragedy\". Others described it as \"hypnotic,\" \". . . a disquieting book about adultery, scams, misuse of power and attempted murder . . . a must-read.\" The paperback includes details about Minns' ",
"score": "1.358676"
},
{
"id": "11317591",
"title": "William A. Wilson (folklorist)",
"text": "with with with ",
"score": "1.3559152"
},
{
"id": "29694289",
"title": "Robert Bernard Hass",
"text": " Robert Bernard Hass is the author of Going by Contraries: Robert Frost's Conflict With Science (University of Virginia Press, 2002), which was selected by Choice as an Outstanding Academic Title in 2003. He is also the author of the poetry collection, Counting Thunder, published by David Robert Books in 2008, and co-editor of the Letters of Robert Frost (Harvard University Press). His articles and poems have appeared in a number of journals including Poetry, Sewanee Review, Agni, Black Warrior Review, Studies in English Literature, and the Journal of Modern Literature. He has won an Academy of American Poets Prize, an AWP Intro Journals Award and a creative writing fellowship to Bread Loaf. Hass grew up in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He received his B.A., M.F.A., and Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University in 1985, 1993, and 1999, and a M.A. from the University of Florida in 1987, studying under Donald Justice; he is currently Professor of English at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, where he teaches courses in American literature and Shakespeare.",
"score": "1.3555368"
},
{
"id": "25881288",
"title": "Nel Noddings",
"text": " (co-author with Michael S. Katz and Kenneth A. Strike). Professional Ethics in Education series. New York: Teachers College Press, 1999. Publisher's promotion ; Uncertain Lives: Children of Promise, Teachers of Hope (co-author with Robert V. Bullough). New York: Teachers College Press, 2001. ; Educating Moral People. New York: Teachers College Press, 2002. ; Starting at Home: Caring and Social Policy. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. Publisher's promotion Review ; Happiness and Education. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Publisher's promotion ; Critical Issues in Education: Dialogues and Dialectics (Co-author with Jack L. Nelson, Stuart B. Palonsky, and Mary Rose McCarthy). 2003 ; No Education Without Relation (Co-author with Charles ",
"score": "1.3545632"
},
{
"id": "6247555",
"title": "Nadine Taub",
"text": "Co-authored with Anne Marie Boylan. ; Co-authored with Wendy W. Willians. ; Co-authored with Sherrill Cohen. ; Co-authored with J. Ralph Lindgren. ; Co-authored with Barbara Babcock, Deborah L. Rhode, Anne E. Freedman, Susan Ross, Wendy W. Williams, and Rhonda Copelon. Co-authored with Barbara Babcock, Deborah L. Rhode, Anne E. Freedman, Susan Ross, Wendy W. Williams, and Rhonda Copelon. ",
"score": "1.3542647"
},
{
"id": "3768832",
"title": "Geoff Chapple (writer)",
"text": "(co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) ",
"score": "1.354115"
}
] | [
"Barbara Love\nEditor Author Co-author ",
"Kate Millett\nAuthor Co-author ",
"Charles Gramlich\nWrite With Fire, Borgo Press, 2009. ; Writing in Psychology, (With Y. Du Bois Irvin & Elliott Hammer), Borgo Press. ",
"Brinsley Ford\nAuthor Co-author ",
"Kenneth Paul Rosenberg\n Rosenberg is co-editor with Laura Feder of the addiction textbook, Behavioral Addictions (2014), and he is the author of two trade books, Infidelity (2018) and Bedlam (2019), which was written with Jessica DuLong.",
"Ethan Watters\nWith co-author Richard Ofshe With co-author Richard Ofshe With co-author Richard Ofshe ",
"Author! Author! (film)\n 'Author! Author!' is a 1982 American autobiographical film directed by Arthur Hiller, written by Israel Horovitz and starring Al Pacino.",
"Carlos Martínez Shaw\nAuthor Co-author Editor ",
"Someone to Run With\n Someone to Run With ([מישהו לרוץ איתו / Mishehu laruts ito, 2000]) is a thriller novel by Israeli writer David Grossman. The English edition was published by London by Bloomsbury in 2003, ISBN: 0-7475-6207-5. The book has received several reviews in international press. The book was adapted into a film in 2006 of the same name. In 2019 the book was banned in Russia.",
"José María Portillo Valdés\nAuthor Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author Co-author ",
"David Sington\n He has co-written the following books: ",
"Jot Agyeman\nI Have the Power, Destiny Books (2003); ; The Concept of Love in Relationships, Temple Publishing (2003). As a writer, Agyeman served as the Director of publishing with Eagle Media House, London, UK, he a considerable part of his career as an editor and book writer for the firm for many years. He wrote and edited various books, some of which include; War on Poverty and The Concept of Love in Relationships. He is also the author of; ",
"Physician writer\n (born 1942) author of 13 novels, often called the Medical thrillers series ; Miodrag Pavlović (1928–1914) Serbian writer and physician. ; M. Scott Peck (1936–2005), American psychiatrist whose The Road Less Traveled sold more than seven million copies and was on The New York Times best-seller list for over six years ; Walker Percy (1916–1990) American Southern author whose interests included philosophy and semiotics ; Lenrie Leopold Wilfred Peters (born 1932) Gambian novelist and poet ; Steve Pieczenik (born 1943) is author of psycho-political thrillers and the co-creator of the best-selling Tom Clancy's Op-Center and Tom Clancy's Net Force paperback series ; ",
"With (album)\n With (stylized as WITH) is the eighth Japanese studio album (fifteenth overall) by South Korean pop duo Tohoshinki, released by Avex Trax on December 17, 2014. The record was released in four physical versions – Version A, a CD+DVD version with music videos and live performances; Version B, another CD+DVD version with off-shot movies; Version C, a CD only version with two bonus tracks; and Version D, a fan club limited edition with a CD-Extra. Recording and writing for the album roughly began in the summer of 2013. With is described to be an album composed of nostalgic dance-pop songs that are influenced ",
"Suzanne Finstad\n Finstad wrote the national bestseller Sleeping with the Devil (1991), a non-fiction novel about the murder-for-hire of Barbra Piotrowski, a California beauty queen in a destructive love triangle with a married Texas health club tycoon named Richard Minns, who was alleged to have hired the assassins who shot and paralyzed Piotrowski. The book was excerpted in Cosmopolitan and published in France, Italy, and Germany. One critic called Sleeping With the Devil \"a true American tragedy\". Others described it as \"hypnotic,\" \". . . a disquieting book about adultery, scams, misuse of power and attempted murder . . . a must-read.\" The paperback includes details about Minns' ",
"William A. Wilson (folklorist)\nwith with with ",
"Robert Bernard Hass\n Robert Bernard Hass is the author of Going by Contraries: Robert Frost's Conflict With Science (University of Virginia Press, 2002), which was selected by Choice as an Outstanding Academic Title in 2003. He is also the author of the poetry collection, Counting Thunder, published by David Robert Books in 2008, and co-editor of the Letters of Robert Frost (Harvard University Press). His articles and poems have appeared in a number of journals including Poetry, Sewanee Review, Agni, Black Warrior Review, Studies in English Literature, and the Journal of Modern Literature. He has won an Academy of American Poets Prize, an AWP Intro Journals Award and a creative writing fellowship to Bread Loaf. Hass grew up in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He received his B.A., M.F.A., and Ph.D. from Pennsylvania State University in 1985, 1993, and 1999, and a M.A. from the University of Florida in 1987, studying under Donald Justice; he is currently Professor of English at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania, where he teaches courses in American literature and Shakespeare.",
"Nel Noddings\n (co-author with Michael S. Katz and Kenneth A. Strike). Professional Ethics in Education series. New York: Teachers College Press, 1999. Publisher's promotion ; Uncertain Lives: Children of Promise, Teachers of Hope (co-author with Robert V. Bullough). New York: Teachers College Press, 2001. ; Educating Moral People. New York: Teachers College Press, 2002. ; Starting at Home: Caring and Social Policy. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2002. Publisher's promotion Review ; Happiness and Education. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Publisher's promotion ; Critical Issues in Education: Dialogues and Dialectics (Co-author with Jack L. Nelson, Stuart B. Palonsky, and Mary Rose McCarthy). 2003 ; No Education Without Relation (Co-author with Charles ",
"Nadine Taub\nCo-authored with Anne Marie Boylan. ; Co-authored with Wendy W. Willians. ; Co-authored with Sherrill Cohen. ; Co-authored with J. Ralph Lindgren. ; Co-authored with Barbara Babcock, Deborah L. Rhode, Anne E. Freedman, Susan Ross, Wendy W. Williams, and Rhonda Copelon. Co-authored with Barbara Babcock, Deborah L. Rhode, Anne E. Freedman, Susan Ross, Wendy W. Williams, and Rhonda Copelon. ",
"Geoff Chapple (writer)\n(co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) (co-authored with Vincent Ward, Louis Nowra and Alison Carter) "
] |
What genre is All the Years? | [
"rock music",
"rock and roll",
"rock",
"Rock"
] | genre | All the Years | 3,296,008 | 66 | [
{
"id": "25163419",
"title": "All the Years",
"text": " All the Years is a song that was recorded by the rock band Chicago, released on the 2008 album Stone of Sisyphus. It was written by Robert Lamm and studio session musician Bruce Gaitsch, the guitarist from the Night & Day Big Band album. This is the third track on the 2008 release. It was supposed to be the opening track on the original 1994 release.",
"score": "1.4775983"
},
{
"id": "16469570",
"title": "All (All album)",
"text": " All is a self-titled compilation album by the punk rock band All. It was released on February 23, 1999, on All's own label, Owned & Operated. The album includes remastered songs picked by the fans, a previously unavailable track by Milo Aukerman, and an extensive booklet with lyrics, photos, and a complex family tree of All and the Descendents. Since this album was self-released, a limited number of copies were pressed. Because of this, it is harder to find on the secondary market than other All CDs.",
"score": "1.404454"
},
{
"id": "7809532",
"title": "All discography",
"text": " The discography of All, an American punk rock band, consists of nine studio albums, one compilation album, two live albums, one EP, six singles, and five music videos. All formed in Los Angeles in 1987 following the departure of singer Milo Aukerman from the Descendents. The remaining Descendents members—guitarist Stephen Egerton, bassist Karl Alvarez, and drummer Bill Stevenson—decided to carry on as a band, adopting the title of the Descendents' last studio album, All, as their new name and recruiting singer Dave Smalley. They released the album Allroy Sez and EP Allroy for Prez in 1988 through Cruz Records, the former supported by a single for ",
"score": "1.3692365"
},
{
"id": "1828248",
"title": "All These Years",
"text": " \"All These Years\" is a song written by Mac McAnally, originally recorded on his 1992 album Live and Learn. It was later recorded by American country music group Sawyer Brown. It was released in November 1992 as the second single from their album Cafe on the Corner. Their version peaked at 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart, in addition to being a minor AC hit, peaking at 42 on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart.",
"score": "1.3561001"
},
{
"id": "12472224",
"title": "List of films: A",
"text": " All Things Fair (1995) ; All This and Rabbit Stew (1941) ; All This, and Heaven Too (1940) ; All Through the Night (1941) ; All Together Now (2008) ; All Under the Moon (1993) ; All for the Winner (1990) ; All You Need Is Cash (1978) ; All You Need Is Love (2015) ; All's Well, Ends Well (1992) ; All's Well, Ends Well Too (1993) ; All-American Murder (1992) ; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987) ; Allari Bullodu (2005) ; Allegro Non Troppo (1977) ; Allende en su laberinto (2014) ; Alles ",
"score": "1.3513288"
},
{
"id": "565569",
"title": "After All These Years (Instrumental)",
"text": " In the week ending August 5, 2017, After All These Years (Instrumental), was registered on Billboard's Christian Albums chart as the forty third best-selling album of the genre in the United States.",
"score": "1.3495846"
},
{
"id": "27511269",
"title": "The Gang's All Here (album)",
"text": " The Gang's All Here is the second studio album by the American Celtic punk band the Dropkick Murphys. It is their first album with Al Barr (ex-vocalist for The Bruisers), who replaced founding singer Mike McColgan in 1998. \"10 Years of Service\" was the album's only single; the music video received some minor airplay on MTV's 120 Minutes, a first for the band. The album peaked at No. 184 on the Billboard 200.",
"score": "1.3446147"
},
{
"id": "25314892",
"title": "All Years Leaving",
"text": " All Years Leaving is the debut album by English band The Stands, released in 2004. The album was produced by frontman Howie Payne and reached 28 in the UK album charts. Four singles were released from the album, one reaching the UK Top 30 and two reaching the Top 40.",
"score": "1.3323298"
},
{
"id": "13821489",
"title": "Know-It-All",
"text": " Know-It-All is the debut studio album by Canadian singer and songwriter Alessia Cara. It was released on November 13, 2015 through Def Jam Recordings. The album followed the release of her debut extended play (EP) Four Pink Walls (2015), which Cara regarded as a preview of the album. Know-It-All contains the five original songs from Four Pink Walls as well as five new songs recording for the album. Cara co-wrote all the tracks and worked closely with Pop & Oak and Sebastian Kole amongst others. The album led Cara to receive the Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 2018.",
"score": "1.3313785"
},
{
"id": "9627093",
"title": "The Missing Years (album)",
"text": " Although many listeners might assume that the album's title might allude to Prine's recent sabbatical from the music business, it actually refers to the song \"Jesus The Missing Years\", which speculates upon the unrecorded middle 18 years of Christ's life. The surreal piece features, among other things, Jesus traveling to France and Spain, marrying an Irish bride, inventing Santa Claus, and opening a show for country singer George Jones. \"All The Best\" dealt with the theme of divorce, with the singer commenting before a performance of the song on Irish TV in 1990, \"Country songs and country songwriters are a strange lot. ",
"score": "1.3294065"
},
{
"id": "5661125",
"title": "List of years in rock music",
"text": "2020 in rock music ; Rapper Machine Gun Kelly goes through a radical style change and releases a pop punk album, titled Tickets to My Downfall. It is the only rock album to be a number one album on the all-format US Billboard 200 album chart until AC/DC tops it in late November, the only other band to do so. Both Green Day and The Killers top both the UK and Australian all-format album charts. ; The COVID-19 pandemic delays or outright cancels countless rock albums and tours scheduled for the year. ; During the 2020 United States presidential election, many rock musicians oppose Donald Trump's unauthorized use of their music. ",
"score": "1.3292156"
},
{
"id": "565567",
"title": "After All These Years (Instrumental)",
"text": " The album is an instrumental collection of songs with an 88-piece orchestra by Bethel Music from Brian & Jenn Johnson's fourth album, After All These Years (2017), a critically acclaimed and commercially successful release by the duo. The album has been promoted as a project that is \"intended to be a tool for devotion; an invitation to step away from the distractions of life into peace, clarity and encounter with God's presence.\"",
"score": "1.3212762"
},
{
"id": "1888160",
"title": "All or Nothing (Shopping album)",
"text": " All or Nothing is the fourth studio album by British post-punk band Shopping. It was released on 7 February 2020 through FatCat Records. Stylistically All or Nothing has been described by contemporary critics as an expansion of the band's sound while repurposing their traditional post-punk sound. Critics have noted that tracks on the album touch on a range of genres including disco, dark wave, krautrock, and synth-pop. The album garnered critical acclaim based on music aggregate ratings.",
"score": "1.3204457"
},
{
"id": "8116065",
"title": "Gabriel Allon",
"text": " The books are never explicit in the year in which they're set, although there are sometimes references to real-world events, such as the changing American presidency. In The Fallen Angel, Allon makes references to meeting Chiara ten years prior, which roughly matches up to the books' annual releases. However some titles, especially Moscow Rules and The Defector take place within greater proximity to one another based on the books' events. In an interview that coincided with the release of Moscow Rules, Silva revealed he heard an art professional quote Allon and some real-world news accounts make reference to the Allon series and wonder whether the specific news will become part of the series.",
"score": "1.3202827"
},
{
"id": "5661131",
"title": "List of years in rock music",
"text": "2014 in rock music ; The Black Keys, Jack White, Slipknot, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, and Coldplay all have number one albums on the US all-format Billboard 200 chart. ; Foo Fighters's single \"Something From Nothing\" spends 8 weeks atop of the Billboard Mainstream Rock songs chart, Seether's \"Words as Weapons\" and The Pretty Reckless's Heaven Knows\" both spend 5 weeks at the top of the chart each. ; U2 releases their thirteenth studio album Songs of Innocence in a non-traditional and controversial manner - an automatic download to all registered iTunes accounts to mixed results. ",
"score": "1.3151058"
},
{
"id": "25816086",
"title": "All That: The Album",
"text": " All That: The Album is the soundtrack of musical performances and sketch clips from the hit Nickelodeon television series All That. It was released by Columbia Records, Interscope Records and Nick Records on November 26, 1996.",
"score": "1.3141668"
},
{
"id": "4116156",
"title": "2021 in rock music",
"text": " first in over 15 years for the band, was cancelled, as the band was unable to agree how to proceed with recording new material, so Tankian instead decided to release his proposed songs as solo material. The EP is titled Elasticity, an allusion to the band's album Toxicity. ; Evanescence released their fourth studio album, The Bitter Truth, their first since 2011. Frontwoman Amy Lee describes it as \"heavy and dark\" and similar to the sound of their second album, The Open Door. While initially aiming for a 2020 release, it was pushed back into 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The album charts in the top ten of eight separate national charts, and debuts just outside of it at number eleven in the US. ",
"score": "1.3124505"
},
{
"id": "11738290",
"title": "Story of the Year",
"text": " Story of the Year has been categorized under several genres, especially emo, screamo, post-hardcore, and pop punk. AllMusic describe the band as \"emo punk\" and \"emo-inflected post-grunge\" and the band has also been labeled as alternative rock and melodic hardcore. Story of the Year's early material as Big Blue Monkey is considered nu metal. The band's influences include Skid Row, Guns N' Roses, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, NOFX, Pennywise, Sick of It All, and H2O.",
"score": "1.3123639"
},
{
"id": "306687",
"title": "All Time Low discography",
"text": " American pop punk band All Time Low has released nine studio albums, six EPs, two live albums, twenty-three singles and thirty-four music videos. Beginning as a high school band in 2003, All Time Low released their debut EP The Three Words to Remember in Dealing with the End EP in 2004 through local label Emerald Moon Records, and their first studio album The Party Scene in 2005. While on tour with other bands, they caught the attention of Hopeless Records and signed to them, releasing the Put Up or Shut Up EP in 2006 which reached number 20 on the US Billboard Independent Albums chart. All ",
"score": "1.3116267"
},
{
"id": "31948386",
"title": "All the Wars",
"text": " All the Wars is a studio album by the British alternative rock band the Pineapple Thief, released in 2012.",
"score": "1.3110315"
}
] | [
"All the Years\n All the Years is a song that was recorded by the rock band Chicago, released on the 2008 album Stone of Sisyphus. It was written by Robert Lamm and studio session musician Bruce Gaitsch, the guitarist from the Night & Day Big Band album. This is the third track on the 2008 release. It was supposed to be the opening track on the original 1994 release.",
"All (All album)\n All is a self-titled compilation album by the punk rock band All. It was released on February 23, 1999, on All's own label, Owned & Operated. The album includes remastered songs picked by the fans, a previously unavailable track by Milo Aukerman, and an extensive booklet with lyrics, photos, and a complex family tree of All and the Descendents. Since this album was self-released, a limited number of copies were pressed. Because of this, it is harder to find on the secondary market than other All CDs.",
"All discography\n The discography of All, an American punk rock band, consists of nine studio albums, one compilation album, two live albums, one EP, six singles, and five music videos. All formed in Los Angeles in 1987 following the departure of singer Milo Aukerman from the Descendents. The remaining Descendents members—guitarist Stephen Egerton, bassist Karl Alvarez, and drummer Bill Stevenson—decided to carry on as a band, adopting the title of the Descendents' last studio album, All, as their new name and recruiting singer Dave Smalley. They released the album Allroy Sez and EP Allroy for Prez in 1988 through Cruz Records, the former supported by a single for ",
"All These Years\n \"All These Years\" is a song written by Mac McAnally, originally recorded on his 1992 album Live and Learn. It was later recorded by American country music group Sawyer Brown. It was released in November 1992 as the second single from their album Cafe on the Corner. Their version peaked at 3 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks (now Hot Country Songs) chart, in addition to being a minor AC hit, peaking at 42 on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks chart.",
"List of films: A\n All Things Fair (1995) ; All This and Rabbit Stew (1941) ; All This, and Heaven Too (1940) ; All Through the Night (1941) ; All Together Now (2008) ; All Under the Moon (1993) ; All for the Winner (1990) ; All You Need Is Cash (1978) ; All You Need Is Love (2015) ; All's Well, Ends Well (1992) ; All's Well, Ends Well Too (1993) ; All-American Murder (1992) ; Allan Quatermain and the Lost City of Gold (1987) ; Allari Bullodu (2005) ; Allegro Non Troppo (1977) ; Allende en su laberinto (2014) ; Alles ",
"After All These Years (Instrumental)\n In the week ending August 5, 2017, After All These Years (Instrumental), was registered on Billboard's Christian Albums chart as the forty third best-selling album of the genre in the United States.",
"The Gang's All Here (album)\n The Gang's All Here is the second studio album by the American Celtic punk band the Dropkick Murphys. It is their first album with Al Barr (ex-vocalist for The Bruisers), who replaced founding singer Mike McColgan in 1998. \"10 Years of Service\" was the album's only single; the music video received some minor airplay on MTV's 120 Minutes, a first for the band. The album peaked at No. 184 on the Billboard 200.",
"All Years Leaving\n All Years Leaving is the debut album by English band The Stands, released in 2004. The album was produced by frontman Howie Payne and reached 28 in the UK album charts. Four singles were released from the album, one reaching the UK Top 30 and two reaching the Top 40.",
"Know-It-All\n Know-It-All is the debut studio album by Canadian singer and songwriter Alessia Cara. It was released on November 13, 2015 through Def Jam Recordings. The album followed the release of her debut extended play (EP) Four Pink Walls (2015), which Cara regarded as a preview of the album. Know-It-All contains the five original songs from Four Pink Walls as well as five new songs recording for the album. Cara co-wrote all the tracks and worked closely with Pop & Oak and Sebastian Kole amongst others. The album led Cara to receive the Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 2018.",
"The Missing Years (album)\n Although many listeners might assume that the album's title might allude to Prine's recent sabbatical from the music business, it actually refers to the song \"Jesus The Missing Years\", which speculates upon the unrecorded middle 18 years of Christ's life. The surreal piece features, among other things, Jesus traveling to France and Spain, marrying an Irish bride, inventing Santa Claus, and opening a show for country singer George Jones. \"All The Best\" dealt with the theme of divorce, with the singer commenting before a performance of the song on Irish TV in 1990, \"Country songs and country songwriters are a strange lot. ",
"List of years in rock music\n2020 in rock music ; Rapper Machine Gun Kelly goes through a radical style change and releases a pop punk album, titled Tickets to My Downfall. It is the only rock album to be a number one album on the all-format US Billboard 200 album chart until AC/DC tops it in late November, the only other band to do so. Both Green Day and The Killers top both the UK and Australian all-format album charts. ; The COVID-19 pandemic delays or outright cancels countless rock albums and tours scheduled for the year. ; During the 2020 United States presidential election, many rock musicians oppose Donald Trump's unauthorized use of their music. ",
"After All These Years (Instrumental)\n The album is an instrumental collection of songs with an 88-piece orchestra by Bethel Music from Brian & Jenn Johnson's fourth album, After All These Years (2017), a critically acclaimed and commercially successful release by the duo. The album has been promoted as a project that is \"intended to be a tool for devotion; an invitation to step away from the distractions of life into peace, clarity and encounter with God's presence.\"",
"All or Nothing (Shopping album)\n All or Nothing is the fourth studio album by British post-punk band Shopping. It was released on 7 February 2020 through FatCat Records. Stylistically All or Nothing has been described by contemporary critics as an expansion of the band's sound while repurposing their traditional post-punk sound. Critics have noted that tracks on the album touch on a range of genres including disco, dark wave, krautrock, and synth-pop. The album garnered critical acclaim based on music aggregate ratings.",
"Gabriel Allon\n The books are never explicit in the year in which they're set, although there are sometimes references to real-world events, such as the changing American presidency. In The Fallen Angel, Allon makes references to meeting Chiara ten years prior, which roughly matches up to the books' annual releases. However some titles, especially Moscow Rules and The Defector take place within greater proximity to one another based on the books' events. In an interview that coincided with the release of Moscow Rules, Silva revealed he heard an art professional quote Allon and some real-world news accounts make reference to the Allon series and wonder whether the specific news will become part of the series.",
"List of years in rock music\n2014 in rock music ; The Black Keys, Jack White, Slipknot, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, and Coldplay all have number one albums on the US all-format Billboard 200 chart. ; Foo Fighters's single \"Something From Nothing\" spends 8 weeks atop of the Billboard Mainstream Rock songs chart, Seether's \"Words as Weapons\" and The Pretty Reckless's Heaven Knows\" both spend 5 weeks at the top of the chart each. ; U2 releases their thirteenth studio album Songs of Innocence in a non-traditional and controversial manner - an automatic download to all registered iTunes accounts to mixed results. ",
"All That: The Album\n All That: The Album is the soundtrack of musical performances and sketch clips from the hit Nickelodeon television series All That. It was released by Columbia Records, Interscope Records and Nick Records on November 26, 1996.",
"2021 in rock music\n first in over 15 years for the band, was cancelled, as the band was unable to agree how to proceed with recording new material, so Tankian instead decided to release his proposed songs as solo material. The EP is titled Elasticity, an allusion to the band's album Toxicity. ; Evanescence released their fourth studio album, The Bitter Truth, their first since 2011. Frontwoman Amy Lee describes it as \"heavy and dark\" and similar to the sound of their second album, The Open Door. While initially aiming for a 2020 release, it was pushed back into 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The album charts in the top ten of eight separate national charts, and debuts just outside of it at number eleven in the US. ",
"Story of the Year\n Story of the Year has been categorized under several genres, especially emo, screamo, post-hardcore, and pop punk. AllMusic describe the band as \"emo punk\" and \"emo-inflected post-grunge\" and the band has also been labeled as alternative rock and melodic hardcore. Story of the Year's early material as Big Blue Monkey is considered nu metal. The band's influences include Skid Row, Guns N' Roses, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, NOFX, Pennywise, Sick of It All, and H2O.",
"All Time Low discography\n American pop punk band All Time Low has released nine studio albums, six EPs, two live albums, twenty-three singles and thirty-four music videos. Beginning as a high school band in 2003, All Time Low released their debut EP The Three Words to Remember in Dealing with the End EP in 2004 through local label Emerald Moon Records, and their first studio album The Party Scene in 2005. While on tour with other bands, they caught the attention of Hopeless Records and signed to them, releasing the Put Up or Shut Up EP in 2006 which reached number 20 on the US Billboard Independent Albums chart. All ",
"All the Wars\n All the Wars is a studio album by the British alternative rock band the Pineapple Thief, released in 2012."
] |
Who is the author of Sail? | [
"James Patterson",
"James Brendan Patterson",
"James B. Patterson"
] | author | Sail (novel) | 1,120,770 | 46 | [
{
"id": "12718891",
"title": "Tom Cunliffe",
"text": " Cunliffe has been a regular contributor to Yachting Monthly, Yachting World, Sail magazine,Classic Boat and 'Sailing Today' for many years. A professional writer since 1986, Cunliffe has won the Best Book of the Sea award twice, for Topsail and Battleaxe and Hand, Reef and Steer. He is author of the important Shell Channel Pilot for the English Channel. In 2010 he presented the award-winning six-part BBC documentary series, The Boats that Built Britain. He also presented the popular 'Boat Yard' series for Discovery TV. He now has a big following on his Youtube channel, 'Yachts and Yarns'.",
"score": "1.5994642"
},
{
"id": "28253053",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " Sail was born in London and brought up in Exeter. He studied French and German at Oxford University and subsequently taught for some years in Kenya, before returning to the UK, where he taught at Blundell's School and, later, Exeter School (where the modern languages department was headed by Harry Guest, another published poet). He is now a freelance writer. Sail has published nine poetry collections, the most recent being Eye-Baby (2006); The World Returning (2002), Building into Air (1995), and Out of Land: New and Selected Poems (1992), and has edited a number of anthologies, including The New Exeter Book of Riddles (1999) with Kevin ",
"score": "1.594529"
},
{
"id": "29383029",
"title": "John Rousmaniere",
"text": "1982 – co-writer,The Compleat Beatles. ASIN 6301966376. ; 1987–88 – host and writer, The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Volume One: Cruising Under Sail (ISBN: 0-924819-00-6) and four subsequent instructional videos in this series on sailing, plus a video on powerboat navigation. ; 2011 – host, Lifesling Training Video, The Sailing Foundation. ; 2011 – Report of Annapolis accident review, U.S. Sailing Association Annual Meeting, October 29, 2011. ",
"score": "1.5937154"
},
{
"id": "13853958",
"title": "John Cutler (sailor)",
"text": "Co-Author “Understanding Match Racing” (North Sails CD) now in its fourth edition ; Authored rules and tactics for Virtual Spectator (America's Cup 30 & 31) ; Coach – New Zealand Olympic Sailing Team Barcelona (1992) and Atlanta (1996). ",
"score": "1.572998"
},
{
"id": "28253054",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " and First and Always: Poems for Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital (1988). He also edited South-West Review from 1980 to 1985. Sail works in schools and colleges, and has also written a radio play, as well as short features for radio. He has presented the BBC Radio 3 programme 'Poetry Now' and 'Time for Verse' on BBC Radio 4. He was chairman of the Arvon Foundation from 1990 to 1994, has directed the Cheltenham Literature Festival, was the UK jury member for the European Literature Prize (1994–96), has been a judge for the Whitbread Prize and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.",
"score": "1.542679"
},
{
"id": "26557264",
"title": "Evans Starzinger",
"text": " 2007 National Outdoor Book Awards. It is the first time a sailing book has won the Literature prize. The announcement is on the NOBA website. Evans Starzinger and Beth Leonard are among the leading blue water cruising sailors today. During the 1990s they completed a circumnavigation aboard a Shannon 37' ketch, using the typical tropical route but including Cape Hope. During the 2000s they have taken a custom built Van De Stadt designed 47' aluminum fractional sloop on a second circumnavigation, above the Arctic Circle and around all five great capes - Cape Horn, Cape of Good Hope, Cape Leeuwin, South West Cape, Tasmania, and South ",
"score": "1.5387483"
},
{
"id": "29382999",
"title": "John Rousmaniere",
"text": " John Rousmaniere is an American writer and author of 30 historical. technical, and instructional books on sailing, yachting history, New York history, business history, and the histories of clubs, businesses, and other organizations. An authority on seamanship and boating safety, he has conducted tests of equipment and sailing skills, and led or participated in fact-finding inquiries into boating accidents. He has been presented with several awards for his writing and his contributions to boating safety and seamanship.",
"score": "1.5222187"
},
{
"id": "26697293",
"title": "Brian M. Fagan",
"text": " An avid sailor since childhood, Fagan wrote sailing guides to many locations on the Pacific coast of the United States and published them under his own imprint. Now retired from UC Santa Barbara, he lives in the Santa Barbara area with his wife, one of his two daughters, and numerous cats and rabbits.",
"score": "1.5216749"
},
{
"id": "15853861",
"title": "Dick Tillman",
"text": " He wrote The Complete Book of Laser Sailing, published by McGraw Hill in 2005.",
"score": "1.520787"
},
{
"id": "25526624",
"title": "Nathaniel Philbrick",
"text": " After graduate school, Philbrick worked for four years as an editor at Sailing World magazine. He then worked as a freelancer for a number of years, during which time he was the primary caregiver for his two children while writing and editing several books about sailing, including The Passionate Sailor, Second Wind, and Yaahting: A Parody. In 1986, Philbrick moved to Nantucket with his wife Melissa and their two children. In 1994, he published his first book about the island’s history, Away Off Shore, followed in 1998 by a study of the Nantucket’s native legacy, Abram’s Eyes. He is the founding director of Nantucket’s Egan Maritime Institute and is a research fellow at the Nantucket Historical Association.",
"score": "1.5202254"
},
{
"id": "414944",
"title": "Bill Robinson (author)",
"text": " William Wheeler Robinson (October 4, 1918 – April 3, 2007) was an American sailor, author and editor well known in the national and international sailing community for his 27 nautical books, speaking engagements, and contributions to nautical publications. Robinson was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and attended Princeton University from 1935 to 1939, graduating with a degree in English. He received a commission in the United States Naval Reserve in 1941 and served as an officer until 1945. He commanded a 110-foot wooden Navy subchaser - hull number SC 743 - in the Pacific theater during World War II - ",
"score": "1.510752"
},
{
"id": "27542957",
"title": "William H. White (maritime writer)",
"text": " William H. White is an American writer specializing in historical novels relating to the age of sail.",
"score": "1.5077071"
},
{
"id": "31493347",
"title": "Clare Francis",
"text": " After writing three accounts of her experiences while sailing, she turned to fiction and is the author of eight best-sellers.",
"score": "1.5063875"
},
{
"id": "5782334",
"title": "Chris Eakin",
"text": " He wrote the book \"A Race Too Far\" which describes the 1968 sailing race to be the first person to sail non-stop round the world single-handed.",
"score": "1.5022621"
},
{
"id": "842469",
"title": "List of sailors",
"text": "John Arthur Barry, Australian journalist and author ; Peter Baynham, Welsh screenwriter; Academy Award-nominated; co-writer of Borat ; John Blackburn, British novelist ; Nathaniel Bowditch, author, The American Practical Navigator ; E. S. Campbell, American author, broadcaster and radio officer ; A. Bertram Chandler, Australian science fiction author of over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction ; Brian Cleeve, English writer and popular TV broadcaster ; Richard Henry Dana Jr., American author, Two Years Before the Mast ; Clare Francis, British novelist ; Allen Ginsberg, poet, \"Howl\", \"Kaddish\" ; David Hackworth, retired United States Army colonel and military journalist ; John L. Hess, American journalist ; Herbert Huncke, American beat generation ",
"score": "1.4953092"
},
{
"id": "25823957",
"title": "Eric and Susan Hiscock",
"text": " Eric Charles Hiscock (14 March 1908 – 15 September 1986) was a British sailor and author of books on small boat sailing and ocean cruising. Together with his wife and crew Susan Oakes Hiscock (née Sclater, 18 May 1913 – 12 May 1995), he authored numerous accounts of their short cruises and world circumnavigations, accomplished over several decades. His works also include several technical how-to books on sailing and ocean cruising and a film made on board Wanderer III entitled Beyond The West Horizon.",
"score": "1.4860868"
},
{
"id": "7730444",
"title": "Barry Gifford",
"text": " Barry Gifford (born October 18, 1946) is an American author, poet, and screenwriter known for his distinctive mix of American landscapes and prose influenced by film noir and Beat Generation writers. Gifford is best known for his series of novels about Sailor and Lula, two star-crossed protagonists on a perpetual road trip. Published in seven novels between 1990 and 2015, the Sailor and Lula series is described by professor Andrei Codrescu as written in \"a great comic realist\" style that explores \"an unmistakably American universe [...] populated by a huge and lovable humanity propelled on a tragic river of excess energy.\" The first book of the ",
"score": "1.4848357"
},
{
"id": "8935857",
"title": "Maritime history of the United Kingdom",
"text": " Britain has had many authors who wrote on marine topics, the sailing era being a popular period. Joseph Conrad, who was born in Poland in 1857, came to Britain in 1878 and was naturalised in 1886. He undertook a voyage in a collier and then a wool clipper, obtaining a master's ticket in 1887. His last voyage in 1916 was in a Q-ship during the war. Conrad wrote many stories based on his experiences, such as \"Lord Jim\". Basil Lubbock went out to the Klondike and then sailed back from San Francisco on a grain ship. From this he wrote \"Round the Horn before the Mast\" describing the life of an ordinary seaman. After settling down in England he collected facts on sailing ships and wrote books about them. Alan Villiers first sailed in a British square rigger and then in Danish ones. He bought a small Danish fully rigged ship and sailed around the world. After his return he wrote books about square riggers. Many works of fiction have also been written, perhaps the most famous being the series on Horatio Hornblower by C. S. Forester.",
"score": "1.4812131"
},
{
"id": "26322652",
"title": "SAIL High School",
"text": " A 501c(3) nonprofit exists in the form of the SAIL High School Foundation, promoting alumni involvement in SAIL's future direction. Notable SAIL alumni include the fantasy author Jesse Bullington (also published as Alex Marshall).",
"score": "1.4808435"
},
{
"id": "28253052",
"title": "Lawrence Sail",
"text": " Lawrence Sail (born 29 October 1942) is a contemporary British poet and writer.",
"score": "1.479547"
}
] | [
"Tom Cunliffe\n Cunliffe has been a regular contributor to Yachting Monthly, Yachting World, Sail magazine,Classic Boat and 'Sailing Today' for many years. A professional writer since 1986, Cunliffe has won the Best Book of the Sea award twice, for Topsail and Battleaxe and Hand, Reef and Steer. He is author of the important Shell Channel Pilot for the English Channel. In 2010 he presented the award-winning six-part BBC documentary series, The Boats that Built Britain. He also presented the popular 'Boat Yard' series for Discovery TV. He now has a big following on his Youtube channel, 'Yachts and Yarns'.",
"Lawrence Sail\n Sail was born in London and brought up in Exeter. He studied French and German at Oxford University and subsequently taught for some years in Kenya, before returning to the UK, where he taught at Blundell's School and, later, Exeter School (where the modern languages department was headed by Harry Guest, another published poet). He is now a freelance writer. Sail has published nine poetry collections, the most recent being Eye-Baby (2006); The World Returning (2002), Building into Air (1995), and Out of Land: New and Selected Poems (1992), and has edited a number of anthologies, including The New Exeter Book of Riddles (1999) with Kevin ",
"John Rousmaniere\n1982 – co-writer,The Compleat Beatles. ASIN 6301966376. ; 1987–88 – host and writer, The Annapolis Book of Seamanship: Volume One: Cruising Under Sail (ISBN: 0-924819-00-6) and four subsequent instructional videos in this series on sailing, plus a video on powerboat navigation. ; 2011 – host, Lifesling Training Video, The Sailing Foundation. ; 2011 – Report of Annapolis accident review, U.S. Sailing Association Annual Meeting, October 29, 2011. ",
"John Cutler (sailor)\nCo-Author “Understanding Match Racing” (North Sails CD) now in its fourth edition ; Authored rules and tactics for Virtual Spectator (America's Cup 30 & 31) ; Coach – New Zealand Olympic Sailing Team Barcelona (1992) and Atlanta (1996). ",
"Lawrence Sail\n and First and Always: Poems for Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital (1988). He also edited South-West Review from 1980 to 1985. Sail works in schools and colleges, and has also written a radio play, as well as short features for radio. He has presented the BBC Radio 3 programme 'Poetry Now' and 'Time for Verse' on BBC Radio 4. He was chairman of the Arvon Foundation from 1990 to 1994, has directed the Cheltenham Literature Festival, was the UK jury member for the European Literature Prize (1994–96), has been a judge for the Whitbread Prize and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.",
"Evans Starzinger\n 2007 National Outdoor Book Awards. It is the first time a sailing book has won the Literature prize. The announcement is on the NOBA website. Evans Starzinger and Beth Leonard are among the leading blue water cruising sailors today. During the 1990s they completed a circumnavigation aboard a Shannon 37' ketch, using the typical tropical route but including Cape Hope. During the 2000s they have taken a custom built Van De Stadt designed 47' aluminum fractional sloop on a second circumnavigation, above the Arctic Circle and around all five great capes - Cape Horn, Cape of Good Hope, Cape Leeuwin, South West Cape, Tasmania, and South ",
"John Rousmaniere\n John Rousmaniere is an American writer and author of 30 historical. technical, and instructional books on sailing, yachting history, New York history, business history, and the histories of clubs, businesses, and other organizations. An authority on seamanship and boating safety, he has conducted tests of equipment and sailing skills, and led or participated in fact-finding inquiries into boating accidents. He has been presented with several awards for his writing and his contributions to boating safety and seamanship.",
"Brian M. Fagan\n An avid sailor since childhood, Fagan wrote sailing guides to many locations on the Pacific coast of the United States and published them under his own imprint. Now retired from UC Santa Barbara, he lives in the Santa Barbara area with his wife, one of his two daughters, and numerous cats and rabbits.",
"Dick Tillman\n He wrote The Complete Book of Laser Sailing, published by McGraw Hill in 2005.",
"Nathaniel Philbrick\n After graduate school, Philbrick worked for four years as an editor at Sailing World magazine. He then worked as a freelancer for a number of years, during which time he was the primary caregiver for his two children while writing and editing several books about sailing, including The Passionate Sailor, Second Wind, and Yaahting: A Parody. In 1986, Philbrick moved to Nantucket with his wife Melissa and their two children. In 1994, he published his first book about the island’s history, Away Off Shore, followed in 1998 by a study of the Nantucket’s native legacy, Abram’s Eyes. He is the founding director of Nantucket’s Egan Maritime Institute and is a research fellow at the Nantucket Historical Association.",
"Bill Robinson (author)\n William Wheeler Robinson (October 4, 1918 – April 3, 2007) was an American sailor, author and editor well known in the national and international sailing community for his 27 nautical books, speaking engagements, and contributions to nautical publications. Robinson was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and attended Princeton University from 1935 to 1939, graduating with a degree in English. He received a commission in the United States Naval Reserve in 1941 and served as an officer until 1945. He commanded a 110-foot wooden Navy subchaser - hull number SC 743 - in the Pacific theater during World War II - ",
"William H. White (maritime writer)\n William H. White is an American writer specializing in historical novels relating to the age of sail.",
"Clare Francis\n After writing three accounts of her experiences while sailing, she turned to fiction and is the author of eight best-sellers.",
"Chris Eakin\n He wrote the book \"A Race Too Far\" which describes the 1968 sailing race to be the first person to sail non-stop round the world single-handed.",
"List of sailors\nJohn Arthur Barry, Australian journalist and author ; Peter Baynham, Welsh screenwriter; Academy Award-nominated; co-writer of Borat ; John Blackburn, British novelist ; Nathaniel Bowditch, author, The American Practical Navigator ; E. S. Campbell, American author, broadcaster and radio officer ; A. Bertram Chandler, Australian science fiction author of over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction ; Brian Cleeve, English writer and popular TV broadcaster ; Richard Henry Dana Jr., American author, Two Years Before the Mast ; Clare Francis, British novelist ; Allen Ginsberg, poet, \"Howl\", \"Kaddish\" ; David Hackworth, retired United States Army colonel and military journalist ; John L. Hess, American journalist ; Herbert Huncke, American beat generation ",
"Eric and Susan Hiscock\n Eric Charles Hiscock (14 March 1908 – 15 September 1986) was a British sailor and author of books on small boat sailing and ocean cruising. Together with his wife and crew Susan Oakes Hiscock (née Sclater, 18 May 1913 – 12 May 1995), he authored numerous accounts of their short cruises and world circumnavigations, accomplished over several decades. His works also include several technical how-to books on sailing and ocean cruising and a film made on board Wanderer III entitled Beyond The West Horizon.",
"Barry Gifford\n Barry Gifford (born October 18, 1946) is an American author, poet, and screenwriter known for his distinctive mix of American landscapes and prose influenced by film noir and Beat Generation writers. Gifford is best known for his series of novels about Sailor and Lula, two star-crossed protagonists on a perpetual road trip. Published in seven novels between 1990 and 2015, the Sailor and Lula series is described by professor Andrei Codrescu as written in \"a great comic realist\" style that explores \"an unmistakably American universe [...] populated by a huge and lovable humanity propelled on a tragic river of excess energy.\" The first book of the ",
"Maritime history of the United Kingdom\n Britain has had many authors who wrote on marine topics, the sailing era being a popular period. Joseph Conrad, who was born in Poland in 1857, came to Britain in 1878 and was naturalised in 1886. He undertook a voyage in a collier and then a wool clipper, obtaining a master's ticket in 1887. His last voyage in 1916 was in a Q-ship during the war. Conrad wrote many stories based on his experiences, such as \"Lord Jim\". Basil Lubbock went out to the Klondike and then sailed back from San Francisco on a grain ship. From this he wrote \"Round the Horn before the Mast\" describing the life of an ordinary seaman. After settling down in England he collected facts on sailing ships and wrote books about them. Alan Villiers first sailed in a British square rigger and then in Danish ones. He bought a small Danish fully rigged ship and sailed around the world. After his return he wrote books about square riggers. Many works of fiction have also been written, perhaps the most famous being the series on Horatio Hornblower by C. S. Forester.",
"SAIL High School\n A 501c(3) nonprofit exists in the form of the SAIL High School Foundation, promoting alumni involvement in SAIL's future direction. Notable SAIL alumni include the fantasy author Jesse Bullington (also published as Alex Marshall).",
"Lawrence Sail\n Lawrence Sail (born 29 October 1942) is a contemporary British poet and writer."
] |
What is the religion of Carlo Curis? | [
"Catholic Church",
"Roman Catholic Church",
"Church",
"Roman Apostolic Catholic Church"
] | religion | Carlo Curis | 3,198,188 | 85 | [
{
"id": "32361672",
"title": "Edmondo De Amicis",
"text": " representation of his theatral drama titled San Paolo, interpreted by the Italian actor and mason Giovanni Emanuel. His book Cuore has been considered for decades an educative textbook largely read and studied in the Italian public schools. Some literary critics noted it substituted the traditional Roman Catholic doctrine with a lay civil religion where heroes took the place of Christian martyrs, the Statuto Albertino displaced the Gospels, the Church, its believers and the Ten Commandments were respectively deleted in favour of the State, the figure of the citizen and the protection of the Italian codes of laws. The Grand Orient of Italy recognized De Amicis as one of his most notable past members.",
"score": "1.500308"
},
{
"id": "2459304",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Carlo Maria Curci (1810 in Naples – June 8, 1891 in Florence) was an Italian theologian from Naples.",
"score": "1.4895313"
},
{
"id": "1870976",
"title": "Carlo Chenis",
"text": " Carlo was born in Turin, Italy on April 20, 1954, and later completed his studies in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Salesian University. On May 26, 1984 he was ordained a priest in Cuorgne for the Salesians of Don Bosco, and later obtained an academic degree in materials science with a specialization in literary arts at the University of Turin in 1989. He held numerous positions in the administrative academic when he became a professor of theoretical philosophy at the Pontifical Salesian University. He later became a coordinator of the Secretariat Relations Students and chaplain of the University from 1986 to 1998. During his job as a coordinator, he was appointed secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church in 1995.",
"score": "1.4688146"
},
{
"id": "2459306",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Conflict between the Church and Italy\" (Il Moderno Dissidio tra la Chiesa e l'Italia, published in 1878) he called for the separation of church and state in Italy. This was followed by \"The New Italy and The Old Zealots\" (La Nuova Italia ed i Vecchi Zelanti, published in 1881), another attack on the Vatican policy; and by his \"Royal Vatican\" (Vaticano Regio, published in 1883), in which he accuses the Vatican of selling sacred objects and declares that secularism came from the false principles accepted by the Curia. Curci's work in Naples eventually drew him to Christian Socialism. He was condemned in Rome, and in a letter to The Times (September 10, 1884), ",
"score": "1.4682047"
},
{
"id": "2459305",
"title": "Carlo Maria Curci",
"text": " Curci joined the Society of Jesus in 1826, and was devoted to the education and care of the poor and prisoners. Curci became one of the first editors of the Jesuit periodical, La Civiltà Cattolica. He later wrote for Vincenzo Gioberti, Antonio Rosmini-Serbati and other advocates for reform; Cerci wrote a preface to Gioberti's Primato (1843), but dissented from his Prolegomena. In the 1870s, Curci delivered a course on Christian philosophy in Florence and published several Scriptural works. In his edition of the New Testament, Curci harshly criticized Italian clergy for neglecting to study Scripture. In the meantime, he began to attack the Vatican for its role in politics. In his work \"The ",
"score": "1.4321282"
},
{
"id": "27681769",
"title": "Gian Carlo Michelini",
"text": " Gian Carlo Michelini, M.I. (born 7 July 1935) is an Italian-Taiwanese Roman Catholic priest. He moved to Taiwan in 1964, where he founded the Lanyang Dance Troupe. In 1996, Michelini helped establish the Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folkgame Festival.",
"score": "1.4112929"
},
{
"id": "32657018",
"title": "CESNUR",
"text": " CESNUR (Centro Studi sulle Nuove Religioni, \"Center for Studies on New Religions\"), is a non-profit organization based in Turin, Italy that studies new religious movements and opposes the anti-cult movement. It was established in 1988 by Massimo Introvigne, Jean-François Mayer and Ernesto Zucchini. Its first president was Giuseppe Casale. Later, Luigi Berzano became CESNUR's president. CESNUR has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\". CESNUR's scholars have defended such diverse groups as the Unification Church (\"Moonies\"), the Church of Scientology, Chinese church Eastern Lightning (accused of ties to the 2014 murder of Wu Shuoyan), the Order of the Solar Temple (responsible for 74 deaths in mass murder-suicide), Aum Shinrikyo (responsible for the 1995 Tokyo sarin gas attack), and Shincheonji Church of Jesus, accused of ",
"score": "1.386087"
},
{
"id": "27786522",
"title": "Carlo Acutis",
"text": " Carlo Acutis (3 May 1991 – 12 October 2006) was an English-born Italian Catholic youth and amateur computer programmer, who is best known for documenting Eucharistic miracles around the world and cataloguing them onto a website, miracolieucaristici.org, which he created before his death from leukemia. He was noted for his cheerfulness, computer skills, and deep devotion to the Eucharist, which becomes a core theme of his life. He was beatified on 10 October 2020.",
"score": "1.3772777"
},
{
"id": "14141025",
"title": "Carlo Severi",
"text": " Carlo Severi (born December 9, 1952) is an Italian anthropologist who is Professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). He is noted for his studies of ritual, image/imagination, and social memory",
"score": "1.3709557"
},
{
"id": "7620717",
"title": "Anastasio Cuschieri",
"text": " Cuschieri was also engaged in party politics. His early commitments were characterised by his love of the Latin culture, and, together with others, decided that Malta's own culture should be defined in Latin, rather than in Anglo-Saxon, terms. This pitched him against the Protestant British colonial government of Malta. Nonetheless, his political commitment had a pronounced social edge. In 1921, when his political activity became more manifest, he was encouraged by a visit to Malta made by the Jesuit Charles Plater to accept an invitation by the Unione Cattolica San Giuseppe (St. Joseph Catholic Workers' Union) to become the first Director of a Study Club which had the intention of educating workers. This society was ",
"score": "1.366538"
},
{
"id": "8530047",
"title": "Massimo Introvigne",
"text": " Massimo Introvigne (born June 14, 1955, in Rome) is an Italian Roman Catholic sociologist of religion and intellectual property attorney. He is a founder and the managing director of the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), a Turin-based organization which has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\".",
"score": "1.3656785"
},
{
"id": "12115328",
"title": "San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane",
"text": " The church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Saint Charles at the Four Fountains), also called San Carlino, is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy. The church was designed by the architect Francesco Borromini and it was his first independent commission. It is an iconic masterpiece of Baroque architecture, built as part of a complex of monastic buildings on the Quirinal Hill for the Spanish Trinitarians, an order dedicated to the freeing of Christian slaves. He received the commission in 1634, under the patronage of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, whose palace was across the road. However, this financial backing did not last and subsequently the building project suffered various financial difficulties. It is one of at least three churches in Rome dedicated to San Carlo, including San Carlo ai Catinari and San Carlo al Corso.",
"score": "1.3654048"
},
{
"id": "33067675",
"title": "Carlo Emanuele Muzzarelli",
"text": " Carlo Emanuele dei conti Muzzarelli (19 April 1797 – 1856) was an Italian clergyman, a member of the Roman Catholic curia under Pope Pius IX, who had the reputation of a liberal as well as a man of letters.",
"score": "1.3640712"
},
{
"id": "31632182",
"title": "San Carlo ai Catinari",
"text": " San Carlo ai Catinari, also called Santi Biagio e Carlo ai Catinari (\"Saints Blaise and Charles at the Bowl-Makers\") is an early-Baroque style church in Rome, Italy. It is located on Piazza Benedetto Cairoli, 117 just off the corner of Via Arenula and Via dei Falegnami, a few blocks south of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. The attribute ai Catinari refers to the presence, at the time of its construction, of the many makers of wooden basins (Italian catini) who worked in the area. The church was commissioned by the Order of the Barnabites and funded by the Milanese community in Rome to honour their fellow Milanese St. Charles Borromeo (Italian: San Carlo). It is one of at least three Roman churches dedicated to him, including San Carlo al Corso and San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (San Carlino).",
"score": "1.3582308"
},
{
"id": "5981795",
"title": "Carlo Tullio Altan",
"text": " Carlo Tullio Altan (30 March 1916 – 15 February 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, sociologist and philosopher. He was particularly known for his studies on the Italian national character, and was considered one of the pioneers of Italian cultural anthropology. Altan was born at San Vito al Tagliamento, in Friuli. His son Francesco Tullio Altan is a popular comic books creator and satirist.",
"score": "1.3546996"
},
{
"id": "9004619",
"title": "Carlo Gnocchi",
"text": " families of the deceased. He went into the Alpine Valleys to find the relatives of fallen comrades. After becoming part of the O.S.C.A.R., Catholic association for aid to refugees, he helped Jews and escaped Allied POWs flee to Switzerland. He wrote articles in the illegal magazine Il Ribelle (Rebel) and in the diocesan newspaper L'Italia (Italy). He was imprisoned more than once in the San Vittore prison, but obtained the liberation by the intervention of the archbishop of Milan, Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster. In those years the idea arose to create a charitable center that would take care of the victims of this war, which in the future developed as the origin of the Pro Juventute.",
"score": "1.3531964"
},
{
"id": "13759769",
"title": "Alberto Quadrio Curzio",
"text": " a member of the EIB Prize Committee (1995-2000) and President of the Bank of Italy's revolving selection committee for the “Paolo Baffi Lectures on Money and Finance” (2003). In 2002 he was part of the Reflection Group on the “Reflection Group on the Spiritual and Cultural Dimension of Europe” initiated by the President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, which considered the most relevant values necessary to the European unification process. His approach to politico-economic and social-institutional issues are embraced within social liberalism and liberal solidarism which led to a longstanding collaboration with Carlo Maria Martini, Archbishop of Milan. He is Chairman of ",
"score": "1.3528683"
},
{
"id": "30085146",
"title": "Carlo Curci",
"text": " Carlo Curci (Trentola-Ducenta, August 30, 1846 - Trani, after 1916) was an Italian painter, mainly of seascapes. He also was active in painting portraits in a Renaissance style.",
"score": "1.3483105"
},
{
"id": "26432239",
"title": "Giuseppe Francesco Borri",
"text": " Borri also began his propaganda, both messianic and political, with the purpose of returning to an evangelically pure religion. Borri believed religion to be the foundation of every science and scientific investigation. For him the whole world (Christian and non-Christian) should be conquered and ruled by a Papal theocracy, that should trailblaze the Kingdom to come: a sort of heavenly world, a new Golden Age, where the values of a renewed and universal Christianity would triumph. Borri considered himself (at least according to the later Inquisition's records) Prochristus, the prophet and herald of the new era.",
"score": "1.3481377"
},
{
"id": "9925555",
"title": "Giosuè Carducci",
"text": " In his youth he was an atheist, whose political views were vehemently hostile to the Catholic Church. In the course of his life his views on religion shifted towards a socially oriented theism which he exposed in his famous \"Discorso sulla libertà perpetua di San Marino\" (\"A Speech on San Marino's Perpetual Freedom\"), pronounced on September the 30th, 1894 before the authorities and people of that ancient Republic and celebrating \"the Universal God of Peoples, Mazzini's and Washington's God\". His anti-clerical revolutionary vehemence was prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative \"Inno a Satana\" (\"Hymn to Satan\"). \"Satan\" / \"Lucifer\" was considered by Italian leftists of the time as a metaphor ",
"score": "1.3478487"
}
] | [
"Edmondo De Amicis\n representation of his theatral drama titled San Paolo, interpreted by the Italian actor and mason Giovanni Emanuel. His book Cuore has been considered for decades an educative textbook largely read and studied in the Italian public schools. Some literary critics noted it substituted the traditional Roman Catholic doctrine with a lay civil religion where heroes took the place of Christian martyrs, the Statuto Albertino displaced the Gospels, the Church, its believers and the Ten Commandments were respectively deleted in favour of the State, the figure of the citizen and the protection of the Italian codes of laws. The Grand Orient of Italy recognized De Amicis as one of his most notable past members.",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Carlo Maria Curci (1810 in Naples – June 8, 1891 in Florence) was an Italian theologian from Naples.",
"Carlo Chenis\n Carlo was born in Turin, Italy on April 20, 1954, and later completed his studies in philosophy and theology at the Pontifical Salesian University. On May 26, 1984 he was ordained a priest in Cuorgne for the Salesians of Don Bosco, and later obtained an academic degree in materials science with a specialization in literary arts at the University of Turin in 1989. He held numerous positions in the administrative academic when he became a professor of theoretical philosophy at the Pontifical Salesian University. He later became a coordinator of the Secretariat Relations Students and chaplain of the University from 1986 to 1998. During his job as a coordinator, he was appointed secretary of the Pontifical Commission for the Cultural Heritage of the Church in 1995.",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Conflict between the Church and Italy\" (Il Moderno Dissidio tra la Chiesa e l'Italia, published in 1878) he called for the separation of church and state in Italy. This was followed by \"The New Italy and The Old Zealots\" (La Nuova Italia ed i Vecchi Zelanti, published in 1881), another attack on the Vatican policy; and by his \"Royal Vatican\" (Vaticano Regio, published in 1883), in which he accuses the Vatican of selling sacred objects and declares that secularism came from the false principles accepted by the Curia. Curci's work in Naples eventually drew him to Christian Socialism. He was condemned in Rome, and in a letter to The Times (September 10, 1884), ",
"Carlo Maria Curci\n Curci joined the Society of Jesus in 1826, and was devoted to the education and care of the poor and prisoners. Curci became one of the first editors of the Jesuit periodical, La Civiltà Cattolica. He later wrote for Vincenzo Gioberti, Antonio Rosmini-Serbati and other advocates for reform; Cerci wrote a preface to Gioberti's Primato (1843), but dissented from his Prolegomena. In the 1870s, Curci delivered a course on Christian philosophy in Florence and published several Scriptural works. In his edition of the New Testament, Curci harshly criticized Italian clergy for neglecting to study Scripture. In the meantime, he began to attack the Vatican for its role in politics. In his work \"The ",
"Gian Carlo Michelini\n Gian Carlo Michelini, M.I. (born 7 July 1935) is an Italian-Taiwanese Roman Catholic priest. He moved to Taiwan in 1964, where he founded the Lanyang Dance Troupe. In 1996, Michelini helped establish the Yilan International Children's Folklore and Folkgame Festival.",
"CESNUR\n CESNUR (Centro Studi sulle Nuove Religioni, \"Center for Studies on New Religions\"), is a non-profit organization based in Turin, Italy that studies new religious movements and opposes the anti-cult movement. It was established in 1988 by Massimo Introvigne, Jean-François Mayer and Ernesto Zucchini. Its first president was Giuseppe Casale. Later, Luigi Berzano became CESNUR's president. CESNUR has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\". CESNUR's scholars have defended such diverse groups as the Unification Church (\"Moonies\"), the Church of Scientology, Chinese church Eastern Lightning (accused of ties to the 2014 murder of Wu Shuoyan), the Order of the Solar Temple (responsible for 74 deaths in mass murder-suicide), Aum Shinrikyo (responsible for the 1995 Tokyo sarin gas attack), and Shincheonji Church of Jesus, accused of ",
"Carlo Acutis\n Carlo Acutis (3 May 1991 – 12 October 2006) was an English-born Italian Catholic youth and amateur computer programmer, who is best known for documenting Eucharistic miracles around the world and cataloguing them onto a website, miracolieucaristici.org, which he created before his death from leukemia. He was noted for his cheerfulness, computer skills, and deep devotion to the Eucharist, which becomes a core theme of his life. He was beatified on 10 October 2020.",
"Carlo Severi\n Carlo Severi (born December 9, 1952) is an Italian anthropologist who is Professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS). He is noted for his studies of ritual, image/imagination, and social memory",
"Anastasio Cuschieri\n Cuschieri was also engaged in party politics. His early commitments were characterised by his love of the Latin culture, and, together with others, decided that Malta's own culture should be defined in Latin, rather than in Anglo-Saxon, terms. This pitched him against the Protestant British colonial government of Malta. Nonetheless, his political commitment had a pronounced social edge. In 1921, when his political activity became more manifest, he was encouraged by a visit to Malta made by the Jesuit Charles Plater to accept an invitation by the Unione Cattolica San Giuseppe (St. Joseph Catholic Workers' Union) to become the first Director of a Study Club which had the intention of educating workers. This society was ",
"Massimo Introvigne\n Massimo Introvigne (born June 14, 1955, in Rome) is an Italian Roman Catholic sociologist of religion and intellectual property attorney. He is a founder and the managing director of the Center for Studies on New Religions (CESNUR), a Turin-based organization which has been described as \"the highest profile lobbying and information group for controversial religions\".",
"San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane\n The church of San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (Saint Charles at the Four Fountains), also called San Carlino, is a Roman Catholic church in Rome, Italy. The church was designed by the architect Francesco Borromini and it was his first independent commission. It is an iconic masterpiece of Baroque architecture, built as part of a complex of monastic buildings on the Quirinal Hill for the Spanish Trinitarians, an order dedicated to the freeing of Christian slaves. He received the commission in 1634, under the patronage of Cardinal Francesco Barberini, whose palace was across the road. However, this financial backing did not last and subsequently the building project suffered various financial difficulties. It is one of at least three churches in Rome dedicated to San Carlo, including San Carlo ai Catinari and San Carlo al Corso.",
"Carlo Emanuele Muzzarelli\n Carlo Emanuele dei conti Muzzarelli (19 April 1797 – 1856) was an Italian clergyman, a member of the Roman Catholic curia under Pope Pius IX, who had the reputation of a liberal as well as a man of letters.",
"San Carlo ai Catinari\n San Carlo ai Catinari, also called Santi Biagio e Carlo ai Catinari (\"Saints Blaise and Charles at the Bowl-Makers\") is an early-Baroque style church in Rome, Italy. It is located on Piazza Benedetto Cairoli, 117 just off the corner of Via Arenula and Via dei Falegnami, a few blocks south of the church of Sant'Andrea della Valle. The attribute ai Catinari refers to the presence, at the time of its construction, of the many makers of wooden basins (Italian catini) who worked in the area. The church was commissioned by the Order of the Barnabites and funded by the Milanese community in Rome to honour their fellow Milanese St. Charles Borromeo (Italian: San Carlo). It is one of at least three Roman churches dedicated to him, including San Carlo al Corso and San Carlo alle Quattro Fontane (San Carlino).",
"Carlo Tullio Altan\n Carlo Tullio Altan (30 March 1916 – 15 February 2005) was an Italian anthropologist, sociologist and philosopher. He was particularly known for his studies on the Italian national character, and was considered one of the pioneers of Italian cultural anthropology. Altan was born at San Vito al Tagliamento, in Friuli. His son Francesco Tullio Altan is a popular comic books creator and satirist.",
"Carlo Gnocchi\n families of the deceased. He went into the Alpine Valleys to find the relatives of fallen comrades. After becoming part of the O.S.C.A.R., Catholic association for aid to refugees, he helped Jews and escaped Allied POWs flee to Switzerland. He wrote articles in the illegal magazine Il Ribelle (Rebel) and in the diocesan newspaper L'Italia (Italy). He was imprisoned more than once in the San Vittore prison, but obtained the liberation by the intervention of the archbishop of Milan, Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster. In those years the idea arose to create a charitable center that would take care of the victims of this war, which in the future developed as the origin of the Pro Juventute.",
"Alberto Quadrio Curzio\n a member of the EIB Prize Committee (1995-2000) and President of the Bank of Italy's revolving selection committee for the “Paolo Baffi Lectures on Money and Finance” (2003). In 2002 he was part of the Reflection Group on the “Reflection Group on the Spiritual and Cultural Dimension of Europe” initiated by the President of the European Commission, Romano Prodi, which considered the most relevant values necessary to the European unification process. His approach to politico-economic and social-institutional issues are embraced within social liberalism and liberal solidarism which led to a longstanding collaboration with Carlo Maria Martini, Archbishop of Milan. He is Chairman of ",
"Carlo Curci\n Carlo Curci (Trentola-Ducenta, August 30, 1846 - Trani, after 1916) was an Italian painter, mainly of seascapes. He also was active in painting portraits in a Renaissance style.",
"Giuseppe Francesco Borri\n Borri also began his propaganda, both messianic and political, with the purpose of returning to an evangelically pure religion. Borri believed religion to be the foundation of every science and scientific investigation. For him the whole world (Christian and non-Christian) should be conquered and ruled by a Papal theocracy, that should trailblaze the Kingdom to come: a sort of heavenly world, a new Golden Age, where the values of a renewed and universal Christianity would triumph. Borri considered himself (at least according to the later Inquisition's records) Prochristus, the prophet and herald of the new era.",
"Giosuè Carducci\n In his youth he was an atheist, whose political views were vehemently hostile to the Catholic Church. In the course of his life his views on religion shifted towards a socially oriented theism which he exposed in his famous \"Discorso sulla libertà perpetua di San Marino\" (\"A Speech on San Marino's Perpetual Freedom\"), pronounced on September the 30th, 1894 before the authorities and people of that ancient Republic and celebrating \"the Universal God of Peoples, Mazzini's and Washington's God\". His anti-clerical revolutionary vehemence was prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative \"Inno a Satana\" (\"Hymn to Satan\"). \"Satan\" / \"Lucifer\" was considered by Italian leftists of the time as a metaphor "
] |
In what country is Habit? | [
"United States of America",
"the United States of America",
"America",
"U.S.A.",
"USA",
"U.S.",
"US",
"the US",
"the USA",
"US of A",
"the United States",
"U. S. A.",
"U. S.",
"the States",
"the U.S.",
"'Merica",
"U.S",
"United States",
"'Murica"
] | country | Habit, Kentucky | 4,315,768 | 72 | [
{
"id": "32419029",
"title": "Kicking the National Habit",
"text": " Kicking the National Habit is the debut album from British dance-rock duo Grand National. The album was released in the United Kingdom on 24 May 2004 by Sunday Best Records, and then in the United States almost two years later in March 2006. The US edition comes with seven bonus tracks, including remixes by The Glimmers and Sasha.",
"score": "1.6180446"
},
{
"id": "12833564",
"title": "Tobacco smoking",
"text": " lax enforcement in some nations and states. In China, Turkey, and many other countries usually a child will have little problem buying tobacco products, because they are often told to go to the store to buy tobacco for their parents. Several countries such as Ireland, Latvia, Estonia, the Netherlands, Finland, Norway, Canada, Australia, Sweden, Portugal, Singapore, Italy, Indonesia, India, Lithuania, Chile, Spain, Iceland, United Kingdom, Slovenia, Turkey and Malta have legislated against smoking in public places, often including bars and restaurants. Restaurateurs have been permitted in some jurisdictions to build designated smoking areas (or to prohibit smoking). In the United States, ",
"score": "1.5548912"
},
{
"id": "15556130",
"title": "Bad Habits (band)",
"text": " Bad Habits is a social conscious rock/punk/metal band from London. Bad Habits is a registered trademark in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries for entertainment and musical performances, production and recording services, merchandise and music entertainment related goods and services. They have successfully taken legal action against other parties in many of these countries misusing their mark for infringement of their intellectual property rights and won. The band line-up has experienced various changes since its original formation in 1984 by former Gypsy Leicester band members (including Robin Pizer) who when reformed decided to go in a heavier musical direction from their original formation as Gypsy and therefore used both names interchangeably with the first heavier sounding single for Bad Habits, \"Lipstick Queen\", (with bass playing from Algy Ward) released in 1986 on Sniffin' Rock Magazine and the release of the Gypsy band album Future Teller, containing the album track \"Bad Habits\", with vocals from John K. on Way Out Of Line, Lost In Berlin and Let Me In.",
"score": "1.532449"
},
{
"id": "16026365",
"title": "Bad Habit (song)",
"text": " \"Bad Habit\" is the fourth single by UK band Foals, from their third studio album Holy Fire. The official video, unveiled on 17 June 2013, was directed by Nabil where visual effects were created by GloriaFX and features lead singer Yannis Philippakis wandering through a desert following a nude woman. The song has been featured in a BBC promotion for its Summer of Music in May 2013. The single artwork was done by Leif Podhajsky.",
"score": "1.524221"
},
{
"id": "25333453",
"title": "Habit",
"text": " A habit (or wont as a humorous and formal term) is a routine of behavior that is repeated regularly and tends to occur subconsciously. The American Journal of Psychology (1903) defined a \"habit, from the standpoint of psychology, [as] a more or less fixed way of thinking, willing, or feeling acquired through previous repetition of a mental experience.\" Habitual behavior often goes unnoticed in persons exhibiting it, because a person does not need to engage in self-analysis when undertaking routine tasks. Habits are sometimes compulsory. A 2002 daily experience study by habit researcher Wendy Wood and her colleagues found that approximately 43% ",
"score": "1.5107459"
},
{
"id": "443225",
"title": "Habit Heroes",
"text": " Habit Heroes was an interactive exhibit located within Innoventions East at Epcot in Walt Disney World. The health and wellness exhibit, which focused on healthy habits and ways to fight bad habits, soft-opened on February 4, 2012. Habit Heroes initially generated a backlash from experts within the medical community for the way it depicted and personified bad habits as villains, with claims that it body-shamed and stigmatized obese and overweight individuals. Following an outcry from activist groups, Disney closed the attraction indefinitely in late February, just days before its scheduled public opening on March 5, 2012. After research and consultation with medical experts, the attraction was retooled with a new storyline complete with new characters. It eventually opened to the public on January 18, 2013. Without warning, Disney permanently closed the attraction three years later on January 17, 2016.",
"score": "1.4935122"
},
{
"id": "13743910",
"title": "I Gotta Habit",
"text": "Singles ",
"score": "1.4932153"
},
{
"id": "14176810",
"title": "Pour Habit",
"text": " Pour Habit are an American punk rock band from Long Beach, California, United States. Their first demo CD, \"WTF!?\" is long out of print. In 2007, the band released its breakthrough album, Suiticide. After signing to Fat Wreck Chords in 2009, the album was re-released on the label that same year. Their next album, Got Your Back, was released on April 12, 2011. Pour Habit is planning on releasing their third album, the album will be titled \"Fuck It\".",
"score": "1.4924562"
},
{
"id": "14759438",
"title": "Breaking the Habit (song)",
"text": " \"Breaking the Habit\" is a song by American rock band Linkin Park. It is the ninth track from their second studio album, Meteora, and was released as the fifth and final single from the album. The song was a hit; it became the fifth consecutive single from Meteora to reach number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, a feat unmatched by any other artist in the history of that chart. It was also the third single from the album to reach number one on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The song also peaked at number 20 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was certified Gold by the RIAA. The song was also successful in many other countries, except in the UK where it became their first single to chart outside of the top thirty, faring only better than their previous single \"From the Inside\" which failed to chart. On September 4, 2012, \"Breaking the Habit\", \"Shadow of the Day\", \"New Divide\", and \"Burn It Down\" were released in the \"Linkin Park Pack 02\" as downloadable content for the music rhythm video game, Rock Band 3.",
"score": "1.486479"
},
{
"id": "28839485",
"title": "Vanaprasta",
"text": " Vanaprasta made their national television debut on Fuel TV's \"The Daily Habit\" on November 9, 2011.",
"score": "1.4721828"
},
{
"id": "31882699",
"title": "Habit (1997 film)",
"text": " Habit is a 1997 vampire horror film starring Larry Fessenden, who also wrote and directed the film.",
"score": "1.4675691"
},
{
"id": "26732991",
"title": "The Daily Habit",
"text": " The Daily Habit is a sports telecast airing on Fuel TV hosted by Pat Parnell. The show features personalities in the world of extreme sports, including surfboarding, skateboarding, snowboarding, as well as other personalities from entertainment and popular music such as rock bands from the 1990s and today. The Daily Habit began airing on October 3, 2005. Its seventh season began airing on September 1, 2011.",
"score": "1.4673171"
},
{
"id": "6965532",
"title": "Habit (2021 film)",
"text": " Habit is a 2021 American drama film directed by Janell Shirtcliff in her directorial debut, from a screenplay by Shirtcliff and Libby Mintz. It stars Bella Thorne, Gavin Rossdale, Libby Mintz, Andreja Pejić, Ione Skye, Jamie Hince, Alison Mosshart, Paris Jackson and Josie Ho. It was released on August 20, 2021, by Lionsgate.",
"score": "1.4659545"
},
{
"id": "3637097",
"title": "Bad Habits (Ed Sheeran song)",
"text": " \"Bad Habits\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran. It was released on 25 June 2021, through Asylum and Atlantic Records, as the lead single of his fifth studio album, =. The song marked his first solo release from an album in over four years. A limited edition CD and cassette single was also released. The song received mixed reviews from music critics, who compared its sound and style to the works of The Weeknd, particularly \"Blinding Lights\". \"Bad Habits\" was a commercial success, peaking at number-one in numerous countries including Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Hungary, New Zealand, Switzerland and South Africa, becoming the official first number-one hit on the newly launched South African music charts. It proved to be particularly successful in both the United Kingdom and Ireland, as the song spent eleven consecutive weeks at the top of both the UK Singles Chart and Irish Singles Chart. In the United States, the song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100. A drill remix made by Fumez the Engineer featuring British rappers Tion Wayne and Central Cee was released on 12 August 2021.",
"score": "1.4560292"
},
{
"id": "1486004",
"title": "Automatic Systematic Habit",
"text": " \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" is the third and final European radio airplay (fifth overall) single released from alternative rock band Garbage's fifth studio album, Not Your Kind of People. Copies were sent to radio stations across Europe in November 2012. Earlier in the year, Garbage released \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" as a free digital download via iTunes in the United States on May 8, 2012 — a week before the album was released. Garbage later pressed a limited edition 7\" vinyl single for \"Big Bright World\" and released it through their website. It was backed with \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" on the B-side.",
"score": "1.4534888"
},
{
"id": "12274115",
"title": "The Habit Burger Grill",
"text": " The Habit Burger Grill was founded on November 15, 1969, in Santa Barbara County, California as a family-owned business. In 1980, Brent and Bruce Reichard purchased the original location in Goleta. A second location opened in Ventura in 1996 and they gradually grew the chain to twenty-four units in Southern California. In 2007, KarpReilly, a private equity firm, acquired a majority ownership in the company and began to rapidly expand the chain, including franchising. Not included in the sale were the eight locations in Santa Barbara County, California, which remained under the ownership of the Reichard brothers. In 2014, Habit had 109 locations either open for business or under construction, including ",
"score": "1.4492056"
},
{
"id": "6965536",
"title": "Habit (2021 film)",
"text": " The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes surveyed 16 critics and, categorizing the reviews as positive or negative, assessed all 16 as negative for a 6% rating. The film attracted controversy by the Christian right for the supposedly blasphemous and sacrilegious themes of depicting Jesus as lesbian before its release. As of June 30, 2020, more than 260,000 people had signed a petition in order to block the film. Detractors labelled the film as \"Christianophobic garbage\" as well as claiming that it aims to \"ridicule people of faith\". According to a BBC report, Habit is similar to the Brazilian parody film The First Temptation of Christ, which depicted Jesus as gay and resulted in a ban overturned by the Supreme Federal Court. However there is no indication of promotional materials that portray Jesus as a lesbian.",
"score": "1.444438"
},
{
"id": "6965533",
"title": "Habit (2021 film)",
"text": " An L.A. party girl (who does not play by the rules but her own) goes on the run with her BFFs. The group hide out dressed up as nuns when they run afoul of a dangerous drug lord.",
"score": "1.4426494"
},
{
"id": "32542320",
"title": "Habítame Siempre",
"text": "Notes ; In iTunes, the album was released in both standard and bonus tracks editions. ; In Latin America, the album was released in the format of the bonus tracks edition. ",
"score": "1.44169"
},
{
"id": "12274114",
"title": "The Habit Burger Grill",
"text": " The Habit Burger Grill is an American fast casual restaurant chain that specializes in charbroiled hamburgers. The company also sells other typical fast-casual fare. Its headquarters are in Irvine, California. In March 2021, Yum! Brands, the parent company of KFC, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and Wingstreet, acquired The Habit.",
"score": "1.4392896"
}
] | [
"Kicking the National Habit\n Kicking the National Habit is the debut album from British dance-rock duo Grand National. The album was released in the United Kingdom on 24 May 2004 by Sunday Best Records, and then in the United States almost two years later in March 2006. The US edition comes with seven bonus tracks, including remixes by The Glimmers and Sasha.",
"Tobacco smoking\n lax enforcement in some nations and states. In China, Turkey, and many other countries usually a child will have little problem buying tobacco products, because they are often told to go to the store to buy tobacco for their parents. Several countries such as Ireland, Latvia, Estonia, the Netherlands, Finland, Norway, Canada, Australia, Sweden, Portugal, Singapore, Italy, Indonesia, India, Lithuania, Chile, Spain, Iceland, United Kingdom, Slovenia, Turkey and Malta have legislated against smoking in public places, often including bars and restaurants. Restaurateurs have been permitted in some jurisdictions to build designated smoking areas (or to prohibit smoking). In the United States, ",
"Bad Habits (band)\n Bad Habits is a social conscious rock/punk/metal band from London. Bad Habits is a registered trademark in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries for entertainment and musical performances, production and recording services, merchandise and music entertainment related goods and services. They have successfully taken legal action against other parties in many of these countries misusing their mark for infringement of their intellectual property rights and won. The band line-up has experienced various changes since its original formation in 1984 by former Gypsy Leicester band members (including Robin Pizer) who when reformed decided to go in a heavier musical direction from their original formation as Gypsy and therefore used both names interchangeably with the first heavier sounding single for Bad Habits, \"Lipstick Queen\", (with bass playing from Algy Ward) released in 1986 on Sniffin' Rock Magazine and the release of the Gypsy band album Future Teller, containing the album track \"Bad Habits\", with vocals from John K. on Way Out Of Line, Lost In Berlin and Let Me In.",
"Bad Habit (song)\n \"Bad Habit\" is the fourth single by UK band Foals, from their third studio album Holy Fire. The official video, unveiled on 17 June 2013, was directed by Nabil where visual effects were created by GloriaFX and features lead singer Yannis Philippakis wandering through a desert following a nude woman. The song has been featured in a BBC promotion for its Summer of Music in May 2013. The single artwork was done by Leif Podhajsky.",
"Habit\n A habit (or wont as a humorous and formal term) is a routine of behavior that is repeated regularly and tends to occur subconsciously. The American Journal of Psychology (1903) defined a \"habit, from the standpoint of psychology, [as] a more or less fixed way of thinking, willing, or feeling acquired through previous repetition of a mental experience.\" Habitual behavior often goes unnoticed in persons exhibiting it, because a person does not need to engage in self-analysis when undertaking routine tasks. Habits are sometimes compulsory. A 2002 daily experience study by habit researcher Wendy Wood and her colleagues found that approximately 43% ",
"Habit Heroes\n Habit Heroes was an interactive exhibit located within Innoventions East at Epcot in Walt Disney World. The health and wellness exhibit, which focused on healthy habits and ways to fight bad habits, soft-opened on February 4, 2012. Habit Heroes initially generated a backlash from experts within the medical community for the way it depicted and personified bad habits as villains, with claims that it body-shamed and stigmatized obese and overweight individuals. Following an outcry from activist groups, Disney closed the attraction indefinitely in late February, just days before its scheduled public opening on March 5, 2012. After research and consultation with medical experts, the attraction was retooled with a new storyline complete with new characters. It eventually opened to the public on January 18, 2013. Without warning, Disney permanently closed the attraction three years later on January 17, 2016.",
"I Gotta Habit\nSingles ",
"Pour Habit\n Pour Habit are an American punk rock band from Long Beach, California, United States. Their first demo CD, \"WTF!?\" is long out of print. In 2007, the band released its breakthrough album, Suiticide. After signing to Fat Wreck Chords in 2009, the album was re-released on the label that same year. Their next album, Got Your Back, was released on April 12, 2011. Pour Habit is planning on releasing their third album, the album will be titled \"Fuck It\".",
"Breaking the Habit (song)\n \"Breaking the Habit\" is a song by American rock band Linkin Park. It is the ninth track from their second studio album, Meteora, and was released as the fifth and final single from the album. The song was a hit; it became the fifth consecutive single from Meteora to reach number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart, a feat unmatched by any other artist in the history of that chart. It was also the third single from the album to reach number one on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. The song also peaked at number 20 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was certified Gold by the RIAA. The song was also successful in many other countries, except in the UK where it became their first single to chart outside of the top thirty, faring only better than their previous single \"From the Inside\" which failed to chart. On September 4, 2012, \"Breaking the Habit\", \"Shadow of the Day\", \"New Divide\", and \"Burn It Down\" were released in the \"Linkin Park Pack 02\" as downloadable content for the music rhythm video game, Rock Band 3.",
"Vanaprasta\n Vanaprasta made their national television debut on Fuel TV's \"The Daily Habit\" on November 9, 2011.",
"Habit (1997 film)\n Habit is a 1997 vampire horror film starring Larry Fessenden, who also wrote and directed the film.",
"The Daily Habit\n The Daily Habit is a sports telecast airing on Fuel TV hosted by Pat Parnell. The show features personalities in the world of extreme sports, including surfboarding, skateboarding, snowboarding, as well as other personalities from entertainment and popular music such as rock bands from the 1990s and today. The Daily Habit began airing on October 3, 2005. Its seventh season began airing on September 1, 2011.",
"Habit (2021 film)\n Habit is a 2021 American drama film directed by Janell Shirtcliff in her directorial debut, from a screenplay by Shirtcliff and Libby Mintz. It stars Bella Thorne, Gavin Rossdale, Libby Mintz, Andreja Pejić, Ione Skye, Jamie Hince, Alison Mosshart, Paris Jackson and Josie Ho. It was released on August 20, 2021, by Lionsgate.",
"Bad Habits (Ed Sheeran song)\n \"Bad Habits\" is a song by English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran. It was released on 25 June 2021, through Asylum and Atlantic Records, as the lead single of his fifth studio album, =. The song marked his first solo release from an album in over four years. A limited edition CD and cassette single was also released. The song received mixed reviews from music critics, who compared its sound and style to the works of The Weeknd, particularly \"Blinding Lights\". \"Bad Habits\" was a commercial success, peaking at number-one in numerous countries including Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Hungary, New Zealand, Switzerland and South Africa, becoming the official first number-one hit on the newly launched South African music charts. It proved to be particularly successful in both the United Kingdom and Ireland, as the song spent eleven consecutive weeks at the top of both the UK Singles Chart and Irish Singles Chart. In the United States, the song peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100. A drill remix made by Fumez the Engineer featuring British rappers Tion Wayne and Central Cee was released on 12 August 2021.",
"Automatic Systematic Habit\n \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" is the third and final European radio airplay (fifth overall) single released from alternative rock band Garbage's fifth studio album, Not Your Kind of People. Copies were sent to radio stations across Europe in November 2012. Earlier in the year, Garbage released \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" as a free digital download via iTunes in the United States on May 8, 2012 — a week before the album was released. Garbage later pressed a limited edition 7\" vinyl single for \"Big Bright World\" and released it through their website. It was backed with \"Automatic Systematic Habit\" on the B-side.",
"The Habit Burger Grill\n The Habit Burger Grill was founded on November 15, 1969, in Santa Barbara County, California as a family-owned business. In 1980, Brent and Bruce Reichard purchased the original location in Goleta. A second location opened in Ventura in 1996 and they gradually grew the chain to twenty-four units in Southern California. In 2007, KarpReilly, a private equity firm, acquired a majority ownership in the company and began to rapidly expand the chain, including franchising. Not included in the sale were the eight locations in Santa Barbara County, California, which remained under the ownership of the Reichard brothers. In 2014, Habit had 109 locations either open for business or under construction, including ",
"Habit (2021 film)\n The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes surveyed 16 critics and, categorizing the reviews as positive or negative, assessed all 16 as negative for a 6% rating. The film attracted controversy by the Christian right for the supposedly blasphemous and sacrilegious themes of depicting Jesus as lesbian before its release. As of June 30, 2020, more than 260,000 people had signed a petition in order to block the film. Detractors labelled the film as \"Christianophobic garbage\" as well as claiming that it aims to \"ridicule people of faith\". According to a BBC report, Habit is similar to the Brazilian parody film The First Temptation of Christ, which depicted Jesus as gay and resulted in a ban overturned by the Supreme Federal Court. However there is no indication of promotional materials that portray Jesus as a lesbian.",
"Habit (2021 film)\n An L.A. party girl (who does not play by the rules but her own) goes on the run with her BFFs. The group hide out dressed up as nuns when they run afoul of a dangerous drug lord.",
"Habítame Siempre\nNotes ; In iTunes, the album was released in both standard and bonus tracks editions. ; In Latin America, the album was released in the format of the bonus tracks edition. ",
"The Habit Burger Grill\n The Habit Burger Grill is an American fast casual restaurant chain that specializes in charbroiled hamburgers. The company also sells other typical fast-casual fare. Its headquarters are in Irvine, California. In March 2021, Yum! Brands, the parent company of KFC, Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and Wingstreet, acquired The Habit."
] |
In what city was Amoene van Haersolte born? | [
"Utrecht",
"Utreg",
"Utrecht (city)"
] | place of birth | Amoene van Haersolte | 1,632,004 | 55 | [
{
"id": "29687333",
"title": "Amoene van Haersolte",
"text": " Jonkvrouw Amoëne van Haersolte (born Ernestine Amoene Sophia van Holthe tot Echten; 23 February 1890 – 11 August 1952) was a Dutch author of prose writing. Van Haersolte was born in Utrecht. She won the first P. C. Hooft Award in 1947. She died, aged 62, in Dalfsen.",
"score": "1.938472"
},
{
"id": "29687335",
"title": "Amoene van Haersolte",
"text": "1927 - De laatsten ; 1946 - Sophia in de Koestraat ; 1953 - De roerkop ",
"score": "1.7829623"
},
{
"id": "7721297",
"title": "Kees van Kooten",
"text": " Cornelis Reinier van Kooten was born on 10 August 1941 in The Hague, Netherlands. He is the oldest child of Cornelis Reinier van Kooten en Anna Geertruida Snaauw. He has one sister, Anke, who is a year younger. He met his wife Barbara Kits in 1959 and married her on 18 October 1968. After their marriage they moved from The Hague to the polder village of Zuidoostbeemster, where their two children were born, Kasper in 1971 and Kim in 1974. Both children are well-known performers in the Netherlands. In 1978 the family moved to Hilversum and in 1996 to Amsterdam. Van Kooten is ",
"score": "1.6228845"
},
{
"id": "10014924",
"title": "Manon van Raay",
"text": " Van Raay was born in Woerden.",
"score": "1.6151953"
},
{
"id": "9609180",
"title": "Maasgouw",
"text": "Henk van Hoof (born 1947) a retired Dutch politician, lives in Ohé en Laak ; Jan Cober (born 1951 in Thorn) a Dutch conductor and clarinet player ; Guido Geelen (born 1961 in Thorn) a Dutch sculptor, furniture designer and ceramist ; Margo Reuten (born ca.1966 in Maasbracht) a Dutch head chef, holds two Michelin stars ; Lies Visschedijk (born 1974 in Heel) a Dutch actress ",
"score": "1.5877478"
},
{
"id": "29687334",
"title": "Amoene van Haersolte",
"text": "1949 - De komeet en het harlekijntje ; 1951 - Lucile ; 1953 - De roerkop ",
"score": "1.5818131"
},
{
"id": "1323241",
"title": "Johannes Bernardus van Loghem",
"text": " He was born in Haarlem as the son of a bulb grower and after attending high school at the local HBS, he continued his education at the Polytechnical school there for civic engineering. According to the RKD he studied in Delft during the years 1905–1909 and was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright and Hendrik Petrus Berlage. After graduation he became an architect in Haarlem where he married the textile artist Berta Neumeier. In 1912 they moved into the house of his own design on the Spaarne river called \"Steenhaag\". He received many commissions for city planning, including the projects based on the garden city movement Rosenhaghe, Betondorp, Ter Cleef, and Tuinwijk ",
"score": "1.5735769"
},
{
"id": "30530374",
"title": "Almelo",
"text": "Catharina Julia Roeters van Lennep (1813–1883) a Dutch artist ; Bertha Tideman-Wijers (1887-1976) composer ; Izaak Kolthoff (1894–1993) an analytical chemist and chemistry educator ; Judith Ledeboer OBE (1901–1990) architect ; Evert Willem Beth (1908-1964) philosopher and logician ; Gerritdina Benders-Letteboer (1909–1980) an active member of the Dutch Resistance ; Wubbo Ockels (1946-2014) a physicist and astronaut of the European Space Agency ; Herman Finkers (born 1954) comedian, known for his friendly, dry-witted humour ; Tom Egbers (born 1957) a Dutch English journalist, writer and TV presenter ; Liesbeth van Tongeren (born 1958) a Dutch politician, Director of Greenpeace Netherlands 2003–2010, grew up in Almelo ; Hero Brinkman (born 1964) a police officer and former Dutch politician ; Jos de Blok, Dutch Wiki (born 1960) founder and CEO of Buurtzorg ; Michiel Veenstra (born 1976) Radio-dj on KINK ; Ilse de Lange (born 1977) a Dutch country and pop rock singer-songwriter ; Loes Haverkort (born 1981) a Dutch movie, TV and theater actress ; Azra Akın (born 1981) Miss Turkey World 2002 and Miss World 2002 ",
"score": "1.5684128"
},
{
"id": "2319148",
"title": "Anton Koolhaas",
"text": " Anthonie Koolhaas was born on 16 November 1912 in Utrecht, Netherlands. He was the son of Teunis Koolhaas and Trijntje de Boer, and he had two elder brothers and an elder sister. He grew up in Utrecht, where the Remonstrant family lived. He had little connection with the members of his family and he developed a rich imagination. He wrote his first play at the age of seven. He attended the hogere burgerschool in Utrecht. Between 1931 and 1935 he attended Utrecht University, studying an individual program related to journalism. He wrote the scenario of the Academy Award-nominated films Everyman (1963) and Ape and Super-Ape (1972), both directed by Bert Haanstra. He is the father of architect Rem Koolhaas (1944). He won the Constantijn Huygens Prize for his complete works in 1989 and the P. C. Hooft Award, a literary oeuvre award, in 1992. He died on 16 December 1992, age 80, in Amsterdam, Netherlands.",
"score": "1.5678723"
},
{
"id": "30612980",
"title": "Vught",
"text": "Erna Spoorenberg (1925 – 2004 in Vught) a Dutch soprano ; Misha Geller (1937 – 2007 in Vught) a Russian viola player and composer ; Joost Prinsen (born 1942 in Vught) a Dutch actor, TV presenter, singer and writer ; Mina Witteman (born 1959 in Vught) a Dutch children's author ; Maarten van der Vleuten (born 1967 in Vught) a Dutch producer, composer and recording artist ; Jan-Hein Arens (born 1974 in Vught) a Dutch painter, sculptor and illustrator ",
"score": "1.5668972"
},
{
"id": "7474394",
"title": "Aart Staartjes",
"text": " Aart Staartjes was born in Nieuwendam, a neighbourhood of Amsterdam-Noord. He had an older brother, and a younger sister. They lived in a house on the Nieuwendammerdijk. His father, his grandfather, and an uncle of his worked in a carpentry shop located behind the house. Staartjes started his primary education at the age of eight. After that, he went to the mulo in Amsterdam, followed by the Kweekschool, a teachers' college. He dropped out of the Kweekschool in 1958, and went to the theatre school instead. He graduated in 1961.",
"score": "1.5605147"
},
{
"id": "25289337",
"title": "Goeree-Overflakkee",
"text": "Jan van Os (1744 in Middelharnis – 1808) a Dutch painter ; Laurens J. Bol (1898 in Ooltgensplaat – 1994) an art historian, specialized in Dutch Golden Age painters ; Aart Alblas (1918 in Middelharnis – 1944 in Mauthausen concentration camp) highly decorated Dutch resistance member ; Tomas Ross (born 1944 in Den Bommel) a Dutch writer of historical criminal thrillers ; Elco Brinkman (born 1948 in Dirksland) a retired Dutch politician and businessman. ; Toine van Peperstraten (born 1967 in Achthuizen) a Dutch sports journalist ; Barbara Baarsma (born 1969) a Dutch economist, grew up in Goeree-Overflakkee ; Liesbeth Zegveld (born 1970 in Ridderkerk) a Dutch lawyer, legal expert and professor ",
"score": "1.5596781"
},
{
"id": "8193803",
"title": "Dick Ket",
"text": " Born in Den Helder, Ket spent his childhood in Hoorn and then Ede before attending the Kunstoefening in Arnhem from 1922 to 1925. Born with a serious heart defect (believed to be tetralogy of Fallot with dextrocardia), he was prevented from traveling by debilitating weakness as well as by phobias, and lived secluded in his parents' house in Bennekom after 1930. Exposed to modern art mainly through reproductions, he concentrated on painting still lifes and self-portraits. His health worsened in his last decade, leading to his early death in Bennekom in 1940.",
"score": "1.5594921"
},
{
"id": "27053579",
"title": "Jacob Israël de Haan",
"text": " De Haan was born in Smilde, a village in the northern province of Drenthe, and grew up in Zaandam. He was said to be one of eighteen children and received a traditional Jewish education. In 1904, while living in Amsterdam, he wrote the novel Pijpelijntjes (\"Lines from De Pijp\"), which pretends to be a thinly veiled version of his own gay life with Aletrino in Amsterdam's \"Pijp\" working-class district. The homo-eroticism of the book, shocking to readers in the early 20th century, led to his dismissal from his teaching job and social-democratic political circles. Aletrino and Johanna van Maarseveen, de Haan's fiancée, bought almost the entire print run of the book, to keep a lid on the scandal. In 1907 he married van Maarseveen, a non-Jewish doctor; they separated in 1919 but never officially divorced.",
"score": "1.5592861"
},
{
"id": "26147435",
"title": "Susan Hendrik van Sitteren",
"text": " Van Sitteren was born on 4 November 1904 in the city of Amsterdam, Netherlands. He was named after his aunt, Susan.",
"score": "1.5564128"
},
{
"id": "8522529",
"title": "Patrick van Aanholt",
"text": " Van Aanholt was born in 's-Hertogenbosch to parents from Curaçao. He is the cousin of fellow Dutch international Leroy Fer.",
"score": "1.5536973"
},
{
"id": "30531474",
"title": "Oldebroek",
"text": "Rudolph van Pallandt (1868–1913), sport shooter who competed at the 1908 Summer Olympics ; Martin Koopman (born 1956 in Wezep), former football defender and football manager ; Jan Maarten Heideman (born 1973), speed skater ; Lana Wolf (born 1975 in Wezep), pop singer ; Freek Jansen (born 1992), politician ",
"score": "1.5535852"
},
{
"id": "785711",
"title": "Kees Verkade",
"text": " Kees Verkade was born on 12 October 1941 in Haarlem. He wished to attend the Gerrit Rietveld Academie but was rejected. He took painting lessons with Gerrit van ’t Net from 1958 to 1963, and from Dirk Bus at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague. He graduated from the Academy in 1963.",
"score": "1.55353"
},
{
"id": "30531498",
"title": "Rheden",
"text": "Mina Kruseman (1839 in Velp – 1922) a 19th-century Dutch feminist, actress and author ; Louis Couperus (1863 – 1923 in De Steeg) a Dutch novelist and poet ; Baroness Ella van Heemstra (1900 in Velp – 1984) a Dutch-British aristocrat and the mother of Audrey Hepburn ; Simon Carmiggelt (1913–1987) author, who had a home in De Steeg ; Teun Jacob (1927 in Rheden - 2009) a Dutch wall painter and sculptor ; Jan Siebelink (born 1938 in Velp) a Dutch author ; Paula van der Oest (born 1965 in Laag-Soeren) a Dutch film director and screenwriter ; Anouk van Dijk (born 1965 in Velp) a Dutch choreographer, dancer, artistic director and teacher ; Maarten Demmink (born 1967 in Goudriaan), known as Demiak, a Dutch painter, photographer and sculptor ; Jorrit van der Kooi (born 1972 in Rheden) a Dutch film and TV director and presenter ",
"score": "1.5521142"
},
{
"id": "11690849",
"title": "Richard Stolte",
"text": " Stolte was born in Emmeloord, Netherlands. Before being picked up by the youth academy of SC Heerenveen, Stolte played at Flevo Boys, an amateur club from his home town. In the academy he played as a left winger, both on midfield and in attack. He also received many international call-ups from the various Dutch youth squads. In 2008, he signed a two-year deal at Heerenveen with an option for two more seasons. The plan was to keep Stolte another year in the academy followed by one season in the reserve squad. In the summer of 2009 FC Emmen was interested in loaning him for a season, but first team manager Trond Sollied kept him at the club. With many injuries in the first ",
"score": "1.5518199"
}
] | [
"Amoene van Haersolte\n Jonkvrouw Amoëne van Haersolte (born Ernestine Amoene Sophia van Holthe tot Echten; 23 February 1890 – 11 August 1952) was a Dutch author of prose writing. Van Haersolte was born in Utrecht. She won the first P. C. Hooft Award in 1947. She died, aged 62, in Dalfsen.",
"Amoene van Haersolte\n1927 - De laatsten ; 1946 - Sophia in de Koestraat ; 1953 - De roerkop ",
"Kees van Kooten\n Cornelis Reinier van Kooten was born on 10 August 1941 in The Hague, Netherlands. He is the oldest child of Cornelis Reinier van Kooten en Anna Geertruida Snaauw. He has one sister, Anke, who is a year younger. He met his wife Barbara Kits in 1959 and married her on 18 October 1968. After their marriage they moved from The Hague to the polder village of Zuidoostbeemster, where their two children were born, Kasper in 1971 and Kim in 1974. Both children are well-known performers in the Netherlands. In 1978 the family moved to Hilversum and in 1996 to Amsterdam. Van Kooten is ",
"Manon van Raay\n Van Raay was born in Woerden.",
"Maasgouw\nHenk van Hoof (born 1947) a retired Dutch politician, lives in Ohé en Laak ; Jan Cober (born 1951 in Thorn) a Dutch conductor and clarinet player ; Guido Geelen (born 1961 in Thorn) a Dutch sculptor, furniture designer and ceramist ; Margo Reuten (born ca.1966 in Maasbracht) a Dutch head chef, holds two Michelin stars ; Lies Visschedijk (born 1974 in Heel) a Dutch actress ",
"Amoene van Haersolte\n1949 - De komeet en het harlekijntje ; 1951 - Lucile ; 1953 - De roerkop ",
"Johannes Bernardus van Loghem\n He was born in Haarlem as the son of a bulb grower and after attending high school at the local HBS, he continued his education at the Polytechnical school there for civic engineering. According to the RKD he studied in Delft during the years 1905–1909 and was influenced by Frank Lloyd Wright and Hendrik Petrus Berlage. After graduation he became an architect in Haarlem where he married the textile artist Berta Neumeier. In 1912 they moved into the house of his own design on the Spaarne river called \"Steenhaag\". He received many commissions for city planning, including the projects based on the garden city movement Rosenhaghe, Betondorp, Ter Cleef, and Tuinwijk ",
"Almelo\nCatharina Julia Roeters van Lennep (1813–1883) a Dutch artist ; Bertha Tideman-Wijers (1887-1976) composer ; Izaak Kolthoff (1894–1993) an analytical chemist and chemistry educator ; Judith Ledeboer OBE (1901–1990) architect ; Evert Willem Beth (1908-1964) philosopher and logician ; Gerritdina Benders-Letteboer (1909–1980) an active member of the Dutch Resistance ; Wubbo Ockels (1946-2014) a physicist and astronaut of the European Space Agency ; Herman Finkers (born 1954) comedian, known for his friendly, dry-witted humour ; Tom Egbers (born 1957) a Dutch English journalist, writer and TV presenter ; Liesbeth van Tongeren (born 1958) a Dutch politician, Director of Greenpeace Netherlands 2003–2010, grew up in Almelo ; Hero Brinkman (born 1964) a police officer and former Dutch politician ; Jos de Blok, Dutch Wiki (born 1960) founder and CEO of Buurtzorg ; Michiel Veenstra (born 1976) Radio-dj on KINK ; Ilse de Lange (born 1977) a Dutch country and pop rock singer-songwriter ; Loes Haverkort (born 1981) a Dutch movie, TV and theater actress ; Azra Akın (born 1981) Miss Turkey World 2002 and Miss World 2002 ",
"Anton Koolhaas\n Anthonie Koolhaas was born on 16 November 1912 in Utrecht, Netherlands. He was the son of Teunis Koolhaas and Trijntje de Boer, and he had two elder brothers and an elder sister. He grew up in Utrecht, where the Remonstrant family lived. He had little connection with the members of his family and he developed a rich imagination. He wrote his first play at the age of seven. He attended the hogere burgerschool in Utrecht. Between 1931 and 1935 he attended Utrecht University, studying an individual program related to journalism. He wrote the scenario of the Academy Award-nominated films Everyman (1963) and Ape and Super-Ape (1972), both directed by Bert Haanstra. He is the father of architect Rem Koolhaas (1944). He won the Constantijn Huygens Prize for his complete works in 1989 and the P. C. Hooft Award, a literary oeuvre award, in 1992. He died on 16 December 1992, age 80, in Amsterdam, Netherlands.",
"Vught\nErna Spoorenberg (1925 – 2004 in Vught) a Dutch soprano ; Misha Geller (1937 – 2007 in Vught) a Russian viola player and composer ; Joost Prinsen (born 1942 in Vught) a Dutch actor, TV presenter, singer and writer ; Mina Witteman (born 1959 in Vught) a Dutch children's author ; Maarten van der Vleuten (born 1967 in Vught) a Dutch producer, composer and recording artist ; Jan-Hein Arens (born 1974 in Vught) a Dutch painter, sculptor and illustrator ",
"Aart Staartjes\n Aart Staartjes was born in Nieuwendam, a neighbourhood of Amsterdam-Noord. He had an older brother, and a younger sister. They lived in a house on the Nieuwendammerdijk. His father, his grandfather, and an uncle of his worked in a carpentry shop located behind the house. Staartjes started his primary education at the age of eight. After that, he went to the mulo in Amsterdam, followed by the Kweekschool, a teachers' college. He dropped out of the Kweekschool in 1958, and went to the theatre school instead. He graduated in 1961.",
"Goeree-Overflakkee\nJan van Os (1744 in Middelharnis – 1808) a Dutch painter ; Laurens J. Bol (1898 in Ooltgensplaat – 1994) an art historian, specialized in Dutch Golden Age painters ; Aart Alblas (1918 in Middelharnis – 1944 in Mauthausen concentration camp) highly decorated Dutch resistance member ; Tomas Ross (born 1944 in Den Bommel) a Dutch writer of historical criminal thrillers ; Elco Brinkman (born 1948 in Dirksland) a retired Dutch politician and businessman. ; Toine van Peperstraten (born 1967 in Achthuizen) a Dutch sports journalist ; Barbara Baarsma (born 1969) a Dutch economist, grew up in Goeree-Overflakkee ; Liesbeth Zegveld (born 1970 in Ridderkerk) a Dutch lawyer, legal expert and professor ",
"Dick Ket\n Born in Den Helder, Ket spent his childhood in Hoorn and then Ede before attending the Kunstoefening in Arnhem from 1922 to 1925. Born with a serious heart defect (believed to be tetralogy of Fallot with dextrocardia), he was prevented from traveling by debilitating weakness as well as by phobias, and lived secluded in his parents' house in Bennekom after 1930. Exposed to modern art mainly through reproductions, he concentrated on painting still lifes and self-portraits. His health worsened in his last decade, leading to his early death in Bennekom in 1940.",
"Jacob Israël de Haan\n De Haan was born in Smilde, a village in the northern province of Drenthe, and grew up in Zaandam. He was said to be one of eighteen children and received a traditional Jewish education. In 1904, while living in Amsterdam, he wrote the novel Pijpelijntjes (\"Lines from De Pijp\"), which pretends to be a thinly veiled version of his own gay life with Aletrino in Amsterdam's \"Pijp\" working-class district. The homo-eroticism of the book, shocking to readers in the early 20th century, led to his dismissal from his teaching job and social-democratic political circles. Aletrino and Johanna van Maarseveen, de Haan's fiancée, bought almost the entire print run of the book, to keep a lid on the scandal. In 1907 he married van Maarseveen, a non-Jewish doctor; they separated in 1919 but never officially divorced.",
"Susan Hendrik van Sitteren\n Van Sitteren was born on 4 November 1904 in the city of Amsterdam, Netherlands. He was named after his aunt, Susan.",
"Patrick van Aanholt\n Van Aanholt was born in 's-Hertogenbosch to parents from Curaçao. He is the cousin of fellow Dutch international Leroy Fer.",
"Oldebroek\nRudolph van Pallandt (1868–1913), sport shooter who competed at the 1908 Summer Olympics ; Martin Koopman (born 1956 in Wezep), former football defender and football manager ; Jan Maarten Heideman (born 1973), speed skater ; Lana Wolf (born 1975 in Wezep), pop singer ; Freek Jansen (born 1992), politician ",
"Kees Verkade\n Kees Verkade was born on 12 October 1941 in Haarlem. He wished to attend the Gerrit Rietveld Academie but was rejected. He took painting lessons with Gerrit van ’t Net from 1958 to 1963, and from Dirk Bus at the Royal Academy of Art, The Hague. He graduated from the Academy in 1963.",
"Rheden\nMina Kruseman (1839 in Velp – 1922) a 19th-century Dutch feminist, actress and author ; Louis Couperus (1863 – 1923 in De Steeg) a Dutch novelist and poet ; Baroness Ella van Heemstra (1900 in Velp – 1984) a Dutch-British aristocrat and the mother of Audrey Hepburn ; Simon Carmiggelt (1913–1987) author, who had a home in De Steeg ; Teun Jacob (1927 in Rheden - 2009) a Dutch wall painter and sculptor ; Jan Siebelink (born 1938 in Velp) a Dutch author ; Paula van der Oest (born 1965 in Laag-Soeren) a Dutch film director and screenwriter ; Anouk van Dijk (born 1965 in Velp) a Dutch choreographer, dancer, artistic director and teacher ; Maarten Demmink (born 1967 in Goudriaan), known as Demiak, a Dutch painter, photographer and sculptor ; Jorrit van der Kooi (born 1972 in Rheden) a Dutch film and TV director and presenter ",
"Richard Stolte\n Stolte was born in Emmeloord, Netherlands. Before being picked up by the youth academy of SC Heerenveen, Stolte played at Flevo Boys, an amateur club from his home town. In the academy he played as a left winger, both on midfield and in attack. He also received many international call-ups from the various Dutch youth squads. In 2008, he signed a two-year deal at Heerenveen with an option for two more seasons. The plan was to keep Stolte another year in the academy followed by one season in the reserve squad. In the summer of 2009 FC Emmen was interested in loaning him for a season, but first team manager Trond Sollied kept him at the club. With many injuries in the first "
] |
Who was the composer of Alone? | [
"Evan Brewer"
] | composer | Alone (Evan Brewer album) | 2,162,041 | 87 | [
{
"id": "14973844",
"title": "Gary Carpenter (composer)",
"text": "The One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ",
"score": "1.6062787"
},
{
"id": "26748485",
"title": "Dominic Chad",
"text": "Composed alone Composed with Paul Draper (and others) ",
"score": "1.5870972"
},
{
"id": "30308307",
"title": "Alone Together (1932 song)",
"text": " \"Alone Together\" is a song composed by Arthur Schwartz with lyrics by Howard Dietz. It was introduced in the Broadway musical Flying Colors in 1932 by Jean Sargent. The song soon became a hit, with Leo Reisman and His Orchestra's 1932 recording (vocal by Frank Luther) being the first to reach the charts. It has become a jazz standard. The first jazz musician to record the song was Artie Shaw in 1939.",
"score": "1.5364333"
},
{
"id": "3566979",
"title": "Alone Together (Clare Fischer album)",
"text": " Alone Together is a studio album by American composer/arranger/pianist Clare Fischer, recorded in October 1975 and released in 1977 on the German label, MPS, and in the US by Discovery Records in 1980 (catalogue number DS 820). Its 1997 reissue on CD accompanied a volume created by pianist, composer and educator Bill Dobbins, containing transcriptions of four of Alone Together 's tracks and five from Fischer's 1995 solo piano CD, Just Me, and described by saxophonist and longtime Fischer colleague Gary Foster as \"among the very best materials published in the field of jazz pedagogy.\" Of the 1975 recording, Dobbins wrote: \"If I had to make a list of the ten most important solo jazz piano recordings of all time, this recording would definitely be on the list.\"",
"score": "1.5207062"
},
{
"id": "33175730",
"title": "Alone (i-Ten song)",
"text": " \"Alone\" is a song composed by Billy Steinberg and Tom Kelly, who recorded it under the name i-Ten on their 1983 album Taking a Cold Look. It was later recorded by actress Valerie Stevenson and actor John Stamos on the original soundtrack of the CBS sitcom Dreams in 1984. American rock band Heart covered it on their 1987 album Bad Animals, and this version reached number one in the US and Canada. In 2007 Celine Dion recorded it for her album Taking Chances. In 2010 Alyssa Reid used the music and lyrics for the chorus of her song Alone Again.",
"score": "1.5142603"
},
{
"id": "30565782",
"title": "Alone. (2014 film)",
"text": " Lucashenko challenged Hilbert with actualizing the project in November. The two had previously collaborated on the creation of an original score for Hilbert's 2011 film Ikland, which Hilbert had assembled from footage shot in a similarly spontaneous way. Hilbert was tasked with fulfilling the project concept, using material selected by Lucashenko, and subsequently assumed producing responsibilities as he finished the film.",
"score": "1.51309"
},
{
"id": "3783995",
"title": "Alone, Again",
"text": " Alone, Again is a solo piano album by Paul Bley, recorded in Norway in 1974 and released on Bley's own Improvising Artists label in 1975.",
"score": "1.5013225"
},
{
"id": "3783998",
"title": "Alone, Again",
"text": "Paul Bley - piano ",
"score": "1.4948962"
},
{
"id": "31193955",
"title": "Henry Geehl",
"text": " for piano and violin, Suite espagnole, Comedy Overture, In Fairyland, On the Cornish Coast, Rhapsody for band, Prince Charlie – 1745, piano pieces and songs. His song \"For You Alone\" (\"Für dich allein\"; words by P. J. O'Reilly) achieved great popularity, being recorded by Enrico Caruso, Lauritz Melchior, Jussi Björling and Mario Lanza, among others. Eleanor Steber's rendition of \"For You Alone\" can be seen on this YouTube video. (It has been claimed that \"For You Alone\" was the only song ever sung in English by Caruso but that is contradicted by other evidence, such as his recording of George M. Cohan's \"Over There\"). Henry Geehl also wrote some ",
"score": "1.4923346"
},
{
"id": "4935881",
"title": "George Posford",
"text": " added \"Mine Alone\", composed by Manning Sherwin, which outlived the show. Posford and Harry Parr-Davies composed Full Swing (1940), starring Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, which had 468 performances during the London blitz. Posford wrote a number of wartime revues for the duo. During World War II, he was in the Royal Corps of Signals and the London Fire Service. He was subsequently involved in the Overseas Recorded Broadcasting Service. After the war, Posford co-composed Evangeline (1946) with Harry Jacobson. Starring Frances Day, this was a reworking by Maschwitz of James Laver's Nymph Errant. In 1951, Posford was again in collaboration with Maschwitz, writing ",
"score": "1.4879698"
},
{
"id": "5282053",
"title": "Jean Lenoir (composer)",
"text": "Alone (1931) ; My Aunt from Honfleur (1931) ; Moonlight (1932) ; The Three Musketeers (1932) ; The Crisis is Over (1934) ; Miquette (1934) ; Gold in the Street (1934) ; Second Bureau (1935) ; Veille d'armes (1935) ; Women's Prison (1938) ; The Chess Player (1938) ; Dorothy Looks for Love (1945) ; Night Warning (1946) ; Midnight in Paris (2011) (Instrumental) ",
"score": "1.4849343"
},
{
"id": "7855891",
"title": "No One Is Alone (song)",
"text": " During the show's tryouts at the Old Globe theatre, this song was absent. The LA Times recounts: \"At that point, there was simply a spot in the 'Woods' script that said 'quartet for Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Baker and Jack.' During intermission at a Wednesday evening performance, Sondheim showed up with 'No One Is Alone.' He played it for the cast after the show that night, and it was part of the score by Friday. The next day Sondheim and Lapine left for New York.\" There was initially an issue over whether the song had been inspired by a preexisting poem. James Lapine explained to LA Weekly that he killed ",
"score": "1.4833579"
},
{
"id": "8434028",
"title": "Left Alone (song)",
"text": " This is one of seven songs written by or co-written by Holiday that she never recorded. Mal Waldron began working as pianist for Holiday in mid-1953. Holiday had intended to record the song a number of times but \"always forget the damned sheet music.\" However, Waldron himself recorded the song on his 1959 album Left Alone, and near the end of the LP discusses the origin of the song.",
"score": "1.4745734"
},
{
"id": "8301238",
"title": "Fugue",
"text": " composer John Williams includes a fugue in his score for the 1990 film, Home Alone, at the point where Kevin, accidentally left at home by his family, and realizing he is about to be attacked by a pair of bumbling burglars, begins to plan his elaborate defenses. Another fugue occurs at a similar point in the 1992 sequel film, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. The jazz composer and film composer, Michel Legrand, includes a fugue as the climax of his score (a classical theme with variations, and fugue) for Joseph Losey's 1972 film The Go-Between, based on the 1953 novel by British novelist, L.P. Hartley.",
"score": "1.47399"
},
{
"id": "25601325",
"title": "He Knows You're Alone",
"text": " The original music score was composed by Alexander and Mark Peskanov.",
"score": "1.4672188"
},
{
"id": "8042182",
"title": "Red Alone",
"text": " Red Alone is a solo piano album by jazz musician Red Garland, recorded in 1960 and released the same year on Prestige Records, originally as part of the Moodsville series.",
"score": "1.4669633"
},
{
"id": "15200831",
"title": "Alone (Bill Evans album)",
"text": " Alone is an album by jazz musician Bill Evans, recorded in late 1968 for Verve Records. The year of release is unclear, even though a release in the first months of 1970 is a strong possibility. The Grammy Award-winning Alone was Bill Evans' first single piano solo album following in the footsteps of his 1963 Verve session Conversations with Myself (three pianos overdubbed) and his 1967 Further Conversations with Myself, also on Verve (two pianos overdubbed). It has been reissued in various forms with additional tracks and alternate takes from sessions on September 23, October 8 and 21st.",
"score": "1.4539568"
},
{
"id": "13040809",
"title": "Alone in the Dark (2008 video game)",
"text": " The music in Alone in the Dark is scored by Olivier Deriviere. It includes the female choir The Mystery of Bulgarian Voices. Derivière did not use a live orchestra; instead, he used virtual instruments and samplers to create a realistic orchestral sound. The official soundtrack album by Derivière and Voices is available for purchase digitally and in audio CD format.",
"score": "1.4522319"
},
{
"id": "7855890",
"title": "No One Is Alone (song)",
"text": " \"No One Is Alone\" is a song by Stephen Sondheim from the musical Into the Woods, performed toward the end of Act II as the piece's penultimate number.",
"score": "1.4504602"
},
{
"id": "26376872",
"title": "List of compositions by George Gershwin",
"text": " Gershwin Alone – one-man play by Hershey Felder, who portrayed Gershwin, incorporating \"Swanee\" from Sinbad (lyrics by Irving Caesar), \"Embraceable You\" from Girl Crazy (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Someone to Watch Over Me\" from Oh, Kay! (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Bess, You is My Woman Now\" from Porgy and Bess (lyrics by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin), An American in Paris and Rhapsody in Blue. ; 2002 – Elaine Stritch at Liberty – But Not For Me ; 2002 – Back from Broadway – one-time concert featuring songs by George Gershwin ; 2010 – Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin – two incomplete pieces by Gershwin finished by Brian Wilson and 12 other reimagined Gershwin classics ",
"score": "1.4494064"
}
] | [
"Gary Carpenter (composer)\nThe One Alone (1987), verse drama by Iris Murdoch ",
"Dominic Chad\nComposed alone Composed with Paul Draper (and others) ",
"Alone Together (1932 song)\n \"Alone Together\" is a song composed by Arthur Schwartz with lyrics by Howard Dietz. It was introduced in the Broadway musical Flying Colors in 1932 by Jean Sargent. The song soon became a hit, with Leo Reisman and His Orchestra's 1932 recording (vocal by Frank Luther) being the first to reach the charts. It has become a jazz standard. The first jazz musician to record the song was Artie Shaw in 1939.",
"Alone Together (Clare Fischer album)\n Alone Together is a studio album by American composer/arranger/pianist Clare Fischer, recorded in October 1975 and released in 1977 on the German label, MPS, and in the US by Discovery Records in 1980 (catalogue number DS 820). Its 1997 reissue on CD accompanied a volume created by pianist, composer and educator Bill Dobbins, containing transcriptions of four of Alone Together 's tracks and five from Fischer's 1995 solo piano CD, Just Me, and described by saxophonist and longtime Fischer colleague Gary Foster as \"among the very best materials published in the field of jazz pedagogy.\" Of the 1975 recording, Dobbins wrote: \"If I had to make a list of the ten most important solo jazz piano recordings of all time, this recording would definitely be on the list.\"",
"Alone (i-Ten song)\n \"Alone\" is a song composed by Billy Steinberg and Tom Kelly, who recorded it under the name i-Ten on their 1983 album Taking a Cold Look. It was later recorded by actress Valerie Stevenson and actor John Stamos on the original soundtrack of the CBS sitcom Dreams in 1984. American rock band Heart covered it on their 1987 album Bad Animals, and this version reached number one in the US and Canada. In 2007 Celine Dion recorded it for her album Taking Chances. In 2010 Alyssa Reid used the music and lyrics for the chorus of her song Alone Again.",
"Alone. (2014 film)\n Lucashenko challenged Hilbert with actualizing the project in November. The two had previously collaborated on the creation of an original score for Hilbert's 2011 film Ikland, which Hilbert had assembled from footage shot in a similarly spontaneous way. Hilbert was tasked with fulfilling the project concept, using material selected by Lucashenko, and subsequently assumed producing responsibilities as he finished the film.",
"Alone, Again\n Alone, Again is a solo piano album by Paul Bley, recorded in Norway in 1974 and released on Bley's own Improvising Artists label in 1975.",
"Alone, Again\nPaul Bley - piano ",
"Henry Geehl\n for piano and violin, Suite espagnole, Comedy Overture, In Fairyland, On the Cornish Coast, Rhapsody for band, Prince Charlie – 1745, piano pieces and songs. His song \"For You Alone\" (\"Für dich allein\"; words by P. J. O'Reilly) achieved great popularity, being recorded by Enrico Caruso, Lauritz Melchior, Jussi Björling and Mario Lanza, among others. Eleanor Steber's rendition of \"For You Alone\" can be seen on this YouTube video. (It has been claimed that \"For You Alone\" was the only song ever sung in English by Caruso but that is contradicted by other evidence, such as his recording of George M. Cohan's \"Over There\"). Henry Geehl also wrote some ",
"George Posford\n added \"Mine Alone\", composed by Manning Sherwin, which outlived the show. Posford and Harry Parr-Davies composed Full Swing (1940), starring Cicely Courtneidge and Jack Hulbert, which had 468 performances during the London blitz. Posford wrote a number of wartime revues for the duo. During World War II, he was in the Royal Corps of Signals and the London Fire Service. He was subsequently involved in the Overseas Recorded Broadcasting Service. After the war, Posford co-composed Evangeline (1946) with Harry Jacobson. Starring Frances Day, this was a reworking by Maschwitz of James Laver's Nymph Errant. In 1951, Posford was again in collaboration with Maschwitz, writing ",
"Jean Lenoir (composer)\nAlone (1931) ; My Aunt from Honfleur (1931) ; Moonlight (1932) ; The Three Musketeers (1932) ; The Crisis is Over (1934) ; Miquette (1934) ; Gold in the Street (1934) ; Second Bureau (1935) ; Veille d'armes (1935) ; Women's Prison (1938) ; The Chess Player (1938) ; Dorothy Looks for Love (1945) ; Night Warning (1946) ; Midnight in Paris (2011) (Instrumental) ",
"No One Is Alone (song)\n During the show's tryouts at the Old Globe theatre, this song was absent. The LA Times recounts: \"At that point, there was simply a spot in the 'Woods' script that said 'quartet for Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, Baker and Jack.' During intermission at a Wednesday evening performance, Sondheim showed up with 'No One Is Alone.' He played it for the cast after the show that night, and it was part of the score by Friday. The next day Sondheim and Lapine left for New York.\" There was initially an issue over whether the song had been inspired by a preexisting poem. James Lapine explained to LA Weekly that he killed ",
"Left Alone (song)\n This is one of seven songs written by or co-written by Holiday that she never recorded. Mal Waldron began working as pianist for Holiday in mid-1953. Holiday had intended to record the song a number of times but \"always forget the damned sheet music.\" However, Waldron himself recorded the song on his 1959 album Left Alone, and near the end of the LP discusses the origin of the song.",
"Fugue\n composer John Williams includes a fugue in his score for the 1990 film, Home Alone, at the point where Kevin, accidentally left at home by his family, and realizing he is about to be attacked by a pair of bumbling burglars, begins to plan his elaborate defenses. Another fugue occurs at a similar point in the 1992 sequel film, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York. The jazz composer and film composer, Michel Legrand, includes a fugue as the climax of his score (a classical theme with variations, and fugue) for Joseph Losey's 1972 film The Go-Between, based on the 1953 novel by British novelist, L.P. Hartley.",
"He Knows You're Alone\n The original music score was composed by Alexander and Mark Peskanov.",
"Red Alone\n Red Alone is a solo piano album by jazz musician Red Garland, recorded in 1960 and released the same year on Prestige Records, originally as part of the Moodsville series.",
"Alone (Bill Evans album)\n Alone is an album by jazz musician Bill Evans, recorded in late 1968 for Verve Records. The year of release is unclear, even though a release in the first months of 1970 is a strong possibility. The Grammy Award-winning Alone was Bill Evans' first single piano solo album following in the footsteps of his 1963 Verve session Conversations with Myself (three pianos overdubbed) and his 1967 Further Conversations with Myself, also on Verve (two pianos overdubbed). It has been reissued in various forms with additional tracks and alternate takes from sessions on September 23, October 8 and 21st.",
"Alone in the Dark (2008 video game)\n The music in Alone in the Dark is scored by Olivier Deriviere. It includes the female choir The Mystery of Bulgarian Voices. Derivière did not use a live orchestra; instead, he used virtual instruments and samplers to create a realistic orchestral sound. The official soundtrack album by Derivière and Voices is available for purchase digitally and in audio CD format.",
"No One Is Alone (song)\n \"No One Is Alone\" is a song by Stephen Sondheim from the musical Into the Woods, performed toward the end of Act II as the piece's penultimate number.",
"List of compositions by George Gershwin\n Gershwin Alone – one-man play by Hershey Felder, who portrayed Gershwin, incorporating \"Swanee\" from Sinbad (lyrics by Irving Caesar), \"Embraceable You\" from Girl Crazy (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Someone to Watch Over Me\" from Oh, Kay! (lyrics by Ira Gershwin), \"Bess, You is My Woman Now\" from Porgy and Bess (lyrics by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin), An American in Paris and Rhapsody in Blue. ; 2002 – Elaine Stritch at Liberty – But Not For Me ; 2002 – Back from Broadway – one-time concert featuring songs by George Gershwin ; 2010 – Brian Wilson Reimagines Gershwin – two incomplete pieces by Gershwin finished by Brian Wilson and 12 other reimagined Gershwin classics "
] |
What sport does Guyana women's national field hockey team play? | [
"field hockey",
"hockey"
] | sport | Guyana women's national field hockey team | 1,111,661 | 85 | [
{
"id": "8100909",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2010 – 5th place ; 2014 – 6th place ; 2018 – 7th place ",
"score": "1.9560065"
},
{
"id": "8100908",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2013 – 8th place ",
"score": "1.9365549"
},
{
"id": "8100910",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2011 – ",
"score": "1.9132926"
},
{
"id": "8100907",
"title": "Guyana women's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national field hockey team represents Guyana in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"score": "1.9062688"
},
{
"id": "674706",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "1971 – 8th place ; 1975 – 7th place ; 1991 – 10th place ",
"score": "1.815131"
},
{
"id": "674705",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Guyana men's national field hockey team represents Guyana in men's international field hockey competitions. The team is controlled by the Guyana Hockey Board, the governing body for field hockey in Guyana.",
"score": "1.792299"
},
{
"id": "30707436",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " The team were three-time NACRA 7s champions in consecutive years from 2008, but dwindled due to lack of funding. The 2016 Olympics renewed interest in building the team.",
"score": "1.7620997"
},
{
"id": "674707",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "1993 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.7562034"
},
{
"id": "674708",
"title": "Guyana men's national field hockey team",
"text": "2015 – 4th place ",
"score": "1.748926"
},
{
"id": "8100896",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1987 – 4th place ; 1991 – 7th place ; 1995 – 5th place ; 1999 – 4th place ; 2003 – 6th place ; 2011 – 7th place ",
"score": "1.688628"
},
{
"id": "30707435",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national rugby union team represents Guyana in the sport of rugby union.",
"score": "1.6867461"
},
{
"id": "8100901",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "2012–13 – 25th place ; 2014–15 – 30th place ; 2016–17 – 33rd place ",
"score": "1.6646943"
},
{
"id": "8100900",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1998 – 7th place ; 2010 – 9th place ; 2014 – 10th place ",
"score": "1.6639855"
},
{
"id": "6408011",
"title": "Malaysia women's national field hockey team",
"text": " In 2010, the women's national team is invited to play in Malaysia Junior Hockey League as preparation match before the World Cup qualifier. The following season, the women's national team joined with Bandar Penawar Sports School to enter as a team in Division 2 of MHJL. The women's national hockey team create world record with 36–0 thrashing over Cambodia during a group match in 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Yangon. It is a new world record for the highest score in an international match, last held by Argentina after they defeated Peru 26–0 at the South American Women's Championships in Santiago, Chile, in 2003.",
"score": "1.6636176"
},
{
"id": "16437499",
"title": "Barbados women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1987 – 5th place ; 1991 – 8th place ; 2011 – 8th place ",
"score": "1.648818"
},
{
"id": "16437502",
"title": "Barbados women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1986 – ; 1993 – 4th place ; 1998 – 4th place ; 2002 – ; 2006 – ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.6457977"
},
{
"id": "30707438",
"title": "Guyana women's national rugby union team",
"text": " See Women's international rugby for information about the status of international games and match numbering",
"score": "1.6432154"
},
{
"id": "4690607",
"title": "Guyana women's national football team",
"text": " The Guyana women's national football team is controlled by the Guyana Football Federation. Although the former British colony is located in South America, it competes in CONCACAF.",
"score": "1.6432011"
},
{
"id": "8100898",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": "1986 – ; 1990 – ; 1993 – ; 2002 – ; 2006 – 4th place ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 4th place ; 2018 – ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"score": "1.6429329"
},
{
"id": "8100895",
"title": "Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team",
"text": " The Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team represents Trinidad and Tobago in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"score": "1.6399082"
}
] | [
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2010 – 5th place ; 2014 – 6th place ; 2018 – 7th place ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2013 – 8th place ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n2011 – ",
"Guyana women's national field hockey team\n The Guyana women's national field hockey team represents Guyana in women's international field hockey competitions.",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n1971 – 8th place ; 1975 – 7th place ; 1991 – 10th place ",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n The Guyana men's national field hockey team represents Guyana in men's international field hockey competitions. The team is controlled by the Guyana Hockey Board, the governing body for field hockey in Guyana.",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n The team were three-time NACRA 7s champions in consecutive years from 2008, but dwindled due to lack of funding. The 2016 Olympics renewed interest in building the team.",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n1993 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Guyana men's national field hockey team\n2015 – 4th place ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1987 – 4th place ; 1991 – 7th place ; 1995 – 5th place ; 1999 – 4th place ; 2003 – 6th place ; 2011 – 7th place ",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n The Guyana women's national rugby union team represents Guyana in the sport of rugby union.",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n2012–13 – 25th place ; 2014–15 – 30th place ; 2016–17 – 33rd place ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1998 – 7th place ; 2010 – 9th place ; 2014 – 10th place ",
"Malaysia women's national field hockey team\n In 2010, the women's national team is invited to play in Malaysia Junior Hockey League as preparation match before the World Cup qualifier. The following season, the women's national team joined with Bandar Penawar Sports School to enter as a team in Division 2 of MHJL. The women's national hockey team create world record with 36–0 thrashing over Cambodia during a group match in 2013 Southeast Asian Games, Yangon. It is a new world record for the highest score in an international match, last held by Argentina after they defeated Peru 26–0 at the South American Women's Championships in Santiago, Chile, in 2003.",
"Barbados women's national field hockey team\n1987 – 5th place ; 1991 – 8th place ; 2011 – 8th place ",
"Barbados women's national field hockey team\n1986 – ; 1993 – 4th place ; 1998 – 4th place ; 2002 – ; 2006 – ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 5th place ; 2018 – 4th place ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Guyana women's national rugby union team\n See Women's international rugby for information about the status of international games and match numbering",
"Guyana women's national football team\n The Guyana women's national football team is controlled by the Guyana Football Federation. Although the former British colony is located in South America, it competes in CONCACAF.",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n1986 – ; 1990 – ; 1993 – ; 2002 – ; 2006 – 4th place ; 2010 – ; 2014 – 4th place ; 2018 – ; 2022 – Qualified ",
"Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team\n The Trinidad and Tobago women's national field hockey team represents Trinidad and Tobago in women's international field hockey competitions."
] |
In what city was Anders Orvin born? | [
"Hattfjelldal"
] | place of birth | Anders K. Orvin | 2,603,928 | 50 | [
{
"id": "6992779",
"title": "Anders K. Orvin",
"text": " He was born at Hattfjelldal in Nordland, Norway. He was a son of Ole Tobias Olsen (1830–1924) and Christine Bernhardine Dahl (1855–1910). His father was a parish pastor in Nordland. Orvin finished his secondary education in 1909 and graduated cand.min. from the Royal Frederick University (now University of Oslo) in mineralogy in 1912. He mostly explored and worked at Spitsbergen, but had tenures in Siberia in 1914. As well as Spitsbergen his expeditions went to East Greenland and Bear Island. He served as operating manager of the molybdenite mines Ornehommen Molybdengruber 1915 to 1916 and at Dalen Gruber in Telemark from 1918 to 1921. He was hired in the Norwegian Polar Institute in 1928. He was acting managing director from 1945 to 1948. He served as sub-director until ",
"score": "1.9438579"
},
{
"id": "6992778",
"title": "Anders K. Orvin",
"text": " Anders Kristian Orvin (24 October 1889 – 2 October 1980) was a Norwegian geologist and explorer.",
"score": "1.7525104"
},
{
"id": "32343334",
"title": "Glenn Anders",
"text": " Glenn Anders was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of a Swedish immigrant father. He attended the Wallace dramatic school in California, and began his career performing in vaudeville on the Orpheum circuit. He arrived in New York City in 1919 and attended Columbia University from 1919 until 1921.",
"score": "1.631062"
},
{
"id": "9139634",
"title": "Edvin Öhrström",
"text": " Karl Edvin Öhrström (August 22, 1906 in Burlöv – December 2, 1994) was a Swedish sculptor and glass artist. Öhrström grew up in Halmstad, where his father worked at the railroad. He started to work as a railroad worker, he trained to become an art teacher at Tekniska skolan (current Konstfack) in Stockholm 1925–1928, and at the sculptural department at the Royal University College of Fine Arts 1928–1931, with Carl Milles and Nils Sjögren as teachers. In 1932, in Paris, France. From 1932 to 1957, he worked two months per year at Orrefors Glasbruk in Småland. He often used the ariel technique, which he had invented together ",
"score": "1.6267654"
},
{
"id": "6992780",
"title": "Anders K. Orvin",
"text": " managing director from 1958 to 1961. He took his dr.philos. degree in 1934 on the thesis Geology of the Kings Bay Region, Spitsbergen. Among his other writings are Geology of Bear Island (1928, with Gunnar Horn) and Outline of the Geological History of Spitsbergen (1940). After the war he wrote The place-names of Jan Mayen (1960). He was a fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters from 1952, was made a Knight, First Class of Order of St. Olav in 1960 and a Knight of the Order of the Polar Star. He died during 1980 and was buried in the cemetery at Vestre Aker Church in Oslo. The Orvin Mountains in Queen Maud Land in Antarctica and Orvin Land in Svalbard are named after him.",
"score": "1.6181982"
},
{
"id": "10176079",
"title": "Anders Odden",
"text": " Anders was born in Stavanger. He moved to Fredrikstad and then to Råde sometime during his childhood, where he grew up without any TV and listened to his father's collection of classical music. He was unaware of rock music until the age of 7 when he discovered Kiss and devoted his life to music.",
"score": "1.6144292"
},
{
"id": "6995395",
"title": "Fredrik Ording",
"text": " He enrolled as a student in 1888, and worked as a teacher at various schools in Kristiania between 1893 and 1901. From 1899 to 1900 he lived in Stockholm, working as the private teacher for Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden and Norway. He later tutored Gustaf Adolf in Kristiania, in the springs of 1903 and 1904. He studied in Germany in 1895 and in England in 1901, 1905 and 1906. Between 1902 and 1904 he worked at Bjølsen School, Nissen's School and Kristiania Teacher's College. He was the manager of the two latter institutions from 1904 to 1912, and in August 1912 he was hired as acting rector of Holmestrand Teacher's College. Ording was a member of Holmestrand city council from 1916 to 1924, serving as mayor from 1919. ",
"score": "1.5941572"
},
{
"id": "28279412",
"title": "Anders Buen",
"text": " Buen was born in Gransherad as the son of farmer Jon Olsen Buen (1823–1906) and his wife Aslaug Olsdatter (1826–1906). He finished primary school, and attended a secondary school in Vang, Hedmark for two years, before entering apprenticeship as a book printer at W.C. Fabritius in Kristiania in 1879. He then educated himself, and worked, as a typographer.",
"score": "1.579699"
},
{
"id": "32900531",
"title": "Ernst Orvil",
"text": " Ernst Richard Orvil was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. His parents Johan Nilsen (Rev. Nilsson) (1859-1957) and Sara-Lisa Pettersson (1864-1940), were both from Värmland, Sweden. He graduated artium at the Kristiania cathedral school in 1917. Later he was an engineering student at the Norwegian Institute of Technology in Trondheim. He made his literary debut with the novel Birger in 1932, followed by six annual releases in this same genre. His first poetry collection was Bølgeslag (1940). His more notable works include Menneskebråk (1936), Hvit ur (1937) and Synøve selv (1946). Orvil was awarded Gyldendal's Endowment in 1946. He received the Aschehoug Prize in 1979. He was awarded the Riksmål Society Literature Prize in 1984.",
"score": "1.5795307"
},
{
"id": "29315836",
"title": "Anders Buraas",
"text": " He was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. He was a son of editor and attorney Carl Ludvig Buraas (1870–1933) and Dagny von Tangen (1874–1936). He finished his secondary education at Oslo Commerce School (Oslo handelsgymnasium) in 1933, and was hired as an office clerk in the newspaper Aftenposten. He remained here until 1941, when he had to flee to Sweden because he was involved in Norwegian resistance movement to the German occupation of Norway which had started in 1940. He worked in the press office of the Norwegian legation in Stockholm before being transferred to London, where the Norwegian government-in-exile sat. In 1945, after the liberation ",
"score": "1.5712655"
},
{
"id": "5535812",
"title": "Merry Anders",
"text": " Anders was born in Chicago in 1934, the only child of Charles, a contractor, and Helen Anderson. Anders was of German, Irish and Swedish descent. In 1949, Anders and her mother visited Los Angeles for two weeks. They decided to remain in Los Angeles permanently while Charles Anderson remained in Chicago. While she was a student at John Burroughs Middle School, Anders met former actress Rita Leroy who encouraged her to begin a modeling career. While working as a junior model, Anders began studying acting at the Ben Bard Playhouse. It was there that a talent scout from 20th Century Fox spotted her and signed her to a film contract in 1951.",
"score": "1.570575"
},
{
"id": "315807",
"title": "Arne Ording",
"text": " Ording was born in Kristiania as a son of theology professor Johannes Ording (1869–1929) and Fredrikke Ording (1874–1966). He was a maternal great-grandson of Andreas Hauge, a nephew of educator and politician Fredrik Ording and theologian Hans Nielsen Hauge Ording, a first cousin of actor Jørn Ording and a second cousin of Aake Anker Ording. He took his examen artium in 1916, and subsequently enrolled at the Royal Frederick University. In 1921 he joined the group around the periodical Mot Dag, and when Mot Dag was formalized as an organization, Ording became one of the prominent members. Mot Dag was a revolutionary socialist group, and had a goal of attracting an elite of intellectuals. Ording was ",
"score": "1.5609176"
},
{
"id": "3638981",
"title": "Anders Parker",
"text": " Anders Parker is a first-generation Swedish American. He was born circa 1970 and grew up in Upstate New York, in the Hudson Valley, in a musical family. His father lived in Vermont. In the 1990s Anders moved briefly to Portland, Oregon. He spent some time in North Carolina where he lived with Matt Brown, founder of Bladen County Records, and worked in a bar. He then moved back up north with his one-eyed dog Oly. In 1996 he performed at the NXNE Festival in Toronto, and later he performed and recorded with the band Varnaline. Parker lived for some time in New York City. In 2008 he moved to Burlington, Vermont, where he lived with his wife as of 2014. In 2016 he had been living in the town of Alert, Nunavut in the Canadian Arctic – the northernmost permanently inhabited place in the world, located 508 miles from the North Pole. <!-- Temporarily commenting out... needs to be reworked...",
"score": "1.5580971"
},
{
"id": "26887814",
"title": "Evin Ahmad",
"text": " Elvin Ahmad was born on 8 June 1990 in Stockholm, Sweden. Her parents are Kurds. Her father is an actor from Sulaymaniyah in Iraq and her mother is from Afrin in Syria. She grew up in Akalla, Stockholm where she lived for 22 years.",
"score": "1.5568812"
},
{
"id": "255410",
"title": "Anders Linder",
"text": " Anders Hjalmar Linder (born 27 August 1941 in Solna, Sweden) is a Swedish actor and jazz musician. His father is Erik Hjalmar Linder and his son is Olle Linder. He is mainly known from the children's programs Ville, Valle och Viktor, Vintergatan, Björnes magasin and Kapten Zoom. Linder is a trained architect from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, but only worked half-time as an architect for two years before his stage career took over entirely.",
"score": "1.550242"
},
{
"id": "15019465",
"title": "Olav Gurvin",
"text": " Gurvin was born in Tysnes as the son of teacher Elling Olson Gurvin and Kristina Olsdatter Flugem. He married Dagny Siqveland in 1947.",
"score": "1.5455506"
},
{
"id": "26215691",
"title": "Reidar Kjellberg",
"text": " Anders Reidar Kjellberg was born in Fredrikstad in Østfold county, Norway. Kjellberg took his final exams in 1924 and began studying theology. However, he soon found out that he was more interested in the history of science, art history and literary history. In 1934 he took a master's degree in art history at the University of Oslo. In 1934, he was hired as an assistant keeper at the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History (Norsk Folkemuseum), a large open-air museum located on Bygdøy in the Frogner borough of Oslo. He was promoted to deputy director in 1940. He became Director of the museum in 1947 as a replacement for the founding director, Hans Aall ",
"score": "1.5413082"
},
{
"id": "3562813",
"title": "Anders Nelsson",
"text": " Nelsson was born in California, USA, to Swedish missionaries. His family moved to Hong Kong in 1950 when he was 4 years old. He studied at King George V School between 1958 and 1965. Older kids in KGV allowed him to play in their bands in school hall. They played on Friday afternoons",
"score": "1.5360419"
},
{
"id": "14451521",
"title": "Anders Holm",
"text": " Holm was born the youngest of three boys on May 29, 1981, in Evanston, Illinois, His brothers are Olen (born 1975) and Erik (born 1976). He graduated from Evanston Township High School. In 2003, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a bachelor's degree in history. He was a member of the university's swim team. Holm studied at the Second City Conservatory in Los Angeles.",
"score": "1.5308151"
},
{
"id": "26706414",
"title": "Erik Ortvad",
"text": " Erik Ortvad (born in Copenhagen, 18 June 1917; died in Kvänjarp, 28 February 2008) was a painter and a creator of many drawings. He debuted as a painter in 1935. He is mostly known for colorful surrealistic paintings. . He also created several hundred satiric drawings about the modern way of life under the pseudonym Enrico. In 1948 he was a founding member of the COBRA avant-garde art movement. He is represented in the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen. During the second world war he lived as a refugee in Sweden due to communist sympathies and a Jewish wife, and in 1962 he returned and settled in a croft in Kvänjarp, Ljungby Municipality, Småland, Sweden where he lived for the rest of his life.",
"score": "1.5305417"
}
] | [
"Anders K. Orvin\n He was born at Hattfjelldal in Nordland, Norway. He was a son of Ole Tobias Olsen (1830–1924) and Christine Bernhardine Dahl (1855–1910). His father was a parish pastor in Nordland. Orvin finished his secondary education in 1909 and graduated cand.min. from the Royal Frederick University (now University of Oslo) in mineralogy in 1912. He mostly explored and worked at Spitsbergen, but had tenures in Siberia in 1914. As well as Spitsbergen his expeditions went to East Greenland and Bear Island. He served as operating manager of the molybdenite mines Ornehommen Molybdengruber 1915 to 1916 and at Dalen Gruber in Telemark from 1918 to 1921. He was hired in the Norwegian Polar Institute in 1928. He was acting managing director from 1945 to 1948. He served as sub-director until ",
"Anders K. Orvin\n Anders Kristian Orvin (24 October 1889 – 2 October 1980) was a Norwegian geologist and explorer.",
"Glenn Anders\n Glenn Anders was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of a Swedish immigrant father. He attended the Wallace dramatic school in California, and began his career performing in vaudeville on the Orpheum circuit. He arrived in New York City in 1919 and attended Columbia University from 1919 until 1921.",
"Edvin Öhrström\n Karl Edvin Öhrström (August 22, 1906 in Burlöv – December 2, 1994) was a Swedish sculptor and glass artist. Öhrström grew up in Halmstad, where his father worked at the railroad. He started to work as a railroad worker, he trained to become an art teacher at Tekniska skolan (current Konstfack) in Stockholm 1925–1928, and at the sculptural department at the Royal University College of Fine Arts 1928–1931, with Carl Milles and Nils Sjögren as teachers. In 1932, in Paris, France. From 1932 to 1957, he worked two months per year at Orrefors Glasbruk in Småland. He often used the ariel technique, which he had invented together ",
"Anders K. Orvin\n managing director from 1958 to 1961. He took his dr.philos. degree in 1934 on the thesis Geology of the Kings Bay Region, Spitsbergen. Among his other writings are Geology of Bear Island (1928, with Gunnar Horn) and Outline of the Geological History of Spitsbergen (1940). After the war he wrote The place-names of Jan Mayen (1960). He was a fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters from 1952, was made a Knight, First Class of Order of St. Olav in 1960 and a Knight of the Order of the Polar Star. He died during 1980 and was buried in the cemetery at Vestre Aker Church in Oslo. The Orvin Mountains in Queen Maud Land in Antarctica and Orvin Land in Svalbard are named after him.",
"Anders Odden\n Anders was born in Stavanger. He moved to Fredrikstad and then to Råde sometime during his childhood, where he grew up without any TV and listened to his father's collection of classical music. He was unaware of rock music until the age of 7 when he discovered Kiss and devoted his life to music.",
"Fredrik Ording\n He enrolled as a student in 1888, and worked as a teacher at various schools in Kristiania between 1893 and 1901. From 1899 to 1900 he lived in Stockholm, working as the private teacher for Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden and Norway. He later tutored Gustaf Adolf in Kristiania, in the springs of 1903 and 1904. He studied in Germany in 1895 and in England in 1901, 1905 and 1906. Between 1902 and 1904 he worked at Bjølsen School, Nissen's School and Kristiania Teacher's College. He was the manager of the two latter institutions from 1904 to 1912, and in August 1912 he was hired as acting rector of Holmestrand Teacher's College. Ording was a member of Holmestrand city council from 1916 to 1924, serving as mayor from 1919. ",
"Anders Buen\n Buen was born in Gransherad as the son of farmer Jon Olsen Buen (1823–1906) and his wife Aslaug Olsdatter (1826–1906). He finished primary school, and attended a secondary school in Vang, Hedmark for two years, before entering apprenticeship as a book printer at W.C. Fabritius in Kristiania in 1879. He then educated himself, and worked, as a typographer.",
"Ernst Orvil\n Ernst Richard Orvil was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. His parents Johan Nilsen (Rev. Nilsson) (1859-1957) and Sara-Lisa Pettersson (1864-1940), were both from Värmland, Sweden. He graduated artium at the Kristiania cathedral school in 1917. Later he was an engineering student at the Norwegian Institute of Technology in Trondheim. He made his literary debut with the novel Birger in 1932, followed by six annual releases in this same genre. His first poetry collection was Bølgeslag (1940). His more notable works include Menneskebråk (1936), Hvit ur (1937) and Synøve selv (1946). Orvil was awarded Gyldendal's Endowment in 1946. He received the Aschehoug Prize in 1979. He was awarded the Riksmål Society Literature Prize in 1984.",
"Anders Buraas\n He was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway. He was a son of editor and attorney Carl Ludvig Buraas (1870–1933) and Dagny von Tangen (1874–1936). He finished his secondary education at Oslo Commerce School (Oslo handelsgymnasium) in 1933, and was hired as an office clerk in the newspaper Aftenposten. He remained here until 1941, when he had to flee to Sweden because he was involved in Norwegian resistance movement to the German occupation of Norway which had started in 1940. He worked in the press office of the Norwegian legation in Stockholm before being transferred to London, where the Norwegian government-in-exile sat. In 1945, after the liberation ",
"Merry Anders\n Anders was born in Chicago in 1934, the only child of Charles, a contractor, and Helen Anderson. Anders was of German, Irish and Swedish descent. In 1949, Anders and her mother visited Los Angeles for two weeks. They decided to remain in Los Angeles permanently while Charles Anderson remained in Chicago. While she was a student at John Burroughs Middle School, Anders met former actress Rita Leroy who encouraged her to begin a modeling career. While working as a junior model, Anders began studying acting at the Ben Bard Playhouse. It was there that a talent scout from 20th Century Fox spotted her and signed her to a film contract in 1951.",
"Arne Ording\n Ording was born in Kristiania as a son of theology professor Johannes Ording (1869–1929) and Fredrikke Ording (1874–1966). He was a maternal great-grandson of Andreas Hauge, a nephew of educator and politician Fredrik Ording and theologian Hans Nielsen Hauge Ording, a first cousin of actor Jørn Ording and a second cousin of Aake Anker Ording. He took his examen artium in 1916, and subsequently enrolled at the Royal Frederick University. In 1921 he joined the group around the periodical Mot Dag, and when Mot Dag was formalized as an organization, Ording became one of the prominent members. Mot Dag was a revolutionary socialist group, and had a goal of attracting an elite of intellectuals. Ording was ",
"Anders Parker\n Anders Parker is a first-generation Swedish American. He was born circa 1970 and grew up in Upstate New York, in the Hudson Valley, in a musical family. His father lived in Vermont. In the 1990s Anders moved briefly to Portland, Oregon. He spent some time in North Carolina where he lived with Matt Brown, founder of Bladen County Records, and worked in a bar. He then moved back up north with his one-eyed dog Oly. In 1996 he performed at the NXNE Festival in Toronto, and later he performed and recorded with the band Varnaline. Parker lived for some time in New York City. In 2008 he moved to Burlington, Vermont, where he lived with his wife as of 2014. In 2016 he had been living in the town of Alert, Nunavut in the Canadian Arctic – the northernmost permanently inhabited place in the world, located 508 miles from the North Pole. <!-- Temporarily commenting out... needs to be reworked...",
"Evin Ahmad\n Elvin Ahmad was born on 8 June 1990 in Stockholm, Sweden. Her parents are Kurds. Her father is an actor from Sulaymaniyah in Iraq and her mother is from Afrin in Syria. She grew up in Akalla, Stockholm where she lived for 22 years.",
"Anders Linder\n Anders Hjalmar Linder (born 27 August 1941 in Solna, Sweden) is a Swedish actor and jazz musician. His father is Erik Hjalmar Linder and his son is Olle Linder. He is mainly known from the children's programs Ville, Valle och Viktor, Vintergatan, Björnes magasin and Kapten Zoom. Linder is a trained architect from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, but only worked half-time as an architect for two years before his stage career took over entirely.",
"Olav Gurvin\n Gurvin was born in Tysnes as the son of teacher Elling Olson Gurvin and Kristina Olsdatter Flugem. He married Dagny Siqveland in 1947.",
"Reidar Kjellberg\n Anders Reidar Kjellberg was born in Fredrikstad in Østfold county, Norway. Kjellberg took his final exams in 1924 and began studying theology. However, he soon found out that he was more interested in the history of science, art history and literary history. In 1934 he took a master's degree in art history at the University of Oslo. In 1934, he was hired as an assistant keeper at the Norwegian Museum of Cultural History (Norsk Folkemuseum), a large open-air museum located on Bygdøy in the Frogner borough of Oslo. He was promoted to deputy director in 1940. He became Director of the museum in 1947 as a replacement for the founding director, Hans Aall ",
"Anders Nelsson\n Nelsson was born in California, USA, to Swedish missionaries. His family moved to Hong Kong in 1950 when he was 4 years old. He studied at King George V School between 1958 and 1965. Older kids in KGV allowed him to play in their bands in school hall. They played on Friday afternoons",
"Anders Holm\n Holm was born the youngest of three boys on May 29, 1981, in Evanston, Illinois, His brothers are Olen (born 1975) and Erik (born 1976). He graduated from Evanston Township High School. In 2003, he graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a bachelor's degree in history. He was a member of the university's swim team. Holm studied at the Second City Conservatory in Los Angeles.",
"Erik Ortvad\n Erik Ortvad (born in Copenhagen, 18 June 1917; died in Kvänjarp, 28 February 2008) was a painter and a creator of many drawings. He debuted as a painter in 1935. He is mostly known for colorful surrealistic paintings. . He also created several hundred satiric drawings about the modern way of life under the pseudonym Enrico. In 1948 he was a founding member of the COBRA avant-garde art movement. He is represented in the Museum of Modern Art in New York City and Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen. During the second world war he lived as a refugee in Sweden due to communist sympathies and a Jewish wife, and in 1962 he returned and settled in a croft in Kvänjarp, Ljungby Municipality, Småland, Sweden where he lived for the rest of his life."
] |
What is Louis O'Dea's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | Louis O'Dea | 5,022,237 | 52 | [
{
"id": "2756389",
"title": "Louis O'Dea",
"text": " Louis Edward O'Dea (died 19 February 1955) was an Irish politician and solicitor. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann as a Sinn Féin Teachta Dála (TD) for the Galway constituency at the 1923 general election. He did not take his seat in the Dáil due to Sinn Féin's abstentionist policy. He did not contest June 1927 general election. In 1944 as a member of Fianna Fáil, he was elected to the 5th Seanad on the Cultural and Educational Panel.",
"score": "1.64802"
},
{
"id": "5691977",
"title": "Denis O'Dea",
"text": " Denis O'Dea (26 April 1905 – 5 November 1978) was an Irish stage and film actor. He was born in Dublin and attended Synge Street CBS. When very young he and his mother Kathleen (from County Kerry) moved in with her sister, who kept a boarding house at 54 South Richmond Street. He worked in insurance until taking up acting. O'Dea was a leading member of Dublin's Abbey Theatre where he had a great acting career from 1929 to 1953; a list of his performances can be found in the Abbey archives. He also appeared in numerous plays by Irish playwright Teresa Deevy, some of which toured New York and England. His work led to a number of notable film roles, including two ",
"score": "1.4196502"
},
{
"id": "7947012",
"title": "Louis DaPron",
"text": " Louis Francis DaPron (February 13, 1913, in Indiana – July 21, 1987, in Agoura, California) was an American dancer, choreographer and dance instructor. He worked often with tap dancer Donald O'Connor.",
"score": "1.4007812"
},
{
"id": "7926549",
"title": "O'Dea",
"text": "Addison O'Dea – Documentary filmmaker ; Ann O'Dea – Irish journalist and businesswoman ; Ben O'Dea – New Zealand beach volleyball player ; Bob (Robert John) O'Dea – New Zealand rugby union player ; Brian O'Dea – Canadian smuggler and author ; Chris O'Dea – American documentary filmmaker. ; Cornelius (Connor) O'Dea, Bishop of Limerick (Appointed 1400; resigned 1426). ; Danny O'Dea – British actor ; Darrell O'Dea – Canadian musician and recording engineer ; Darren O'Dea – Soccer manager and retired Irish footballer. ; Denis O'Dea – Actor and father of Donnacha, below. ; Donnacha O'Dea – Olympic swimmer and professional poker player. ; Ebony O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Edward John O'Dea (1856–1932), Bishop of dioceses Nesqually and ",
"score": "1.3967128"
},
{
"id": "12671234",
"title": "Louis O'Neill (politician)",
"text": " Louis O'Neill (April 25, 1925 – October 23, 2018) was a Canadian university professor, writer, priest and politician. O'Neill was a member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1976–1981 and held two cabinet posts.",
"score": "1.3880401"
},
{
"id": "2042584",
"title": "Darren O'Dea",
"text": " Darren O'Dea (born 4 February 1987) is an Irish retired professional football player, who is currently the manager of Celtic under-18s. O'Dea has played as a centre back for clubs in Scotland, England, Canada, Ukraine and India, and represented the Republic of Ireland internationally. O'Dea began his career on the youth team of Celtic, with whom he played from 2006 to 2012. During his time on Celtic, he was loaned to Reading, Ipswich Town and Leeds United. While playing for Leeds, O'Dea won the Ireland Young International Player of the Year Award. For more first-team opportunities he switched clubs and countries, joining Toronto FC of Major League ",
"score": "1.3867407"
},
{
"id": "12432112",
"title": "John R. O'Dea",
"text": " John Roche O'Dea (April 17, 1915 – 1998) was a business owner and politician in Newfoundland. He represented St. John's South from 1959 to 1962 in the Newfoundland House of Assembly as a member of the United Newfoundland Party.",
"score": "1.3752272"
},
{
"id": "10174625",
"title": "Paul O'Dea (hurler)",
"text": " Paul O'Dea (born 1996) is an Irish hurler who plays for Dublin Senior Championship club Na Fianna and at inter-county level with the Dublin senior hurling team. He usually lines out at wing-back.",
"score": "1.3747898"
},
{
"id": "28686343",
"title": "Patrick Louis",
"text": " Patrick Louis (born 22 October 1955, Vitry-le-François) is a French politician who served as a Member of the European Parliament for the south-east of France. He is a member of the Movement for France, which is part of the Independence and Democracy group, and sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Transport and Tourism. He was also a substitute for the Committee on International Trade and a member of the delegations for relations with the Gulf States, including Yemen, for relations with the Mashreq countries, and to the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly.",
"score": "1.3724315"
},
{
"id": "29655328",
"title": "Donnacha O'Dea",
"text": " Donnacha \"The Don\" O'Dea (born 30 August 1948) is an Irish professional poker player. In his youth, he was a swimmer, and represented Ireland in the 1968 Olympics. He was also the first Irish swimmer to swim 100m in less than one minute. His parents were actors Denis O'Dea and Siobhán McKenna.",
"score": "1.361274"
},
{
"id": "32657314",
"title": "Ernest Charles O'Dea",
"text": " O'Dea was born in Armidale in 1889 and moved to Sydney with his family as a child.",
"score": "1.3582382"
},
{
"id": "28327465",
"title": "Willie O'Dea",
"text": " O'Dea was born in Limerick in 1952, but he was raised in Kilteely, County Limerick. He was educated at the Patrician Brothers College in Ballyfin, County Laois, and University College Dublin where he studied law. He qualified as a barrister at King's Inns, Dublin and as an accountant from the Institute of Certified Accountants. He worked as both a barrister and as an accountant before embarking on a career in politics. He also lectured in the law faculties of both University College Dublin and the National Institute of Higher Education, Limerick (now the University of Limerick). As a lecturer, he taught future cabinet colleague and Taoiseach Brian Cowen. O'Dea is married to Geraldine Kennedy. He writes regularly for the Sunday Independent and occasionally for other national newspapers.",
"score": "1.3564457"
},
{
"id": "32657313",
"title": "Ernest Charles O'Dea",
"text": " Ernest Charles O'Dea (19 February 1889 – 21 November 1976) was an Australian trade union official, Labor Party politician, Lord Mayor of Sydney and Member of the New South Wales Parliament.",
"score": "1.3426917"
},
{
"id": "10372424",
"title": "Ah Louis",
"text": " On Wong (1840 – December 16, 1936), more commonly known as Ah Louis, was a Chinese American banker, labor contractor, farmer, and shopkeeper in San Luis Obispo, California, during the late 19th and early 20th century. His Ah Louis Store building is on the National Register of Historic Places. Ah Louis was a central figure in the development of the Central Coast of California, serving as an organizer of Chinese laborers during the construction of the Pacific Coast Railway's Avila—Port Harford spur and the tunnels through Cuesta Grade over the Santa Lucia Range.",
"score": "1.3327447"
},
{
"id": "28327470",
"title": "Willie O'Dea",
"text": " O'Dea is highly identified with his native Limerick. Three main issues have dominated his recent pronouncements on Limerick: Shannon Airport, Dell and gangland crime. In August 2007, he broke ranks with cabinet colleagues to speak out against Aer Lingus's decision to cease London Heathrow Airport flights from Shannon. In December 2008, O'Dea and Tánaiste Mary Coughlan flew to Dell's Corporate HQ in Texas, in a last-ditch and ultimately futile attempt to stop the closure of Dell's manufacturing plant in Raheen, Limerick. Manufacturing was moved to Poland, with the loss of about two thirds of the jobs at Dell's Limerick operation. The ",
"score": "1.3242693"
},
{
"id": "25521860",
"title": "Louis Cullen",
"text": " Louis Michael Cullen (born 1932) is an Irish diplomat, academic, historian, author and Japanologist. He is Professor of Modern Irish History at Trinity College in Dublin. Nicholas Canny has described him as \"the most prolific, most wide-ranging, and the most enterprising historian of his generation in Ireland.\"",
"score": "1.3200536"
},
{
"id": "7926551",
"title": "O'Dea",
"text": " Luke O'Dea – Australian soccer player ; Mark O'Dea – British television presenter ; Michael O'Dea (Irish politician) – Irish Senator from 1922 to 1925. ; Michael O'Dea (Australian politician) ; Mick O'Dea – Irish painter ; Pat O'Dea – Australian and American football player and coach. ; Patrick O'Dea – New Zealand public servant ; Paul O'Dea – American professional basketball player. ; Stephanie O'Dea – American food writer and blogger ; Steve O'Dea – Australian rugby league football player ; Terry O'Dea – Australian darts player ; Thomas O'Dea (1858–1923), Bishop of Clonfert, Galway, and Kilmacduagh. ; Tom O'Dea – American attorney and Connecticut state politician ; Trent O'Dea – Australian volleyball player ; Willie O'Dea – Irish politician. ",
"score": "1.3179139"
},
{
"id": "10957852",
"title": "Louis O'Neill",
"text": " Louis O’Neill attended Hunter College High School in Manhattan and earned a bachelor's degree with Distinction from Stanford University, where he was Co-Captain of the Stanford Cycling Team, leading it to 3rd place in National Competition. Later he completed a master's degree at Stanford's Center for Russian and East European Studies and graduated cum laude from the Harvard Law School.",
"score": "1.315423"
},
{
"id": "7926550",
"title": "O'Dea",
"text": " ; Ernest Charles O'Dea – Australian politician and union official ; Fabian O'Dea – Former Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland, Canada. ; Jane Skiles O'Dea – US Navy officer ; Jim O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Jimmy O'Dea – Actor, comedian. ; John O'Dea – Union Army soldier during the American civil war ; John R. O'Dea – Canadian businessman and politician ; Jonathan O'Dea – Australian politician ; Judith O'Dea – Hollywood actress. ; Ken O'Dea – American baseball player ; Kevin O'Dea – American football coach. ; Larry O'Dea – Australian wrestler and promoter ; Louis O'Dea – Irish politician elected to Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann between 1923 and 1944. ; Luke O'Dea – Irish rugby player. ",
"score": "1.3111968"
},
{
"id": "10972965",
"title": "Pat O'Dea",
"text": " O'Dea was born in Kilmore, Victoria, Australia to an Irish-born father and a Victorian-born mother. He was the third child of seven children. As a child he attended Christian Brothers College and Xavier College. As a 16-year-old he received a bronze medallion from the Royal Humane Society of Australasia for rescuing a woman at Mordialloc beach.",
"score": "1.3105953"
}
] | [
"Louis O'Dea\n Louis Edward O'Dea (died 19 February 1955) was an Irish politician and solicitor. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann as a Sinn Féin Teachta Dála (TD) for the Galway constituency at the 1923 general election. He did not take his seat in the Dáil due to Sinn Féin's abstentionist policy. He did not contest June 1927 general election. In 1944 as a member of Fianna Fáil, he was elected to the 5th Seanad on the Cultural and Educational Panel.",
"Denis O'Dea\n Denis O'Dea (26 April 1905 – 5 November 1978) was an Irish stage and film actor. He was born in Dublin and attended Synge Street CBS. When very young he and his mother Kathleen (from County Kerry) moved in with her sister, who kept a boarding house at 54 South Richmond Street. He worked in insurance until taking up acting. O'Dea was a leading member of Dublin's Abbey Theatre where he had a great acting career from 1929 to 1953; a list of his performances can be found in the Abbey archives. He also appeared in numerous plays by Irish playwright Teresa Deevy, some of which toured New York and England. His work led to a number of notable film roles, including two ",
"Louis DaPron\n Louis Francis DaPron (February 13, 1913, in Indiana – July 21, 1987, in Agoura, California) was an American dancer, choreographer and dance instructor. He worked often with tap dancer Donald O'Connor.",
"O'Dea\nAddison O'Dea – Documentary filmmaker ; Ann O'Dea – Irish journalist and businesswoman ; Ben O'Dea – New Zealand beach volleyball player ; Bob (Robert John) O'Dea – New Zealand rugby union player ; Brian O'Dea – Canadian smuggler and author ; Chris O'Dea – American documentary filmmaker. ; Cornelius (Connor) O'Dea, Bishop of Limerick (Appointed 1400; resigned 1426). ; Danny O'Dea – British actor ; Darrell O'Dea – Canadian musician and recording engineer ; Darren O'Dea – Soccer manager and retired Irish footballer. ; Denis O'Dea – Actor and father of Donnacha, below. ; Donnacha O'Dea – Olympic swimmer and professional poker player. ; Ebony O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Edward John O'Dea (1856–1932), Bishop of dioceses Nesqually and ",
"Louis O'Neill (politician)\n Louis O'Neill (April 25, 1925 – October 23, 2018) was a Canadian university professor, writer, priest and politician. O'Neill was a member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1976–1981 and held two cabinet posts.",
"Darren O'Dea\n Darren O'Dea (born 4 February 1987) is an Irish retired professional football player, who is currently the manager of Celtic under-18s. O'Dea has played as a centre back for clubs in Scotland, England, Canada, Ukraine and India, and represented the Republic of Ireland internationally. O'Dea began his career on the youth team of Celtic, with whom he played from 2006 to 2012. During his time on Celtic, he was loaned to Reading, Ipswich Town and Leeds United. While playing for Leeds, O'Dea won the Ireland Young International Player of the Year Award. For more first-team opportunities he switched clubs and countries, joining Toronto FC of Major League ",
"John R. O'Dea\n John Roche O'Dea (April 17, 1915 – 1998) was a business owner and politician in Newfoundland. He represented St. John's South from 1959 to 1962 in the Newfoundland House of Assembly as a member of the United Newfoundland Party.",
"Paul O'Dea (hurler)\n Paul O'Dea (born 1996) is an Irish hurler who plays for Dublin Senior Championship club Na Fianna and at inter-county level with the Dublin senior hurling team. He usually lines out at wing-back.",
"Patrick Louis\n Patrick Louis (born 22 October 1955, Vitry-le-François) is a French politician who served as a Member of the European Parliament for the south-east of France. He is a member of the Movement for France, which is part of the Independence and Democracy group, and sat on the European Parliament's Committee on Transport and Tourism. He was also a substitute for the Committee on International Trade and a member of the delegations for relations with the Gulf States, including Yemen, for relations with the Mashreq countries, and to the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly.",
"Donnacha O'Dea\n Donnacha \"The Don\" O'Dea (born 30 August 1948) is an Irish professional poker player. In his youth, he was a swimmer, and represented Ireland in the 1968 Olympics. He was also the first Irish swimmer to swim 100m in less than one minute. His parents were actors Denis O'Dea and Siobhán McKenna.",
"Ernest Charles O'Dea\n O'Dea was born in Armidale in 1889 and moved to Sydney with his family as a child.",
"Willie O'Dea\n O'Dea was born in Limerick in 1952, but he was raised in Kilteely, County Limerick. He was educated at the Patrician Brothers College in Ballyfin, County Laois, and University College Dublin where he studied law. He qualified as a barrister at King's Inns, Dublin and as an accountant from the Institute of Certified Accountants. He worked as both a barrister and as an accountant before embarking on a career in politics. He also lectured in the law faculties of both University College Dublin and the National Institute of Higher Education, Limerick (now the University of Limerick). As a lecturer, he taught future cabinet colleague and Taoiseach Brian Cowen. O'Dea is married to Geraldine Kennedy. He writes regularly for the Sunday Independent and occasionally for other national newspapers.",
"Ernest Charles O'Dea\n Ernest Charles O'Dea (19 February 1889 – 21 November 1976) was an Australian trade union official, Labor Party politician, Lord Mayor of Sydney and Member of the New South Wales Parliament.",
"Ah Louis\n On Wong (1840 – December 16, 1936), more commonly known as Ah Louis, was a Chinese American banker, labor contractor, farmer, and shopkeeper in San Luis Obispo, California, during the late 19th and early 20th century. His Ah Louis Store building is on the National Register of Historic Places. Ah Louis was a central figure in the development of the Central Coast of California, serving as an organizer of Chinese laborers during the construction of the Pacific Coast Railway's Avila—Port Harford spur and the tunnels through Cuesta Grade over the Santa Lucia Range.",
"Willie O'Dea\n O'Dea is highly identified with his native Limerick. Three main issues have dominated his recent pronouncements on Limerick: Shannon Airport, Dell and gangland crime. In August 2007, he broke ranks with cabinet colleagues to speak out against Aer Lingus's decision to cease London Heathrow Airport flights from Shannon. In December 2008, O'Dea and Tánaiste Mary Coughlan flew to Dell's Corporate HQ in Texas, in a last-ditch and ultimately futile attempt to stop the closure of Dell's manufacturing plant in Raheen, Limerick. Manufacturing was moved to Poland, with the loss of about two thirds of the jobs at Dell's Limerick operation. The ",
"Louis Cullen\n Louis Michael Cullen (born 1932) is an Irish diplomat, academic, historian, author and Japanologist. He is Professor of Modern Irish History at Trinity College in Dublin. Nicholas Canny has described him as \"the most prolific, most wide-ranging, and the most enterprising historian of his generation in Ireland.\"",
"O'Dea\n Luke O'Dea – Australian soccer player ; Mark O'Dea – British television presenter ; Michael O'Dea (Irish politician) – Irish Senator from 1922 to 1925. ; Michael O'Dea (Australian politician) ; Mick O'Dea – Irish painter ; Pat O'Dea – Australian and American football player and coach. ; Patrick O'Dea – New Zealand public servant ; Paul O'Dea – American professional basketball player. ; Stephanie O'Dea – American food writer and blogger ; Steve O'Dea – Australian rugby league football player ; Terry O'Dea – Australian darts player ; Thomas O'Dea (1858–1923), Bishop of Clonfert, Galway, and Kilmacduagh. ; Tom O'Dea – American attorney and Connecticut state politician ; Trent O'Dea – Australian volleyball player ; Willie O'Dea – Irish politician. ",
"Louis O'Neill\n Louis O’Neill attended Hunter College High School in Manhattan and earned a bachelor's degree with Distinction from Stanford University, where he was Co-Captain of the Stanford Cycling Team, leading it to 3rd place in National Competition. Later he completed a master's degree at Stanford's Center for Russian and East European Studies and graduated cum laude from the Harvard Law School.",
"O'Dea\n ; Ernest Charles O'Dea – Australian politician and union official ; Fabian O'Dea – Former Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland, Canada. ; Jane Skiles O'Dea – US Navy officer ; Jim O'Dea – Australian rules football player ; Jimmy O'Dea – Actor, comedian. ; John O'Dea – Union Army soldier during the American civil war ; John R. O'Dea – Canadian businessman and politician ; Jonathan O'Dea – Australian politician ; Judith O'Dea – Hollywood actress. ; Ken O'Dea – American baseball player ; Kevin O'Dea – American football coach. ; Larry O'Dea – Australian wrestler and promoter ; Louis O'Dea – Irish politician elected to Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann between 1923 and 1944. ; Luke O'Dea – Irish rugby player. ",
"Pat O'Dea\n O'Dea was born in Kilmore, Victoria, Australia to an Irish-born father and a Victorian-born mother. He was the third child of seven children. As a child he attended Christian Brothers College and Xavier College. As a 16-year-old he received a bronze medallion from the Royal Humane Society of Australasia for rescuing a woman at Mordialloc beach."
] |
What sport does 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final | 3,169,996 | 93 | [
{
"id": "129283",
"title": "2009 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Dnipro Stadium on May 31, 2009. The match was the 18th Ukrainian Cup final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Vorskla Poltava. The 2009 final was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Dnipropetrovsk. Vorskla Poltava, as Ukrainian Cup winners, qualified for the UEFA Europa League play-off round.",
"score": "1.8128573"
},
{
"id": "29190557",
"title": "2008 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2008 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Metalist Stadium on May 7, 2008. The match was the 17th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The 2008 Ukrainian Cup FInal was the first to be held outside of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won the match 2–0 through goals from Oleksandr Gladkiy and Oleksiy Gai. The match had five red cards issued, two to Dynamo players and three to Shakhtar players. The match also had six yellow cards (Gladkiy received two), four of which were given to Shakhtar players and two to Dynamo players. This was in part because of players' violent behavior and also because referee Victor Shvetsov made several misjudgments.",
"score": "1.7802248"
},
{
"id": "10894307",
"title": "2010 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2010 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played place at the Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, on 16 May 2010. The match was the 19th Ukrainian Cup final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Tavriya Simferopol. The final was the second time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Kharkiv. The Ukrainian Cup winners qualified for the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League play-off round. Tavriya played in their second cup final after last appearing in 1994, where the side lost to Chornomorets Odessa on penalty kicks (5–3) after the matched finished 0–0 after extra time. Metalurh Donetsk were playing in their first cup final.",
"score": "1.731604"
},
{
"id": "11047269",
"title": "2005 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2005 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 29 May 2005. The match was the 14th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final. The game was remembered for involving the most foreign players in the Ukrainian Cup finals: out of 36 players on both teams' rosters, 28 were from outside of Ukraine. Of the starting line-ups, there were five Brazilians, four Ukrainians, four Romanians, and others. Refereeing the match was a Norwegian team of referees.",
"score": "1.7118208"
},
{
"id": "27447311",
"title": "2009–10 Ukrainian Cup",
"text": " The Cup final was played on May 16, 2010.",
"score": "1.703119"
},
{
"id": "10813556",
"title": "2006 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2006 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Olympic NSC on 2 May 2006. The match was the 15th Ukrainian Cup final, and it was contested by Metalurh Zaporizhzhia and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final.",
"score": "1.6661054"
},
{
"id": "1186029",
"title": "2012 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2012 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Olimpiysky NSC, Kiev, on 6 May 2012. The match was the 21st Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time since 2007 that the Cup final had returned to Kiev. Since Shakhtar had qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League, Metalurh would qualify for the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Metalurh was selected as the home team.",
"score": "1.6547216"
},
{
"id": "11266952",
"title": "2004 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2004 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 30 May 2004. The match was the 13th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the cup final.",
"score": "1.650378"
},
{
"id": "1811300",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2011 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Yuvileiny Stadium, Sumy, on 25 May 2011. The match was the 20th Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was played in Sumy. Since this match was between two teams that had qualified for the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, the sixth-placed team in the 2010–11 Ukrainian Premier League season would qualify for the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Dynamo was selected as the home team. After a goalless first half, Shakhtar's superiority prevailed and they won the match 2–0, enabling them to win the Ukrainian treble of the Ukrainian Super Cup, the Premier League and the Ukrainian Cup.",
"score": "1.6467135"
},
{
"id": "33142129",
"title": "Cup of Ukrainian PFL 2009 (winter)",
"text": " ====Third Place Game ==== ====Final ====",
"score": "1.636206"
},
{
"id": "10894309",
"title": "2010 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " Tavriya had met Metalurh Donetsk previously in the Ukrainian Cup competition in the quarter-Final of the 2003–04 edition. In that match, Tavriya advanced on penalty kicks 10–9 after the score finished 1–1 after extra time.",
"score": "1.6320312"
},
{
"id": "1811303",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The match was broadcast on ICTV in Ukraine.",
"score": "1.6238455"
},
{
"id": "10096336",
"title": "2014 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The match was broadcast on Futbol 2 and Ukrayina in Ukraine.",
"score": "1.619653"
},
{
"id": "6159518",
"title": "2018 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2018 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that has been scheduled to be played on May 9, 2018 in Dnipro. This was the second time the cup final has been held in Dnipro. The match was the 27th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union.",
"score": "1.6120439"
},
{
"id": "27246699",
"title": "1997 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 25, 1997. The match was the 6th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by FC Shakhtar Donetsk and FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final was the fifth to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won by a single goal netted by Serhiy Atelkin in the 36th minute. There also were a couple of yellow cards issued at this game, both of them to Shakhtar players: Potskhveria and Hennadiy Orbu.",
"score": "1.6116922"
},
{
"id": "1811302",
"title": "2011 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " This was the sixth Ukrainian Cup final between the two teams. Dynamo had defeated Shakhtar three times out of the five Cup Finals. In the last final, however, in 2008, Shakhtar was victorious. The two teams also met in a semi final in 2008–09 and in the quarter-final in 2009–10 in which Shakhtar was victorious in both games. Dynamo had appeared in 11 finals, winning 9, while opponents Shakhtar had appeared in 10 finals, winning 6.",
"score": "1.6114191"
},
{
"id": "6159520",
"title": "2018 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The game between Shakhtar and Dynamo has become the main fixture of every season and received a nickname of Klasychne which means Classic. Before this game both teams met in a final of Ukrainian Cup nine times, the first being back in 2002. Games between the two clubs are known to be very intense and out of the nine previous meetings in the final, only two in 2003 and 2017 did not have red cards shown to players. There were total of 14 red cards shown with 13 in finals only. Before this final out of the previous nine Shakhtar won 4 games and Dynamo won ",
"score": "1.6097498"
},
{
"id": "2158938",
"title": "1998 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 31, 1998. The match was the 7th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by both Kyivan clubs FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC CSKA Kyiv. The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final was the seventh to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Dynamo won by two goals netted by Andriy Shevchenko on the 1st and 33rd minutes. CSKA managed to answer with a single tally from Novokhatsky on the 68th minute, which was scored on the rebound right after the missed penalty kick. Shovkovskyi managed to deflect the penalty kick from Oliynyk. There also were several yellow cards issued at this game, all of them to Army players: Semchuk, Hohil, and Kripak.",
"score": "1.6096284"
},
{
"id": "10209522",
"title": "2019 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The 2019 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that was played on May 15, 2019 in Zaporizhia between Shakhtar Donetsk and Inhulets Petrove. The match is the 28th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union. This is the first time the cup final would be held in Zaporizhia. If Inhulets win the cup, they will qualify to the group stage of 2019–20 UEFA Europa League, because Shakhtar have already qualified for 2019–20 UEFA Champions League. For Slavutych Arena this is the second time of hosting games of such level after hosting the 2010 Ukrainian Super Cup. This will be the first final of the Ukrainian Cup competitions that features a team from a second tier division.",
"score": "1.6083636"
},
{
"id": "10096334",
"title": "2014 Ukrainian Cup Final",
"text": " The final was originally to be played at Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, but was moved to Butovsky Vorskla Stadium in Poltava. Due to the May 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine, the Football Federation of Ukraine (FFU), after being advised to do so by the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, decided that the match would be played behind closed doors for security reasons. The decision to have no spectators at the match was met with criticism and protest by both clubs fans including picketing of the House of Football in Kiev a day before the match and was reverted after the FFU held an emergency meeting and conferred with club officials and government security.",
"score": "1.6063945"
}
] | [
"2009 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2009 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Dnipro Stadium on May 31, 2009. The match was the 18th Ukrainian Cup final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Vorskla Poltava. The 2009 final was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Dnipropetrovsk. Vorskla Poltava, as Ukrainian Cup winners, qualified for the UEFA Europa League play-off round.",
"2008 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2008 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Metalist Stadium on May 7, 2008. The match was the 17th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The 2008 Ukrainian Cup FInal was the first to be held outside of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won the match 2–0 through goals from Oleksandr Gladkiy and Oleksiy Gai. The match had five red cards issued, two to Dynamo players and three to Shakhtar players. The match also had six yellow cards (Gladkiy received two), four of which were given to Shakhtar players and two to Dynamo players. This was in part because of players' violent behavior and also because referee Victor Shvetsov made several misjudgments.",
"2010 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2010 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played place at the Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, on 16 May 2010. The match was the 19th Ukrainian Cup final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Tavriya Simferopol. The final was the second time a Ukrainian Cup final was held in Kharkiv. The Ukrainian Cup winners qualified for the 2010–11 UEFA Europa League play-off round. Tavriya played in their second cup final after last appearing in 1994, where the side lost to Chornomorets Odessa on penalty kicks (5–3) after the matched finished 0–0 after extra time. Metalurh Donetsk were playing in their first cup final.",
"2005 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2005 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 29 May 2005. The match was the 14th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final. The game was remembered for involving the most foreign players in the Ukrainian Cup finals: out of 36 players on both teams' rosters, 28 were from outside of Ukraine. Of the starting line-ups, there were five Brazilians, four Ukrainians, four Romanians, and others. Refereeing the match was a Norwegian team of referees.",
"2009–10 Ukrainian Cup\n The Cup final was played on May 16, 2010.",
"2006 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2006 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the Olympic NSC on 2 May 2006. The match was the 15th Ukrainian Cup final, and it was contested by Metalurh Zaporizhzhia and Dynamo Kyiv. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the Cup final.",
"2012 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2012 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Olimpiysky NSC, Kiev, on 6 May 2012. The match was the 21st Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Metalurh Donetsk and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time since 2007 that the Cup final had returned to Kiev. Since Shakhtar had qualified for the 2012–13 UEFA Champions League, Metalurh would qualify for the 2012–13 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Metalurh was selected as the home team.",
"2004 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2004 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on 30 May 2004. The match was the 13th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by Shakhtar Donetsk and Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The Olympic stadium is the traditional arena for the cup final.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2011 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that was played at the Yuvileiny Stadium, Sumy, on 25 May 2011. The match was the 20th Ukrainian Cup Final and was contested by Dynamo Kyiv and Shakhtar Donetsk. This was the first time a Ukrainian Cup final was played in Sumy. Since this match was between two teams that had qualified for the 2011–12 UEFA Champions League, the sixth-placed team in the 2010–11 Ukrainian Premier League season would qualify for the 2011–12 UEFA Europa League. In the draw, Dynamo was selected as the home team. After a goalless first half, Shakhtar's superiority prevailed and they won the match 2–0, enabling them to win the Ukrainian treble of the Ukrainian Super Cup, the Premier League and the Ukrainian Cup.",
"Cup of Ukrainian PFL 2009 (winter)\n ====Third Place Game ==== ====Final ====",
"2010 Ukrainian Cup Final\n Tavriya had met Metalurh Donetsk previously in the Ukrainian Cup competition in the quarter-Final of the 2003–04 edition. In that match, Tavriya advanced on penalty kicks 10–9 after the score finished 1–1 after extra time.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The match was broadcast on ICTV in Ukraine.",
"2014 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The match was broadcast on Futbol 2 and Ukrayina in Ukraine.",
"2018 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2018 Ukrainian Cup Final was a football match that has been scheduled to be played on May 9, 2018 in Dnipro. This was the second time the cup final has been held in Dnipro. The match was the 27th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union.",
"1997 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 25, 1997. The match was the 6th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by FC Shakhtar Donetsk and FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk. The 1997 Ukrainian Cup Final was the fifth to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Shakhtar won by a single goal netted by Serhiy Atelkin in the 36th minute. There also were a couple of yellow cards issued at this game, both of them to Shakhtar players: Potskhveria and Hennadiy Orbu.",
"2011 Ukrainian Cup Final\n This was the sixth Ukrainian Cup final between the two teams. Dynamo had defeated Shakhtar three times out of the five Cup Finals. In the last final, however, in 2008, Shakhtar was victorious. The two teams also met in a semi final in 2008–09 and in the quarter-final in 2009–10 in which Shakhtar was victorious in both games. Dynamo had appeared in 11 finals, winning 9, while opponents Shakhtar had appeared in 10 finals, winning 6.",
"2018 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The game between Shakhtar and Dynamo has become the main fixture of every season and received a nickname of Klasychne which means Classic. Before this game both teams met in a final of Ukrainian Cup nine times, the first being back in 2002. Games between the two clubs are known to be very intense and out of the nine previous meetings in the final, only two in 2003 and 2017 did not have red cards shown to players. There were total of 14 red cards shown with 13 in finals only. Before this final out of the previous nine Shakhtar won 4 games and Dynamo won ",
"1998 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that took place at the NSC Olimpiyskiy on May 31, 1998. The match was the 7th Ukrainian Cup Final and it was contested by both Kyivan clubs FC Dynamo Kyiv and FC CSKA Kyiv. The 1998 Ukrainian Cup Final was the seventh to be held in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv. Dynamo won by two goals netted by Andriy Shevchenko on the 1st and 33rd minutes. CSKA managed to answer with a single tally from Novokhatsky on the 68th minute, which was scored on the rebound right after the missed penalty kick. Shovkovskyi managed to deflect the penalty kick from Oliynyk. There also were several yellow cards issued at this game, all of them to Army players: Semchuk, Hohil, and Kripak.",
"2019 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The 2019 Ukrainian Cup Final is a football match that was played on May 15, 2019 in Zaporizhia between Shakhtar Donetsk and Inhulets Petrove. The match is the 28th Ukrainian Cup Final since fall of the Soviet Union. This is the first time the cup final would be held in Zaporizhia. If Inhulets win the cup, they will qualify to the group stage of 2019–20 UEFA Europa League, because Shakhtar have already qualified for 2019–20 UEFA Champions League. For Slavutych Arena this is the second time of hosting games of such level after hosting the 2010 Ukrainian Super Cup. This will be the first final of the Ukrainian Cup competitions that features a team from a second tier division.",
"2014 Ukrainian Cup Final\n The final was originally to be played at Metalist Stadium, Kharkiv, but was moved to Butovsky Vorskla Stadium in Poltava. Due to the May 2014 pro-Russian conflict in Ukraine, the Football Federation of Ukraine (FFU), after being advised to do so by the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, decided that the match would be played behind closed doors for security reasons. The decision to have no spectators at the match was met with criticism and protest by both clubs fans including picketing of the House of Football in Kiev a day before the match and was reverted after the FFU held an emergency meeting and conferred with club officials and government security."
] |
What is Michael Hutchings's occupation? | [
"chef",
"chef de cuisine"
] | occupation | Michael Hutchings (chef) | 896,602 | 60 | [
{
"id": "15325657",
"title": "Chris Hutchings",
"text": " Christopher Hutchings (born 5 July 1957) is an English former footballer and manager. He played for a number of clubs including Chelsea and played more than 100 games for Brighton & Hove Albion and Huddersfield Town. He has managed in the Premier League with Bradford City and Wigan Athletic, while his most recent tenure was at Walsall. He left Ipswich Town in November 2012 following Paul Jewell's departure.",
"score": "1.6900065"
},
{
"id": "15731863",
"title": "Timothy Hutchings",
"text": " Timothy Hutchings (born 1974) is an American visual artist living and working in New York City. He uses a diverse range of media, ranging from video to sculpture to drawing. Hutchings has exhibited work internationally, notably at P.S.1/MOMA and the New Museum in New York City, Western Bridge in Seattle, the Centro de Arte de Salamanca and Museo de Arte Contemporane in Spain, and the Borusan Cultural Center in Istanbul. He also constructed the World's Largest Wargame Table for Real Art Ways in Hartford, Connecticut.",
"score": "1.6787481"
},
{
"id": "5827618",
"title": "Michael Hutchings (chef)",
"text": " Michael Hutchings (born 1949) is a professional chef who is best known as the chef/owner of Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara, California. He appears with Julia Child on the PBS cooking program Dinner at Julia's and on Cox Television with Jeanne Berg's Cooking Local program. Since 2015, he has appeared as the Chef Host of the Santa Barbara ABC-Affiliate cooking program The Inn Crowd.",
"score": "1.6784685"
},
{
"id": "5827619",
"title": "Michael Hutchings (chef)",
"text": " Michael Hutchings first worked at a restaurant in college. His first major job was in the kitchen of the private Club 33 at Disneyland. Michael Hutchings eventually became executive chef of Club 33, and afterwards worked under several Los Angeles chefs, including James Sly and Jean Grodin. He then opened Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara. He sold Michael's Waterside in 1993, and worked at other restaurants for some time. Chef Michael currently oversees a food consulting and service business in Santa Barbara.",
"score": "1.6469445"
},
{
"id": "9100374",
"title": "Tim Hutchings",
"text": " Timothy (\"Tim\") Hilton Hutchings (born 4 December 1958 in London) is a male former middle- and long-distance runner who represented England and Great Britain internationally.",
"score": "1.6256869"
},
{
"id": "29566409",
"title": "Michael Hutchings (mathematician)",
"text": " Michael Lounsbery Hutchings is an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. He is known for proving the double bubble conjecture on the shape of two-chambered soap bubbles, and for his work on circle-valued Morse theory and on embedded contact homology, which he defined.",
"score": "1.6190748"
},
{
"id": "2811353",
"title": "Carl Hutchings",
"text": " Carl Emil Hutchings (born 24 September 1974) is an English retired professional footballer who played as a utility player. He is best remembered for his five years in the Football League with Brentford, for whom he made over 200 appearances. He also played league football for Bristol City, Southend United and Exeter City. Hutchings was described as an \"intelligent footballer\", who performed \"with infectious exuberance\".",
"score": "1.6132262"
},
{
"id": "15312712",
"title": "Steve Hutchings",
"text": " Stephen Hutchings (born 13 December 1990) is an English footballer, who played as a striker for Conference South club Havant & Waterlooville and previously Bournemouth. He now plays for Portsmouth-based Moneyfields FC in the Southern League Division One South. Hutchings made his debut for Bournemouth at home to Millwall, in the 2–0 win in League One on 29 March 2008. He joined Conference South side Dorchester Town on a work experience deal on 13 February 2009. He returned to Bournemouth from his work experience deal at Dorchester Town on 30 March 2009.",
"score": "1.5487299"
},
{
"id": "14901655",
"title": "Jeffrey A. Hutchings",
"text": " Jeffrey A. Hutchings FRSC (born 11 September 1958) is a Canadian-born fisheries scientist, Professor of Biology, and Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Chair in Fish, Fisheries, and Oceans at Dalhousie University. He is known for his work on the evolution of fish life histories and on the collapse, recovery, and sustainable harvesting of marine fishes. In addition to being Chair of a 2012 Royal Society of Canada Expert Panel on Marine Biodiversity (and member of a 2001 Expert Panel on genetically modified foods), he chaired Canada's national science body (Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada) responsible, by law, for advising the Canadian federal Minister of the Environment on species at risk of extinction. Past-President and Co-Founder of the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Academy of Science) in 2015. In 2017, he was awarded the international A.G. Huntsman Award for Excellence in the Marine Sciences. He was elected Fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters in 2018.",
"score": "1.5379217"
},
{
"id": "31230755",
"title": "Cory Hutchings",
"text": " Cory Francis Hutchings (born 5 March 1972) is a former world surf lifesaving Ironman champion from Gisborne, New Zealand. Hutchings was born in Gisborne to a family of passionate sportspeople. His father Ben was the coach of the New Zealand men's canoeing team who won gold in four events at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Cory's involvement in surf lifesaving begun at age five.",
"score": "1.528924"
},
{
"id": "8197295",
"title": "Alex Hutchings",
"text": " Alex Hutchings (born November 7, 1990) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player who is currently playing for IF Björklöven of the Swedish HockeyAllsvenskan (Allsv). He was selected by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 4th round (93rd overall) of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.5283167"
},
{
"id": "4493172",
"title": "Hutchings",
"text": " American baseball pitcher ; Keith Hutchings, Canadian politician ; Kenneth Hutchings (1882–1916), English cricketer ; Kimberly Hutchings, British academic ; Mark Hutchings (born 1991), Australian rules footballer ; Michael Hutchings (chef) (born 1949), American chef ; Michael Hutchings (mathematician), American mathematician ; Noah Hutchings (born 1922), American religious broadcaster ; Richard Hutchings (born 1978), English cricketer ; Robert Hutchings, American academic ; Sarah Hutchings (born 1984), American composer ; Steve Hutchings (born 1990), English footballer ; Stuart James Hutchings (born 1951), Welsh chess master ; Tim Hutchings (born 1958), English runner ; Timothy Hutchings (born 1974), American artist ; William Hutchings (1879–1948), English cricketer ; William S. Hutchings (1832–1911), American mathematics prodigy Hutchings is a surname of English and Scottish origin. People with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.527898"
},
{
"id": "15325665",
"title": "Chris Hutchings",
"text": " Outside football, Hutchings has also worked as a bricklayer and a second-hand car salesman.",
"score": "1.523989"
},
{
"id": "13035169",
"title": "Andrew Hutchings",
"text": " Andrew William Seymour Hutchings (3 December 1907 – 30 October 1996) was a British trade union leader. Hutchings studied at Cotham School in Bristol and then St Catharine's College, Cambridge, before becoming a teacher. His first appointment was assistant master at Downside School in 1929, he then moved to the Methodist College, Belfast and the Holt School in Liverpool. Active in the Assistant Masters' Association, he became its full-time assistant secretary in 1936, then its general secretary in 1939. As leader of the union, Hutchings represented it on a number of other bodies; he was honorary secretary of the Joint Committee of Four Secondary Associations, and served on the executives of the World Confederation of Organisations of ",
"score": "1.5174276"
},
{
"id": "32149259",
"title": "Michael Hutt (academic and translator)",
"text": " Michael James Hutt (born 11 October 1957) is Professor of Nepali and Himalayan Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. He is engaged in the study of modern and contemporary Nepali literature, and as a translator. He has also published on Nepali politics, Nepali art and architecture, censorship in the Nepali print media, and the Bhutanese refugee issue.",
"score": "1.5115192"
},
{
"id": "8070191",
"title": "Keith Hutchings",
"text": " Hutchings was born the youngest of six children in Mobile, a community on the south coast of the Avalon Peninsula. He attended Memorial University of Newfoundland (MUN) in St. John's where he completed a Bachelor of Arts degree, with a major in political science and a minor in history. Hutchings also has a Certificate in Public Administration from MUN, and has completed an Occupational Health and Safety Program from Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario. Hutchings spent 11 years working with the Workplace Health Safety and Compensation Commission. From 1996 to 1998 he served as Chief of Staff and Executive Assistant to Loyola Sullivan, then the Leader of the Official Opposition in the House of Assembly. Prior to entering politics he worked as a consultant. He also owned and operated IMPACC Consulting.",
"score": "1.510623"
},
{
"id": "27833807",
"title": "Arthur Hutchings",
"text": " Arthur James Bramwell Hutchings (14 July 1906 – 13 November 1989 ) was an English musicologist, composer, and professor of music successively at the University of Durham and the University of Exeter. He wrote extensively on topics as varied as nineteenth-century English liturgical composition, Schubert, Purcell, Edmund Rubbra, and baroque concertos; but his most famous book was the Companion to Mozart's Piano Concertos, published in 1948 and often reissued since. Among his other books are The Invention and Composition of Music and Church Music in the Nineteenth Century. During the late 1970s his articles on music regularly appeared in the monthly magazine Records and Recording. His compositions include the Seasonal Preludes for organ, the overture Oriana Triumphans, the opera Marriage à la Mode, and the operetta The Plumber's Arms. Among his choral works are Hosanna to the Son of David, God is Gone Up, Grant Them Rest, and the Communion Service on Russian Themes. Hutchings served for many years as a director of the English Hymnal Company and three of his tunes were included in the 1986 New English Hymnal.",
"score": "1.5056839"
},
{
"id": "9276454",
"title": "Richard Hutchings",
"text": " Richard Martin Hutchings (born 6 May 1978) is an English cricketer. Hutchings is a right-handed batsman who plays primarily as a wicket-keeper. He was born in Leicester, Leicestershire. Hutchings represented the Leicestershire Cricket Board in List A cricket. His debut List A match came against Hertfordshire in the 1999 NatWest Trophy. From 1999 to 2001, he represented the Board in four List A matches, the last of which came against the Kent Cricket Board in the 2nd round of the 2002 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy which was played in 2001. In his 4 List A matches, he scored 28 runs at a batting average of 7.00, with a high score of 15. In the field he took 2 catches. Despite being able to play as a wicket-keeper, he did not keep wicket for the Board. From 2004 to 2009, he played for Hinckley Town in the Leicestershire Premier League.",
"score": "1.4951507"
},
{
"id": "30475879",
"title": "Graham Hutchings",
"text": " Graham John Hutchings CBE FRS FIChemE FRSC FLSW is a British chemist, Professor for Research at Cardiff University. He gained his BSc in 1972 at University College London, a PhD from University College in 1975 in Biological Chemistry and a DSc from the University of London in 2002 for his work on heterogeneous catalysis. His scientific career has included being Scientific Officer (1975–79) and Research and Production Manager (1979-1981) at ICI Petrochemicals and Chief Scientific Officer at AE & CI (African Explosives and Chemical Industries), Modderfontein, South Africa (1981–84). He was then in turn Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Professor in the Department of Chemistry, University of ",
"score": "1.4915566"
},
{
"id": "4680262",
"title": "Ashley Hutchings",
"text": " Ashley Stephen Hutchings, MBE, sometimes known in early years by his nickname, \"Tyger\" Hutchings (born 26 January 1945) is an English bassist, vocalist, songwriter, arranger, band leader, writer and record producer. He was a founding member of three noteworthy English folk-rock bands: Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and The Albion Band. Hutchings has overseen numerous other projects, including records and live theatre, and has collaborated on film and television projects.",
"score": "1.4693083"
}
] | [
"Chris Hutchings\n Christopher Hutchings (born 5 July 1957) is an English former footballer and manager. He played for a number of clubs including Chelsea and played more than 100 games for Brighton & Hove Albion and Huddersfield Town. He has managed in the Premier League with Bradford City and Wigan Athletic, while his most recent tenure was at Walsall. He left Ipswich Town in November 2012 following Paul Jewell's departure.",
"Timothy Hutchings\n Timothy Hutchings (born 1974) is an American visual artist living and working in New York City. He uses a diverse range of media, ranging from video to sculpture to drawing. Hutchings has exhibited work internationally, notably at P.S.1/MOMA and the New Museum in New York City, Western Bridge in Seattle, the Centro de Arte de Salamanca and Museo de Arte Contemporane in Spain, and the Borusan Cultural Center in Istanbul. He also constructed the World's Largest Wargame Table for Real Art Ways in Hartford, Connecticut.",
"Michael Hutchings (chef)\n Michael Hutchings (born 1949) is a professional chef who is best known as the chef/owner of Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara, California. He appears with Julia Child on the PBS cooking program Dinner at Julia's and on Cox Television with Jeanne Berg's Cooking Local program. Since 2015, he has appeared as the Chef Host of the Santa Barbara ABC-Affiliate cooking program The Inn Crowd.",
"Michael Hutchings (chef)\n Michael Hutchings first worked at a restaurant in college. His first major job was in the kitchen of the private Club 33 at Disneyland. Michael Hutchings eventually became executive chef of Club 33, and afterwards worked under several Los Angeles chefs, including James Sly and Jean Grodin. He then opened Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara. He sold Michael's Waterside in 1993, and worked at other restaurants for some time. Chef Michael currently oversees a food consulting and service business in Santa Barbara.",
"Tim Hutchings\n Timothy (\"Tim\") Hilton Hutchings (born 4 December 1958 in London) is a male former middle- and long-distance runner who represented England and Great Britain internationally.",
"Michael Hutchings (mathematician)\n Michael Lounsbery Hutchings is an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. He is known for proving the double bubble conjecture on the shape of two-chambered soap bubbles, and for his work on circle-valued Morse theory and on embedded contact homology, which he defined.",
"Carl Hutchings\n Carl Emil Hutchings (born 24 September 1974) is an English retired professional footballer who played as a utility player. He is best remembered for his five years in the Football League with Brentford, for whom he made over 200 appearances. He also played league football for Bristol City, Southend United and Exeter City. Hutchings was described as an \"intelligent footballer\", who performed \"with infectious exuberance\".",
"Steve Hutchings\n Stephen Hutchings (born 13 December 1990) is an English footballer, who played as a striker for Conference South club Havant & Waterlooville and previously Bournemouth. He now plays for Portsmouth-based Moneyfields FC in the Southern League Division One South. Hutchings made his debut for Bournemouth at home to Millwall, in the 2–0 win in League One on 29 March 2008. He joined Conference South side Dorchester Town on a work experience deal on 13 February 2009. He returned to Bournemouth from his work experience deal at Dorchester Town on 30 March 2009.",
"Jeffrey A. Hutchings\n Jeffrey A. Hutchings FRSC (born 11 September 1958) is a Canadian-born fisheries scientist, Professor of Biology, and Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Chair in Fish, Fisheries, and Oceans at Dalhousie University. He is known for his work on the evolution of fish life histories and on the collapse, recovery, and sustainable harvesting of marine fishes. In addition to being Chair of a 2012 Royal Society of Canada Expert Panel on Marine Biodiversity (and member of a 2001 Expert Panel on genetically modified foods), he chaired Canada's national science body (Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada) responsible, by law, for advising the Canadian federal Minister of the Environment on species at risk of extinction. Past-President and Co-Founder of the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Academy of Science) in 2015. In 2017, he was awarded the international A.G. Huntsman Award for Excellence in the Marine Sciences. He was elected Fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters in 2018.",
"Cory Hutchings\n Cory Francis Hutchings (born 5 March 1972) is a former world surf lifesaving Ironman champion from Gisborne, New Zealand. Hutchings was born in Gisborne to a family of passionate sportspeople. His father Ben was the coach of the New Zealand men's canoeing team who won gold in four events at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Cory's involvement in surf lifesaving begun at age five.",
"Alex Hutchings\n Alex Hutchings (born November 7, 1990) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player who is currently playing for IF Björklöven of the Swedish HockeyAllsvenskan (Allsv). He was selected by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 4th round (93rd overall) of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Hutchings\n American baseball pitcher ; Keith Hutchings, Canadian politician ; Kenneth Hutchings (1882–1916), English cricketer ; Kimberly Hutchings, British academic ; Mark Hutchings (born 1991), Australian rules footballer ; Michael Hutchings (chef) (born 1949), American chef ; Michael Hutchings (mathematician), American mathematician ; Noah Hutchings (born 1922), American religious broadcaster ; Richard Hutchings (born 1978), English cricketer ; Robert Hutchings, American academic ; Sarah Hutchings (born 1984), American composer ; Steve Hutchings (born 1990), English footballer ; Stuart James Hutchings (born 1951), Welsh chess master ; Tim Hutchings (born 1958), English runner ; Timothy Hutchings (born 1974), American artist ; William Hutchings (1879–1948), English cricketer ; William S. Hutchings (1832–1911), American mathematics prodigy Hutchings is a surname of English and Scottish origin. People with the surname include: ",
"Chris Hutchings\n Outside football, Hutchings has also worked as a bricklayer and a second-hand car salesman.",
"Andrew Hutchings\n Andrew William Seymour Hutchings (3 December 1907 – 30 October 1996) was a British trade union leader. Hutchings studied at Cotham School in Bristol and then St Catharine's College, Cambridge, before becoming a teacher. His first appointment was assistant master at Downside School in 1929, he then moved to the Methodist College, Belfast and the Holt School in Liverpool. Active in the Assistant Masters' Association, he became its full-time assistant secretary in 1936, then its general secretary in 1939. As leader of the union, Hutchings represented it on a number of other bodies; he was honorary secretary of the Joint Committee of Four Secondary Associations, and served on the executives of the World Confederation of Organisations of ",
"Michael Hutt (academic and translator)\n Michael James Hutt (born 11 October 1957) is Professor of Nepali and Himalayan Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. He is engaged in the study of modern and contemporary Nepali literature, and as a translator. He has also published on Nepali politics, Nepali art and architecture, censorship in the Nepali print media, and the Bhutanese refugee issue.",
"Keith Hutchings\n Hutchings was born the youngest of six children in Mobile, a community on the south coast of the Avalon Peninsula. He attended Memorial University of Newfoundland (MUN) in St. John's where he completed a Bachelor of Arts degree, with a major in political science and a minor in history. Hutchings also has a Certificate in Public Administration from MUN, and has completed an Occupational Health and Safety Program from Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario. Hutchings spent 11 years working with the Workplace Health Safety and Compensation Commission. From 1996 to 1998 he served as Chief of Staff and Executive Assistant to Loyola Sullivan, then the Leader of the Official Opposition in the House of Assembly. Prior to entering politics he worked as a consultant. He also owned and operated IMPACC Consulting.",
"Arthur Hutchings\n Arthur James Bramwell Hutchings (14 July 1906 – 13 November 1989 ) was an English musicologist, composer, and professor of music successively at the University of Durham and the University of Exeter. He wrote extensively on topics as varied as nineteenth-century English liturgical composition, Schubert, Purcell, Edmund Rubbra, and baroque concertos; but his most famous book was the Companion to Mozart's Piano Concertos, published in 1948 and often reissued since. Among his other books are The Invention and Composition of Music and Church Music in the Nineteenth Century. During the late 1970s his articles on music regularly appeared in the monthly magazine Records and Recording. His compositions include the Seasonal Preludes for organ, the overture Oriana Triumphans, the opera Marriage à la Mode, and the operetta The Plumber's Arms. Among his choral works are Hosanna to the Son of David, God is Gone Up, Grant Them Rest, and the Communion Service on Russian Themes. Hutchings served for many years as a director of the English Hymnal Company and three of his tunes were included in the 1986 New English Hymnal.",
"Richard Hutchings\n Richard Martin Hutchings (born 6 May 1978) is an English cricketer. Hutchings is a right-handed batsman who plays primarily as a wicket-keeper. He was born in Leicester, Leicestershire. Hutchings represented the Leicestershire Cricket Board in List A cricket. His debut List A match came against Hertfordshire in the 1999 NatWest Trophy. From 1999 to 2001, he represented the Board in four List A matches, the last of which came against the Kent Cricket Board in the 2nd round of the 2002 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy which was played in 2001. In his 4 List A matches, he scored 28 runs at a batting average of 7.00, with a high score of 15. In the field he took 2 catches. Despite being able to play as a wicket-keeper, he did not keep wicket for the Board. From 2004 to 2009, he played for Hinckley Town in the Leicestershire Premier League.",
"Graham Hutchings\n Graham John Hutchings CBE FRS FIChemE FRSC FLSW is a British chemist, Professor for Research at Cardiff University. He gained his BSc in 1972 at University College London, a PhD from University College in 1975 in Biological Chemistry and a DSc from the University of London in 2002 for his work on heterogeneous catalysis. His scientific career has included being Scientific Officer (1975–79) and Research and Production Manager (1979-1981) at ICI Petrochemicals and Chief Scientific Officer at AE & CI (African Explosives and Chemical Industries), Modderfontein, South Africa (1981–84). He was then in turn Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Professor in the Department of Chemistry, University of ",
"Ashley Hutchings\n Ashley Stephen Hutchings, MBE, sometimes known in early years by his nickname, \"Tyger\" Hutchings (born 26 January 1945) is an English bassist, vocalist, songwriter, arranger, band leader, writer and record producer. He was a founding member of three noteworthy English folk-rock bands: Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and The Albion Band. Hutchings has overseen numerous other projects, including records and live theatre, and has collaborated on film and television projects."
] |
What is the capital of Tarussky District? | [
"Tarusa"
] | capital | Tarussky District | 1,023,414 | 76 | [
{
"id": "4119481",
"title": "Tarussky District",
"text": " Tarussky District (Тарусский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-four in Kaluga Oblast, Russia. It is located in the east of the oblast. The area of the district is 714.6 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tarusa. Population: 15,680 (2002 Census); The population of Tarusa accounts for 63.3% of the district's total population.",
"score": "1.7903541"
},
{
"id": "12886839",
"title": "Tarumovsky District",
"text": " Tarumovsky District (Тару́мовский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the forty-one in the Republic of Dagestan, Russia. It is located in the north of the republic. The area of the district is 3020 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarumovka. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 31,683, with the population of Tarumovka accounting for 17.0% of that number.",
"score": "1.582062"
},
{
"id": "4923249",
"title": "Tarusa",
"text": " Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarusa serves as the administrative center of Tarussky District, to which it is directly subordinated. As a municipal division, the town of Tarusa is incorporated within Tarussky Municipal District as Tarusa Urban Settlement.",
"score": "1.5800047"
},
{
"id": "11285955",
"title": "Tarbagataysky District",
"text": " Tarbagataysky District (Тарбагата́йский райо́н; Тарбагатайн аймаг, Tarbagatain aimag) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-one in the Republic of Buryatia, Russia. It is located in the center of the republic. The area of the district is 3304 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarbagatay. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 16,476, with the population of Tarbagatay accounting for 26.2% of that number.",
"score": "1.5756648"
},
{
"id": "4409077",
"title": "Purovsky District",
"text": " Purovsky District (Пу́ровский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the seven in Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug of Tyumen Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center and south of the autonomous okrug. The area of the district is 108400 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tarko-Sale. Population: 51,280 (2010 Census); The population of Tarko-Sale accounts for 39.8% of the district's total population.",
"score": "1.5124903"
},
{
"id": "4225154",
"title": "Ust-Tarksky District",
"text": " Ust-Tarksky District (Усть-Та́ркский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty in Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the west of the oblast. The area of the district is 4061 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Ust-Tarka. Population: 12,307 (2010 Census); The population of Ust-Tarka accounts for 31.0% of the district's total population.",
"score": "1.5117798"
},
{
"id": "4408637",
"title": "Tarnogsky District",
"text": " Tarnogsky District (Та́рногский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-six in Vologda Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the oblast and borders with Ustyansky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast in the north, Nyuksensky District in the east, Totemsky District in the south, and with Verkhovazhsky District in the west. The area of the district is 5200 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarnogsky Gorodok. District's population: 15,363 (2002 Census); The population of Tarnogsky Gorodok accounts for 41.8% of the district's total population.",
"score": "1.5062035"
},
{
"id": "4923243",
"title": "Tarusa",
"text": " Tarusa (Тару́са), also known as Tarussa (Тару́сса), is a town and the administrative center of Tarussky District in Kaluga Oblast, Russia, located on the left bank of the Oka River, 76 km northeast of Kaluga, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:",
"score": "1.500482"
},
{
"id": "13986513",
"title": "Elbrussky District",
"text": " Elbrussky District (Эльбру́сский райо́н; Kabardian: Ӏуащхьэмахуэ къедзыгъуэ; ) is an administrative and a municipal district (raion), one of the ten in the Kabardino-Balkar Republic, Russia. It is located in the western and southwestern parts of the republic. The area of the district is 1850.43 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tyrnyauz. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 36,260, with the population of Tyrnyauz accounting for 57.9% of that number.",
"score": "1.4999279"
},
{
"id": "12886840",
"title": "Tarumovsky District",
"text": " Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarumovsky District is one of the forty-one in the Republic of Dagestan. The district is divided into five selsoviets which comprise twenty-three rural localities. As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Tarumovsky Municipal District. Its five selsoviets are incorporated as thirteen rural settlements within the municipal district. The selo of Tarumovka serves as the administrative center of both the administrative and municipal district.",
"score": "1.4789584"
},
{
"id": "11285956",
"title": "Tarbagataysky District",
"text": " Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarbagataysky District is one of the twenty-one in the Republic of Buryatia. The district is divided into ten selsoviets, which comprise twenty-three rural localities. As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Tarbagataysky Municipal District. Its ten selsoviets are incorporated as ten rural settlements within the municipal district. The selo of Tarbagatay serves as the administrative center of both the administrative and municipal district.",
"score": "1.4783428"
},
{
"id": "4073113",
"title": "Birilyussky District",
"text": " The district was founded on April 4, 1924.",
"score": "1.4759266"
},
{
"id": "4225201",
"title": "Tarsky District",
"text": " Tarsky District (Та́рский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty-two in Omsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the oblast. The area of the district is 15700 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tara (which is not administratively a part of the district). Population: 19,242 (2010 Census);",
"score": "1.4729943"
},
{
"id": "4073114",
"title": "Birilyussky District",
"text": " As of 2013, the Head of the District and Chairman of the District Council is Vladimir V. Belenya.",
"score": "1.4647193"
},
{
"id": "4408638",
"title": "Tarnogsky District",
"text": " The district is located at the divide between the Sukhona and the Vaga Rivers and belongs thus to the Northern Dvina's basin. The Sukhona forms the southeastern border of the district. The northeastern part of the district lies in the basin of the Uftyuga River, the left tributary of the Sukhona. The Uftyuga, as well as its main tributary the Sulonga, flow through the district. The rivers in the central, northern, and western parts of the district flow into the Kokshenga River, the right tributary of the Vaga. The main tributaries of the Kokshenga within the district are the Ileza and the Uftyuga (a different one from the tributary of the Sukhona). Almost the whole of the district is covered by coniferous forests (taiga). The exception are the meadows in the floodplains.",
"score": "1.4566917"
},
{
"id": "6109346",
"title": "Takhtamukaysky District",
"text": " Takhtamukaysky District (Тахтамука́йский райо́н; ) is an administrative and a municipal district (raion), one of the seven in the Republic of Adygea, Russia. It is located in the west of the republic and borders with Krasnoarmeysky District of Krasnodar Krai and with the territory of the City of Krasnodar in the north, Teuchezhsky District in the east, the territory of the Town of Goryachy Klyuch of Krasnodar Krai in the south, and with Seversky District of Krasnodar Krai in the south and west. The area of the district is 463.6 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (an aul) of Takhtamukay. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 69,662, with the population of Takhtamukay accounting for 7.5% of that number.",
"score": "1.4563482"
},
{
"id": "9060703",
"title": "Askinsky District",
"text": " Askinsky District (А́скинский райо́н; Асҡын районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the north of the republic. The area of the district is 2542 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Askino. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 21,272, with the population of Askino accounting for 32.5% of that number.",
"score": "1.4473202"
},
{
"id": "9282413",
"title": "Tuymazinsky District",
"text": " Tuymazinsky District (Туймази́нский райо́н; Туймазы районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the west of the republic and borders with Sharansky District in the north, Buzdyaksky District in the east, Belebeyevsky District in the southeast and south, Yermekeyevsky District in the south, and with the Republic of Tatarstan in the west. The area of the district is 2403 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tuymazy (which is administratively separate from the district). As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 64,389.",
"score": "1.4466119"
},
{
"id": "4119556",
"title": "Tisulsky District",
"text": " The district is in the northeast of Kemerovo Oblast, and the Kuznetsk Basin, and covers the northern end of the Kuznetsk Alatau mountain range. The Kuznetsk Alatau is the source of many rivers and streams that flow north to the Kiya River, and eventually the Tom River.Much of the terrain is mid-height mountains, with the southern portion of the district being part of a federally protected area, the Kuznetsk Alatau Nature Reserve. Vegetation is mostly dark taiga (coniferous forest).The district is about 250 km east of the regional city of Kemerovo. Tisulsky District borders with Tyazhinsky District in the north, Krapivinsky District in the south, and with Chebulinsky District in the west.",
"score": "1.4439192"
},
{
"id": "9282407",
"title": "Sterlitamaksky District",
"text": " Sterlitamaksky District (Стерлитама́кский райо́н; Стәрлетамаҡ районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the center of the republic and borders with Aurgazinsky District in the north, Gafuriysky District in the northeast, Ishimbaysky District in the east and southeast, Meleuzovsky District in the south, Sterlibashevsky District in the southwest, Miyakinsky District in the west, and with Alsheyevsky District in the west and northwest. The area of the district is 2216 km2. Its administrative center is the city of Sterlitamak (which is not administratively a part of the district). As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 40,325.",
"score": "1.4432657"
}
] | [
"Tarussky District\n Tarussky District (Тарусский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-four in Kaluga Oblast, Russia. It is located in the east of the oblast. The area of the district is 714.6 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tarusa. Population: 15,680 (2002 Census); The population of Tarusa accounts for 63.3% of the district's total population.",
"Tarumovsky District\n Tarumovsky District (Тару́мовский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the forty-one in the Republic of Dagestan, Russia. It is located in the north of the republic. The area of the district is 3020 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarumovka. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 31,683, with the population of Tarumovka accounting for 17.0% of that number.",
"Tarusa\n Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarusa serves as the administrative center of Tarussky District, to which it is directly subordinated. As a municipal division, the town of Tarusa is incorporated within Tarussky Municipal District as Tarusa Urban Settlement.",
"Tarbagataysky District\n Tarbagataysky District (Тарбагата́йский райо́н; Тарбагатайн аймаг, Tarbagatain aimag) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-one in the Republic of Buryatia, Russia. It is located in the center of the republic. The area of the district is 3304 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarbagatay. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 16,476, with the population of Tarbagatay accounting for 26.2% of that number.",
"Purovsky District\n Purovsky District (Пу́ровский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the seven in Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug of Tyumen Oblast, Russia. It is located in the center and south of the autonomous okrug. The area of the district is 108400 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tarko-Sale. Population: 51,280 (2010 Census); The population of Tarko-Sale accounts for 39.8% of the district's total population.",
"Ust-Tarksky District\n Ust-Tarksky District (Усть-Та́ркский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty in Novosibirsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the west of the oblast. The area of the district is 4061 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Ust-Tarka. Population: 12,307 (2010 Census); The population of Ust-Tarka accounts for 31.0% of the district's total population.",
"Tarnogsky District\n Tarnogsky District (Та́рногский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the twenty-six in Vologda Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the oblast and borders with Ustyansky District of Arkhangelsk Oblast in the north, Nyuksensky District in the east, Totemsky District in the south, and with Verkhovazhsky District in the west. The area of the district is 5200 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Tarnogsky Gorodok. District's population: 15,363 (2002 Census); The population of Tarnogsky Gorodok accounts for 41.8% of the district's total population.",
"Tarusa\n Tarusa (Тару́са), also known as Tarussa (Тару́сса), is a town and the administrative center of Tarussky District in Kaluga Oblast, Russia, located on the left bank of the Oka River, 76 km northeast of Kaluga, the administrative center of the oblast. Population:",
"Elbrussky District\n Elbrussky District (Эльбру́сский райо́н; Kabardian: Ӏуащхьэмахуэ къедзыгъуэ; ) is an administrative and a municipal district (raion), one of the ten in the Kabardino-Balkar Republic, Russia. It is located in the western and southwestern parts of the republic. The area of the district is 1850.43 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tyrnyauz. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 36,260, with the population of Tyrnyauz accounting for 57.9% of that number.",
"Tarumovsky District\n Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarumovsky District is one of the forty-one in the Republic of Dagestan. The district is divided into five selsoviets which comprise twenty-three rural localities. As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Tarumovsky Municipal District. Its five selsoviets are incorporated as thirteen rural settlements within the municipal district. The selo of Tarumovka serves as the administrative center of both the administrative and municipal district.",
"Tarbagataysky District\n Within the framework of administrative divisions, Tarbagataysky District is one of the twenty-one in the Republic of Buryatia. The district is divided into ten selsoviets, which comprise twenty-three rural localities. As a municipal division, the district is incorporated as Tarbagataysky Municipal District. Its ten selsoviets are incorporated as ten rural settlements within the municipal district. The selo of Tarbagatay serves as the administrative center of both the administrative and municipal district.",
"Birilyussky District\n The district was founded on April 4, 1924.",
"Tarsky District\n Tarsky District (Та́рский райо́н) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the thirty-two in Omsk Oblast, Russia. It is located in the northeast of the oblast. The area of the district is 15700 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tara (which is not administratively a part of the district). Population: 19,242 (2010 Census);",
"Birilyussky District\n As of 2013, the Head of the District and Chairman of the District Council is Vladimir V. Belenya.",
"Tarnogsky District\n The district is located at the divide between the Sukhona and the Vaga Rivers and belongs thus to the Northern Dvina's basin. The Sukhona forms the southeastern border of the district. The northeastern part of the district lies in the basin of the Uftyuga River, the left tributary of the Sukhona. The Uftyuga, as well as its main tributary the Sulonga, flow through the district. The rivers in the central, northern, and western parts of the district flow into the Kokshenga River, the right tributary of the Vaga. The main tributaries of the Kokshenga within the district are the Ileza and the Uftyuga (a different one from the tributary of the Sukhona). Almost the whole of the district is covered by coniferous forests (taiga). The exception are the meadows in the floodplains.",
"Takhtamukaysky District\n Takhtamukaysky District (Тахтамука́йский райо́н; ) is an administrative and a municipal district (raion), one of the seven in the Republic of Adygea, Russia. It is located in the west of the republic and borders with Krasnoarmeysky District of Krasnodar Krai and with the territory of the City of Krasnodar in the north, Teuchezhsky District in the east, the territory of the Town of Goryachy Klyuch of Krasnodar Krai in the south, and with Seversky District of Krasnodar Krai in the south and west. The area of the district is 463.6 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (an aul) of Takhtamukay. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 69,662, with the population of Takhtamukay accounting for 7.5% of that number.",
"Askinsky District\n Askinsky District (А́скинский райо́н; Асҡын районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the north of the republic. The area of the district is 2542 km2. Its administrative center is the rural locality (a selo) of Askino. As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 21,272, with the population of Askino accounting for 32.5% of that number.",
"Tuymazinsky District\n Tuymazinsky District (Туймази́нский райо́н; Туймазы районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the west of the republic and borders with Sharansky District in the north, Buzdyaksky District in the east, Belebeyevsky District in the southeast and south, Yermekeyevsky District in the south, and with the Republic of Tatarstan in the west. The area of the district is 2403 km2. Its administrative center is the town of Tuymazy (which is administratively separate from the district). As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 64,389.",
"Tisulsky District\n The district is in the northeast of Kemerovo Oblast, and the Kuznetsk Basin, and covers the northern end of the Kuznetsk Alatau mountain range. The Kuznetsk Alatau is the source of many rivers and streams that flow north to the Kiya River, and eventually the Tom River.Much of the terrain is mid-height mountains, with the southern portion of the district being part of a federally protected area, the Kuznetsk Alatau Nature Reserve. Vegetation is mostly dark taiga (coniferous forest).The district is about 250 km east of the regional city of Kemerovo. Tisulsky District borders with Tyazhinsky District in the north, Krapivinsky District in the south, and with Chebulinsky District in the west.",
"Sterlitamaksky District\n Sterlitamaksky District (Стерлитама́кский райо́н; Стәрлетамаҡ районы) is an administrative and municipal district (raion), one of the fifty-four in the Republic of Bashkortostan, Russia. It is located in the center of the republic and borders with Aurgazinsky District in the north, Gafuriysky District in the northeast, Ishimbaysky District in the east and southeast, Meleuzovsky District in the south, Sterlibashevsky District in the southwest, Miyakinsky District in the west, and with Alsheyevsky District in the west and northwest. The area of the district is 2216 km2. Its administrative center is the city of Sterlitamak (which is not administratively a part of the district). As of the 2010 Census, the total population of the district was 40,325."
] |
In what country is Colonia Nueva Coneta? | [
"Argentina",
"AR",
"ar",
"🇦🇷",
"Argentine Republic",
"ARG",
"Republic of Argentina"
] | country | Colonia Nueva Coneta | 3,769,612 | 75 | [
{
"id": "25542809",
"title": "Colonia Nueva Coneta",
"text": " It is located 12 km from the city of San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca, on the margin of the Ongolí River and at the foot of the southwestern slope of the Sierra de Ambato.",
"score": "1.7443588"
},
{
"id": "25542810",
"title": "Colonia Nueva Coneta",
"text": " It has 1,951 inhabitants (INDEC, 2010), which represents an increase of 30% compared to 1,497 inhabitants in 2001.",
"score": "1.708673"
},
{
"id": "25542808",
"title": "Colonia Nueva Coneta",
"text": " Colonia Nueva Coneta is a village and municipality in Catamarca Province in northwestern Argentina.",
"score": "1.6611409"
},
{
"id": "12181520",
"title": "Nueva Helvecia",
"text": " Nueva Helvecia is a city in Colonia Department of Uruguay. Nueva Helvecia (Spanish for \"New Helvetia\"; formerly known as Colonia Suiza) is 120 km west of Montevideo, the capital and largest city of Uruguay. It is a few kilometres from the coast where the Atlantic Ocean meets the Río de la Plata and east of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is known nationwide for its Swiss heritage.",
"score": "1.543823"
},
{
"id": "1073095",
"title": "San José la Colonia",
"text": " San José la Colonia is located in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala, on the northern outskirts of the city of Cobán (15.47844°N, -90.37448°W). Formerly a nationalized finca, San José la Colonia was designated a national park in 1976. The park covers an area of 54 ha, and is managed by the National Forestry Institute (INAB).",
"score": "1.4343437"
},
{
"id": "14987458",
"title": "Colonia Narvarte",
"text": " The old village of La Piedad was located in Colonia Piedad Narvarte, but no traces remain. The area was developed starting in the 1940s, and Japanese, German and Lebanese immigrants moved here.",
"score": "1.4253287"
},
{
"id": "12181528",
"title": "Nueva Helvecia",
"text": " It is located in the southeastern part of Colonia Department, Uruguay. Its population, as of 2004, was 12,000.",
"score": "1.4188131"
},
{
"id": "14165857",
"title": "Nueva Congregación Israelita, Montevideo",
"text": " The Synagogue of the New Jewish Congregation (Sinagoga de la Nueva Congregación Israelita, often known by its acronym NCI) is a synagogue in Montevideo, Uruguay.",
"score": "1.4072123"
},
{
"id": "26646450",
"title": "Colonia Buenavista",
"text": " The name of the colonia is from a former owner of the lands here, Miguel Pérez de Santa Cruz Andoboya, the Marquis of Buenavista, who was the mayor of Mexico City three times during the 1710s and 1720s. The mansion of the marquis was located in front of the small plaza which is on Avenida Puente de Alvarado, near the current offices of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. This building is now the Museo Nacional de San Carlos. This plaza maintains a number of arches from the Santa Fe Aqueduct, which brought water into the city. During the 18th century, the area was filed with large orchards and gardens that stretched to what is now the Calzada de San Cosme. By 1871, the aqueduct was no ",
"score": "1.392354"
},
{
"id": "10548839",
"title": "Colonia San Juan",
"text": " Colonia San Juan is a neighborhood in Benito Juárez, Mexico City.",
"score": "1.3920608"
},
{
"id": "31342253",
"title": "Colonia (film)",
"text": " Colonia (released in the United Kingdom as The Colony) is a 2015 historical thriller film directed by Florian Gallenberger, produced by Benjamin Herrmann, written by Torsten Wenzel and Gallenberger, and starring Emma Watson, Daniel Brühl, and Michael Nyqvist. The film is set against the backdrop of the 1973 Chilean military coup and the real \"Colonia Dignidad\", a notorious cult in the South of Chile, led by German lay preacher Paul Schäfer. Schäfer was a follower and teacher of \"The Message\" of William Branham. The film is an international co-production of companies in the United Kingdom, Germany, Luxembourg, and France. Principal photography began on 2 October 2014 in Luxembourg; filming also took place in Germany and Argentina. The film held its world premiere at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival in the Special Presentations section. The film was released in Germany on 18 February 2016, in the United Kingdom on 1 July 2016, and in France on 20 July 2016.",
"score": "1.3902297"
},
{
"id": "15752340",
"title": "Boris Weisfeiler",
"text": " to most of the world, Colonia Dignidad sat on a large tract of land not far from the border with Argentina. Idyllic in appearance, the Colonia was run by German expatriates who included alleged Nazi war criminals and sympathizers. The leader of the Colonia for most of its existence was former Nazi Paul Schäfer. The Colonia had a cult-like atmosphere, in which many children were molested, a crime for which its leaders have faced prosecution; Schäfer himself was convicted in May 2006, in connection with allegations of child abuse at the Colonia. The BBC has reported and Chilean governmental documents suggest that the Chilean Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional (the secret police, which ",
"score": "1.3873746"
},
{
"id": "26184747",
"title": "Colonia Dublán",
"text": " Colonia Dublán is currently a very small town located just north of Nuevo Casas Grandes. Most of the remaining residents engage in agriculture and produce crops such as peaches, apples, pecans and chile. There is also significant production of wheat and cattle. Most members of the Mormon community are now of Mexican descent. The remaining descendants of the colonizers belong to the LDS Church and continue to serve a role within that church in Mexico.",
"score": "1.3806076"
},
{
"id": "25958319",
"title": "San Pedro Sula",
"text": " Barrio El Benque, the business district, is just to the west and south of the center, and other neighborhoods in the suroeste include Barrio Paz Barahona, Barrio La Guardia, Colonia Altamira, Colonia Mesetas, Barrio Río de Piedras, Barrio Suyapa (from 12 Avenida S out to Avenida Circunvalación, from 7 Calle S to 10 Calles S), Colonia Hernandez, Barrio Prado Alto, and Colonia El Chamelecón. The latter includes area from 23 Avenida S west to 27 Avenida S, from 1 Calle (named Bulevar Los Próceres there) south to 5 Calle S0. To the south of Colonia El Chamelecón are Colonia Dubón, Colonia Figueroa, Colonia Trejo (from 10 Calle S to 12 Calle S, from about Avenida Circunvalación to 25 Avenida S, including the Consulate of Nicaragua), Colonia Altamira, and Colonia Altiplano. Colonia Las Mesetas runs from 12 Calle S to 14 Calle S, from 21 Avenida A (S) to past 24 Avenida S.",
"score": "1.3804469"
},
{
"id": "25790699",
"title": "German Argentines",
"text": "Colonia Hinojo (5 January 1878) - originally called Colonia Santa María and called \"Kamenka\" by the Colonists (named after several Volga German towns in Russia). It is situated in Olavarría Partido. ; Colonia Monte La Plata (1906) ; Colonia Nievas (1885) - called Holtzel by the colonists. ; Colonia San Miguel (3 October 1881) - called Dehler by settlers. ; Colonia Santa Rosa (1899). ; Colonia San Miguel Arcangel (1903). ; Coronel Suárez (1883). ; San José (1887) - called Dehler by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Santa Trinidad (1887) - called Hildmann by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Santa María (1887) - called Kamenka by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Sierra de La Ventana (1908) ; Stroeder ; Tornquist (1883) ; Villa Gesell (1931) ; Verónica ",
"score": "1.3773743"
},
{
"id": "25950119",
"title": "Ciudad Colonial (Santo Domingo)",
"text": " Ciudad Colonial (Spanish for \"Colonial City\") is the historic central neighborhood of the Dominican Republic's capital Santo Domingo. It is the oldest continuously inhabited European-established settlement in the Americas. The area has been declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. It is also known as Zona Colonial (Colonial Zone) or more colloquially as \"La Zona\" (The Zone). The Ciudad Colonial is located on the west bank of the Ozama River, which bisects the city. It covers 1.06 sqkm bounded by a walled perimeter. It is an important section of the city due to the high number of landmarks, including Alcázar de Colón, Fortaleza Ozama, Catedral de Santa María la Menor, and others. The area is the main tourist attraction of Santo Domingo, even though the main sites of governmental and commercial activity are now in the more modern parts of the city.",
"score": "1.3768604"
},
{
"id": "10548841",
"title": "Colonia San Juan",
"text": " The neighborhood is mainly a residential zone, with some small shops and businesses such as convenience stores, tailor shops, restaurants and tortillerías. The colonia has one public plaza, the Plaza Valentín Gómez Farías, that dates back to the 17th century. The former house of Mexican president Valentín Gómez Farías, where he was even buried some years after his death in 1858, is located on one of the sides of the plaza. The building now houses Instituto Mora, a public research school. Colonia San Juan has one church, the Parroquia San Juan Evangelista y Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Church of Saint John the Evangelist and Our Lady of Guadalupe) a colonial building, dating back to the 17th century. The church has pieces of great artistic value, such as an oil painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe and a sculpture of John the Evangelist. The church is located in front of Plaza Valentín Gómez Farías. Besides Valentín Gómez Farías, other notable historical residents include Mexican intellectual Ireneo Paz, grandfather of Mexican writer and Nobel laureate Octavio Paz, who lived in a 19th century house that is still in the neighborhood but is now used as a house of Dominican preachers.",
"score": "1.3742262"
},
{
"id": "30786072",
"title": "Colonia Juárez, Mexico City",
"text": " Today the colonia, especially the Zona Rosa area, is a mix of wealth and poverty, old and new with many conflicting changes. New construction, most of it tall office and apartment buildings, is going up along Paseo de la Reforma, with predictions that this will return the area to its former prestige. In the interior, new boutiques, restaurants, bars and nightclubs continue to open. The deterioration process from the 1980s has been partially reverted by city efforts in conservation of older buildings and tourism promotion. The colonia has thirteen branches of banks that offer international services such as currency exchange. There are also several language schools, ",
"score": "1.3716882"
},
{
"id": "13819699",
"title": "Colonia Florida",
"text": " Colonia Florida is a neighborhood in Mexico City, located in the Álvaro Obregón borough.",
"score": "1.3619968"
},
{
"id": "8996536",
"title": "Colonia Díaz",
"text": " Colonia Díaz was the first permanent Mormon colony in Mexico, located along the Casas Grandes River in the northwest of the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. It is now a ghost town bordered on the east by the Sierra Madre Occidental. It was the nearest colony to the Mexico–United States border. By 1900, Díaz had grown to 623 inhabitants. In 1912, during the Mexican revolution, Colonia Díaz was intentionally burned and destroyed. Other neighboring colonies were established after Colonia Díaz in the late 19th century, of which only Colonia Dublán, sixty miles south of Colonia Díaz, and Colonia Juárez, 18 miles southeast of Colonia Dublán, are ",
"score": "1.360701"
}
] | [
"Colonia Nueva Coneta\n It is located 12 km from the city of San Fernando del Valle de Catamarca, on the margin of the Ongolí River and at the foot of the southwestern slope of the Sierra de Ambato.",
"Colonia Nueva Coneta\n It has 1,951 inhabitants (INDEC, 2010), which represents an increase of 30% compared to 1,497 inhabitants in 2001.",
"Colonia Nueva Coneta\n Colonia Nueva Coneta is a village and municipality in Catamarca Province in northwestern Argentina.",
"Nueva Helvecia\n Nueva Helvecia is a city in Colonia Department of Uruguay. Nueva Helvecia (Spanish for \"New Helvetia\"; formerly known as Colonia Suiza) is 120 km west of Montevideo, the capital and largest city of Uruguay. It is a few kilometres from the coast where the Atlantic Ocean meets the Río de la Plata and east of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is known nationwide for its Swiss heritage.",
"San José la Colonia\n San José la Colonia is located in Alta Verapaz, Guatemala, on the northern outskirts of the city of Cobán (15.47844°N, -90.37448°W). Formerly a nationalized finca, San José la Colonia was designated a national park in 1976. The park covers an area of 54 ha, and is managed by the National Forestry Institute (INAB).",
"Colonia Narvarte\n The old village of La Piedad was located in Colonia Piedad Narvarte, but no traces remain. The area was developed starting in the 1940s, and Japanese, German and Lebanese immigrants moved here.",
"Nueva Helvecia\n It is located in the southeastern part of Colonia Department, Uruguay. Its population, as of 2004, was 12,000.",
"Nueva Congregación Israelita, Montevideo\n The Synagogue of the New Jewish Congregation (Sinagoga de la Nueva Congregación Israelita, often known by its acronym NCI) is a synagogue in Montevideo, Uruguay.",
"Colonia Buenavista\n The name of the colonia is from a former owner of the lands here, Miguel Pérez de Santa Cruz Andoboya, the Marquis of Buenavista, who was the mayor of Mexico City three times during the 1710s and 1720s. The mansion of the marquis was located in front of the small plaza which is on Avenida Puente de Alvarado, near the current offices of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. This building is now the Museo Nacional de San Carlos. This plaza maintains a number of arches from the Santa Fe Aqueduct, which brought water into the city. During the 18th century, the area was filed with large orchards and gardens that stretched to what is now the Calzada de San Cosme. By 1871, the aqueduct was no ",
"Colonia San Juan\n Colonia San Juan is a neighborhood in Benito Juárez, Mexico City.",
"Colonia (film)\n Colonia (released in the United Kingdom as The Colony) is a 2015 historical thriller film directed by Florian Gallenberger, produced by Benjamin Herrmann, written by Torsten Wenzel and Gallenberger, and starring Emma Watson, Daniel Brühl, and Michael Nyqvist. The film is set against the backdrop of the 1973 Chilean military coup and the real \"Colonia Dignidad\", a notorious cult in the South of Chile, led by German lay preacher Paul Schäfer. Schäfer was a follower and teacher of \"The Message\" of William Branham. The film is an international co-production of companies in the United Kingdom, Germany, Luxembourg, and France. Principal photography began on 2 October 2014 in Luxembourg; filming also took place in Germany and Argentina. The film held its world premiere at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival in the Special Presentations section. The film was released in Germany on 18 February 2016, in the United Kingdom on 1 July 2016, and in France on 20 July 2016.",
"Boris Weisfeiler\n to most of the world, Colonia Dignidad sat on a large tract of land not far from the border with Argentina. Idyllic in appearance, the Colonia was run by German expatriates who included alleged Nazi war criminals and sympathizers. The leader of the Colonia for most of its existence was former Nazi Paul Schäfer. The Colonia had a cult-like atmosphere, in which many children were molested, a crime for which its leaders have faced prosecution; Schäfer himself was convicted in May 2006, in connection with allegations of child abuse at the Colonia. The BBC has reported and Chilean governmental documents suggest that the Chilean Dirección de Inteligencia Nacional (the secret police, which ",
"Colonia Dublán\n Colonia Dublán is currently a very small town located just north of Nuevo Casas Grandes. Most of the remaining residents engage in agriculture and produce crops such as peaches, apples, pecans and chile. There is also significant production of wheat and cattle. Most members of the Mormon community are now of Mexican descent. The remaining descendants of the colonizers belong to the LDS Church and continue to serve a role within that church in Mexico.",
"San Pedro Sula\n Barrio El Benque, the business district, is just to the west and south of the center, and other neighborhoods in the suroeste include Barrio Paz Barahona, Barrio La Guardia, Colonia Altamira, Colonia Mesetas, Barrio Río de Piedras, Barrio Suyapa (from 12 Avenida S out to Avenida Circunvalación, from 7 Calle S to 10 Calles S), Colonia Hernandez, Barrio Prado Alto, and Colonia El Chamelecón. The latter includes area from 23 Avenida S west to 27 Avenida S, from 1 Calle (named Bulevar Los Próceres there) south to 5 Calle S0. To the south of Colonia El Chamelecón are Colonia Dubón, Colonia Figueroa, Colonia Trejo (from 10 Calle S to 12 Calle S, from about Avenida Circunvalación to 25 Avenida S, including the Consulate of Nicaragua), Colonia Altamira, and Colonia Altiplano. Colonia Las Mesetas runs from 12 Calle S to 14 Calle S, from 21 Avenida A (S) to past 24 Avenida S.",
"German Argentines\nColonia Hinojo (5 January 1878) - originally called Colonia Santa María and called \"Kamenka\" by the Colonists (named after several Volga German towns in Russia). It is situated in Olavarría Partido. ; Colonia Monte La Plata (1906) ; Colonia Nievas (1885) - called Holtzel by the colonists. ; Colonia San Miguel (3 October 1881) - called Dehler by settlers. ; Colonia Santa Rosa (1899). ; Colonia San Miguel Arcangel (1903). ; Coronel Suárez (1883). ; San José (1887) - called Dehler by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Santa Trinidad (1887) - called Hildmann by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Santa María (1887) - called Kamenka by the colonists and situated in Coronel Suárez Partido. ; Sierra de La Ventana (1908) ; Stroeder ; Tornquist (1883) ; Villa Gesell (1931) ; Verónica ",
"Ciudad Colonial (Santo Domingo)\n Ciudad Colonial (Spanish for \"Colonial City\") is the historic central neighborhood of the Dominican Republic's capital Santo Domingo. It is the oldest continuously inhabited European-established settlement in the Americas. The area has been declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. It is also known as Zona Colonial (Colonial Zone) or more colloquially as \"La Zona\" (The Zone). The Ciudad Colonial is located on the west bank of the Ozama River, which bisects the city. It covers 1.06 sqkm bounded by a walled perimeter. It is an important section of the city due to the high number of landmarks, including Alcázar de Colón, Fortaleza Ozama, Catedral de Santa María la Menor, and others. The area is the main tourist attraction of Santo Domingo, even though the main sites of governmental and commercial activity are now in the more modern parts of the city.",
"Colonia San Juan\n The neighborhood is mainly a residential zone, with some small shops and businesses such as convenience stores, tailor shops, restaurants and tortillerías. The colonia has one public plaza, the Plaza Valentín Gómez Farías, that dates back to the 17th century. The former house of Mexican president Valentín Gómez Farías, where he was even buried some years after his death in 1858, is located on one of the sides of the plaza. The building now houses Instituto Mora, a public research school. Colonia San Juan has one church, the Parroquia San Juan Evangelista y Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (Church of Saint John the Evangelist and Our Lady of Guadalupe) a colonial building, dating back to the 17th century. The church has pieces of great artistic value, such as an oil painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe and a sculpture of John the Evangelist. The church is located in front of Plaza Valentín Gómez Farías. Besides Valentín Gómez Farías, other notable historical residents include Mexican intellectual Ireneo Paz, grandfather of Mexican writer and Nobel laureate Octavio Paz, who lived in a 19th century house that is still in the neighborhood but is now used as a house of Dominican preachers.",
"Colonia Juárez, Mexico City\n Today the colonia, especially the Zona Rosa area, is a mix of wealth and poverty, old and new with many conflicting changes. New construction, most of it tall office and apartment buildings, is going up along Paseo de la Reforma, with predictions that this will return the area to its former prestige. In the interior, new boutiques, restaurants, bars and nightclubs continue to open. The deterioration process from the 1980s has been partially reverted by city efforts in conservation of older buildings and tourism promotion. The colonia has thirteen branches of banks that offer international services such as currency exchange. There are also several language schools, ",
"Colonia Florida\n Colonia Florida is a neighborhood in Mexico City, located in the Álvaro Obregón borough.",
"Colonia Díaz\n Colonia Díaz was the first permanent Mormon colony in Mexico, located along the Casas Grandes River in the northwest of the state of Chihuahua, Mexico. It is now a ghost town bordered on the east by the Sierra Madre Occidental. It was the nearest colony to the Mexico–United States border. By 1900, Díaz had grown to 623 inhabitants. In 1912, during the Mexican revolution, Colonia Díaz was intentionally burned and destroyed. Other neighboring colonies were established after Colonia Díaz in the late 19th century, of which only Colonia Dublán, sixty miles south of Colonia Díaz, and Colonia Juárez, 18 miles southeast of Colonia Dublán, are "
] |
What genre is Astro? | [
"reggae",
"reggae music"
] | genre | Astro (English musician) | 3,398,480 | 46 | [
{
"id": "32495489",
"title": "Astro (album)",
"text": " Astro is the first album of long duration (after the EP Le disc of Astrou) of Chilean indie band Astro, released in 2011. The first single from the album was \"Ciervos\" and followed \"Colombo\", \"Panda\" and \"Manglares\". This album was chosen by National Public Radio among the 50 discs of 2012.",
"score": "1.7114973"
},
{
"id": "8514259",
"title": "Astro (Chilean band)",
"text": " The quartet released its first full-length album, Astro, in 2011. Despite being entirely in Spanish, the album received attention from American music critics. NPR Music featured the album as part of its First Listen series in 2012. Jasmine Garsd called Astro one of her favorite albums, referring to it as \"infectiously cheery, lighthearted and danceable.\" She described them as musical cognates with American bands such as MGMT, Animal Collective, and Passion Pit. In 2013, Astro performed at Lollapalooza Chicago, Primavera Sound, Mysteryland, and many others festivals. The song \"Panda\" was featured on the soundtrack of FIFA 13, the EA Sports video game.",
"score": "1.6343495"
},
{
"id": "16170044",
"title": "Astro Battle",
"text": " Astro Battle is a science fiction multi-directional shooter developed and published by American studio Lava Lord Games for Microsoft Windows and Linux. The gameplay focuses on players designing star fighters to fight against other players' ships in an overhead melee. Development is continuous; New ships and weapons are continuously added, and a sequel to Astro Battle is available for beta testing. The basic gameplay in the sequel remains the same, and adds in-game tutorials, new design tools, a new 3d graphics engine, and support for Linux.",
"score": "1.5843291"
},
{
"id": "7284167",
"title": "S.S. Astro",
"text": " S.S. Astro (教艦ASTRO) is a Japanese four-panel comic strip manga by Negi Banno about the lives of female teachers within a school at which they teach. The \"Astro\" in the title is actually an acronym abbreviating \"Asahio Sogo Teacher's ROom\", alluding to the school's name Asahio Sogo. The original title, Kyōkan Astro, plays on the fact that kyōkan (教官) is 'instructor' in Japanese, but the title uses the kanji kan (艦) meaning 'warship' in place of kan (官) meaning 'government service'. The manga started serialization in Houbunsha's seinen manga magazine Manga Time Kirara Carat on February 24, 2005, and the first bound volume was released on February 27, 2007. However, the manga has not appeared in the magazine since November 28, 2007. Yen Press licensed the series for release in English, and released the first volume on August 12, 2008.",
"score": "1.5765681"
},
{
"id": "4234076",
"title": "Astro's Playroom",
"text": " Astro's Playroom is a 3D platforming video game. It was developed by Japan Studio's Team Asobi division and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment for the PlayStation 5. The game is a sequel to Astro Bot Rescue Mission and comes pre-installed on every console, serving additionally as a free tech demo for the DualSense controller. The game was announced on 11 June 2020, at the PlayStation 5 reveal event. It was released on 12 November 2020, in select territories, and worldwide on 19 November 2020.",
"score": "1.5559487"
},
{
"id": "7299813",
"title": "Astro Plan",
"text": " Astro Plan, known in China as Space Adventures and informally in Japan as Star Field War Record Astro Plan (星原戦記アストロプラン), is a science fiction mecha animated series created by Guangzhou-based toy firm Xing Yuan. Hailed as \"China's first sci-fi animation\", the series premiered on Chinese television on January 16, 2010 through Hunan TV's Golden Eagle Channel and ended in mid-February with a total of 26 episodes.",
"score": "1.5532151"
},
{
"id": "8514257",
"title": "Astro (Chilean band)",
"text": " Astro is an indie band from Santiago, Chile formed in 2008.",
"score": "1.5520575"
},
{
"id": "31108436",
"title": "Astrorama",
"text": " Astrorama is an album by French Jazz fusion artist Jean-Luc Ponty and Japanese Avant-Garde artist Masahiko Satoh. It was released in 1970 on Toshiba EMI. The album was recorded live in Tokyo on August 29, 1970. Catalog: FAR EAST/TOSHIBA EMI (ETJ-65016)",
"score": "1.5477192"
},
{
"id": "30588141",
"title": "Astro Boy (2004 video game)",
"text": " Astro Boy (アストロボーイ・鉄腕アトム) is a video game based on the 2003 anime television series, produced by Sonic Team and published by Sega exclusively for the PlayStation 2. It was released in Japan on April 18, 2004, followed by a North American release on August 18, 2004, a European release on February 11, 2005, and an Australasian release on February 23, 2005. Astro Boy is a 3-D third person adventure game and has open world capabilities; throughout the game, Astro is controlled by the player and learns more of his abilities that can be used outside of battles and also in battles as well. Players explore a series of many levels towards a particular game cycle of events. Astro Boy also has a day and night cycle depending on the said storyline and events throughout the game. The game received a generally mixed response upon release.",
"score": "1.5410583"
},
{
"id": "29304020",
"title": "The Crüxshadows",
"text": " massive Völkerschlachtdenkmal War Memorial. Helios peaked on the Billboard singles chart at the No. 11 position in the USA and later in 2017 the single dominated the German Alternative Charts, camping out at the No. 1 position for months. In 2017, following its lead single Helios, The Crüxshadows released a new concept album called \"Astromythology\", which tells the story of an astronaut escaping the destruction of the solar system. Every song represents a planetary body, and the album as a whole becomes an allegory of life changing realities. The album became The Crüxshadows' most popular German release and its first two singles reached number ",
"score": "1.5312755"
},
{
"id": "8514262",
"title": "Astro (Chilean band)",
"text": "Astro (2011) ; Chicos de la luz (2015) Le disc de Astrou (2009) \"Maestro distorsión \" (2009) ; \"Ciervos\" (2012) ; \" Colombo \" (2012) ; \"Panda\" (2013) ; \"Hawaii\" (2013) ; \"Manglares\" (2014) ; \"Caribbean\" (2015) ; \"Druida\" (2015) ; \"Warrior\" (2016) Albums EPs Singles ",
"score": "1.5299203"
},
{
"id": "9388030",
"title": "Astro Artz",
"text": " Astro Artz was an American publishing company founded by Susanna Dakin in the early 1980s.",
"score": "1.5266109"
},
{
"id": "2138690",
"title": "Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro",
"text": " Daughter of a Brazilian mother and Swedish father, Astro leaves her life in Sweden to visit Rio de Janeiro. She travels to the city to get a house that she had inherited, but ends up getting longer than expected. Eventually, she ends up meeting Alice and her group of friends, starting to interact more with the city.",
"score": "1.521435"
},
{
"id": "25784229",
"title": "Astro (Japanese band)",
"text": " Astro is a Japanese noise group, originally started in 1993 as a solo project of Hiroshi Hasegawa (長谷川洋) of the group C.C.C.C.. Hiroshi Hasegawa uses assorted analog equipment including vintage Moog and EMS synthesizers. His music covers a wide range of styles in the noise field, from space music to psychedelically-tinged harsh noise. Since 2013, Astro has been a duo of Hiroshi Hasegawa and Rohco (Hiroko Hasegawa), who has played with Astro since 2009.",
"score": "1.5199463"
},
{
"id": "32407173",
"title": "The Astro-Zombies",
"text": " The Astro-Zombies is a 1968 American science fiction horror film written, directed and produced by Ted V. Mikels and starring John Carradine, Wendell Corey, and Tura Satana.",
"score": "1.5154076"
},
{
"id": "16170050",
"title": "Astro Battle",
"text": " Astro Battle was released in 2004 by Lava Lord Games and was inspired by Star Control. Initially, the game was released for free trial with an expansion pack allowing for much more powerful ships. Initially, Astro Battle was released as a stand-alone application. In 2007, the game had 18,000 subscribers and work on a sequel began. In 2009, the original was re-released as a web application, accessible from the website. Today, both the original game and the sequel are available for free from the website.",
"score": "1.5103693"
},
{
"id": "31908669",
"title": "Astro Boy (film)",
"text": " The score to Astro Boy was composed by John Ottman, who recorded his score with a 95-piece orchestra and choir at Abbey Road Studios. A soundtrack album was released on October 20, 2009, by Varèse Sarabande Records. Songs in Astro Boy not composed by John Ottman are as follows: Breezy Day, composed by Roger-Roger. Alright, written by Daniel Goffey, Gaz Coombes, and Michael Quinn and performed by Supergrass. Marching Down the Field, composed by Harry Edwards.",
"score": "1.5082681"
},
{
"id": "2138689",
"title": "Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro",
"text": " Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro (Portuguese: Astro, Uma Fábula Urbana em um Rio de Janeiro Mágico) is a 2012 Brazilian adventure-drama film directed by Paula Trabulsi. The film is part of a project that involves visual art, street culture, cuisine and urban interventions.",
"score": "1.4991634"
},
{
"id": "12998198",
"title": "Astro Battle 2009",
"text": " Astro Battle 2009 (or sometimes just Astro Battle) is a Space Invaders clone published by Bally Manufacturing in 1978 for the Bally Astrocade arcade system.",
"score": "1.4986396"
},
{
"id": "15281948",
"title": "Astro (South Korean band)",
"text": " Astro is a South Korean boy band formed by Fantagio that debuted in 2016. The group is composed of six members: MJ, Jinjin, Cha Eun-woo, Moon Bin, Rocky and Yoon San-ha. They debuted with the single \"Hide & Seek\" from their debut EP Spring Up, and were subsequently named by Billboard as one of the best new K-pop groups of 2016.",
"score": "1.497625"
}
] | [
"Astro (album)\n Astro is the first album of long duration (after the EP Le disc of Astrou) of Chilean indie band Astro, released in 2011. The first single from the album was \"Ciervos\" and followed \"Colombo\", \"Panda\" and \"Manglares\". This album was chosen by National Public Radio among the 50 discs of 2012.",
"Astro (Chilean band)\n The quartet released its first full-length album, Astro, in 2011. Despite being entirely in Spanish, the album received attention from American music critics. NPR Music featured the album as part of its First Listen series in 2012. Jasmine Garsd called Astro one of her favorite albums, referring to it as \"infectiously cheery, lighthearted and danceable.\" She described them as musical cognates with American bands such as MGMT, Animal Collective, and Passion Pit. In 2013, Astro performed at Lollapalooza Chicago, Primavera Sound, Mysteryland, and many others festivals. The song \"Panda\" was featured on the soundtrack of FIFA 13, the EA Sports video game.",
"Astro Battle\n Astro Battle is a science fiction multi-directional shooter developed and published by American studio Lava Lord Games for Microsoft Windows and Linux. The gameplay focuses on players designing star fighters to fight against other players' ships in an overhead melee. Development is continuous; New ships and weapons are continuously added, and a sequel to Astro Battle is available for beta testing. The basic gameplay in the sequel remains the same, and adds in-game tutorials, new design tools, a new 3d graphics engine, and support for Linux.",
"S.S. Astro\n S.S. Astro (教艦ASTRO) is a Japanese four-panel comic strip manga by Negi Banno about the lives of female teachers within a school at which they teach. The \"Astro\" in the title is actually an acronym abbreviating \"Asahio Sogo Teacher's ROom\", alluding to the school's name Asahio Sogo. The original title, Kyōkan Astro, plays on the fact that kyōkan (教官) is 'instructor' in Japanese, but the title uses the kanji kan (艦) meaning 'warship' in place of kan (官) meaning 'government service'. The manga started serialization in Houbunsha's seinen manga magazine Manga Time Kirara Carat on February 24, 2005, and the first bound volume was released on February 27, 2007. However, the manga has not appeared in the magazine since November 28, 2007. Yen Press licensed the series for release in English, and released the first volume on August 12, 2008.",
"Astro's Playroom\n Astro's Playroom is a 3D platforming video game. It was developed by Japan Studio's Team Asobi division and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment for the PlayStation 5. The game is a sequel to Astro Bot Rescue Mission and comes pre-installed on every console, serving additionally as a free tech demo for the DualSense controller. The game was announced on 11 June 2020, at the PlayStation 5 reveal event. It was released on 12 November 2020, in select territories, and worldwide on 19 November 2020.",
"Astro Plan\n Astro Plan, known in China as Space Adventures and informally in Japan as Star Field War Record Astro Plan (星原戦記アストロプラン), is a science fiction mecha animated series created by Guangzhou-based toy firm Xing Yuan. Hailed as \"China's first sci-fi animation\", the series premiered on Chinese television on January 16, 2010 through Hunan TV's Golden Eagle Channel and ended in mid-February with a total of 26 episodes.",
"Astro (Chilean band)\n Astro is an indie band from Santiago, Chile formed in 2008.",
"Astrorama\n Astrorama is an album by French Jazz fusion artist Jean-Luc Ponty and Japanese Avant-Garde artist Masahiko Satoh. It was released in 1970 on Toshiba EMI. The album was recorded live in Tokyo on August 29, 1970. Catalog: FAR EAST/TOSHIBA EMI (ETJ-65016)",
"Astro Boy (2004 video game)\n Astro Boy (アストロボーイ・鉄腕アトム) is a video game based on the 2003 anime television series, produced by Sonic Team and published by Sega exclusively for the PlayStation 2. It was released in Japan on April 18, 2004, followed by a North American release on August 18, 2004, a European release on February 11, 2005, and an Australasian release on February 23, 2005. Astro Boy is a 3-D third person adventure game and has open world capabilities; throughout the game, Astro is controlled by the player and learns more of his abilities that can be used outside of battles and also in battles as well. Players explore a series of many levels towards a particular game cycle of events. Astro Boy also has a day and night cycle depending on the said storyline and events throughout the game. The game received a generally mixed response upon release.",
"The Crüxshadows\n massive Völkerschlachtdenkmal War Memorial. Helios peaked on the Billboard singles chart at the No. 11 position in the USA and later in 2017 the single dominated the German Alternative Charts, camping out at the No. 1 position for months. In 2017, following its lead single Helios, The Crüxshadows released a new concept album called \"Astromythology\", which tells the story of an astronaut escaping the destruction of the solar system. Every song represents a planetary body, and the album as a whole becomes an allegory of life changing realities. The album became The Crüxshadows' most popular German release and its first two singles reached number ",
"Astro (Chilean band)\nAstro (2011) ; Chicos de la luz (2015) Le disc de Astrou (2009) \"Maestro distorsión \" (2009) ; \"Ciervos\" (2012) ; \" Colombo \" (2012) ; \"Panda\" (2013) ; \"Hawaii\" (2013) ; \"Manglares\" (2014) ; \"Caribbean\" (2015) ; \"Druida\" (2015) ; \"Warrior\" (2016) Albums EPs Singles ",
"Astro Artz\n Astro Artz was an American publishing company founded by Susanna Dakin in the early 1980s.",
"Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro\n Daughter of a Brazilian mother and Swedish father, Astro leaves her life in Sweden to visit Rio de Janeiro. She travels to the city to get a house that she had inherited, but ends up getting longer than expected. Eventually, she ends up meeting Alice and her group of friends, starting to interact more with the city.",
"Astro (Japanese band)\n Astro is a Japanese noise group, originally started in 1993 as a solo project of Hiroshi Hasegawa (長谷川洋) of the group C.C.C.C.. Hiroshi Hasegawa uses assorted analog equipment including vintage Moog and EMS synthesizers. His music covers a wide range of styles in the noise field, from space music to psychedelically-tinged harsh noise. Since 2013, Astro has been a duo of Hiroshi Hasegawa and Rohco (Hiroko Hasegawa), who has played with Astro since 2009.",
"The Astro-Zombies\n The Astro-Zombies is a 1968 American science fiction horror film written, directed and produced by Ted V. Mikels and starring John Carradine, Wendell Corey, and Tura Satana.",
"Astro Battle\n Astro Battle was released in 2004 by Lava Lord Games and was inspired by Star Control. Initially, the game was released for free trial with an expansion pack allowing for much more powerful ships. Initially, Astro Battle was released as a stand-alone application. In 2007, the game had 18,000 subscribers and work on a sequel began. In 2009, the original was re-released as a web application, accessible from the website. Today, both the original game and the sequel are available for free from the website.",
"Astro Boy (film)\n The score to Astro Boy was composed by John Ottman, who recorded his score with a 95-piece orchestra and choir at Abbey Road Studios. A soundtrack album was released on October 20, 2009, by Varèse Sarabande Records. Songs in Astro Boy not composed by John Ottman are as follows: Breezy Day, composed by Roger-Roger. Alright, written by Daniel Goffey, Gaz Coombes, and Michael Quinn and performed by Supergrass. Marching Down the Field, composed by Harry Edwards.",
"Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro\n Astro: An Urban Fable in a Magical Rio de Janeiro (Portuguese: Astro, Uma Fábula Urbana em um Rio de Janeiro Mágico) is a 2012 Brazilian adventure-drama film directed by Paula Trabulsi. The film is part of a project that involves visual art, street culture, cuisine and urban interventions.",
"Astro Battle 2009\n Astro Battle 2009 (or sometimes just Astro Battle) is a Space Invaders clone published by Bally Manufacturing in 1978 for the Bally Astrocade arcade system.",
"Astro (South Korean band)\n Astro is a South Korean boy band formed by Fantagio that debuted in 2016. The group is composed of six members: MJ, Jinjin, Cha Eun-woo, Moon Bin, Rocky and Yoon San-ha. They debuted with the single \"Hide & Seek\" from their debut EP Spring Up, and were subsequently named by Billboard as one of the best new K-pop groups of 2016."
] |
Who was the director of The Loudwater Mystery? | [
"Walter West",
"Walter Alabaster West"
] | director | The Loudwater Mystery (film) | 5,939,255 | 93 | [
{
"id": "14923683",
"title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)",
"text": " A detective investigating the death of an aristocrat eventually deduces he was murdered by his secretary.",
"score": "1.8505179"
},
{
"id": "14923807",
"title": "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)",
"text": " In 1921, the novel was made by Broadwest into a silent film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook.",
"score": "1.7699251"
},
{
"id": "14923682",
"title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)",
"text": " The Loudwater Mystery is a 1921 British silent crime film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook. It was based on the 1920 novel The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson.",
"score": "1.7300788"
},
{
"id": "14923684",
"title": "The Loudwater Mystery (film)",
"text": "Gregory Scott as Hubert Manley ; Pauline Peters as Lady Loudwater ; Clive Brook as Lord Loudwater ; Cameron Carr as Inspector Flexen ; Charles Tilson-Chowne as Colonel Grey ; Arthur Walcott as Carrington ; Nan Heriot as Miss Truslove ; Charles Poulton as Roper ",
"score": "1.6553762"
},
{
"id": "14923806",
"title": "The Loudwater Mystery (novel)",
"text": " The Loudwater Mystery is crime novel by the British writer Edgar Jepson which was first published in 1920. Police are called in to investigate the suspicious death of Lord Loudwater and eventually deduce he was murdered by his private secretary. Or maybe not.",
"score": "1.6417474"
},
{
"id": "31001433",
"title": "River of Mystery",
"text": " River of Mystery is a 1971 television film directed by Paul Stanley and starring Vic Morrow.",
"score": "1.3790939"
},
{
"id": "8945456",
"title": "Loudwater railway station",
"text": " The station appears briefly in an early scene of The Reptile'' (1966) made by Hammer Film Productions.",
"score": "1.360347"
},
{
"id": "10966686",
"title": "The Cameron Files: Secret at Loch Ness",
"text": " The detective Alan Parker Cameron is investigating the secret case of the monster of Loch Ness, he is sent to “Devil's Ridge Manor” (A mansion located at the shore of the lake) because people claim to see ghosts and paranormal activity around the house. Alan is sent there to resolve this weird case.",
"score": "1.3394997"
},
{
"id": "5199630",
"title": "Piranha (1995 film)",
"text": " During the night, Barbara (Lorissa McComas) and her boyfriend David (Richard Israel) sneak into a closed down US Army test site, and discovered a pool. They go swimming, but are attacked and killed by an unseen force in the pool. The next day, J.R. Randolph (Monte Markham) the uncle of Barbara, hires private investigator Maggie McNamara (Alexandra Paul), to investigate the incident, believing her to be a runaway. Maggie searches the area for any possible witnesses, eventually stopping by local homeowner Paul Grogan (William Katt), asking for any knowledge of the girl's disappearance. He claims to have not seen her, but leads her to the army test site where they discover the pool. They enter to look for ",
"score": "1.3309851"
},
{
"id": "11415789",
"title": "Pete Hautman",
"text": "The Bloodwater Mysteries (co-authored with Mary Logue) ; Snatched (2006) ; Skullduggery (2007) ; Doppelganger (2008) ; The Flinkwater Chronicles ; The Flinkwater Factor (2015) ; The Forgetting Machine (2016) ; Slider (2017) ; Otherwood (2018) ",
"score": "1.324255"
},
{
"id": "27714230",
"title": "Igor Auzins",
"text": "Matlock Police (TV series) - camera operator ; Division 4 (1972-73) (TV series) - director ; Upstream, Downstream (1975) (short film) ; Homicide (1973–76) - won a Logie for his direction of episode \"The Firework Man\" ; The Outsiders (1976) - director Ghost Town ; The Big Backyard (1977) (short film) - director ; Upstream downstream (1977) (short) - director ; All at Sea (1977) (TV movie) ; Death Train (1977) (TV movie) - director ; The Night Nurse (1977) (TV movie) - director ; High Rolling (1977) - director ; Chopper Squad (1978) (TV series) - director ; Bailey's Bird (1979) (TV series) - director ; Water Under the Bridge (1980) (miniseries) - director ; A Country Practice (TV series) - director ; Runaway Island (1982) - director ; We of the Never Never (1982) - director ; Taurus Rising (1982) (Tv series) - director ; The Coolangatta Gold (1984) - director ",
"score": "1.32191"
},
{
"id": "26797841",
"title": "The Murder Game (TV series)",
"text": " In the town of Blackwater a fictional woman named Catherine Prior had been murdered. Ten contestants from the British public were set the challenge of becoming investigators and finding the killer. The investigators were led by Bob Taylor, known as the Chief Investigator or Chief, who was in real life a retired Detective Chief Superintendent from the West Yorkshire Police. The people from the town, played by actors, formed the suspects, some of whom later became victims. At the beginning of each episode, one investigator would be appointed as the Lead Investigator, who would have specific responsibilities and powers. The investigators would be split into teams by the Lead Investigator, and sent down different lines of inquiry determined by the Chief. These lines of inquiry would involve hidden tests, which the teams would either pass or fail as judged by the Chief.",
"score": "1.3196354"
},
{
"id": "27060283",
"title": "The Lady in the Lake (Agent Carter)",
"text": " In 1947 New York, Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR) Agent Peggy Carter and Chief Jack Thompson apprehend Soviet spy Dottie Underwood during an attempted bank robbery. In Los Angeles, newly appointed SSR Chief Daniel Sousa meets with Los Angeles Police Department Detective Andrew Henry, who informs him that a woman's body was found in Echo Park Lake with stab wounds similar to victims of a notorious serial killer, the Lady of the Lake Killer, but that the body was oddly discovered encased in a block of ice during a scorching heat wave in the city. Sousa requests backup from New York and Thompson sends Carter, interrupting her interrogation of Underwood. Carter travels to Los Angeles, where she ",
"score": "1.3186991"
},
{
"id": "14013056",
"title": "Kyle Marshall",
"text": " He directed several episodes of The Loud House, along with series creator Chris Savino. In October 2017, he replaced Savino as the show's head director, after he was being fired from Nickelodeon for sexual harassment allegations.",
"score": "1.3164892"
},
{
"id": "8945454",
"title": "Loudwater railway station",
"text": " Loudwater railway station was a railway station which served Loudwater, Buckinghamshire and Flackwell Heath, on the Wycombe Railway.",
"score": "1.3098958"
},
{
"id": "26668273",
"title": "William Witney",
"text": " Doctor (1956-59) (TV series) - director ; Riverboat (1959-60) (TV series) - director ; Wagon Train (1959-65) (TV series) - director ; Valley of the Redwoods (1960) - director ; Overland Trail (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960) - director ; M Squad (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Tall Man (1961) (TV series) - editor, director ; Coronado 9 (1960-61) (TV series) - director ; The Long Rope (1961) - director ; The Cat Burglar (1961) - director ; Master of the World (1961) - director ; Frontier Circus (1961-62) (TV series) ",
"score": "1.3043284"
},
{
"id": "1530882",
"title": "The Caribbean Mystery",
"text": " The Caribbean Mystery is a 1945 American film noir mystery film which marked the directorial debut of Robert D. Webb. It is the third film adaptation of the 1933 novel Murder in Trinidad by John W. Vandercook to be produced by 20th Century Fox. Starring James Dunn, Sheila Ryan, and Reed Hadley, the plot finds a Brooklyn detective summoned to a Caribbean island to solve the disappearance of eight geologists who had visited an alligator-infested swamp. The lead role was rewritten especially for Dunn after his successful film comeback in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), also produced by 20th Century Fox.",
"score": "1.2974763"
},
{
"id": "3575984",
"title": "Ron Mann",
"text": " Ronald Mann (born June 13, 1958), credited professionally as Ron Mann, is a Canadian documentary film director. His work includes the films Imagine the Sound (1981); Comic Book Confidential (1988); Grass (1999) and Go Further (2003), both of which feature Woody Harrelson; In the Wake of the Flood (2010), which features author Margaret Atwood; and Altman (2014), about the life and career of film director Robert Altman. Mann has served as mentor to and worked with many filmmakers from the Toronto New Wave of the 1980s, including Atom Egoyan, Bruce McDonald, Jeremy Podeswa, and Peter Mettler.",
"score": "1.2936349"
},
{
"id": "32976073",
"title": "David Loud",
"text": " David Loud (born November 28, 1961, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American music supervisor, music director, conductor, vocal and dance arranger, pianist and actor. He is best known for his collaborations with and interpretations of the music of both Kander and Ebb and Stephen Sondheim.",
"score": "1.2893121"
},
{
"id": "26587574",
"title": "Robert Louden",
"text": " Robert Louden (died 1867), also known by the alias Charlie Dale, was a Confederate saboteur and mail carrier during the American Civil War. He was said to be the primary messenger between General Sterling Price and Confederate regulars and bushwhackers. As a Confederate agent, Louden was involved in the sabotage and sinking of several Union steamboats near St. Louis, Missouri and, on his deathbed, claimed to have been responsible for the destruction of the steamboat Sultana, which exploded on April 27, 1865 just north of Memphis, Tennessee, killing an estimated 1,300 to 1,900 paroled Union prisoners and civilians returning home after the war, the deadliest maritime disaster in United States history. Louden supposedly ",
"score": "1.2891954"
}
] | [
"The Loudwater Mystery (film)\n A detective investigating the death of an aristocrat eventually deduces he was murdered by his secretary.",
"The Loudwater Mystery (novel)\n In 1921, the novel was made by Broadwest into a silent film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook.",
"The Loudwater Mystery (film)\n The Loudwater Mystery is a 1921 British silent crime film directed by Walter West and starring Gregory Scott, Pauline Peters and Clive Brook. It was based on the 1920 novel The Loudwater Mystery by Edgar Jepson.",
"The Loudwater Mystery (film)\nGregory Scott as Hubert Manley ; Pauline Peters as Lady Loudwater ; Clive Brook as Lord Loudwater ; Cameron Carr as Inspector Flexen ; Charles Tilson-Chowne as Colonel Grey ; Arthur Walcott as Carrington ; Nan Heriot as Miss Truslove ; Charles Poulton as Roper ",
"The Loudwater Mystery (novel)\n The Loudwater Mystery is crime novel by the British writer Edgar Jepson which was first published in 1920. Police are called in to investigate the suspicious death of Lord Loudwater and eventually deduce he was murdered by his private secretary. Or maybe not.",
"River of Mystery\n River of Mystery is a 1971 television film directed by Paul Stanley and starring Vic Morrow.",
"Loudwater railway station\n The station appears briefly in an early scene of The Reptile'' (1966) made by Hammer Film Productions.",
"The Cameron Files: Secret at Loch Ness\n The detective Alan Parker Cameron is investigating the secret case of the monster of Loch Ness, he is sent to “Devil's Ridge Manor” (A mansion located at the shore of the lake) because people claim to see ghosts and paranormal activity around the house. Alan is sent there to resolve this weird case.",
"Piranha (1995 film)\n During the night, Barbara (Lorissa McComas) and her boyfriend David (Richard Israel) sneak into a closed down US Army test site, and discovered a pool. They go swimming, but are attacked and killed by an unseen force in the pool. The next day, J.R. Randolph (Monte Markham) the uncle of Barbara, hires private investigator Maggie McNamara (Alexandra Paul), to investigate the incident, believing her to be a runaway. Maggie searches the area for any possible witnesses, eventually stopping by local homeowner Paul Grogan (William Katt), asking for any knowledge of the girl's disappearance. He claims to have not seen her, but leads her to the army test site where they discover the pool. They enter to look for ",
"Pete Hautman\nThe Bloodwater Mysteries (co-authored with Mary Logue) ; Snatched (2006) ; Skullduggery (2007) ; Doppelganger (2008) ; The Flinkwater Chronicles ; The Flinkwater Factor (2015) ; The Forgetting Machine (2016) ; Slider (2017) ; Otherwood (2018) ",
"Igor Auzins\nMatlock Police (TV series) - camera operator ; Division 4 (1972-73) (TV series) - director ; Upstream, Downstream (1975) (short film) ; Homicide (1973–76) - won a Logie for his direction of episode \"The Firework Man\" ; The Outsiders (1976) - director Ghost Town ; The Big Backyard (1977) (short film) - director ; Upstream downstream (1977) (short) - director ; All at Sea (1977) (TV movie) ; Death Train (1977) (TV movie) - director ; The Night Nurse (1977) (TV movie) - director ; High Rolling (1977) - director ; Chopper Squad (1978) (TV series) - director ; Bailey's Bird (1979) (TV series) - director ; Water Under the Bridge (1980) (miniseries) - director ; A Country Practice (TV series) - director ; Runaway Island (1982) - director ; We of the Never Never (1982) - director ; Taurus Rising (1982) (Tv series) - director ; The Coolangatta Gold (1984) - director ",
"The Murder Game (TV series)\n In the town of Blackwater a fictional woman named Catherine Prior had been murdered. Ten contestants from the British public were set the challenge of becoming investigators and finding the killer. The investigators were led by Bob Taylor, known as the Chief Investigator or Chief, who was in real life a retired Detective Chief Superintendent from the West Yorkshire Police. The people from the town, played by actors, formed the suspects, some of whom later became victims. At the beginning of each episode, one investigator would be appointed as the Lead Investigator, who would have specific responsibilities and powers. The investigators would be split into teams by the Lead Investigator, and sent down different lines of inquiry determined by the Chief. These lines of inquiry would involve hidden tests, which the teams would either pass or fail as judged by the Chief.",
"The Lady in the Lake (Agent Carter)\n In 1947 New York, Strategic Scientific Reserve (SSR) Agent Peggy Carter and Chief Jack Thompson apprehend Soviet spy Dottie Underwood during an attempted bank robbery. In Los Angeles, newly appointed SSR Chief Daniel Sousa meets with Los Angeles Police Department Detective Andrew Henry, who informs him that a woman's body was found in Echo Park Lake with stab wounds similar to victims of a notorious serial killer, the Lady of the Lake Killer, but that the body was oddly discovered encased in a block of ice during a scorching heat wave in the city. Sousa requests backup from New York and Thompson sends Carter, interrupting her interrogation of Underwood. Carter travels to Los Angeles, where she ",
"Kyle Marshall\n He directed several episodes of The Loud House, along with series creator Chris Savino. In October 2017, he replaced Savino as the show's head director, after he was being fired from Nickelodeon for sexual harassment allegations.",
"Loudwater railway station\n Loudwater railway station was a railway station which served Loudwater, Buckinghamshire and Flackwell Heath, on the Wycombe Railway.",
"William Witney\n Doctor (1956-59) (TV series) - director ; Riverboat (1959-60) (TV series) - director ; Wagon Train (1959-65) (TV series) - director ; Valley of the Redwoods (1960) - director ; Overland Trail (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Secret of the Purple Reef (1960) - director ; M Squad (1960) (TV series) - director ; The Tall Man (1961) (TV series) - editor, director ; Coronado 9 (1960-61) (TV series) - director ; The Long Rope (1961) - director ; The Cat Burglar (1961) - director ; Master of the World (1961) - director ; Frontier Circus (1961-62) (TV series) ",
"The Caribbean Mystery\n The Caribbean Mystery is a 1945 American film noir mystery film which marked the directorial debut of Robert D. Webb. It is the third film adaptation of the 1933 novel Murder in Trinidad by John W. Vandercook to be produced by 20th Century Fox. Starring James Dunn, Sheila Ryan, and Reed Hadley, the plot finds a Brooklyn detective summoned to a Caribbean island to solve the disappearance of eight geologists who had visited an alligator-infested swamp. The lead role was rewritten especially for Dunn after his successful film comeback in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945), also produced by 20th Century Fox.",
"Ron Mann\n Ronald Mann (born June 13, 1958), credited professionally as Ron Mann, is a Canadian documentary film director. His work includes the films Imagine the Sound (1981); Comic Book Confidential (1988); Grass (1999) and Go Further (2003), both of which feature Woody Harrelson; In the Wake of the Flood (2010), which features author Margaret Atwood; and Altman (2014), about the life and career of film director Robert Altman. Mann has served as mentor to and worked with many filmmakers from the Toronto New Wave of the 1980s, including Atom Egoyan, Bruce McDonald, Jeremy Podeswa, and Peter Mettler.",
"David Loud\n David Loud (born November 28, 1961, in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American music supervisor, music director, conductor, vocal and dance arranger, pianist and actor. He is best known for his collaborations with and interpretations of the music of both Kander and Ebb and Stephen Sondheim.",
"Robert Louden\n Robert Louden (died 1867), also known by the alias Charlie Dale, was a Confederate saboteur and mail carrier during the American Civil War. He was said to be the primary messenger between General Sterling Price and Confederate regulars and bushwhackers. As a Confederate agent, Louden was involved in the sabotage and sinking of several Union steamboats near St. Louis, Missouri and, on his deathbed, claimed to have been responsible for the destruction of the steamboat Sultana, which exploded on April 27, 1865 just north of Memphis, Tennessee, killing an estimated 1,300 to 1,900 paroled Union prisoners and civilians returning home after the war, the deadliest maritime disaster in United States history. Louden supposedly "
] |
Who is the author of Operator? | [
"David Williamson",
"David Keith Williamson"
] | author | Operator (play) | 5,346,275 | 70 | [
{
"id": "33466",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " Operator is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by Logan Kibens from a screenplay by Sharon Greene and Logan Kibens. It stars Martin Starr as Joe, a programmer and obsessive self-quantifier, and Mae Whitman as Emily, a budding comedy performer, who are a happily married couple until they decide to use one another in their work. Nat Faxon, Cameron Esposito, Retta, and Christine Lahti co-star. The film had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 12, 2016 and was released by The Orchard on November 8, 2016.",
"score": "1.647727"
},
{
"id": "2946490",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": " Operator is an American post-grunge band from Los Angeles, California, United States. The name Operator was used for a solo project created by Johnny Strong, an actor and musician, who has appeared in movies such as Black Hawk Down (2001), The Fast and the Furious (2001), Get Carter (2000) and The Glimmer Man (1996).",
"score": "1.6110582"
},
{
"id": "15336200",
"title": "Jack Deere",
"text": " C. Peter Wagner said this book “is the new operator’s manual for those who want to be participants, not just spectators, in today’s prophetic movement. This book will help you put it all together, get it up and running, and troubleshoot whatever problems arise.”",
"score": "1.6023571"
},
{
"id": "11323341",
"title": "Operator (play)",
"text": " Operator is a play by David Williamson. Williamson's son Rory played the lead role during its original production.",
"score": "1.5860887"
},
{
"id": "7379912",
"title": "Operator (2015 film)",
"text": " Operator is a 2015 American action thriller drama film directed by Amariah Olson and Obin Olson and starring Luke Goss, Mischa Barton, Michael Paré and Ving Rhames.",
"score": "1.5692788"
},
{
"id": "25160371",
"title": "Operator (album)",
"text": " Operator is the third studio album by Canadian electronic music duo Mstrkrft. It was released on July 22, 2016, by Last Gang Records.",
"score": "1.53407"
},
{
"id": "12013577",
"title": "Kim Harrison",
"text": "1) The Drafter (September 1, 2015, ISBN: 978-1-50-110869-3) ; 2) The Operator (November 22, 2016, ISBN: 978-1-40-870758-6) ",
"score": "1.4920883"
},
{
"id": "33031239",
"title": "Operator (Motown song)",
"text": " \"Operator\" is a Motown song recorded by Motown vocalists Mary Wells and Brenda Holloway. The Wells version was the b-side to her top ten hit, \"Two Lovers\" while Holloway's was issued as a single in 1965.",
"score": "1.4865448"
},
{
"id": "33467",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " Joe (Martin Starr) is a programmer with a crippling anxiety problem who is unable to deal with uncertainty. At work he is tasked with creating an interactive call center answering machine that can convey empathy. Joe recruits his wife Emily (Mae Whitman) who has the perfect voice for the system. Emily works at the front desk of a swanky hotel during the day and has an uncanny ability to soothe even the most irate guests (at night she performs with a comedy group at the Neo-Futurists). After years of being happily married, the pressures of work, family, and personal growth have strained their ",
"score": "1.4848099"
},
{
"id": "13885464",
"title": "Operator No. 5",
"text": " The magazine ran for 48 issues, from April 1934 to November 1939. One final story was written but never published. Stories were all credited to \"Curtis Steele\", which was a house name for writers Frederick C. Davis (#1-20), Emile C. Tepperman (#21-39), and Wayne Rogers (#40-48). Like other such pulps of the day, there were short backup stories by other authors. Davis left because he got fed up with the publisher's demand of trying to think up a new evil super-power attacking America every issue. Tepperman solved this by writing 13 interconnected novels (starting with #26) that make up The Purple Invasion, a series in which the Purple Empire (an unnamed European power which is a thinly veiled Nazi Germany) conquers the United States after ",
"score": "1.4747056"
},
{
"id": "31468743",
"title": "The Operators (band)",
"text": " The Operators are a British indie rock band. Their songs include \"Mountain\", \"Just My Way\" and \"It Grinds\".",
"score": "1.4623921"
},
{
"id": "4862629",
"title": "Operator (Midnight Star song)",
"text": " \"Operator\" is a 1984 R&B/dance song by Midnight Star, produced by then-current bandmember Reginald Calloway, released as a single from their album, Planetary Invasion.",
"score": "1.4591442"
},
{
"id": "25160375",
"title": "Operator (album)",
"text": " In support of the album, the band went on a North American tour from June 1, 2016 at the U Street Music Hall in Washington, D.C. to June 14, 2016 at The Horseshoe Tavern in Ontario, Canada.",
"score": "1.4581785"
},
{
"id": "4869359",
"title": "Gerard Murphy (mathematician)",
"text": " C*-Algebras and Operator Theory This book has become a standard textbook in many countries, and is often cited as a reference in research articles. The book was published in 1990 by Academic Press. Its aim is to give an introduction to one of the most dynamic areas of modern mathematics. It is directed at first and second year graduate students intending to specialise in research in operator algebras and at interested researchers from other areas, especially quantum physicists. He attempted to give an accessible exposition of the core material and to cover a number of topics that have a high contemporary profile. No attempt is made to be encyclopedic but there are notes at the end of each chapter giving additional results not covered in ",
"score": "1.4514091"
},
{
"id": "2946495",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": "Johnny Strong – lead vocals (2003–present) ; Paul Phillips – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Ricki Lixx – lead guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Wade Carrpenter – bass guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Dorman Pantfoeder – drums, percussion (2003–present) ",
"score": "1.4501439"
},
{
"id": "27563509",
"title": "İbrahim Kavrakoğlu",
"text": " He is the author of 24 books and more than 130 papers, including lead articles and invited papers in the European Journal of Operational Research, Mathematical Modeling, Omega, Automatica, Interfaces and Operations Research. The most recent, \"Knowledge Leveraging - Post Modern O.R.,\" appeared in the April 2004 issue of OR/MS Today.",
"score": "1.4496331"
},
{
"id": "33471",
"title": "Operator (2016 film)",
"text": " The film premiered to positive reviews at the South by Southwest festival on March 12, 2016. On May 25, 2016, it was announced that The Orchard had acquired distribution rights to the film. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 7.19/10.",
"score": "1.4476168"
},
{
"id": "30839625",
"title": "Operator 13",
"text": " Operator 13 is a 1934 American pre-Code romance film directed by Richard Boleslawski and starring Marion Davies, Gary Cooper, and Jean Parker. Based on stories written by Robert W. Chambers, the film is about a Union spy who impersonates a black maid in the early days of the Civil War, but complications arise when she falls in love with a Confederate officer. George J. Folsey received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cinematography. The film features the Four Mills Brothers and Davies performing musical numbers and the supporting cast includes Ted Healy, Douglas Dumbrille as Jeb Stuart, Sidney Toler as Allan Pinkerton, Fuzzy Knight, and an uncredited Sterling Holloway as a wounded Union soldier.",
"score": "1.4436448"
},
{
"id": "13885461",
"title": "Operator No. 5",
"text": " Operator #5 was a pulp hero that appeared in his own ten cent pulp magazine. It was soon renamed Secret Service Operator #5 and was published by Popular Publications between 1934 and 1939.",
"score": "1.4382346"
},
{
"id": "2946491",
"title": "Operator (band)",
"text": " The first Operator album, Can You Hear Me Now (2003), was a self-released demo, and is very hard to find as well as sold out on the band's website. But soon, it attracted the attention of Atlantic Records, which signed Operator in 2007. Strong soon began recording Operator's Atlantic debut as a solo album playing the lead/rhythm guitar, Bass, Piano, backing and lead vocals. He eventually put together a band to play live; rhythm consisting of guitarist Paul Phillips, Lead guitarist Rikki Lixx, bassist Wade Carpenter, and drummer Dorman Pantfoeder completed the lineup. Thus aggregated, Operator's Atlantic debut, Soulcrusher, was released in the summer of 2007. The album has since sold over 110,000 copies and peaked ",
"score": "1.4371777"
}
] | [
"Operator (2016 film)\n Operator is a 2016 American comedy-drama film directed by Logan Kibens from a screenplay by Sharon Greene and Logan Kibens. It stars Martin Starr as Joe, a programmer and obsessive self-quantifier, and Mae Whitman as Emily, a budding comedy performer, who are a happily married couple until they decide to use one another in their work. Nat Faxon, Cameron Esposito, Retta, and Christine Lahti co-star. The film had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival on March 12, 2016 and was released by The Orchard on November 8, 2016.",
"Operator (band)\n Operator is an American post-grunge band from Los Angeles, California, United States. The name Operator was used for a solo project created by Johnny Strong, an actor and musician, who has appeared in movies such as Black Hawk Down (2001), The Fast and the Furious (2001), Get Carter (2000) and The Glimmer Man (1996).",
"Jack Deere\n C. Peter Wagner said this book “is the new operator’s manual for those who want to be participants, not just spectators, in today’s prophetic movement. This book will help you put it all together, get it up and running, and troubleshoot whatever problems arise.”",
"Operator (play)\n Operator is a play by David Williamson. Williamson's son Rory played the lead role during its original production.",
"Operator (2015 film)\n Operator is a 2015 American action thriller drama film directed by Amariah Olson and Obin Olson and starring Luke Goss, Mischa Barton, Michael Paré and Ving Rhames.",
"Operator (album)\n Operator is the third studio album by Canadian electronic music duo Mstrkrft. It was released on July 22, 2016, by Last Gang Records.",
"Kim Harrison\n1) The Drafter (September 1, 2015, ISBN: 978-1-50-110869-3) ; 2) The Operator (November 22, 2016, ISBN: 978-1-40-870758-6) ",
"Operator (Motown song)\n \"Operator\" is a Motown song recorded by Motown vocalists Mary Wells and Brenda Holloway. The Wells version was the b-side to her top ten hit, \"Two Lovers\" while Holloway's was issued as a single in 1965.",
"Operator (2016 film)\n Joe (Martin Starr) is a programmer with a crippling anxiety problem who is unable to deal with uncertainty. At work he is tasked with creating an interactive call center answering machine that can convey empathy. Joe recruits his wife Emily (Mae Whitman) who has the perfect voice for the system. Emily works at the front desk of a swanky hotel during the day and has an uncanny ability to soothe even the most irate guests (at night she performs with a comedy group at the Neo-Futurists). After years of being happily married, the pressures of work, family, and personal growth have strained their ",
"Operator No. 5\n The magazine ran for 48 issues, from April 1934 to November 1939. One final story was written but never published. Stories were all credited to \"Curtis Steele\", which was a house name for writers Frederick C. Davis (#1-20), Emile C. Tepperman (#21-39), and Wayne Rogers (#40-48). Like other such pulps of the day, there were short backup stories by other authors. Davis left because he got fed up with the publisher's demand of trying to think up a new evil super-power attacking America every issue. Tepperman solved this by writing 13 interconnected novels (starting with #26) that make up The Purple Invasion, a series in which the Purple Empire (an unnamed European power which is a thinly veiled Nazi Germany) conquers the United States after ",
"The Operators (band)\n The Operators are a British indie rock band. Their songs include \"Mountain\", \"Just My Way\" and \"It Grinds\".",
"Operator (Midnight Star song)\n \"Operator\" is a 1984 R&B/dance song by Midnight Star, produced by then-current bandmember Reginald Calloway, released as a single from their album, Planetary Invasion.",
"Operator (album)\n In support of the album, the band went on a North American tour from June 1, 2016 at the U Street Music Hall in Washington, D.C. to June 14, 2016 at The Horseshoe Tavern in Ontario, Canada.",
"Gerard Murphy (mathematician)\n C*-Algebras and Operator Theory This book has become a standard textbook in many countries, and is often cited as a reference in research articles. The book was published in 1990 by Academic Press. Its aim is to give an introduction to one of the most dynamic areas of modern mathematics. It is directed at first and second year graduate students intending to specialise in research in operator algebras and at interested researchers from other areas, especially quantum physicists. He attempted to give an accessible exposition of the core material and to cover a number of topics that have a high contemporary profile. No attempt is made to be encyclopedic but there are notes at the end of each chapter giving additional results not covered in ",
"Operator (band)\nJohnny Strong – lead vocals (2003–present) ; Paul Phillips – rhythm guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Ricki Lixx – lead guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Wade Carrpenter – bass guitar, backing vocals (2003–present) ; Dorman Pantfoeder – drums, percussion (2003–present) ",
"İbrahim Kavrakoğlu\n He is the author of 24 books and more than 130 papers, including lead articles and invited papers in the European Journal of Operational Research, Mathematical Modeling, Omega, Automatica, Interfaces and Operations Research. The most recent, \"Knowledge Leveraging - Post Modern O.R.,\" appeared in the April 2004 issue of OR/MS Today.",
"Operator (2016 film)\n The film premiered to positive reviews at the South by Southwest festival on March 12, 2016. On May 25, 2016, it was announced that The Orchard had acquired distribution rights to the film. On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 100% based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 7.19/10.",
"Operator 13\n Operator 13 is a 1934 American pre-Code romance film directed by Richard Boleslawski and starring Marion Davies, Gary Cooper, and Jean Parker. Based on stories written by Robert W. Chambers, the film is about a Union spy who impersonates a black maid in the early days of the Civil War, but complications arise when she falls in love with a Confederate officer. George J. Folsey received an Academy Award nomination for Best Cinematography. The film features the Four Mills Brothers and Davies performing musical numbers and the supporting cast includes Ted Healy, Douglas Dumbrille as Jeb Stuart, Sidney Toler as Allan Pinkerton, Fuzzy Knight, and an uncredited Sterling Holloway as a wounded Union soldier.",
"Operator No. 5\n Operator #5 was a pulp hero that appeared in his own ten cent pulp magazine. It was soon renamed Secret Service Operator #5 and was published by Popular Publications between 1934 and 1939.",
"Operator (band)\n The first Operator album, Can You Hear Me Now (2003), was a self-released demo, and is very hard to find as well as sold out on the band's website. But soon, it attracted the attention of Atlantic Records, which signed Operator in 2007. Strong soon began recording Operator's Atlantic debut as a solo album playing the lead/rhythm guitar, Bass, Piano, backing and lead vocals. He eventually put together a band to play live; rhythm consisting of guitarist Paul Phillips, Lead guitarist Rikki Lixx, bassist Wade Carpenter, and drummer Dorman Pantfoeder completed the lineup. Thus aggregated, Operator's Atlantic debut, Soulcrusher, was released in the summer of 2007. The album has since sold over 110,000 copies and peaked "
] |
What sport does Najeh Humoud play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Najeh Humoud | 5,245,572 | 82 | [
{
"id": "28562676",
"title": "Najeh Humoud",
"text": " Najeh Humoud (Arabic: ناجح حمود حريب) is a former football coach of Najaf FC and Iraq. He played in midfield for Kufa FC in the 1970s, and the Najaf province team but never managed to play in the Iraqi first division. He began his coaching career with Najaf FC in 1987, and helped the club to their first ever cup in 1998 as his team beat Al-Shorta 4-0 at the Al Shaab Stadium to lift the Umm Al-Maarak Cup. He went on to manage the Iraqi youth team in 1998 and worked as Zoran Smileski's assistant at the 1998 Asian Youth Championship. Najeh then coached the Iraq national football team in 1999. He was Vice-President of the Iraq Football Association from 2004-2011 and the president of the Iraq Football Association from 2011 to 2014. Aside from football, Najih was also the director of the Kufa Cement Factory.",
"score": "1.8918927"
},
{
"id": "3541541",
"title": "Mohammad Hassan Senobar",
"text": " Senobars's first national game was for Iran boys national volleyball team in 2012, he joined the Iran men's national volleyball team for 6 years.",
"score": "1.5776753"
},
{
"id": "2018632",
"title": "Daoud Musa",
"text": " Daoud Musa Daoud (born February 2, 1982) is a professional basketball player. He plays for Qatar SC of the Qatar basketball league. He is also a member of the Qatar national basketball team. Musa competed for the Qatar national basketball team at the 2005, 2007 and FIBA Asia Championship 2009. He also competed for Qatar at their only FIBA World Championship performance to date, in 2006, where he averaged 5.2 points per game. Previously he competed for the junior national team at the 1999 FIBA World Championship for Junior Men and 2001 FIBA World Championship for Young Men.",
"score": "1.5458881"
},
{
"id": "7844899",
"title": "Adel Humoud",
"text": " Adel Humoud (عادل حمود, born 20 June 1986) is a Kuwaiti footballer who is a Midfielder.",
"score": "1.5418888"
},
{
"id": "2942358",
"title": "Mohamed Masoud (volleyball)",
"text": " Mohamed Masoud (born May 1, 1994) is an Egyptian male volleyball player. He is part of the Egypt men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Smouha SC, then in June 2016 he moved to Al Ahly (volleyball)",
"score": "1.5231342"
},
{
"id": "7822901",
"title": "Khamis Humoud",
"text": " Khamis Humoud is a former Iraqi football defender. He competed in the 1986 Asian Games. Humoud played for Iraq between 1985 and 1987.",
"score": "1.5033067"
},
{
"id": "5377708",
"title": "Milad Meydavoudi",
"text": " Milad Meydavoudi (, born 20 January 1985 in Masjed Soleyman) is an Iranian football player, who last played for Naft Masjed Soleyman in Persian Gulf Pro League. He appointed as assistant coach of Khooshe Talaei Saveh F.C..",
"score": "1.5019236"
},
{
"id": "16371516",
"title": "Navid Niktash",
"text": " Niktash was invited to play for the Iran national basketball team in China in 2017. On August 9, 2017 he played his first official match for Iran against India. He recorded 3 points and 6 rebounds and .25 FG% in 12 minutes. He debuted with the Iran national basketball team at the FIBA Asia Cup with averaging 1.5 points, 2.0 rebounds 0.3 steals and 22% ppg.",
"score": "1.498996"
},
{
"id": "2478256",
"title": "Rasoul Najafi",
"text": " As a junior player he competed at the 2011 FIVB Men's Junior World Championship finishing 6th. Two years later he became with the national U23 team 5th at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship. With the national team he finished 5th at the 2015 Summer Universiade and competed in the 2015 FIVB Volleyball World League. With his club Saipa Tehran he played in the 2015–16 Iran Super League.",
"score": "1.495599"
},
{
"id": "10729786",
"title": "David Najem",
"text": " David Najem (Dari: داوید نجم; born May 26, 1992) is a professional footballer who plays as a defender for USL Championship club New Mexico United and the Afghanistan national team. Najem grew up in Clifton, New Jersey and attended Paramus Catholic High School, where he set school career records for both goals and points.",
"score": "1.4921725"
},
{
"id": "7281612",
"title": "Imad Najah",
"text": " Born in Utrecht, Netherlands, Najah has played club football for PSV and RKC Waalwijk. Najah represented Morocco at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4910202"
},
{
"id": "5180006",
"title": "Meraj Sheykh",
"text": " In the sixth season, Sheykh continued to raid with great success and scored 94 raid points. However, the Iranian only managed 3 tackle points from 19 matches. Iran Kabaddi team He represented his country in the 2016 Kabaddi World Cup final, where they finished runners-up to India.",
"score": "1.4899657"
},
{
"id": "31121831",
"title": "Éric Micoud",
"text": " Éric Micoud (born March 18, 1973 in Cotonou, Benin) is a French basketball player who played 20 games for the men's French national team between 1999 and 2001.",
"score": "1.4834098"
},
{
"id": "24973392",
"title": "Mohammad Reza Hazratpour",
"text": " Mohammadreza Hazratpour Talatappeh (, born March 31, 1999 in Urmia) is an Iranian volleyball player who plays as a libero for the Iranian national team and Iranian club Shahrdari Urmia. Hazratpour in 2018 year invited to Iran senior national team by Igor Kolaković and made his debut match against Japan in the 2018 Nations League.",
"score": "1.4783956"
},
{
"id": "13639366",
"title": "Morteza Mehrzad",
"text": " His talent was spotted and identified by Iran national head coach Hadi Rezaei in 2011 after watching a television program which talked about unusual and differently able talented people. Hadi quickly got in touch with the television network to inquire about Mehrzad who was also one of the disabled talents to have participated in the program. Hadi convinced and encouraged Mehrzad to play sitting volleyball. He was selected for Iran's national team in March 2016 after undergoing training sessions at various regional clubs in Iran and made his international debut in 2016 at the Paralympics qualifiers. Subsequently, he was also selected for the national team to compete at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, which marked his Paralympic debut. In the 2016 Summer Paralympics sitting volleyball final, he was the match top scorer with 28 points for Iran. Iran eventually secured a gold medal after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 in the final. He was also the second best spiker during the 2016 Rio Paralympics. In 2018, he helped Iran win the 2018 Sitting Volleyball World Cup, securing Iran's first world title in 8 years, after a 3-0 victory over defending champions Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final.",
"score": "1.4745488"
},
{
"id": "15812497",
"title": "Moharram Navidkia",
"text": " He was first selected to the national team during the West Asian Football Federation tournament in 2002, which was held in Syria. He made his debut for Iran against Jordan in August 2002. His biggest achievement was winning the gold medal of the 2002 Asian Games with Iran U-23 in Busan, where he continued his impressive display during the games. He played in the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification for Team Melli. Having been selected among Iran's reserve men for the 2006 World Cup, he was called up to join the team in Germany to replace injured Sattar Zare. He bid his farewell to national team on December 2009. In May 2011, he was called up to Iran national team by Carlos Queiroz, but he rejected the offer due to his \"several injuries and surgeries\" which makes him unable to play for both national team and club.",
"score": "1.4732752"
},
{
"id": "10729793",
"title": "David Najem",
"text": " David's brother, Adam, is also a professional soccer player who currently plays for FC Edmonton and the Afghanistan national team.",
"score": "1.4727124"
},
{
"id": "5091934",
"title": "Mojtaba Mirzajanpour",
"text": " Mojtaba Mirzajanpour Muziraji (, born 7 October 1991) is an Iranian volleyball player, a member of the Iran national team and Iranian Volleyball Super League club Shahrdari Varamin. He competed at the 2014 World Championship and Rio 2016 Summer Olympics. Mirzajanpour debut national game in 2013 Grand Championship did with invitations Julio Velasco.",
"score": "1.4726672"
},
{
"id": "31360711",
"title": "Hamed Noormohammadi",
"text": " Noormohammadi has played his entire career for Rah Ahan",
"score": "1.4716661"
},
{
"id": "16371511",
"title": "Navid Niktash",
"text": " Navid Niktash (born January 17, 1991) is an Iranian-French professional basketball player for the London Lions of the British Basketball League (BBL). Niktash's plays small forward and power forward.",
"score": "1.4679462"
}
] | [
"Najeh Humoud\n Najeh Humoud (Arabic: ناجح حمود حريب) is a former football coach of Najaf FC and Iraq. He played in midfield for Kufa FC in the 1970s, and the Najaf province team but never managed to play in the Iraqi first division. He began his coaching career with Najaf FC in 1987, and helped the club to their first ever cup in 1998 as his team beat Al-Shorta 4-0 at the Al Shaab Stadium to lift the Umm Al-Maarak Cup. He went on to manage the Iraqi youth team in 1998 and worked as Zoran Smileski's assistant at the 1998 Asian Youth Championship. Najeh then coached the Iraq national football team in 1999. He was Vice-President of the Iraq Football Association from 2004-2011 and the president of the Iraq Football Association from 2011 to 2014. Aside from football, Najih was also the director of the Kufa Cement Factory.",
"Mohammad Hassan Senobar\n Senobars's first national game was for Iran boys national volleyball team in 2012, he joined the Iran men's national volleyball team for 6 years.",
"Daoud Musa\n Daoud Musa Daoud (born February 2, 1982) is a professional basketball player. He plays for Qatar SC of the Qatar basketball league. He is also a member of the Qatar national basketball team. Musa competed for the Qatar national basketball team at the 2005, 2007 and FIBA Asia Championship 2009. He also competed for Qatar at their only FIBA World Championship performance to date, in 2006, where he averaged 5.2 points per game. Previously he competed for the junior national team at the 1999 FIBA World Championship for Junior Men and 2001 FIBA World Championship for Young Men.",
"Adel Humoud\n Adel Humoud (عادل حمود, born 20 June 1986) is a Kuwaiti footballer who is a Midfielder.",
"Mohamed Masoud (volleyball)\n Mohamed Masoud (born May 1, 1994) is an Egyptian male volleyball player. He is part of the Egypt men's national volleyball team. On club level he plays for Smouha SC, then in June 2016 he moved to Al Ahly (volleyball)",
"Khamis Humoud\n Khamis Humoud is a former Iraqi football defender. He competed in the 1986 Asian Games. Humoud played for Iraq between 1985 and 1987.",
"Milad Meydavoudi\n Milad Meydavoudi (, born 20 January 1985 in Masjed Soleyman) is an Iranian football player, who last played for Naft Masjed Soleyman in Persian Gulf Pro League. He appointed as assistant coach of Khooshe Talaei Saveh F.C..",
"Navid Niktash\n Niktash was invited to play for the Iran national basketball team in China in 2017. On August 9, 2017 he played his first official match for Iran against India. He recorded 3 points and 6 rebounds and .25 FG% in 12 minutes. He debuted with the Iran national basketball team at the FIBA Asia Cup with averaging 1.5 points, 2.0 rebounds 0.3 steals and 22% ppg.",
"Rasoul Najafi\n As a junior player he competed at the 2011 FIVB Men's Junior World Championship finishing 6th. Two years later he became with the national U23 team 5th at the 2013 FIVB Volleyball Men's U23 World Championship. With the national team he finished 5th at the 2015 Summer Universiade and competed in the 2015 FIVB Volleyball World League. With his club Saipa Tehran he played in the 2015–16 Iran Super League.",
"David Najem\n David Najem (Dari: داوید نجم; born May 26, 1992) is a professional footballer who plays as a defender for USL Championship club New Mexico United and the Afghanistan national team. Najem grew up in Clifton, New Jersey and attended Paramus Catholic High School, where he set school career records for both goals and points.",
"Imad Najah\n Born in Utrecht, Netherlands, Najah has played club football for PSV and RKC Waalwijk. Najah represented Morocco at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Meraj Sheykh\n In the sixth season, Sheykh continued to raid with great success and scored 94 raid points. However, the Iranian only managed 3 tackle points from 19 matches. Iran Kabaddi team He represented his country in the 2016 Kabaddi World Cup final, where they finished runners-up to India.",
"Éric Micoud\n Éric Micoud (born March 18, 1973 in Cotonou, Benin) is a French basketball player who played 20 games for the men's French national team between 1999 and 2001.",
"Mohammad Reza Hazratpour\n Mohammadreza Hazratpour Talatappeh (, born March 31, 1999 in Urmia) is an Iranian volleyball player who plays as a libero for the Iranian national team and Iranian club Shahrdari Urmia. Hazratpour in 2018 year invited to Iran senior national team by Igor Kolaković and made his debut match against Japan in the 2018 Nations League.",
"Morteza Mehrzad\n His talent was spotted and identified by Iran national head coach Hadi Rezaei in 2011 after watching a television program which talked about unusual and differently able talented people. Hadi quickly got in touch with the television network to inquire about Mehrzad who was also one of the disabled talents to have participated in the program. Hadi convinced and encouraged Mehrzad to play sitting volleyball. He was selected for Iran's national team in March 2016 after undergoing training sessions at various regional clubs in Iran and made his international debut in 2016 at the Paralympics qualifiers. Subsequently, he was also selected for the national team to compete at the 2016 Summer Paralympics, which marked his Paralympic debut. In the 2016 Summer Paralympics sitting volleyball final, he was the match top scorer with 28 points for Iran. Iran eventually secured a gold medal after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3-1 in the final. He was also the second best spiker during the 2016 Rio Paralympics. In 2018, he helped Iran win the 2018 Sitting Volleyball World Cup, securing Iran's first world title in 8 years, after a 3-0 victory over defending champions Bosnia and Herzegovina in the final.",
"Moharram Navidkia\n He was first selected to the national team during the West Asian Football Federation tournament in 2002, which was held in Syria. He made his debut for Iran against Jordan in August 2002. His biggest achievement was winning the gold medal of the 2002 Asian Games with Iran U-23 in Busan, where he continued his impressive display during the games. He played in the 2006 FIFA World Cup qualification for Team Melli. Having been selected among Iran's reserve men for the 2006 World Cup, he was called up to join the team in Germany to replace injured Sattar Zare. He bid his farewell to national team on December 2009. In May 2011, he was called up to Iran national team by Carlos Queiroz, but he rejected the offer due to his \"several injuries and surgeries\" which makes him unable to play for both national team and club.",
"David Najem\n David's brother, Adam, is also a professional soccer player who currently plays for FC Edmonton and the Afghanistan national team.",
"Mojtaba Mirzajanpour\n Mojtaba Mirzajanpour Muziraji (, born 7 October 1991) is an Iranian volleyball player, a member of the Iran national team and Iranian Volleyball Super League club Shahrdari Varamin. He competed at the 2014 World Championship and Rio 2016 Summer Olympics. Mirzajanpour debut national game in 2013 Grand Championship did with invitations Julio Velasco.",
"Hamed Noormohammadi\n Noormohammadi has played his entire career for Rah Ahan",
"Navid Niktash\n Navid Niktash (born January 17, 1991) is an Iranian-French professional basketball player for the London Lions of the British Basketball League (BBL). Niktash's plays small forward and power forward."
] |
In what country is Sar Giz? | [
"Iran",
"Islamic Republic of Iran",
"Persia",
"ir",
"Islamic Rep. Iran",
"🇮🇷"
] | country | Sar Giz | 4,860,923 | 36 | [
{
"id": "11899306",
"title": "Sar Giz",
"text": " Sar Giz (, also Romanized as Sar Gīz; also known as Sar Gīs, Sarkīs, and Sarkīz) is a village in Oshnavieh-ye Jonubi Rural District, Nalus District, Oshnavieh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 448, in 75 families.",
"score": "1.5204679"
},
{
"id": "10849588",
"title": "Sar-Sar",
"text": " Lezgins live there.",
"score": "1.4410572"
},
{
"id": "10849587",
"title": "Sar-Sar",
"text": " Sar-Sar is located 39 km northeast of Kizlyar (the district's administrative centre) by road. Chernyayevka and Gruzinsky are the nearest rural localities.",
"score": "1.4273993"
},
{
"id": "29432034",
"title": "Arani Sari",
"text": " Arani sari received Intellectual Property Rights Protection or Geographical Indication (GI) status.",
"score": "1.385313"
},
{
"id": "10849586",
"title": "Sar-Sar",
"text": " Sar-Sar (Сар-Сар) is a rural locality (a selo) in Chernyayevsky Selsoviet, Kizlyarsky District, Republic of Dagestan, Russia. The population was 538 as of 2010. There are 4 streets.",
"score": "1.3545319"
},
{
"id": "30558484",
"title": "Scholars at Risk",
"text": " In 2005, SAR and partners began organizing SAR 'sections' and 'partner networks' around the world, building a global community pledged to help scholars and promote academic freedom everywhere. SAR sections were established in Israel (2005, now dormant), the United Kingdom (2006, with CARA), the Netherlands (2009, with UAF), Ireland (2009, with Universities Ireland), Norway (2011), Canada (2012), Switzerland (2015), Sweden (2016), Germany (2016), Finland (2017), United States (2018), Denmark (2019), Italy (2019), and Slovakia (2019), while partner networks were formed with pre-existing higher education networks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.",
"score": "1.353413"
},
{
"id": "11904125",
"title": "Sarsaz, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan",
"text": " Sarsaz (Сарсаз) is a rural locality (a village) in Podlubovsky Selsoviet, Karmaskalinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 90 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.",
"score": "1.3244847"
},
{
"id": "8458899",
"title": "Sar-i Sang",
"text": " Sar-i Sang (or Sar-e Sang) (lit. \"stone summit\" in Persian) is a settlement in the Kuran Wa Munjan District of Badakhshan Province, Afghanistan, famous for its ancient lapis lazuli mines producing the world's finest lapis.",
"score": "1.3243439"
},
{
"id": "11234188",
"title": "SARIA",
"text": " Around 11,000 employees work at the company's approx. 200 sites which are located in 24 countries worldwide.",
"score": "1.3229787"
},
{
"id": "6960156",
"title": "Development programs in Tribal Areas",
"text": " With financial assistance from Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) the ongoing project aims to promote, develop and rebuild communities in areas that previously hosted, or continue to host Afghan Nationals or Afghans Refugees. It focuses on resuming access to critical infrastructure schemes and social sector services and establish livelihood opportunities.",
"score": "1.3197578"
},
{
"id": "12523875",
"title": "List of special economic zones",
"text": " The North West Suez Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) is located at the Red Sea, 45 km south of Suez. It is served by Sokhna harbour. It was the first SEZ set up under laws passed in 2002. Additionally, in 2013 Egypt had nine FZs and thirteen Investment Zones.",
"score": "1.3180398"
},
{
"id": "29428807",
"title": "Gollabhama sari",
"text": " The sari received Intellectual Property Rights Protection or Geographical Indication (GI) status.",
"score": "1.3134115"
},
{
"id": "5890453",
"title": "Sar, Isfahan",
"text": " Sar (, also Romanized as Sār) is a village in Kuh Dasht Rural District, Neyasar District, Kashan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2014 census, its population was 850 in summer and 150 in winter, in 210 families. Sar is located in Kashan county and in Isfahan Province in Iran. Sar is surrounded by mountains and located in a valley. Sar agricultural productions are walnut, almond, rose and Mohammadi flower, plum, berry and wild berry, cucumber, corn and other fruits. Sar industry is related to agricultural and honey production and rose-water production and other crafts like carpet production. Sar has many farms included Hamzer jungle, Lasompa Farm, and Jomalabad Farm, .... The nearby Hamzer jungle begins from Sar and finished in near of Meshkat village near of ",
"score": "1.3108342"
},
{
"id": "5175460",
"title": "Sarezzo",
"text": "🇫🇷 Oberhaslach, France Sarezzo is twinned with: ",
"score": "1.30521"
},
{
"id": "32939045",
"title": "Sarh",
"text": " Sarh is now a major transport hub. It is served by the Sarh Airport (IATA airport code SRH). It is a center for the cotton industry, due to its warm and seasonally wet climate. It is also an important center for commercial fishing in the Chari River. The city is known as a center of nightlife in the region. Attractions in the city include the Sarh National Museum.",
"score": "1.2950687"
},
{
"id": "11904126",
"title": "Sarsaz, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan",
"text": " Sarsaz is located 23 km northwest of Karmaskaly (the district's administrative centre) by road. Suuk-Chishma is the nearest rural locality.",
"score": "1.292565"
},
{
"id": "31282617",
"title": "Instarem",
"text": "East Asia: China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea ; Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam ; South Asia: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka ; North America: USA, Canada, Mexico ; South America: Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru ; Oceania: Australia ; Europe: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom As of October 2019, Instarem receiving countries are:",
"score": "1.2904413"
},
{
"id": "32627011",
"title": "ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36",
"text": " Countries pay a fee to ISO to be members of subcommittees. The 20 \"P\" (participating) members of ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36 are: Australia (SA), Canada (SCC), China (SAC), Finland (SFS), France (AFNOR), Germany (DIN), India (BIS), Italy (UNI), Japan (JISC), Kazakhstan(KAZMEST), Republic of Korea (KATS), Netherlands (NEN), Norway (SN), Portugal (IPQ), Russian Federation (GOST R), Slovakia (SOSMT), South Africa (SABS), Spain (AENOR), Ukraine (DSTU), United Kingdom (BSI). The 27 \"O\" (observer) members of ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36 are: Algeria (IANOR), Argentina (IRAM), Austria (ASI), Belgium (NBN), Bosnia and Herzegovina (BAS), Colombia (ICONTEC), Czech Republic (UNMZ), Ethiopia(ESA), Ghana (GSA), Greece(NQIS ELOT), Hong Kong (ITCHKSAR), Hungary (MSZT), Indonesia (BSN), Iran, Islamic Republic of (ISIRI), Ireland (NSAI), Kenya (KEBS), New Zealand (SNZ), Pakistan (PSQCA), Philippines(BPS), Romania (ASRO), Saudi Arabia (SASO), Serbia (ISS), Sweden (SIS), Switzerland (SNV), Tunisia (INNORPI), Turkey (TSE). Uganda (UNBS) ※ Note: Name of Country(Name of National Body)",
"score": "1.2903748"
},
{
"id": "5890454",
"title": "Sar, Isfahan",
"text": " - Kashan Highway. In this jungle, wild berry is found in abundance. Sar is a prominent village in memorizing the Quran in Iran and every year Quran competitions are held in this village. After final competition kids receive awards. The nature of Sar is covered by buttonwood, willow, walnut and almond trees. The village has television and mobile coverage and all homes have a landline phone. Streets and alleys are covered by asphalt. A river passes through middle of the village and which floats in spring and winter. Local games include abdeh, pel and chafto, haft sang (7 stone), these games are like the American rugby game. Soccer and volleyball are popular among youths and every year matches between villages are held in Norouz holiday (20-30 March).",
"score": "1.2887934"
},
{
"id": "25852231",
"title": "Sary-Tash",
"text": " Sary-Tash is a village and major crossroads in the Alay Valley of Osh Region, Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 2,337 in 2021. Until 2012 it was an urban-type settlement. Nearby towns and villages to the north include Ak-Bosogo (5 mi) and Chagyr (9 mi). Although this remote village has only some shop-cafes, a petrol station and five guest houses (March 2016), it is an important road junction connecting China, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Its name is derived from Turkic roots and means \"yellow-stone\". To the north, M41 goes over the Taldyk Pass to Gulcha and Osh in the Ferghana Valley. To the south, after leaving the Alay Valley the M41 rises to the 4280m Kyzylart Pass into Tajikistan as part of the Pamir Highway. 50 mi to the east on A371 is the Irkeshtam pass to Kashgar, Xinjiang province, China. To the west, the A372 leads down the Alay Valley. The pass at the west end (towards Dushanbe, Tajikistan) is a bilateral border crossing closed to foreigners.",
"score": "1.2869639"
}
] | [
"Sar Giz\n Sar Giz (, also Romanized as Sar Gīz; also known as Sar Gīs, Sarkīs, and Sarkīz) is a village in Oshnavieh-ye Jonubi Rural District, Nalus District, Oshnavieh County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 448, in 75 families.",
"Sar-Sar\n Lezgins live there.",
"Sar-Sar\n Sar-Sar is located 39 km northeast of Kizlyar (the district's administrative centre) by road. Chernyayevka and Gruzinsky are the nearest rural localities.",
"Arani Sari\n Arani sari received Intellectual Property Rights Protection or Geographical Indication (GI) status.",
"Sar-Sar\n Sar-Sar (Сар-Сар) is a rural locality (a selo) in Chernyayevsky Selsoviet, Kizlyarsky District, Republic of Dagestan, Russia. The population was 538 as of 2010. There are 4 streets.",
"Scholars at Risk\n In 2005, SAR and partners began organizing SAR 'sections' and 'partner networks' around the world, building a global community pledged to help scholars and promote academic freedom everywhere. SAR sections were established in Israel (2005, now dormant), the United Kingdom (2006, with CARA), the Netherlands (2009, with UAF), Ireland (2009, with Universities Ireland), Norway (2011), Canada (2012), Switzerland (2015), Sweden (2016), Germany (2016), Finland (2017), United States (2018), Denmark (2019), Italy (2019), and Slovakia (2019), while partner networks were formed with pre-existing higher education networks in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.",
"Sarsaz, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan\n Sarsaz (Сарсаз) is a rural locality (a village) in Podlubovsky Selsoviet, Karmaskalinsky District, Bashkortostan, Russia. The population was 90 as of 2010. There are 2 streets.",
"Sar-i Sang\n Sar-i Sang (or Sar-e Sang) (lit. \"stone summit\" in Persian) is a settlement in the Kuran Wa Munjan District of Badakhshan Province, Afghanistan, famous for its ancient lapis lazuli mines producing the world's finest lapis.",
"SARIA\n Around 11,000 employees work at the company's approx. 200 sites which are located in 24 countries worldwide.",
"Development programs in Tribal Areas\n With financial assistance from Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) the ongoing project aims to promote, develop and rebuild communities in areas that previously hosted, or continue to host Afghan Nationals or Afghans Refugees. It focuses on resuming access to critical infrastructure schemes and social sector services and establish livelihood opportunities.",
"List of special economic zones\n The North West Suez Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) is located at the Red Sea, 45 km south of Suez. It is served by Sokhna harbour. It was the first SEZ set up under laws passed in 2002. Additionally, in 2013 Egypt had nine FZs and thirteen Investment Zones.",
"Gollabhama sari\n The sari received Intellectual Property Rights Protection or Geographical Indication (GI) status.",
"Sar, Isfahan\n Sar (, also Romanized as Sār) is a village in Kuh Dasht Rural District, Neyasar District, Kashan County, Isfahan Province, Iran. At the 2014 census, its population was 850 in summer and 150 in winter, in 210 families. Sar is located in Kashan county and in Isfahan Province in Iran. Sar is surrounded by mountains and located in a valley. Sar agricultural productions are walnut, almond, rose and Mohammadi flower, plum, berry and wild berry, cucumber, corn and other fruits. Sar industry is related to agricultural and honey production and rose-water production and other crafts like carpet production. Sar has many farms included Hamzer jungle, Lasompa Farm, and Jomalabad Farm, .... The nearby Hamzer jungle begins from Sar and finished in near of Meshkat village near of ",
"Sarezzo\n🇫🇷 Oberhaslach, France Sarezzo is twinned with: ",
"Sarh\n Sarh is now a major transport hub. It is served by the Sarh Airport (IATA airport code SRH). It is a center for the cotton industry, due to its warm and seasonally wet climate. It is also an important center for commercial fishing in the Chari River. The city is known as a center of nightlife in the region. Attractions in the city include the Sarh National Museum.",
"Sarsaz, Karmaskalinsky District, Republic of Bashkortostan\n Sarsaz is located 23 km northwest of Karmaskaly (the district's administrative centre) by road. Suuk-Chishma is the nearest rural locality.",
"Instarem\nEast Asia: China, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea ; Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam ; South Asia: Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sri Lanka ; North America: USA, Canada, Mexico ; South America: Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru ; Oceania: Australia ; Europe: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, San Marino, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom As of October 2019, Instarem receiving countries are:",
"ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36\n Countries pay a fee to ISO to be members of subcommittees. The 20 \"P\" (participating) members of ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36 are: Australia (SA), Canada (SCC), China (SAC), Finland (SFS), France (AFNOR), Germany (DIN), India (BIS), Italy (UNI), Japan (JISC), Kazakhstan(KAZMEST), Republic of Korea (KATS), Netherlands (NEN), Norway (SN), Portugal (IPQ), Russian Federation (GOST R), Slovakia (SOSMT), South Africa (SABS), Spain (AENOR), Ukraine (DSTU), United Kingdom (BSI). The 27 \"O\" (observer) members of ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 36 are: Algeria (IANOR), Argentina (IRAM), Austria (ASI), Belgium (NBN), Bosnia and Herzegovina (BAS), Colombia (ICONTEC), Czech Republic (UNMZ), Ethiopia(ESA), Ghana (GSA), Greece(NQIS ELOT), Hong Kong (ITCHKSAR), Hungary (MSZT), Indonesia (BSN), Iran, Islamic Republic of (ISIRI), Ireland (NSAI), Kenya (KEBS), New Zealand (SNZ), Pakistan (PSQCA), Philippines(BPS), Romania (ASRO), Saudi Arabia (SASO), Serbia (ISS), Sweden (SIS), Switzerland (SNV), Tunisia (INNORPI), Turkey (TSE). Uganda (UNBS) ※ Note: Name of Country(Name of National Body)",
"Sar, Isfahan\n - Kashan Highway. In this jungle, wild berry is found in abundance. Sar is a prominent village in memorizing the Quran in Iran and every year Quran competitions are held in this village. After final competition kids receive awards. The nature of Sar is covered by buttonwood, willow, walnut and almond trees. The village has television and mobile coverage and all homes have a landline phone. Streets and alleys are covered by asphalt. A river passes through middle of the village and which floats in spring and winter. Local games include abdeh, pel and chafto, haft sang (7 stone), these games are like the American rugby game. Soccer and volleyball are popular among youths and every year matches between villages are held in Norouz holiday (20-30 March).",
"Sary-Tash\n Sary-Tash is a village and major crossroads in the Alay Valley of Osh Region, Kyrgyzstan. Its population was 2,337 in 2021. Until 2012 it was an urban-type settlement. Nearby towns and villages to the north include Ak-Bosogo (5 mi) and Chagyr (9 mi). Although this remote village has only some shop-cafes, a petrol station and five guest houses (March 2016), it is an important road junction connecting China, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Its name is derived from Turkic roots and means \"yellow-stone\". To the north, M41 goes over the Taldyk Pass to Gulcha and Osh in the Ferghana Valley. To the south, after leaving the Alay Valley the M41 rises to the 4280m Kyzylart Pass into Tajikistan as part of the Pamir Highway. 50 mi to the east on A371 is the Irkeshtam pass to Kashgar, Xinjiang province, China. To the west, the A372 leads down the Alay Valley. The pass at the west end (towards Dushanbe, Tajikistan) is a bilateral border crossing closed to foreigners."
] |
Who is the author of Chelsea on the Edge? | [
"Davi Napoleon"
] | author | Chelsea on the Edge | 3,705,753 | 66 | [
{
"id": "29336336",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater (1991) is a book by Davi Napoleon about the onstage triumphs and the offstage turmoil at the Chelsea Theater Center of Brooklyn. It includes biographies of the three co-directors, Robert Kalfin, Michael David, and Burl Hash, and anecdotes about behind-the-scenes activities at the Chelsea. It is also a history of the funding crisis for the arts in America. It explores the theater's socioeconomic milieu in the 1970s. There are stories about attempts to censor the arts and describing increasing anti-arts sentiment in this country. The book features a foreword by Broadway director and producer Harold Prince. Prince discusses the problems of ",
"score": "1.8397659"
},
{
"id": "29336344",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " Edge is a fascinating account of the unique theater he created. I doubt we will ever see the like of such a theater again.\" Frank Langella \"I believe this book documents a tragedy. It is a metaphor for the change in the priorities of our society. It follows a diminishing curve of moral responsibility emphasized by the government's unwillingness to acknowledge the place of art in the quality of our lives...They tell me that it's only cyclical, that times will change, that the worship of Mammon will give way to daydreaming, impracticality, naiveté, idealism. Perhaps they're right. After all; there once was a Group Theatre; there once a Mercury Theatre; and there once was the Chelsea.\" Hal Prince, from the foreword",
"score": "1.8139116"
},
{
"id": "29336337",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " an art theater in a commercial society. It is written in the style of a novel, even though it is a non-fiction work. The model for the book is Voltaire's Candide. This book was one of a handful on the forefront of the field of creative non-fiction. Three years after its publication, in 1994, the Creative Nonfiction Foundation was established. The author reports that when she submitted a draft of the work as a doctoral dissertation, she was asked to rewrite it because the creative nonfiction approach had not yet been accepted in the academic community. According to her report, members of her dissertation committee said that while it was ",
"score": "1.7994413"
},
{
"id": "30140630",
"title": "Davi Napoleon",
"text": " Napoleon has written extensively about the history and issues surrounding the not-for-profit theater in America. Her book about Robert Kalfin and the Chelsea Theater Center is an in-depth history of the life of a theater in the 1960s and 1970s. Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater (1991) describes on- and off-stage dramas, detailing internal conflicts when a theater that was the darling of critics and audiences was forced to downsize because of changes in funding to the arts. Hal Prince wrote the foreword to the book that found a readership among working artists both because it is one of the first complex studies of ",
"score": "1.6437256"
},
{
"id": "29336343",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " \"I have vivid memories of Bob Kalfin. His laughter, enthusiasm, and intensity. He made us all feel special and a part of something important...This book is interesting to me because it explores group dynamics...How does one maintain an organization that is created out of the passion and spontaneity and chemistry of certain key individuals?\" Glenn Close \"A brightly written, thoroughly absorbing account of one of the most innovative theatrical companies of the last five decades. Clashing ideals, opposing personalities, economic hazards and withal superb and original productions are all part of Davi Napoleon's narrative and make up a beguiling chapter of our theatrical history.\" Thomas Lask, book reviewer The New York Times. \"Bob Kalfin is a unique man and Chelsea on ",
"score": "1.6260672"
},
{
"id": "4958263",
"title": "Marilyn Chris",
"text": "Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater, Davi Napoleon. Includes discussion of Robert Kalfin's off-Broadway multi-media production of Kaddish.Iowa State University Press. ISBN: 0-8138-1713-7, 1991. ",
"score": "1.6244746"
},
{
"id": "29336338",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " and accurate, they felt they were reading a novel; they asked her to make changes in the style so that it no longer met the criteria of creative nonfiction. She did so in order to get her doctorate, but submitted the earlier draft to publishers. The chapter titles, written in the style of Voltaire's 'Candide' (listed below), were particularly controversial. The Chelsea Theater Center was founded in 1965 and closed in 1986. It was in residence at the Brooklyn Academy of Music from 1968 to 1978. Before and after that time, it worked in theaters in Manhattan, mainly the Westside Theater. Glenn Close, Frank Langella, Christopher Lloyd and Meryl Streep ",
"score": "1.6152318"
},
{
"id": "14771616",
"title": "On the Edge (Hinton novel)",
"text": " On the Edge is a novel by British author Nigel Hinton and was first published in 2014. It follows the story of two boys whose mentally unstable father, who is an ex serviceman, takes them on holiday but suspicions arise.",
"score": "1.5844843"
},
{
"id": "29336340",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " 1 Wherein Robert Kalfin uses his salary to pay for Chelsea's first off-Broadway contract production in order to attract media attention and funding and thereby loses his partners and his space. 2 How Chelsea finds an ideal, inexpensive space in a major cultural institution which rarely attracts Manhattan audiences and where agents don't send performers to audition. 3 Wherein Chelsea's empathic Caucasian director discovers exciting Black plays and gives militant performers a forum for their views, and how this results in a major triumph for the young theater in an international tour which the actors abandon in Zurich. 4 In which Chelsea mounts three major productions, moves two ",
"score": "1.5591142"
},
{
"id": "10945976",
"title": "Chelsea Handler",
"text": " Handler has written six books that have made the New York Times Best Seller List, five of which have reached number one. Her first book, My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands (2005), describes the variety of sexual encounters she has experienced throughout her life. Her second book, Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea (2008), a collection of humorous essays, hit the top of The New York Times Nonfiction Best Seller List on May 11, 2008, with a print run of more than 350,000. She went on a nationwide tour to promote her third book, titled Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang, which was released on March 9, ",
"score": "1.539289"
},
{
"id": "11918487",
"title": "The Edge (novel)",
"text": " The Edge is a young adult novel written by Alan Gibbons which was published in 2002. The book tells the story of Danny Mangam, a teenage boy living in an abusive home. After Danny and his mother escape her abusive boyfriend, he also confronts a number of problems caused by his mixed ancestry. The novel was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal and won the Angus Book Award in 2004.",
"score": "1.5313158"
},
{
"id": "33055488",
"title": "Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang",
"text": " Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang hit Number 1 on the New York Times Nonfiction Hardback Bestseller list on March 21, 2010. That same week, her previous books, 'Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea' and 'My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One Night Stands\", hit numbers 2 and 3 on the paperback list.",
"score": "1.525989"
},
{
"id": "33055485",
"title": "Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang",
"text": " Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang is a book by Chelsea Handler that was published in March 2010.",
"score": "1.5057113"
},
{
"id": "4424124",
"title": "Martyn Clayton",
"text": " Martyn Clayton is a British author of Roma : A People On The Edge (Braiswick 2003) a non-fiction book exploring the history and current situation of the Roma Gypsy peoples worldwide and a novel, Take Me Out (Subculture Books 2008).",
"score": "1.4993256"
},
{
"id": "33055486",
"title": "Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang",
"text": " The book consists of humorous essays written by Chelsea about her various life experiences. The essays are often blatantly vulgar, much like the ones in Handler's previous two published books.",
"score": "1.4849945"
},
{
"id": "13065172",
"title": "Edge of Chaos (book)",
"text": " The Edge of Chaos is a 2018 non-fiction book by Zambian writer Dambisa Moyo. The book explains economies on the edge of economic overhauls.",
"score": "1.4784994"
},
{
"id": "10945977",
"title": "Chelsea Handler",
"text": " Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang hit Number 1 on The New York Times Nonfiction Hardback Bestseller list for March 21, 2010. On November 15, 2010, it was announced that Handler's publishers gave her her own publishing imprint, Borderline Amazing/A Chelsea Handler Book. She also signed a three-book deal with the imprint, the first of which is called Lies That Chelsea Handler Told Me, where her coworkers and family members discuss their experiences with Handler, which was released in May 2011 and also hit the top of the bestseller list. Handler has her own columns in Cosmopolitan and Now, a UK celebrity magazine. In May 2009, she was the host ",
"score": "1.4783634"
},
{
"id": "29336341",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " off-Broadway for unlimited runs, is featured on the front page of the Arts and Leisure section of The New York Times and can't get funding to finish the season. Again. 5 How Chelsea soars on borrowed wings. 6 Wherein Chelsea creates a Manhattan annex to house Brooklyn successes. How it opens shows, books shows, and rents spaces to other producers at the Westside Theater while continuing to move Brooklyn productions to inappropriate, overpriced rental houses. 7 In which commercial interests rally for art while artists sabotage a revolutionary production. Chelsea wins major awards for best off-Broadway and best Broadway show of the season but doesn't make any money. ",
"score": "1.4764996"
},
{
"id": "29336339",
"title": "Chelsea on the Edge",
"text": " among the actors who worked at the Chelsea. Directors included Des McAnuff, Hal Prince, John Hirsch, and Alan Schneider. In 1965, when Robert Kalfin founded the Chelsea, there were few nonprofit theaters in New York. During the next ten years, new theaters opened, funding sources decreased, and costs rose. Many nonprofit theaters started to do conventional work that would attract audiences. Kalfin and his partners, David and Hash, continued to do innovative work. Critics often said that the Chelsea stretched the boundaries of theater. Spectators subscribed to seasons before they knew what the Chelsea would produce the following year. On the other hand, there were many clashes behind the scenes.",
"score": "1.4752797"
},
{
"id": "30140628",
"title": "Davi Napoleon",
"text": " Davi Napoleon, also known as Davida Skurnick and Davida Napoleon (born 1946), is an American theater historian and critic as well as a freelance feature writer. She is a regular contributor to Live Design, a monthly magazine about entertainment design and designers. She is an expert on the not-for-profit theater in America and author of Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater. This book is a major study of the economic changes in the American not-for-profit theater and the impact of these on the art produced. She has written on social and political issues as well.",
"score": "1.4730742"
}
] | [
"Chelsea on the Edge\n Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater (1991) is a book by Davi Napoleon about the onstage triumphs and the offstage turmoil at the Chelsea Theater Center of Brooklyn. It includes biographies of the three co-directors, Robert Kalfin, Michael David, and Burl Hash, and anecdotes about behind-the-scenes activities at the Chelsea. It is also a history of the funding crisis for the arts in America. It explores the theater's socioeconomic milieu in the 1970s. There are stories about attempts to censor the arts and describing increasing anti-arts sentiment in this country. The book features a foreword by Broadway director and producer Harold Prince. Prince discusses the problems of ",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n Edge is a fascinating account of the unique theater he created. I doubt we will ever see the like of such a theater again.\" Frank Langella \"I believe this book documents a tragedy. It is a metaphor for the change in the priorities of our society. It follows a diminishing curve of moral responsibility emphasized by the government's unwillingness to acknowledge the place of art in the quality of our lives...They tell me that it's only cyclical, that times will change, that the worship of Mammon will give way to daydreaming, impracticality, naiveté, idealism. Perhaps they're right. After all; there once was a Group Theatre; there once a Mercury Theatre; and there once was the Chelsea.\" Hal Prince, from the foreword",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n an art theater in a commercial society. It is written in the style of a novel, even though it is a non-fiction work. The model for the book is Voltaire's Candide. This book was one of a handful on the forefront of the field of creative non-fiction. Three years after its publication, in 1994, the Creative Nonfiction Foundation was established. The author reports that when she submitted a draft of the work as a doctoral dissertation, she was asked to rewrite it because the creative nonfiction approach had not yet been accepted in the academic community. According to her report, members of her dissertation committee said that while it was ",
"Davi Napoleon\n Napoleon has written extensively about the history and issues surrounding the not-for-profit theater in America. Her book about Robert Kalfin and the Chelsea Theater Center is an in-depth history of the life of a theater in the 1960s and 1970s. Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater (1991) describes on- and off-stage dramas, detailing internal conflicts when a theater that was the darling of critics and audiences was forced to downsize because of changes in funding to the arts. Hal Prince wrote the foreword to the book that found a readership among working artists both because it is one of the first complex studies of ",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n \"I have vivid memories of Bob Kalfin. His laughter, enthusiasm, and intensity. He made us all feel special and a part of something important...This book is interesting to me because it explores group dynamics...How does one maintain an organization that is created out of the passion and spontaneity and chemistry of certain key individuals?\" Glenn Close \"A brightly written, thoroughly absorbing account of one of the most innovative theatrical companies of the last five decades. Clashing ideals, opposing personalities, economic hazards and withal superb and original productions are all part of Davi Napoleon's narrative and make up a beguiling chapter of our theatrical history.\" Thomas Lask, book reviewer The New York Times. \"Bob Kalfin is a unique man and Chelsea on ",
"Marilyn Chris\nChelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater, Davi Napoleon. Includes discussion of Robert Kalfin's off-Broadway multi-media production of Kaddish.Iowa State University Press. ISBN: 0-8138-1713-7, 1991. ",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n and accurate, they felt they were reading a novel; they asked her to make changes in the style so that it no longer met the criteria of creative nonfiction. She did so in order to get her doctorate, but submitted the earlier draft to publishers. The chapter titles, written in the style of Voltaire's 'Candide' (listed below), were particularly controversial. The Chelsea Theater Center was founded in 1965 and closed in 1986. It was in residence at the Brooklyn Academy of Music from 1968 to 1978. Before and after that time, it worked in theaters in Manhattan, mainly the Westside Theater. Glenn Close, Frank Langella, Christopher Lloyd and Meryl Streep ",
"On the Edge (Hinton novel)\n On the Edge is a novel by British author Nigel Hinton and was first published in 2014. It follows the story of two boys whose mentally unstable father, who is an ex serviceman, takes them on holiday but suspicions arise.",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n 1 Wherein Robert Kalfin uses his salary to pay for Chelsea's first off-Broadway contract production in order to attract media attention and funding and thereby loses his partners and his space. 2 How Chelsea finds an ideal, inexpensive space in a major cultural institution which rarely attracts Manhattan audiences and where agents don't send performers to audition. 3 Wherein Chelsea's empathic Caucasian director discovers exciting Black plays and gives militant performers a forum for their views, and how this results in a major triumph for the young theater in an international tour which the actors abandon in Zurich. 4 In which Chelsea mounts three major productions, moves two ",
"Chelsea Handler\n Handler has written six books that have made the New York Times Best Seller List, five of which have reached number one. Her first book, My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One-Night Stands (2005), describes the variety of sexual encounters she has experienced throughout her life. Her second book, Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea (2008), a collection of humorous essays, hit the top of The New York Times Nonfiction Best Seller List on May 11, 2008, with a print run of more than 350,000. She went on a nationwide tour to promote her third book, titled Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang, which was released on March 9, ",
"The Edge (novel)\n The Edge is a young adult novel written by Alan Gibbons which was published in 2002. The book tells the story of Danny Mangam, a teenage boy living in an abusive home. After Danny and his mother escape her abusive boyfriend, he also confronts a number of problems caused by his mixed ancestry. The novel was shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal and won the Angus Book Award in 2004.",
"Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang\n Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang hit Number 1 on the New York Times Nonfiction Hardback Bestseller list on March 21, 2010. That same week, her previous books, 'Are You There, Vodka? It's Me, Chelsea' and 'My Horizontal Life: A Collection of One Night Stands\", hit numbers 2 and 3 on the paperback list.",
"Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang\n Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang is a book by Chelsea Handler that was published in March 2010.",
"Martyn Clayton\n Martyn Clayton is a British author of Roma : A People On The Edge (Braiswick 2003) a non-fiction book exploring the history and current situation of the Roma Gypsy peoples worldwide and a novel, Take Me Out (Subculture Books 2008).",
"Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang\n The book consists of humorous essays written by Chelsea about her various life experiences. The essays are often blatantly vulgar, much like the ones in Handler's previous two published books.",
"Edge of Chaos (book)\n The Edge of Chaos is a 2018 non-fiction book by Zambian writer Dambisa Moyo. The book explains economies on the edge of economic overhauls.",
"Chelsea Handler\n Chelsea Chelsea Bang Bang hit Number 1 on The New York Times Nonfiction Hardback Bestseller list for March 21, 2010. On November 15, 2010, it was announced that Handler's publishers gave her her own publishing imprint, Borderline Amazing/A Chelsea Handler Book. She also signed a three-book deal with the imprint, the first of which is called Lies That Chelsea Handler Told Me, where her coworkers and family members discuss their experiences with Handler, which was released in May 2011 and also hit the top of the bestseller list. Handler has her own columns in Cosmopolitan and Now, a UK celebrity magazine. In May 2009, she was the host ",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n off-Broadway for unlimited runs, is featured on the front page of the Arts and Leisure section of The New York Times and can't get funding to finish the season. Again. 5 How Chelsea soars on borrowed wings. 6 Wherein Chelsea creates a Manhattan annex to house Brooklyn successes. How it opens shows, books shows, and rents spaces to other producers at the Westside Theater while continuing to move Brooklyn productions to inappropriate, overpriced rental houses. 7 In which commercial interests rally for art while artists sabotage a revolutionary production. Chelsea wins major awards for best off-Broadway and best Broadway show of the season but doesn't make any money. ",
"Chelsea on the Edge\n among the actors who worked at the Chelsea. Directors included Des McAnuff, Hal Prince, John Hirsch, and Alan Schneider. In 1965, when Robert Kalfin founded the Chelsea, there were few nonprofit theaters in New York. During the next ten years, new theaters opened, funding sources decreased, and costs rose. Many nonprofit theaters started to do conventional work that would attract audiences. Kalfin and his partners, David and Hash, continued to do innovative work. Critics often said that the Chelsea stretched the boundaries of theater. Spectators subscribed to seasons before they knew what the Chelsea would produce the following year. On the other hand, there were many clashes behind the scenes.",
"Davi Napoleon\n Davi Napoleon, also known as Davida Skurnick and Davida Napoleon (born 1946), is an American theater historian and critic as well as a freelance feature writer. She is a regular contributor to Live Design, a monthly magazine about entertainment design and designers. She is an expert on the not-for-profit theater in America and author of Chelsea on the Edge: The Adventures of an American Theater. This book is a major study of the economic changes in the American not-for-profit theater and the impact of these on the art produced. She has written on social and political issues as well."
] |
Who is the author of Conan the Valiant? | [
"Roland J. Green",
"Roland James Green"
] | author | Conan the Valiant | 3,776,549 | 98 | [
{
"id": "29838204",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Conan the Valiant is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1988; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1989, and was reprinted in July 2000.",
"score": "1.8547819"
},
{
"id": "2124599",
"title": "Conan the Triumphant",
"text": " Conan the Triumphant is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1983, and was reprinted in 1991; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in April 1985, and was reprinted in January 1987, May 1991 and February 2011. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in November 1985; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in April 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6408817"
},
{
"id": "1951838",
"title": "Conan the Magnificent",
"text": " Conan the Magnificent is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in May 1984, and was reprinted in December 1991; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1991. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in July 1986 and reprinted in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in February 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6330438"
},
{
"id": "29838206",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Writing of this novel, Don D'Ammassa noted that \"Green spends a lot more time on background detail than did some of Conan's chroniclers.\"",
"score": "1.63056"
},
{
"id": "2530026",
"title": "Conan the Victorious",
"text": " Conan the Victorious is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1984; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in December 1985, and was reprinted in March 1991 and August 2010. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in April 1987. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Triumphant into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"score": "1.6170439"
},
{
"id": "29838205",
"title": "Conan the Valiant",
"text": " Conan the Valiant begins in Turan, where a 22-year-old Conan is recovering from his victory over the Cult of Doom (found in Robert Jordan's Conan the Unconquered). Conan finds himself involved in court intrigue and joins forces with a sword maiden, Raihna, and her employer, a sorcerer named Illyana, in their efforts against the growing menace of an evil wizard named Eremius. Using one of the Jewels of Kurag — the other is held by Illyana — Eremius has command over his growing army of the Transformed, former humans who were mutated into reptilian demons, and is looking to conquer a large region of Turan. The combination of local villagers, Conan's sword, and Illyana's magic destroy Eremius as well as the twin Jewels.",
"score": "1.6167204"
},
{
"id": "1958314",
"title": "Conan the Great",
"text": " Conan the Great is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1990 (the 1989 date appearing on the title page verso is erroneous). It was reprinted by Tor in August 1997. It is the only one of the Tor series of Conan novels set in the period of Conan's kingship.",
"score": "1.6110612"
},
{
"id": "29943581",
"title": "Conan the Savage",
"text": " Conan the Savage is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1992; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1993, and was reprinted in March 1999.",
"score": "1.6080705"
},
{
"id": "2928467",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " not include such aids. De Camp provided chronological fixes for the first seven volumes (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Victorious), and Jordan for the first sixteen (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Valiant), with the odd exception of the eighth, Conan the Valorous. As both efforts also covered the earlier Lancer/Ace and Bantam Conan series, they also in effect provided fixes for the Bantams afterwards reissued by Tor (though they disagreed on the placement of three of these). Tor's listings in various volumes of books published in the series to date were in neither chronological nor publication order, but alphabetical by title.",
"score": "1.6075795"
},
{
"id": "1952619",
"title": "Conan the Invincible",
"text": " Conan the Invincible is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in June 1982 and reprinted in July 1990; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1998. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in August 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, July 1995).",
"score": "1.6065624"
},
{
"id": "5782992",
"title": "Conan the Hero",
"text": " Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"score": "1.595175"
},
{
"id": "12880503",
"title": "Conan and the Treasure of Python",
"text": " Conan and the Treasure of Python is a fantasy novel by American writer John Maddox Roberts, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1993; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1994.",
"score": "1.591602"
},
{
"id": "1127229",
"title": "Conan the Defender",
"text": " Conan the Defender is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in December 1982, followed by a regular paperback edition in December 1983. The book was reprinted by Tor in February 1991 and September 2009. The first British edition was published by Legend in September 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Invincible and Conan the Unconquered into the omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, 1995).",
"score": "1.5909226"
},
{
"id": "12500299",
"title": "Conan the Warrior",
"text": " Conan the Warrior is a 1967 collection of three fantasy short stories by American writer Robert E. Howard, featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The collection is introduced and edited by L. Sprague de Camp. The stories originally appeared in the fantasy magazine Weird Tales in the 1930s. The book has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers, and has also been translated into Japanese, German, French, Polish, Spanish, Swedish and Italian.",
"score": "1.5887117"
},
{
"id": "10900515",
"title": "Conan the Avenger",
"text": " Conan the Avenger is a 1968 collection of two fantasy works written by Björn Nyberg, Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Lancer Books, and has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers. It has also been translated into Japanese, German and Spanish.",
"score": "1.5883797"
},
{
"id": "2928469",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " (Apr. 1987) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Defiant (Oct. 1987) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Marauder (Jan. 1988) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Warlord (Mar. 1988) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Valiant (Oct. 1988) (by Roland Green) ; Conan the Hero (Feb. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Bold (Apr. 1989) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Great (Apr. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Indomitable (Oct. 1989) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Free Lance (Feb. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Formidable (Nov. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Guardian (Jan. 1991) (by Roland Green) ; Conan ",
"score": "1.5863678"
},
{
"id": "2928454",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": " The Conan books are sword and sorcery fantasies featuring the character of Conan the Cimmerian originally created by Robert E. Howard. Written by numerous authors and issued by numerous publishers, they include both novels and short stories, the latter assembled in various combinations over the years by the several publishers. The character has proven durably popular, resulting in Conan stories being produced after Howard's death by such later writers as Poul Anderson, Leonard Carpenter, Lin Carter, L. Sprague de Camp, Roland J. Green, John C. Hocking, Robert Jordan, Sean A. Moore, Björn Nyberg, Andrew J. Offutt, Steve Perry, John Maddox Roberts, Harry Turtledove, and Karl Edward Wagner. Some of these writers finished incomplete Conan manuscripts by Howard, or rewrote Howard stories which originally featured different characters. Most post-Howard Conan stories, however, are completely original works. In total, more than fifty novels and dozens of short stories featuring the Conan character have been written by authors other than Howard. This article describes and discusses notable book editions of the Conan stories.",
"score": "1.5810077"
},
{
"id": "12880372",
"title": "Conan the Renegade",
"text": " Conan the Renegade is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1986. The first British edition was published by Sphere Books in August 1988.",
"score": "1.5804906"
},
{
"id": "2928473",
"title": "Conan (books)",
"text": "The Conan Chronicles (Jul. 1995 omnibus of Conan the Invincible, Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered) (by Robert Jordan) ; The Further Chronicles of Conan (Oct. 1999 omnibus of Conan the Magnificent, Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious) (by Robert Jordan) ; Sagas of Conan (Jan. 2004 omnibus of Conan the Swordsman, Conan the Liberator and Conan and the Spider God) (by L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, and Björn Nyberg) ",
"score": "1.5751224"
},
{
"id": "28585771",
"title": "The Conan Grimoire",
"text": " The book consists of thirty-seven pieces, mostly essays on fantasy writer Robert E. Howard and his seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian, Howard's sources and literary successors, and other fantasy authors such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, E. R. Eddison, Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber and Talbot Mundy. Some original material by Howard, a number of fantasy poems and a few fictional pieces are also included.",
"score": "1.5714843"
}
] | [
"Conan the Valiant\n Conan the Valiant is a fantasy novel by American writer Roland Green, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1988; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1989, and was reprinted in July 2000.",
"Conan the Triumphant\n Conan the Triumphant is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in October 1983, and was reprinted in 1991; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in April 1985, and was reprinted in January 1987, May 1991 and February 2011. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in November 1985; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in April 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Magnificent\n Conan the Magnificent is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in May 1984, and was reprinted in December 1991; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1991. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in July 1986 and reprinted in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in February 1997. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Destroyer into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles II (Legend, April 1997), and was later gathered together with Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Valiant\n Writing of this novel, Don D'Ammassa noted that \"Green spends a lot more time on background detail than did some of Conan's chroniclers.\"",
"Conan the Victorious\n Conan the Victorious is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1984; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in December 1985, and was reprinted in March 1991 and August 2010. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in April 1987. The novel was later gathered together with Conan the Magnificent and Conan the Triumphant into the hardcover omnibus collection The Further Chronicles of Conan (Tor Books, October 1999).",
"Conan the Valiant\n Conan the Valiant begins in Turan, where a 22-year-old Conan is recovering from his victory over the Cult of Doom (found in Robert Jordan's Conan the Unconquered). Conan finds himself involved in court intrigue and joins forces with a sword maiden, Raihna, and her employer, a sorcerer named Illyana, in their efforts against the growing menace of an evil wizard named Eremius. Using one of the Jewels of Kurag — the other is held by Illyana — Eremius has command over his growing army of the Transformed, former humans who were mutated into reptilian demons, and is looking to conquer a large region of Turan. The combination of local villagers, Conan's sword, and Illyana's magic destroy Eremius as well as the twin Jewels.",
"Conan the Great\n Conan the Great is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1990 (the 1989 date appearing on the title page verso is erroneous). It was reprinted by Tor in August 1997. It is the only one of the Tor series of Conan novels set in the period of Conan's kingship.",
"Conan the Savage\n Conan the Savage is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1992; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1993, and was reprinted in March 1999.",
"Conan (books)\n not include such aids. De Camp provided chronological fixes for the first seven volumes (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Victorious), and Jordan for the first sixteen (Conan the Invincible through Conan the Valiant), with the odd exception of the eighth, Conan the Valorous. As both efforts also covered the earlier Lancer/Ace and Bantam Conan series, they also in effect provided fixes for the Bantams afterwards reissued by Tor (though they disagreed on the placement of three of these). Tor's listings in various volumes of books published in the series to date were in neither chronological nor publication order, but alphabetical by title.",
"Conan the Invincible\n Conan the Invincible is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in June 1982 and reprinted in July 1990; a trade paperback edition followed from the same publisher in 1998. The first British edition was published in paperback by Sphere Books in September 1989; a later British edition was published in paperback by Legend Books in August 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered into the hardcover omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, July 1995).",
"Conan the Hero\n Conan the Hero is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian and his black counterpart Juma of Kush, a character originally created by L. Sprague de Camp and Lin Carter for their Conan story “The City of Skulls.” It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in February 1989, and was reprinted in September 1991 and March 1997.",
"Conan and the Treasure of Python\n Conan and the Treasure of Python is a fantasy novel by American writer John Maddox Roberts, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in November 1993; a regular paperback edition followed from the same publisher in August 1994.",
"Conan the Defender\n Conan the Defender is a fantasy novel by American writer Robert Jordan, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in trade paperback by Tor Books in December 1982, followed by a regular paperback edition in December 1983. The book was reprinted by Tor in February 1991 and September 2009. The first British edition was published by Legend in September 1996. It was later gathered together with Conan the Invincible and Conan the Unconquered into the omnibus collection The Conan Chronicles (Tor Books, 1995).",
"Conan the Warrior\n Conan the Warrior is a 1967 collection of three fantasy short stories by American writer Robert E. Howard, featuring his sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. The collection is introduced and edited by L. Sprague de Camp. The stories originally appeared in the fantasy magazine Weird Tales in the 1930s. The book has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers, and has also been translated into Japanese, German, French, Polish, Spanish, Swedish and Italian.",
"Conan the Avenger\n Conan the Avenger is a 1968 collection of two fantasy works written by Björn Nyberg, Robert E. Howard and L. Sprague de Camp featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Lancer Books, and has been reprinted a number of times since by various publishers. It has also been translated into Japanese, German and Spanish.",
"Conan (books)\n (Apr. 1987) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Defiant (Oct. 1987) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Marauder (Jan. 1988) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Warlord (Mar. 1988) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Valiant (Oct. 1988) (by Roland Green) ; Conan the Hero (Feb. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Bold (Apr. 1989) (by John M. Roberts) ; Conan the Great (Apr. 1989) (by Leonard Carpenter) ; Conan the Indomitable (Oct. 1989) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Free Lance (Feb. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Formidable (Nov. 1990) (by Steve Perry) ; Conan the Guardian (Jan. 1991) (by Roland Green) ; Conan ",
"Conan (books)\n The Conan books are sword and sorcery fantasies featuring the character of Conan the Cimmerian originally created by Robert E. Howard. Written by numerous authors and issued by numerous publishers, they include both novels and short stories, the latter assembled in various combinations over the years by the several publishers. The character has proven durably popular, resulting in Conan stories being produced after Howard's death by such later writers as Poul Anderson, Leonard Carpenter, Lin Carter, L. Sprague de Camp, Roland J. Green, John C. Hocking, Robert Jordan, Sean A. Moore, Björn Nyberg, Andrew J. Offutt, Steve Perry, John Maddox Roberts, Harry Turtledove, and Karl Edward Wagner. Some of these writers finished incomplete Conan manuscripts by Howard, or rewrote Howard stories which originally featured different characters. Most post-Howard Conan stories, however, are completely original works. In total, more than fifty novels and dozens of short stories featuring the Conan character have been written by authors other than Howard. This article describes and discusses notable book editions of the Conan stories.",
"Conan the Renegade\n Conan the Renegade is a fantasy novel by American writer Leonard Carpenter, featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian. It was first published in paperback by Tor Books in April 1986. The first British edition was published by Sphere Books in August 1988.",
"Conan (books)\nThe Conan Chronicles (Jul. 1995 omnibus of Conan the Invincible, Conan the Defender and Conan the Unconquered) (by Robert Jordan) ; The Further Chronicles of Conan (Oct. 1999 omnibus of Conan the Magnificent, Conan the Triumphant and Conan the Victorious) (by Robert Jordan) ; Sagas of Conan (Jan. 2004 omnibus of Conan the Swordsman, Conan the Liberator and Conan and the Spider God) (by L. Sprague de Camp, Lin Carter, and Björn Nyberg) ",
"The Conan Grimoire\n The book consists of thirty-seven pieces, mostly essays on fantasy writer Robert E. Howard and his seminal sword and sorcery hero Conan the Barbarian, Howard's sources and literary successors, and other fantasy authors such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, E. R. Eddison, Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber and Talbot Mundy. Some original material by Howard, a number of fantasy poems and a few fictional pieces are also included."
] |
What genre is Conversations? | [
"contemporary Christian music",
"inspirational music",
"CCM",
"Contemporary Christian music"
] | genre | Conversations (Sara Groves album) | 975,023 | 99 | [
{
"id": "31530482",
"title": "Conversations (Roses Are Red album)",
"text": " Conversations is the second studio album by American rock band Roses Are Red.",
"score": "1.7943484"
},
{
"id": "9381900",
"title": "Conversations (Sara Groves album)",
"text": " Conversations is the first studio album and second album overall from Christian singer-songwriter Sara Groves, and was released on March 20, 2001, by INO Records. The producer on the album is Nate Sabin.",
"score": "1.7766633"
},
{
"id": "10546826",
"title": "Conversations with Friends",
"text": " Conversations with Friends is the 2017 debut novel by the Irish author Sally Rooney. The novel was published by Faber and Faber.",
"score": "1.7740777"
},
{
"id": "7168405",
"title": "Conversations (Woman's Hour album)",
"text": " Conversations is the debut album by London-based group Woman's Hour. This album is mixture of indie pop, alternative and electronic pop. Adding swooning synths, clipped rhythms, and muted guitars, \"Conversations\" is new wave with a twist of some nocturnal R&B and soft disco.",
"score": "1.7660838"
},
{
"id": "28821481",
"title": "Conversations (From a Second Story Window album)",
"text": " Conversations is From a Second Story Window's second and final full-length studio album. It was released on May 27, 2008. This album is a concept album, telling the stories of people of the world and the conversations they have with each other.",
"score": "1.7538896"
},
{
"id": "9381902",
"title": "Conversations (Sara Groves album)",
"text": " For the Billboard charting week of April 7, 2001, Conversations ranked at No. 35 for the best-selling albums in the Christian music market via the Christian Albums position.",
"score": "1.7433414"
},
{
"id": "1304825",
"title": "Our Precious Conversations",
"text": " Our Precious Conversations (僕と君の大切な話) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Robico. It was serialized in Dessert from August 24, 2015, to December 24, 2019, and published in seven volumes.",
"score": "1.7410108"
},
{
"id": "7454088",
"title": "Conversations (song)",
"text": " \"Conversations\" is a song by American recording artist Juice Wrld, released on July 10, 2020, as the second track from his posthumous third studio album Legends Never Die.",
"score": "1.7320287"
},
{
"id": "11323276",
"title": "A Conversation",
"text": " A Conversation is a play by the Australian author David Williamson. It was the second in his \"Jack Manning trilogy\" of plays about conferencing.",
"score": "1.7295887"
},
{
"id": "2898345",
"title": "Indistinct Conversations",
"text": " Indistinct Conversations is the fourth full-length album by Canadian indie rock band Land of Talk, released on July 31, 2020 through Saddle Creek Records and Dine Alone Records. The album was planned to be released on May 15, 2020, however, due to COVID-19 the album's release was delayed. The album was produced in Montreal, Quebec.",
"score": "1.7225707"
},
{
"id": "14680211",
"title": "Conversations (EP)",
"text": " Conversations is an EP in 2009 released by Irish band Time Is a Thief. The EP was recorded and mixed by Laurence White at Roughcut Studios in Bandon, County Cork, Ireland.",
"score": "1.6942828"
},
{
"id": "8703776",
"title": "Conversations (radio program)",
"text": " Conversations, formerly Conversations with Richard Fidler, is an Australian radio program broadcast on the ABC's local radio stations (except in Victoria) and Radio National every weekday. It is hosted by Richard Fidler (on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays) and Sarah Kanowski (on Thursdays and Fridays).",
"score": "1.6812209"
},
{
"id": "26687687",
"title": "The Conversation (website)",
"text": " The Conversation uses a custom publishing and content management system built in Ruby on Rails. This system enables authors and editors to collaborate on articles in real time. Articles link to author profiles—including disclosure statements—and personal dashboards showing authors' engagement with the public.",
"score": "1.6726122"
},
{
"id": "1325539",
"title": "Real Life Conversations",
"text": " Real Life Conversations is the second album by American contemporary Christian music singer and songwriter Steven Curtis Chapman. The album was released in 1988 by Sparrow Records and produced by Phil Naish. This second album features a harder and edgier sound that steers more toward light rock music than his previous album.",
"score": "1.6724617"
},
{
"id": "30367882",
"title": "Two Conversations",
"text": " Two Conversations is the fifth studio album by Indie Rock band The Appleseed Cast, released in the U.S. on July 22, 2003 on Tiger Style Records.",
"score": "1.6698701"
},
{
"id": "31230093",
"title": "Conversations II",
"text": " Conversations II is an album by American jazz saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell, with pianist with Craig Taborn and drummer Kikanju Baku which was recorded in 2013 and released on Wide Hive.",
"score": "1.6666572"
},
{
"id": "26115751",
"title": "Conversations (Buddy Rich, Louie Bellson, Kenny Clare album)",
"text": " Conversations is a 1972 album showcasing three jazz drummers Buddy Rich, Louie Bellson, and Kenny Clare with the Bobby Lamb - Ray Premru Orchestra.",
"score": "1.6608346"
},
{
"id": "8703777",
"title": "Conversations (radio program)",
"text": " The program has been running since 2006, and is broadcast each weekday on ABC Local Radio in all Australian states except Victoria, and on ABC Radio National. It has over many years been one of the top five most downloaded podcasts in Australia, according to iTunes charts. Since 2016 it has been the Most Downloaded Australian podcast on iTunes Australia. In 2018, the program's name changed to Conversations, and former Radio National arts journalist Sarah Kanowski joined Fidler as a regular host. The two presenters share duties, with Fidler usually presenting on Monday to Wednesday and Kanowski on Thursday and Friday.",
"score": "1.6606995"
},
{
"id": "6697444",
"title": "Conversations on Serious Topics",
"text": " Conversations on Serious Topics (Pokalbiai rimtomis temomis) is a 2012 Lithuanian documentary film directed by Giedrė Beinoriūtė. The film was selected as the Lithuanian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.",
"score": "1.6526595"
},
{
"id": "25867708",
"title": "Conversation (magazine)",
"text": " The Conversation Papers (formerly Conversation Poetry Quarterly) is a UK-based poetry magazine founded in 2007 and produced by The Conversation Paperpress. The magazine aims to promote the idea of poetry as a socially critical art and is the connected to the Dialecticist school of poetic thought. In 2009 it became the English-language publication of The Conversation International - a radical writing and publishing collective with members from countries across the world, with the aim of creating a cross-cultural poetic dialogue through translation and co-operative publishing.",
"score": "1.6502168"
}
] | [
"Conversations (Roses Are Red album)\n Conversations is the second studio album by American rock band Roses Are Red.",
"Conversations (Sara Groves album)\n Conversations is the first studio album and second album overall from Christian singer-songwriter Sara Groves, and was released on March 20, 2001, by INO Records. The producer on the album is Nate Sabin.",
"Conversations with Friends\n Conversations with Friends is the 2017 debut novel by the Irish author Sally Rooney. The novel was published by Faber and Faber.",
"Conversations (Woman's Hour album)\n Conversations is the debut album by London-based group Woman's Hour. This album is mixture of indie pop, alternative and electronic pop. Adding swooning synths, clipped rhythms, and muted guitars, \"Conversations\" is new wave with a twist of some nocturnal R&B and soft disco.",
"Conversations (From a Second Story Window album)\n Conversations is From a Second Story Window's second and final full-length studio album. It was released on May 27, 2008. This album is a concept album, telling the stories of people of the world and the conversations they have with each other.",
"Conversations (Sara Groves album)\n For the Billboard charting week of April 7, 2001, Conversations ranked at No. 35 for the best-selling albums in the Christian music market via the Christian Albums position.",
"Our Precious Conversations\n Our Precious Conversations (僕と君の大切な話) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Robico. It was serialized in Dessert from August 24, 2015, to December 24, 2019, and published in seven volumes.",
"Conversations (song)\n \"Conversations\" is a song by American recording artist Juice Wrld, released on July 10, 2020, as the second track from his posthumous third studio album Legends Never Die.",
"A Conversation\n A Conversation is a play by the Australian author David Williamson. It was the second in his \"Jack Manning trilogy\" of plays about conferencing.",
"Indistinct Conversations\n Indistinct Conversations is the fourth full-length album by Canadian indie rock band Land of Talk, released on July 31, 2020 through Saddle Creek Records and Dine Alone Records. The album was planned to be released on May 15, 2020, however, due to COVID-19 the album's release was delayed. The album was produced in Montreal, Quebec.",
"Conversations (EP)\n Conversations is an EP in 2009 released by Irish band Time Is a Thief. The EP was recorded and mixed by Laurence White at Roughcut Studios in Bandon, County Cork, Ireland.",
"Conversations (radio program)\n Conversations, formerly Conversations with Richard Fidler, is an Australian radio program broadcast on the ABC's local radio stations (except in Victoria) and Radio National every weekday. It is hosted by Richard Fidler (on Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays) and Sarah Kanowski (on Thursdays and Fridays).",
"The Conversation (website)\n The Conversation uses a custom publishing and content management system built in Ruby on Rails. This system enables authors and editors to collaborate on articles in real time. Articles link to author profiles—including disclosure statements—and personal dashboards showing authors' engagement with the public.",
"Real Life Conversations\n Real Life Conversations is the second album by American contemporary Christian music singer and songwriter Steven Curtis Chapman. The album was released in 1988 by Sparrow Records and produced by Phil Naish. This second album features a harder and edgier sound that steers more toward light rock music than his previous album.",
"Two Conversations\n Two Conversations is the fifth studio album by Indie Rock band The Appleseed Cast, released in the U.S. on July 22, 2003 on Tiger Style Records.",
"Conversations II\n Conversations II is an album by American jazz saxophonist Roscoe Mitchell, with pianist with Craig Taborn and drummer Kikanju Baku which was recorded in 2013 and released on Wide Hive.",
"Conversations (Buddy Rich, Louie Bellson, Kenny Clare album)\n Conversations is a 1972 album showcasing three jazz drummers Buddy Rich, Louie Bellson, and Kenny Clare with the Bobby Lamb - Ray Premru Orchestra.",
"Conversations (radio program)\n The program has been running since 2006, and is broadcast each weekday on ABC Local Radio in all Australian states except Victoria, and on ABC Radio National. It has over many years been one of the top five most downloaded podcasts in Australia, according to iTunes charts. Since 2016 it has been the Most Downloaded Australian podcast on iTunes Australia. In 2018, the program's name changed to Conversations, and former Radio National arts journalist Sarah Kanowski joined Fidler as a regular host. The two presenters share duties, with Fidler usually presenting on Monday to Wednesday and Kanowski on Thursday and Friday.",
"Conversations on Serious Topics\n Conversations on Serious Topics (Pokalbiai rimtomis temomis) is a 2012 Lithuanian documentary film directed by Giedrė Beinoriūtė. The film was selected as the Lithuanian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 86th Academy Awards, but it was not nominated.",
"Conversation (magazine)\n The Conversation Papers (formerly Conversation Poetry Quarterly) is a UK-based poetry magazine founded in 2007 and produced by The Conversation Paperpress. The magazine aims to promote the idea of poetry as a socially critical art and is the connected to the Dialecticist school of poetic thought. In 2009 it became the English-language publication of The Conversation International - a radical writing and publishing collective with members from countries across the world, with the aim of creating a cross-cultural poetic dialogue through translation and co-operative publishing."
] |
Who was the director of The Love Nest? | [
"Thomas Bentley"
] | director | The Love Nest (1933 film) | 5,939,352 | 92 | [
{
"id": "25559106",
"title": "The Nest (1988 film)",
"text": " The Nest is an 1988 American science-fiction horror film directed by Terence H. Winkless in his directorial debut. Based on the 1980 novel of the same name by Eli Cantor (published under the pseudonym Gregory A. Douglas), the film's screenplay was written by Robert King. The film was produced by Julie Corman and stars Robert Lansing, Lisa Langlois, Franc Luz, and Terri Treas. The Nest takes place in a small New England town that is overrun by genetically engineered killer cockroaches. The local sheriff (Luz) joins forces with his former girlfriend (Langlois) and a pest control agent (Stephen Davies) to defeat the insects. The film was released in the United States on May 13, 1988, by Concorde Pictures, and received mixed reviews from critics.",
"score": "1.5540879"
},
{
"id": "8583653",
"title": "Love Nest",
"text": " Love Nest is a 1951 American comedy-drama film directed by Joseph Newman and starring June Haver, William Lundigan, Frank Fay, and Marilyn Monroe. The post-World War II comedy features an early supporting role for Monroe. It is one of the few films future Tonight Show host Jack Paar made prior to his television career, and the last film appearance by Fay, who had been a popular stage comedian in the 1920s and revived his career starring in the long-running Broadway comedy Harvey. It was also the last appearance by silent star Leatrice Joy. The film borrows its name from the song \"Love Nest\" with music by Louis Hirsch and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. The song is sung by a chorus over the opening credits and was used as a theme song for The Burns and Allen Show on both radio and TV.",
"score": "1.5536178"
},
{
"id": "26646521",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": "Gene Gerrard - George ; Camilla Horn - Fifi ; Nancy Burne - Angela ; Gus McNaughton - Fox ; Garry Marsh - Hugo ; Amy Veness - Ma ; Charles Paton - Pa ; Marian Dawson - Mrs. Drinkwater ; Judy Kelly - Girl ",
"score": "1.5250807"
},
{
"id": "26646520",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": " On the eve of his own marriage, a man offers shelter to a runaway wife with whom he strikes up an unexpected bond.",
"score": "1.5123746"
},
{
"id": "30088306",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": " In order to escape from his life and his lost love, Keaton sets off on his small boat, Cupid, but runs into the whaling ship, The Love Nest. The whaler's merciless captain (Joe Roberts) throws crew members overboard for even the slightest offense. After his steward accidentally pours hot tea over the captain's hand, the captain tosses him overboard and replaces him with Keaton. Despite a series of mishaps, Keaton manages to avoid the fate of other crewmen.",
"score": "1.5062168"
},
{
"id": "30088305",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": " The Love Nest is a 1923 American short comedy silent film written and directed by and starring Buster Keaton.",
"score": "1.4951303"
},
{
"id": "26646519",
"title": "The Love Nest (1933 film)",
"text": " The Love Nest is a 1933 British comedy film directed by Thomas Bentley and starring Gene Gerrard, Camilla Horn and Nancy Burne.",
"score": "1.4799639"
},
{
"id": "26330843",
"title": "The Love Nest",
"text": "The Love Nest (1922 film) aka Das Liebesnest, is a 1922 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein. ; The Love Nest (1922), an American film directed by Wray Bartlett Physioc. ; The Love Nest (1923 film), an American short silent comedy by Buster Keaton ; The Love Nest (1933 film), a British comedy directed by Thomas Bentley The Love Nest may refer to:",
"score": "1.4767561"
},
{
"id": "1520959",
"title": "Franz Xaver Kroetz",
"text": " contain less violence and sexuality, and are more influenced by Bertolt Brecht. Oberösterreich (Upper Austria, 1972) and Das Nest (The Nest, 1974) garnered popular and critical acclaim. The former marked a shift from portraying (in Kroetz's words) the \"milieu of the extreme\" to portraying average people who lack pent-up frutrations and communicate more effectively. Donna L. Hoffmeister wrote that the work \"was presented, according to my count, by forty different theaters between 1974 and 1976 and the play Das Nest (1974) by about twenty theaters in the 1976/77 season\". In The Nest, the protagonist is a truck driver. His boss orders him to dump toxic waste into a lake, thus soiling his \"nest.\" After the ",
"score": "1.4692032"
},
{
"id": "1705439",
"title": "The Sex Nest",
"text": " The Sex Nest (Das gelbe Haus am Pinnasberg) is a 1970 West German sex comedy directed by Alfred Vohrer. The film is about a brothel for neglected wives that is predominantly staffed by men. It is based on the novel by.",
"score": "1.4639602"
},
{
"id": "30088307",
"title": "The Love Nest (1923 film)",
"text": "Buster Keaton - Buster Keaton ; Joe Roberts - Captain of the Whaler ; Virginia Fox - The Girl ",
"score": "1.4483476"
},
{
"id": "5436635",
"title": "Robert N. Zagone",
"text": " before returning to his freelance work. Zagone won two Emmys from the San Francisco chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for Evening Magazine, one of the winning shows having featured comedian Steve Martin and Rolling Stone journalist Ben Fong-Torres. Inside the Cuckoo's Nest (1976) Director This groundbreaking PBS documentary was shot at the Oregon State Mental Hospital in Salem, Oregon, the same hospital used in the Academy Award-winning feature film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The film included a graphic sequence that showed the preparation, the actual process, and the aftermath of an electroshock treatment for a patient. The ",
"score": "1.4385436"
},
{
"id": "27855148",
"title": "The Nest (2020 film)",
"text": " The Nest is a 2020 psychological thriller film written, directed, and produced by Sean Durkin. It stars Jude Law, Carrie Coon, Charlie Shotwell, Oona Roche, and Adeel Akhtar. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2020, and was released in the United States and Canada on September 18, 2020, by IFC Films and Elevation Pictures respectively.",
"score": "1.433481"
},
{
"id": "27855156",
"title": "The Nest (2020 film)",
"text": " The project was announced in April 2018, with Jude Law and Carrie Coon set to star for writer and director Sean Durkin. Filming began in September 2018 in Canada for one week before moving to England.",
"score": "1.4308915"
},
{
"id": "27397432",
"title": "Love Nest on Wheels",
"text": " Love Nest on Wheels is a 1937 Educational Pictures short subject directed by Buster Keaton and Charles Lamont. The film borrows heavily from Keaton's 1918 film The Bell Boy. The film is notable because it is one of the rare times that Buster Keaton appeared onscreen with his family, whom he had performed with in vaudeville.",
"score": "1.4205396"
},
{
"id": "8349959",
"title": "Hal Ashby",
"text": " 1973, Ashby was hired to direct One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, though he would be replaced by Miloš Forman before filming started. Aside from Shampoo, Ashby's most commercially successful film was the Vietnam War drama Coming Home (1978). Starring Jane Fonda and Jon Voight, both in Academy Award-winning performances, it was for this film that Ashby earned his only Best Director nomination from the Academy. Arriving in the post-Jaws and Star Wars era, Coming Home was one of the last films to encapsulate the modestly budgeted, socially realistic ethos of the New Hollywood era, earning nearly $15 million in returns and rentals on a $3 million budget.",
"score": "1.4204072"
},
{
"id": "25511089",
"title": "The Marriage Nest",
"text": " The Marriage Nest (Das Heiratsnest) is a 1927 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein and starring Livio Pavanelli, Harry Liedtke, and Wolfgang Zilzer. The film's sets were designed by Botho Hoefer and August Rinaldi. It was made by the Berlin-based Aafa-Film.",
"score": "1.418321"
},
{
"id": "3501156",
"title": "Tina Howe",
"text": " Howe’s first full-length play to receive a professional production was The Nest, which premiered in the summer of 1969 at the Act IV Theater in Provincetown, Massachusetts. It was directed by Larry Arrick and the cast included Sally Kirkland and Richard Jordan among others. From Provincetown, the show was transferred Off-Broadway to New York's Mercury Theater, opening on April 9, 1970. Howe later recalled: \"My first play, 'The Nest,' was about courtship and how women compete with each other to land a husband. That play closed [off-Broadway] in one night.\" The play follows the trials of three young women competing for husbands at a dinner ",
"score": "1.4181564"
},
{
"id": "2797189",
"title": "The Nest (1980 film)",
"text": " In a small village near Salamanca, Alejandro, a rich 60-year-old widower falls in love with Goyita, a 13-year-old girl.",
"score": "1.4120022"
},
{
"id": "2797188",
"title": "The Nest (1980 film)",
"text": " The Nest (El Nido) is a 1980 Spanish drama film written and directed by Jaime de Armiñán, starring Héctor Alterio and Ana Torrent. The plot follows the emotionally intense relationship between an old widower and a precocious thirteen-year-old girl. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 53rd Academy Awards.",
"score": "1.4090253"
}
] | [
"The Nest (1988 film)\n The Nest is an 1988 American science-fiction horror film directed by Terence H. Winkless in his directorial debut. Based on the 1980 novel of the same name by Eli Cantor (published under the pseudonym Gregory A. Douglas), the film's screenplay was written by Robert King. The film was produced by Julie Corman and stars Robert Lansing, Lisa Langlois, Franc Luz, and Terri Treas. The Nest takes place in a small New England town that is overrun by genetically engineered killer cockroaches. The local sheriff (Luz) joins forces with his former girlfriend (Langlois) and a pest control agent (Stephen Davies) to defeat the insects. The film was released in the United States on May 13, 1988, by Concorde Pictures, and received mixed reviews from critics.",
"Love Nest\n Love Nest is a 1951 American comedy-drama film directed by Joseph Newman and starring June Haver, William Lundigan, Frank Fay, and Marilyn Monroe. The post-World War II comedy features an early supporting role for Monroe. It is one of the few films future Tonight Show host Jack Paar made prior to his television career, and the last film appearance by Fay, who had been a popular stage comedian in the 1920s and revived his career starring in the long-running Broadway comedy Harvey. It was also the last appearance by silent star Leatrice Joy. The film borrows its name from the song \"Love Nest\" with music by Louis Hirsch and lyrics by Otto A. Harbach. The song is sung by a chorus over the opening credits and was used as a theme song for The Burns and Allen Show on both radio and TV.",
"The Love Nest (1933 film)\nGene Gerrard - George ; Camilla Horn - Fifi ; Nancy Burne - Angela ; Gus McNaughton - Fox ; Garry Marsh - Hugo ; Amy Veness - Ma ; Charles Paton - Pa ; Marian Dawson - Mrs. Drinkwater ; Judy Kelly - Girl ",
"The Love Nest (1933 film)\n On the eve of his own marriage, a man offers shelter to a runaway wife with whom he strikes up an unexpected bond.",
"The Love Nest (1923 film)\n In order to escape from his life and his lost love, Keaton sets off on his small boat, Cupid, but runs into the whaling ship, The Love Nest. The whaler's merciless captain (Joe Roberts) throws crew members overboard for even the slightest offense. After his steward accidentally pours hot tea over the captain's hand, the captain tosses him overboard and replaces him with Keaton. Despite a series of mishaps, Keaton manages to avoid the fate of other crewmen.",
"The Love Nest (1923 film)\n The Love Nest is a 1923 American short comedy silent film written and directed by and starring Buster Keaton.",
"The Love Nest (1933 film)\n The Love Nest is a 1933 British comedy film directed by Thomas Bentley and starring Gene Gerrard, Camilla Horn and Nancy Burne.",
"The Love Nest\nThe Love Nest (1922 film) aka Das Liebesnest, is a 1922 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein. ; The Love Nest (1922), an American film directed by Wray Bartlett Physioc. ; The Love Nest (1923 film), an American short silent comedy by Buster Keaton ; The Love Nest (1933 film), a British comedy directed by Thomas Bentley The Love Nest may refer to:",
"Franz Xaver Kroetz\n contain less violence and sexuality, and are more influenced by Bertolt Brecht. Oberösterreich (Upper Austria, 1972) and Das Nest (The Nest, 1974) garnered popular and critical acclaim. The former marked a shift from portraying (in Kroetz's words) the \"milieu of the extreme\" to portraying average people who lack pent-up frutrations and communicate more effectively. Donna L. Hoffmeister wrote that the work \"was presented, according to my count, by forty different theaters between 1974 and 1976 and the play Das Nest (1974) by about twenty theaters in the 1976/77 season\". In The Nest, the protagonist is a truck driver. His boss orders him to dump toxic waste into a lake, thus soiling his \"nest.\" After the ",
"The Sex Nest\n The Sex Nest (Das gelbe Haus am Pinnasberg) is a 1970 West German sex comedy directed by Alfred Vohrer. The film is about a brothel for neglected wives that is predominantly staffed by men. It is based on the novel by.",
"The Love Nest (1923 film)\nBuster Keaton - Buster Keaton ; Joe Roberts - Captain of the Whaler ; Virginia Fox - The Girl ",
"Robert N. Zagone\n before returning to his freelance work. Zagone won two Emmys from the San Francisco chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for Evening Magazine, one of the winning shows having featured comedian Steve Martin and Rolling Stone journalist Ben Fong-Torres. Inside the Cuckoo's Nest (1976) Director This groundbreaking PBS documentary was shot at the Oregon State Mental Hospital in Salem, Oregon, the same hospital used in the Academy Award-winning feature film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. The film included a graphic sequence that showed the preparation, the actual process, and the aftermath of an electroshock treatment for a patient. The ",
"The Nest (2020 film)\n The Nest is a 2020 psychological thriller film written, directed, and produced by Sean Durkin. It stars Jude Law, Carrie Coon, Charlie Shotwell, Oona Roche, and Adeel Akhtar. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2020, and was released in the United States and Canada on September 18, 2020, by IFC Films and Elevation Pictures respectively.",
"The Nest (2020 film)\n The project was announced in April 2018, with Jude Law and Carrie Coon set to star for writer and director Sean Durkin. Filming began in September 2018 in Canada for one week before moving to England.",
"Love Nest on Wheels\n Love Nest on Wheels is a 1937 Educational Pictures short subject directed by Buster Keaton and Charles Lamont. The film borrows heavily from Keaton's 1918 film The Bell Boy. The film is notable because it is one of the rare times that Buster Keaton appeared onscreen with his family, whom he had performed with in vaudeville.",
"Hal Ashby\n 1973, Ashby was hired to direct One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, though he would be replaced by Miloš Forman before filming started. Aside from Shampoo, Ashby's most commercially successful film was the Vietnam War drama Coming Home (1978). Starring Jane Fonda and Jon Voight, both in Academy Award-winning performances, it was for this film that Ashby earned his only Best Director nomination from the Academy. Arriving in the post-Jaws and Star Wars era, Coming Home was one of the last films to encapsulate the modestly budgeted, socially realistic ethos of the New Hollywood era, earning nearly $15 million in returns and rentals on a $3 million budget.",
"The Marriage Nest\n The Marriage Nest (Das Heiratsnest) is a 1927 German silent film directed by Rudolf Walther-Fein and starring Livio Pavanelli, Harry Liedtke, and Wolfgang Zilzer. The film's sets were designed by Botho Hoefer and August Rinaldi. It was made by the Berlin-based Aafa-Film.",
"Tina Howe\n Howe’s first full-length play to receive a professional production was The Nest, which premiered in the summer of 1969 at the Act IV Theater in Provincetown, Massachusetts. It was directed by Larry Arrick and the cast included Sally Kirkland and Richard Jordan among others. From Provincetown, the show was transferred Off-Broadway to New York's Mercury Theater, opening on April 9, 1970. Howe later recalled: \"My first play, 'The Nest,' was about courtship and how women compete with each other to land a husband. That play closed [off-Broadway] in one night.\" The play follows the trials of three young women competing for husbands at a dinner ",
"The Nest (1980 film)\n In a small village near Salamanca, Alejandro, a rich 60-year-old widower falls in love with Goyita, a 13-year-old girl.",
"The Nest (1980 film)\n The Nest (El Nido) is a 1980 Spanish drama film written and directed by Jaime de Armiñán, starring Héctor Alterio and Ana Torrent. The plot follows the emotionally intense relationship between an old widower and a precocious thirteen-year-old girl. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 53rd Academy Awards."
] |
What is Bruce McDaniel's occupation? | [
"composer"
] | occupation | Bruce McDaniel | 3,583,128 | 91 | [
{
"id": "8011557",
"title": "Bruce McDaniel",
"text": " Bruce McDaniel (born September 23, 1962) is an American musician, composer, producer and recording engineer, currently living in New Orleans. Bruce McDaniel was born in Boston, Massachusetts of Mexican and Scottish/American parents on 23 September 1962 and grew up in New York. He was raised by musical parents who met while attending the Juilliard School of Music. He had an early start in NYC's underground punk rock scene as lead guitarist for the Sic F*cks with Tish Bellomo and Snooky Bellomo, a band who, despite the inability to have their name said on the radio, parlayed their comedy-punk spectacle to a feature in Playboy Magazine and movie appearances, including 1982's Alone in ",
"score": "1.7091708"
},
{
"id": "33123058",
"title": "Jerry McDaniel",
"text": " '91\" poster. An official AFL-CIO special-run artist-signed copy of this print is in the University of Missouri St. Louis Art Collection – \"The Bruce & Barbara Feldacker Labor Art Collection\", and the Special Collections of the Frostburg State University, Frostburg, MD. McDaniel has also conceived and produced short films and film titles, among them the film ICE (Idea, Composition, and Execution) and the film titles for The Bolshoi at The Bolshoi. In 2008, the New York Society of Illustrators commemorated the 50th anniversary of their Annual Show by publishing a book entitled Icons and Images: 50 Years of Illustration, containing 500 ",
"score": "1.5812864"
},
{
"id": "25075024",
"title": "Randall McDaniel",
"text": " Randall Cornell McDaniel (born December 19, 1964) is an American former football player who was a guard in the National Football League (NFL).",
"score": "1.5408397"
},
{
"id": "8401702",
"title": "Ed McDaniel",
"text": " Edward McDaniel (born March 23, 1969) is a former American football linebacker in the NFL. He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings, 5th round (125th overall) of the 1992 Draft. He spent his entire professional career with the Minnesota Vikings. McDaniel is a co-owner of D1 Sports Training in Greenville, South Carolina. He resides in a suburb of the Twin Cities in Minnesota and owns a number of apartment buildings in Minneapolis and St. Paul.",
"score": "1.5247586"
},
{
"id": "9439297",
"title": "John McDaniel",
"text": " John McDaniel (born September 23, 1951 in Birmingham, Alabama) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League for the Cincinnati Bengals and the Washington Redskins. He played college football at Lincoln University of Missouri and was drafted in the eighth round of the 1974 NFL Draft.",
"score": "1.5160909"
},
{
"id": "4495677",
"title": "Hardy McLain",
"text": " Bruce Hardy McLain was born in September 1952, in San Francisco, US. McLain earned a bachelor's degree in economics and public policy from Duke University, North Carolina, followed by an MBA in finance and marketing from UCLA, California.",
"score": "1.5029008"
},
{
"id": "11039178",
"title": "Pellom McDaniels",
"text": " Pellom McDaniels III (February 21, 1968 – April 19, 2020 ) was an American professional football player who was a defensive lineman in the National Football League (NFL). After his playing career, he became a professor and curator at Emory University.",
"score": "1.4879283"
},
{
"id": "12466064",
"title": "Steve McDaniel",
"text": " Steve K. McDaniel is a former Republican Party Representative from the US state of Tennessee, having represented all of Henderson, Chester, Decatur and Perry Counties.",
"score": "1.4839301"
},
{
"id": "9697872",
"title": "David McDaniel",
"text": " David McDaniel was born 16 June 1939, in Toledo, Ohio. He studied cinematography at San Diego State University, then moved to Los Angeles. While living in Los Angeles he joined science fiction fandom, using the pseudonym Ted Johnstone. This makes him one of the few authors to write under his real name but conduct his social life under a pseudonym. He was also known by the nickname \"Tedron\", the name of his character in a Shared universe fantasy called Coventry. David McDaniel died sometime in the early morning of 1 November 1977 while alone at his home. At the time of his death he was contracted to fly to Baton Rouge, Louisiana for freelance work as a cameraman.",
"score": "1.4790139"
},
{
"id": "32916678",
"title": "Terry McDaniel",
"text": " Terence Lee McDaniel (born February 8, 1965) is a former American football player who played 11 seasons in the National Football League, mostly with the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders. A 5'10\", 180-pound cornerback, he played college football at the University of Tennessee, and was selected in the first round (9th overall) of the 1988 NFL Draft. A five-time Pro Bowl selection from 1992 to 1996, McDaniel had 35 career interceptions for 667 yards and 6 touchdowns. His five interceptions returned for touchdowns over his career with the Raiders are a team record. His 34 interceptions are the third-highest in franchise history, and his 624 return yards are the second-highest.",
"score": "1.478832"
},
{
"id": "33123048",
"title": "Jerry McDaniel",
"text": " Jerry W. McDaniel (born 1935) is an American heterogeneous artist; graphics artist, illustrator, communication designer, educator and modernist painter. He distinguished himself by doing advertising work for numerous large corporations (PanAm, Intercontinental Hotels, Philip Morris International), creating posters, doing book and magazine illustrations, and influencing numerous students of advertising and communication design. In parallel with his commercial career he was a prolific multimedia artist, painting in acrylic and in watercolor, in various fields such as landscape, portraits, sports, and political graphics. He also designed sports stamps. He was one of the first illustrators to embrace computer graphics.",
"score": "1.4785742"
},
{
"id": "6487874",
"title": "James McDaniel",
"text": " James McDaniel (born March 25, 1958) is an American stage, film and television actor. He is best known for playing Lt. Arthur Fancy on the television show NYPD Blue. He created the role of Paul in the hit Lincoln Center play Six Degrees of Separation. He played a police officer in the ill-fated 1990 series Cop Rock, and a close advisor to the director Spike Lee regarding the activist Malcolm X in the 1992 film Malcolm X. He also played Sgt. Jesse Longford in the ABC television series Detroit 1-8-7. He was born in Washington, D.C.",
"score": "1.4779923"
},
{
"id": "4495676",
"title": "Hardy McLain",
"text": " Bruce Hardy McLain (born September 1952) is an American retired hedge fund manager, and a co-founder and former managing partner of CVC Capital Partners.",
"score": "1.4774718"
},
{
"id": "13235941",
"title": "Clint McDaniel",
"text": " Clinton Eugene McDaniel (born February 26, 1972) is a retired American professional basketball player. A 6'4\" (1.93 m) guard from the University of Arkansas, McDaniel was a key member of the 1994 National Championship team that defeated Duke University, 76–72. Born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, McDaniel was considered the best on ball defender in the country. McDaniel went on to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA),signing as a free agent Sacramento Kings during the 1995-96 NBA season signing with the Washington Wizards 1996–97 season but later released. He has also played professionally in Europe and in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL) with the Perth Wildcats and the South East Melbourne Magic. McDaniel has been selected as a recipient of the prestigious 2014 SEC Men's Basketball Legends Award. McDaniel is the first of only two players in SEC history to ever record 100 steals in a single season(102). McDaniel was named to the AP 3rd Team All-Conference 1995, and named to the 1995 Final Four All-Tournament Team.",
"score": "1.4764533"
},
{
"id": "11039181",
"title": "Pellom McDaniels",
"text": " Following his collegiate career, McDaniels worked for Procter & Gamble as a Health and Beauty Care representative in the Portland, Oregon area before pursuing a professional football career in the World League of American Football with the Birmingham Fire. In 1991, McDaniels signed his first contract in the National Football League with the Philadelphia Eagles. After having hip surgery, he spent his recovery time coaching football defensive lineman at Sunset High School in Beaverton, Oregon. Pellom spent his evenings after practice working on his own reconditioning and strength building. He was considered one of the best coaches to have worked at Sunset High according to his students. In 1992, the Kansas City Chiefs asked McDaniels to ",
"score": "1.4762685"
},
{
"id": "11312642",
"title": "Wayne McDaniel",
"text": " Wayne McDaniel is an American former professional basketball player. He spent much of his career in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL), playing 288 games from 1983-1994. He scored over 7,600 points in his career at an average of 26.5 points per game over twelve seasons with 4 teams. He was a four-time NBL All-Star. Born in San Francisco, California, McDaniel played college basketball for the Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners from 1980 to 1982. He played professionally for the Adelaide 36ers (1983), Geelong Supercats (1984–1985), Newcastle Falcons (1986–1988) and Hobart Devils (1989–1994) of the NBL. Setting many single-game and single-season records, he retired in 1995. As of the ",
"score": "1.4649651"
},
{
"id": "12047895",
"title": "Rodger McDaniel",
"text": " University of Wyoming College of Law with a Juris Doctor Degree and practiced law for twenty years, specializing in employment and insurance law. McDaniel also served as the Wyoming lobbyist for State Farm Insurance and Anheuser Busch Companies for all of his legal career. He also participated, as a member of the Lawyer's Guild, as a human rights observer in Guatemala. From 1991–1992, McDaniel and his family joined Habitat for Humanity as International Partners in Guatemala and Nicaragua. Shortly after his return to Wyoming, McDaniel closed his law practice in order to attend Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado, earning a Masters in Divinity Degree. Between 1999 and 2002, McDaniel consulted for the Wyoming Department of Health's Substance Abuse Division, where he ",
"score": "1.4602727"
},
{
"id": "9697871",
"title": "David McDaniel",
"text": " David Edward McDaniel (16 June 1939 – 1 November 1977) was an American science fiction author, who also wrote spy fiction, including several novels based upon the television series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.",
"score": "1.4593353"
},
{
"id": "31640190",
"title": "Bruce McLenna",
"text": " A native of Holly, Michigan, McLenna grew up in Fenton, Michigan.",
"score": "1.4548012"
},
{
"id": "12350931",
"title": "Jim McMullan",
"text": " James P. McMullan (October 13, 1936 – May 31, 2019 ) was an American actor from Long Island, New York, best known for his role as Dr. Terry McDaniel on the 1960s series Ben Casey and as Senator Andrew Dowling on the CBS primetime soap opera Dallas. McMullan studied Industrial Design at New York University and Parsons School of Design; he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1961 with a Bachelor of Architecture degree. Guest starred in a 1962 episode of Laramie, as Virg Walker",
"score": "1.451833"
}
] | [
"Bruce McDaniel\n Bruce McDaniel (born September 23, 1962) is an American musician, composer, producer and recording engineer, currently living in New Orleans. Bruce McDaniel was born in Boston, Massachusetts of Mexican and Scottish/American parents on 23 September 1962 and grew up in New York. He was raised by musical parents who met while attending the Juilliard School of Music. He had an early start in NYC's underground punk rock scene as lead guitarist for the Sic F*cks with Tish Bellomo and Snooky Bellomo, a band who, despite the inability to have their name said on the radio, parlayed their comedy-punk spectacle to a feature in Playboy Magazine and movie appearances, including 1982's Alone in ",
"Jerry McDaniel\n '91\" poster. An official AFL-CIO special-run artist-signed copy of this print is in the University of Missouri St. Louis Art Collection – \"The Bruce & Barbara Feldacker Labor Art Collection\", and the Special Collections of the Frostburg State University, Frostburg, MD. McDaniel has also conceived and produced short films and film titles, among them the film ICE (Idea, Composition, and Execution) and the film titles for The Bolshoi at The Bolshoi. In 2008, the New York Society of Illustrators commemorated the 50th anniversary of their Annual Show by publishing a book entitled Icons and Images: 50 Years of Illustration, containing 500 ",
"Randall McDaniel\n Randall Cornell McDaniel (born December 19, 1964) is an American former football player who was a guard in the National Football League (NFL).",
"Ed McDaniel\n Edward McDaniel (born March 23, 1969) is a former American football linebacker in the NFL. He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings, 5th round (125th overall) of the 1992 Draft. He spent his entire professional career with the Minnesota Vikings. McDaniel is a co-owner of D1 Sports Training in Greenville, South Carolina. He resides in a suburb of the Twin Cities in Minnesota and owns a number of apartment buildings in Minneapolis and St. Paul.",
"John McDaniel\n John McDaniel (born September 23, 1951 in Birmingham, Alabama) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League for the Cincinnati Bengals and the Washington Redskins. He played college football at Lincoln University of Missouri and was drafted in the eighth round of the 1974 NFL Draft.",
"Hardy McLain\n Bruce Hardy McLain was born in September 1952, in San Francisco, US. McLain earned a bachelor's degree in economics and public policy from Duke University, North Carolina, followed by an MBA in finance and marketing from UCLA, California.",
"Pellom McDaniels\n Pellom McDaniels III (February 21, 1968 – April 19, 2020 ) was an American professional football player who was a defensive lineman in the National Football League (NFL). After his playing career, he became a professor and curator at Emory University.",
"Steve McDaniel\n Steve K. McDaniel is a former Republican Party Representative from the US state of Tennessee, having represented all of Henderson, Chester, Decatur and Perry Counties.",
"David McDaniel\n David McDaniel was born 16 June 1939, in Toledo, Ohio. He studied cinematography at San Diego State University, then moved to Los Angeles. While living in Los Angeles he joined science fiction fandom, using the pseudonym Ted Johnstone. This makes him one of the few authors to write under his real name but conduct his social life under a pseudonym. He was also known by the nickname \"Tedron\", the name of his character in a Shared universe fantasy called Coventry. David McDaniel died sometime in the early morning of 1 November 1977 while alone at his home. At the time of his death he was contracted to fly to Baton Rouge, Louisiana for freelance work as a cameraman.",
"Terry McDaniel\n Terence Lee McDaniel (born February 8, 1965) is a former American football player who played 11 seasons in the National Football League, mostly with the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders. A 5'10\", 180-pound cornerback, he played college football at the University of Tennessee, and was selected in the first round (9th overall) of the 1988 NFL Draft. A five-time Pro Bowl selection from 1992 to 1996, McDaniel had 35 career interceptions for 667 yards and 6 touchdowns. His five interceptions returned for touchdowns over his career with the Raiders are a team record. His 34 interceptions are the third-highest in franchise history, and his 624 return yards are the second-highest.",
"Jerry McDaniel\n Jerry W. McDaniel (born 1935) is an American heterogeneous artist; graphics artist, illustrator, communication designer, educator and modernist painter. He distinguished himself by doing advertising work for numerous large corporations (PanAm, Intercontinental Hotels, Philip Morris International), creating posters, doing book and magazine illustrations, and influencing numerous students of advertising and communication design. In parallel with his commercial career he was a prolific multimedia artist, painting in acrylic and in watercolor, in various fields such as landscape, portraits, sports, and political graphics. He also designed sports stamps. He was one of the first illustrators to embrace computer graphics.",
"James McDaniel\n James McDaniel (born March 25, 1958) is an American stage, film and television actor. He is best known for playing Lt. Arthur Fancy on the television show NYPD Blue. He created the role of Paul in the hit Lincoln Center play Six Degrees of Separation. He played a police officer in the ill-fated 1990 series Cop Rock, and a close advisor to the director Spike Lee regarding the activist Malcolm X in the 1992 film Malcolm X. He also played Sgt. Jesse Longford in the ABC television series Detroit 1-8-7. He was born in Washington, D.C.",
"Hardy McLain\n Bruce Hardy McLain (born September 1952) is an American retired hedge fund manager, and a co-founder and former managing partner of CVC Capital Partners.",
"Clint McDaniel\n Clinton Eugene McDaniel (born February 26, 1972) is a retired American professional basketball player. A 6'4\" (1.93 m) guard from the University of Arkansas, McDaniel was a key member of the 1994 National Championship team that defeated Duke University, 76–72. Born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, McDaniel was considered the best on ball defender in the country. McDaniel went on to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA),signing as a free agent Sacramento Kings during the 1995-96 NBA season signing with the Washington Wizards 1996–97 season but later released. He has also played professionally in Europe and in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL) with the Perth Wildcats and the South East Melbourne Magic. McDaniel has been selected as a recipient of the prestigious 2014 SEC Men's Basketball Legends Award. McDaniel is the first of only two players in SEC history to ever record 100 steals in a single season(102). McDaniel was named to the AP 3rd Team All-Conference 1995, and named to the 1995 Final Four All-Tournament Team.",
"Pellom McDaniels\n Following his collegiate career, McDaniels worked for Procter & Gamble as a Health and Beauty Care representative in the Portland, Oregon area before pursuing a professional football career in the World League of American Football with the Birmingham Fire. In 1991, McDaniels signed his first contract in the National Football League with the Philadelphia Eagles. After having hip surgery, he spent his recovery time coaching football defensive lineman at Sunset High School in Beaverton, Oregon. Pellom spent his evenings after practice working on his own reconditioning and strength building. He was considered one of the best coaches to have worked at Sunset High according to his students. In 1992, the Kansas City Chiefs asked McDaniels to ",
"Wayne McDaniel\n Wayne McDaniel is an American former professional basketball player. He spent much of his career in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL), playing 288 games from 1983-1994. He scored over 7,600 points in his career at an average of 26.5 points per game over twelve seasons with 4 teams. He was a four-time NBL All-Star. Born in San Francisco, California, McDaniel played college basketball for the Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners from 1980 to 1982. He played professionally for the Adelaide 36ers (1983), Geelong Supercats (1984–1985), Newcastle Falcons (1986–1988) and Hobart Devils (1989–1994) of the NBL. Setting many single-game and single-season records, he retired in 1995. As of the ",
"Rodger McDaniel\n University of Wyoming College of Law with a Juris Doctor Degree and practiced law for twenty years, specializing in employment and insurance law. McDaniel also served as the Wyoming lobbyist for State Farm Insurance and Anheuser Busch Companies for all of his legal career. He also participated, as a member of the Lawyer's Guild, as a human rights observer in Guatemala. From 1991–1992, McDaniel and his family joined Habitat for Humanity as International Partners in Guatemala and Nicaragua. Shortly after his return to Wyoming, McDaniel closed his law practice in order to attend Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado, earning a Masters in Divinity Degree. Between 1999 and 2002, McDaniel consulted for the Wyoming Department of Health's Substance Abuse Division, where he ",
"David McDaniel\n David Edward McDaniel (16 June 1939 – 1 November 1977) was an American science fiction author, who also wrote spy fiction, including several novels based upon the television series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.",
"Bruce McLenna\n A native of Holly, Michigan, McLenna grew up in Fenton, Michigan.",
"Jim McMullan\n James P. McMullan (October 13, 1936 – May 31, 2019 ) was an American actor from Long Island, New York, best known for his role as Dr. Terry McDaniel on the 1960s series Ben Casey and as Senator Andrew Dowling on the CBS primetime soap opera Dallas. McMullan studied Industrial Design at New York University and Parsons School of Design; he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1961 with a Bachelor of Architecture degree. Guest starred in a 1962 episode of Laramie, as Virg Walker"
] |
Who was the director of Emergency Landing? | [
"Arne Skouen"
] | director | Emergency Landing (1952 film) | 1,269,483 | 88 | [
{
"id": "14139863",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1952 film)",
"text": "Henki Kolstad - Hans ; Jack Kennedy - Eddie, captain ; Randi Kolstad - Kristin ; Bjarne Andersen - Stråmannen ; Jens Bolling - Knut ; Einar Vaage - Edvartsen, churchwarden ; Samuel Matlowsky - Leo, sergeant ; Lee Payant - Fiorello, 2nd lt. ; John Robbins - Don, sergeant ; Lee Zimmer - Steve, sergeant ; Chris Bugge - Mart, 1st lt. ; Joachim Holst-Jensen - Willie, the vicar (as J. Holst Jensen) ",
"score": "1.533505"
},
{
"id": "12330898",
"title": "Școala Superioară de Aviație Civilă Flight 111",
"text": " As a direct result of the crash of flight RFT111 and the response to it, the head of the national emergency response department, IGSU, resigned. One day later, also as a result, the Interior Minister Radu Stroe resigned. A passenger on board had died of hypothermia after surviving the crash because of the long emergency response. This has led to an overhaul of the country's emergency response methods. In response to an open letter, Gary Machado, Executive Director of European Emergency Number Association assigned blame for the situation on Neelie Kroes, who at the time of the incident had not enacted European-level regulation requiring provision of GPS co-ordinates in emergencies. The lack of provision of this critical information from the mobile company of the 112 caller to the emergency services was recognised as a major factor in the lethal delay in the rescue.",
"score": "1.525379"
},
{
"id": "27614086",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Emergency Landing (a.k.a. Robot Pilot) is a 1941 American aviation spy-fi romantic screwball comedy film directed by William Beaudine. The film stars Forrest Tucker in his second film and in his first leading role with co-stars Carol Hughes and Evelyn Brent. Emergency Landing features much mismatched stock footage of various types of aircraft.",
"score": "1.4988652"
},
{
"id": "27614093",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Shortly after release, Emergency Landing was re-titled Robot Pilot. Merely a B film, Variety felt the film's major asset was \"sex appeal\".",
"score": "1.495574"
},
{
"id": "14139861",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1952 film)",
"text": " Emergency Landing (Nødlanding) is a 1952 Norwegian war film directed by Arne Skouen. It was entered into the 1952 Cannes Film Festival. The film depicts the Norwegian resistance attempting to hide shot-down American aviators from the German occupation forces.",
"score": "1.4882209"
},
{
"id": "13264989",
"title": "Jeffrey Skiles",
"text": " (though he had less experience in the Airbus A320). Both of Skiles' parents were pilots during his childhood, and he became a pilot himself when he was just sixteen years old. He first worked flying cargo airplanes, and then worked for Midstate Airlines from 1983 to 1986. At the time of the emergency landing he had been with US Airways for 23 years. Atul Gawande, author of The Checklist Manifesto, asserted that the successful emergency landing relied on the cooperation of Sullenberger and Skiles. Gawande's central premise is that even really experienced people in any field encounter rare events, and that successfully coping ",
"score": "1.4816668"
},
{
"id": "27919361",
"title": "Adriel N. Williams",
"text": " copilot on the aircraft that dropped the first Army paratrooper at Fort Benning, Georgia. He graduated from the National War College in Washington, D.C., in 1959. Following graduation he was assigned to the Directorate of Plans, Deputy Chief of Staff, Plans and Programs, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, as assistant deputy director for policy. In August 1960, he became the deputy director for policy and on April 22, 1961, he was promoted to brigadier general He served in the Pentagon until he was assigned as the commander, Air Rescue Service in August 1963. He served as vice commander, Eastern Transport Air Force (Military Air Transport Service) ",
"score": "1.4804939"
},
{
"id": "11115858",
"title": "ČSA Flight 001",
"text": " A surviving passenger later claimed in an interview that flight captain requested emergency landing in Brno but it was rejected because of the Vietnamese delegation visiting the city and an emergency landing would harm the image of the country. He also claimed that Vienna airport offered an emergency landing permission but communist authorities rejected it. It is unclear how a surviving passenger would be aware of the captain's actions during the flight, or how searching for an alternate emergency landing site relates to an unstabilized approach with inadvertent thrust reversal deployment at Bratislava.",
"score": "1.4732366"
},
{
"id": "27614091",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": "Forrest Tucker as Jerry Barton ; Carol Hughes as Betty Lambert ; Evelyn Brent as Maude Marshall ; Emmett Vogan as \"Doc\" Williams ; William Halligan as George B. Lambert ; George Sherwood as Jones ; Joaquin Edwards as Pedro ; I. Stanford Jolley as Karl ; Stanley Price as Otto ; Jack Lescoulie as Captain North ; Paul Scott as Colonel Lemon ; Billy Curtis as Judge Gildersleeve ",
"score": "1.4602883"
},
{
"id": "27614087",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Arizona inventor \"Doc\" Williams (Emmett Vogan) has invented a wireless remote control that can pilot an aircraft. Despite his efforts and those of his friend, pilot Jerry Barton (Forrest Tucker), they can not interest anyone in the invention. Barton has found a job as a test pilot for a millionaire named George Lambert (William Halligan) with his own aircraft company. When Doc brings a model of his invention, the two send their model aircraft to buzz Lambert on the golf course. Lambert is fascinated and arranges a test, but his daughter Betty is not, especially when the model lands in a puddle and drenches ",
"score": "1.4449124"
},
{
"id": "10105130",
"title": "Jay Greene",
"text": " flight operations director George Abbey, he began the process of training to become a flight director. He worked STS-3 and STS-4 as a backup flight director, learning the job by being paired with the experienced flight director Tommy Holloway and observing him at work. Greene's first mission as flight director in his own right was STS-6, which launched on April 6, 1983. As a flight director, Greene specialized in the ascent shift, considered to be one of the most demanding and dangerous phases of a mission. He worked on ten flights between 1983 and 1986, including STS-61-C, which was notable for having included Rep. Bill Nelson (D-FL) as a member of the crew. In his book about the mission, Nelson characterized Greene as a \"no-nonsense type of man,\" \"underpaid and overworked,\" yet dedicated to his job. His tenth and final mission as lead Flight Director was on STS-51-L.",
"score": "1.4448205"
},
{
"id": "8923343",
"title": "Miracle Landing",
"text": " life jackets. Gail Kornberg becomes hysterical when she cannot get a life jacket for David, but soon is calmed by Michelle. Roy Wesler (Glenn Cannon) panics when he sees hydraulic fluid leaking from the wings. The tower alerts Kahului Fire and Rescue personnel and they arrive before the crippled jet lands. Finally after several tense minutes, Mimi and Bob are able to figure out a plan for the emergency. After some time, the airliner lands but with difficulties in the brakes and hydraulics. The pilots were worried that the landing might result in a broken aircraft and fire, but miraculously their landing resulted in no deaths and the emergency notification allowed crews to treat and evacuate passengers immediately.",
"score": "1.4413934"
},
{
"id": "27614092",
"title": "Emergency Landing (1941 film)",
"text": " Principal photography for Emergency Landing took place from late March to early April 1941. After a stint in Great Britain, director William \"One Shot\" Beaudine returned to America in 1937 but had trouble re-establishing himself at the major studios. After working at Warner Brothers, Beaudine found work on Poverty Row, working for studios specializing in low-budget films, such as Monogram Pictures and Producers Releasing Corporation. Beaudine became a specialist in comedies, thrillers and melodramas making dozens for these studios. By the 1940s, Beaudine had a reputation for being a resourceful, no-nonsense director who could make feature films in a matter of days, sometimes as few as five.",
"score": "1.4409819"
},
{
"id": "25670011",
"title": "2016 Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations Il-76 crash",
"text": " Flags were flown at half-mast and television programmes were cancelled as respect for those who were killed. The Russian Minister of Emergency Situations Vladimir Puchkov told the families of the deceased crew that he \"expresses his condolences\". He stated that \"All our Emergencies Ministry team is mourning. These were professional pilots and rescuers. We will never forget them.\" The pilots were said to be experienced, and had been in the job for decades. The Chairman of the Interstate Aviation Committee Sergei Yakimenko also commented on the incident, citing that human, equipment, and environmental factors may have all contributed to the crash.",
"score": "1.4369891"
},
{
"id": "3414540",
"title": "R. David Paulison",
"text": " after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and after the crash of ValuJet Flight 592 over the Everglades in 1996. On September 20, 2001, President George W. Bush announced that he would appoint Paulison (a Democrat) as the head of the United States Fire Administration, now a division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Directorate of Preparedness. The nomination was sent to the U.S. Senate on October 16, 2001. Paulison was confirmed unanimously on November 30, 2001. It was not in this role, rather he had also been made Director of FEMA's Preparedness Division, that Paulison released an advisory on February 10, 2003 recommending households keep several common items on ",
"score": "1.4355713"
},
{
"id": "9331023",
"title": "John Hodge (engineer)",
"text": " in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"score": "1.4344401"
},
{
"id": "24927718",
"title": "David Leestma",
"text": " as the Director, Flight Crew Operations Directorate, in November 1992. As Director, FCOD, he had overall responsibility for the Astronaut Office and for Johnson Space Center (JSC) Aircraft Operations. During his tenure as Director, 41 Shuttle flights and 7 Mir missions were successfully flown. He was responsible for the selection of Astronaut Groups 15, 16 and 17. While director, he oversaw the requirements, development modifications of the T-38A transition to the T-38N avionics upgrades. In September 1998, Leestma was reassigned as the Deputy Director, Engineering, in charge of the management of Johnson Space Center Government Furnished Equipment (GFE) Projects. In August 2001 he was assigned as ",
"score": "1.4311696"
},
{
"id": "28796219",
"title": "Crisis in Mid-Air",
"text": " as the head of the Civil Aviation Authority in Los Angeles had sent for the psychologist. Brad Mullins (Dana Elcar), as the head of the controllers, wants to closely watch the controllers as some of them are reported to have problems and there is fear for consequences in air safety. The presence of Dr. Denvers increases the stress as everyone knows that if detected to be mentally unstable, the controller will lose his job. Nick explains all the tricks of the trade to the psychologist including why even rules have to bend to allow traffic to keep on going instead of queuing for long ",
"score": "1.4263375"
},
{
"id": "4436654",
"title": "Space Shuttle Challenger disaster",
"text": " NASA also created a new Office of Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance, headed as the commission had specified by a NASA associate administrator who reported directly to the NASA administrator. Former Challenger flight director Greene became chief of the Safety Division of the directorate. After the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) concluded that NASA had not effectively set up an independent office for safety oversight. The CAIB concluded that the ineffective safety culture that had resulted in the Challenger accident was also responsible for the subsequent disaster.",
"score": "1.4245074"
},
{
"id": "9329155",
"title": "Cessna 188 Pacific rescue",
"text": " McDonnell Douglas awarded the crew a certificate of commendation for \"the highest standards of compassion, judgment and airmanship.\" Gordon Brooks was the flight engineer on Air New Zealand Flight 901 and was killed when the DC-10 crashed into Mount Erebus, Antarctica, on 28 November 1979. Vette published a book about the Flight 901 disaster, called Impact Erebus. The incident was dramatised in the American 1993 made-for-TV movie Mercy Mission - the Rescue of Flight 771. It starred Scott Bakula as Jay Prochnow (which was changed to Perkins in the movie) and Robert Loggia as Gordon Vette.",
"score": "1.4242305"
}
] | [
"Emergency Landing (1952 film)\nHenki Kolstad - Hans ; Jack Kennedy - Eddie, captain ; Randi Kolstad - Kristin ; Bjarne Andersen - Stråmannen ; Jens Bolling - Knut ; Einar Vaage - Edvartsen, churchwarden ; Samuel Matlowsky - Leo, sergeant ; Lee Payant - Fiorello, 2nd lt. ; John Robbins - Don, sergeant ; Lee Zimmer - Steve, sergeant ; Chris Bugge - Mart, 1st lt. ; Joachim Holst-Jensen - Willie, the vicar (as J. Holst Jensen) ",
"Școala Superioară de Aviație Civilă Flight 111\n As a direct result of the crash of flight RFT111 and the response to it, the head of the national emergency response department, IGSU, resigned. One day later, also as a result, the Interior Minister Radu Stroe resigned. A passenger on board had died of hypothermia after surviving the crash because of the long emergency response. This has led to an overhaul of the country's emergency response methods. In response to an open letter, Gary Machado, Executive Director of European Emergency Number Association assigned blame for the situation on Neelie Kroes, who at the time of the incident had not enacted European-level regulation requiring provision of GPS co-ordinates in emergencies. The lack of provision of this critical information from the mobile company of the 112 caller to the emergency services was recognised as a major factor in the lethal delay in the rescue.",
"Emergency Landing (1941 film)\n Emergency Landing (a.k.a. Robot Pilot) is a 1941 American aviation spy-fi romantic screwball comedy film directed by William Beaudine. The film stars Forrest Tucker in his second film and in his first leading role with co-stars Carol Hughes and Evelyn Brent. Emergency Landing features much mismatched stock footage of various types of aircraft.",
"Emergency Landing (1941 film)\n Shortly after release, Emergency Landing was re-titled Robot Pilot. Merely a B film, Variety felt the film's major asset was \"sex appeal\".",
"Emergency Landing (1952 film)\n Emergency Landing (Nødlanding) is a 1952 Norwegian war film directed by Arne Skouen. It was entered into the 1952 Cannes Film Festival. The film depicts the Norwegian resistance attempting to hide shot-down American aviators from the German occupation forces.",
"Jeffrey Skiles\n (though he had less experience in the Airbus A320). Both of Skiles' parents were pilots during his childhood, and he became a pilot himself when he was just sixteen years old. He first worked flying cargo airplanes, and then worked for Midstate Airlines from 1983 to 1986. At the time of the emergency landing he had been with US Airways for 23 years. Atul Gawande, author of The Checklist Manifesto, asserted that the successful emergency landing relied on the cooperation of Sullenberger and Skiles. Gawande's central premise is that even really experienced people in any field encounter rare events, and that successfully coping ",
"Adriel N. Williams\n copilot on the aircraft that dropped the first Army paratrooper at Fort Benning, Georgia. He graduated from the National War College in Washington, D.C., in 1959. Following graduation he was assigned to the Directorate of Plans, Deputy Chief of Staff, Plans and Programs, Headquarters U.S. Air Force, as assistant deputy director for policy. In August 1960, he became the deputy director for policy and on April 22, 1961, he was promoted to brigadier general He served in the Pentagon until he was assigned as the commander, Air Rescue Service in August 1963. He served as vice commander, Eastern Transport Air Force (Military Air Transport Service) ",
"ČSA Flight 001\n A surviving passenger later claimed in an interview that flight captain requested emergency landing in Brno but it was rejected because of the Vietnamese delegation visiting the city and an emergency landing would harm the image of the country. He also claimed that Vienna airport offered an emergency landing permission but communist authorities rejected it. It is unclear how a surviving passenger would be aware of the captain's actions during the flight, or how searching for an alternate emergency landing site relates to an unstabilized approach with inadvertent thrust reversal deployment at Bratislava.",
"Emergency Landing (1941 film)\nForrest Tucker as Jerry Barton ; Carol Hughes as Betty Lambert ; Evelyn Brent as Maude Marshall ; Emmett Vogan as \"Doc\" Williams ; William Halligan as George B. Lambert ; George Sherwood as Jones ; Joaquin Edwards as Pedro ; I. Stanford Jolley as Karl ; Stanley Price as Otto ; Jack Lescoulie as Captain North ; Paul Scott as Colonel Lemon ; Billy Curtis as Judge Gildersleeve ",
"Emergency Landing (1941 film)\n Arizona inventor \"Doc\" Williams (Emmett Vogan) has invented a wireless remote control that can pilot an aircraft. Despite his efforts and those of his friend, pilot Jerry Barton (Forrest Tucker), they can not interest anyone in the invention. Barton has found a job as a test pilot for a millionaire named George Lambert (William Halligan) with his own aircraft company. When Doc brings a model of his invention, the two send their model aircraft to buzz Lambert on the golf course. Lambert is fascinated and arranges a test, but his daughter Betty is not, especially when the model lands in a puddle and drenches ",
"Jay Greene\n flight operations director George Abbey, he began the process of training to become a flight director. He worked STS-3 and STS-4 as a backup flight director, learning the job by being paired with the experienced flight director Tommy Holloway and observing him at work. Greene's first mission as flight director in his own right was STS-6, which launched on April 6, 1983. As a flight director, Greene specialized in the ascent shift, considered to be one of the most demanding and dangerous phases of a mission. He worked on ten flights between 1983 and 1986, including STS-61-C, which was notable for having included Rep. Bill Nelson (D-FL) as a member of the crew. In his book about the mission, Nelson characterized Greene as a \"no-nonsense type of man,\" \"underpaid and overworked,\" yet dedicated to his job. His tenth and final mission as lead Flight Director was on STS-51-L.",
"Miracle Landing\n life jackets. Gail Kornberg becomes hysterical when she cannot get a life jacket for David, but soon is calmed by Michelle. Roy Wesler (Glenn Cannon) panics when he sees hydraulic fluid leaking from the wings. The tower alerts Kahului Fire and Rescue personnel and they arrive before the crippled jet lands. Finally after several tense minutes, Mimi and Bob are able to figure out a plan for the emergency. After some time, the airliner lands but with difficulties in the brakes and hydraulics. The pilots were worried that the landing might result in a broken aircraft and fire, but miraculously their landing resulted in no deaths and the emergency notification allowed crews to treat and evacuate passengers immediately.",
"Emergency Landing (1941 film)\n Principal photography for Emergency Landing took place from late March to early April 1941. After a stint in Great Britain, director William \"One Shot\" Beaudine returned to America in 1937 but had trouble re-establishing himself at the major studios. After working at Warner Brothers, Beaudine found work on Poverty Row, working for studios specializing in low-budget films, such as Monogram Pictures and Producers Releasing Corporation. Beaudine became a specialist in comedies, thrillers and melodramas making dozens for these studios. By the 1940s, Beaudine had a reputation for being a resourceful, no-nonsense director who could make feature films in a matter of days, sometimes as few as five.",
"2016 Russian Ministry of Emergency Situations Il-76 crash\n Flags were flown at half-mast and television programmes were cancelled as respect for those who were killed. The Russian Minister of Emergency Situations Vladimir Puchkov told the families of the deceased crew that he \"expresses his condolences\". He stated that \"All our Emergencies Ministry team is mourning. These were professional pilots and rescuers. We will never forget them.\" The pilots were said to be experienced, and had been in the job for decades. The Chairman of the Interstate Aviation Committee Sergei Yakimenko also commented on the incident, citing that human, equipment, and environmental factors may have all contributed to the crash.",
"R. David Paulison\n after Hurricane Andrew in 1992 and after the crash of ValuJet Flight 592 over the Everglades in 1996. On September 20, 2001, President George W. Bush announced that he would appoint Paulison (a Democrat) as the head of the United States Fire Administration, now a division of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and the Directorate of Preparedness. The nomination was sent to the U.S. Senate on October 16, 2001. Paulison was confirmed unanimously on November 30, 2001. It was not in this role, rather he had also been made Director of FEMA's Preparedness Division, that Paulison released an advisory on February 10, 2003 recommending households keep several common items on ",
"John Hodge (engineer)\n in the Mercury program, MA-9, was scheduled to last long enough that a second flight director was needed in Mission Control. Thus, in 1963, Hodge became a flight director, choosing blue as his team color. The missions that he worked on included Gemini 8, where he was the first person other than Kraft to be lead flight director for a mission. Hodge was on shift when a stuck Gemini thruster brought a rapid end to the mission. He was also on duty during the launch test that resulted in the Apollo 1 fire which killed Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. ",
"David Leestma\n as the Director, Flight Crew Operations Directorate, in November 1992. As Director, FCOD, he had overall responsibility for the Astronaut Office and for Johnson Space Center (JSC) Aircraft Operations. During his tenure as Director, 41 Shuttle flights and 7 Mir missions were successfully flown. He was responsible for the selection of Astronaut Groups 15, 16 and 17. While director, he oversaw the requirements, development modifications of the T-38A transition to the T-38N avionics upgrades. In September 1998, Leestma was reassigned as the Deputy Director, Engineering, in charge of the management of Johnson Space Center Government Furnished Equipment (GFE) Projects. In August 2001 he was assigned as ",
"Crisis in Mid-Air\n as the head of the Civil Aviation Authority in Los Angeles had sent for the psychologist. Brad Mullins (Dana Elcar), as the head of the controllers, wants to closely watch the controllers as some of them are reported to have problems and there is fear for consequences in air safety. The presence of Dr. Denvers increases the stress as everyone knows that if detected to be mentally unstable, the controller will lose his job. Nick explains all the tricks of the trade to the psychologist including why even rules have to bend to allow traffic to keep on going instead of queuing for long ",
"Space Shuttle Challenger disaster\n NASA also created a new Office of Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance, headed as the commission had specified by a NASA associate administrator who reported directly to the NASA administrator. Former Challenger flight director Greene became chief of the Safety Division of the directorate. After the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster in 2003, the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) concluded that NASA had not effectively set up an independent office for safety oversight. The CAIB concluded that the ineffective safety culture that had resulted in the Challenger accident was also responsible for the subsequent disaster.",
"Cessna 188 Pacific rescue\n McDonnell Douglas awarded the crew a certificate of commendation for \"the highest standards of compassion, judgment and airmanship.\" Gordon Brooks was the flight engineer on Air New Zealand Flight 901 and was killed when the DC-10 crashed into Mount Erebus, Antarctica, on 28 November 1979. Vette published a book about the Flight 901 disaster, called Impact Erebus. The incident was dramatised in the American 1993 made-for-TV movie Mercy Mission - the Rescue of Flight 771. It starred Scott Bakula as Jay Prochnow (which was changed to Perkins in the movie) and Robert Loggia as Gordon Vette."
] |
In what country is Rizuiyeh? | [
"Iran",
"Islamic Republic of Iran",
"Persia",
"ir",
"Islamic Rep. Iran",
"🇮🇷"
] | country | Rizuiyeh | 4,430,730 | 25 | [
{
"id": "8415370",
"title": "Riasanites",
"text": " Poland, USSR and Yemen",
"score": "1.4893534"
},
{
"id": "25920225",
"title": "Knafeh",
"text": " This Azerbaijani variant is prepared in Tabriz, Iran. \"Riştə Xətayi\", and is typically cooked in Ramadan in the world's biggest covered Bazaar of Tabriz. It is made with chopped walnuts, cinnamon, ginger, powder of rose, sugar, rose water and olive oil.",
"score": "1.4786632"
},
{
"id": "24902590",
"title": "Arzuiyeh",
"text": " Arzuiyeh (, also romanized as Arzū’īyeh, Arzoo’eyeh, Orzū’īyeh, ‘Orsū’īyeh, and Ozū’īyeh; also known as Ārzū) is a city and capital of Arzuiyeh County, in Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,668, in 1,286 families.",
"score": "1.4146891"
},
{
"id": "14957606",
"title": "Rizhao",
"text": "🇹🇲 Türkmenabat, Türkmenistan (2014) Rizhao twin towns and sister cities are: ",
"score": "1.4028997"
},
{
"id": "16381967",
"title": "Razuiyeh, Hormozgan",
"text": " Razuiyeh (, also Romanized as Razū’īyeh; also known as Razoo) is a village in Mosaferabad Rural District, Rudkhaneh District, Rudan County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 305, in 60 families.",
"score": "1.3927317"
},
{
"id": "12178787",
"title": "Rism",
"text": " Rism is a hamlet in Dhofar Governorate, in southwestern Oman.",
"score": "1.3879805"
},
{
"id": "26208159",
"title": "Rihaniyeh",
"text": " Rihaniyeh (الريحانيه (عكـار)) (also Rihaniyet) is a village in Akkar Governorate, Lebanon. The population is mostly Alawite.",
"score": "1.3855941"
},
{
"id": "30431637",
"title": "Feyziyeh School",
"text": " The Feyziyya school was registered as one of Iran's national monuments on January 29, 2008.",
"score": "1.383074"
},
{
"id": "12301523",
"title": "Riz, Iran",
"text": " Riz (also Romanized as Rīz) is a city in and capital of Riz District, in Jam County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,802, in 415 families.",
"score": "1.3783548"
},
{
"id": "30114171",
"title": "Rizwan Mosque",
"text": " Rizwan Mosque is an Ahmadi Muslim mosque in Portland, in the US state of Oregon. It was opened in 1987, making it the first and oldest mosque built in Portland. It is operated by the Portland chapter.",
"score": "1.3738029"
},
{
"id": "10908766",
"title": "Aghjabadi",
"text": "Batumi, Georgia ; 🇹🇷 Rize, Turkey ",
"score": "1.3620842"
},
{
"id": "4286536",
"title": "Arzuiyeh County",
"text": " Arzuiyeh County (Persian: شهرستان ارزوئیه) is a county in Kerman Province in Iran. The capital of the county is Arzuiyeh. It was separated from Baft County in 2011. At the 2006 census, the county's population (including portions later split off to form Rabor County) was 40,386, in 9,078 families. The county is subdivided into two districts (bakhsh): the Central District and Soghan District. The county has one city: Arzuiyeh.",
"score": "1.3522556"
},
{
"id": "855593",
"title": "Rifaʽi",
"text": " present), modern day Albania and Kosovo. In the United States and Canada tekkes (lodges) are found in Staten Island and Toronto that were under the guidance of the late Shaykh Xhemali Shehu (d.2004) of Prizren, Kosovo. Each of these orders is ultimately Turkish in origin. The original Rifai order has spawned many branches and derivatives. For example, the Islamic Sufi Order of Qadiri Rifai Tariqa of the Americas has been a legally registered non-profit organization since 1996. This order has students and branches in Australia, Germany, UK, South Africa, and Mauritius. The head of the order, Taner Ansari travels worldwide attending conferences, giving discourses, and has written many books. The order has its center established in Nassau, New York.",
"score": "1.3406072"
},
{
"id": "26013419",
"title": "Reisabad, Eslamiyeh",
"text": " Reisabad (, also Romanized as Re’īsābād; also known as Morteẕáābād (Persian: مرتضي اباد) and Rīsābād) is a village in Eslamiyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 10, in 4 families.",
"score": "1.3390739"
},
{
"id": "25164246",
"title": "Hassan Risheh",
"text": " Hassan Risheh (حسان ريشة) is the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Syrian Arab Republic to the Russian Federation.",
"score": "1.337094"
},
{
"id": "13354396",
"title": "Rizab Rural District",
"text": " Rizab Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Qatruyeh District, Neyriz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11,363, in 2,560 families. The rural district has 70 villages.",
"score": "1.3368292"
},
{
"id": "26013763",
"title": "Rozuiyeh",
"text": " Rozuiyeh (, also Romanized as Rozū’īyeh) is a village in Sarcheshmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 14, in 4 families.",
"score": "1.3364053"
},
{
"id": "31796966",
"title": "Iranian New Zealanders",
"text": "Rasoul Amani, New Zealand wrestler who represented New Zealand in Graeco-Roman wrestling at the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Nazanin \"Naz\" Khanjani, a contestant in Season 2 of The Bachelor NZ (aired on TV3), a reality dating show. She was born in Tehran (the capital of Iran), and moved to New Zealand at the age of 4. ; Golriz Ghahraman, New Zealand politician, member of the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, elected in 2017 member of parliament in the House of representatives in the 52nd New Zealand Parliament. ",
"score": "1.3337376"
},
{
"id": "25629132",
"title": "Foziyeh",
"text": " Foziyeh (الفوزية) is a Syrian village located in Salqin Nahiyah in Harem District, Idlib. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Foziyeh had a population of 171 in the 2004 census.",
"score": "1.3321186"
},
{
"id": "8196173",
"title": "Mamuniyeh",
"text": " Mamuniyeh (, also Romanized as Ma’mūnīyeh) is a city and capital of Zarandieh County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 17,337, in 4,672 families. Moosa Farzaneh was a well-known philanthropist, educator and a highly respected public figure of Mamuniyeh. He was of Mirza Hakim Yazdi descent from the city of Yazd, who made Mamuniyeh his home. His vision, love and dedication in addition to his significant contributions in both education and development brought many of the modern infrastructures and amenities to the community, which resulted in the prosperity of the city as well as the county.",
"score": "1.3260899"
}
] | [
"Riasanites\n Poland, USSR and Yemen",
"Knafeh\n This Azerbaijani variant is prepared in Tabriz, Iran. \"Riştə Xətayi\", and is typically cooked in Ramadan in the world's biggest covered Bazaar of Tabriz. It is made with chopped walnuts, cinnamon, ginger, powder of rose, sugar, rose water and olive oil.",
"Arzuiyeh\n Arzuiyeh (, also romanized as Arzū’īyeh, Arzoo’eyeh, Orzū’īyeh, ‘Orsū’īyeh, and Ozū’īyeh; also known as Ārzū) is a city and capital of Arzuiyeh County, in Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 5,668, in 1,286 families.",
"Rizhao\n🇹🇲 Türkmenabat, Türkmenistan (2014) Rizhao twin towns and sister cities are: ",
"Razuiyeh, Hormozgan\n Razuiyeh (, also Romanized as Razū’īyeh; also known as Razoo) is a village in Mosaferabad Rural District, Rudkhaneh District, Rudan County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 305, in 60 families.",
"Rism\n Rism is a hamlet in Dhofar Governorate, in southwestern Oman.",
"Rihaniyeh\n Rihaniyeh (الريحانيه (عكـار)) (also Rihaniyet) is a village in Akkar Governorate, Lebanon. The population is mostly Alawite.",
"Feyziyeh School\n The Feyziyya school was registered as one of Iran's national monuments on January 29, 2008.",
"Riz, Iran\n Riz (also Romanized as Rīz) is a city in and capital of Riz District, in Jam County, Bushehr Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,802, in 415 families.",
"Rizwan Mosque\n Rizwan Mosque is an Ahmadi Muslim mosque in Portland, in the US state of Oregon. It was opened in 1987, making it the first and oldest mosque built in Portland. It is operated by the Portland chapter.",
"Aghjabadi\nBatumi, Georgia ; 🇹🇷 Rize, Turkey ",
"Arzuiyeh County\n Arzuiyeh County (Persian: شهرستان ارزوئیه) is a county in Kerman Province in Iran. The capital of the county is Arzuiyeh. It was separated from Baft County in 2011. At the 2006 census, the county's population (including portions later split off to form Rabor County) was 40,386, in 9,078 families. The county is subdivided into two districts (bakhsh): the Central District and Soghan District. The county has one city: Arzuiyeh.",
"Rifaʽi\n present), modern day Albania and Kosovo. In the United States and Canada tekkes (lodges) are found in Staten Island and Toronto that were under the guidance of the late Shaykh Xhemali Shehu (d.2004) of Prizren, Kosovo. Each of these orders is ultimately Turkish in origin. The original Rifai order has spawned many branches and derivatives. For example, the Islamic Sufi Order of Qadiri Rifai Tariqa of the Americas has been a legally registered non-profit organization since 1996. This order has students and branches in Australia, Germany, UK, South Africa, and Mauritius. The head of the order, Taner Ansari travels worldwide attending conferences, giving discourses, and has written many books. The order has its center established in Nassau, New York.",
"Reisabad, Eslamiyeh\n Reisabad (, also Romanized as Re’īsābād; also known as Morteẕáābād (Persian: مرتضي اباد) and Rīsābād) is a village in Eslamiyeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 10, in 4 families.",
"Hassan Risheh\n Hassan Risheh (حسان ريشة) is the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Syrian Arab Republic to the Russian Federation.",
"Rizab Rural District\n Rizab Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Qatruyeh District, Neyriz County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11,363, in 2,560 families. The rural district has 70 villages.",
"Rozuiyeh\n Rozuiyeh (, also Romanized as Rozū’īyeh) is a village in Sarcheshmeh Rural District, in the Central District of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 14, in 4 families.",
"Iranian New Zealanders\nRasoul Amani, New Zealand wrestler who represented New Zealand in Graeco-Roman wrestling at the 2000 Summer Olympics ; Nazanin \"Naz\" Khanjani, a contestant in Season 2 of The Bachelor NZ (aired on TV3), a reality dating show. She was born in Tehran (the capital of Iran), and moved to New Zealand at the age of 4. ; Golriz Ghahraman, New Zealand politician, member of the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, elected in 2017 member of parliament in the House of representatives in the 52nd New Zealand Parliament. ",
"Foziyeh\n Foziyeh (الفوزية) is a Syrian village located in Salqin Nahiyah in Harem District, Idlib. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Foziyeh had a population of 171 in the 2004 census.",
"Mamuniyeh\n Mamuniyeh (, also Romanized as Ma’mūnīyeh) is a city and capital of Zarandieh County, Markazi Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 17,337, in 4,672 families. Moosa Farzaneh was a well-known philanthropist, educator and a highly respected public figure of Mamuniyeh. He was of Mirza Hakim Yazdi descent from the city of Yazd, who made Mamuniyeh his home. His vision, love and dedication in addition to his significant contributions in both education and development brought many of the modern infrastructures and amenities to the community, which resulted in the prosperity of the city as well as the county."
] |
Who was the composer of Prelude for Clarinet? | [
"Krzysztof Penderecki",
"Krzysztof Eugeniusz Penderecki"
] | composer | Prelude for Clarinet (Penderecki) | 1,807,138 | 86 | [
{
"id": "29086415",
"title": "Prelude (music)",
"text": " Schoenberg's Suite for piano, Op. 25 (1921/23), both of which begin with an introductory prelude (Schoenberg's choral introduction to the Genesis Suite is a rare case of an attached prelude written in the 20th century without any neo-baroque intent ). As well as a series of unattached piano preludes (Op. 2), Dmitri Shostakovich composed a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues in the tradition of Bach's The Well Tempered Clavier. Some avant-garde composers have also produced unattached preludes. John Cage's brief Prelude for Meditation is written for prepared piano, while François-Bernard Mâche's Prélude (1959) and Branimir Sakač's Aleatory Prelude (1961) call on electronic resources and aleatoric techniques.",
"score": "1.5828516"
},
{
"id": "6233590",
"title": "Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs",
"text": " its premiere as part of Bernstein's Omnibus television show, The World of Jazz on October 16, 1955. According to some sources the soloist at the premiere was Al Gallodoro; other sources state it was premiered by Benny Goodman – Bernstein's Tanglewood neighbour and friend since the 1940s – to whom the work was dedicated. In 1952 Bernstein revised the score from its original instrumentation for a more conventional pit orchestra, and the work was then incorporated into a ballet sequence in the first draft of the musical comedy Wonderful Town. The revised version of Prelude, Fugue and Riffs did not survive and the majority of the music was cut from the final version of the Wonderful Town score with the exception of a few phrases in the musical's numbers \"Conquering the City\" and \"Conversation Piece\". It later was transcribed for clarinet and orchestra by Lukas Foss.",
"score": "1.5758169"
},
{
"id": "30984893",
"title": "Frank Bencriscutto",
"text": "Rondeau for percussion and piano (1959) ; Valse Rondo for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Dialogue for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Elegy for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Concerto grosso for saxophone quartet and piano (1980) ; Suite for flute and piano, bass, drum-set (1986) ",
"score": "1.5743315"
},
{
"id": "29086410",
"title": "Prelude (music)",
"text": " composers such as Dieterich Buxtehude (c.1637–1707) and Nikolaus Bruhns (c.1665–1697) combined sections of free improvised passages with parts in strict contrapuntal writing (usually brief fugues). Outside Germany, Abraham van den Kerckhoven (c.1618–c.1701), one of the most important Dutch composers of the period, used this model for some of his preludes. Southern and central German composers did not follow the sectional model and their preludes remained improvisational in character with little or no strict counterpoint. During the second half of the 17th century, German composers started pairing preludes (or sometimes toccatas) with fugues in the same key; Johann Pachelbel (c.1653–1706) was one of the first to do so, although ",
"score": "1.5738618"
},
{
"id": "2923809",
"title": "Benny Goodman",
"text": " for Clarinet and Piano by Francis Poulenc, and Clarinet Concerto by Aaron Copland. Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs by Leonard Bernstein was commissioned for Woody Herman's big band, but it was premiered by Goodman. Herman was the dedicatee (1945) and first performer (1946) of Igor Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto, but many years later Stravinsky made another recording with Goodman as the soloist. He made a recording of Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in July 1956 with the Boston Symphony String Quartet at the Berkshire Festival; on the same occasion he recorded Mozart's Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Charles Munch. He also recorded the clarinet concertos of Weber After forays outside swing, Goodman started a new band in 1953. According ",
"score": "1.5647485"
},
{
"id": "10544094",
"title": "Island Prelude",
"text": " Joan Tower says that she found her inspiration for Island Prelude in oboist Peter Bowman's \"exceptionally lyrical playing and also Samuel Barber's wonderfully controlled Adagio for Strings\". The piece premiered May 4, 1989, in a performance by Peter Bowman and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Slatkin. Island Prelude is also scored for oboe and string quartet, and for woodwind quintet. As part of a National Endowment for the Arts Consortium Commissioning Grant, the wind ensembles Quintessence, the Dorian Quintet, and the Dakota Quintet commissioned the woodwind quintet version for a series of premieres. The first performance of this arrangement was given by Nancy Clauter and Quintessence at Arizona State University on April 9, 1989. ",
"score": "1.5641639"
},
{
"id": "6233589",
"title": "Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs",
"text": "brass and rhythm in the first movement, ; saxophones in the second movement, and ; the entire ensemble plus solo clarinet in the third movement first with backing from the piano then by the entire ensemble. Prelude, Fugue and Riffs is a \"written-out\" jazz-in-concert-hall composition composed by Leonard Bernstein for a jazz ensemble featuring solo clarinet. The title points to the union of classical music and jazz: Prelude (first movement) and Fugue (second movement) – both baroque forms – are followed immediately without a pause by a series of \"riffs\" (third movement), which is a jazz term for a repeated and short melodic figure. It features: Completed in 1949 for Woody Herman's big band as part of a series of commissioned works – that already included Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto – it was never performed by Herman, possibly because his orchestra had disbanded at that time. Instead, it ",
"score": "1.5617924"
},
{
"id": "11825478",
"title": "Preludes (Chopin)",
"text": " The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.",
"score": "1.5614945"
},
{
"id": "1014958",
"title": "List of compositions by Eugène Bozza",
"text": "Aria for alto saxophone (or flute, or clarinet, or violin, or cello) and piano (1936) ; Ballade for bass clarinet and piano (1939) ; Fantaisie italienne for clarinet (or flute, or oboe) and piano (1939) ; Pulcinella for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1944) ; 14 Études de mecanisme for clarinet (1948) ; Bucolique for clarinet and piano (1949) ; Claribel for clarinet and piano (1952) ; 12 Études for clarinet (1953) ; Idylle for clarinet and piano (1959) ; Prélude et divertissement for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1960) ; Caprice-improvisation for clarinet and piano (1963) ; Lucioles for 6 clarinets (1963) ; Divertissement for clarinet and piano, Op. 39 (1964) ; Épithalame for clarinet and piano (1971) ; Sonatine for clarinet quartet (1971); also for flute, oboe, clarinet and bassoon ; 11 Études sur des modes karnatiques (11 Studies in Karnatic Modes) for clarinet (1972) ; Suite for clarinet and piano (1973) ; Rapsodie niçoise for clarinet and piano (1977) ",
"score": "1.5575523"
},
{
"id": "16476017",
"title": "Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (Bernstein)",
"text": " Now a popular piece in the clarinet repertoire, featured on the DipABRSM & AMEB examination syllabus, the Initial reviews were mixed. The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald reviewed the premiere. Though the former praised its jazz inflections, both felt the composing was stronger for the piano than for the clarinet. Many early reviews alluded to the influences of Hindemith and Copland and were very mixed. By the end of 1943, though, Bernstein had become a conducting star through his work with the New York Philharmonic and subsequent reviews were more positive and the jazz aspects were frequently referred to positively. The sonata is now a part of the standard repertoire for clarinet and others outside of the clarinet world have embraced the piece. In 1994 it was orchestrated by Sid Ramin so that it can be played by a solo clarinet with orchestral accompaniment. Yo-Yo Ma has arranged this work for cello and piano. It has also been arranged for both violin and trombone. Bernstein later returned to composing for the clarinet in 1949, when he composed Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs for Solo Clarinet and Jazz Ensemble, dedicated to Benny Goodman.",
"score": "1.5566562"
},
{
"id": "8544052",
"title": "Jules Semler-Collery",
"text": "Habanera Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Prelude Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Introduction et Saltarelle Flute and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pastorale et Caprice Flute and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Cantilène et petit Divertissement Oboe and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Etudes de Concert Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Petites Etudes Recreatives Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Lied et Final Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Fantaisie et Danse en Forme de Gigue Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Reverie et Scherzo Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Melodie expressive Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pièce de Caractère for two clarinets (publisher Billaudot) ; Terzetto for ",
"score": "1.5490975"
},
{
"id": "1771247",
"title": "Clarinet Concerto (Piston)",
"text": " Walter Piston's Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, was written in 1967. It was commissioned for the Hopkins Center Congregation of the Arts at Dartmouth College by its music director, Mario di Bonaventura, who conducted the world premiere on August 6, 1967 at the Congregation of Arts Festival, with clarinetist Donald Wendlant and the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra.",
"score": "1.5474594"
},
{
"id": "6765956",
"title": "Aurelio de la Vega",
"text": " Consonance Tres Preludios (Three Preludes) (1944) ; Rondó (1948) ; Epigrama (\"Epigram\") (1953) ; Danza Lenta (\"Slow Dance\") (1956) ; Minuet (1957) ; Toccata (1957) ; Antinomies (1967) - commissioned by Peter Hewitt ; Homenagem (\"Homage\"),\"In Memoriam Heitor Villa-Lobos\" (1987) - commissioned by José Eduardo Martins Sound Clouds (1975) ; Bifloreo (1992) - commissioned by guitarist Anton Machleder Interpolation, for solo clarinet with or without pre-recorded sounds (1965) - commissioned by clarinetist John Neufeld ; Undici Colori (\"Eleven Colors\"), for solo bassoon with or without projected transparencies of mixed media colored drawings by the composer (1981) - commissioned by the Klimt Foundation for bassoonist Donald Christlieb ; Memorial ",
"score": "1.5402517"
},
{
"id": "26359810",
"title": "Preludes (musical)",
"text": " Preludes is a musical fantasia set in the mind of Sergei Rachmaninoff, written and composed by Dave Malloy. The music is a combination of compositions by Rachmaninoff, Malloy, hybrids of the two, as well as music and lyrics from other related compositions.",
"score": "1.5390784"
},
{
"id": "14602727",
"title": "Sean Osborn",
"text": "Preludes, Book 1. by Claude Debussy for Orchestra ; Suite of Music by William Byrd, for clarinet quartet ; smaller pieces and Christmas songs for clarinet quartet or Wind Quintet ; pieces by Grieg, Bach, Faure and others for Wind Quintet ",
"score": "1.5372933"
},
{
"id": "9047661",
"title": "Richard Henry Walthew",
"text": " the end not played at) the 1943 Proms. (This version was recorded by Dutton Epoch in 2016). His most successful chamber work was the Phantasy Quintet for piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass, commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Musicians, dedicated to Walter Cobbett and published by Stainer and Bell in 1912. This was later revived by the composer at the marathon one thousandth South Place Sunday Concert in February 1927. Among his educational piano works, the short piece Sun and Shade was chosen as one of ten test pieces for the Daily Express national piano playing competition in 1928, and recorded as a demonstration by William Murdoch. The Prelude and Fugue (1945), originally written for strings, later transcribed for two clarinets and bassoon, has been reissued in recent times and recorded by The Trio Pleyel.",
"score": "1.5339305"
},
{
"id": "13789687",
"title": "Paul Jeanjean",
"text": " Paul Jeanjean (1874 – 1928) was a noted French composer and principal clarinetist of the Garde Republicaine Band and the MonteCarlo opera. While known primarily for his clarinet compositions, he also composed for other instruments, such as the bassoon and cornet. He studied with one of the most important clarinet teachers, Chrysogone Cyrille Rose. His compositions for the clarinet are mainly studies for the practice of technical elements. Every year, the Paris Conservatoire would call on the clarinet teachers to compose music for that of their own use and also for their students. As a result we now have many sets of studies for the clarinet.",
"score": "1.5321255"
},
{
"id": "10544093",
"title": "Island Prelude",
"text": " Island Prelude is a chamber work composed by Joan Tower in 1988. Intended for oboist Peter Bowman of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, it is originally scored for solo oboe and string orchestra.",
"score": "1.5311086"
},
{
"id": "8791446",
"title": "Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)",
"text": " Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.",
"score": "1.530369"
},
{
"id": "2978089",
"title": "Henri Tomasi",
"text": " much stress or accent when indicated. (Gordon) There are a plethora of accents sprinkled throughout this brief movement. It opens with a quick two bar ostinato in 3/8. The changing meters give it impetus. It is in ABA form with the interior section marked Lent and fantasque This is punctuated by a figure marked brusquement and counteracted with three bars marked tendrement. The \"A\" section returns briefly with the main theme ostinato. Introduction et Danse was composed in 1949 and dedicated to the clarinetist Louis Cahuzac. It was published in 1949 by Alphonse Leduc. It can be performed with clarinet and piano ",
"score": "1.5261573"
}
] | [
"Prelude (music)\n Schoenberg's Suite for piano, Op. 25 (1921/23), both of which begin with an introductory prelude (Schoenberg's choral introduction to the Genesis Suite is a rare case of an attached prelude written in the 20th century without any neo-baroque intent ). As well as a series of unattached piano preludes (Op. 2), Dmitri Shostakovich composed a set of 24 Preludes and Fugues in the tradition of Bach's The Well Tempered Clavier. Some avant-garde composers have also produced unattached preludes. John Cage's brief Prelude for Meditation is written for prepared piano, while François-Bernard Mâche's Prélude (1959) and Branimir Sakač's Aleatory Prelude (1961) call on electronic resources and aleatoric techniques.",
"Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs\n its premiere as part of Bernstein's Omnibus television show, The World of Jazz on October 16, 1955. According to some sources the soloist at the premiere was Al Gallodoro; other sources state it was premiered by Benny Goodman – Bernstein's Tanglewood neighbour and friend since the 1940s – to whom the work was dedicated. In 1952 Bernstein revised the score from its original instrumentation for a more conventional pit orchestra, and the work was then incorporated into a ballet sequence in the first draft of the musical comedy Wonderful Town. The revised version of Prelude, Fugue and Riffs did not survive and the majority of the music was cut from the final version of the Wonderful Town score with the exception of a few phrases in the musical's numbers \"Conquering the City\" and \"Conversation Piece\". It later was transcribed for clarinet and orchestra by Lukas Foss.",
"Frank Bencriscutto\nRondeau for percussion and piano (1959) ; Valse Rondo for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Dialogue for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Elegy for solo clarinet and piano (1978) ; Concerto grosso for saxophone quartet and piano (1980) ; Suite for flute and piano, bass, drum-set (1986) ",
"Prelude (music)\n composers such as Dieterich Buxtehude (c.1637–1707) and Nikolaus Bruhns (c.1665–1697) combined sections of free improvised passages with parts in strict contrapuntal writing (usually brief fugues). Outside Germany, Abraham van den Kerckhoven (c.1618–c.1701), one of the most important Dutch composers of the period, used this model for some of his preludes. Southern and central German composers did not follow the sectional model and their preludes remained improvisational in character with little or no strict counterpoint. During the second half of the 17th century, German composers started pairing preludes (or sometimes toccatas) with fugues in the same key; Johann Pachelbel (c.1653–1706) was one of the first to do so, although ",
"Benny Goodman\n for Clarinet and Piano by Francis Poulenc, and Clarinet Concerto by Aaron Copland. Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs by Leonard Bernstein was commissioned for Woody Herman's big band, but it was premiered by Goodman. Herman was the dedicatee (1945) and first performer (1946) of Igor Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto, but many years later Stravinsky made another recording with Goodman as the soloist. He made a recording of Mozart's Clarinet Quintet in July 1956 with the Boston Symphony String Quartet at the Berkshire Festival; on the same occasion he recorded Mozart's Clarinet Concerto in A major, K. 622, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Charles Munch. He also recorded the clarinet concertos of Weber After forays outside swing, Goodman started a new band in 1953. According ",
"Island Prelude\n Joan Tower says that she found her inspiration for Island Prelude in oboist Peter Bowman's \"exceptionally lyrical playing and also Samuel Barber's wonderfully controlled Adagio for Strings\". The piece premiered May 4, 1989, in a performance by Peter Bowman and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leonard Slatkin. Island Prelude is also scored for oboe and string quartet, and for woodwind quintet. As part of a National Endowment for the Arts Consortium Commissioning Grant, the wind ensembles Quintessence, the Dorian Quintet, and the Dakota Quintet commissioned the woodwind quintet version for a series of premieres. The first performance of this arrangement was given by Nancy Clauter and Quintessence at Arizona State University on April 9, 1989. ",
"Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs\nbrass and rhythm in the first movement, ; saxophones in the second movement, and ; the entire ensemble plus solo clarinet in the third movement first with backing from the piano then by the entire ensemble. Prelude, Fugue and Riffs is a \"written-out\" jazz-in-concert-hall composition composed by Leonard Bernstein for a jazz ensemble featuring solo clarinet. The title points to the union of classical music and jazz: Prelude (first movement) and Fugue (second movement) – both baroque forms – are followed immediately without a pause by a series of \"riffs\" (third movement), which is a jazz term for a repeated and short melodic figure. It features: Completed in 1949 for Woody Herman's big band as part of a series of commissioned works – that already included Stravinsky's Ebony Concerto – it was never performed by Herman, possibly because his orchestra had disbanded at that time. Instead, it ",
"Preludes (Chopin)\n The untitled Presto con leggierezza in A major was composed in 1834 as a gift for Pierre Wolff and published in Geneva in 1918. Sometimes known as Prelude No. 26, the piece is very short and generally bright in tone.",
"List of compositions by Eugène Bozza\nAria for alto saxophone (or flute, or clarinet, or violin, or cello) and piano (1936) ; Ballade for bass clarinet and piano (1939) ; Fantaisie italienne for clarinet (or flute, or oboe) and piano (1939) ; Pulcinella for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1944) ; 14 Études de mecanisme for clarinet (1948) ; Bucolique for clarinet and piano (1949) ; Claribel for clarinet and piano (1952) ; 12 Études for clarinet (1953) ; Idylle for clarinet and piano (1959) ; Prélude et divertissement for clarinet (or alto saxophone) and piano (1960) ; Caprice-improvisation for clarinet and piano (1963) ; Lucioles for 6 clarinets (1963) ; Divertissement for clarinet and piano, Op. 39 (1964) ; Épithalame for clarinet and piano (1971) ; Sonatine for clarinet quartet (1971); also for flute, oboe, clarinet and bassoon ; 11 Études sur des modes karnatiques (11 Studies in Karnatic Modes) for clarinet (1972) ; Suite for clarinet and piano (1973) ; Rapsodie niçoise for clarinet and piano (1977) ",
"Sonata for Clarinet and Piano (Bernstein)\n Now a popular piece in the clarinet repertoire, featured on the DipABRSM & AMEB examination syllabus, the Initial reviews were mixed. The Boston Globe and The Boston Herald reviewed the premiere. Though the former praised its jazz inflections, both felt the composing was stronger for the piano than for the clarinet. Many early reviews alluded to the influences of Hindemith and Copland and were very mixed. By the end of 1943, though, Bernstein had become a conducting star through his work with the New York Philharmonic and subsequent reviews were more positive and the jazz aspects were frequently referred to positively. The sonata is now a part of the standard repertoire for clarinet and others outside of the clarinet world have embraced the piece. In 1994 it was orchestrated by Sid Ramin so that it can be played by a solo clarinet with orchestral accompaniment. Yo-Yo Ma has arranged this work for cello and piano. It has also been arranged for both violin and trombone. Bernstein later returned to composing for the clarinet in 1949, when he composed Prelude, Fugue, and Riffs for Solo Clarinet and Jazz Ensemble, dedicated to Benny Goodman.",
"Jules Semler-Collery\nHabanera Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Prelude Piano Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Introduction et Saltarelle Flute and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pastorale et Caprice Flute and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Cantilène et petit Divertissement Oboe and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Etudes de Concert Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Petites Etudes Recreatives Clarinet Solo (publisher Eschig) ; Lied et Final Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Fantaisie et Danse en Forme de Gigue Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Reverie et Scherzo Clarinet and Piano (publisher Alphonse Leduc) ; Melodie expressive Clarinet and Piano (publisher Eschig) ; Pièce de Caractère for two clarinets (publisher Billaudot) ; Terzetto for ",
"Clarinet Concerto (Piston)\n Walter Piston's Concerto for Clarinet and Orchestra, was written in 1967. It was commissioned for the Hopkins Center Congregation of the Arts at Dartmouth College by its music director, Mario di Bonaventura, who conducted the world premiere on August 6, 1967 at the Congregation of Arts Festival, with clarinetist Donald Wendlant and the Dartmouth Symphony Orchestra.",
"Aurelio de la Vega\n Consonance Tres Preludios (Three Preludes) (1944) ; Rondó (1948) ; Epigrama (\"Epigram\") (1953) ; Danza Lenta (\"Slow Dance\") (1956) ; Minuet (1957) ; Toccata (1957) ; Antinomies (1967) - commissioned by Peter Hewitt ; Homenagem (\"Homage\"),\"In Memoriam Heitor Villa-Lobos\" (1987) - commissioned by José Eduardo Martins Sound Clouds (1975) ; Bifloreo (1992) - commissioned by guitarist Anton Machleder Interpolation, for solo clarinet with or without pre-recorded sounds (1965) - commissioned by clarinetist John Neufeld ; Undici Colori (\"Eleven Colors\"), for solo bassoon with or without projected transparencies of mixed media colored drawings by the composer (1981) - commissioned by the Klimt Foundation for bassoonist Donald Christlieb ; Memorial ",
"Preludes (musical)\n Preludes is a musical fantasia set in the mind of Sergei Rachmaninoff, written and composed by Dave Malloy. The music is a combination of compositions by Rachmaninoff, Malloy, hybrids of the two, as well as music and lyrics from other related compositions.",
"Sean Osborn\nPreludes, Book 1. by Claude Debussy for Orchestra ; Suite of Music by William Byrd, for clarinet quartet ; smaller pieces and Christmas songs for clarinet quartet or Wind Quintet ; pieces by Grieg, Bach, Faure and others for Wind Quintet ",
"Richard Henry Walthew\n the end not played at) the 1943 Proms. (This version was recorded by Dutton Epoch in 2016). His most successful chamber work was the Phantasy Quintet for piano, violin, viola, cello and double bass, commissioned by the Worshipful Company of Musicians, dedicated to Walter Cobbett and published by Stainer and Bell in 1912. This was later revived by the composer at the marathon one thousandth South Place Sunday Concert in February 1927. Among his educational piano works, the short piece Sun and Shade was chosen as one of ten test pieces for the Daily Express national piano playing competition in 1928, and recorded as a demonstration by William Murdoch. The Prelude and Fugue (1945), originally written for strings, later transcribed for two clarinets and bassoon, has been reissued in recent times and recorded by The Trio Pleyel.",
"Paul Jeanjean\n Paul Jeanjean (1874 – 1928) was a noted French composer and principal clarinetist of the Garde Republicaine Band and the MonteCarlo opera. While known primarily for his clarinet compositions, he also composed for other instruments, such as the bassoon and cornet. He studied with one of the most important clarinet teachers, Chrysogone Cyrille Rose. His compositions for the clarinet are mainly studies for the practice of technical elements. Every year, the Paris Conservatoire would call on the clarinet teachers to compose music for that of their own use and also for their students. As a result we now have many sets of studies for the clarinet.",
"Island Prelude\n Island Prelude is a chamber work composed by Joan Tower in 1988. Intended for oboist Peter Bowman of the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, it is originally scored for solo oboe and string orchestra.",
"Prelude in C-sharp minor (Rachmaninoff)\n Sergei Rachmaninoff's Prelude in C-sharp minor (Прелюдия), Op. 3, No. 2, is one of the composer's most famous compositions. Part of a set of five piano pieces titled Morceaux de fantaisie, it is a 62-bar prelude in ternary (ABA) form. It is also known as The Bells of Moscow since the introduction seems to reproduce the Kremlin's most solemn carillon chimes. Its first performance was by the composer on 26 September 1892, at a festival called the Moscow Electrical Exhibition. After this première, a review of the concert singled out the Prelude, noting that it had “aroused enthusiasm”. From this point on, its popularity grew. Rachmaninoff later published 23 more preludes to complete a set of 24 preludes covering all the major and minor keys, to emulate earlier sets by Bach, Chopin, Alkan, Scriabin and others.",
"Henri Tomasi\n much stress or accent when indicated. (Gordon) There are a plethora of accents sprinkled throughout this brief movement. It opens with a quick two bar ostinato in 3/8. The changing meters give it impetus. It is in ABA form with the interior section marked Lent and fantasque This is punctuated by a figure marked brusquement and counteracted with three bars marked tendrement. The \"A\" section returns briefly with the main theme ostinato. Introduction et Danse was composed in 1949 and dedicated to the clarinetist Louis Cahuzac. It was published in 1949 by Alphonse Leduc. It can be performed with clarinet and piano "
] |
In what country is Perth? | [
"Canada",
"Dominion of Canada",
"British North America",
"CAN",
"CA",
"ca",
"can",
"Can."
] | country | Perth (electoral district) | 2,567,382 | 97 | [
{
"id": "31417918",
"title": "Tourism in Perth",
"text": " Tourism in Perth, the capital city of Western Australia, is an important part of the Australian state's economy, contributing to the prosperity of businesses in the city, as well as other regions of the state. Perth had approximately 2.8 million domestic visitors and 0.7 million international visitors in the year ending March 2012.",
"score": "1.4940803"
},
{
"id": "5901107",
"title": "Perth, Scotland",
"text": " music events in the city. The annual event lasts for a couple of weeks and is usually held in May. In recent years, the festival has broadened its appeal by adding comedy, rock and popular music acts to the bill. Perth also has a number of twin cities around the world. These are: Aschaffenburg in Germany, Bydgoszcz in Poland, Haikou, Hainan in China, Perth in Australia, Perth in Canada, Pskov in Russia and Cognac in France. Perth is noted for its lively nightlife, with dozens of bars and several nightclubs. Perth has hosted the National Mòd in 1896, 1900, 1924, 1929, 1947, 1954, 1963, 1980 and 2004.",
"score": "1.4589026"
},
{
"id": "31417947",
"title": "Tourism in Perth",
"text": " Avon Valley is a national park located 47 km northeast of the Perth CBD. In the springtime there is a diverse range of wildflowers. Toilets, water, shaded areas and wood barbecues are available for use, however entry and camping fess apply. John Forrest National Park is a national park in the Darling Scarp, 24 km east of the Perth CBD. It was the first national park in Western Australia. There are several walking trails within the national park, including along the former route of the Eastern Railway. Yanchep is a national park 42 km north of the Perth CBD. The park is noted for its caves, native bush and koala colonies. It also offers cultural educational programmes offered in partnership with the local Nyoongar aboriginal people.",
"score": "1.4280021"
},
{
"id": "8696864",
"title": "Perth, Tasmania",
"text": " Perth is a town in the Australian state of Tasmania. It lies 20 km south of Launceston, on the Midland Highway. The town had a population of 2,965 at the 2016 census, and is part of the Northern Midlands Council. Like nearby Longford, Perth is a historic town with many buildings dating back to the early 19th century. It is the first major town out of Launceston on the route to Hobart, and also serves as a major junction for people bypassing Launceston on the route from Hobart to the northwest of the state.",
"score": "1.4256058"
},
{
"id": "28782455",
"title": "Perth (suburb)",
"text": " Perth is a suburb in the Perth metropolitan region, Western Australia that includes both the central business district of the city, and a suburban area spreading north to the northern side of Hyde Park. It does not include the separate suburbs of Northbridge or Highgate. Perth is split between the City of Perth and the City of Vincent local authorities, and was named after the city of the same name in Scotland.",
"score": "1.4210191"
},
{
"id": "5423805",
"title": "West Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " West Perth is an inner suburb of Perth, the capital city of Western Australia.",
"score": "1.4151337"
},
{
"id": "5901091",
"title": "Perth, Scotland",
"text": " sailed to Australia to found the new settlement. The old Municipal Buildings were completed in 1881, although the Perth and Kinross District Council moved to the former head office of General Accident at No. 2 High Street in 1984. Today, Perth serves as a retail centre for the surrounding area. This includes a main shopping centre — St John's Centre — along with a pedestrianised high street and many independent and specialist shops. The city also has \"an embarrassing abundance of public houses\". Main employers in the city now include Aviva, Royal Bank of Scotland and Scottish and Southern Energy.",
"score": "1.4097065"
},
{
"id": "10947922",
"title": "City of Perth",
"text": " The City of Perth is a local government area and body, within the Perth metropolitan area, which is the capital of Western Australia. The local government is commonly known as Perth City Council. The City covers the Perth city centre and surrounding suburbs. The City covers an area of 20.01 km2 and had an estimated population of 21,092 as at 30 June 2015. On 1 July 2016 the City expanded, absorbing 1,247 residents from the City of Subiaco.",
"score": "1.4011382"
},
{
"id": "10947930",
"title": "City of Perth",
"text": " The City of Perth is twinned with:",
"score": "1.3972384"
},
{
"id": "9732665",
"title": "Perth Concert Hall (Western Australia)",
"text": " The Perth Concert Hall is a concert hall located in Perth, the capital of the Australian state of Western Australia. Owned by the City of Perth, the hall is the main venue of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra, and also hosts a number of other events and performances. The building itself is located in Perth's central business district, adjacent to the Supreme Court Gardens and Government House. The building has two façades: facing north over St Georges Terrace, and facing south over the Swan River. The concert hall was constructed on land granted to the City of Perth by the Government of Western Australia, and opened on Australia Day (26 January), 1973. Designed by Howlett and Bailey Architects, local architectural firm, the building is constructed in the Brutalist style, making heavy use of white off-form concrete and a solid opaque interior. The main auditorium of the hall seats 1,729 people, as well as a 160-person choir gallery and a 3000-pipe organ. Acoustically, the venue is considered one of the best in Australia, with the design overseen by the New Zealand acoustician Sir Harold Marshall.",
"score": "1.3922162"
},
{
"id": "27225122",
"title": "List of cities in Australia",
"text": " • Perth (state capital) • Albany • Bunbury • Busselton • Fremantle • Geraldton • Joondalup • Kalgoorlie • Karratha • Mandurah • Rockingham Local government areas with city status not listed above, all of which lie within Perth's metropolitan area, include: • City of Armadale • City of Bayswater • City of Canning • City of Cockburn • City of Gosnells • City of Kalamunda • City of Kwinana • City of Melville • City of Nedlands • City of South Perth • City of Stirling • City of Subiaco • City of Swan • City of Wanneroo",
"score": "1.3909371"
},
{
"id": "28782459",
"title": "Perth (suburb)",
"text": " The Perth Cultural Centre includes facilities such as the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the State Library of Western Australia, the State Theatre Centre of Western Australia and the Western Australian Museum. The Perth Concert Hall is located on St Georges Terrace and His Majesty's Theatre on Hay Street.",
"score": "1.3880305"
},
{
"id": "15136552",
"title": "History of Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " The discovery of gold in the Kimberley, Murchison and Kalgoorlie regions in the 1880s and 1890s, and the concurrent granting of responsible government to Western Australia in 1890 had a huge impact on the development of Perth. The physical nature of the city changed dramatically with economic prosperity and the increase of population as a result of gold rush immigration. In one decade the population of the city tripled, from 8,447 in 1891 to 27,553 in 1901. By the beginning of the twentieth century, Perth was totally transformed. Its streets were lined with elaborately styled multi-storey buildings, many of which were designed by members of a now large architectural profession, and the population had spilled over into new suburbs that encircled the city. The location of the central Perth railway ",
"score": "1.382098"
},
{
"id": "28933581",
"title": "East Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " In the 2016 Census, there were 10,596 people in East Perth. 30.3% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were England 6.7%, China 4.0%, India 3.7%, Malaysia 3.4% and South Korea 2.9%. 47.6% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 6.6%, Korean 2.7%, Cantonese 2.6%, Portuguese 2.0% and Spanish 1.9%. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 33.3% and Catholic 18.4%.",
"score": "1.3810978"
},
{
"id": "5423806",
"title": "West Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " Formerly an exclusive enclave for wealthy merchants and politicians, the West Perth suburb is now part of the inner mixed zone, and has predominantly office blocks which have displaced residential buildings. The suburb has a relatively high proportion of miners, consultants, and especially medical specialists as compared with the Perth CBD. Streets such as Colin Street, Ord Street, and Outram Street have a significant percentage of office and high density residential buildings. Most retail outlets are located on Hay Street, which is the main commercial zone for the suburb, and these are focused on serving the office population. Closer to the CBD, the eastern edge of the suburb features both the Watertown brand outlet complex and the City West complex. This location was home to the Perth Metropolitan Markets from 1929 to 1989, when they moved to Canning Vale.",
"score": "1.3771105"
},
{
"id": "29625216",
"title": "Electoral district of Perth",
"text": " The Electoral district of Perth is a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. Perth is named for the capital city of Western Australia whose central business district falls within its borders. It is one of the oldest electorates in Western Australia, with its first member having been elected in the inaugural 1890 elections of the Legislative Assembly. Perth has traditionally been a safe Labor seat Party, but was briefly held by Liberal Eleni Evangel between 2013 and 2017. Perth is currently held by Labor MLA John Carey.",
"score": "1.3747561"
},
{
"id": "1867823",
"title": "Lists of landmarks",
"text": "Perth, Western Australia ",
"score": "1.3737156"
},
{
"id": "12802528",
"title": "Palace Hotel, Perth",
"text": " The Palace Hotel in Perth, Western Australia is a landmark three-storey heritage listed building located in the city's central business district. Originally built in 1897 as a hotel during the gold rush period of Western Australia's history, it was converted to banking chambers and offices in the 1980s and now accommodates the Perth headquarters of Woods Bagot, Adapptor and Hatchd. The building is located on the most prominent intersection in the financial district of the city, at the corner of St Georges Terrace and William Street. When the hotel opened for business on 18 March 1897 it was, although slightly smaller than some of its contemporary buildings in other capital cities in Australasia, described as \"... one of the most beautiful and elegant hotels in Australasia\". Other praise included: \"... redolent of the bourgeois luxury and splendour of the Paris of Napoleon III\" and later \"... in its day, as sumptuous a hostelry as any in Melbourne or Sydney.\" It operated as licensed premises from 1897 until 1981.",
"score": "1.3665993"
},
{
"id": "15136568",
"title": "History of Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " growing capital. From 2001 to 2011, the city's population increased by 346,000, which is comparable to Sydney's 499,000 over the same period despite being only one third the size. As with Melbourne, most population growth was absorbed by the outer suburbs, primarily in the City of Wanneroo, and the southern coastal suburbs (Cockburn, Rockingham and Kwinana). In recent years Perth has been getting a larger share of overseas migrants who, due to the demand for workers in the mining industry, are predominantly arriving on skilled migration visas. More than any other city in Australia, it has attracted migrants from the UK and South Africa. Major infrastructure projects completed included the $1.6 billion New MetroRail project, which effectively doubled the size of the Perth rail system, the Graham Farmer Freeway and Roe Highway. Notable events include: ",
"score": "1.3659967"
},
{
"id": "15136550",
"title": "History of Perth, Western Australia",
"text": " Perth as: \"'...a quiet little town of some 3000 inhabitants spread out in straggling allotments down to the water's edge, intermingled with gardens and shrubberies and half rural in its aspect ... The main streets are macadamised, but the outlying ones and most of the footpaths retain their native state from the loose sand - the all pervading element of Western Australia - productive of intense glare or much dust in the summer and dissolving into slush during the rainy season.'\" This village-like atmosphere of scattered single and two story brick or stone residences, surrounded by gardens, remained unchanged until the 1880s and 1890s.",
"score": "1.3659555"
}
] | [
"Tourism in Perth\n Tourism in Perth, the capital city of Western Australia, is an important part of the Australian state's economy, contributing to the prosperity of businesses in the city, as well as other regions of the state. Perth had approximately 2.8 million domestic visitors and 0.7 million international visitors in the year ending March 2012.",
"Perth, Scotland\n music events in the city. The annual event lasts for a couple of weeks and is usually held in May. In recent years, the festival has broadened its appeal by adding comedy, rock and popular music acts to the bill. Perth also has a number of twin cities around the world. These are: Aschaffenburg in Germany, Bydgoszcz in Poland, Haikou, Hainan in China, Perth in Australia, Perth in Canada, Pskov in Russia and Cognac in France. Perth is noted for its lively nightlife, with dozens of bars and several nightclubs. Perth has hosted the National Mòd in 1896, 1900, 1924, 1929, 1947, 1954, 1963, 1980 and 2004.",
"Tourism in Perth\n Avon Valley is a national park located 47 km northeast of the Perth CBD. In the springtime there is a diverse range of wildflowers. Toilets, water, shaded areas and wood barbecues are available for use, however entry and camping fess apply. John Forrest National Park is a national park in the Darling Scarp, 24 km east of the Perth CBD. It was the first national park in Western Australia. There are several walking trails within the national park, including along the former route of the Eastern Railway. Yanchep is a national park 42 km north of the Perth CBD. The park is noted for its caves, native bush and koala colonies. It also offers cultural educational programmes offered in partnership with the local Nyoongar aboriginal people.",
"Perth, Tasmania\n Perth is a town in the Australian state of Tasmania. It lies 20 km south of Launceston, on the Midland Highway. The town had a population of 2,965 at the 2016 census, and is part of the Northern Midlands Council. Like nearby Longford, Perth is a historic town with many buildings dating back to the early 19th century. It is the first major town out of Launceston on the route to Hobart, and also serves as a major junction for people bypassing Launceston on the route from Hobart to the northwest of the state.",
"Perth (suburb)\n Perth is a suburb in the Perth metropolitan region, Western Australia that includes both the central business district of the city, and a suburban area spreading north to the northern side of Hyde Park. It does not include the separate suburbs of Northbridge or Highgate. Perth is split between the City of Perth and the City of Vincent local authorities, and was named after the city of the same name in Scotland.",
"West Perth, Western Australia\n West Perth is an inner suburb of Perth, the capital city of Western Australia.",
"Perth, Scotland\n sailed to Australia to found the new settlement. The old Municipal Buildings were completed in 1881, although the Perth and Kinross District Council moved to the former head office of General Accident at No. 2 High Street in 1984. Today, Perth serves as a retail centre for the surrounding area. This includes a main shopping centre — St John's Centre — along with a pedestrianised high street and many independent and specialist shops. The city also has \"an embarrassing abundance of public houses\". Main employers in the city now include Aviva, Royal Bank of Scotland and Scottish and Southern Energy.",
"City of Perth\n The City of Perth is a local government area and body, within the Perth metropolitan area, which is the capital of Western Australia. The local government is commonly known as Perth City Council. The City covers the Perth city centre and surrounding suburbs. The City covers an area of 20.01 km2 and had an estimated population of 21,092 as at 30 June 2015. On 1 July 2016 the City expanded, absorbing 1,247 residents from the City of Subiaco.",
"City of Perth\n The City of Perth is twinned with:",
"Perth Concert Hall (Western Australia)\n The Perth Concert Hall is a concert hall located in Perth, the capital of the Australian state of Western Australia. Owned by the City of Perth, the hall is the main venue of the West Australian Symphony Orchestra, and also hosts a number of other events and performances. The building itself is located in Perth's central business district, adjacent to the Supreme Court Gardens and Government House. The building has two façades: facing north over St Georges Terrace, and facing south over the Swan River. The concert hall was constructed on land granted to the City of Perth by the Government of Western Australia, and opened on Australia Day (26 January), 1973. Designed by Howlett and Bailey Architects, local architectural firm, the building is constructed in the Brutalist style, making heavy use of white off-form concrete and a solid opaque interior. The main auditorium of the hall seats 1,729 people, as well as a 160-person choir gallery and a 3000-pipe organ. Acoustically, the venue is considered one of the best in Australia, with the design overseen by the New Zealand acoustician Sir Harold Marshall.",
"List of cities in Australia\n • Perth (state capital) • Albany • Bunbury • Busselton • Fremantle • Geraldton • Joondalup • Kalgoorlie • Karratha • Mandurah • Rockingham Local government areas with city status not listed above, all of which lie within Perth's metropolitan area, include: • City of Armadale • City of Bayswater • City of Canning • City of Cockburn • City of Gosnells • City of Kalamunda • City of Kwinana • City of Melville • City of Nedlands • City of South Perth • City of Stirling • City of Subiaco • City of Swan • City of Wanneroo",
"Perth (suburb)\n The Perth Cultural Centre includes facilities such as the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the State Library of Western Australia, the State Theatre Centre of Western Australia and the Western Australian Museum. The Perth Concert Hall is located on St Georges Terrace and His Majesty's Theatre on Hay Street.",
"History of Perth, Western Australia\n The discovery of gold in the Kimberley, Murchison and Kalgoorlie regions in the 1880s and 1890s, and the concurrent granting of responsible government to Western Australia in 1890 had a huge impact on the development of Perth. The physical nature of the city changed dramatically with economic prosperity and the increase of population as a result of gold rush immigration. In one decade the population of the city tripled, from 8,447 in 1891 to 27,553 in 1901. By the beginning of the twentieth century, Perth was totally transformed. Its streets were lined with elaborately styled multi-storey buildings, many of which were designed by members of a now large architectural profession, and the population had spilled over into new suburbs that encircled the city. The location of the central Perth railway ",
"East Perth, Western Australia\n In the 2016 Census, there were 10,596 people in East Perth. 30.3% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were England 6.7%, China 4.0%, India 3.7%, Malaysia 3.4% and South Korea 2.9%. 47.6% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 6.6%, Korean 2.7%, Cantonese 2.6%, Portuguese 2.0% and Spanish 1.9%. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 33.3% and Catholic 18.4%.",
"West Perth, Western Australia\n Formerly an exclusive enclave for wealthy merchants and politicians, the West Perth suburb is now part of the inner mixed zone, and has predominantly office blocks which have displaced residential buildings. The suburb has a relatively high proportion of miners, consultants, and especially medical specialists as compared with the Perth CBD. Streets such as Colin Street, Ord Street, and Outram Street have a significant percentage of office and high density residential buildings. Most retail outlets are located on Hay Street, which is the main commercial zone for the suburb, and these are focused on serving the office population. Closer to the CBD, the eastern edge of the suburb features both the Watertown brand outlet complex and the City West complex. This location was home to the Perth Metropolitan Markets from 1929 to 1989, when they moved to Canning Vale.",
"Electoral district of Perth\n The Electoral district of Perth is a Legislative Assembly electorate in the state of Western Australia. Perth is named for the capital city of Western Australia whose central business district falls within its borders. It is one of the oldest electorates in Western Australia, with its first member having been elected in the inaugural 1890 elections of the Legislative Assembly. Perth has traditionally been a safe Labor seat Party, but was briefly held by Liberal Eleni Evangel between 2013 and 2017. Perth is currently held by Labor MLA John Carey.",
"Lists of landmarks\nPerth, Western Australia ",
"Palace Hotel, Perth\n The Palace Hotel in Perth, Western Australia is a landmark three-storey heritage listed building located in the city's central business district. Originally built in 1897 as a hotel during the gold rush period of Western Australia's history, it was converted to banking chambers and offices in the 1980s and now accommodates the Perth headquarters of Woods Bagot, Adapptor and Hatchd. The building is located on the most prominent intersection in the financial district of the city, at the corner of St Georges Terrace and William Street. When the hotel opened for business on 18 March 1897 it was, although slightly smaller than some of its contemporary buildings in other capital cities in Australasia, described as \"... one of the most beautiful and elegant hotels in Australasia\". Other praise included: \"... redolent of the bourgeois luxury and splendour of the Paris of Napoleon III\" and later \"... in its day, as sumptuous a hostelry as any in Melbourne or Sydney.\" It operated as licensed premises from 1897 until 1981.",
"History of Perth, Western Australia\n growing capital. From 2001 to 2011, the city's population increased by 346,000, which is comparable to Sydney's 499,000 over the same period despite being only one third the size. As with Melbourne, most population growth was absorbed by the outer suburbs, primarily in the City of Wanneroo, and the southern coastal suburbs (Cockburn, Rockingham and Kwinana). In recent years Perth has been getting a larger share of overseas migrants who, due to the demand for workers in the mining industry, are predominantly arriving on skilled migration visas. More than any other city in Australia, it has attracted migrants from the UK and South Africa. Major infrastructure projects completed included the $1.6 billion New MetroRail project, which effectively doubled the size of the Perth rail system, the Graham Farmer Freeway and Roe Highway. Notable events include: ",
"History of Perth, Western Australia\n Perth as: \"'...a quiet little town of some 3000 inhabitants spread out in straggling allotments down to the water's edge, intermingled with gardens and shrubberies and half rural in its aspect ... The main streets are macadamised, but the outlying ones and most of the footpaths retain their native state from the loose sand - the all pervading element of Western Australia - productive of intense glare or much dust in the summer and dissolving into slush during the rainy season.'\" This village-like atmosphere of scattered single and two story brick or stone residences, surrounded by gardens, remained unchanged until the 1880s and 1890s."
] |
Who is the author of Out of This World? | [
"Lawrence Watt-Evans"
] | author | Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel) | 5,360,349 | 48 | [
{
"id": "28907994",
"title": "Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)",
"text": " Out of This World (1993) is the first fantasy novel in The Worlds of Shadow trilogy by Lawrence Watt-Evans.",
"score": "1.7628777"
},
{
"id": "8707013",
"title": "Out of This World (1945 film)",
"text": " Out of This World is a 1945 American romantic comedy film directed by Hal Walker and starring Eddie Bracken, Veronica Lake and Diana Lynn. The picture was a satire on the Frank Sinatra \"bobby soxer\" cult.",
"score": "1.6582482"
},
{
"id": "3204001",
"title": "Out of This World (Walter Benton album)",
"text": " The Allmusic site awarded the album 3 stars.",
"score": "1.6151159"
},
{
"id": "28907999",
"title": "Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)",
"text": "Out of This World (1993) ; In the Empire of Shadow (1995) ; The Reign of the Brown Magician (1996) The Worlds of Shadow series: ",
"score": "1.6098657"
},
{
"id": "338389",
"title": "Henry Sutton (novelist)",
"text": " Henry Edward Sutton (born 8 September 1963) is a crime novelist. The author of nine works of fiction including My Criminal World (2013) and Get Me Out of Here (2011), he teaches Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, where he is a Senior Lecturer and the co-director of the Master of Arts in Prose Fiction UEA Creative Writing Course. In 2004, he won the J.B.Priestley Award.",
"score": "1.5925002"
},
{
"id": "3204000",
"title": "Out of This World (Walter Benton album)",
"text": " Out of This World is the sole album led by American jazz saxophonist Walter Benton which was recorded in 1960 for the Jazzland label.",
"score": "1.584"
},
{
"id": "9740244",
"title": "Out of This World Adventures",
"text": " Out of This World Adventures was an American pulp magazine which published two issues, in July and December 1950. It included several pages of comics as well as science fiction stories. It was edited by Donald A. Wollheim and published by Avon. Sales were weak, and after two issues Avon decided to cancel it.",
"score": "1.5639317"
},
{
"id": "15746275",
"title": "Out of This World (Teddy Edwards album)",
"text": " Out of This World is an album by saxophonist Teddy Edwards recorded in Denmark in 1980 for the SteepleChase label. The 1995 CD reissue added an additional track.",
"score": "1.5569472"
},
{
"id": "13436392",
"title": "Out of This World (Maureen McGovern album)",
"text": " Out of This World is Maureen McGovern's ninth studio album (and first in four years), released in 1996. This is a cover album of 16 songs that were written or co-written by Harold Arlen. The third track is a two-song medley, and the twelfth track is a three-song medley. The album was reissued in November 2003 with two bonus tracks: \"Let's Fall in Love\" and \"Optimistic Voices\".",
"score": "1.5458497"
},
{
"id": "12029920",
"title": "Out of This World (Pepper Adams Donald Byrd Quintet album)",
"text": " Out of This World is an album by the Pepper Adams Donald Byrd Quintet. The album features the recording debut of pianist Herbie Hancock.",
"score": "1.5451962"
},
{
"id": "8680113",
"title": "Barbara Ramsden Award",
"text": "Mark Henshaw (author), Margit Meinhold and Jackie Yowell (editors) for Out of the Line of Fire (Text Publishing) ",
"score": "1.5432373"
},
{
"id": "14832153",
"title": "Tom Gross",
"text": " Gross is co-author of Out of Tune: David Helfgott and the Myth of Shine (Warner Books, New York, 1998) and of The Time Out Guide to Prague (Penguin Books, London, 1995). Out of Tune was named the most important biography of a troubled genius by The Huffington Post in April 2011. Gross has contributed essays to a number of books, including Those Who Forget The Past (edited by Ron Rosenbaum, Random House, New York, 2004), and worked as a consultant on Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and their Journey (by Isabel Fonseca), and as an editor on Germany and its Gypsies: A post-Auschwitz ordeal (by Gilad Margalit).",
"score": "1.5343297"
},
{
"id": "11166724",
"title": "Irene Shubik",
"text": " Cushing. Just as the success of “Murder Club” had enabled Shubik to persuade Newman to commission Out of this World, so The Caves of Steel’s positive reception opened the door for Shubik to devise a similar anthology series for BBC2 called Out of the Unknown, on which Shubik acted as story editor and producer. Like Out of this World, under Shubik's stewardship Out of the Unknown concentrated mainly on adaptations of science fiction stories including works by Frederik Pohl, Ray Bradbury, J.G. Ballard and Isaac Asimov (of whom Shubik was a particular fan, commissioning adaptations of six of his works for Out of the ",
"score": "1.5233248"
},
{
"id": "12649440",
"title": "Out of This World (card trick)",
"text": " Out of This World is a card trick created by magician Paul Curry in 1942. Many performers have devised their own variations of this trick. It is often billed as \"the trick that fooled Winston Churchill\" due to a story describing how it was performed for him during World War II. The method behind the trick is simple and essentially self-working, and can be enhanced by the presentation of the performer and the use of other principles of magic.",
"score": "1.5190499"
},
{
"id": "7160710",
"title": "Out of This World (American TV series)",
"text": " The opening credits for the series incorporated special effects footage from the 1979–1981 series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. The theme song is a modified version of \"Swinging on a Star\".",
"score": "1.5031456"
},
{
"id": "15455751",
"title": "Ruth Nichols (author)",
"text": "A Walk Out of the World (1969), illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman ; Ceremony of Innocence (1969) ; The Marrow of the World (1972), illus. Hyman – CLA Book of the Year ; Song of the Pearl (1976) ; The Left-Handed Spirit (1978) ; The Burning of the Rose (1990) ; What Dangers Deep: a story of Philip Sydney (1992) ",
"score": "1.4993935"
},
{
"id": "26023838",
"title": "Into the Out Of",
"text": " Into the Out Of (1986) is a horror-science fiction novel by American writer Alan Dean Foster.",
"score": "1.4971919"
},
{
"id": "7160711",
"title": "Out of This World (American TV series)",
"text": " Out of This World was first broadcast in the UK on the ITV network on April 9, 1990, until 1995.",
"score": "1.4960339"
},
{
"id": "9740249",
"title": "Out of This World Adventures",
"text": " Out of This World Adventures was intended to be bi-monthly, but only two issues were produced, dated July and December 1950. It was priced at 25 cents for both issues; each issue was 128 pages and was in pulp format. The publisher was Avon Periodicals for both issues. A Canadian edition appeared, also priced at 25 cents; the cover of the Canadian edition omitted the dates, but the issues appeared in November 1950 and April 1951.",
"score": "1.4945222"
},
{
"id": "28907998",
"title": "Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)",
"text": "Pel Brown - A marketing entrepreneur who lives in Maryland. His family and lawyer are among the group of people from Earth. ; Raven - A former lord of The World of Shadow who now leads a resistance cell in his reality. He first makes contact with Earth's reality by emerging through a magical portal in Pel's basement. ; Captain Cahn - The leader of the expedition from the Galactic Empire. Cahn is a capable leader, who commands the respect and authority of his men. ",
"score": "1.4925816"
}
] | [
"Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)\n Out of This World (1993) is the first fantasy novel in The Worlds of Shadow trilogy by Lawrence Watt-Evans.",
"Out of This World (1945 film)\n Out of This World is a 1945 American romantic comedy film directed by Hal Walker and starring Eddie Bracken, Veronica Lake and Diana Lynn. The picture was a satire on the Frank Sinatra \"bobby soxer\" cult.",
"Out of This World (Walter Benton album)\n The Allmusic site awarded the album 3 stars.",
"Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)\nOut of This World (1993) ; In the Empire of Shadow (1995) ; The Reign of the Brown Magician (1996) The Worlds of Shadow series: ",
"Henry Sutton (novelist)\n Henry Edward Sutton (born 8 September 1963) is a crime novelist. The author of nine works of fiction including My Criminal World (2013) and Get Me Out of Here (2011), he teaches Creative Writing at the University of East Anglia, where he is a Senior Lecturer and the co-director of the Master of Arts in Prose Fiction UEA Creative Writing Course. In 2004, he won the J.B.Priestley Award.",
"Out of This World (Walter Benton album)\n Out of This World is the sole album led by American jazz saxophonist Walter Benton which was recorded in 1960 for the Jazzland label.",
"Out of This World Adventures\n Out of This World Adventures was an American pulp magazine which published two issues, in July and December 1950. It included several pages of comics as well as science fiction stories. It was edited by Donald A. Wollheim and published by Avon. Sales were weak, and after two issues Avon decided to cancel it.",
"Out of This World (Teddy Edwards album)\n Out of This World is an album by saxophonist Teddy Edwards recorded in Denmark in 1980 for the SteepleChase label. The 1995 CD reissue added an additional track.",
"Out of This World (Maureen McGovern album)\n Out of This World is Maureen McGovern's ninth studio album (and first in four years), released in 1996. This is a cover album of 16 songs that were written or co-written by Harold Arlen. The third track is a two-song medley, and the twelfth track is a three-song medley. The album was reissued in November 2003 with two bonus tracks: \"Let's Fall in Love\" and \"Optimistic Voices\".",
"Out of This World (Pepper Adams Donald Byrd Quintet album)\n Out of This World is an album by the Pepper Adams Donald Byrd Quintet. The album features the recording debut of pianist Herbie Hancock.",
"Barbara Ramsden Award\nMark Henshaw (author), Margit Meinhold and Jackie Yowell (editors) for Out of the Line of Fire (Text Publishing) ",
"Tom Gross\n Gross is co-author of Out of Tune: David Helfgott and the Myth of Shine (Warner Books, New York, 1998) and of The Time Out Guide to Prague (Penguin Books, London, 1995). Out of Tune was named the most important biography of a troubled genius by The Huffington Post in April 2011. Gross has contributed essays to a number of books, including Those Who Forget The Past (edited by Ron Rosenbaum, Random House, New York, 2004), and worked as a consultant on Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and their Journey (by Isabel Fonseca), and as an editor on Germany and its Gypsies: A post-Auschwitz ordeal (by Gilad Margalit).",
"Irene Shubik\n Cushing. Just as the success of “Murder Club” had enabled Shubik to persuade Newman to commission Out of this World, so The Caves of Steel’s positive reception opened the door for Shubik to devise a similar anthology series for BBC2 called Out of the Unknown, on which Shubik acted as story editor and producer. Like Out of this World, under Shubik's stewardship Out of the Unknown concentrated mainly on adaptations of science fiction stories including works by Frederik Pohl, Ray Bradbury, J.G. Ballard and Isaac Asimov (of whom Shubik was a particular fan, commissioning adaptations of six of his works for Out of the ",
"Out of This World (card trick)\n Out of This World is a card trick created by magician Paul Curry in 1942. Many performers have devised their own variations of this trick. It is often billed as \"the trick that fooled Winston Churchill\" due to a story describing how it was performed for him during World War II. The method behind the trick is simple and essentially self-working, and can be enhanced by the presentation of the performer and the use of other principles of magic.",
"Out of This World (American TV series)\n The opening credits for the series incorporated special effects footage from the 1979–1981 series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. The theme song is a modified version of \"Swinging on a Star\".",
"Ruth Nichols (author)\nA Walk Out of the World (1969), illustrated by Trina Schart Hyman ; Ceremony of Innocence (1969) ; The Marrow of the World (1972), illus. Hyman – CLA Book of the Year ; Song of the Pearl (1976) ; The Left-Handed Spirit (1978) ; The Burning of the Rose (1990) ; What Dangers Deep: a story of Philip Sydney (1992) ",
"Into the Out Of\n Into the Out Of (1986) is a horror-science fiction novel by American writer Alan Dean Foster.",
"Out of This World (American TV series)\n Out of This World was first broadcast in the UK on the ITV network on April 9, 1990, until 1995.",
"Out of This World Adventures\n Out of This World Adventures was intended to be bi-monthly, but only two issues were produced, dated July and December 1950. It was priced at 25 cents for both issues; each issue was 128 pages and was in pulp format. The publisher was Avon Periodicals for both issues. A Canadian edition appeared, also priced at 25 cents; the cover of the Canadian edition omitted the dates, but the issues appeared in November 1950 and April 1951.",
"Out of This World (Watt-Evans novel)\nPel Brown - A marketing entrepreneur who lives in Maryland. His family and lawyer are among the group of people from Earth. ; Raven - A former lord of The World of Shadow who now leads a resistance cell in his reality. He first makes contact with Earth's reality by emerging through a magical portal in Pel's basement. ; Captain Cahn - The leader of the expedition from the Galactic Empire. Cahn is a capable leader, who commands the respect and authority of his men. "
] |
What sport does Imbi Hoop play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Imbi Hoop | 580,143 | 48 | [
{
"id": "30461567",
"title": "Winis Imbi",
"text": " Winis Imbi (born 26 April 1979 in Papua New Guinea) is an Australian rules footballer. He is 172cm in height. Imbi was named in the 1997 TAC Cup team of the year before training with Essendon in 1998. In 1999, Imbi was promoted to the Essendon rookie list and played some promising games in the Bomber's Ansett Cup finals campaign. That year he won the Essendon Football Club reserves best and fairest. At the end of the season, he was delisted and added to the Kangaroos Football Club's rookie list where he lasted until the end of the year. Imbi holds the North Ballarat Rebels games record with 53 games. He played football in Aberfeldie, Victoria in 2002. He continues to play football semi-professionally for the Portland Football Club in the Western Border Football League, where he was joint winner of the league's best and fairest in 2003. His younger brother, James Imbi, began at the Portland Football Club before trying out with the Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League in 2004, after which he went to the Palmerston Football Club in the Northern Territory Football League in 2006.",
"score": "1.4628818"
},
{
"id": "12353899",
"title": "Liliane Mukobwanakawe",
"text": " According to the New Times, a Rwandese daily, Mukobwanakawe was introduced to sitting volleyball, a sport in the Paralympic Games, in 2007, and was recruited by a team called Imena. She left Imena a year later and joined the Nyarugenge-based Troupe Handicapee Tuzuzanye (THT) Club where she also played for one year before crossing to Intwari in Kicukiro where she was appointed captain and later the club vice president, roles she holds to date. She has since gone ahead to represent her country at the 2016 Intercontinental and World ParaVolley Championship was held between March 17-23 in Hangzhou City, China.",
"score": "1.4497957"
},
{
"id": "10367409",
"title": "HoopWorld",
"text": " HoopWorld is an action sports basketball game in arcade style where two teams fight each other in order to defend their home courts. The point of the game is to get the highest score possible before match time runs out. The player runs, fights, kicks, steals the ball from opponents, and performs dunks and ball passes to win the match. Mystery Boxes will appear randomly on the court during the match revealing one of eight power-ups that impact game play. The game comes with three game modes (Quick Match, Tournament, and Survival) and has four difficulty levels (easy, normal, difficulty, and crazy) that enable the player to unlock teams and courts when played in Tournament mode. HoopWorld is an offline multiplayer game that can be played with 1-2 players. There is also an online leader board allowing players to upload their accumulated scores generated in Tournament mode. There are six available courts that are set in nature and outdoor locations, such as a jungle, a volcano, a Caribbean island, a Greek village, a desert, and a mystical forest. Each court is defended by its respective team that the player can pick from.",
"score": "1.335885"
},
{
"id": "10491780",
"title": "Imed Mhedhebi",
"text": " Imed Mhedhebi or Mhadhbi (عماد المهذبى) (born 22 March 1976 in Tunis) is a former Tunisian football winger. He was a member of the Tunisian national team that participated at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and won the 2004 African Cup of Nations. On January 27, 2007 he played his first Ligue 1 match for Nantes against Lorient",
"score": "1.3341119"
},
{
"id": "8867213",
"title": "Festus Ezeli",
"text": " Shortly after Ezeli arrived in Yuba City, his uncle encouraged him to take up what seemed to be the most appropriate sport for a 6'8\" (2.03 m) teenager—basketball. This proved much more difficult for him than academics; although he had played soccer as a child, he had never played any organized sports. He took a year of classes at Jesuit High School in Sacramento, but did not play basketball; different sources report that he was either ineligible to play because he had graduated from high school in Nigeria or cut during tryouts. The start of his organized basketball career, with a low-level AAU team, was especially inauspicious; his first points were scored in his own team's basket. ",
"score": "1.329997"
},
{
"id": "3872292",
"title": "Bulgantamir Sergelenbaatar",
"text": " Sergelenbaatar has been practicing athletics, freestyle wrestling, basketball, and handball when she was a child. She has been practicing volleyball since she was 13 years old with her first volleyball trainer Munkhtulga.M. She likes to watch Lee Jae-yeong, the outside spiker of the South Korea women's national volleyball team and Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders. Their body measurements are quite similar so she compares her play with her matches. Because Lee Jae-yeong is considered as one of the world's best players who takes an advantage of their shorter height in a volleyball play.",
"score": "1.3065944"
},
{
"id": "26141610",
"title": "Gabriela Guimarães",
"text": " Gabriela Braga Guimarães, nickname Gabi, (born May 19, 1994) is a Brazilian indoor volleyball player. She plays as an outside spiker. She competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics, in the Women's tournament, winning a sliver medal.",
"score": "1.3027817"
},
{
"id": "26446064",
"title": "Jessica Gallagher",
"text": " She played netball and basketball with able-bodied competitors, having first participated at the elite level in both sports as she started to lose her vision. In netball, she was a goal keeper and goal attack, represented Victoria several times and was named as an emergency for the Australian U16 team. In the Victorian league's Championship Division, she represented both Palladians and Altona Lightning. In basketball, she represented the Geelong Cats for five years and also represented Victoria Country. At that time, her goal was to become a professional netball or basketball player. As well, she played netball in the Geelong Football Netball League, representing South Barwon and Leopold. Despite her low vision and missing one third of the games due to her Paralympic training program, she won the A grade Best and Fairest Award in 2007, representing Leopold. Gallagher is also a snowboarder, having taken up the sport while on a working holiday in Vail, Colorado before she found out about the Winter Paralympic Games.",
"score": "1.2995386"
},
{
"id": "9889223",
"title": "Manipur",
"text": " and blocks any such attempt as well as tries to grab the coconut and score on its own. In Manipur's long history, Yubi lakpi was the annual official game, attended by the king, over the Hindu festival of Shree Govindajee. It is like the game of rugby, or American football. Oolaobi (Woo-Laobi) is an outdoor game mainly played by females. Meitei mythology believes that UmangLai Heloi-Taret (seven deities–seven fairies) played this game on the Courtyard of the temple of Umang Lai Lairembi. The number of participants is not fixed but are divided into two groups (size as per agreement). Players are divided as into Raiders (Attackers) or Defenders (Avoiders). Hiyang tannaba, also called Hi Yangba Tanaba, is a traditional boat rowing race and festivity of the Panas.",
"score": "1.2979581"
},
{
"id": "31535592",
"title": "Hoop rolling",
"text": " as hoops: \"A wheel must be protected. You make me a useful present. It will be a hoop to children, but to me a tyre for my wheel.\"(14. CLXVIII) Martial also mentions the sport was practised by Sarmatian boys, who rolled their hoops on the frozen Danube river. According to Strabo, one of the popular Roman venues for practising the sport was the Campus Martius, which was large enough to accommodate a wide variety of activities. The Roman game was to roll the hoop while throwing a spear or stick through it. For Romans, this was more an entertainment and military development, not a philosophical activity. Several ancient sources praise the sport. According to Horace, hoop driving was one of the manly sports. Ovid in his Tristia is more ",
"score": "1.2968388"
},
{
"id": "32700073",
"title": "Mikaela Dombkins",
"text": " Dombkins came to the Australian Institute of Sport on a scholarship when she was 16. She represented Australia at the Under 19s World Championship for Women in Tunisia in 2005, and at the Under 21 World Championship for Women in Russia, where the team won silver. She played for the Australian Institute of Sport team in the WNBL, starting with the 2003/2004 season. During that season, she had a knee injury. She was part of the team during the 2005/2006 season. During that season, she was the most senior player on the squad. Early in that season, she had an injury to her foot. In an October 2005 game against the Perth Lynx, she scored 24 points. In a December 2005 game against the Capitals, she scored 11 points. While playing for the team, she ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament.",
"score": "1.2953737"
},
{
"id": "3168488",
"title": "Basketball",
"text": " Variations of basketball are activities based on the game of basketball, using common basketball skills and equipment (primarily the ball and basket). Some variations only have superficial rule changes, while others are distinct games with varying degrees of influence from basketball. Other variations include children's games, contests or activities meant to help players reinforce skills. An earlier version of basketball, played primarily by women and girls, was Six-on-six basketball. Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net (approximately 1.5m×1.5m). The sport is like a combination of polo, rugby, and basketball. There is even a form played on donkeys known as Donkey basketball, which has attracted criticism from animal rights groups. ",
"score": "1.2949746"
},
{
"id": "31535594",
"title": "Hoop rolling",
"text": " Early 19th-century travellers saw children playing with hoops over much of Europe and beyond. The game was also a common pastime of African village children on the Tanganyika plateau, and not long after it is recorded in the Freetown settler community. In China, the game may well go back to 1000 BC or further. Christian missionaries encountered it there in the 19th century. Children in late Edo period Japan also were known to play the game. In English the sport is known by several names, \"hoop and stick\", \"bowling hoops\", or \"gird and cleek\" in Scotland, where the gird is the hoop and ",
"score": "1.2948676"
},
{
"id": "8828303",
"title": "Tess Madgen",
"text": " Madgen plays guard and forward and is an offensive player. In 2008, she was featured as a basketball star on myFiba. Madgen played junior basketball for the Eastern Mavericks. She has been affiliated with the South Australian Institute of Sport. She competed at the 2004 and 2005 Australian U16 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. She competed at the 2006 and 2007 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2007, she played for Barossa Valley. She competed at the 2007 and 2008 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2008, her team finished first, beating Victoria 99–61 for one of the biggest wins ever in the competition's history. As a competitor at the 2009 Australian Under-20 national championships, she won the Bob Staunton Award while her team took home silver.",
"score": "1.293514"
},
{
"id": "12490982",
"title": "Chris Imes",
"text": " Chris Imes (born August 27, 1972), is an American former ice hockey player. He played for HK Olimpija, the Anchorage Aces, and the Minnesota Moose during his career. He also played for the American national team at the 1994 Winter Olympics and 1995 World Championships. Imes played for the University of Maine Black Bears from 1990 to 1995. During his freshman and sophomore year at the University of Maine, Imes won the Shawn Walsh Defensive Player Award twice and helped guide Maine to their first NCAA Championship in 1992–93. In his senior year, Imes was a runner up for the Hobey Baker Award and was named the Hockey East Player of the Year in 1995. He was inducted into the University of Maine Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. After retiring, Imes joined the Chicago Blues youth hockey organization as a director.",
"score": "1.2931914"
},
{
"id": "25584055",
"title": "Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir",
"text": " Abdul-Qaadir's hopes were to continue playing professionally in Europe, but were quickly diminished when she was informed of the rule from the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) that prohibits headgear larger than five inches. Unwilling to stray in her beliefs, Abdul-Qaadir has stood up to the international rules, petitioning for an exemption to the rule. She put her dreams of playing professionally aside as she works to now pave a way for other Muslim women in sports. FIBA eventually ruled in her favor in 2017. Abdul-Qaadir started an online campaign called “Muslim Girls Hoop Too” to raise awareness for Muslim women in sports with an emphasis on female basketball players. She hopes ",
"score": "1.293004"
},
{
"id": "6628417",
"title": "Punjabi sports (India)",
"text": " This is played by a group of girls using a ball made of seven layers of cloth. The ball is bounced in one hand with the girl singing rhymes. The girl who sings the longest is the winner.",
"score": "1.2918838"
},
{
"id": "15364863",
"title": "Šarūnas Jasikevičius",
"text": " played in the gym, and also in the street using scrap metal instead of real baskets, and their favorite pastime was called minus, a kind of forerunner of little game that can be seen today during the NBA All-Star Game called \"horse\". It was far from ideal, but his parents preferred to see him play with the scrap metal hoops in front of their home rather than down at the pitch, where it would have taken him less than five minutes to pick a fight with the wrong person. His childhood dream was to become a Žalgiris player about which he was so crazy that he ",
"score": "1.2906189"
},
{
"id": "16208119",
"title": "Darshika Abeywickrama",
"text": " She initially took interest in high jump as a kid and she received her first certificate in high jump when she was studying Grade 4. She later switched to netball after watching one of her sisters playing the sport. It was revealed that she was urged to join the school netball team when she switched to Anula Vidyalaya. In addition, she also participated in athletic events such as shot put, discus throw and javelin throw at school level competitions. She also took up basketball in school sportsmeet when she was in Grade 9 and was subsequently called up to the ",
"score": "1.2851167"
},
{
"id": "2620760",
"title": "Sani Sakakini",
"text": " Sakakini started playing basketball at the age of 14 in the Sarriyet Ramallah club. His international career started in 2007 after he went to Applied Science University in Jordan and joined the Jordanian Premier League playing three seasons for Al Riyadi Amman. He came back to the league in 2015 to play one season with Orthodox and help the team win the title. In 2011, Sakakini started in the minor NBL league with Guangzhou Free Man before playing in the main CBA league for four seasons with Qingdao Eagles, Jiangsu Monkey King and Tianjin Gold Lions. He started 115 games for 126 appearances, averaging 19.3 PPG and 12.5 RPG. Sakakini played a few games in 2013 in the PBBA league for Sarriyet Ramallah and helped the team win the championship. He also played a few games in 2014 and 2016 in the LBL league for Hoops Club and Champville SC. He started 17 games out of 17 appearances, averaging 18.4 PPG and 10.6 RPG. For the 2017-2018 season, Sakakini joined the LPB league playing for the Trotamundos de Carabobo. On August 29, 2021, Sakakini officially joined the Taichung Suns of the T1 League in Taiwan.",
"score": "1.2849996"
}
] | [
"Winis Imbi\n Winis Imbi (born 26 April 1979 in Papua New Guinea) is an Australian rules footballer. He is 172cm in height. Imbi was named in the 1997 TAC Cup team of the year before training with Essendon in 1998. In 1999, Imbi was promoted to the Essendon rookie list and played some promising games in the Bomber's Ansett Cup finals campaign. That year he won the Essendon Football Club reserves best and fairest. At the end of the season, he was delisted and added to the Kangaroos Football Club's rookie list where he lasted until the end of the year. Imbi holds the North Ballarat Rebels games record with 53 games. He played football in Aberfeldie, Victoria in 2002. He continues to play football semi-professionally for the Portland Football Club in the Western Border Football League, where he was joint winner of the league's best and fairest in 2003. His younger brother, James Imbi, began at the Portland Football Club before trying out with the Sturt Football Club in the South Australian National Football League in 2004, after which he went to the Palmerston Football Club in the Northern Territory Football League in 2006.",
"Liliane Mukobwanakawe\n According to the New Times, a Rwandese daily, Mukobwanakawe was introduced to sitting volleyball, a sport in the Paralympic Games, in 2007, and was recruited by a team called Imena. She left Imena a year later and joined the Nyarugenge-based Troupe Handicapee Tuzuzanye (THT) Club where she also played for one year before crossing to Intwari in Kicukiro where she was appointed captain and later the club vice president, roles she holds to date. She has since gone ahead to represent her country at the 2016 Intercontinental and World ParaVolley Championship was held between March 17-23 in Hangzhou City, China.",
"HoopWorld\n HoopWorld is an action sports basketball game in arcade style where two teams fight each other in order to defend their home courts. The point of the game is to get the highest score possible before match time runs out. The player runs, fights, kicks, steals the ball from opponents, and performs dunks and ball passes to win the match. Mystery Boxes will appear randomly on the court during the match revealing one of eight power-ups that impact game play. The game comes with three game modes (Quick Match, Tournament, and Survival) and has four difficulty levels (easy, normal, difficulty, and crazy) that enable the player to unlock teams and courts when played in Tournament mode. HoopWorld is an offline multiplayer game that can be played with 1-2 players. There is also an online leader board allowing players to upload their accumulated scores generated in Tournament mode. There are six available courts that are set in nature and outdoor locations, such as a jungle, a volcano, a Caribbean island, a Greek village, a desert, and a mystical forest. Each court is defended by its respective team that the player can pick from.",
"Imed Mhedhebi\n Imed Mhedhebi or Mhadhbi (عماد المهذبى) (born 22 March 1976 in Tunis) is a former Tunisian football winger. He was a member of the Tunisian national team that participated at the 2002 FIFA World Cup and won the 2004 African Cup of Nations. On January 27, 2007 he played his first Ligue 1 match for Nantes against Lorient",
"Festus Ezeli\n Shortly after Ezeli arrived in Yuba City, his uncle encouraged him to take up what seemed to be the most appropriate sport for a 6'8\" (2.03 m) teenager—basketball. This proved much more difficult for him than academics; although he had played soccer as a child, he had never played any organized sports. He took a year of classes at Jesuit High School in Sacramento, but did not play basketball; different sources report that he was either ineligible to play because he had graduated from high school in Nigeria or cut during tryouts. The start of his organized basketball career, with a low-level AAU team, was especially inauspicious; his first points were scored in his own team's basket. ",
"Bulgantamir Sergelenbaatar\n Sergelenbaatar has been practicing athletics, freestyle wrestling, basketball, and handball when she was a child. She has been practicing volleyball since she was 13 years old with her first volleyball trainer Munkhtulga.M. She likes to watch Lee Jae-yeong, the outside spiker of the South Korea women's national volleyball team and Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders. Their body measurements are quite similar so she compares her play with her matches. Because Lee Jae-yeong is considered as one of the world's best players who takes an advantage of their shorter height in a volleyball play.",
"Gabriela Guimarães\n Gabriela Braga Guimarães, nickname Gabi, (born May 19, 1994) is a Brazilian indoor volleyball player. She plays as an outside spiker. She competed at the 2020 Summer Olympics, in the Women's tournament, winning a sliver medal.",
"Jessica Gallagher\n She played netball and basketball with able-bodied competitors, having first participated at the elite level in both sports as she started to lose her vision. In netball, she was a goal keeper and goal attack, represented Victoria several times and was named as an emergency for the Australian U16 team. In the Victorian league's Championship Division, she represented both Palladians and Altona Lightning. In basketball, she represented the Geelong Cats for five years and also represented Victoria Country. At that time, her goal was to become a professional netball or basketball player. As well, she played netball in the Geelong Football Netball League, representing South Barwon and Leopold. Despite her low vision and missing one third of the games due to her Paralympic training program, she won the A grade Best and Fairest Award in 2007, representing Leopold. Gallagher is also a snowboarder, having taken up the sport while on a working holiday in Vail, Colorado before she found out about the Winter Paralympic Games.",
"Manipur\n and blocks any such attempt as well as tries to grab the coconut and score on its own. In Manipur's long history, Yubi lakpi was the annual official game, attended by the king, over the Hindu festival of Shree Govindajee. It is like the game of rugby, or American football. Oolaobi (Woo-Laobi) is an outdoor game mainly played by females. Meitei mythology believes that UmangLai Heloi-Taret (seven deities–seven fairies) played this game on the Courtyard of the temple of Umang Lai Lairembi. The number of participants is not fixed but are divided into two groups (size as per agreement). Players are divided as into Raiders (Attackers) or Defenders (Avoiders). Hiyang tannaba, also called Hi Yangba Tanaba, is a traditional boat rowing race and festivity of the Panas.",
"Hoop rolling\n as hoops: \"A wheel must be protected. You make me a useful present. It will be a hoop to children, but to me a tyre for my wheel.\"(14. CLXVIII) Martial also mentions the sport was practised by Sarmatian boys, who rolled their hoops on the frozen Danube river. According to Strabo, one of the popular Roman venues for practising the sport was the Campus Martius, which was large enough to accommodate a wide variety of activities. The Roman game was to roll the hoop while throwing a spear or stick through it. For Romans, this was more an entertainment and military development, not a philosophical activity. Several ancient sources praise the sport. According to Horace, hoop driving was one of the manly sports. Ovid in his Tristia is more ",
"Mikaela Dombkins\n Dombkins came to the Australian Institute of Sport on a scholarship when she was 16. She represented Australia at the Under 19s World Championship for Women in Tunisia in 2005, and at the Under 21 World Championship for Women in Russia, where the team won silver. She played for the Australian Institute of Sport team in the WNBL, starting with the 2003/2004 season. During that season, she had a knee injury. She was part of the team during the 2005/2006 season. During that season, she was the most senior player on the squad. Early in that season, she had an injury to her foot. In an October 2005 game against the Perth Lynx, she scored 24 points. In a December 2005 game against the Capitals, she scored 11 points. While playing for the team, she ruptured her anterior cruciate ligament.",
"Basketball\n Variations of basketball are activities based on the game of basketball, using common basketball skills and equipment (primarily the ball and basket). Some variations only have superficial rule changes, while others are distinct games with varying degrees of influence from basketball. Other variations include children's games, contests or activities meant to help players reinforce skills. An earlier version of basketball, played primarily by women and girls, was Six-on-six basketball. Horseball is a game played on horseback where a ball is handled and points are scored by shooting it through a high net (approximately 1.5m×1.5m). The sport is like a combination of polo, rugby, and basketball. There is even a form played on donkeys known as Donkey basketball, which has attracted criticism from animal rights groups. ",
"Hoop rolling\n Early 19th-century travellers saw children playing with hoops over much of Europe and beyond. The game was also a common pastime of African village children on the Tanganyika plateau, and not long after it is recorded in the Freetown settler community. In China, the game may well go back to 1000 BC or further. Christian missionaries encountered it there in the 19th century. Children in late Edo period Japan also were known to play the game. In English the sport is known by several names, \"hoop and stick\", \"bowling hoops\", or \"gird and cleek\" in Scotland, where the gird is the hoop and ",
"Tess Madgen\n Madgen plays guard and forward and is an offensive player. In 2008, she was featured as a basketball star on myFiba. Madgen played junior basketball for the Eastern Mavericks. She has been affiliated with the South Australian Institute of Sport. She competed at the 2004 and 2005 Australian U16 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. She competed at the 2006 and 2007 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2007, she played for Barossa Valley. She competed at the 2007 and 2008 Australian U18 Championships, playing for South Australia Country. In 2008, her team finished first, beating Victoria 99–61 for one of the biggest wins ever in the competition's history. As a competitor at the 2009 Australian Under-20 national championships, she won the Bob Staunton Award while her team took home silver.",
"Chris Imes\n Chris Imes (born August 27, 1972), is an American former ice hockey player. He played for HK Olimpija, the Anchorage Aces, and the Minnesota Moose during his career. He also played for the American national team at the 1994 Winter Olympics and 1995 World Championships. Imes played for the University of Maine Black Bears from 1990 to 1995. During his freshman and sophomore year at the University of Maine, Imes won the Shawn Walsh Defensive Player Award twice and helped guide Maine to their first NCAA Championship in 1992–93. In his senior year, Imes was a runner up for the Hobey Baker Award and was named the Hockey East Player of the Year in 1995. He was inducted into the University of Maine Sports Hall of Fame in 2003. After retiring, Imes joined the Chicago Blues youth hockey organization as a director.",
"Bilqis Abdul-Qaadir\n Abdul-Qaadir's hopes were to continue playing professionally in Europe, but were quickly diminished when she was informed of the rule from the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) that prohibits headgear larger than five inches. Unwilling to stray in her beliefs, Abdul-Qaadir has stood up to the international rules, petitioning for an exemption to the rule. She put her dreams of playing professionally aside as she works to now pave a way for other Muslim women in sports. FIBA eventually ruled in her favor in 2017. Abdul-Qaadir started an online campaign called “Muslim Girls Hoop Too” to raise awareness for Muslim women in sports with an emphasis on female basketball players. She hopes ",
"Punjabi sports (India)\n This is played by a group of girls using a ball made of seven layers of cloth. The ball is bounced in one hand with the girl singing rhymes. The girl who sings the longest is the winner.",
"Šarūnas Jasikevičius\n played in the gym, and also in the street using scrap metal instead of real baskets, and their favorite pastime was called minus, a kind of forerunner of little game that can be seen today during the NBA All-Star Game called \"horse\". It was far from ideal, but his parents preferred to see him play with the scrap metal hoops in front of their home rather than down at the pitch, where it would have taken him less than five minutes to pick a fight with the wrong person. His childhood dream was to become a Žalgiris player about which he was so crazy that he ",
"Darshika Abeywickrama\n She initially took interest in high jump as a kid and she received her first certificate in high jump when she was studying Grade 4. She later switched to netball after watching one of her sisters playing the sport. It was revealed that she was urged to join the school netball team when she switched to Anula Vidyalaya. In addition, she also participated in athletic events such as shot put, discus throw and javelin throw at school level competitions. She also took up basketball in school sportsmeet when she was in Grade 9 and was subsequently called up to the ",
"Sani Sakakini\n Sakakini started playing basketball at the age of 14 in the Sarriyet Ramallah club. His international career started in 2007 after he went to Applied Science University in Jordan and joined the Jordanian Premier League playing three seasons for Al Riyadi Amman. He came back to the league in 2015 to play one season with Orthodox and help the team win the title. In 2011, Sakakini started in the minor NBL league with Guangzhou Free Man before playing in the main CBA league for four seasons with Qingdao Eagles, Jiangsu Monkey King and Tianjin Gold Lions. He started 115 games for 126 appearances, averaging 19.3 PPG and 12.5 RPG. Sakakini played a few games in 2013 in the PBBA league for Sarriyet Ramallah and helped the team win the championship. He also played a few games in 2014 and 2016 in the LBL league for Hoops Club and Champville SC. He started 17 games out of 17 appearances, averaging 18.4 PPG and 10.6 RPG. For the 2017-2018 season, Sakakini joined the LPB league playing for the Trotamundos de Carabobo. On August 29, 2021, Sakakini officially joined the Taichung Suns of the T1 League in Taiwan."
] |
What genre is The Harrowing? | [
"horror literature"
] | genre | The Harrowing (novel) | 5,931,235 | 87 | [
{
"id": "15739323",
"title": "The Harrowing (novel)",
"text": " The Harrowing is a horror novel by Alexandra Sokoloff. It was first published in 2006 by St. Martin's Press, and is the author's debut book, following a screenwriting career. According to Sokoloff's website, she was inspired to write the novel because of her experiences teaching to troubled teenagers in the Los Angeles County prison system. The Harrowing was nominated for the Bram Stoker Award for Best First Novel. The story follows a group of five troubled teenagers, all college students, who decide to stay behind in their creepy dorm rather than go to their dysfunctional homes for the Thanksgiving holiday. But after playing around with a Ouija board they realize that there is a presence lurking in the house with them.",
"score": "1.766398"
},
{
"id": "25925568",
"title": "The Harrow",
"text": " The Harrow has placed within the top 10 in the Preditors and Editors Best Fiction Magazines/E-Zines poll every year since 2003. Pieces first published in the magazine have received recognition in several other venues. First-place Harrow contest winner \"Harming Obsession\" by Bev Vincent received an honorable mention in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror (16th Ed.); \"The Pickup\", a short story by Jim Schutte was a 2005 nominee for the Gaylactic Spectrum Award. M. Frost's poem, \"Removing the Bloodstain\", from the November 2006 issue was reprinted in the March 2007 newsletter from the Horror Writers Association. Well-known authors published in The Harrow include Gemma Files, Peter Crowther and Marlys Pearson. Editor Pagliassotti's fantasy novel, Clockwork Heart, was published by Juno Books in March 2008. Other authors published in The Harrow who also have novels or collections out include Brian Ames and Chris Howard.",
"score": "1.5575843"
},
{
"id": "30781697",
"title": "The Harrowing of Gwynedd",
"text": " The Harrowing of Gwynedd is a historical fantasy novel by American-born author Katherine Kurtz. It was first published by Del Rey Books in 1989. It was the tenth of Kurtz' Deryni novels to be published, and the first book in her fourth Deryni trilogy, The Heirs of Saint Camber. Although the Heirs trilogy was the fourth Deryni series to be published, it is a direct sequel to the second trilogy, The Legends of Camber of Culdi.",
"score": "1.5360339"
},
{
"id": "25390790",
"title": "Alexandra Sokoloff",
"text": " Her first novel, The Harrowing, was published by St. Martin's Press in 2006. Her second novel, The Price, was published by St. Martin's in 2007, her third, The Unseen, in 2009, her fourth, \"Book of Shadows\", in 2010. She is a Bram Stoker and Anthony award nominee and a Thriller award winner, and the co-author of the paranormal mystery romance series \"The Keepers\". Her short story \"The Edge of Seventeen\" was the recipient of a 2009 International Thriller Writers Award. She also co-wrote the screenplay for the psychological thriller Cold Kisses, and two books on story structure, \"Story Structure\" and \"Writing Love\", based on her Screenwriting Tricks for Authors workshops and blog. She lives in Los Angeles and in Scotland, with her husband, the Scottish crime author Craig Robertson.",
"score": "1.4671416"
},
{
"id": "11098177",
"title": "Dru Pagliassotti",
"text": " Iron Wind in March 2014, and Heavy Fire in September 2014. Since 1998 Pagliassotti has been the editor in chief and publisher of The Harrow and owner of The Harrow Press. The Harrow was a peer reviewed online literary magazine designed to support new writers as they develop their careers. The magazine published two anthologies of horror fiction. Pagliassotti is also a professor in the communication department of California Lutheran University, where xe researches yaoi or \"boys' love\" fiction (manga, anime, visual novels and dōjinshi) from Japan. In 2009, Pagliassotti was named one of the Year's Best Fantasy writers, qualifying her story \"Bookmarked\" to be published in the 21st edition of The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror.",
"score": "1.4511962"
},
{
"id": "25925569",
"title": "The Harrow",
"text": " In 2006, The Harrow produced Fear of the Unknown, published by Echelon Press, with an introduction by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro and including stories by Poppy Z Brite, Owl Goingback and Jack Ketchum. In 2007, it followed up with Midnight Lullabies, published by The Harrow Press, with an introduction by Tim Wynne-Jones.",
"score": "1.4377072"
},
{
"id": "5672688",
"title": "Flynn Berry",
"text": " In 2016, Berry published Under the Harrow, a mystery novel about a woman's murder in a sleepy English town and the effects of the murder upon her sister. The book received universally positive reviews. It also won the 2017 Edgar Award for Best First Novel. In 2018, Berry published A Double Life based on the murder of Sandra Rivett and the subsequent disappearance of Lord Lucan. In 2021, Berry published Northern Spy.",
"score": "1.4248817"
},
{
"id": "30781698",
"title": "The Harrowing of Gwynedd",
"text": " The novel is set in the land of Gwynedd, one of the fictional Eleven Kingdoms. Gwynedd itself is a medieval kingdom similar to the British Isles of the 10th century, with a powerful Holy Church (based on the Roman Catholic Church), and a feudal government ruled by a hereditary monarchy. The population of Gwynedd includes both humans and Deryni, a race of people with inherent psychic and magical abilities who are being systematically persecuted by both the Crown and the Church. The novel begins two days after the conclusion of Camber the Heretic, as the Regents of young King Alroy Haldane continue their bloody suppression of Deryni throughout the realm. As the Deryni struggle to survive, the remaining members of the MacRorie family investigate the strange circumstances of their patriarch's apparent death.",
"score": "1.4204323"
},
{
"id": "2851901",
"title": "Douglas Clegg",
"text": " Leisure Books, and Wildside Press. Under the pseudonym Andrew Harper, the novels Red Angel and Night Cage also were released. Clegg's Harrow series includes Nightmare House (1999), Mischief (2000), The Infinite (2001) and The Abandoned (2005), as well as the prequel novellas The Necromancer (2003) and Isis (2006). The Vampyricon trilogy, a dark fantasy series about vampirism and mythology set in an alternate medieval history, includes The Priest of Blood (2005), The Lady of Serpents (2006) and The Queen of Wolves (2007). The Priest of Blood hit the extended New York Times bestseller list in hardcover in late 2005. In 2006 Clegg ",
"score": "1.4016161"
},
{
"id": "30781708",
"title": "The Harrowing of Gwynedd",
"text": "1989, USA, Del Rey Books ISBN: 0-345-33259-8, Hardcover (first edition) ; 1989, USA, Del Rey Books ISBN: 0-345-36314-0, Paperback ; 1989, UK, Century Publishing ISBN: 0-7126-3495-9, Pub date 14 December 1989, Hardcover ; 1989, UK, Legend Books ISBN: 0-7126-3500-9, Pub date 14 December 1989, Paperback ; 1991, UK, Legend Books ISBN: 0-09-971070-6, Pub date 3 January 1991, Paperback ",
"score": "1.3896592"
},
{
"id": "25925567",
"title": "The Harrow",
"text": " The Harrow was an online magazine for fantasy and horror fiction, poetry, and reviews, launched in January 1998 by founder and editor-in-chief Dru Pagliassotti. The magazine has an all-volunteer editorial staff and reviewer pool and uses a double blind review system that provides authors with individualized feedback on their submissions. In 2008, The Harrow was published on the first of each month using Open Journal Systems software. From 2009, The Harrow staff are taking a break and the journal is not in production at the moment.",
"score": "1.3862534"
},
{
"id": "915938",
"title": "Harrowing of Hell (drama)",
"text": " The Harrowing of Hell is an eighth-century Latin work in fifty-five lines found in the Anglo-Saxon Book of Cerne (folios 98v–99v). It is probably a Northumbrian work, written in prose and verse, where the former serves either as a set of stage directions for a dramatic portrayal or as a series of narrations for explaining the poetry. Three voices appear in the work: those of Adam, Eve, and a narrator. The prose of the \"narrator\" appears in the Book of Cerne in red ink setting it off from the rest of the text. The prose portions are rhythmic and may therefore have been sung, even if they were primarily directorial. Besides the three main soloists, the work was designed for a full choir (antiqui iusti). The work may be either an early oratorio or the earliest surviving work of ",
"score": "1.3832078"
},
{
"id": "3320656",
"title": "Alma Katsu",
"text": " The Taker was named one of the ten best debut novels of 2011 by Booklist magazine, the publication of the American Library Association. The second novel, The Reckoning, was nominated for several year-end awards including Goodreads Readers Choice Award for best paranormal fantasy and RT Book Reviews Reviewers Choice Award for best paranormal romance. The Deep was a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Novel, and a finalist for the Locus Award for Best Horror Novel.",
"score": "1.368293"
},
{
"id": "26996531",
"title": "Alix E. Harrow",
"text": " Alix E. Harrow (born November 9, 1989) is a Hugo Award-winning American science fiction and fantasy writer. Her short fiction has been nominated for the Nebula Award, World Fantasy Award, and Locus Award, and in 2019 she won a Hugo Award for her story \"A Witch's Guide to Escape: A Practical Compendium of Portal Fantasies\". She has published under the name Alix Heintzman.",
"score": "1.3677235"
},
{
"id": "5458042",
"title": "Harrowing of Hell",
"text": "The harrowing is mentioned in the eponymous episode of the British dark comedy anthology series Inside No. 9. ",
"score": "1.3622298"
},
{
"id": "13455983",
"title": "In Certain Circles",
"text": " The novel received positive reviews upon publication. The Guardian called the work \"subtle yet wounding, and very much alive\", praising it as \"a graceful reply to the questions of what really shapes us, and what might actually constitute a wasted life.\" The Wall Street Journal called the novel \"a treasure from an unearthed time capsule\" and praised Harrower as \"one of the great Australian writers of the postwar era.\" In 2015 it won the Voss Literary Prize for best novel published in 2014.",
"score": "1.355967"
},
{
"id": "612862",
"title": "Elizabeth Harrower (writer)",
"text": " Harrower published her first three novels in quick succession, beginning with Down in the City in 1957. Novelist Christina Stead was a champion of her work, praising The Long Prospect in particular. In 1971 her fifth novel In Certain Circles was set to be published until she abruptly withdrew it from publication following the death of her mother. In an interview with The Australian, Harrower claimed that she had written the book under pressure after receiving a grant and called the act of writing it \"forced labour\". Afterwards she published a few short stories before giving her writing up entirely by 1977. In 2012, following a period of obscurity during which all of her novels fell out of print, Harrower experienced a small revival when Michael Heyward and Penny Hueston, editors of the independent press Text Publishing, began to reprint her works. They attempted to persuade Harrower to publish In Certain Circles and she eventually acquiesced, allowing the novel to be published in 2014. The novel received positive reviews and renewed interest in all of Harrower's novels. In 2015, a collection of stories from throughout Harrower's career was published as A Few Days in the Country: And Other Stories.",
"score": "1.3414366"
},
{
"id": "5458040",
"title": "Harrowing of Hell",
"text": "The Harrowing of Hell is the subject of several baroque oratorios, and notably of Salieri's Gesù al Limbo (1803) to a text by Luigi Prividali. ",
"score": "1.3395958"
},
{
"id": "26996532",
"title": "Alix E. Harrow",
"text": " Alix E. Harrow was born in 1989 in the United States and grew up in Kentucky. She enrolled at Berea College at age sixteen, where she completed a bachelor's degree in history in three years. She then went on to earn a master's degree in history from the University of Vermont. Harrow lives in Virginia with her husband, Nick Stiner, and two children. Her first novel, The Ten Thousand Doors of January, was critically received and nominated for multiple awards, including the Hugo Award, Nebula Award, and World Fantasy Award for best novel. Harrow has also written short fiction for Shimmer, Strange Horizons, Tor.com, and Apex. Before working as a full-time writer, Harrow was an academic historian who taught as an adjunct professor of African and African American history at Eastern Kentucky University.",
"score": "1.3366516"
},
{
"id": "5990987",
"title": "Christian mythology",
"text": " According to David Leeming, writing in The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, the harrowing of hell is an example of the motif of the hero's descent to the underworld, which is common in many mythologies. According to Christian tradition, Christ descended to hell after his death in order to free the souls there; this event is known as the Harrowing of Hell. This story is narrated in the Gospel of Nicodemus and may be the meaning behind 1 Peter 3:18-22.",
"score": "1.3297077"
}
] | [
"The Harrowing (novel)\n The Harrowing is a horror novel by Alexandra Sokoloff. It was first published in 2006 by St. Martin's Press, and is the author's debut book, following a screenwriting career. According to Sokoloff's website, she was inspired to write the novel because of her experiences teaching to troubled teenagers in the Los Angeles County prison system. The Harrowing was nominated for the Bram Stoker Award for Best First Novel. The story follows a group of five troubled teenagers, all college students, who decide to stay behind in their creepy dorm rather than go to their dysfunctional homes for the Thanksgiving holiday. But after playing around with a Ouija board they realize that there is a presence lurking in the house with them.",
"The Harrow\n The Harrow has placed within the top 10 in the Preditors and Editors Best Fiction Magazines/E-Zines poll every year since 2003. Pieces first published in the magazine have received recognition in several other venues. First-place Harrow contest winner \"Harming Obsession\" by Bev Vincent received an honorable mention in The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror (16th Ed.); \"The Pickup\", a short story by Jim Schutte was a 2005 nominee for the Gaylactic Spectrum Award. M. Frost's poem, \"Removing the Bloodstain\", from the November 2006 issue was reprinted in the March 2007 newsletter from the Horror Writers Association. Well-known authors published in The Harrow include Gemma Files, Peter Crowther and Marlys Pearson. Editor Pagliassotti's fantasy novel, Clockwork Heart, was published by Juno Books in March 2008. Other authors published in The Harrow who also have novels or collections out include Brian Ames and Chris Howard.",
"The Harrowing of Gwynedd\n The Harrowing of Gwynedd is a historical fantasy novel by American-born author Katherine Kurtz. It was first published by Del Rey Books in 1989. It was the tenth of Kurtz' Deryni novels to be published, and the first book in her fourth Deryni trilogy, The Heirs of Saint Camber. Although the Heirs trilogy was the fourth Deryni series to be published, it is a direct sequel to the second trilogy, The Legends of Camber of Culdi.",
"Alexandra Sokoloff\n Her first novel, The Harrowing, was published by St. Martin's Press in 2006. Her second novel, The Price, was published by St. Martin's in 2007, her third, The Unseen, in 2009, her fourth, \"Book of Shadows\", in 2010. She is a Bram Stoker and Anthony award nominee and a Thriller award winner, and the co-author of the paranormal mystery romance series \"The Keepers\". Her short story \"The Edge of Seventeen\" was the recipient of a 2009 International Thriller Writers Award. She also co-wrote the screenplay for the psychological thriller Cold Kisses, and two books on story structure, \"Story Structure\" and \"Writing Love\", based on her Screenwriting Tricks for Authors workshops and blog. She lives in Los Angeles and in Scotland, with her husband, the Scottish crime author Craig Robertson.",
"Dru Pagliassotti\n Iron Wind in March 2014, and Heavy Fire in September 2014. Since 1998 Pagliassotti has been the editor in chief and publisher of The Harrow and owner of The Harrow Press. The Harrow was a peer reviewed online literary magazine designed to support new writers as they develop their careers. The magazine published two anthologies of horror fiction. Pagliassotti is also a professor in the communication department of California Lutheran University, where xe researches yaoi or \"boys' love\" fiction (manga, anime, visual novels and dōjinshi) from Japan. In 2009, Pagliassotti was named one of the Year's Best Fantasy writers, qualifying her story \"Bookmarked\" to be published in the 21st edition of The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror.",
"The Harrow\n In 2006, The Harrow produced Fear of the Unknown, published by Echelon Press, with an introduction by Chelsea Quinn Yarbro and including stories by Poppy Z Brite, Owl Goingback and Jack Ketchum. In 2007, it followed up with Midnight Lullabies, published by The Harrow Press, with an introduction by Tim Wynne-Jones.",
"Flynn Berry\n In 2016, Berry published Under the Harrow, a mystery novel about a woman's murder in a sleepy English town and the effects of the murder upon her sister. The book received universally positive reviews. It also won the 2017 Edgar Award for Best First Novel. In 2018, Berry published A Double Life based on the murder of Sandra Rivett and the subsequent disappearance of Lord Lucan. In 2021, Berry published Northern Spy.",
"The Harrowing of Gwynedd\n The novel is set in the land of Gwynedd, one of the fictional Eleven Kingdoms. Gwynedd itself is a medieval kingdom similar to the British Isles of the 10th century, with a powerful Holy Church (based on the Roman Catholic Church), and a feudal government ruled by a hereditary monarchy. The population of Gwynedd includes both humans and Deryni, a race of people with inherent psychic and magical abilities who are being systematically persecuted by both the Crown and the Church. The novel begins two days after the conclusion of Camber the Heretic, as the Regents of young King Alroy Haldane continue their bloody suppression of Deryni throughout the realm. As the Deryni struggle to survive, the remaining members of the MacRorie family investigate the strange circumstances of their patriarch's apparent death.",
"Douglas Clegg\n Leisure Books, and Wildside Press. Under the pseudonym Andrew Harper, the novels Red Angel and Night Cage also were released. Clegg's Harrow series includes Nightmare House (1999), Mischief (2000), The Infinite (2001) and The Abandoned (2005), as well as the prequel novellas The Necromancer (2003) and Isis (2006). The Vampyricon trilogy, a dark fantasy series about vampirism and mythology set in an alternate medieval history, includes The Priest of Blood (2005), The Lady of Serpents (2006) and The Queen of Wolves (2007). The Priest of Blood hit the extended New York Times bestseller list in hardcover in late 2005. In 2006 Clegg ",
"The Harrowing of Gwynedd\n1989, USA, Del Rey Books ISBN: 0-345-33259-8, Hardcover (first edition) ; 1989, USA, Del Rey Books ISBN: 0-345-36314-0, Paperback ; 1989, UK, Century Publishing ISBN: 0-7126-3495-9, Pub date 14 December 1989, Hardcover ; 1989, UK, Legend Books ISBN: 0-7126-3500-9, Pub date 14 December 1989, Paperback ; 1991, UK, Legend Books ISBN: 0-09-971070-6, Pub date 3 January 1991, Paperback ",
"The Harrow\n The Harrow was an online magazine for fantasy and horror fiction, poetry, and reviews, launched in January 1998 by founder and editor-in-chief Dru Pagliassotti. The magazine has an all-volunteer editorial staff and reviewer pool and uses a double blind review system that provides authors with individualized feedback on their submissions. In 2008, The Harrow was published on the first of each month using Open Journal Systems software. From 2009, The Harrow staff are taking a break and the journal is not in production at the moment.",
"Harrowing of Hell (drama)\n The Harrowing of Hell is an eighth-century Latin work in fifty-five lines found in the Anglo-Saxon Book of Cerne (folios 98v–99v). It is probably a Northumbrian work, written in prose and verse, where the former serves either as a set of stage directions for a dramatic portrayal or as a series of narrations for explaining the poetry. Three voices appear in the work: those of Adam, Eve, and a narrator. The prose of the \"narrator\" appears in the Book of Cerne in red ink setting it off from the rest of the text. The prose portions are rhythmic and may therefore have been sung, even if they were primarily directorial. Besides the three main soloists, the work was designed for a full choir (antiqui iusti). The work may be either an early oratorio or the earliest surviving work of ",
"Alma Katsu\n The Taker was named one of the ten best debut novels of 2011 by Booklist magazine, the publication of the American Library Association. The second novel, The Reckoning, was nominated for several year-end awards including Goodreads Readers Choice Award for best paranormal fantasy and RT Book Reviews Reviewers Choice Award for best paranormal romance. The Deep was a finalist for the Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Novel, and a finalist for the Locus Award for Best Horror Novel.",
"Alix E. Harrow\n Alix E. Harrow (born November 9, 1989) is a Hugo Award-winning American science fiction and fantasy writer. Her short fiction has been nominated for the Nebula Award, World Fantasy Award, and Locus Award, and in 2019 she won a Hugo Award for her story \"A Witch's Guide to Escape: A Practical Compendium of Portal Fantasies\". She has published under the name Alix Heintzman.",
"Harrowing of Hell\nThe harrowing is mentioned in the eponymous episode of the British dark comedy anthology series Inside No. 9. ",
"In Certain Circles\n The novel received positive reviews upon publication. The Guardian called the work \"subtle yet wounding, and very much alive\", praising it as \"a graceful reply to the questions of what really shapes us, and what might actually constitute a wasted life.\" The Wall Street Journal called the novel \"a treasure from an unearthed time capsule\" and praised Harrower as \"one of the great Australian writers of the postwar era.\" In 2015 it won the Voss Literary Prize for best novel published in 2014.",
"Elizabeth Harrower (writer)\n Harrower published her first three novels in quick succession, beginning with Down in the City in 1957. Novelist Christina Stead was a champion of her work, praising The Long Prospect in particular. In 1971 her fifth novel In Certain Circles was set to be published until she abruptly withdrew it from publication following the death of her mother. In an interview with The Australian, Harrower claimed that she had written the book under pressure after receiving a grant and called the act of writing it \"forced labour\". Afterwards she published a few short stories before giving her writing up entirely by 1977. In 2012, following a period of obscurity during which all of her novels fell out of print, Harrower experienced a small revival when Michael Heyward and Penny Hueston, editors of the independent press Text Publishing, began to reprint her works. They attempted to persuade Harrower to publish In Certain Circles and she eventually acquiesced, allowing the novel to be published in 2014. The novel received positive reviews and renewed interest in all of Harrower's novels. In 2015, a collection of stories from throughout Harrower's career was published as A Few Days in the Country: And Other Stories.",
"Harrowing of Hell\nThe Harrowing of Hell is the subject of several baroque oratorios, and notably of Salieri's Gesù al Limbo (1803) to a text by Luigi Prividali. ",
"Alix E. Harrow\n Alix E. Harrow was born in 1989 in the United States and grew up in Kentucky. She enrolled at Berea College at age sixteen, where she completed a bachelor's degree in history in three years. She then went on to earn a master's degree in history from the University of Vermont. Harrow lives in Virginia with her husband, Nick Stiner, and two children. Her first novel, The Ten Thousand Doors of January, was critically received and nominated for multiple awards, including the Hugo Award, Nebula Award, and World Fantasy Award for best novel. Harrow has also written short fiction for Shimmer, Strange Horizons, Tor.com, and Apex. Before working as a full-time writer, Harrow was an academic historian who taught as an adjunct professor of African and African American history at Eastern Kentucky University.",
"Christian mythology\n According to David Leeming, writing in The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, the harrowing of hell is an example of the motif of the hero's descent to the underworld, which is common in many mythologies. According to Christian tradition, Christ descended to hell after his death in order to free the souls there; this event is known as the Harrowing of Hell. This story is narrated in the Gospel of Nicodemus and may be the meaning behind 1 Peter 3:18-22."
] |
What genre is Info? | [
"industrial rock"
] | genre | Info (band) | 4,560,056 | 98 | [
{
"id": "29796568",
"title": ".info (magazine)",
"text": " .info (originally INFO=64) was a computer magazine covering Commodore 8-bit computers and later the Amiga. It was published from 1983 to 1992.",
"score": "1.6687238"
},
{
"id": "15278486",
"title": "Infobase Publishing",
"text": " Infobase Publishing is an American publisher of reference book titles and textbooks geared towards the North American library, secondary school, and university-level curriculum markets. Infobase operates a number of prominent imprints, including Facts On File, Films for the Humanities & Sciences, Cambridge Educational, Chelsea House (which also serves as the imprint for the special collection series, \"Bloom's Literary Criticism\" under the direction of literary critic Harold Bloom), and Ferguson Publishing.",
"score": "1.6561519"
},
{
"id": "11308803",
"title": "Info Wars (film)",
"text": " Info Wars (styled as info wars) is a 2004 film about the mechanics of modern information warfare and media hacking. It shows some of the ways special interests manipulate modern mass media to reach their ends. The film is named after InfoWars, launched in 1999.",
"score": "1.6064489"
},
{
"id": "15278488",
"title": "Infobase Publishing",
"text": "Facts On File ; Films for the Humanities & Sciences ; Cambridge Educational ; Chelsea House Publishing ; Bloom's Literary Criticism ; World Almanac ; Ferguson Publishing ",
"score": "1.5641184"
},
{
"id": "26744489",
"title": "Info-Cult",
"text": " Info-Cult, also known as Info-Secte, is a non-profit group that offers information to the Canadian public about religious cults and related topics. From its office in Montreal, it also provides support to people who were victimized as members of a sect. The group was founded by Mike Kropveld, who is still its Executive Director. In 1977, Kropveld was involved with journalist Josh Freed and others in rescuing a friend who got involved with Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. Freed wrote a series of six news reports for the Montreal Star about the intervention, then a book (Moonwebs: Journey into the Mind of a Cult). Director Ralph L. Thomas subsequently made the story into the award-winning film Ticket to Heaven. Faced with the large number of ",
"score": "1.5324587"
},
{
"id": "27669371",
"title": "Information Libre",
"text": " Information Libre is an album by punk band Sham 69, released in 1991.",
"score": "1.523848"
},
{
"id": "30129658",
"title": "Infoganda",
"text": " Infoganda is a term describing dramatic or literary work that contains both elements of an infomercial and propaganda. The term has been sporadically used in both the popular media and in blogs since 2001.",
"score": "1.497978"
},
{
"id": "29796570",
"title": ".info (magazine)",
"text": " home computers and 35mm cameras, that were inexpensively available to the general public. Early issues were typeset using a Commodore 64 and a dot-matrix printer, giving the magazine a distinctive hand-crafted appearance. The magazine soon switched to a more professional appearance using laser printers with Springboard Software's The Newsroom or Berkeley Softworks' GEOS geoPublish software for 8-bit Commodores, before changing its editorial focus and publishing platform to the Amiga, and changing its name to .info, which was coincidentally the file extension of Amiga icon files. The Computer Press Association named .info as one of two 'Runners-Up' in the category of Best Computer Magazine - Circulation Less Than 50,000 at its seventh annual awards ceremony in ",
"score": "1.4944994"
},
{
"id": "12905329",
"title": "Info.com",
"text": " Info is a metasearch engine, which as of 2013, provided results from search engines Google, Yahoo!, Ask, Bing, Yandex, and Open Directory. As of 2004, news search was powered by Topix.net, Info.com's shopping database was powered by Shopping.com, and Info.com had White Page and Yellow Page search. As of 2013, Info.com also had search plugins for Google Chrome, Internet Explorer and Firefox.",
"score": "1.4792821"
},
{
"id": "7062150",
"title": "The INFO Project",
"text": " The INFO (Information and Knowledge for Optimal Health) Project is housed at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Communication Programs (JHU∙CCP) and is funded by the United States Agency for International Development.",
"score": "1.4697003"
},
{
"id": "7757828",
"title": "The Age of Information",
"text": " The Age of Information (formerly known as Trading Yesterday) was an American alternative rock band originally formed in 2002 by David Hodges and Mark Colbert, and later joined by Steven McMorran. In 2004, The Age of Information released a demo CD titled The Beauty and the Tragedy, and after signing with Epic Records later that year, they released their first single, \"One Day\", in the summer of 2005, along with an announcement for the upcoming album \"More Than This\". After a premature end to their contract with Epic Records, the album \"More Than This\" was shelved until 2011, when it was finally released independently by David Hodges' Sleepwalker Records.",
"score": "1.4692891"
},
{
"id": "3337292",
"title": "Info-Mac",
"text": " Info-Mac is an online community, news aggregator and shareware file hosting service covering Apple Inc. products, including the iPhone, iPod and especially the Macintosh. Established in 1984 as an electronic mailing list, Info-Mac is notable as being the first online community for Apple's then-new Macintosh computer. Info-Mac was the dominant Internet resource for Mac OS software and community-based support throughout the 1980s and early 1990s.",
"score": "1.4666758"
},
{
"id": "15278487",
"title": "Infobase Publishing",
"text": " The private equity firm Veronis Suhler Stevenson bought Facts on File and Chelsea House in 2005. Infobase bought Films for the Humanities & Sciences in 2007 and the World Almanac in 2009. In 2017, Infobase acquired The Mailbox lesson plans and Learning magazine. Veronis Suhler Stevenson sold Infobase to another private equity firm, Centre Lane Partners, in 2018. As well as nonfiction works in print, Infobase and its imprints publish a selection of works in digital, audio-visual and online database formats. Facts On File has been publishing books since 1941. It was owned by CCH from 1965 to 1993. The publisher publishes general reference and trade books. Facts On File acquired Ferguson Publishing, which specializes in career education works, in 2003. Chelsea House was founded in 1966. It is known for multi-volume reference works.",
"score": "1.4651728"
},
{
"id": "27906873",
"title": "France Info (radio network)",
"text": " France Info is a radio network operated by the French public service radio broadcaster Radio France. It provides continuous live news and information. Broadcasting on FM (as well as being streamed on the internet), France Info is receivable across France and audible too in the border regions of neighbouring countries, including southern parts of the United Kingdom, especially the southeastern coastal region of England.",
"score": "1.4607302"
},
{
"id": "6123382",
"title": "Internet genre",
"text": " Personal homepages are regularly updated, allows people to connect with those that they know through leaving messages and joining buddylists.",
"score": "1.4505126"
},
{
"id": "3337293",
"title": "Info-Mac",
"text": " Info-Mac consisted of two distinct services: the Info-Mac Archive, a user-submitted collection of nearly all contemporary freeware and shareware available for the Macintosh, and the Info-Mac Digest, an electronic mailing list open to public participation. Both the Info-Mac Archive and Info-Mac Digest were operated by volunteers.",
"score": "1.4491813"
},
{
"id": "5022553",
"title": "InfoChammel",
"text": " Infostories (short films where the viewer determines their own plot), and EROS Video Restaurant (a late-night \"food porn\" show). Creator Davy Force has said that the intent behind InfoChammel's non-engaging content was that \"if we’re just going to have 500 channels of nothing, then here’s nothing, here’s what nothing looks like.\" InfoChammel's \"Info Live Now\" streams are broadcast on Twitch every Thursday evening, and consist of Davy Force hosting a show where he interacts with his audience. Fans can also submit content in the form of their own text screens, or their own InfoChammel text shows. InfoChammel has a sister station titled \"Primo Primetime ",
"score": "1.4373319"
},
{
"id": "26779456",
"title": "Information Age (album)",
"text": " Information Age is the third studio album by hip-hop duo dead prez. It was released on October 16, 2012 digitally and January 29, 2013 physically.",
"score": "1.4348518"
},
{
"id": "5022550",
"title": "InfoChammel",
"text": " Infochammel originally started as a webseries of videos on Youtube parodying advertorial datacast networks, early cable television, and teletext services reminiscent of Ceefax (UK) and ExtraVision (US). The series is created by Davy Force, an animator who has worked previously for Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! and as long-running electronic musician \"TV Sheriff\". The fictional in-universe history of Infochammel is that it was first created in the 1980s by inventor Fred Furner, but after minimal success it was purchased by Davy Force in 2012 for \"16.7 million colors\" The first InfoChammel video was released on Youtube in 2012 as a \"test signal\" programme being ",
"score": "1.4312177"
},
{
"id": "32373040",
"title": "Infomaniac",
"text": " On April 27, 2009, Infomaniac was announced for release in July. The album was originally set to be released through their own record label, The Bevonshire Label, on July 21, but later delayed until August 4.",
"score": "1.4268494"
}
] | [
".info (magazine)\n .info (originally INFO=64) was a computer magazine covering Commodore 8-bit computers and later the Amiga. It was published from 1983 to 1992.",
"Infobase Publishing\n Infobase Publishing is an American publisher of reference book titles and textbooks geared towards the North American library, secondary school, and university-level curriculum markets. Infobase operates a number of prominent imprints, including Facts On File, Films for the Humanities & Sciences, Cambridge Educational, Chelsea House (which also serves as the imprint for the special collection series, \"Bloom's Literary Criticism\" under the direction of literary critic Harold Bloom), and Ferguson Publishing.",
"Info Wars (film)\n Info Wars (styled as info wars) is a 2004 film about the mechanics of modern information warfare and media hacking. It shows some of the ways special interests manipulate modern mass media to reach their ends. The film is named after InfoWars, launched in 1999.",
"Infobase Publishing\nFacts On File ; Films for the Humanities & Sciences ; Cambridge Educational ; Chelsea House Publishing ; Bloom's Literary Criticism ; World Almanac ; Ferguson Publishing ",
"Info-Cult\n Info-Cult, also known as Info-Secte, is a non-profit group that offers information to the Canadian public about religious cults and related topics. From its office in Montreal, it also provides support to people who were victimized as members of a sect. The group was founded by Mike Kropveld, who is still its Executive Director. In 1977, Kropveld was involved with journalist Josh Freed and others in rescuing a friend who got involved with Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. Freed wrote a series of six news reports for the Montreal Star about the intervention, then a book (Moonwebs: Journey into the Mind of a Cult). Director Ralph L. Thomas subsequently made the story into the award-winning film Ticket to Heaven. Faced with the large number of ",
"Information Libre\n Information Libre is an album by punk band Sham 69, released in 1991.",
"Infoganda\n Infoganda is a term describing dramatic or literary work that contains both elements of an infomercial and propaganda. The term has been sporadically used in both the popular media and in blogs since 2001.",
".info (magazine)\n home computers and 35mm cameras, that were inexpensively available to the general public. Early issues were typeset using a Commodore 64 and a dot-matrix printer, giving the magazine a distinctive hand-crafted appearance. The magazine soon switched to a more professional appearance using laser printers with Springboard Software's The Newsroom or Berkeley Softworks' GEOS geoPublish software for 8-bit Commodores, before changing its editorial focus and publishing platform to the Amiga, and changing its name to .info, which was coincidentally the file extension of Amiga icon files. The Computer Press Association named .info as one of two 'Runners-Up' in the category of Best Computer Magazine - Circulation Less Than 50,000 at its seventh annual awards ceremony in ",
"Info.com\n Info is a metasearch engine, which as of 2013, provided results from search engines Google, Yahoo!, Ask, Bing, Yandex, and Open Directory. As of 2004, news search was powered by Topix.net, Info.com's shopping database was powered by Shopping.com, and Info.com had White Page and Yellow Page search. As of 2013, Info.com also had search plugins for Google Chrome, Internet Explorer and Firefox.",
"The INFO Project\n The INFO (Information and Knowledge for Optimal Health) Project is housed at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Communication Programs (JHU∙CCP) and is funded by the United States Agency for International Development.",
"The Age of Information\n The Age of Information (formerly known as Trading Yesterday) was an American alternative rock band originally formed in 2002 by David Hodges and Mark Colbert, and later joined by Steven McMorran. In 2004, The Age of Information released a demo CD titled The Beauty and the Tragedy, and after signing with Epic Records later that year, they released their first single, \"One Day\", in the summer of 2005, along with an announcement for the upcoming album \"More Than This\". After a premature end to their contract with Epic Records, the album \"More Than This\" was shelved until 2011, when it was finally released independently by David Hodges' Sleepwalker Records.",
"Info-Mac\n Info-Mac is an online community, news aggregator and shareware file hosting service covering Apple Inc. products, including the iPhone, iPod and especially the Macintosh. Established in 1984 as an electronic mailing list, Info-Mac is notable as being the first online community for Apple's then-new Macintosh computer. Info-Mac was the dominant Internet resource for Mac OS software and community-based support throughout the 1980s and early 1990s.",
"Infobase Publishing\n The private equity firm Veronis Suhler Stevenson bought Facts on File and Chelsea House in 2005. Infobase bought Films for the Humanities & Sciences in 2007 and the World Almanac in 2009. In 2017, Infobase acquired The Mailbox lesson plans and Learning magazine. Veronis Suhler Stevenson sold Infobase to another private equity firm, Centre Lane Partners, in 2018. As well as nonfiction works in print, Infobase and its imprints publish a selection of works in digital, audio-visual and online database formats. Facts On File has been publishing books since 1941. It was owned by CCH from 1965 to 1993. The publisher publishes general reference and trade books. Facts On File acquired Ferguson Publishing, which specializes in career education works, in 2003. Chelsea House was founded in 1966. It is known for multi-volume reference works.",
"France Info (radio network)\n France Info is a radio network operated by the French public service radio broadcaster Radio France. It provides continuous live news and information. Broadcasting on FM (as well as being streamed on the internet), France Info is receivable across France and audible too in the border regions of neighbouring countries, including southern parts of the United Kingdom, especially the southeastern coastal region of England.",
"Internet genre\n Personal homepages are regularly updated, allows people to connect with those that they know through leaving messages and joining buddylists.",
"Info-Mac\n Info-Mac consisted of two distinct services: the Info-Mac Archive, a user-submitted collection of nearly all contemporary freeware and shareware available for the Macintosh, and the Info-Mac Digest, an electronic mailing list open to public participation. Both the Info-Mac Archive and Info-Mac Digest were operated by volunteers.",
"InfoChammel\n Infostories (short films where the viewer determines their own plot), and EROS Video Restaurant (a late-night \"food porn\" show). Creator Davy Force has said that the intent behind InfoChammel's non-engaging content was that \"if we’re just going to have 500 channels of nothing, then here’s nothing, here’s what nothing looks like.\" InfoChammel's \"Info Live Now\" streams are broadcast on Twitch every Thursday evening, and consist of Davy Force hosting a show where he interacts with his audience. Fans can also submit content in the form of their own text screens, or their own InfoChammel text shows. InfoChammel has a sister station titled \"Primo Primetime ",
"Information Age (album)\n Information Age is the third studio album by hip-hop duo dead prez. It was released on October 16, 2012 digitally and January 29, 2013 physically.",
"InfoChammel\n Infochammel originally started as a webseries of videos on Youtube parodying advertorial datacast networks, early cable television, and teletext services reminiscent of Ceefax (UK) and ExtraVision (US). The series is created by Davy Force, an animator who has worked previously for Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! and as long-running electronic musician \"TV Sheriff\". The fictional in-universe history of Infochammel is that it was first created in the 1980s by inventor Fred Furner, but after minimal success it was purchased by Davy Force in 2012 for \"16.7 million colors\" The first InfoChammel video was released on Youtube in 2012 as a \"test signal\" programme being ",
"Infomaniac\n On April 27, 2009, Infomaniac was announced for release in July. The album was originally set to be released through their own record label, The Bevonshire Label, on July 21, but later delayed until August 4."
] |
In what country is Jeqjeq-e Pain? | [
"Iran",
"Islamic Republic of Iran",
"Persia",
"ir",
"Islamic Rep. Iran",
"🇮🇷"
] | country | Jeqjeq-e Pain | 4,664,979 | 27 | [
{
"id": "4701848",
"title": "Qeshlaq-e Pain",
"text": " Qeshlaq-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā'īn and Qeshlāq Pā’īn; also known as Kishlaa-Ashagi, Qeshlāq Ashāqī, Qeshlāq Soflá, and Qishlāq Ashāghi) is a village in Mavazekhan-e Shomali Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 132, in 32 families.",
"score": "1.4924064"
},
{
"id": "28721716",
"title": "Nehjaz-e Pain",
"text": " Nehjaz-e Pain (, also Romanized as Nehjaz-e Pā’īn) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 4 families.",
"score": "1.4408407"
},
{
"id": "14908610",
"title": "Qik-e Pain",
"text": " Qik-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qīḵ-e Pā’īn , Qehk-e Pā’īn, Qahak-e Pā’īn, and Qehak Pā’īn; also known as Qīḵ-e Soflá) is a village in Darmian Rural District, in the Central District of Darmian County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 164, in 46 families.",
"score": "1.4024088"
},
{
"id": "47442",
"title": "Pirjad-e Pain",
"text": " Pirjad-e Pain (, also Romanized as Pīrjad-e Pā’īn; also known as Pīrjed, Pīrjerd, and Pīr Jad) is a village in Koregah-e Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 107, in 24 families.",
"score": "1.3970705"
},
{
"id": "15652797",
"title": "Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey",
"text": " Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāleh Pey; also known as Anjelibei, Pā’īn Aḩmad, Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāl Pey, and Pā’īn Chāl) is a village in Lalehabad Rural District, Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,684, in 445 families.",
"score": "1.3854297"
},
{
"id": "31294172",
"title": "Qebleh Ei Pain",
"text": " Qebleh Ei Pain (, also Romanized as Qebleh Eī Pā’īn, Qebleh’ī-ye Pā’īn, and Qeblehī-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Jahangiri Rural District, in the Central District of Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 93, in 13 families.",
"score": "1.3829769"
},
{
"id": "15652945",
"title": "Pain Ganj Afruz",
"text": " Pain Ganj Afruz (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Ganj Afrūz) is a village in Ganjafruz Rural District, in the Central District of Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,821, in 1,380 families.",
"score": "1.3738306"
},
{
"id": "15652551",
"title": "Pain Marzbal",
"text": " Pain Marzbal (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Marzbāl) is a village in Gatab-e Jonubi Rural District, Gatab District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,110, in 246 families.",
"score": "1.3723367"
},
{
"id": "30084695",
"title": "Jazimaq",
"text": " Jazimaq (, also Romanized as Jazīmaq; also known as Jazīman (Persian: جزيمن), Gizmeh, Kharīmaq, and Kiz’ma) is a village in Qareh Poshtelu-e Pain Rural District, Qareh Poshtelu District, Zanjan County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 250, in 51 families.",
"score": "1.3699472"
},
{
"id": "27484462",
"title": "Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar",
"text": " Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā’īn Ḩeşār; also known as Qeshlāq-e Āqāyī) is a village in Miankuh Rural District, Chapeshlu District, Dargaz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 20 families.",
"score": "1.3697841"
},
{
"id": "27874787",
"title": "Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain",
"text": " Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain (, also Romanized as ʿEīdī Mordeh-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Ahmadfedaleh Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 88, in 14 families.",
"score": "1.3684993"
},
{
"id": "30984740",
"title": "Hajj Qeshlaq",
"text": " Hajj Qeshlaq (, also Romanized as Ḩājj Qeshlāq; also known as Hāj, Ḩājī Qeshlāq, Ḩājjī Qeshlāq, and Hāz Qishlāq) is a village in Ijrud-e Pain Rural District, Halab District, Ijrud County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 166, in 35 families.",
"score": "1.3630117"
},
{
"id": "25631170",
"title": "Ezzat-e Pain",
"text": " Ezzat-e Pain (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzat-e Pā’īn; also known as Kalāteh-ye Cheshmeh Kabūd) is a village in Jazin Rural District, in the Central District of Bajestan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23, in 11 families.",
"score": "1.3613043"
},
{
"id": "131351",
"title": "Zeyarat-e Pain",
"text": " Zeyarat-e Pain (, also Romanized as Zeyārat-e Pā’īn) is a village in Jamabrud Rural District, in the Central District of Damavand County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 20, in 8 families.",
"score": "1.3549898"
},
{
"id": "12204490",
"title": "Sar Asiab-e Pain, Fars",
"text": " Sar Asiab-e Pain (, also Romanized as Sar Āsīāb-e Pā’īn; also known as Sar Āsīāb-e Soflá) is a village in Javid-e Mahuri Rural District, in the Central District of Mamasani County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 6 families.",
"score": "1.351156"
},
{
"id": "4701457",
"title": "Jiqeh",
"text": " Jiqeh (, also Romanized as Jīqeh; also known as Dzhiga, Jegheh, Jeqeh, Jeqqeh, Jiga, and Jīgheh) is a village in Bedevostan-e Gharbi Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,156, in 244 families.",
"score": "1.3485146"
},
{
"id": "29120104",
"title": "Jam-Abad",
"text": " Jeam Abad is a town near Mashad in the east of Iran near its border with Afghanistan.",
"score": "1.3440671"
},
{
"id": "27305378",
"title": "Jow-e Pain",
"text": " Jow-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jow-e Pā’īn, Jowpā’īn, and Jūpa’īn) is a village in Bizaki Rural District, Golbajar District, Chenaran County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 30 families.",
"score": "1.3419757"
},
{
"id": "11023138",
"title": "Jaghdar-e Pain",
"text": " Jaghdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jaghdar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Siyahu Rural District, Fin District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 19 families.",
"score": "1.3393092"
},
{
"id": "28721912",
"title": "Pain Jovin Rural District",
"text": " Pain Jovin Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Helali District, Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12,536, in 3,051 families. The rural district includes 16 villages.",
"score": "1.3350961"
}
] | [
"Qeshlaq-e Pain\n Qeshlaq-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā'īn and Qeshlāq Pā’īn; also known as Kishlaa-Ashagi, Qeshlāq Ashāqī, Qeshlāq Soflá, and Qishlāq Ashāghi) is a village in Mavazekhan-e Shomali Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 132, in 32 families.",
"Nehjaz-e Pain\n Nehjaz-e Pain (, also Romanized as Nehjaz-e Pā’īn) is a village in Kakhk Rural District, Kakhk District, Gonabad County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 11, in 4 families.",
"Qik-e Pain\n Qik-e Pain (, also Romanized as Qīḵ-e Pā’īn , Qehk-e Pā’īn, Qahak-e Pā’īn, and Qehak Pā’īn; also known as Qīḵ-e Soflá) is a village in Darmian Rural District, in the Central District of Darmian County, South Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 164, in 46 families.",
"Pirjad-e Pain\n Pirjad-e Pain (, also Romanized as Pīrjad-e Pā’īn; also known as Pīrjed, Pīrjerd, and Pīr Jad) is a village in Koregah-e Sharqi Rural District, in the Central District of Khorramabad County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 107, in 24 families.",
"Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey\n Pain Ahmad Chaleh Pey (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāleh Pey; also known as Anjelibei, Pā’īn Aḩmad, Pā’īn Aḩmad Chāl Pey, and Pā’īn Chāl) is a village in Lalehabad Rural District, Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,684, in 445 families.",
"Qebleh Ei Pain\n Qebleh Ei Pain (, also Romanized as Qebleh Eī Pā’īn, Qebleh’ī-ye Pā’īn, and Qeblehī-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Jahangiri Rural District, in the Central District of Masjed Soleyman County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 93, in 13 families.",
"Pain Ganj Afruz\n Pain Ganj Afruz (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Ganj Afrūz) is a village in Ganjafruz Rural District, in the Central District of Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 4,821, in 1,380 families.",
"Pain Marzbal\n Pain Marzbal (, also Romanized as Pā’īn Marzbāl) is a village in Gatab-e Jonubi Rural District, Gatab District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,110, in 246 families.",
"Jazimaq\n Jazimaq (, also Romanized as Jazīmaq; also known as Jazīman (Persian: جزيمن), Gizmeh, Kharīmaq, and Kiz’ma) is a village in Qareh Poshtelu-e Pain Rural District, Qareh Poshtelu District, Zanjan County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 250, in 51 families.",
"Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar\n Qeshlaq-e Pain Hesar (, also Romanized as Qeshlāq-e Pā’īn Ḩeşār; also known as Qeshlāq-e Āqāyī) is a village in Miankuh Rural District, Chapeshlu District, Dargaz County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 95, in 20 families.",
"Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain\n Eidi Mordeh-ye Pain (, also Romanized as ʿEīdī Mordeh-ye Pā’īn) is a village in Ahmadfedaleh Rural District, Sardasht District, Dezful County, Khuzestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 88, in 14 families.",
"Hajj Qeshlaq\n Hajj Qeshlaq (, also Romanized as Ḩājj Qeshlāq; also known as Hāj, Ḩājī Qeshlāq, Ḩājjī Qeshlāq, and Hāz Qishlāq) is a village in Ijrud-e Pain Rural District, Halab District, Ijrud County, Zanjan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 166, in 35 families.",
"Ezzat-e Pain\n Ezzat-e Pain (, also Romanized as ‘Ezzat-e Pā’īn; also known as Kalāteh-ye Cheshmeh Kabūd) is a village in Jazin Rural District, in the Central District of Bajestan County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 23, in 11 families.",
"Zeyarat-e Pain\n Zeyarat-e Pain (, also Romanized as Zeyārat-e Pā’īn) is a village in Jamabrud Rural District, in the Central District of Damavand County, Tehran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 20, in 8 families.",
"Sar Asiab-e Pain, Fars\n Sar Asiab-e Pain (, also Romanized as Sar Āsīāb-e Pā’īn; also known as Sar Āsīāb-e Soflá) is a village in Javid-e Mahuri Rural District, in the Central District of Mamasani County, Fars Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 25, in 6 families.",
"Jiqeh\n Jiqeh (, also Romanized as Jīqeh; also known as Dzhiga, Jegheh, Jeqeh, Jeqqeh, Jiga, and Jīgheh) is a village in Bedevostan-e Gharbi Rural District, Khvajeh District, Heris County, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 1,156, in 244 families.",
"Jam-Abad\n Jeam Abad is a town near Mashad in the east of Iran near its border with Afghanistan.",
"Jow-e Pain\n Jow-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jow-e Pā’īn, Jowpā’īn, and Jūpa’īn) is a village in Bizaki Rural District, Golbajar District, Chenaran County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 30 families.",
"Jaghdar-e Pain\n Jaghdar-e Pain (, also Romanized as Jaghdar-e Pā’īn) is a village in Siyahu Rural District, Fin District, Bandar Abbas County, Hormozgan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 62, in 19 families.",
"Pain Jovin Rural District\n Pain Jovin Rural District is a rural district (dehestan) in Helali District, Joghatai County, Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 12,536, in 3,051 families. The rural district includes 16 villages."
] |
In what country is Bitchū-Kawamo Station? | [
"Japan",
"State of Japan",
"Land of the Rising Sun",
"Nihon",
"Nippon",
"JP",
"Nippon-koku",
"Nihon-koku",
"JA",
"JPN",
"jp",
"JAP",
"Ja",
"Jap"
] | country | Bitchū-Kawamo Station | 2,759,830 | 33 | [
{
"id": "1358633",
"title": "Bitchū-Kawamo Station",
"text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Hakubi Line ",
"score": "2.1495361"
},
{
"id": "1358632",
"title": "Bitchū-Kawamo Station",
"text": " Bitchū-Kawamo Station (備中川面駅) is a train station in Takahashi, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"score": "2.1256022"
},
{
"id": "29579027",
"title": "Bitchū-Kurese Station",
"text": " Bitchū-Kurese Station (備中呉妹駅) is a train station in the city of Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"score": "1.8525195"
},
{
"id": "29560380",
"title": "Bitchū-Takamatsu Station",
"text": " Bitchū-Takamatsu Station (備中高松駅) is a train station in the city of Okayama, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"score": "1.8249321"
},
{
"id": "4759146",
"title": "Bitchū-Mishima Station",
"text": " Bitchū-Mishima Station (備中箕島駅) is a train station in Okayama, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"score": "1.8103123"
},
{
"id": "29560381",
"title": "Bitchū-Takamatsu Station",
"text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Kibi Line ",
"score": "1.7996335"
},
{
"id": "28593590",
"title": "Bitchū, Okayama",
"text": " Bitchū (備中町) was a town located in Kawakami District, Okayama Prefecture, Japan. As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 2,893 and a density of 28.21 persons per km2. The total area was 102.56 km2. On October 1, 2004, Bitchū, along with the town of Ukan (from Jōbō District), and the towns of Kawakami and Nariwa (all from Kawakami District), was merged into the expanded city of Takahashi and no longer exists as an independent municipality.",
"score": "1.7553682"
},
{
"id": "29579028",
"title": "Bitchū-Kurese Station",
"text": "Ibara Railway ; Ibara Line ",
"score": "1.7179985"
},
{
"id": "11912065",
"title": "Hakubi Line",
"text": " southern section was gradually extended north, extending to Bitchū-Kawamo on 31 July 1927, with connection between the north and south sections being made on 25 October 1928, from which date the entire line was named the Hakubi Line. The Kiyone to Bitchu-Takahashi section was double-tracked between 1968 and 1973, with the Kurashiki to Kiyone and Niimi to Nunohara sections being double-tracked in 1979, and the Ishiga to Ikuta section double-tracked between 1982 and 1983 in conjunction with a realignment which shortened the route by 1.2 km. CTC signalling was commissioned on the entire line in 1972, and the Kurashiki to Hokidaisen section was electrified in 1982.",
"score": "1.7040973"
},
{
"id": "4759147",
"title": "Bitchū-Mishima Station",
"text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Uno Line ",
"score": "1.680486"
},
{
"id": "28593593",
"title": "Kawakami District, Okayama",
"text": "On October 1, 2004 - the towns of Bitchū, Kawakami and Nariwa, along with the town of Ukan (from Jōbō District), were merged into the expanded city of Takahashi. Kawakami District was dissolved as a result of this merger. ",
"score": "1.6773264"
},
{
"id": "29579029",
"title": "Bitchū-Kurese Station",
"text": " !colspan=5|Ibara Railway",
"score": "1.6144043"
},
{
"id": "28593592",
"title": "Kawakami District, Okayama",
"text": "Bitchū ; Kawakami ; Nariwa ",
"score": "1.5931454"
},
{
"id": "26573330",
"title": "Kawama Station",
"text": " Kawama Station (川間駅) is a railway station in the city of Noda, Chiba, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway. The station is numbered \"TD-13\".",
"score": "1.5693343"
},
{
"id": "16267584",
"title": "Kawahigashi Station (Saga)",
"text": " Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a train station located in Imari, Saga Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Nishi-Kyūshū Line which has been operated by the third-sector Matsuura Railway since 1988.",
"score": "1.5686536"
},
{
"id": "7520117",
"title": "Bitchū Province",
"text": " Bitchū Province (備中国) was a province of Japan on the Inland Sea side of western Honshū, in what is today western Okayama Prefecture. It was sometimes called Bishū (備州), with Bizen and Bingo Provinces; those three provinces were settled in the late 7th Century, dividing former Kibi Province. Bitchu bordered Hōki, Mimasaka, Bizen, and Bingo Provinces. The ancient capital and temples were built around Sōja. For much of the Muromachi Period, the province was dominated by the Hosokawa clan, who resided in Shikoku and allowed the province a degree of independence. By the Sengoku Period, other clans fought over Bitchu, and Oda Nobunaga and Mōri Terumoto were fighting in the province when Oda died, leading to a division of the province. After 1600, the province was divided among a variety of han (fiefs), and included a number of castles. By the time the provinces were reorganized into prefectures, the dominant city was the port, Kurashiki.",
"score": "1.5393538"
},
{
"id": "26564923",
"title": "Shimoasō Station",
"text": " Shimoasō Station (下麻生駅) is a railway station on the Takayama Main Line in the town of Kawabe, Kamo District, Gifu Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central).",
"score": "1.53578"
},
{
"id": "26573543",
"title": "Masuo Station (Chiba)",
"text": " {{nihongo|Masuo Station|増尾駅|Masuo-eki} is a passenger railway station in the city of Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway. The station is numbered \"TD-26\".",
"score": "1.5272735"
},
{
"id": "31734431",
"title": "Kawayu-Onsen Station",
"text": " Kawayu-Onsen Station (川湯温泉駅) is a railway station on the Senmō Main Line in Teshikaga, Hokkaido, Japan, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company.",
"score": "1.5251002"
},
{
"id": "29443135",
"title": "Shimo-Kawabe Station",
"text": "West Japan Railway Company ; Fukuen Line ",
"score": "1.5248988"
}
] | [
"Bitchū-Kawamo Station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Hakubi Line ",
"Bitchū-Kawamo Station\n Bitchū-Kawamo Station (備中川面駅) is a train station in Takahashi, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"Bitchū-Kurese Station\n Bitchū-Kurese Station (備中呉妹駅) is a train station in the city of Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"Bitchū-Takamatsu Station\n Bitchū-Takamatsu Station (備中高松駅) is a train station in the city of Okayama, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"Bitchū-Mishima Station\n Bitchū-Mishima Station (備中箕島駅) is a train station in Okayama, Okayama Prefecture, Japan.",
"Bitchū-Takamatsu Station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Kibi Line ",
"Bitchū, Okayama\n Bitchū (備中町) was a town located in Kawakami District, Okayama Prefecture, Japan. As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 2,893 and a density of 28.21 persons per km2. The total area was 102.56 km2. On October 1, 2004, Bitchū, along with the town of Ukan (from Jōbō District), and the towns of Kawakami and Nariwa (all from Kawakami District), was merged into the expanded city of Takahashi and no longer exists as an independent municipality.",
"Bitchū-Kurese Station\nIbara Railway ; Ibara Line ",
"Hakubi Line\n southern section was gradually extended north, extending to Bitchū-Kawamo on 31 July 1927, with connection between the north and south sections being made on 25 October 1928, from which date the entire line was named the Hakubi Line. The Kiyone to Bitchu-Takahashi section was double-tracked between 1968 and 1973, with the Kurashiki to Kiyone and Niimi to Nunohara sections being double-tracked in 1979, and the Ishiga to Ikuta section double-tracked between 1982 and 1983 in conjunction with a realignment which shortened the route by 1.2 km. CTC signalling was commissioned on the entire line in 1972, and the Kurashiki to Hokidaisen section was electrified in 1982.",
"Bitchū-Mishima Station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Uno Line ",
"Kawakami District, Okayama\nOn October 1, 2004 - the towns of Bitchū, Kawakami and Nariwa, along with the town of Ukan (from Jōbō District), were merged into the expanded city of Takahashi. Kawakami District was dissolved as a result of this merger. ",
"Bitchū-Kurese Station\n !colspan=5|Ibara Railway",
"Kawakami District, Okayama\nBitchū ; Kawakami ; Nariwa ",
"Kawama Station\n Kawama Station (川間駅) is a railway station in the city of Noda, Chiba, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway. The station is numbered \"TD-13\".",
"Kawahigashi Station (Saga)\n Kawahigashi Station (川東駅) is a train station located in Imari, Saga Prefecture, Japan. It is on the Nishi-Kyūshū Line which has been operated by the third-sector Matsuura Railway since 1988.",
"Bitchū Province\n Bitchū Province (備中国) was a province of Japan on the Inland Sea side of western Honshū, in what is today western Okayama Prefecture. It was sometimes called Bishū (備州), with Bizen and Bingo Provinces; those three provinces were settled in the late 7th Century, dividing former Kibi Province. Bitchu bordered Hōki, Mimasaka, Bizen, and Bingo Provinces. The ancient capital and temples were built around Sōja. For much of the Muromachi Period, the province was dominated by the Hosokawa clan, who resided in Shikoku and allowed the province a degree of independence. By the Sengoku Period, other clans fought over Bitchu, and Oda Nobunaga and Mōri Terumoto were fighting in the province when Oda died, leading to a division of the province. After 1600, the province was divided among a variety of han (fiefs), and included a number of castles. By the time the provinces were reorganized into prefectures, the dominant city was the port, Kurashiki.",
"Shimoasō Station\n Shimoasō Station (下麻生駅) is a railway station on the Takayama Main Line in the town of Kawabe, Kamo District, Gifu Prefecture, Japan, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central).",
"Masuo Station (Chiba)\n {{nihongo|Masuo Station|増尾駅|Masuo-eki} is a passenger railway station in the city of Kashiwa, Chiba, Japan, operated by the private railway operator Tōbu Railway. The station is numbered \"TD-26\".",
"Kawayu-Onsen Station\n Kawayu-Onsen Station (川湯温泉駅) is a railway station on the Senmō Main Line in Teshikaga, Hokkaido, Japan, operated by Hokkaido Railway Company.",
"Shimo-Kawabe Station\nWest Japan Railway Company ; Fukuen Line "
] |
What is Donald Robert Macgregor's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | Donald Robert Macgregor | 3,939,174 | 29 | [
{
"id": "10290904",
"title": "Donald Robert Macgregor",
"text": " Donald Robert Macgregor (1824 – 9 December 1889) was a Scottish politician. From 1874 to 1878 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Leith Burghs constituency, near Edinburgh.",
"score": "1.7403576"
},
{
"id": "27169499",
"title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)",
"text": " Madras College, St Andrews from 1974 until 1999, when he retired from full-time teaching. Until 2006 he taught French and German part-time in the Business School of the University of Abertay Dundee and was also a German-language tour guide. He published a book of poetry, Stars and Spikes (2004, Nutwood Press), following in the footsteps of his father Forbes, who was a more prolific author and published among many other books with a Scottish theme, including the best-selling Greyfriars Bobby – the True Story at Last. More recently Donald was involved in research for John Bryant's books 3:59.4 (2004 – Random House) and The Marathon Makers (2008 – John Blake Publishing) and in photo caption translations for German books about ",
"score": "1.737577"
},
{
"id": "27169498",
"title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)",
"text": " Donald Forbes Macgregor (23 July 1939 – 3 June 2020) was a Scottish long-distance runner, teacher and politician. He competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, representing Great Britain in the men's marathon event, in which he finished in seventh position in 2:16:34. He also competed for Scotland at the Commonwealth Games in 1970 in Edinburgh and 1974 in Christchurch, New Zealand. He had a personal best time of 2:14:15.4. Macgregor was born in Edinburgh, and studied at the University of St Andrews. He was chairman of the Royal Burgh of St Andrews Community Council until 2007, and served as a Liberal Democrat councillor on North East Fife District Council from 1988 to 1996. He was principal teacher of German ",
"score": "1.6614025"
},
{
"id": "10291061",
"title": "Donald MacGregor (Liberal MP)",
"text": " Donald MacGregor (1839 – 20 July 1911) was a Scottish Liberal Party politician. From 1892 to 1895 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Inverness-shire constituency. He is buried in London at St Mary Magdalen Roman Catholic Church Mortlake.",
"score": "1.62664"
},
{
"id": "28157863",
"title": "Douglas Macgregor",
"text": " Douglas Abbott Macgregor (born January 4, 1953, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a U.S. Army Colonel (retired), government official, author, consultant, and television commentator. On July 27, 2020, the White House announced that President Donald Trump intended to nominate Macgregor to serve as the United States Ambassador to Germany. On November 11, 2020, a Pentagon spokesperson announced that Macgregor had been hired to serve as Senior Advisor to the Acting Secretary of Defense.",
"score": "1.6154299"
},
{
"id": "27169500",
"title": "Donald Macgregor (athlete)",
"text": " 2006 World Cup and 2008 Olympic Games. He did this and other translation work for the Olympic historian Volker Kluge (Berlin/Brandenburg). In May 2007 he was elected to Fife Council as one of the ward members for East Neuk and Landward ward (Liberal Democrat) and forms part of the Fife Council coalition administration with the Scottish National Party. Following his running career, he coached distance athletes as a member of Fife Athletic Club. Macgregor and his former wife had three children. In 2010 he published an autobiography, Running My Life (Pinetree Press, St Andrews). In 2016, with co-author Tim Johnston, a fellow Olympian, he published His Own Man a biography of Dr Otto Peltzer, a German athlete (Pitch Publishers 2016).",
"score": "1.6097156"
},
{
"id": "2906833",
"title": "William Firth MacGregor",
"text": " William Firth MacGregor (1896–1958/73) was a painter, illustrator and artist who immigrated to Canada in 1925. MacGregor was a central witness in the Canadian Art Fraud case of 1962 to 1964, in which Toronto art dealer and owner of the Haynes Art Gallery in Toronto, Leslie W. Lewis and art dealer Neil Sharkey were convicted of fraud and sentenced to prison. More than 30 paintings, made by MacGregor, were admitted as evidence in the trial, all bearing fake signatures of Tom Thomson, A.Y. Jackson, J.E.H. MacDonald, James Wilson Morrice, David Milne or Arthur Lismer.",
"score": "1.5952308"
},
{
"id": "10184314",
"title": "James Drummond McGregor",
"text": " James Drummond McGregor (1 September 1838 – 4 March 1918) was a Canadian businessman, politician, and the tenth Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia. Born in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, the son of Roderick MacGregor and Janet Chisholm, both of Scottish descent, he was mayor of New Glasgow from 1879 to 1880. In 1867, MacGregor married Elizabeth McColl. He represented Pictou County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1890 to 1894 and from 1897 to 1900. MacGregor married Roberta Ridley in 1894. In 1900, he ran unsuccessfully for the House of Commons of Canada in the riding of Pictou. MacGregor was appointed to the Senate of Canada in 1903 representing the senatorial division of New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. A Liberal, he resigned in 1910 when he was appointed lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia. He served until 1915. MacGregor died in New Glasgow at the age of 79. His son Robert also represented Pictou County in the provincial assembly.",
"score": "1.5808573"
},
{
"id": "5140157",
"title": "Graeme MacGregor",
"text": " Graeme MacGregor (born 14 June 1993) is a Scottish footballer who plays primarily as a defender. MacGregor was with Bolton Wanderers as a youth and played for Scotland under-19. He was released by Bolton Wanderers in June 2012 and signed for St Mirren in September 2012. He then played for East Stirlingshire for two years, before signing for East Fife in July 2015.",
"score": "1.5381832"
},
{
"id": "25189349",
"title": "Craig MacGregor",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.5378897"
},
{
"id": "25189348",
"title": "Craig MacGregor",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.5378897"
},
{
"id": "3413531",
"title": "Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)",
"text": " MacGregor was born in 1869 to Donald MacGregor J.P. of Argyll in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was schooled at Uppingham before matriculating to Jesus College, Cambridge in October 1887. On leaving university he found work on the London Stock Exchange.",
"score": "1.5308349"
},
{
"id": "9824243",
"title": "Neil MacGregor",
"text": " Robert Neil MacGregor (born 16 June 1946) is a British art historian and former museum director. He was editor of the Burlington Magazine from 1981 to 1987, then Director of the National Gallery, London, from 1987 to 2002, Director of the British Museum from 2002 to 2015, and founding director of the Humboldt Forum in Berlin until 2018.",
"score": "1.5187702"
},
{
"id": "7263463",
"title": "Fulton MacGregor",
"text": " Fulton James MacGregor MSP (born 1980) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician who has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the constituency of Coatbridge and Chryston since 2016. He serves on the Justice and Education & Skills committees in the Scottish Parliament.",
"score": "1.5072315"
},
{
"id": "1321868",
"title": "MacGregor (surname)",
"text": "Alasdair Alpin MacGregor (1899–1970), writer and photographer ; Andrew MacGregor (1897–1983), World War I flying ace ; Brad MacGregor (born 1964), Canadian ice hockey player ; Byron MacGregor (1948–1995), Canadian news anchor ; Chummy MacGregor (1903–1973), jazz pianist and songwriter ; Clark MacGregor (1922–2003), U.S. politician ; Clifford J. MacGregor (1904–1985), American meteorologist and Arctic explorer ; David MacGregor (born 1983), Scottish musician ; Douglas Macgregor, military writer ; Elizabeth Ann Macgregor (born 1958), Scottish curator and art historian ; Gregor MacGregor (1869–1919), cricketer ; Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845), adventurer and confidence trickster ; Sir Ian Kinloch MacGregor (1912–1998), British industrialist ; Ian Macgregor (born 1937), accountant and charity finance guru ; James Mor MacGregor (1695–1754), the eldest son of Rob Roy and a major during the rising of '45 ; Joanna MacGregor (born 1959), classical pianist ; John MacGregor (disambiguation), multiple people ; Judith Macgregor (born 1952), ",
"score": "1.5019665"
},
{
"id": "1321869",
"title": "MacGregor (surname)",
"text": " diplomat ; Katherine MacGregor (1925–2018), television actress ; Mary MacGregor (born 1948), singer ; Neil MacGregor (born 1946), art historian and museum director ; Robert Roy MacGregor (\"Rob Roy\", 1671–1734), Scottish outlaw and folk hero ; Sara Macgregor (died 1919), British painter ; Sue MacGregor (born 1941), writer and broadcaster ; William MacGregor (1846–1919), British imperial administrator MacGregor, also spelt Macgregor, is a Scottish surname. The name is Anglicised form of the Scottish Gaelic MacGriogair. The Gaelic name was originally a patronym, and means \"son of Griogar\". The Gaelic personal name Griogar is a Gaelicised form of the name Gregory. The surname is used by members of the Scottish clan Clan Gregor, also known as Clan MacGregor. The surname was banned in Scotland several times prior to the 18th century, in an effort to clamp down on the unruly clan. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"score": "1.499053"
},
{
"id": "28157871",
"title": "Douglas Macgregor",
"text": " Macgregor is the vice president of Burke-Macgregor, LLC, a consulting firm based in Reston, Virginia, and he appears as a guest commentator on television and radio. Macgregor has been a regular guest on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News program since 2017. When John Bolton was removed from the White House in 2019, Macgregor was one of five finalists under consideration for selection as President Trump's National Security Advisor. In 2012, he challenged general James F. Amos' stance on the United States Marine Corps. Macgregor argued that the military capability and pertinence of the Marines, along with Army’s XVIII Airborne Corps, made them both \"as relevant as ",
"score": "1.4946625"
},
{
"id": "3413530",
"title": "Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)",
"text": " Gregor MacGregor (31 August 1869 – 20 August 1919) was a Scottish cricketer and rugby union player. He played rugby for Scotland and cricket for England.",
"score": "1.4934064"
},
{
"id": "27717523",
"title": "Ian Donald",
"text": " Later in 1952 Donald resigned his role at St Thomas's to take up a position as a reader at the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Royal Postgraduate Medical School located in Hammersmith Hospital. At the medical school Donald continued his research into neonatal breathing disorders. Donald worked to improve the Servo patient-cycled respirator as the device that Donald and Young had built. Later working with Josephine Lord, a registrar, Donald built a new piece of equipment called the Trip Spirometer later called the Spirometer whose purpose was to measure the respiratory efficiency of a neonate. As well as being a diagnostic device, Donald used the device to make a quantitative determination of normal respiration with the goal of determining the physiology and pathology of neonatal pulmonary disease.",
"score": "1.4881493"
},
{
"id": "4254771",
"title": "Alasdair Alpin MacGregor",
"text": " He was born at Applecross, Ross and Cromarty, on 20 March 1899, the son of Colonel John MacGregor M.D. of the Indian Medical Service. He was educated at Tain Academy. MacGregor was brought up in Tain and Inverness, and educated there and in Edinburgh. His books were mainly about Scotland, and his romanticising style incurred the displeasure of Compton Mackenzie, who caricatured him in some of his novels (perhaps unjustly so as MacGregor was forced to be critically realistic about certain aspects of life on the west coast, in his book The Western Isles). Judging by the title of the 1931 book ''A Last ",
"score": "1.4831431"
}
] | [
"Donald Robert Macgregor\n Donald Robert Macgregor (1824 – 9 December 1889) was a Scottish politician. From 1874 to 1878 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Leith Burghs constituency, near Edinburgh.",
"Donald Macgregor (athlete)\n Madras College, St Andrews from 1974 until 1999, when he retired from full-time teaching. Until 2006 he taught French and German part-time in the Business School of the University of Abertay Dundee and was also a German-language tour guide. He published a book of poetry, Stars and Spikes (2004, Nutwood Press), following in the footsteps of his father Forbes, who was a more prolific author and published among many other books with a Scottish theme, including the best-selling Greyfriars Bobby – the True Story at Last. More recently Donald was involved in research for John Bryant's books 3:59.4 (2004 – Random House) and The Marathon Makers (2008 – John Blake Publishing) and in photo caption translations for German books about ",
"Donald Macgregor (athlete)\n Donald Forbes Macgregor (23 July 1939 – 3 June 2020) was a Scottish long-distance runner, teacher and politician. He competed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich, representing Great Britain in the men's marathon event, in which he finished in seventh position in 2:16:34. He also competed for Scotland at the Commonwealth Games in 1970 in Edinburgh and 1974 in Christchurch, New Zealand. He had a personal best time of 2:14:15.4. Macgregor was born in Edinburgh, and studied at the University of St Andrews. He was chairman of the Royal Burgh of St Andrews Community Council until 2007, and served as a Liberal Democrat councillor on North East Fife District Council from 1988 to 1996. He was principal teacher of German ",
"Donald MacGregor (Liberal MP)\n Donald MacGregor (1839 – 20 July 1911) was a Scottish Liberal Party politician. From 1892 to 1895 he was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Inverness-shire constituency. He is buried in London at St Mary Magdalen Roman Catholic Church Mortlake.",
"Douglas Macgregor\n Douglas Abbott Macgregor (born January 4, 1953, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a U.S. Army Colonel (retired), government official, author, consultant, and television commentator. On July 27, 2020, the White House announced that President Donald Trump intended to nominate Macgregor to serve as the United States Ambassador to Germany. On November 11, 2020, a Pentagon spokesperson announced that Macgregor had been hired to serve as Senior Advisor to the Acting Secretary of Defense.",
"Donald Macgregor (athlete)\n 2006 World Cup and 2008 Olympic Games. He did this and other translation work for the Olympic historian Volker Kluge (Berlin/Brandenburg). In May 2007 he was elected to Fife Council as one of the ward members for East Neuk and Landward ward (Liberal Democrat) and forms part of the Fife Council coalition administration with the Scottish National Party. Following his running career, he coached distance athletes as a member of Fife Athletic Club. Macgregor and his former wife had three children. In 2010 he published an autobiography, Running My Life (Pinetree Press, St Andrews). In 2016, with co-author Tim Johnston, a fellow Olympian, he published His Own Man a biography of Dr Otto Peltzer, a German athlete (Pitch Publishers 2016).",
"William Firth MacGregor\n William Firth MacGregor (1896–1958/73) was a painter, illustrator and artist who immigrated to Canada in 1925. MacGregor was a central witness in the Canadian Art Fraud case of 1962 to 1964, in which Toronto art dealer and owner of the Haynes Art Gallery in Toronto, Leslie W. Lewis and art dealer Neil Sharkey were convicted of fraud and sentenced to prison. More than 30 paintings, made by MacGregor, were admitted as evidence in the trial, all bearing fake signatures of Tom Thomson, A.Y. Jackson, J.E.H. MacDonald, James Wilson Morrice, David Milne or Arthur Lismer.",
"James Drummond McGregor\n James Drummond McGregor (1 September 1838 – 4 March 1918) was a Canadian businessman, politician, and the tenth Lieutenant Governor of Nova Scotia. Born in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, the son of Roderick MacGregor and Janet Chisholm, both of Scottish descent, he was mayor of New Glasgow from 1879 to 1880. In 1867, MacGregor married Elizabeth McColl. He represented Pictou County in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1890 to 1894 and from 1897 to 1900. MacGregor married Roberta Ridley in 1894. In 1900, he ran unsuccessfully for the House of Commons of Canada in the riding of Pictou. MacGregor was appointed to the Senate of Canada in 1903 representing the senatorial division of New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. A Liberal, he resigned in 1910 when he was appointed lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia. He served until 1915. MacGregor died in New Glasgow at the age of 79. His son Robert also represented Pictou County in the provincial assembly.",
"Graeme MacGregor\n Graeme MacGregor (born 14 June 1993) is a Scottish footballer who plays primarily as a defender. MacGregor was with Bolton Wanderers as a youth and played for Scotland under-19. He was released by Bolton Wanderers in June 2012 and signed for St Mirren in September 2012. He then played for East Stirlingshire for two years, before signing for East Fife in July 2015.",
"Craig MacGregor\n Source:",
"Craig MacGregor\n Source:",
"Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)\n MacGregor was born in 1869 to Donald MacGregor J.P. of Argyll in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was schooled at Uppingham before matriculating to Jesus College, Cambridge in October 1887. On leaving university he found work on the London Stock Exchange.",
"Neil MacGregor\n Robert Neil MacGregor (born 16 June 1946) is a British art historian and former museum director. He was editor of the Burlington Magazine from 1981 to 1987, then Director of the National Gallery, London, from 1987 to 2002, Director of the British Museum from 2002 to 2015, and founding director of the Humboldt Forum in Berlin until 2018.",
"Fulton MacGregor\n Fulton James MacGregor MSP (born 1980) is a Scottish National Party (SNP) politician who has been the Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) for the constituency of Coatbridge and Chryston since 2016. He serves on the Justice and Education & Skills committees in the Scottish Parliament.",
"MacGregor (surname)\nAlasdair Alpin MacGregor (1899–1970), writer and photographer ; Andrew MacGregor (1897–1983), World War I flying ace ; Brad MacGregor (born 1964), Canadian ice hockey player ; Byron MacGregor (1948–1995), Canadian news anchor ; Chummy MacGregor (1903–1973), jazz pianist and songwriter ; Clark MacGregor (1922–2003), U.S. politician ; Clifford J. MacGregor (1904–1985), American meteorologist and Arctic explorer ; David MacGregor (born 1983), Scottish musician ; Douglas Macgregor, military writer ; Elizabeth Ann Macgregor (born 1958), Scottish curator and art historian ; Gregor MacGregor (1869–1919), cricketer ; Gregor MacGregor (1786–1845), adventurer and confidence trickster ; Sir Ian Kinloch MacGregor (1912–1998), British industrialist ; Ian Macgregor (born 1937), accountant and charity finance guru ; James Mor MacGregor (1695–1754), the eldest son of Rob Roy and a major during the rising of '45 ; Joanna MacGregor (born 1959), classical pianist ; John MacGregor (disambiguation), multiple people ; Judith Macgregor (born 1952), ",
"MacGregor (surname)\n diplomat ; Katherine MacGregor (1925–2018), television actress ; Mary MacGregor (born 1948), singer ; Neil MacGregor (born 1946), art historian and museum director ; Robert Roy MacGregor (\"Rob Roy\", 1671–1734), Scottish outlaw and folk hero ; Sara Macgregor (died 1919), British painter ; Sue MacGregor (born 1941), writer and broadcaster ; William MacGregor (1846–1919), British imperial administrator MacGregor, also spelt Macgregor, is a Scottish surname. The name is Anglicised form of the Scottish Gaelic MacGriogair. The Gaelic name was originally a patronym, and means \"son of Griogar\". The Gaelic personal name Griogar is a Gaelicised form of the name Gregory. The surname is used by members of the Scottish clan Clan Gregor, also known as Clan MacGregor. The surname was banned in Scotland several times prior to the 18th century, in an effort to clamp down on the unruly clan. Notable people with the surname include: ",
"Douglas Macgregor\n Macgregor is the vice president of Burke-Macgregor, LLC, a consulting firm based in Reston, Virginia, and he appears as a guest commentator on television and radio. Macgregor has been a regular guest on Tucker Carlson’s Fox News program since 2017. When John Bolton was removed from the White House in 2019, Macgregor was one of five finalists under consideration for selection as President Trump's National Security Advisor. In 2012, he challenged general James F. Amos' stance on the United States Marine Corps. Macgregor argued that the military capability and pertinence of the Marines, along with Army’s XVIII Airborne Corps, made them both \"as relevant as ",
"Gregor MacGregor (sportsman)\n Gregor MacGregor (31 August 1869 – 20 August 1919) was a Scottish cricketer and rugby union player. He played rugby for Scotland and cricket for England.",
"Ian Donald\n Later in 1952 Donald resigned his role at St Thomas's to take up a position as a reader at the Institute of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Royal Postgraduate Medical School located in Hammersmith Hospital. At the medical school Donald continued his research into neonatal breathing disorders. Donald worked to improve the Servo patient-cycled respirator as the device that Donald and Young had built. Later working with Josephine Lord, a registrar, Donald built a new piece of equipment called the Trip Spirometer later called the Spirometer whose purpose was to measure the respiratory efficiency of a neonate. As well as being a diagnostic device, Donald used the device to make a quantitative determination of normal respiration with the goal of determining the physiology and pathology of neonatal pulmonary disease.",
"Alasdair Alpin MacGregor\n He was born at Applecross, Ross and Cromarty, on 20 March 1899, the son of Colonel John MacGregor M.D. of the Indian Medical Service. He was educated at Tain Academy. MacGregor was brought up in Tain and Inverness, and educated there and in Edinburgh. His books were mainly about Scotland, and his romanticising style incurred the displeasure of Compton Mackenzie, who caricatured him in some of his novels (perhaps unjustly so as MacGregor was forced to be critically realistic about certain aspects of life on the west coast, in his book The Western Isles). Judging by the title of the 1931 book ''A Last "
] |
What sport does Ebrahim Asadi play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Ebrahim Asadi | 3,979,080 | 83 | [
{
"id": "506073",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": "Assist Goals Last Update 18 September 2010 ",
"score": "1.8901727"
},
{
"id": "506072",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": " Ebrahim Asadi (, born June 8, 1979) is a retired Iranian footballer who played for Persepolis.",
"score": "1.8152472"
},
{
"id": "30703231",
"title": "Mansour Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " He began playing football in 1973 in Sepahan. Then he played for Isfahan XI between 1974 and 1975.",
"score": "1.6836963"
},
{
"id": "8566241",
"title": "Ebrahim Fathi",
"text": " Ebrahim Fathi oregani (born September 21, 1982) is an Iranian wushu athlete. Ebrahim Fathi with his two teammates of Iran Duilian group, Mohsen Ahmadi and Navid Makvandi, have attended several world championship events and introduced Iran as the first contender of this sub-division in Wushu world.",
"score": "1.6733192"
},
{
"id": "26991956",
"title": "Omid Ebrahimi",
"text": " Omid Ebrahimi was discovered by Amir Ghalenoei in 2011. He started his career in Esteghlal Dargahan. He joined Sepahan in 2010 after spending the previous season at Shahrdari Bandar Abbas in the Azadegan League. Ebrahimi's first competitive appearance came in the Iran Pro League match against Rah Ahan on 27 July 2010, where he played the full 90 minutes. On 10 June 2014, Ebrahimi signed a two-year contract with Esteghlal. He spent an excellent career in Blues of the Capital and selected as the best midfielder of Persian Gulf Pro League in 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons and also became the best goalscorer among midfielders in the history of Esteghlal.",
"score": "1.6568904"
},
{
"id": "6052925",
"title": "Hossein Ebrahimi",
"text": " Hossein Ebrahimi (, born August 3, 1990 in Astaneh) is an Iranian footballer who currently plays for Iranian club Foolad of the Persian Gulf Pro League as a Midfielder.",
"score": "1.6491582"
},
{
"id": "6052929",
"title": "Hossein Ebrahimi",
"text": "Iran ; WAFF Championship: 2008 ",
"score": "1.6443844"
},
{
"id": "29867997",
"title": "Masoud Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Masoud Ebrahimzadeh is an Iranian professional football player who plays as a Left Back for Zob Ahan in the Persian Gulf pro league.۱۲۳",
"score": "1.6424658"
},
{
"id": "7383898",
"title": "Abolfazl Ebrahimi",
"text": " Abolfazl Ebrahimi ; is an Iranian football midfielder who currently plays for the Iranian football club Paykan in the Iran Pro League.",
"score": "1.6340315"
},
{
"id": "7268589",
"title": "Ebrahim Javadi",
"text": " Ebrahim Javadipour (, born 28 July 1943) is a retired Iranian freestyle wrestler. He won a world title in 1969, 1970, 1971 and 1973 and a gold medal at the Asian Games in 1970 and 1974, but placed third at the 1972 Olympics. He is listed in the FILA wrestling hall of fame. Javadi was born in Qazvin, but spent a few of his early years in Tehran, where his father worked for the Ministry of Labor. Javadi was an active child and tried various sports, eventually choosing wrestling because it fitted best to his relatively small body size.",
"score": "1.6331925"
},
{
"id": "8566242",
"title": "Ebrahim Fathi",
"text": " Ebrahim Fathi started his wushu career at the age of 12. he has won numerous titles of the Duilian in World and Asian Championships including Macau, Canada, Turkey, Indonesia and Malaysia. he was a member of Iran national wushu team that won Asian gold medal at the Asian Championship in Macau for the first time in the history of Iran Taolu Wushu.",
"score": "1.6278408"
},
{
"id": "48305",
"title": "Sardar Azmoun",
"text": " According to Sardar, he was first introduced to the sport when he started to kick balls on a family trip in Turkmenistan when he was 9. He began his career at Oghab Gonbad of Gonbad-e Kavus. He also played volleyball and was invited to Iran's national under-15 volleyball team. After some years, he joined Shamoushak Gorgan, before joining Etka Gorgan, who were playing in Division 1 in Iran at the time.",
"score": "1.6268512"
},
{
"id": "5887840",
"title": "Ebrahim Loveinian",
"text": " Played with Sepahan for three seasons and then joined Aboumoslem for one season.",
"score": "1.6260741"
},
{
"id": "4382174",
"title": "Mahmood Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Ebrahimzadeh is one of the most famous footballers to come from Bushehr, he started his football career with Shahin Bushehr. He then played for Iranian club FC Aboomoslem during 1975/76 season where he scored 11 goals, and was captain of Zobahan F.C. in 1976/77 season. In the 1980s, he played in Germany for four years most notably for VfL Wolfsburg. He made his debut for Iran national football team on November 18, 1977 against Hong Kong as a substitute, during a 1978 FIFA World Cup qualification.",
"score": "1.617749"
},
{
"id": "10248968",
"title": "Saeid Ebrahimi",
"text": " Saeid Ebrahimi (, born 22 December 1982 in Nahavand) is an Iranian wrestler. He competed in the freestyle heavyweight division the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, reaching the quarter finals.",
"score": "1.6147959"
},
{
"id": "506074",
"title": "Ebrahim Asadi",
"text": "Persepolis ; Iranian Football League (2) : 1999–2000, 2001–02 ",
"score": "1.6095023"
},
{
"id": "4439714",
"title": "Ebrahim Ghasempour",
"text": " After playing for Sanat Naft for three years, he left the club in 1976 and joined Shahbaz reaching the third place in the Iranian league in 1976–77 with that club as one of the key players. He signed a two-year contract with Pas in 1978. He played for different clubs in Iranian, Emirati, Qatari and Egyptian leagues for 16 years. He returned to Pas in 1994 and retired in 1996.",
"score": "1.6077104"
},
{
"id": "27571765",
"title": "Mohammad Ebrahimi (footballer, born 1984)",
"text": " Mohammad Ebrahimi (born 1 November 1986) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a forward for Pars Jonoubi in the Persian Gulf Pro League",
"score": "1.6019595"
},
{
"id": "14961613",
"title": "Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh",
"text": " Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh (, born 3 January 1980 in Saarbrücken) is Iranian-German tennis player who competed for the Iran Davis Cup team in 2008. Currently, he is the coach of Cedrik-Marcel Stebe and Natalia Vikhlyantseva. He was the coach of Angelique Kerber between 2012 and February 2015.",
"score": "1.5991409"
},
{
"id": "9855702",
"title": "Ebrahim Sadeghi",
"text": " Ebrahim Sadeghi (, born February 4, 1979 in Karaj, Iran) is an Iranian football coach and retired player who played for Saipa for 17 years. Sadeghi has been playing for Saipa since 2000. In 2010, Saipa Cultural and Athletic Corporation celebrated a testimonial ceremony for him because of \"his loyalty to the club\", calling him The Orange Loyal. He was also gifted a Saipa Tiba. On 13 December 2015, in a match against Esteghlal Ahvaz Sadeghi played his 400th league match for the club, becoming the only player in the history of the Persian Gulf Pro League to reach this feat. He retired on 4 May 2017 after playing 17 seasons at Saipa at the top flight.",
"score": "1.5958791"
}
] | [
"Ebrahim Asadi\nAssist Goals Last Update 18 September 2010 ",
"Ebrahim Asadi\n Ebrahim Asadi (, born June 8, 1979) is a retired Iranian footballer who played for Persepolis.",
"Mansour Ebrahimzadeh\n He began playing football in 1973 in Sepahan. Then he played for Isfahan XI between 1974 and 1975.",
"Ebrahim Fathi\n Ebrahim Fathi oregani (born September 21, 1982) is an Iranian wushu athlete. Ebrahim Fathi with his two teammates of Iran Duilian group, Mohsen Ahmadi and Navid Makvandi, have attended several world championship events and introduced Iran as the first contender of this sub-division in Wushu world.",
"Omid Ebrahimi\n Omid Ebrahimi was discovered by Amir Ghalenoei in 2011. He started his career in Esteghlal Dargahan. He joined Sepahan in 2010 after spending the previous season at Shahrdari Bandar Abbas in the Azadegan League. Ebrahimi's first competitive appearance came in the Iran Pro League match against Rah Ahan on 27 July 2010, where he played the full 90 minutes. On 10 June 2014, Ebrahimi signed a two-year contract with Esteghlal. He spent an excellent career in Blues of the Capital and selected as the best midfielder of Persian Gulf Pro League in 2015–16 and 2016–17 seasons and also became the best goalscorer among midfielders in the history of Esteghlal.",
"Hossein Ebrahimi\n Hossein Ebrahimi (, born August 3, 1990 in Astaneh) is an Iranian footballer who currently plays for Iranian club Foolad of the Persian Gulf Pro League as a Midfielder.",
"Hossein Ebrahimi\nIran ; WAFF Championship: 2008 ",
"Masoud Ebrahimzadeh\n Masoud Ebrahimzadeh is an Iranian professional football player who plays as a Left Back for Zob Ahan in the Persian Gulf pro league.۱۲۳",
"Abolfazl Ebrahimi\n Abolfazl Ebrahimi ; is an Iranian football midfielder who currently plays for the Iranian football club Paykan in the Iran Pro League.",
"Ebrahim Javadi\n Ebrahim Javadipour (, born 28 July 1943) is a retired Iranian freestyle wrestler. He won a world title in 1969, 1970, 1971 and 1973 and a gold medal at the Asian Games in 1970 and 1974, but placed third at the 1972 Olympics. He is listed in the FILA wrestling hall of fame. Javadi was born in Qazvin, but spent a few of his early years in Tehran, where his father worked for the Ministry of Labor. Javadi was an active child and tried various sports, eventually choosing wrestling because it fitted best to his relatively small body size.",
"Ebrahim Fathi\n Ebrahim Fathi started his wushu career at the age of 12. he has won numerous titles of the Duilian in World and Asian Championships including Macau, Canada, Turkey, Indonesia and Malaysia. he was a member of Iran national wushu team that won Asian gold medal at the Asian Championship in Macau for the first time in the history of Iran Taolu Wushu.",
"Sardar Azmoun\n According to Sardar, he was first introduced to the sport when he started to kick balls on a family trip in Turkmenistan when he was 9. He began his career at Oghab Gonbad of Gonbad-e Kavus. He also played volleyball and was invited to Iran's national under-15 volleyball team. After some years, he joined Shamoushak Gorgan, before joining Etka Gorgan, who were playing in Division 1 in Iran at the time.",
"Ebrahim Loveinian\n Played with Sepahan for three seasons and then joined Aboumoslem for one season.",
"Mahmood Ebrahimzadeh\n Ebrahimzadeh is one of the most famous footballers to come from Bushehr, he started his football career with Shahin Bushehr. He then played for Iranian club FC Aboomoslem during 1975/76 season where he scored 11 goals, and was captain of Zobahan F.C. in 1976/77 season. In the 1980s, he played in Germany for four years most notably for VfL Wolfsburg. He made his debut for Iran national football team on November 18, 1977 against Hong Kong as a substitute, during a 1978 FIFA World Cup qualification.",
"Saeid Ebrahimi\n Saeid Ebrahimi (, born 22 December 1982 in Nahavand) is an Iranian wrestler. He competed in the freestyle heavyweight division the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, reaching the quarter finals.",
"Ebrahim Asadi\nPersepolis ; Iranian Football League (2) : 1999–2000, 2001–02 ",
"Ebrahim Ghasempour\n After playing for Sanat Naft for three years, he left the club in 1976 and joined Shahbaz reaching the third place in the Iranian league in 1976–77 with that club as one of the key players. He signed a two-year contract with Pas in 1978. He played for different clubs in Iranian, Emirati, Qatari and Egyptian leagues for 16 years. He returned to Pas in 1994 and retired in 1996.",
"Mohammad Ebrahimi (footballer, born 1984)\n Mohammad Ebrahimi (born 1 November 1986) is an Iranian footballer who plays as a forward for Pars Jonoubi in the Persian Gulf Pro League",
"Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh\n Benjamin Ebrahimzadeh (, born 3 January 1980 in Saarbrücken) is Iranian-German tennis player who competed for the Iran Davis Cup team in 2008. Currently, he is the coach of Cedrik-Marcel Stebe and Natalia Vikhlyantseva. He was the coach of Angelique Kerber between 2012 and February 2015.",
"Ebrahim Sadeghi\n Ebrahim Sadeghi (, born February 4, 1979 in Karaj, Iran) is an Iranian football coach and retired player who played for Saipa for 17 years. Sadeghi has been playing for Saipa since 2000. In 2010, Saipa Cultural and Athletic Corporation celebrated a testimonial ceremony for him because of \"his loyalty to the club\", calling him The Orange Loyal. He was also gifted a Saipa Tiba. On 13 December 2015, in a match against Esteghlal Ahvaz Sadeghi played his 400th league match for the club, becoming the only player in the history of the Persian Gulf Pro League to reach this feat. He retired on 4 May 2017 after playing 17 seasons at Saipa at the top flight."
] |
What sport does 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament play? | [
"baseball",
"America's pastime",
"⚾"
] | sport | 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament | 3,169,042 | 88 | [
{
"id": "4055204",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 20 through May 24. It was the first time the tournament has been played at the ballpark since 1999 and fourth time overall since the ballpark opened in 1995. The #6 seeded Virginia Cavaliers won the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's first conference championship in baseball since 1996, and their second tournament championship ever. The tournament was originally scheduled to be contested at Fenway Park in Boston, home of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox. But on August 14, 2008, it was announced by Fenway Sports Group, along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, that the location of the tournament would have to be changed due to a scheduling error. The ACC chose the Bulls' ballpark as Fenway's replacement. 2009 was the third year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.817781"
},
{
"id": "9202865",
"title": "2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 25 through May 29. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Top seeded Virginia won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's third ACC tournament win and second in three years. 2011 was the fifth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.769047"
},
{
"id": "4863460",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 26 through May 30. The #5 seeded Florida State Seminoles won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2010 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Florida State's fifth ACC tournament win and first since 2004. A record 6,247 were in attendance for the championship game. 2010 was the fourth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.7603204"
},
{
"id": "12740626",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " In 2004, the conference expanded to 11 teams with the addition of Miami and Virginia Tech. Beginning with the 2005 Baseball Tournament, the tournament switched from a true eight-team double-elimination to two four-team double-elimination brackets with winner of each side playing in a winner-take-all championship game. The bottom four teams in conference play faced off in a single-elimination bracket, with the winner earning the #8 spot in the tournament.",
"score": "1.7427143"
},
{
"id": "4055208",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " (*)Denotes Unanimous Selection",
"score": "1.7396122"
},
{
"id": "4055205",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"score": "1.7393949"
},
{
"id": "12740628",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " See Example: 2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament Beginning in 2007, the ACC developed a new tournament format that eliminated the brackets altogether. This new format was a two-group, four-team round robin tournament with the winner of each grouping playing in a winner-take-all championship game. Only the top eight teams in the regular season conference standings were invited to play in the tournament. On July 6, 2009, the Atlantic Coast Conference announced a decision to move three future baseball tournaments out of Myrtle Beach, citing miscommunications with the NAACP concerning the display of the Confederate flag in South Carolina. (Charlotte was included in the NAACP Boycott because Knights Stadium was in York County, South Carolina, less than five kilometers from the state line.) The 2010 ACC tournament was initially scheduled to take place at Fenway Park, but cost-containment for schools (most of whom would have to fly to Boston) was cited for moving the tournament to Greensboro.",
"score": "1.7388786"
},
{
"id": "4055206",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to Mercy Rule 1 - Florida State beat Boston College head-to-head",
"score": "1.7342529"
},
{
"id": "4863462",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to mercy rule 1 - Florida State beat Virginia head-to-head 2 - NC State beat Virginia Tech head-to-head",
"score": "1.7307787"
},
{
"id": "12739930",
"title": "2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Florida from May 21 through May 25. The #1 seeded University of Miami won the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Miami's first conference championship in baseball after having played as an independent until joining the ACC during the 2004-05 academic year. 2008 was the second year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"score": "1.7258755"
},
{
"id": "13641992",
"title": "2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 23 through May 27. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Eighth seeded Georgia Tech won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2012 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Georgia Tech's eighth ACC tournament win. This was the first time in which an eighth seeded team won the tournament.",
"score": "1.7078784"
},
{
"id": "4966923",
"title": "2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 20 through May 25 at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. won their ninth tournament championship to earn the league's automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2013–14 academic year. With the victory, Georgia Tech tied Clemson for the most tournament championships. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson and Georgia Tech now tied for the most championships, each winning nine. Charter league members Duke and Maryland, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech and Boston College have never won the event. Pittsburgh and Notre Dame played their first season in the ACC in 2014.",
"score": "1.7009877"
},
{
"id": "12740624",
"title": "Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " With the introduction of Florida State into the ACC to bring the total teams to nine, the baseball tournament added a Play-In game where the bottom two teams in the conference regular season standings played in a winner-takes-all game for the 8th spot in the regular tournament.",
"score": "1.6994898"
},
{
"id": "12739931",
"title": "2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Boston College, Duke, Maryland and Virginia Tech did not make the tournament. From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions. ",
"score": "1.6960492"
},
{
"id": "4976973",
"title": "2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 20–23 at Fifth Third Field in Dayton, OH. It featured the top six regular-season finishers of the conference's 14 teams. Third-seeded Xavier defeated Rhode Island in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the A-10's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Tournament.",
"score": "1.6955402"
},
{
"id": "6014124",
"title": "2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 27 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion receives the league's automatic bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2017–18 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and Florida State has won seven titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame have never won the event. Louisville plays their third season in the ACC in 2017, and has also yet to win a title. Florida State defeated Louisville in the championship game to win the tournament for the eighth time overall, and the third time in four seasons.",
"score": "1.6911455"
},
{
"id": "4055207",
"title": "2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " 1 - Game ended in the bottom of the eighth inning due to the Mercy Rule.",
"score": "1.6898232"
},
{
"id": "4863461",
"title": "2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"score": "1.6890708"
},
{
"id": "12082768",
"title": "2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": "Florida State and North Carolina were Regular Season Division Champs ; Wake Forest held the tie-breaker over Clemson by defeating them head-to-head 3-2 ; North Carolina held the tie-breaker over Virginia by defeating them head-to-head 5-0 ",
"score": "1.6784737"
},
{
"id": "1144559",
"title": "2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament",
"text": " The 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion, North Carolina, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2018–19 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and defending champion Florida State has won eight titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Louisville have never won the event.",
"score": "1.6713126"
}
] | [
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 20 through May 24. It was the first time the tournament has been played at the ballpark since 1999 and fourth time overall since the ballpark opened in 1995. The #6 seeded Virginia Cavaliers won the tournament with a perfect 4–0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's first conference championship in baseball since 1996, and their second tournament championship ever. The tournament was originally scheduled to be contested at Fenway Park in Boston, home of Major League Baseball's Boston Red Sox. But on August 14, 2008, it was announced by Fenway Sports Group, along with the Atlantic Coast Conference, that the location of the tournament would have to be changed due to a scheduling error. The ACC chose the Bulls' ballpark as Fenway's replacement. 2009 was the third year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2011 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, NC from May 25 through May 29. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Top seeded Virginia won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Virginia's third ACC tournament win and second in three years. 2011 was the fifth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 26 through May 30. The #5 seeded Florida State Seminoles won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2010 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Florida State's fifth ACC tournament win and first since 2004. A record 6,247 were in attendance for the championship game. 2010 was the fourth year in which the conference used a round-robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n In 2004, the conference expanded to 11 teams with the addition of Miami and Virginia Tech. Beginning with the 2005 Baseball Tournament, the tournament switched from a true eight-team double-elimination to two four-team double-elimination brackets with winner of each side playing in a winner-take-all championship game. The bottom four teams in conference play faced off in a single-elimination bracket, with the winner earning the #8 spot in the tournament.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n (*)Denotes Unanimous Selection",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n See Example: 2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament Beginning in 2007, the ACC developed a new tournament format that eliminated the brackets altogether. This new format was a two-group, four-team round robin tournament with the winner of each grouping playing in a winner-take-all championship game. Only the top eight teams in the regular season conference standings were invited to play in the tournament. On July 6, 2009, the Atlantic Coast Conference announced a decision to move three future baseball tournaments out of Myrtle Beach, citing miscommunications with the NAACP concerning the display of the Confederate flag in South Carolina. (Charlotte was included in the NAACP Boycott because Knights Stadium was in York County, South Carolina, less than five kilometers from the state line.) The 2010 ACC tournament was initially scheduled to take place at Fenway Park, but cost-containment for schools (most of whom would have to fly to Boston) was cited for moving the tournament to Greensboro.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to Mercy Rule 1 - Florida State beat Boston College head-to-head",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n Notes † - Denotes extra innings ‡ - Denotes game shortened due to mercy rule 1 - Florida State beat Virginia head-to-head 2 - NC State beat Virginia Tech head-to-head",
"2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the Baseball Grounds of Jacksonville in Jacksonville, Florida from May 21 through May 25. The #1 seeded University of Miami won the tournament with a perfect 4-0 record, earning the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Miami's first conference championship in baseball after having played as an independent until joining the ACC during the 2004-05 academic year. 2008 was the second year in which the conference used a round robin tournament format, with the team with the best record in each group at the end of the three-game round robin advancing to a one-game championship.",
"2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2012 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held at the NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, NC from May 23 through May 27. All of the games were shown live on Fox Sports South with select games being shown on Fox Sports Florida, Comcast Mid-Atlantic, Sun Sports, and New England Sports Network. Eighth seeded Georgia Tech won the tournament and earned the Atlantic Coast Conference's automatic bid to the 2012 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. It was Georgia Tech's eighth ACC tournament win. This was the first time in which an eighth seeded team won the tournament.",
"2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2014 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 20 through May 25 at NewBridge Bank Park in Greensboro, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. won their ninth tournament championship to earn the league's automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This is the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2013–14 academic year. With the victory, Georgia Tech tied Clemson for the most tournament championships. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson and Georgia Tech now tied for the most championships, each winning nine. Charter league members Duke and Maryland, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech and Boston College have never won the event. Pittsburgh and Notre Dame played their first season in the ACC in 2014.",
"Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n With the introduction of Florida State into the ACC to bring the total teams to nine, the baseball tournament added a Play-In game where the bottom two teams in the conference regular season standings played in a winner-takes-all game for the 8th spot in the regular tournament.",
"2008 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nBoston College, Duke, Maryland and Virginia Tech did not make the tournament. From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions. ",
"2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2009 Atlantic 10 Conference Baseball Championship was held from May 20–23 at Fifth Third Field in Dayton, OH. It featured the top six regular-season finishers of the conference's 14 teams. Third-seeded Xavier defeated Rhode Island in the title game to win the tournament for the first time, earning the A-10's automatic bid to the 2009 NCAA Tournament.",
"2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2018 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 22 through May 27 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determines the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion receives the league's automatic bid to the 2018 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2017–18 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and Florida State has won seven titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh and Notre Dame have never won the event. Louisville plays their third season in the ACC in 2017, and has also yet to win a title. Florida State defeated Louisville in the championship game to win the tournament for the eighth time overall, and the third time in four seasons.",
"2009 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n 1 - Game ended in the bottom of the eighth inning due to the Mercy Rule.",
"2010 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n From TheACC.com: The top two teams from both the Atlantic and Coastal divisions, as determined by conference winning percentage, in addition to the four teams with the next best conference winning percentage, regardless of division, will be selected to participate in the ACC Baseball Championship. The two division champions will automatically be seeded number one and two based on winning percentage in overall conference competition. The remaining teams will be seeded (three through eight) based on winning percentage in overall conference competition without regard to division. All ties will be broken using the tie-breaking provisions.",
"2007 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\nFlorida State and North Carolina were Regular Season Division Champs ; Wake Forest held the tie-breaker over Clemson by defeating them head-to-head 3-2 ; North Carolina held the tie-breaker over Virginia by defeating them head-to-head 5-0 ",
"2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament\n The 2019 Atlantic Coast Conference Baseball Tournament was held from May 21 through May 26 at Durham Bulls Athletic Park in Durham, North Carolina. The annual tournament determined the conference champion of the Division I Atlantic Coast Conference for college baseball. The tournament champion, North Carolina, received the league's automatic bid to the 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament. This was the last of 19 athletic championship events held by the conference in the 2018–19 academic year. The tournament has been held every year but one since 1973, with Clemson winning ten championships, the most all-time. Georgia Tech has won nine championships, and defending champion Florida State has won eight titles since their entry to the league in 1992. Charter league member Duke, along with recent entrants Virginia Tech, Boston College, Pittsburgh, Notre Dame and Louisville have never won the event."
] |
In what country is Bārta? | [
"Latvia",
"Republic of Latvia",
"Latvian Republic",
"lv",
"Latvija",
"🇱🇻",
"LAT",
"LVA"
] | country | Bārta | 4,591,269 | 78 | [
{
"id": "14282964",
"title": "Barta'a",
"text": " Barta'a (برطعة, בַּרְטַּעָה) is a town in Israel and the Palestinian territories that straddles both sides of the Green Line in the Wadi Ara (or Nahal 'Iron) region. Western Barta'a is in the Haifa District of Israel, and forms part of the Basma local council. Its 4,700 residents are Arab citizens of Israel. Eastern Barta'a is in the Palestinian territories in the northern part of the Jenin Governorate of the West Bank in what was designated under the Oslo Accords as Area C. It has 3,600 residents, of whom 30-40 percent carry Israeli identity cards and the rest of whom carry Palestinian identity cards.",
"score": "1.6653321"
},
{
"id": "27427368",
"title": "Barta, Bangladesh",
"text": " Barta is a village in Barisal District in the Barisal Division of southern-central Bangladesh.",
"score": "1.5948801"
},
{
"id": "12093976",
"title": "The Bonik Barta",
"text": " Bonik Barta is a Bengali-language daily newspaper of Bangladesh. The newspaper is publishing from Dhaka. The name of the editor of the newspaper is Dewan Hanif Mahmud. In 2018, the circulation of the newspaper was 134,000.",
"score": "1.5202534"
},
{
"id": "7356956",
"title": "Vít Bárta",
"text": " Vít Bárta (born 5 December 1973) is a Czech politician and businessman who served as Minister of Transport from 2010 to 2011 and as Member of the Chamber of Deputies (MP) from 2010 to 2013. Bárta also led political party Věci veřejné during 2011–2013. In 2011 Bárta announced his resignation from the government due to prosecution when he was accused of bribery by his party colleagues.",
"score": "1.4964337"
},
{
"id": "13063298",
"title": "Aleš Bárta",
"text": " Aleš Bárta (born 1960 in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czech republic) is a Czech Organist. He began his studies at the Brno Conservatory (under Josef Pukl) and continued at the Academy of Music in Prague (Vaclav Rabas). He appears as soloist with leading Czech symphony and chamber orchestras, among them the Prague Symphony orchestra FOK, the Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra and the Czech Philharmonic. During his tour of Japan his appearance marked the opening of a new concert hall in Yokohama.",
"score": "1.4607697"
},
{
"id": "4133735",
"title": "Niyomiya Barta",
"text": " Niyomiya Barta (নিয়মীয়া বাৰ্তা) is an Indian Assamese language daily newspaper. The newspaper was launched on 4 March 2011. It is published simultaneously from Guwahati, Dibrugarh, Biswanath Chariali and Goalpara of Assam. Niyomiya Barta is run and published by Pride East Entertainment Private Limited. The head office of this newspaper is located at News Live Building, Christian Basti, Guwahati.",
"score": "1.4541061"
},
{
"id": "5895463",
"title": "Jan Bárta",
"text": " Jan Bárta (born 7 December 1984) is a Czech professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team.",
"score": "1.4347205"
},
{
"id": "747866",
"title": "Barta Barry",
"text": "1) REDIRECT: Barta Barri ",
"score": "1.4231787"
},
{
"id": "7356958",
"title": "Vít Bárta",
"text": " In April 2011, Bárta was accused of bribery by his colleagues from Public Affairs, deputies Jaroslav Škárka, Stanislav Huml, and Kristýna Kočí. The deputies were subsequently expelled from the party. The incident caused serious problems in the Czech government coalition. On 8 April 2011, Bárta announced his resignation from the government of Petr Nečas. A year later, in April 2012, Barta was convicted of bribery and conditionally sentenced to 18 months of imprisonment.",
"score": "1.4085635"
},
{
"id": "9540522",
"title": "Hilary Barta",
"text": " Hilary Barta (born June 17, 1957) is an American comic book writer and artist.",
"score": "1.4045494"
},
{
"id": "11721018",
"title": "Bartica",
"text": " The region 7 hospital is located in Bartica and is known for having implemented the country’s first electronic Health Information System in 2005, developed by Peace Corps volunteers Geoffrey Thompson and Jason Knueppel.",
"score": "1.4035571"
},
{
"id": "25575372",
"title": "Bartosz Beda",
"text": " Beda has been showing nationally and internationally. He has participated in many group shows in Poland, Germany, Spain, United States, United Kingdom and Colombia. He had his solo exhibitions in Poland, United Kingdom, Spain and Colombia and forthcoming in United States. He is also a founder of Execute Magazine. Beda was selected for the 2012 Catlin Art Guide as one of the promising emerging artists in the UK. In 2012, Beda was short-listed for Saatchi New Sensations, and won the esteemed Towry Award for the Best of North of England as well as a six-month scholarship to Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. Beda had solo exhibitions at Galeria Liebre, Spain (2013), BAC Gallery, Colombia (2015), Jackson-Teed, England (2016), and received a fellowship from Fondazione per l'Arte in Rome, Italy in 2016.",
"score": "1.4015832"
},
{
"id": "16101726",
"title": "Bārta Parish",
"text": "Bārta ; Krūte ; Ķīburi ; Plosti ",
"score": "1.3924596"
},
{
"id": "14282965",
"title": "Barta'a",
"text": " Ceramics from the Byzantine era have been found in Barta'a.",
"score": "1.390487"
},
{
"id": "16101725",
"title": "Bārta Parish",
"text": " Bārta Parish (Bārtas pagasts) is an administrative unit of Grobiņa Municipality, Latvia. The parish has a population of 683 (as of 1/07/2010) and covers an area of 115.6 km2.",
"score": "1.3883567"
},
{
"id": "8927063",
"title": "Boban Birmančević",
"text": " Republic of the Congo, Egypt, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Grenada, Guinea-Bissau, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Nauru, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, the Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Sao Tome and Principe, the Solomon Islands, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.",
"score": "1.3836721"
},
{
"id": "31765579",
"title": "Martina Bárta",
"text": " Martina Bárta (born 1 September 1988) is a Czech jazz singer and musician. A vocalist and a player of the French horn, she was part of the Frankfurt am Main-based jazz band 4 To The Bar. She also had a role in the musical Robin Hood and worked with Felix Slováček and Karel Gott. She represented the Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 with the song My Turn but failed to qualify to the final. In 2018 she took part in Deutschland sucht den Superstar and reached the recall.",
"score": "1.3819187"
},
{
"id": "14282971",
"title": "Barta'a",
"text": " (the Kabha family), the de facto \"reunification\" was viewed positively by town residents. Residents of East Barta'a began to work in Israel and agriculture became a source of secondary income. Thanks to the proximity to Israel, the standard of living in East Barta'a rose faster than in the rest of the West Bank. In 1978, East Barta'a was connected to electricity from generators, and in 1984, it was connected to the Israeli electricity grid. Barta'a students study at high schools in Ya'abed and Jenin, In 1995, an outline plan for East Barta'a, intended to meet the expansion needs of East Barta'a by 2015, ",
"score": "1.3768048"
},
{
"id": "13063299",
"title": "Aleš Bárta",
"text": "1982 - won the Anton Bruckner International Organ Competition in Linz ; 1983 - prize winner at the Franz Liszt International Organ Competition in Budapest ; 1984 - absolute winner of the Prague Spring International Organ Competition ",
"score": "1.3766606"
},
{
"id": "883192",
"title": "Barta (surname)",
"text": "Adam Barta (born 1979), American actor ; Aleš Bárta (born 1960), Czech organist ; Alexander Barta (born 1983), German professional ice hockey centre ; Bernart de la Barta (fl. 1229), troubadour from La Barthe ; Bjorn Barta (born 1980), German professional ice hockey player ; Dan Bárta, Czech singer ; Franz Barta (born 1902), Austrian boxer ; Gary Barta (born 1963), athletic director at the University of Iowa ; Hilary Barta (born 1957), American comic book writer and artist ; István Barta (1895–1948), Hungarian water polo player ; Jan Bárta (born 1984), professional Czech road cyclist ; Jiří Barta (born 1948), Czech stop-motion animation director ; Jiří Bárta (1935–2012), Czech pianist and composer ; Josef Bárta (1744-1787), Czech composer ; Krisztina Barta (born 1991), Hungarian ice dancer ; Libor Barta (born 1967), Czech ",
"score": "1.371106"
}
] | [
"Barta'a\n Barta'a (برطعة, בַּרְטַּעָה) is a town in Israel and the Palestinian territories that straddles both sides of the Green Line in the Wadi Ara (or Nahal 'Iron) region. Western Barta'a is in the Haifa District of Israel, and forms part of the Basma local council. Its 4,700 residents are Arab citizens of Israel. Eastern Barta'a is in the Palestinian territories in the northern part of the Jenin Governorate of the West Bank in what was designated under the Oslo Accords as Area C. It has 3,600 residents, of whom 30-40 percent carry Israeli identity cards and the rest of whom carry Palestinian identity cards.",
"Barta, Bangladesh\n Barta is a village in Barisal District in the Barisal Division of southern-central Bangladesh.",
"The Bonik Barta\n Bonik Barta is a Bengali-language daily newspaper of Bangladesh. The newspaper is publishing from Dhaka. The name of the editor of the newspaper is Dewan Hanif Mahmud. In 2018, the circulation of the newspaper was 134,000.",
"Vít Bárta\n Vít Bárta (born 5 December 1973) is a Czech politician and businessman who served as Minister of Transport from 2010 to 2011 and as Member of the Chamber of Deputies (MP) from 2010 to 2013. Bárta also led political party Věci veřejné during 2011–2013. In 2011 Bárta announced his resignation from the government due to prosecution when he was accused of bribery by his party colleagues.",
"Aleš Bárta\n Aleš Bárta (born 1960 in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czech republic) is a Czech Organist. He began his studies at the Brno Conservatory (under Josef Pukl) and continued at the Academy of Music in Prague (Vaclav Rabas). He appears as soloist with leading Czech symphony and chamber orchestras, among them the Prague Symphony orchestra FOK, the Czech Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Prague Chamber Orchestra and the Czech Philharmonic. During his tour of Japan his appearance marked the opening of a new concert hall in Yokohama.",
"Niyomiya Barta\n Niyomiya Barta (নিয়মীয়া বাৰ্তা) is an Indian Assamese language daily newspaper. The newspaper was launched on 4 March 2011. It is published simultaneously from Guwahati, Dibrugarh, Biswanath Chariali and Goalpara of Assam. Niyomiya Barta is run and published by Pride East Entertainment Private Limited. The head office of this newspaper is located at News Live Building, Christian Basti, Guwahati.",
"Jan Bárta\n Jan Bárta (born 7 December 1984) is a Czech professional road cyclist, who currently rides for UCI Continental team.",
"Barta Barry\n1) REDIRECT: Barta Barri ",
"Vít Bárta\n In April 2011, Bárta was accused of bribery by his colleagues from Public Affairs, deputies Jaroslav Škárka, Stanislav Huml, and Kristýna Kočí. The deputies were subsequently expelled from the party. The incident caused serious problems in the Czech government coalition. On 8 April 2011, Bárta announced his resignation from the government of Petr Nečas. A year later, in April 2012, Barta was convicted of bribery and conditionally sentenced to 18 months of imprisonment.",
"Hilary Barta\n Hilary Barta (born June 17, 1957) is an American comic book writer and artist.",
"Bartica\n The region 7 hospital is located in Bartica and is known for having implemented the country’s first electronic Health Information System in 2005, developed by Peace Corps volunteers Geoffrey Thompson and Jason Knueppel.",
"Bartosz Beda\n Beda has been showing nationally and internationally. He has participated in many group shows in Poland, Germany, Spain, United States, United Kingdom and Colombia. He had his solo exhibitions in Poland, United Kingdom, Spain and Colombia and forthcoming in United States. He is also a founder of Execute Magazine. Beda was selected for the 2012 Catlin Art Guide as one of the promising emerging artists in the UK. In 2012, Beda was short-listed for Saatchi New Sensations, and won the esteemed Towry Award for the Best of North of England as well as a six-month scholarship to Dresden Academy of Fine Arts. Beda had solo exhibitions at Galeria Liebre, Spain (2013), BAC Gallery, Colombia (2015), Jackson-Teed, England (2016), and received a fellowship from Fondazione per l'Arte in Rome, Italy in 2016.",
"Bārta Parish\nBārta ; Krūte ; Ķīburi ; Plosti ",
"Barta'a\n Ceramics from the Byzantine era have been found in Barta'a.",
"Bārta Parish\n Bārta Parish (Bārtas pagasts) is an administrative unit of Grobiņa Municipality, Latvia. The parish has a population of 683 (as of 1/07/2010) and covers an area of 115.6 km2.",
"Boban Birmančević\n Republic of the Congo, Egypt, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Grenada, Guinea-Bissau, India, Indonesia, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Latvia, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Mexico, Moldova, Montenegro, Morocco, Mozambique, Nauru, the Netherlands, Nicaragua, Nigeria, North Macedonia, Norway, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, the Republic of Congo, Romania, Russia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Sao Tome and Principe, the Solomon Islands, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, South Korea, South Sudan, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Suriname, Sweden, Switzerland, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.",
"Martina Bárta\n Martina Bárta (born 1 September 1988) is a Czech jazz singer and musician. A vocalist and a player of the French horn, she was part of the Frankfurt am Main-based jazz band 4 To The Bar. She also had a role in the musical Robin Hood and worked with Felix Slováček and Karel Gott. She represented the Czech Republic in the Eurovision Song Contest 2017 with the song My Turn but failed to qualify to the final. In 2018 she took part in Deutschland sucht den Superstar and reached the recall.",
"Barta'a\n (the Kabha family), the de facto \"reunification\" was viewed positively by town residents. Residents of East Barta'a began to work in Israel and agriculture became a source of secondary income. Thanks to the proximity to Israel, the standard of living in East Barta'a rose faster than in the rest of the West Bank. In 1978, East Barta'a was connected to electricity from generators, and in 1984, it was connected to the Israeli electricity grid. Barta'a students study at high schools in Ya'abed and Jenin, In 1995, an outline plan for East Barta'a, intended to meet the expansion needs of East Barta'a by 2015, ",
"Aleš Bárta\n1982 - won the Anton Bruckner International Organ Competition in Linz ; 1983 - prize winner at the Franz Liszt International Organ Competition in Budapest ; 1984 - absolute winner of the Prague Spring International Organ Competition ",
"Barta (surname)\nAdam Barta (born 1979), American actor ; Aleš Bárta (born 1960), Czech organist ; Alexander Barta (born 1983), German professional ice hockey centre ; Bernart de la Barta (fl. 1229), troubadour from La Barthe ; Bjorn Barta (born 1980), German professional ice hockey player ; Dan Bárta, Czech singer ; Franz Barta (born 1902), Austrian boxer ; Gary Barta (born 1963), athletic director at the University of Iowa ; Hilary Barta (born 1957), American comic book writer and artist ; István Barta (1895–1948), Hungarian water polo player ; Jan Bárta (born 1984), professional Czech road cyclist ; Jiří Barta (born 1948), Czech stop-motion animation director ; Jiří Bárta (1935–2012), Czech pianist and composer ; Josef Bárta (1744-1787), Czech composer ; Krisztina Barta (born 1991), Hungarian ice dancer ; Libor Barta (born 1967), Czech "
] |
What is Lorena Corona Valdés's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | Lorena Corona Valdés | 1,419,959 | 35 | [
{
"id": "7909532",
"title": "Lorena Corona Valdés",
"text": " Lorena Corona Valdés (born 16 December 1972) is a Mexican politician from the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico. She serves as a federal deputy to the LXIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Durango and the first electoral region.",
"score": "1.6778282"
},
{
"id": "7909533",
"title": "Lorena Corona Valdés",
"text": " Corona received her law degree from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in 1997 and worked primarily as a communications lawyer. Between 2001 and 2006, she was the legal director of Televisa Radio (Sistema Radiópolis, S.A. de C.V.); during this time, she obtained graduate degrees in intellectual property law and in operating broadcasting companies, and she was also named by Vicente Fox to serve on the Federal Telecommunications Commission. After she left Televisa Radio, she worked at Ecija Abogados from 2006 to 2007 and at Legal Media Advisers from 2007 to 2008. From 2009 to 2012, Corona spent her first term in the Chamber of Deputies for the LXI Legislature, where she sat on the Public Education and Educational Services Commission as well as those dealing with Government and National Defense. She returned to the chamber in 2015, again as a proportional representation deputy; she sits on the Economy, Constitutional Points, and Culture and Film Commissions.",
"score": "1.6040497"
},
{
"id": "32343010",
"title": "Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero",
"text": " Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero (born February 26, 1952 in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba) is a Cuban artist specializing in painting, drawing, engraving, and illustration. From 1967 to 1972, she studied in the Escuela Nacional de Arte (ENA), in Havana, Cuba. Between 1984 and 1989 she studied art history at the Universidad de Oriente in Santiago de Cuba.",
"score": "1.4146829"
},
{
"id": "12754527",
"title": "Lorena Benítes",
"text": " Lorena Aida Benítes Valverde (born July 24, 1982 in Esmeraldas) is an Ecuadorian taekwondo practitioner. She represented Ecuador at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where she competed and played for the women's heavyweight category (+67 kg), an event which was later dominated by Mexico's María Espinoza. She was eliminated in the first preliminary round of the competition, after being defeated by Australia's Carmen Marton, who only scored two points in the match.",
"score": "1.4088113"
},
{
"id": "3719059",
"title": "Adriana Valdés",
"text": " Valdés studied at the Catholic University of Chile. She taught literature at that University (1965–1975) and, after 25 years working for the United Nations, went back to postgraduate teaching on arts at the University of Chile for some years after 2002. She writes on visual arts and literature. Two collections of her essays were published in book form, in 1996 and 2006. With Pedro Lastra she co-edited the posthumous book of Enrique Lihn, \"Diario de muerte\", in 1989. She was named a Fellow of the Chilean Academy of Language in 1993. In 2010 she became the first woman to serve as deputy director of the Academy. ",
"score": "1.3973328"
},
{
"id": "13860327",
"title": "Lorena Hermida",
"text": " Lorena is student of Business Administration at the National Unified Corporation of Neiva. Lorena is studying English, play tennis, football and basketball. Hermida is the daughter of Oliver and Geovanna Aguilar Trujillo. Her height is 5 feet part with 9 1/2 inches, their body measurements are 34.3 - 25.4 - 39, having a swarthy skin and dark brown eyes.",
"score": "1.3757012"
},
{
"id": "1382130",
"title": "Zoé Valdés",
"text": " Zoé Valdés (born May 2, 1959 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban novelist, poet, scriptwriter, film director and blogger. She studied at the Instituto Superior Pedagógico Enrique José Varona, but did not graduate. From 1984 to 1988, she worked for the Delegación de Cuba at UNESCO in Paris and in the Oficina Cultural de la Misión de Cuba in Paris. From 1990 to 1995, she was an editor of the magazine Cine Cubano. She lives with her daughter in Paris. She has been married three times: with Cuban writer Manuel Pereira Quintero, Cuban government official José Antonio González and Cuban independent filmmaker Ricardo Vega.",
"score": "1.37257"
},
{
"id": "3719058",
"title": "Adriana Valdés",
"text": " Adriana Valdés Budge (born October 3, 1943 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean writer essayist.",
"score": "1.3645152"
},
{
"id": "3719060",
"title": "Adriana Valdés",
"text": " was reelected to this position in 2013. She received the 2010 Altazor Award in literary essay category for her book Enrique Lihn: vistas parciales, and in 2013 was short-listed for the same award for her book on \"De ángeles y ninfas\", on Aby Warburg and Walter Benjamin. Along with Alfredo Jaar, she published Studies on Happiness, Barcelona, 1999. She has edited a book on the painter Roser Bru (1996) and two books about the artist Alfredo Jaar: Jaar/SCL/2006 and Venezia, Venezia (2013). In 2018 she received the Santiago Municipal Literature Award in the Essay category for Redefinir lo humano: las humanidades en el siglo XXI.",
"score": "1.350148"
},
{
"id": "25593231",
"title": "Rosa Valdeón",
"text": " Rosa María Valdeón Santiago (born 17 December 1960) is a Spanish politician and physician. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the People's Party of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón was the Minister of Economy and Finance of Castile and León, in office from 8 July 2015 to 10 September 2016. She was the mayor of Zamora from 2007 to 2015. Rosa Valdeón was also the procurator of the Cortes of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón held the position of general director of public health at the Junta of Castile and León from 2001 to 2003.",
"score": "1.3489698"
},
{
"id": "31668147",
"title": "Asunción Valdés",
"text": " the German Marshall Fund of the United States. She began her professional career in 1972, with Información. Later, she joined La Verdad, both newspapers in her native city of Alicante. In 1975, she began broadcasting on Radio Exterior. In January 1976 she was one of the journalists who put together the first edition of El País, working as International Economic Editor. In 1977, she moved to Bonn as a correspondent of Radio Nacional de España, and remained in West Germany until 1982, when she became the station's correspondent in Brussels. In Bonn she was vice president of the Association of the Foreign Press in Germany (Verein der Ausländische ",
"score": "1.3364666"
},
{
"id": "27591284",
"title": "Loren Legarda",
"text": " Lorna Regina \"Loren\" Bautista Legarda (born January 28, 1960) is a Filipina politician, environmentalist, cultural worker, and former journalist who is currently serving as the representative of Antique and as a House Deputy Speaker. She previously served as a senator twice: from 1998 to 2004 and from 2007 to 2019. She is the only female in the Philippines to top two senatorial elections: 1998 and 2007. She also unsuccessfully ran for vice president twice: In 2004 as the running mate of Fernando Poe Jr., and again in 2010 as the running mate of Manny Villar. Legarda was a 2001 UNEP Laureate as declared by the United Nations Environment Programme, and a 2008 Regional Champion for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaption for Asia and the Pacific as declared by the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction. She was declared by the United Nations as a UN Global ",
"score": "1.3335896"
},
{
"id": "13302683",
"title": "Elsa Paredes de Salazar",
"text": " Law and Dentistry at the University of La Paz, managing to crown her brilliant studies with the university degree of Surgeon-dentist in National Provision. She studied Political and Social Sciences only to expand her vast culture without being seduced by the hard work of the professional, taking advantage of his intellectual skills at the service of society to vigorously promote institutions of social assistance and dissemination of women's culture, work in which she has undoubtedly achieved full success. However, Dr. Paredes de Salazar has taken special care not only to analyze issues related to the family and society, but has studied historical and legal problems of undeniable importance, demonstrating their capacity and illustration.\"",
"score": "1.3314538"
},
{
"id": "31015252",
"title": "Ángeles González-Sinde",
"text": " Ángeles González-Sinde Reig (born 7 April 1965) is a Spanish scriptwriter, film director and politician. She served as Minister of Culture of the Government of Spain from April 2009 until December 2011. Her appointment was received with anger and rejection by the Spanish Internet Community, due to González-Sinde's opposition to P2P file sharing and the alleged conflict of interest due to her ties to the film industry. A strict anti-piracy law enacted in Spain in December 2011 has become known colloquially as Ley Sinde, or the Sinde Law, as she was seen as the primary backer of the measure.",
"score": "1.3312056"
},
{
"id": "9385758",
"title": "Blanca Alva Guerrero",
"text": " Alva Guerrero graduated from Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and the Ricardo Palma University with post graduate studies in Museology. She has been deaf since childhood. She was the General Director of Defense of Cultural Heritage at the Ministry of Culture from 2006 to 2017. She works to protect archaeological works and other cultural heritage items for the country, confiscating illegal handicrafts. As part of her work with Peru's Ministry of Culture, she ensured people do not sell land where cultural items are and that people do not move into those areas. In 2010, she was awarded the Peru Ministry of Labor \"Recognition of the Work and Entrepreneurship\" Award.",
"score": "1.3301861"
},
{
"id": "25593232",
"title": "Rosa Valdeón",
"text": " Rosa Valdeón was born in Toro, Zamora, Spain. She studied at the University of Salamanca. Rosa Valdeón was vice–presidente of the Junta of Castile and León from 2015 to 2016. Rosa Valdeón served as medical inspector of social security. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the National Executive Committee of the People's Party. Rosa Valdeón also elected to councilor for family and equal opportunities of the Junta of Castile and León from 2003 to 2007.",
"score": "1.3297108"
},
{
"id": "24935502",
"title": "Beatriz Valdés",
"text": " Beatriz Valdés Fidalgo (born May 12, 1963, in Havana) is a Cuban-Venezuelan actress. She was born in Cuba, where she studied drama and worked as an actress before she arrived to Venezuela as a guest at the Cinema Interamerican Forum in 1989. She gave birth to her first child there in 1991.",
"score": "1.3288171"
},
{
"id": "3134753",
"title": "Lorena Ziraldo",
"text": " She studied Art History at the University of Toronto and Fine Arts under Gerald Ferguson at NSCAD University, obtaining her BFA in 2000.",
"score": "1.3250082"
},
{
"id": "25794188",
"title": "Lorena Vindel",
"text": " Lorena Vindel (born 1977) is a Honduran actress and artist.",
"score": "1.3230071"
},
{
"id": "14146896",
"title": "Soraya Rodríguez",
"text": " Born in Valladolid, Rodríguez graduated with her law degree from the University of Valladolid, with a specialization in Community Law, in 1987. Between 1988 and 1990 she worked as a lawyer at the Center for the Reception of Women Victims of Ill-treatment in Valladolid. She was Secretary of Social Movements and Citizen Participation in the Regional Executive of the PSOE in Castile and Leon. Later, in 1991 she was professor of the University School of Labor Relations of Valladolid. Between 1994 and 1997 she was director of the Center for Women in the city of Valladolid. In 1998, she served as legal advisor to the Local Administration.",
"score": "1.3224516"
}
] | [
"Lorena Corona Valdés\n Lorena Corona Valdés (born 16 December 1972) is a Mexican politician from the Ecologist Green Party of Mexico. She serves as a federal deputy to the LXIII Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Durango and the first electoral region.",
"Lorena Corona Valdés\n Corona received her law degree from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM) in 1997 and worked primarily as a communications lawyer. Between 2001 and 2006, she was the legal director of Televisa Radio (Sistema Radiópolis, S.A. de C.V.); during this time, she obtained graduate degrees in intellectual property law and in operating broadcasting companies, and she was also named by Vicente Fox to serve on the Federal Telecommunications Commission. After she left Televisa Radio, she worked at Ecija Abogados from 2006 to 2007 and at Legal Media Advisers from 2007 to 2008. From 2009 to 2012, Corona spent her first term in the Chamber of Deputies for the LXI Legislature, where she sat on the Public Education and Educational Services Commission as well as those dealing with Government and National Defense. She returned to the chamber in 2015, again as a proportional representation deputy; she sits on the Economy, Constitutional Points, and Culture and Film Commissions.",
"Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero\n Julia Emilia Valdés Borrero (born February 26, 1952 in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba) is a Cuban artist specializing in painting, drawing, engraving, and illustration. From 1967 to 1972, she studied in the Escuela Nacional de Arte (ENA), in Havana, Cuba. Between 1984 and 1989 she studied art history at the Universidad de Oriente in Santiago de Cuba.",
"Lorena Benítes\n Lorena Aida Benítes Valverde (born July 24, 1982 in Esmeraldas) is an Ecuadorian taekwondo practitioner. She represented Ecuador at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where she competed and played for the women's heavyweight category (+67 kg), an event which was later dominated by Mexico's María Espinoza. She was eliminated in the first preliminary round of the competition, after being defeated by Australia's Carmen Marton, who only scored two points in the match.",
"Adriana Valdés\n Valdés studied at the Catholic University of Chile. She taught literature at that University (1965–1975) and, after 25 years working for the United Nations, went back to postgraduate teaching on arts at the University of Chile for some years after 2002. She writes on visual arts and literature. Two collections of her essays were published in book form, in 1996 and 2006. With Pedro Lastra she co-edited the posthumous book of Enrique Lihn, \"Diario de muerte\", in 1989. She was named a Fellow of the Chilean Academy of Language in 1993. In 2010 she became the first woman to serve as deputy director of the Academy. ",
"Lorena Hermida\n Lorena is student of Business Administration at the National Unified Corporation of Neiva. Lorena is studying English, play tennis, football and basketball. Hermida is the daughter of Oliver and Geovanna Aguilar Trujillo. Her height is 5 feet part with 9 1/2 inches, their body measurements are 34.3 - 25.4 - 39, having a swarthy skin and dark brown eyes.",
"Zoé Valdés\n Zoé Valdés (born May 2, 1959 in Havana, Cuba) is a Cuban novelist, poet, scriptwriter, film director and blogger. She studied at the Instituto Superior Pedagógico Enrique José Varona, but did not graduate. From 1984 to 1988, she worked for the Delegación de Cuba at UNESCO in Paris and in the Oficina Cultural de la Misión de Cuba in Paris. From 1990 to 1995, she was an editor of the magazine Cine Cubano. She lives with her daughter in Paris. She has been married three times: with Cuban writer Manuel Pereira Quintero, Cuban government official José Antonio González and Cuban independent filmmaker Ricardo Vega.",
"Adriana Valdés\n Adriana Valdés Budge (born October 3, 1943 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean writer essayist.",
"Adriana Valdés\n was reelected to this position in 2013. She received the 2010 Altazor Award in literary essay category for her book Enrique Lihn: vistas parciales, and in 2013 was short-listed for the same award for her book on \"De ángeles y ninfas\", on Aby Warburg and Walter Benjamin. Along with Alfredo Jaar, she published Studies on Happiness, Barcelona, 1999. She has edited a book on the painter Roser Bru (1996) and two books about the artist Alfredo Jaar: Jaar/SCL/2006 and Venezia, Venezia (2013). In 2018 she received the Santiago Municipal Literature Award in the Essay category for Redefinir lo humano: las humanidades en el siglo XXI.",
"Rosa Valdeón\n Rosa María Valdeón Santiago (born 17 December 1960) is a Spanish politician and physician. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the People's Party of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón was the Minister of Economy and Finance of Castile and León, in office from 8 July 2015 to 10 September 2016. She was the mayor of Zamora from 2007 to 2015. Rosa Valdeón was also the procurator of the Cortes of Castile and León. Rosa Valdeón held the position of general director of public health at the Junta of Castile and León from 2001 to 2003.",
"Asunción Valdés\n the German Marshall Fund of the United States. She began her professional career in 1972, with Información. Later, she joined La Verdad, both newspapers in her native city of Alicante. In 1975, she began broadcasting on Radio Exterior. In January 1976 she was one of the journalists who put together the first edition of El País, working as International Economic Editor. In 1977, she moved to Bonn as a correspondent of Radio Nacional de España, and remained in West Germany until 1982, when she became the station's correspondent in Brussels. In Bonn she was vice president of the Association of the Foreign Press in Germany (Verein der Ausländische ",
"Loren Legarda\n Lorna Regina \"Loren\" Bautista Legarda (born January 28, 1960) is a Filipina politician, environmentalist, cultural worker, and former journalist who is currently serving as the representative of Antique and as a House Deputy Speaker. She previously served as a senator twice: from 1998 to 2004 and from 2007 to 2019. She is the only female in the Philippines to top two senatorial elections: 1998 and 2007. She also unsuccessfully ran for vice president twice: In 2004 as the running mate of Fernando Poe Jr., and again in 2010 as the running mate of Manny Villar. Legarda was a 2001 UNEP Laureate as declared by the United Nations Environment Programme, and a 2008 Regional Champion for Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change Adaption for Asia and the Pacific as declared by the United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction. She was declared by the United Nations as a UN Global ",
"Elsa Paredes de Salazar\n Law and Dentistry at the University of La Paz, managing to crown her brilliant studies with the university degree of Surgeon-dentist in National Provision. She studied Political and Social Sciences only to expand her vast culture without being seduced by the hard work of the professional, taking advantage of his intellectual skills at the service of society to vigorously promote institutions of social assistance and dissemination of women's culture, work in which she has undoubtedly achieved full success. However, Dr. Paredes de Salazar has taken special care not only to analyze issues related to the family and society, but has studied historical and legal problems of undeniable importance, demonstrating their capacity and illustration.\"",
"Ángeles González-Sinde\n Ángeles González-Sinde Reig (born 7 April 1965) is a Spanish scriptwriter, film director and politician. She served as Minister of Culture of the Government of Spain from April 2009 until December 2011. Her appointment was received with anger and rejection by the Spanish Internet Community, due to González-Sinde's opposition to P2P file sharing and the alleged conflict of interest due to her ties to the film industry. A strict anti-piracy law enacted in Spain in December 2011 has become known colloquially as Ley Sinde, or the Sinde Law, as she was seen as the primary backer of the measure.",
"Blanca Alva Guerrero\n Alva Guerrero graduated from Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and the Ricardo Palma University with post graduate studies in Museology. She has been deaf since childhood. She was the General Director of Defense of Cultural Heritage at the Ministry of Culture from 2006 to 2017. She works to protect archaeological works and other cultural heritage items for the country, confiscating illegal handicrafts. As part of her work with Peru's Ministry of Culture, she ensured people do not sell land where cultural items are and that people do not move into those areas. In 2010, she was awarded the Peru Ministry of Labor \"Recognition of the Work and Entrepreneurship\" Award.",
"Rosa Valdeón\n Rosa Valdeón was born in Toro, Zamora, Spain. She studied at the University of Salamanca. Rosa Valdeón was vice–presidente of the Junta of Castile and León from 2015 to 2016. Rosa Valdeón served as medical inspector of social security. Rosa Valdeón is a member of the National Executive Committee of the People's Party. Rosa Valdeón also elected to councilor for family and equal opportunities of the Junta of Castile and León from 2003 to 2007.",
"Beatriz Valdés\n Beatriz Valdés Fidalgo (born May 12, 1963, in Havana) is a Cuban-Venezuelan actress. She was born in Cuba, where she studied drama and worked as an actress before she arrived to Venezuela as a guest at the Cinema Interamerican Forum in 1989. She gave birth to her first child there in 1991.",
"Lorena Ziraldo\n She studied Art History at the University of Toronto and Fine Arts under Gerald Ferguson at NSCAD University, obtaining her BFA in 2000.",
"Lorena Vindel\n Lorena Vindel (born 1977) is a Honduran actress and artist.",
"Soraya Rodríguez\n Born in Valladolid, Rodríguez graduated with her law degree from the University of Valladolid, with a specialization in Community Law, in 1987. Between 1988 and 1990 she worked as a lawyer at the Center for the Reception of Women Victims of Ill-treatment in Valladolid. She was Secretary of Social Movements and Citizen Participation in the Regional Executive of the PSOE in Castile and Leon. Later, in 1991 she was professor of the University School of Labor Relations of Valladolid. Between 1994 and 1997 she was director of the Center for Women in the city of Valladolid. In 1998, she served as legal advisor to the Local Administration."
] |
What is George Lewis's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | George Lewis (politician) | 4,218,380 | 68 | [
{
"id": "26215196",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)",
"text": " Lewis spent the 1947–48 season back in the Third Division South with Brighton & Hove Albion before joining Dartford, where he remained until 1952, when he took up a position as groundsman.",
"score": "1.7580492"
},
{
"id": "10448415",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)",
"text": " .",
"score": "1.6559834"
},
{
"id": "10448411",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)",
"text": " George Lewis Igaba-Ishimwe Maniraguha (born 16 June 2000) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for club Arsenal.",
"score": "1.6123273"
},
{
"id": "10448412",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)",
"text": " Born in Kigali, Rwanda, Lewis moved to Tanzania at the age of one. He then moved to Norway the age of four, starting his career at local side Stakkevollan IF, before moving to Tromsdalen, and later Tromsø in 2015. He mostly played for the reserve teams of both clubs, notably notching 32 goals in 35 appearances over three seasons for Tromsdalen's reserve team.",
"score": "1.6105621"
},
{
"id": "1622881",
"title": "George Robert Lewis",
"text": " Attribution",
"score": "1.6041276"
},
{
"id": "30301073",
"title": "George E. Lewis",
"text": " George Emanuel Lewis (born July 14, 1952) is an American composer, performer, and scholar of experimental music. He has been a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) since 1971, when he joined the organization at the age of 19. He is renowned for his work as an improvising trombonist and considered a pioneer of computer music, which he began pursuing in the late 1970s; in the 1980s he created Voyager, an improvising software he has used in interactive performances. Lewis's many honors include a MacArthur Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and his book A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music received the American Book Award. Lewis is the Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music, Composition & Historical Musicology at Columbia University.",
"score": "1.6005778"
},
{
"id": "2982202",
"title": "George Lewis (rugby)",
"text": " George Lewis (9 August 1897 – death unknown) was a Welsh rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s and 1930s. He played club level rugby union (RU) for Pontypool RFC, as a centre, i.e. number 12 or 13, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Wales and Monmouthshire, and at club level for St. Helens, as a, i.e. number 1, 3 or 4, 6, or 7.",
"score": "1.5895267"
},
{
"id": "32729150",
"title": "George Lewis (rugby league)",
"text": " George Lewis was a professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He played at club level for Castleford, and Featherstone Rovers (Heritage № 237) (World War II guest), as a, i.e. number 1.",
"score": "1.5887918"
},
{
"id": "10448414",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)",
"text": " Eligible to represent both Rwanda and Norway, Lewis has stated that he is Norwegian, having grown up in Tromsø.",
"score": "1.5859771"
},
{
"id": "26215192",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)",
"text": " Thomas George Lewis (20 October 1913 – 6 August 1981) was a Welsh footballer who played as a centre-forward for Watford in the late 1930s, before joining Southampton for a brief period after World War II.",
"score": "1.5803967"
},
{
"id": "1622878",
"title": "George Robert Lewis",
"text": " George Robert Lewis (1782–1871) was a versatile English painter of landscapes and portraits.",
"score": "1.57716"
},
{
"id": "10448413",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)",
"text": " Lewis went on trial with English Premier League side Arsenal in March 2020, having previously trained with local side Solihull United, as well as Bournemouth and Ipswich Town. Lewis joined Arsenal in August 2020, signing a professional contract after being released by Fram Larvik. He reportedly signed a two year deal with the North London club. The move was seen as a surprise, as Lewis had only played in the Norwegian second and third divisions, and has no youth international caps. He scored in his first appearance for Arsenal's under-21 side, in a 2–1 win over Ipswich Town in the EFL Trophy.",
"score": "1.5715075"
},
{
"id": "3843918",
"title": "John Lewis (footballer, born 1954)",
"text": " John George Lewis (born 9 May 1954) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League as a midfielder. He also played non-league football for clubs including Romford, Walthamstow Avenue and Tilbury. He represented England at youth level.",
"score": "1.5634989"
},
{
"id": "900282",
"title": "George Lewis (priest)",
"text": " George Lewis was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland. Lewis was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge. He was Archdeacon of Meath from 1723 until his death in 1730.",
"score": "1.553246"
},
{
"id": "26215194",
"title": "George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)",
"text": " In July 1946, he joined Second Division Southampton for a \"four figure fee\". Described as a \"well-built centre-forward\" with a \"never-say-die\" attitude, Lewis enjoyed a fine first season at The Dell, despite problems at the start of the season with a hamstring injury. He made his debut on 3 October 1946, taking over from the injured Doug McGibbon, in a 2–4 defeat at Swansea. After a run of five games, in which he only found the net once, he was replaced by the fit again McGibbon. He regained the number 9 shirt in December when McGibbon was sold to Fulham and went on to score ",
"score": "1.5496391"
},
{
"id": "28040639",
"title": "George F. Lewis",
"text": " George F. Lewis (June 7, 1828 – May 30, 1890) was a nineteenth-century American journalist and proprietor of several newspapers. He helped in the printing of the first time news of presidential election results were published. He was involved in determining there was copper ore in Michigan to be mined. He was also mayor of Saginaw, Michigan.",
"score": "1.543005"
},
{
"id": "15293598",
"title": "G. Craige Lewis",
"text": " George Craige Lewis (born July 19, 1969) is a Christian pastor of Adamant Believers Council in North Richland Hills, Texas, who also travels the world with his EX Ministries that includes speaking against hip-hop culture.",
"score": "1.5348986"
},
{
"id": "2982209",
"title": "George Lewis (rugby)",
"text": " George Lewis was the brother of the rugby union footballer for Pontypool RFC, and the rugby league for St. Helens; Stanley \"Stan\" Lewis.",
"score": "1.534625"
},
{
"id": "11300036",
"title": "Charles George Lewis",
"text": " Charles George Lewis (13 June 1808 – 16 June 1880) was a British printmaker.",
"score": "1.5340832"
},
{
"id": "1622879",
"title": "George Robert Lewis",
"text": " The younger brother of Frederick Christian Lewis and of Charles Lewis the bookbinder, he was born in London on 27 March 1782. He studied under Henry Fuseli in the schools of the Royal Academy, and worked on both nature and antiquities. Lewis sent landscapes to the exhibitions of 1805–7; he at that time lived with his brother Frederick at Enfield, and worked for him on John Chamberlaine's Original Designs of the most celebrated Masters and William Young Ottley's Italian School of Design, for both of which he made aquatint plates. In 1813, he toured North Wales with John Linnell. In 1818, he accompanied Thomas Frognall Dibdin, to make drawings, on a continental journey, and his illustrations to the Bibliographical and Picturesque Tour through France and Germany were published in 1821. From 1820 to 1859, Lewis exhibited portraits, landscapes, and figure subjects at the Royal Academy, the British Institution, the Suffolk Street Gallery, and the Oil and Water-colour Society. He died at Hampstead on 15 May 1871.",
"score": "1.5317433"
}
] | [
"George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)\n Lewis spent the 1947–48 season back in the Third Division South with Brighton & Hove Albion before joining Dartford, where he remained until 1952, when he took up a position as groundsman.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)\n .",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)\n George Lewis Igaba-Ishimwe Maniraguha (born 16 June 2000) is a professional footballer who plays as a forward for club Arsenal.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)\n Born in Kigali, Rwanda, Lewis moved to Tanzania at the age of one. He then moved to Norway the age of four, starting his career at local side Stakkevollan IF, before moving to Tromsdalen, and later Tromsø in 2015. He mostly played for the reserve teams of both clubs, notably notching 32 goals in 35 appearances over three seasons for Tromsdalen's reserve team.",
"George Robert Lewis\n Attribution",
"George E. Lewis\n George Emanuel Lewis (born July 14, 1952) is an American composer, performer, and scholar of experimental music. He has been a member of the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM) since 1971, when he joined the organization at the age of 19. He is renowned for his work as an improvising trombonist and considered a pioneer of computer music, which he began pursuing in the late 1970s; in the 1980s he created Voyager, an improvising software he has used in interactive performances. Lewis's many honors include a MacArthur Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and his book A Power Stronger Than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music received the American Book Award. Lewis is the Edwin H. Case Professor of American Music, Composition & Historical Musicology at Columbia University.",
"George Lewis (rugby)\n George Lewis (9 August 1897 – death unknown) was a Welsh rugby union and professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s and 1930s. He played club level rugby union (RU) for Pontypool RFC, as a centre, i.e. number 12 or 13, and representative level rugby league (RL) for Wales and Monmouthshire, and at club level for St. Helens, as a, i.e. number 1, 3 or 4, 6, or 7.",
"George Lewis (rugby league)\n George Lewis was a professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. He played at club level for Castleford, and Featherstone Rovers (Heritage № 237) (World War II guest), as a, i.e. number 1.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)\n Eligible to represent both Rwanda and Norway, Lewis has stated that he is Norwegian, having grown up in Tromsø.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)\n Thomas George Lewis (20 October 1913 – 6 August 1981) was a Welsh footballer who played as a centre-forward for Watford in the late 1930s, before joining Southampton for a brief period after World War II.",
"George Robert Lewis\n George Robert Lewis (1782–1871) was a versatile English painter of landscapes and portraits.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 2000)\n Lewis went on trial with English Premier League side Arsenal in March 2020, having previously trained with local side Solihull United, as well as Bournemouth and Ipswich Town. Lewis joined Arsenal in August 2020, signing a professional contract after being released by Fram Larvik. He reportedly signed a two year deal with the North London club. The move was seen as a surprise, as Lewis had only played in the Norwegian second and third divisions, and has no youth international caps. He scored in his first appearance for Arsenal's under-21 side, in a 2–1 win over Ipswich Town in the EFL Trophy.",
"John Lewis (footballer, born 1954)\n John George Lewis (born 9 May 1954) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League as a midfielder. He also played non-league football for clubs including Romford, Walthamstow Avenue and Tilbury. He represented England at youth level.",
"George Lewis (priest)\n George Lewis was an 18th-century Anglican priest in Ireland. Lewis was educated at Queens' College, Cambridge. He was Archdeacon of Meath from 1723 until his death in 1730.",
"George Lewis (footballer, born 1913)\n In July 1946, he joined Second Division Southampton for a \"four figure fee\". Described as a \"well-built centre-forward\" with a \"never-say-die\" attitude, Lewis enjoyed a fine first season at The Dell, despite problems at the start of the season with a hamstring injury. He made his debut on 3 October 1946, taking over from the injured Doug McGibbon, in a 2–4 defeat at Swansea. After a run of five games, in which he only found the net once, he was replaced by the fit again McGibbon. He regained the number 9 shirt in December when McGibbon was sold to Fulham and went on to score ",
"George F. Lewis\n George F. Lewis (June 7, 1828 – May 30, 1890) was a nineteenth-century American journalist and proprietor of several newspapers. He helped in the printing of the first time news of presidential election results were published. He was involved in determining there was copper ore in Michigan to be mined. He was also mayor of Saginaw, Michigan.",
"G. Craige Lewis\n George Craige Lewis (born July 19, 1969) is a Christian pastor of Adamant Believers Council in North Richland Hills, Texas, who also travels the world with his EX Ministries that includes speaking against hip-hop culture.",
"George Lewis (rugby)\n George Lewis was the brother of the rugby union footballer for Pontypool RFC, and the rugby league for St. Helens; Stanley \"Stan\" Lewis.",
"Charles George Lewis\n Charles George Lewis (13 June 1808 – 16 June 1880) was a British printmaker.",
"George Robert Lewis\n The younger brother of Frederick Christian Lewis and of Charles Lewis the bookbinder, he was born in London on 27 March 1782. He studied under Henry Fuseli in the schools of the Royal Academy, and worked on both nature and antiquities. Lewis sent landscapes to the exhibitions of 1805–7; he at that time lived with his brother Frederick at Enfield, and worked for him on John Chamberlaine's Original Designs of the most celebrated Masters and William Young Ottley's Italian School of Design, for both of which he made aquatint plates. In 1813, he toured North Wales with John Linnell. In 1818, he accompanied Thomas Frognall Dibdin, to make drawings, on a continental journey, and his illustrations to the Bibliographical and Picturesque Tour through France and Germany were published in 1821. From 1820 to 1859, Lewis exhibited portraits, landscapes, and figure subjects at the Royal Academy, the British Institution, the Suffolk Street Gallery, and the Oil and Water-colour Society. He died at Hampstead on 15 May 1871."
] |
What sport does Armand Raymond play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Armand Raymond | 3,375,629 | 70 | [
{
"id": "25851110",
"title": "Armand Raymond",
"text": " Armand Raymond (January 12, 1913 – January 22, 1993) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who played 22 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born, and died in Montreal, Quebec.",
"score": "1.8659217"
},
{
"id": "12937265",
"title": "Alain Raymond",
"text": " Alain Raymond (born June 24, 1965) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey goaltender. He played one game in the National Hockey League with the Washington Capitals, giving up two goals in the two periods that he played. In his first full IHL season with the Fort Wayne Komets, Raymond won the James Norris Memorial Trophy, awarded to the goaltenders with the fewest goals against in the regular season. Raymond split most of his time during the 1989–90 season between two clubs. He played 31 games with the ECHL's Hampton Roads Admirals and played another 11 games with their parent club, the AHL's Baltimore Skipjacks. Raymond went 17–12–1 with a 3.60 GAA, earning him named the starting goalie on the East Coast Hockey League's all-star team. Raymond later became a goaltender coach with the Rimouski Oceanic of the QMJHL.",
"score": "1.6726967"
},
{
"id": "25681676",
"title": "Paul Raymond (ice hockey)",
"text": " Paul Marcel Raymond (February 27, 1913 – April 4, 1995) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played 65 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born in Montreal, Quebec.",
"score": "1.627417"
},
{
"id": "13935278",
"title": "Raymond Basset",
"text": " Denis Raymond Basset (born 1883, date of death unknown) was a French tug of war competitor, who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics. He participated in the tug of war competition and won a silver medal as a member of French team.",
"score": "1.6043438"
},
{
"id": "13049978",
"title": "Armand Save",
"text": " Save debuted in rugby union for Stadoceste Tarbais, where he took part at the 1950-51 French Rugby Union Championship before switching to rugby league and making a brilliant career for Bordeaux and France. He was Champion of France with Bordeaux in 1954, as well taking part to the 1954 Rugby League World Cup final lost against Australia, as well in the 1957 World Cup. At club level, he joined Saint-Gaudens. After his sports career, he became a butcher and trained the rugby union team of Bazet, the town of which he was municipal councillor between 1977 and 1983.",
"score": "1.5923687"
},
{
"id": "16208166",
"title": "Raymond Gruppi",
"text": " He spent most of his playing career at Villeneuve-sur-Lot, playing the French Championship, which eventually ended as runner-up in 1965, and at the Lord Derby Cup a season later. With his club performances, he was called up several times for the French national team between 1959 and 1971, taking part at the 1960 and 1970 World Cups. Later, he was appointed as coach for Villeneuve-sur-Lot with new successes with the victory at the Lord Derby Cup in 1979 and in the French Championship in 1980. He was also appointed as coach for France alongside Jean Panno debuting with a 24-16 win against Great Britain on 17 March 1985. He was called up for the France squad at the 1960 Rugby League World Cup alongside with his team mates Angélo Boldini, Jacques Dubon, André Lacaze and Jacques Merquey. Later, he was called up again to represent France at the 1970 Rugby League World Cup with his new team mates Jean-Pierre Clar, Gérard Cremoux, Daniel Pellerin and Christian Sabatié.",
"score": "1.5863881"
},
{
"id": "30704007",
"title": "Armand Delmonte",
"text": " Armand Romeo \"Dutch\" Delmonte (June 3, 1927 — April 7, 1981) was a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger who played in one National Hockey League game for the Boston Bruins during the 1945–46 season, on January 6, 1946 against the New York Rangers. Del Monte also played for the St. Catharines Falcons from 1943 to 1945, Boston Olympics from 1945 to 1948, Los Angeles Monarchs from 1946 to 1947, St. Paul Saints from 1947 to 1951, Tacoma Rockets from 1951 to 1952, Cleveland Barons from 1952 to 1953, Ottawa Senators from 1953 to 1954, and the Marion Barons from 1953 to 1954.",
"score": "1.5820258"
},
{
"id": "29135340",
"title": "Bertrand Raymond",
"text": " Bertrand Raymond (born November 2, 1943) is a Canadian sports author and journalist. A former columnist for Le Journal de Montréal, he won the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award in 1990 and is a member of the media section of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Raymond started covering the Montreal Canadiens in 1971, and retired in 2010.",
"score": "1.5738595"
},
{
"id": "6038385",
"title": "Raymond Casimir",
"text": " Raymond Casimir (born 28 October 1976) is a former Dominican cricketer who played for the Windward Islands in West Indian domestic cricket. He played as a left-arm orthodox bowler who batted left-handed. Casimir appeared for the Rest of Windward Islands team in the 2002–03 Red Stripe Bowl, where Saint Vincent and the Grenadines were competing as a separate team. His first-class debut for the Windwards came almost six years later, against Jamaica in the 2007–08 Carib Beer Cup. Casimir's second and final match for the Windwards came the following season, against Trinidad and Tobago. He also represented Dominica in the 2008 edition of the Stanford 20/20, playing against the British Virgin Islands and Barbados.",
"score": "1.5727733"
},
{
"id": "13054695",
"title": "Claude Raymond",
"text": " Jean Claude Marc Raymond (born May 7, 1937) is a former pitcher for the Chicago White Sox (1959), Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1961–63, 1967–69), Houston Colt .45's/Astros (1964–67) and Montreal Expos (1969–71). He was one of the few baseball players to wear glasses during that era and as he came from the province of Quebec was nicknamed \"Frenchy\".",
"score": "1.571821"
},
{
"id": "33006419",
"title": "Sylvain Armand",
"text": " in favour of youngster Mamadou Sakho, who also became the youngest captain in the history of the PSG at the age of 17. Armand then gradually regained his best form, game after game. He provided two consecutive assists, both to Amara Diané, against Lens in Ligue 1 (3–0) then against Valenciennes in the Coupe de la Ligue (4–0) three days later. Rarely injured and suspended, he missed only eight domestic league games between 2004 and 2008, all the while playing in different positions on the pitch, including left-back, centre-back, defensive midfield, and left midfield. With PSG, Armand won the 2006 and 2010 Coupe de France and the 2008 ",
"score": "1.5693922"
},
{
"id": "33006416",
"title": "Sylvain Armand",
"text": " Born in Saint-Étienne, Loire, Armand started playing youth team football for AS Saint-Étienne in 1994. He wasn't retained for the club's senior squad and thus moved to Clermont Foot in 1999, where he received his professional debut.",
"score": "1.5690358"
},
{
"id": "28910529",
"title": "Raymond Milton",
"text": " Raymond Bernard \"Ray\" Milton (August 27, 1912 – September 17, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey player who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics. Milton was a member of the 1936 Port Arthur Bearcats, which won the silver medal for Canada in ice hockey at the 1936 Winter Olympics. In 1987 he was inducted into the Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame as a member of that Olympic team.",
"score": "1.5630314"
},
{
"id": "12936790",
"title": "Raymond Baratto",
"text": " Raymond Baratto (born 23 January 1934 in Amnéville, Moselle, France) is a former French footballer. He was part of France's squad for the 1960 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5576453"
},
{
"id": "14033485",
"title": "Réginald Ray",
"text": " Ray spent the majority of his 15-year career in the French lower divisions. In 1991, while playing in the Championnat National with Montceau, he was the league's top scorer. Ray was top scorer again in 1998, this time in Ligue 2 while playing for Le Mans.",
"score": "1.5502238"
},
{
"id": "30346135",
"title": "Raymond Contrastin",
"text": " Raymond Contrastin (born in Condom, on 5 April 1925 - 1985) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. A France international representative winger, he has been inducted into the International Rugby League Hall of Fame. He started playing rugby union for SA Condom until 1947, before joining RC Roanne XIII, with which he was French champion in 1928 and for Bordeaux XIII, with which he won the 1954 title. Contrastin featured in the 1951 French rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand, Les Chanticleers first such tour, during which they lost four of their 28 games. He played for France during the 1954 Rugby League World Cup, including the final against Great Britain in which he scored a try.",
"score": "1.5477886"
},
{
"id": "8212984",
"title": "Lou Raymond",
"text": " Raymond was born Louis Anthony Raymondjack on December 11, 1894, in Buffalo, New York. Raymond began his professional play as a member of the International League (IL), appearing for the Double-A Syracuse Stars, who later moved during the season and became the Hamilton Tigers (Hamilton, Ontario). He also played a portion of the year for the Rochester Hustlers. Managed in part by Patsy Donovan, Raymond posted a .293 batting average for the entire IL season, with 89 hits in 304 at-bats. Of his hits, 17 went for extra bases—11 were doubles and 6 were triples. In 1919, Raymond advanced from the minor leagues to the majors, appearing with the Philadelphia Phillies, of Major League Baseball's National League (NL). That season, the Phillies posted a 47–90 win–loss record, finishing 47 ",
"score": "1.5469553"
},
{
"id": "3633620",
"title": "Bobby Raymond",
"text": " Raymond attended the Rochester Institute of Technology where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I college hockey with the RIT Tigers men's ice hockey team. He played for the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL) on loan from the Florida Everblades of the ECHL during the 2012–13 season. On June 14, 2013, Raymond signed a one-year contract as a free agent abroad in Germany with the Iserlohn Roosters of the DEL. In the 2013–14 season with the Roosters, Raymond was a fixture on the blueline and compiled a productive 27 points in 52 games. After a post-season exit in the first round of the playoffs, Raymond announced signing a one-year contract with fellow DEL competitors, Adler Mannheim on April 4, 2014. In his only season ",
"score": "1.5448267"
},
{
"id": "16131052",
"title": "Raymond Bonney",
"text": " Raymond Leroy Bonney (April 5, 1892 – October 19, 1964) was an American ice hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Phoenix, New York. He was the goaltender who competed in 1920 for the American ice hockey team, which won the silver medal.",
"score": "1.5410967"
},
{
"id": "13054697",
"title": "Claude Raymond",
"text": " After his playing career, Raymond worked as a French-language broadcaster with the Expos from 1972 to 2001. During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Raymond was the public address announcer for baseball. The International Olympic Committee required that announcements at Olympic venues must also be made in French, which made Raymond, who had previously pitched in Atlanta, well-suited for the job. He was also an Expos English-language broadcaster in 2004, their last season in Montreal. Raymond joined the Expos staff as a roving coach in 2002 and served until the team left Montreal after the 2004 campaign to become the Washington Nationals.",
"score": "1.5392971"
}
] | [
"Armand Raymond\n Armand Raymond (January 12, 1913 – January 22, 1993) was a Canadian professional ice hockey defenceman who played 22 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born, and died in Montreal, Quebec.",
"Alain Raymond\n Alain Raymond (born June 24, 1965) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey goaltender. He played one game in the National Hockey League with the Washington Capitals, giving up two goals in the two periods that he played. In his first full IHL season with the Fort Wayne Komets, Raymond won the James Norris Memorial Trophy, awarded to the goaltenders with the fewest goals against in the regular season. Raymond split most of his time during the 1989–90 season between two clubs. He played 31 games with the ECHL's Hampton Roads Admirals and played another 11 games with their parent club, the AHL's Baltimore Skipjacks. Raymond went 17–12–1 with a 3.60 GAA, earning him named the starting goalie on the East Coast Hockey League's all-star team. Raymond later became a goaltender coach with the Rimouski Oceanic of the QMJHL.",
"Paul Raymond (ice hockey)\n Paul Marcel Raymond (February 27, 1913 – April 4, 1995) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played 65 games in the National Hockey League for the Montreal Canadiens. He was born in Montreal, Quebec.",
"Raymond Basset\n Denis Raymond Basset (born 1883, date of death unknown) was a French tug of war competitor, who competed in the 1900 Summer Olympics. He participated in the tug of war competition and won a silver medal as a member of French team.",
"Armand Save\n Save debuted in rugby union for Stadoceste Tarbais, where he took part at the 1950-51 French Rugby Union Championship before switching to rugby league and making a brilliant career for Bordeaux and France. He was Champion of France with Bordeaux in 1954, as well taking part to the 1954 Rugby League World Cup final lost against Australia, as well in the 1957 World Cup. At club level, he joined Saint-Gaudens. After his sports career, he became a butcher and trained the rugby union team of Bazet, the town of which he was municipal councillor between 1977 and 1983.",
"Raymond Gruppi\n He spent most of his playing career at Villeneuve-sur-Lot, playing the French Championship, which eventually ended as runner-up in 1965, and at the Lord Derby Cup a season later. With his club performances, he was called up several times for the French national team between 1959 and 1971, taking part at the 1960 and 1970 World Cups. Later, he was appointed as coach for Villeneuve-sur-Lot with new successes with the victory at the Lord Derby Cup in 1979 and in the French Championship in 1980. He was also appointed as coach for France alongside Jean Panno debuting with a 24-16 win against Great Britain on 17 March 1985. He was called up for the France squad at the 1960 Rugby League World Cup alongside with his team mates Angélo Boldini, Jacques Dubon, André Lacaze and Jacques Merquey. Later, he was called up again to represent France at the 1970 Rugby League World Cup with his new team mates Jean-Pierre Clar, Gérard Cremoux, Daniel Pellerin and Christian Sabatié.",
"Armand Delmonte\n Armand Romeo \"Dutch\" Delmonte (June 3, 1927 — April 7, 1981) was a Canadian professional ice hockey right winger who played in one National Hockey League game for the Boston Bruins during the 1945–46 season, on January 6, 1946 against the New York Rangers. Del Monte also played for the St. Catharines Falcons from 1943 to 1945, Boston Olympics from 1945 to 1948, Los Angeles Monarchs from 1946 to 1947, St. Paul Saints from 1947 to 1951, Tacoma Rockets from 1951 to 1952, Cleveland Barons from 1952 to 1953, Ottawa Senators from 1953 to 1954, and the Marion Barons from 1953 to 1954.",
"Bertrand Raymond\n Bertrand Raymond (born November 2, 1943) is a Canadian sports author and journalist. A former columnist for Le Journal de Montréal, he won the Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award in 1990 and is a member of the media section of the Hockey Hall of Fame. Raymond started covering the Montreal Canadiens in 1971, and retired in 2010.",
"Raymond Casimir\n Raymond Casimir (born 28 October 1976) is a former Dominican cricketer who played for the Windward Islands in West Indian domestic cricket. He played as a left-arm orthodox bowler who batted left-handed. Casimir appeared for the Rest of Windward Islands team in the 2002–03 Red Stripe Bowl, where Saint Vincent and the Grenadines were competing as a separate team. His first-class debut for the Windwards came almost six years later, against Jamaica in the 2007–08 Carib Beer Cup. Casimir's second and final match for the Windwards came the following season, against Trinidad and Tobago. He also represented Dominica in the 2008 edition of the Stanford 20/20, playing against the British Virgin Islands and Barbados.",
"Claude Raymond\n Jean Claude Marc Raymond (born May 7, 1937) is a former pitcher for the Chicago White Sox (1959), Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves (1961–63, 1967–69), Houston Colt .45's/Astros (1964–67) and Montreal Expos (1969–71). He was one of the few baseball players to wear glasses during that era and as he came from the province of Quebec was nicknamed \"Frenchy\".",
"Sylvain Armand\n in favour of youngster Mamadou Sakho, who also became the youngest captain in the history of the PSG at the age of 17. Armand then gradually regained his best form, game after game. He provided two consecutive assists, both to Amara Diané, against Lens in Ligue 1 (3–0) then against Valenciennes in the Coupe de la Ligue (4–0) three days later. Rarely injured and suspended, he missed only eight domestic league games between 2004 and 2008, all the while playing in different positions on the pitch, including left-back, centre-back, defensive midfield, and left midfield. With PSG, Armand won the 2006 and 2010 Coupe de France and the 2008 ",
"Sylvain Armand\n Born in Saint-Étienne, Loire, Armand started playing youth team football for AS Saint-Étienne in 1994. He wasn't retained for the club's senior squad and thus moved to Clermont Foot in 1999, where he received his professional debut.",
"Raymond Milton\n Raymond Bernard \"Ray\" Milton (August 27, 1912 – September 17, 2003) was a Canadian ice hockey player who competed in the 1936 Winter Olympics. Milton was a member of the 1936 Port Arthur Bearcats, which won the silver medal for Canada in ice hockey at the 1936 Winter Olympics. In 1987 he was inducted into the Northwestern Ontario Sports Hall of Fame as a member of that Olympic team.",
"Raymond Baratto\n Raymond Baratto (born 23 January 1934 in Amnéville, Moselle, France) is a former French footballer. He was part of France's squad for the 1960 Summer Olympics.",
"Réginald Ray\n Ray spent the majority of his 15-year career in the French lower divisions. In 1991, while playing in the Championnat National with Montceau, he was the league's top scorer. Ray was top scorer again in 1998, this time in Ligue 2 while playing for Le Mans.",
"Raymond Contrastin\n Raymond Contrastin (born in Condom, on 5 April 1925 - 1985) was a French rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. A France international representative winger, he has been inducted into the International Rugby League Hall of Fame. He started playing rugby union for SA Condom until 1947, before joining RC Roanne XIII, with which he was French champion in 1928 and for Bordeaux XIII, with which he won the 1954 title. Contrastin featured in the 1951 French rugby league tour of Australia and New Zealand, Les Chanticleers first such tour, during which they lost four of their 28 games. He played for France during the 1954 Rugby League World Cup, including the final against Great Britain in which he scored a try.",
"Lou Raymond\n Raymond was born Louis Anthony Raymondjack on December 11, 1894, in Buffalo, New York. Raymond began his professional play as a member of the International League (IL), appearing for the Double-A Syracuse Stars, who later moved during the season and became the Hamilton Tigers (Hamilton, Ontario). He also played a portion of the year for the Rochester Hustlers. Managed in part by Patsy Donovan, Raymond posted a .293 batting average for the entire IL season, with 89 hits in 304 at-bats. Of his hits, 17 went for extra bases—11 were doubles and 6 were triples. In 1919, Raymond advanced from the minor leagues to the majors, appearing with the Philadelphia Phillies, of Major League Baseball's National League (NL). That season, the Phillies posted a 47–90 win–loss record, finishing 47 ",
"Bobby Raymond\n Raymond attended the Rochester Institute of Technology where he played four seasons of NCAA Division I college hockey with the RIT Tigers men's ice hockey team. He played for the Charlotte Checkers of the American Hockey League (AHL) on loan from the Florida Everblades of the ECHL during the 2012–13 season. On June 14, 2013, Raymond signed a one-year contract as a free agent abroad in Germany with the Iserlohn Roosters of the DEL. In the 2013–14 season with the Roosters, Raymond was a fixture on the blueline and compiled a productive 27 points in 52 games. After a post-season exit in the first round of the playoffs, Raymond announced signing a one-year contract with fellow DEL competitors, Adler Mannheim on April 4, 2014. In his only season ",
"Raymond Bonney\n Raymond Leroy Bonney (April 5, 1892 – October 19, 1964) was an American ice hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics. He was born in Phoenix, New York. He was the goaltender who competed in 1920 for the American ice hockey team, which won the silver medal.",
"Claude Raymond\n After his playing career, Raymond worked as a French-language broadcaster with the Expos from 1972 to 2001. During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Raymond was the public address announcer for baseball. The International Olympic Committee required that announcements at Olympic venues must also be made in French, which made Raymond, who had previously pitched in Atlanta, well-suited for the job. He was also an Expos English-language broadcaster in 2004, their last season in Montreal. Raymond joined the Expos staff as a roving coach in 2002 and served until the team left Montreal after the 2004 campaign to become the Washington Nationals."
] |
What sport does 2001–02 Division 1 season play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | 2001–02 Division 1 season (Swedish ice hockey) | 1,196,350 | 65 | [
{
"id": "28307062",
"title": "2000–01 National Division One",
"text": " The 2001–02 National Division One (previously known as the Allied Dunbar Premiership Two and renamed as the Jewson National Division One for sponsorship reasons) was the fourteenth full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Bedford Blues who had been relegated from the Allied Dunbar Premiership 1999-00 while Otley and Birmingham & Solihull had been promoted from National League Two. This season also saw the introduction of the bonus points scoring system. The season would also herald a new change in venue for Moseley who moved from their traditional home at The Reddings to share the University of Birmingham rugby pitch at Bournbrook, with The Reddings being sold to property developers in order to generate funds to keep the club in existence. Leeds Tykes, the champions, were promoted to the Allied Dunbar Premiership for season 2001–02. There was only one promotion place available and the runners–up Worcester remained in National League 1 while Orrell and Waterloo were relegated to the 2001–02 National Division Two.",
"score": "1.7012217"
},
{
"id": "1962472",
"title": "2001–02 National Division One",
"text": " The 2001–02 National Division One (known as the Jewson National Division One for sponsorship reasons) was the 15th full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Rotherham who had been relegated from the Zurich Premiership 2000–01 while Bracknell and Rugby Lions had been promoted from the 2000–01 National Division Two. For the first time the team finishing first, Rotherham, were denied promotion to the Zurich Premiership for season 2002–03 because their ground was not of the required standard - this was the first time a team had been denied entry to the top flight of English rugby since the leagues started in 1987 due to the introduction of the controversial 'minimum standards' rule for clubs seeking to join the Premiership. Worcester were runners-up for the second consecutive season, and Henley Hawks and Bracknell were relegated to the 2002–03 National Division Two with Bracknell spending just one season in the division.",
"score": "1.665253"
},
{
"id": "10336393",
"title": "2002–03 National Division One",
"text": "Game brought forward from 1 March 2003. ",
"score": "1.6570408"
},
{
"id": "10336387",
"title": "2002–03 National Division One",
"text": " The 2002–03 National Division One (for sponsorship reasons known as the Jewson National Division One) was the 16th full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Orrell and Plymouth Albion who were promoted from 2001–02 National Division Two while no team was relegated from the 2001-02 Zurich Premiership as Rotherham's ground was not deemed suitable for top flight games. For the second year in a row Rotherham, were champions, and this year they were promoted to the Zurich Premiership for season 2003–04 with Worcester finishing as runners–up for the third consecutive season. Moseley and Rugby were relegated to the 2003–04 National Division Two.",
"score": "1.6474507"
},
{
"id": "32112463",
"title": "2001–02 National Division Three North",
"text": "Game brought forward to 2 March 2002. ",
"score": "1.6285337"
},
{
"id": "31570909",
"title": "2000–01 National Division Three North",
"text": "Game brought forward to 23 September 2000. Game initially postponed but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially postponed but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"score": "1.6259291"
},
{
"id": "11207837",
"title": "2001–02 French Division 1",
"text": " Olympique Lyonnais won Division 1 season 2001/2002 of the French Association Football League with 66 points. The title was decided in the very final game of the season when Lyon defeated erstwhile championship leaders Lens at Stade Gerland. Lyon had to win the match to take the title, and won 3–1, ending Lens's title dream. It was Lyon's first league championship, and it began their record seven successive league titles.",
"score": "1.616596"
},
{
"id": "10336398",
"title": "2002–03 National Division One",
"text": "Game brought forward to 5 April 2003. ",
"score": "1.6095771"
},
{
"id": "27018821",
"title": "2001 National Hurling League",
"text": " There are 14 teams in Division 1, divided into 1A and 1B. Each team plays all the others once, either home or away. Teams earn one point for a draw and two for a win. The top two teams in 1A and 1B play each other in the NHL semi-finals and final. The bottom teams in each group play each other in a relegation playoff. There are 10 teams in Division 2. The top two play each other in the final, with the winner promoted. The bottom team is relegated. There are 9 teams in Division 3. The top two play each other in the final, with the winner promoted.",
"score": "1.6089942"
},
{
"id": "16122430",
"title": "2001–02 National Division Two",
"text": " The 2001–02 National Division Two was the second version (fifteenth overall) of the third division of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Orrell and Waterloo who were relegated from the 2000–01 National Division One while Stourbridge (champions) and Sedgley Park (playoffs) came up from the 2000–01 National Division Three North and Plymouth Albion as champions of the 2000-01 National Division Three South. The league points system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. The title race was extremely tight and went to the last game with Orrell winning ",
"score": "1.5950115"
},
{
"id": "5710176",
"title": "2002–03 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"text": " The 2003 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division change from a winter league to a summer league. To facilitate this change, the 2002–03 season was a shortened season. This saw each team play three rounds of games, totalling 27 games each.",
"score": "1.5913998"
},
{
"id": "15780664",
"title": "2002–03 National Division Two",
"text": " The 2002–03 National Division Two was the third version (sixteenth overall) of the third division of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Henley Hawks and Bracknell who were relegated from the 2001–02 National Division One while promoted teams included Doncaster who were champions of the 2001–02 National Division Three North as well as Cornish teams Penzance & Newlyn (champions) and Launceston (playoffs) who came up from the 2001–02 National Division Three South. The league points system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. Penzance & Newlyn finished the season as champions with Henley Hawks six points behind as runners up, both sides being convincingly the best in the division and would be promoted to the 2003–04 National Division ",
"score": "1.5888842"
},
{
"id": "31570922",
"title": "2000–01 National Division Three North",
"text": "Game initially rescheduled from 31 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 31 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"score": "1.5670769"
},
{
"id": "31570919",
"title": "2000–01 National Division Three North",
"text": "Game rescheduled from 17 March 2001. Game initially rescheduled from 30 December 2000 and then 3 March 2001 before finally being cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 30 December 2000 and then 3 March 2001 before finally being cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"score": "1.5553553"
},
{
"id": "3045741",
"title": "2001–02 England Hockey League season",
"text": " The 2001–02 English Hockey League season took place from September 2001 until May 2002. The men's title was won by Reading with the women's title going to Slough. There were no play offs to determine champions after the regular season but there was a competition for the top four clubs called the Premiership tournament which culminated with men's & women's finals on 6 May. The Men's Cup was won by Cannock and the Women's Cup was won by Ipswich.",
"score": "1.5515089"
},
{
"id": "31570895",
"title": "2000–01 National Division Three North",
"text": " their promotion playoff game at home against the 2000-01 National Division Three South runners up Launceston in front of over 1,000 fans. The foot-and-mouth outbreak made relegation far from straightforward as initially the bottom two were Aspatria and Tynedale, who had played 18 games each - less than any of the other teams in the division. In Tynedale's case this was particularly hard as they were only 1 point behind 12th placed Sandal but had played six games less. In the end the RFU had to re-think relegation and used a complicated process based on early season form which meant that 14th placed Aspatria and 11th placed Walsall went down. Aspatria dropped to North Division 1 while Walsall went into Midlands Division 1.",
"score": "1.5490099"
},
{
"id": "5710167",
"title": "2001–02 League of Ireland Premier Division",
"text": " The season saw each team playing three rounds of games, playing every other team three times, totalling 33 games. The 2002–03 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division reduced from 12 to 10 teams. As a result, three teams were automatically relegated. The season is best remembered for the controversy involving allegations of St Patrick's Athletic fielding ineligible players. St. Pat's originally had 9 points deducted for fielding Paul Marney in the first three games of the season. This was later revoked after arbitration. However Shelbourne appealed against this decision which was taken to the High Court where the appeal was rejected. It was then discovered by the Shelbourne chief executive, Ollie Byrne, that Charles Livingstone Mbabazi had not been registered by St. Pat's for the first five games of the season and so the club had 15 points deducted, three points for each game. The decision of the FAI appeal board to dismiss St. Pat's appeal in the Livingstone case saw Shelbourne confirmed as league champions.",
"score": "1.5489857"
},
{
"id": "1962475",
"title": "2001–02 National Division One",
"text": "Game rescheduled from 27 October 2001. ",
"score": "1.541178"
},
{
"id": "1962474",
"title": "2001–02 National Division One",
"text": "Game rescheduled from 27 October 2001. ",
"score": "1.541178"
},
{
"id": "31570921",
"title": "2000–01 National Division Three North",
"text": "Game initially rescheduled from 24 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 24 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 10 March 2001 but ultimately cancelled due to fixture congestion. ",
"score": "1.5388193"
}
] | [
"2000–01 National Division One\n The 2001–02 National Division One (previously known as the Allied Dunbar Premiership Two and renamed as the Jewson National Division One for sponsorship reasons) was the fourteenth full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Bedford Blues who had been relegated from the Allied Dunbar Premiership 1999-00 while Otley and Birmingham & Solihull had been promoted from National League Two. This season also saw the introduction of the bonus points scoring system. The season would also herald a new change in venue for Moseley who moved from their traditional home at The Reddings to share the University of Birmingham rugby pitch at Bournbrook, with The Reddings being sold to property developers in order to generate funds to keep the club in existence. Leeds Tykes, the champions, were promoted to the Allied Dunbar Premiership for season 2001–02. There was only one promotion place available and the runners–up Worcester remained in National League 1 while Orrell and Waterloo were relegated to the 2001–02 National Division Two.",
"2001–02 National Division One\n The 2001–02 National Division One (known as the Jewson National Division One for sponsorship reasons) was the 15th full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Rotherham who had been relegated from the Zurich Premiership 2000–01 while Bracknell and Rugby Lions had been promoted from the 2000–01 National Division Two. For the first time the team finishing first, Rotherham, were denied promotion to the Zurich Premiership for season 2002–03 because their ground was not of the required standard - this was the first time a team had been denied entry to the top flight of English rugby since the leagues started in 1987 due to the introduction of the controversial 'minimum standards' rule for clubs seeking to join the Premiership. Worcester were runners-up for the second consecutive season, and Henley Hawks and Bracknell were relegated to the 2002–03 National Division Two with Bracknell spending just one season in the division.",
"2002–03 National Division One\nGame brought forward from 1 March 2003. ",
"2002–03 National Division One\n The 2002–03 National Division One (for sponsorship reasons known as the Jewson National Division One) was the 16th full season of rugby union within the second tier of the English league system, currently known as the RFU Championship. New teams to the division included Orrell and Plymouth Albion who were promoted from 2001–02 National Division Two while no team was relegated from the 2001-02 Zurich Premiership as Rotherham's ground was not deemed suitable for top flight games. For the second year in a row Rotherham, were champions, and this year they were promoted to the Zurich Premiership for season 2003–04 with Worcester finishing as runners–up for the third consecutive season. Moseley and Rugby were relegated to the 2003–04 National Division Two.",
"2001–02 National Division Three North\nGame brought forward to 2 March 2002. ",
"2000–01 National Division Three North\nGame brought forward to 23 September 2000. Game initially postponed but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially postponed but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"2001–02 French Division 1\n Olympique Lyonnais won Division 1 season 2001/2002 of the French Association Football League with 66 points. The title was decided in the very final game of the season when Lyon defeated erstwhile championship leaders Lens at Stade Gerland. Lyon had to win the match to take the title, and won 3–1, ending Lens's title dream. It was Lyon's first league championship, and it began their record seven successive league titles.",
"2002–03 National Division One\nGame brought forward to 5 April 2003. ",
"2001 National Hurling League\n There are 14 teams in Division 1, divided into 1A and 1B. Each team plays all the others once, either home or away. Teams earn one point for a draw and two for a win. The top two teams in 1A and 1B play each other in the NHL semi-finals and final. The bottom teams in each group play each other in a relegation playoff. There are 10 teams in Division 2. The top two play each other in the final, with the winner promoted. The bottom team is relegated. There are 9 teams in Division 3. The top two play each other in the final, with the winner promoted.",
"2001–02 National Division Two\n The 2001–02 National Division Two was the second version (fifteenth overall) of the third division of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Orrell and Waterloo who were relegated from the 2000–01 National Division One while Stourbridge (champions) and Sedgley Park (playoffs) came up from the 2000–01 National Division Three North and Plymouth Albion as champions of the 2000-01 National Division Three South. The league points system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. The title race was extremely tight and went to the last game with Orrell winning ",
"2002–03 League of Ireland Premier Division\n The 2003 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division change from a winter league to a summer league. To facilitate this change, the 2002–03 season was a shortened season. This saw each team play three rounds of games, totalling 27 games each.",
"2002–03 National Division Two\n The 2002–03 National Division Two was the third version (sixteenth overall) of the third division of the English domestic rugby union competition using the name National Division Two. New teams to the division included Henley Hawks and Bracknell who were relegated from the 2001–02 National Division One while promoted teams included Doncaster who were champions of the 2001–02 National Division Three North as well as Cornish teams Penzance & Newlyn (champions) and Launceston (playoffs) who came up from the 2001–02 National Division Three South. The league points system was 2 points for a win and 1 point for a draw. Penzance & Newlyn finished the season as champions with Henley Hawks six points behind as runners up, both sides being convincingly the best in the division and would be promoted to the 2003–04 National Division ",
"2000–01 National Division Three North\nGame initially rescheduled from 31 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 31 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"2000–01 National Division Three North\nGame rescheduled from 17 March 2001. Game initially rescheduled from 30 December 2000 and then 3 March 2001 before finally being cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 30 December 2000 and then 3 March 2001 before finally being cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. ",
"2001–02 England Hockey League season\n The 2001–02 English Hockey League season took place from September 2001 until May 2002. The men's title was won by Reading with the women's title going to Slough. There were no play offs to determine champions after the regular season but there was a competition for the top four clubs called the Premiership tournament which culminated with men's & women's finals on 6 May. The Men's Cup was won by Cannock and the Women's Cup was won by Ipswich.",
"2000–01 National Division Three North\n their promotion playoff game at home against the 2000-01 National Division Three South runners up Launceston in front of over 1,000 fans. The foot-and-mouth outbreak made relegation far from straightforward as initially the bottom two were Aspatria and Tynedale, who had played 18 games each - less than any of the other teams in the division. In Tynedale's case this was particularly hard as they were only 1 point behind 12th placed Sandal but had played six games less. In the end the RFU had to re-think relegation and used a complicated process based on early season form which meant that 14th placed Aspatria and 11th placed Walsall went down. Aspatria dropped to North Division 1 while Walsall went into Midlands Division 1.",
"2001–02 League of Ireland Premier Division\n The season saw each team playing three rounds of games, playing every other team three times, totalling 33 games. The 2002–03 season would see the League of Ireland Premier Division reduced from 12 to 10 teams. As a result, three teams were automatically relegated. The season is best remembered for the controversy involving allegations of St Patrick's Athletic fielding ineligible players. St. Pat's originally had 9 points deducted for fielding Paul Marney in the first three games of the season. This was later revoked after arbitration. However Shelbourne appealed against this decision which was taken to the High Court where the appeal was rejected. It was then discovered by the Shelbourne chief executive, Ollie Byrne, that Charles Livingstone Mbabazi had not been registered by St. Pat's for the first five games of the season and so the club had 15 points deducted, three points for each game. The decision of the FAI appeal board to dismiss St. Pat's appeal in the Livingstone case saw Shelbourne confirmed as league champions.",
"2001–02 National Division One\nGame rescheduled from 27 October 2001. ",
"2001–02 National Division One\nGame rescheduled from 27 October 2001. ",
"2000–01 National Division Three North\nGame initially rescheduled from 24 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Aspatria's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 24 March 2001 but would ultimately be cancelled due to foot & mouth crisis in northern England cutting short Tynedale's season and leading to them being relegated. Game initially rescheduled from 10 March 2001 but ultimately cancelled due to fixture congestion. "
] |
What sport does Livia Altmann play? | [
"ice hockey"
] | sport | Livia Altmann | 792,503 | 96 | [
{
"id": "1913919",
"title": "Jane Altschwager",
"text": " Altschwager played for both Contax and the Australian Institute of Sport in the South Australia state league. In 1999 she made her senior debut for Contax. In 2000 she was a member of the AIS team that finished as runners up to Contax in the grand final. She was also selected in the league's Team of the Year. In 2011 she returned to the South Australia state league to play for Newton Jaguars.",
"score": "1.5463021"
},
{
"id": "12493418",
"title": "Livy Paige",
"text": " Olivia 'Livy' Paige (born 28 July 1996) is an English international field hockey player who played as a midfielder for England and Great Britain. She plays club hockey in the Women's England Hockey League Premier Division for Hampstead & Westminster. Paige has also played for hdm, Uni of Birmingham, Reading and Marlow.",
"score": "1.5271204"
},
{
"id": "32088401",
"title": "Colgate Raiders women's ice hockey",
"text": "Livia Altmann, Swiss National Team, Sochi Olympics, Bronze Medal (2014) ; Livia Altmann, Swiss National Team, Pyeongchang Olympics (2018) ; Livia Altmann, Switzerland National Team – Nation Cup (2017–2018) ; Shae Labbe, Canadian National Women's Development Team (2016); 2014–15 Canada Under-18 Team ; Brittany Phillips, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Silver (2009) ; Kaila Pinkney, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold ; Lauren Wildfang, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold (2014) ; Breanne Wilson-Bennett, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold (2014) ; Tara French, Canadian Under 22 Team (2005) ; Becky Irvine, Canadian Under-22 Team (2005) ; Sam Hunt, Canadian Under-22 Team (2006) ; Sam Hunt, Canadian Under-22 Team (2005) ; Malia Schneider, 2014–2015 Canada Under-18 Team ; Rebecca Lahaer, 2004 USA Under-22 Team ; Maura Crowell ('02), Head Coach for the USA Under 18 Team (2017-18 & 2018-19) ",
"score": "1.5192417"
},
{
"id": "16177711",
"title": "Liv Grete Skjelbreid",
"text": " As a child Skjelbreid spent a lot of her time with her older sisters, and consequently took part in the sports her sisters did. She played football, kayaked in the lake next to the family home, cross-country skied, and she used to run up to the family cottage up in the mountains, touch the wall and run back down. Skjelbreid excelled in football and biathlon, and first started competing in biathlon when she was nine. She borrowed her father's rifle for her first race. He also built a small shooting range on the family’s farm so his young daughters could practice. However, as she was ",
"score": "1.501733"
},
{
"id": "4664294",
"title": "Livia De Clercq",
"text": " Livia De Clercq (born 3 June 1982) is a Belgian Paralympic athlete who competes in long jump and occasionally sprinting events at international level events. De Clercq had her left leg amputated above the knee after she was diagnosed with a tumour in left knee aged fourteen. She had her kneecap removed but her body rejected the prosthesis which led to amputation.",
"score": "1.499053"
},
{
"id": "11618195",
"title": "Kelly Altmann",
"text": " Kelly Altmann (born 27 April 1993) is an Australian netball player in the Suncorp Super Netball league, currently playing for the Collingwood Magpies.",
"score": "1.4843612"
},
{
"id": "8249635",
"title": "Livia Reit",
"text": " Livia Reit (born 8 April 1960) is a Romanian cross-country skier. She competed in two events at the 1984 Winter Olympics.",
"score": "1.4841237"
},
{
"id": "30679789",
"title": "Minnesota State Mavericks women's ice hockey",
"text": "Alli Altmann was the goaltending coach for the US National Women's Ice Hockey U-18 team, in 2018, 2019, and 2020. She also was goaltending coach in 2017 for the US Women's U-18 Select team in the US-Canada series. ; Nina Tikkinen played for Finland’s 2010 Winter Olympic Hockey Team. ",
"score": "1.4773328"
},
{
"id": "30124451",
"title": "Livia Lang",
"text": " Livia Lang (born 3 June 1994) is an Austrian synchronized swimmer. She competed in the women's duet at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4740698"
},
{
"id": "4079812",
"title": "Lívia Tóth",
"text": "Hungarian athlete of the Year (1): 2005 ",
"score": "1.4465022"
},
{
"id": "5724260",
"title": "Nina Hasselmann",
"text": " Nina Hasselmann (born 31 May 1986, Nürnberg, Germany) is a German field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Germany women's national field hockey team in the women's event.",
"score": "1.4369485"
},
{
"id": "5724266",
"title": "Anke Brockmann",
"text": " Anke Brockmann (born 19 August 1988 in Berlin) is a German field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Germany women's national field hockey team in the women's event.",
"score": "1.4287715"
},
{
"id": "13490089",
"title": "Sevda Altunoluk",
"text": " Sevda Altunoluk (born 1 April 1994) is a Turkish Paralympian goalball player competing for Yenimahalle Belediyespor in Ankara. She is a member of the national team, and was named several times as Top goalscorer. In 2021 she was named as one of the BBC's 100 Women.",
"score": "1.4223466"
},
{
"id": "11618196",
"title": "Kelly Altmann",
"text": " Altmann's elite-level career commenced in 2019 when she was signed by the Adelaide Thunderbirds in the Australian Super Netball league. She had been a training partner at the South Australian based team for two seasons prior to being signed onto the senior list by the club ahead of the 2019 season. During her time as a training partner, Altmann was vice-captain for the Thunderbirds' reserves team, the Southern Force in the Australian Netball League. Altmann played every match for the club in 2019, though she was not re-signed by the club at the end of the season. She was signed by the Collingwood Magpies ahead of the 2020 season as an injury replacement player, replacing the long-term injured Kelsey Browne at the club.",
"score": "1.4182885"
},
{
"id": "6290862",
"title": "Lívia Győrbiró",
"text": " Lívia Győrbiró (born 8 September 1974) is a Hungarian windsurfer. She competed in the women's Mistral One Design event at the 2004 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.4166644"
},
{
"id": "28661675",
"title": "Livia von Plettenberg",
"text": " Livia von Plettenberg (born June 14, 1988) is an Austrian female kickboxer and mixed martial artist, based in Portland, Oregon. She competes professionally since 2005 and is currently in the Invicta Flyweight division. Von Plettenberg's last MMA bout was at Invicta FC 6 against Kathina Catron which she won by unanimous decision. According to the W.A.K.F ranking von Plettenberg was ranked fifth in the welterweight kickboxing division.",
"score": "1.4138657"
},
{
"id": "6143196",
"title": "Jana Dukátová",
"text": " Her life partner is her longtime coach Róbert Orokocký with whom she has a daughter Lívia. She took a break from the sport in 2018 due to pregnancy and motherhood.",
"score": "1.4111143"
},
{
"id": "29753163",
"title": "Annegret Brießmann",
"text": " discus put her in eighth place; and in the javelin with 12.31 m she was ranked eleventh. Einhausen named her their Sportswoman of the Year in 2009. However, T55 classification events were dropped from the track and field program for the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London. Brießmann was introduced to the sport of wheelchair basketball while in rehab. She was classified as a 1.0 point player, the highest level of disability. She played in Darmstadt and Aschaffenburg, then joined the in Frankfurt in 2010. Playing for Team Hessen, she won the women's championships in 2009, 2011 and 2012. She began training with the national squad, and in July 2012 national coach Holger Glinicki nominated her for the national team for ",
"score": "1.4089212"
},
{
"id": "5724262",
"title": "Lisa Hahn",
"text": " Lisa Altenburg ( Hahn, born 23 September 1989) is a German field hockey player. She was part of the German bronze medal winning team at the 2016 Olympic Games and also played for Germany at the 2012 Summer Olympics. She is the niece of Birgit Hahn who also played Olympic hockey for Germany.",
"score": "1.4046476"
},
{
"id": "15002871",
"title": "Sinja Leemann",
"text": " Sinja Leemann (born 19 April 2002) is a Swiss ice hockey player for SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers and the Swiss national team. She represented Switzerland at the 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship.",
"score": "1.4033453"
}
] | [
"Jane Altschwager\n Altschwager played for both Contax and the Australian Institute of Sport in the South Australia state league. In 1999 she made her senior debut for Contax. In 2000 she was a member of the AIS team that finished as runners up to Contax in the grand final. She was also selected in the league's Team of the Year. In 2011 she returned to the South Australia state league to play for Newton Jaguars.",
"Livy Paige\n Olivia 'Livy' Paige (born 28 July 1996) is an English international field hockey player who played as a midfielder for England and Great Britain. She plays club hockey in the Women's England Hockey League Premier Division for Hampstead & Westminster. Paige has also played for hdm, Uni of Birmingham, Reading and Marlow.",
"Colgate Raiders women's ice hockey\nLivia Altmann, Swiss National Team, Sochi Olympics, Bronze Medal (2014) ; Livia Altmann, Swiss National Team, Pyeongchang Olympics (2018) ; Livia Altmann, Switzerland National Team – Nation Cup (2017–2018) ; Shae Labbe, Canadian National Women's Development Team (2016); 2014–15 Canada Under-18 Team ; Brittany Phillips, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Silver (2009) ; Kaila Pinkney, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold ; Lauren Wildfang, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold (2014) ; Breanne Wilson-Bennett, IIHF World U18 Championships, Canada, Gold (2014) ; Tara French, Canadian Under 22 Team (2005) ; Becky Irvine, Canadian Under-22 Team (2005) ; Sam Hunt, Canadian Under-22 Team (2006) ; Sam Hunt, Canadian Under-22 Team (2005) ; Malia Schneider, 2014–2015 Canada Under-18 Team ; Rebecca Lahaer, 2004 USA Under-22 Team ; Maura Crowell ('02), Head Coach for the USA Under 18 Team (2017-18 & 2018-19) ",
"Liv Grete Skjelbreid\n As a child Skjelbreid spent a lot of her time with her older sisters, and consequently took part in the sports her sisters did. She played football, kayaked in the lake next to the family home, cross-country skied, and she used to run up to the family cottage up in the mountains, touch the wall and run back down. Skjelbreid excelled in football and biathlon, and first started competing in biathlon when she was nine. She borrowed her father's rifle for her first race. He also built a small shooting range on the family’s farm so his young daughters could practice. However, as she was ",
"Livia De Clercq\n Livia De Clercq (born 3 June 1982) is a Belgian Paralympic athlete who competes in long jump and occasionally sprinting events at international level events. De Clercq had her left leg amputated above the knee after she was diagnosed with a tumour in left knee aged fourteen. She had her kneecap removed but her body rejected the prosthesis which led to amputation.",
"Kelly Altmann\n Kelly Altmann (born 27 April 1993) is an Australian netball player in the Suncorp Super Netball league, currently playing for the Collingwood Magpies.",
"Livia Reit\n Livia Reit (born 8 April 1960) is a Romanian cross-country skier. She competed in two events at the 1984 Winter Olympics.",
"Minnesota State Mavericks women's ice hockey\nAlli Altmann was the goaltending coach for the US National Women's Ice Hockey U-18 team, in 2018, 2019, and 2020. She also was goaltending coach in 2017 for the US Women's U-18 Select team in the US-Canada series. ; Nina Tikkinen played for Finland’s 2010 Winter Olympic Hockey Team. ",
"Livia Lang\n Livia Lang (born 3 June 1994) is an Austrian synchronized swimmer. She competed in the women's duet at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Lívia Tóth\nHungarian athlete of the Year (1): 2005 ",
"Nina Hasselmann\n Nina Hasselmann (born 31 May 1986, Nürnberg, Germany) is a German field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Germany women's national field hockey team in the women's event.",
"Anke Brockmann\n Anke Brockmann (born 19 August 1988 in Berlin) is a German field hockey player. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, she competed for the Germany women's national field hockey team in the women's event.",
"Sevda Altunoluk\n Sevda Altunoluk (born 1 April 1994) is a Turkish Paralympian goalball player competing for Yenimahalle Belediyespor in Ankara. She is a member of the national team, and was named several times as Top goalscorer. In 2021 she was named as one of the BBC's 100 Women.",
"Kelly Altmann\n Altmann's elite-level career commenced in 2019 when she was signed by the Adelaide Thunderbirds in the Australian Super Netball league. She had been a training partner at the South Australian based team for two seasons prior to being signed onto the senior list by the club ahead of the 2019 season. During her time as a training partner, Altmann was vice-captain for the Thunderbirds' reserves team, the Southern Force in the Australian Netball League. Altmann played every match for the club in 2019, though she was not re-signed by the club at the end of the season. She was signed by the Collingwood Magpies ahead of the 2020 season as an injury replacement player, replacing the long-term injured Kelsey Browne at the club.",
"Lívia Győrbiró\n Lívia Győrbiró (born 8 September 1974) is a Hungarian windsurfer. She competed in the women's Mistral One Design event at the 2004 Summer Olympics.",
"Livia von Plettenberg\n Livia von Plettenberg (born June 14, 1988) is an Austrian female kickboxer and mixed martial artist, based in Portland, Oregon. She competes professionally since 2005 and is currently in the Invicta Flyweight division. Von Plettenberg's last MMA bout was at Invicta FC 6 against Kathina Catron which she won by unanimous decision. According to the W.A.K.F ranking von Plettenberg was ranked fifth in the welterweight kickboxing division.",
"Jana Dukátová\n Her life partner is her longtime coach Róbert Orokocký with whom she has a daughter Lívia. She took a break from the sport in 2018 due to pregnancy and motherhood.",
"Annegret Brießmann\n discus put her in eighth place; and in the javelin with 12.31 m she was ranked eleventh. Einhausen named her their Sportswoman of the Year in 2009. However, T55 classification events were dropped from the track and field program for the 2012 Summer Paralympics in London. Brießmann was introduced to the sport of wheelchair basketball while in rehab. She was classified as a 1.0 point player, the highest level of disability. She played in Darmstadt and Aschaffenburg, then joined the in Frankfurt in 2010. Playing for Team Hessen, she won the women's championships in 2009, 2011 and 2012. She began training with the national squad, and in July 2012 national coach Holger Glinicki nominated her for the national team for ",
"Lisa Hahn\n Lisa Altenburg ( Hahn, born 23 September 1989) is a German field hockey player. She was part of the German bronze medal winning team at the 2016 Olympic Games and also played for Germany at the 2012 Summer Olympics. She is the niece of Birgit Hahn who also played Olympic hockey for Germany.",
"Sinja Leemann\n Sinja Leemann (born 19 April 2002) is a Swiss ice hockey player for SC Rapperswil-Jona Lakers and the Swiss national team. She represented Switzerland at the 2019 IIHF Women's World Championship."
] |
What genre is The Club? | [
"reality television",
"reality TV",
"reality television program",
"reality TV program",
"reality television show",
"television reality program",
"television reality show",
"TV reality program",
"TV reality show"
] | genre | The Club (2010 TV series) | 5,917,281 | 64 | [
{
"id": "28152411",
"title": "The Club (video game)",
"text": " The Club is a third-person shooter video game developed by Bizarre Creations and published by Sega. The story of the game centers on The Club, an underground blood sport controlled by a wealthy elite who place their bets on who will survive the gladiatorial-style combat.",
"score": "1.6578352"
},
{
"id": "28152416",
"title": "The Club (video game)",
"text": " The Club received positive reviews. Eurogamer's Tom Bramwell complimented it as \"a shooter that turns tired genre conventions around with a bullet to the shoulder\", but stated that it would be \"divisive\" due to the game's run and gun mentality, which went against the contemporary trend towards tactical shooters. Bramwell pointed out that The Club \"does for the third-person shooter what no one else has even bothered trying to do: moving it closer to the 2D shoot-'em-ups of old in a manner that appeals anew\". Andrew Reiner, writing for Game Informer, mentioned Bizarre Creations' background and its influence on The Club: \"The speed-first mentality of the racing genre is cleverly infused into the framework of a ",
"score": "1.6234175"
},
{
"id": "7050869",
"title": "Queens Club (band)",
"text": " The band's first album has been described as \"a perfect storm of Euro dance rock, indie sophistication and a sprinkling of punk rock’s filth and fury snottiness.\"",
"score": "1.6023993"
},
{
"id": "3457107",
"title": "Club Moral",
"text": "Genre: Power electronics, noise ; Country: Belgium ; Status: Active ; Time: 1981–present ",
"score": "1.5987004"
},
{
"id": "28152415",
"title": "The Club (video game)",
"text": " The lead designer of the game was Matt Cavanagh who described the title as \"a racing game with guns\". At first the game was literally a shooting gallery with limited AI. After 6 months of development a new prototype was created with an emphasis on scoring rather than narrative. The gameplay was designed before any setting and back story was created. Many publishers declined to take on the title before Sega chose to back it. The title was released globally on February 8, 2008. Composer Richard Jacques wrote the score for the single player levels, Chris Chudley from Audioantics wrote the score for the multiplayer levels, while Jesper Kyd scored the main theme.",
"score": "1.5580285"
},
{
"id": "26576127",
"title": "Club (magazine)",
"text": " Club is a monthly American pornographic magazine which is a spin-off publication of the United Kingdom's Club International. Club features sexually oriented articles, video reviews, and pictorials that include hardcore pornography, masturbation, dildo usage, and lesbianism.",
"score": "1.531124"
},
{
"id": "1450325",
"title": "Club Single",
"text": " Club Single is an EP by German gothic metal band The Vision Bleak, released on 23 July 2007, through Prophecy Productions. It was intended to be a teaser for the band's then-upcoming studio album The Wolves Go Hunt Their Prey, released one month later on 31 August and features two tracks that would ultimately appear on the album, plus other two taken from their older releases Carpathia: A Dramatic Poem and The Deathship Has a New Captain. As evidenced by its title, the EP was given by Prophecy exclusively for members of its club; thus being, it is not available for sale, and is currently out of print.",
"score": "1.5300617"
},
{
"id": "31726914",
"title": "The Club (2004 TV series)",
"text": " The Club is an American reality television series about the competitive and cutthroat world of ICE, a stand-alone nightclub in Las Vegas. The series aired on Spike TV from 2004 to 2005.",
"score": "1.5291318"
},
{
"id": "1154646",
"title": "Deconstructed club",
"text": " The genre steps away from traditional and mainstream dance music tropes, such as four on the floor beats, stable tempos, build-ups, and drops. Instead, it is identified by an aggressive, frantic, post-industrial sound design, featuring metallic or staccato sounds such as samples of glass smashing or gunshots. Deconstructed club aims for an excessive, apocalyptic-sounding soundscape, with constant rhythmic switch-ups and atonality. Deconstructed club proposes a chaotic mix and a sonic canvas where ballroom samples, field recordings, a cappella rapping and industrial soundscapes are adjusted into dance-floor music. The genre is characterized by its disruptive elements and a wide dynamic tempo range, often ",
"score": "1.52424"
},
{
"id": "9176356",
"title": "Weekender club",
"text": " A wide range of genres is offered such as indie, alternative, britpop, rock, grunge, emo, soul, electronica and music from the 50s and 60s.",
"score": "1.5229564"
},
{
"id": "28152417",
"title": "The Club (video game)",
"text": " shooter...And to truly capture the racing atmosphere, some of the levels have players running laps in specific environments...It may sound odd, but the racing shooter formula works amazingly well\". Reiner called The Club \"a nice change of pace, and hopefully the beginning of a new genre\". GamePro reviewer Cameron Lewis wrote: \"What might be most impressive about The Club is that despite the many disparate elements that it cherry-picks from genres as diverse as racing, skateboarding, and first-person shooters, the whole never bears the disjointed feel of a Frankenstein creation\". IGN reviewer Alec Meer stated that the scoring system \"will prove an immediate turn-off for some\" and went on to blame the \"fairly dismal\" graphics for ",
"score": "1.5198352"
},
{
"id": "30403356",
"title": "The Club (British TV series)",
"text": " The Club was a British reality television show, broadcast weekly on ITV. It ran for six weeks, beginning on Thursday 6 March 2003. Presented by Donna Air and Matt Brown, three celebrities were given control of their own individual bar in a London club, named Nylon. Each celebrity was given their own changeable team of staff and viewers were given the chance to vote the celebrities' staff off the show. At the end of the series, viewers were asked to vote for their favourite celebrity bar manager. Actor Dean Gaffney was the eventual winner, beating presenter/singer Richard Blackwood and former Page 3 model, Samantha Fox. 49 percent of the audience voted him the best manager and he won the £15,000 prize. An ITV2 spin-off show also aired for the duration, and a highlights show aired on Saturday nights on ITV. Dooley's Vodka Toffee sponsored the show.",
"score": "1.5196829"
},
{
"id": "13481992",
"title": "In the Club (TV series)",
"text": " In the Club is a British drama television series that was first broadcast on BBC One on 5 August 2014. The series follows six couples who attended a local Parent Craft class during their pregnancy. The series was written and created by Kay Mellor. A second series was commissioned in 2014 and broadcast in the UK from 3 May to 7 June 2016.",
"score": "1.5196599"
},
{
"id": "14820449",
"title": "The Boys Club",
"text": " The Boy's Club is a 1996 Canadian crime drama thriller film directed by John Fawcett, written by Doug Smith (story) and Peter Wellington (writer), and starring Chris Penn, Devon Sawa, Dominic Zamprogna, and Stuart Stone. It was released on VHS in Canada and the United States by Allumination Filmworks, on Laserdisc in the United States by Image Entertainment and on DVD in the United States in 1998 by Simitar Entertainment. It was re-released in the United States in 2003 on DVD by Ardustry Home Entertainment. In 2013, it was released by Echo Bridge Home Entertainment on DVD.",
"score": "1.519465"
},
{
"id": "4185988",
"title": "The Club (Mexican TV series)",
"text": " The Club (Spanish: El Club), is Mexican crime drama streaming television series directed by Camila Ibarra and produced by Argos Comunicación. The series revolves around a group of rich young people who get involved, through an application, in drug trafficking until they get to have contact with much more powerful people and that's when they get into serious problems. It stars Alejandro Speitzer, Minnie West, and Jorge Caballero.",
"score": "1.5172601"
},
{
"id": "30769245",
"title": "S Club (album)",
"text": " S Club is the debut studio album by British pop group S Club 7. It was released by Polydor Records on 4 October 1999. The album was primarily produced by StarGate, Absolute, Dufflebag Boys, Eliot Kennedy and Mike Percy. S Club became one of the group's most successful album releases, and reached number two in the United Kingdom, where it was certified double platinum. S Club was released in North America on 11 April 2000 after their television show S Club 7 in Miami became popular in the United States, where it peaked outside the top 100. In Canada, the album charted within the top 10 and became the group's most successful album release on the Canadian albums chart.",
"score": "1.5160856"
},
{
"id": "30587924",
"title": "Clubbing (comics)",
"text": " Clubbing is a graphic novel published in 2007 by Minx, a cancelled imprint of DC Comics. It was written by Eisner Award nominated Andi Watson and drawn by Josh Howard.",
"score": "1.5146645"
},
{
"id": "30403360",
"title": "The Club (British TV series)",
"text": " A live show was broadcast each week for 6 weeks on ITV, and was presented by Donna Air and Matt Brown. During the show, highlights were shown and the celebrities were interviewed along with the sacked bar mate. In addition to the live show, The Club was also broadcast five nights a week on ITV2, and a highlights show aired on Saturday nights.",
"score": "1.5087268"
},
{
"id": "28123101",
"title": "Pleasure Club (album)",
"text": " Pleasure Club is an album by the American rock musician James Hall, released in 1996. Starting over in the 2000s, Hall named his band for the album. Hall supported the album by opening for Rage Against the Machine on a European tour, and for Love and Rockets in the United States. Pleasure Club's first single was \"Honky Time\".",
"score": "1.5078176"
},
{
"id": "6045459",
"title": "At the Club",
"text": " At the Club is the debut studio album by the British band Kenickie. It was released in 1997 and reached number nine on the UK Albums Chart. At the Club includes the singles \"Punka\", \"Millionaire Sweeper\", \"In Your Car\", \"Nightlife\" and \"Come Out 2nite\"; the lead track from the group's second EP Skillex. \"How I Was Made\" and an earlier stage of recording of \"Acetone\" also previously appeared on Skillex - the latter recording had also been used as part of an acoustic Peel Session in February 1996 and therefore appears on the band's BBC Peel Sessions CD. The album was produced by John Cornfield, Andy Carpenter and band-member Peter Gofton (Johnny X). Receiving good reviews the album was first released by Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs's label EMIdisc in the UK on CD, Cassette and LP on 12 May 1997. The album was released the following month in the US by Warner Bros. with an additional two tracks. The front cover photograph was taken by Warren Du Preez.",
"score": "1.5075102"
}
] | [
"The Club (video game)\n The Club is a third-person shooter video game developed by Bizarre Creations and published by Sega. The story of the game centers on The Club, an underground blood sport controlled by a wealthy elite who place their bets on who will survive the gladiatorial-style combat.",
"The Club (video game)\n The Club received positive reviews. Eurogamer's Tom Bramwell complimented it as \"a shooter that turns tired genre conventions around with a bullet to the shoulder\", but stated that it would be \"divisive\" due to the game's run and gun mentality, which went against the contemporary trend towards tactical shooters. Bramwell pointed out that The Club \"does for the third-person shooter what no one else has even bothered trying to do: moving it closer to the 2D shoot-'em-ups of old in a manner that appeals anew\". Andrew Reiner, writing for Game Informer, mentioned Bizarre Creations' background and its influence on The Club: \"The speed-first mentality of the racing genre is cleverly infused into the framework of a ",
"Queens Club (band)\n The band's first album has been described as \"a perfect storm of Euro dance rock, indie sophistication and a sprinkling of punk rock’s filth and fury snottiness.\"",
"Club Moral\nGenre: Power electronics, noise ; Country: Belgium ; Status: Active ; Time: 1981–present ",
"The Club (video game)\n The lead designer of the game was Matt Cavanagh who described the title as \"a racing game with guns\". At first the game was literally a shooting gallery with limited AI. After 6 months of development a new prototype was created with an emphasis on scoring rather than narrative. The gameplay was designed before any setting and back story was created. Many publishers declined to take on the title before Sega chose to back it. The title was released globally on February 8, 2008. Composer Richard Jacques wrote the score for the single player levels, Chris Chudley from Audioantics wrote the score for the multiplayer levels, while Jesper Kyd scored the main theme.",
"Club (magazine)\n Club is a monthly American pornographic magazine which is a spin-off publication of the United Kingdom's Club International. Club features sexually oriented articles, video reviews, and pictorials that include hardcore pornography, masturbation, dildo usage, and lesbianism.",
"Club Single\n Club Single is an EP by German gothic metal band The Vision Bleak, released on 23 July 2007, through Prophecy Productions. It was intended to be a teaser for the band's then-upcoming studio album The Wolves Go Hunt Their Prey, released one month later on 31 August and features two tracks that would ultimately appear on the album, plus other two taken from their older releases Carpathia: A Dramatic Poem and The Deathship Has a New Captain. As evidenced by its title, the EP was given by Prophecy exclusively for members of its club; thus being, it is not available for sale, and is currently out of print.",
"The Club (2004 TV series)\n The Club is an American reality television series about the competitive and cutthroat world of ICE, a stand-alone nightclub in Las Vegas. The series aired on Spike TV from 2004 to 2005.",
"Deconstructed club\n The genre steps away from traditional and mainstream dance music tropes, such as four on the floor beats, stable tempos, build-ups, and drops. Instead, it is identified by an aggressive, frantic, post-industrial sound design, featuring metallic or staccato sounds such as samples of glass smashing or gunshots. Deconstructed club aims for an excessive, apocalyptic-sounding soundscape, with constant rhythmic switch-ups and atonality. Deconstructed club proposes a chaotic mix and a sonic canvas where ballroom samples, field recordings, a cappella rapping and industrial soundscapes are adjusted into dance-floor music. The genre is characterized by its disruptive elements and a wide dynamic tempo range, often ",
"Weekender club\n A wide range of genres is offered such as indie, alternative, britpop, rock, grunge, emo, soul, electronica and music from the 50s and 60s.",
"The Club (video game)\n shooter...And to truly capture the racing atmosphere, some of the levels have players running laps in specific environments...It may sound odd, but the racing shooter formula works amazingly well\". Reiner called The Club \"a nice change of pace, and hopefully the beginning of a new genre\". GamePro reviewer Cameron Lewis wrote: \"What might be most impressive about The Club is that despite the many disparate elements that it cherry-picks from genres as diverse as racing, skateboarding, and first-person shooters, the whole never bears the disjointed feel of a Frankenstein creation\". IGN reviewer Alec Meer stated that the scoring system \"will prove an immediate turn-off for some\" and went on to blame the \"fairly dismal\" graphics for ",
"The Club (British TV series)\n The Club was a British reality television show, broadcast weekly on ITV. It ran for six weeks, beginning on Thursday 6 March 2003. Presented by Donna Air and Matt Brown, three celebrities were given control of their own individual bar in a London club, named Nylon. Each celebrity was given their own changeable team of staff and viewers were given the chance to vote the celebrities' staff off the show. At the end of the series, viewers were asked to vote for their favourite celebrity bar manager. Actor Dean Gaffney was the eventual winner, beating presenter/singer Richard Blackwood and former Page 3 model, Samantha Fox. 49 percent of the audience voted him the best manager and he won the £15,000 prize. An ITV2 spin-off show also aired for the duration, and a highlights show aired on Saturday nights on ITV. Dooley's Vodka Toffee sponsored the show.",
"In the Club (TV series)\n In the Club is a British drama television series that was first broadcast on BBC One on 5 August 2014. The series follows six couples who attended a local Parent Craft class during their pregnancy. The series was written and created by Kay Mellor. A second series was commissioned in 2014 and broadcast in the UK from 3 May to 7 June 2016.",
"The Boys Club\n The Boy's Club is a 1996 Canadian crime drama thriller film directed by John Fawcett, written by Doug Smith (story) and Peter Wellington (writer), and starring Chris Penn, Devon Sawa, Dominic Zamprogna, and Stuart Stone. It was released on VHS in Canada and the United States by Allumination Filmworks, on Laserdisc in the United States by Image Entertainment and on DVD in the United States in 1998 by Simitar Entertainment. It was re-released in the United States in 2003 on DVD by Ardustry Home Entertainment. In 2013, it was released by Echo Bridge Home Entertainment on DVD.",
"The Club (Mexican TV series)\n The Club (Spanish: El Club), is Mexican crime drama streaming television series directed by Camila Ibarra and produced by Argos Comunicación. The series revolves around a group of rich young people who get involved, through an application, in drug trafficking until they get to have contact with much more powerful people and that's when they get into serious problems. It stars Alejandro Speitzer, Minnie West, and Jorge Caballero.",
"S Club (album)\n S Club is the debut studio album by British pop group S Club 7. It was released by Polydor Records on 4 October 1999. The album was primarily produced by StarGate, Absolute, Dufflebag Boys, Eliot Kennedy and Mike Percy. S Club became one of the group's most successful album releases, and reached number two in the United Kingdom, where it was certified double platinum. S Club was released in North America on 11 April 2000 after their television show S Club 7 in Miami became popular in the United States, where it peaked outside the top 100. In Canada, the album charted within the top 10 and became the group's most successful album release on the Canadian albums chart.",
"Clubbing (comics)\n Clubbing is a graphic novel published in 2007 by Minx, a cancelled imprint of DC Comics. It was written by Eisner Award nominated Andi Watson and drawn by Josh Howard.",
"The Club (British TV series)\n A live show was broadcast each week for 6 weeks on ITV, and was presented by Donna Air and Matt Brown. During the show, highlights were shown and the celebrities were interviewed along with the sacked bar mate. In addition to the live show, The Club was also broadcast five nights a week on ITV2, and a highlights show aired on Saturday nights.",
"Pleasure Club (album)\n Pleasure Club is an album by the American rock musician James Hall, released in 1996. Starting over in the 2000s, Hall named his band for the album. Hall supported the album by opening for Rage Against the Machine on a European tour, and for Love and Rockets in the United States. Pleasure Club's first single was \"Honky Time\".",
"At the Club\n At the Club is the debut studio album by the British band Kenickie. It was released in 1997 and reached number nine on the UK Albums Chart. At the Club includes the singles \"Punka\", \"Millionaire Sweeper\", \"In Your Car\", \"Nightlife\" and \"Come Out 2nite\"; the lead track from the group's second EP Skillex. \"How I Was Made\" and an earlier stage of recording of \"Acetone\" also previously appeared on Skillex - the latter recording had also been used as part of an acoustic Peel Session in February 1996 and therefore appears on the band's BBC Peel Sessions CD. The album was produced by John Cornfield, Andy Carpenter and band-member Peter Gofton (Johnny X). Receiving good reviews the album was first released by Bob Stanley and Pete Wiggs's label EMIdisc in the UK on CD, Cassette and LP on 12 May 1997. The album was released the following month in the US by Warner Bros. with an additional two tracks. The front cover photograph was taken by Warren Du Preez."
] |
What is Petr Mlsna's occupation? | [
"politician",
"political leader",
"political figure",
"polit.",
"pol"
] | occupation | Petr Mlsna | 298,388 | 78 | [
{
"id": "2334396",
"title": "Petr Mlsna",
"text": " Petr Mlsna (born 13 November 1978) is a Czech politician, who served as Head of the Government Legislative Council and Minister without Portfolio of the Czech Republic from December 2012 to July 2013. He was appointed to Petr Nečas' Cabinet as an independent on 12 December 2012.",
"score": "1.7958581"
},
{
"id": "12530577",
"title": "Petr Hlaváček",
"text": " He grew up in South Moravia in Boršice, near Buchlov Castle. From 1965 to 1969 he studied at the Secondary Technical School in Zlin leather. Upon graduation he worked at a shoe factory, Svit, as a production foreman. From 1970 to 1979 he studied at the Faculty of Technology VUT Brno. In 1979, he began working as a lecturer at the Faculty of Technology. He was Dean of the Faculty of Technology at Tomas Bata University in Zlin from 2007 to 2011. On June 15, 2007, he was elected to the position by the Academic Senate of FT and on July 1, 2007 he was appointed by ",
"score": "1.4938025"
},
{
"id": "13923958",
"title": "Petr Kolář",
"text": " Kolář graduated from Charles University in Prague in 1986 with majors in information technology, library science and ethnography. His interests are international politics, sport, literature, history, fine arts. Kolář is married and has two children.",
"score": "1.4300499"
},
{
"id": "30064212",
"title": "Petr Nárožný",
"text": " Petr Nárožný (born 14 April 1938 in Prague ) is a Czech actor and television presenter. Petr Nárožný attended Czech Technical University in Prague (civil engineering, graduate in 1968). He began his career as a presenter of the band Rangers in 1968. From 1973, he was engaged as an actor in the Semafor Theatre in Prague, together with Luděk Sobota and Miloslav Šimek. As of 2011, he is a member of The Drama Club.",
"score": "1.4228988"
},
{
"id": "27081016",
"title": "Martin C. Putna",
"text": " Putna was born in Písek, Czech Republic. Between 1986 and 1991 he studied Philology at the Charles University in Prague. Since 1992 he has worked at the Charles University. He also studied Theology at the University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice. He was visiting scholar at the University of Regensburg. He worked as a director of Vaclav Havel Presidential Library during the years 2009–2011. He is a regular contributor to the daily paper Lidové noviny, replacing Ludvík Vaculík as a core column author after Vaculík's death in 2015.",
"score": "1.3998923"
},
{
"id": "519648",
"title": "Petr Kalina",
"text": " Petr Kalina (born 9 July 1997) is a Czech professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing for HC Sparta Praha of the Czech Extraliga. Kalina made his Czech Extraliga debut playing with Mountfield HK during the 2015–16 Czech Extraliga season.",
"score": "1.3924892"
},
{
"id": "10171056",
"title": "Gymnázium třída Kapitána Jaroše",
"text": "Alfons Mucha (1860—1939), artist ; Vilem Mrstik (1863—1912), writer ; Petr Bezruč (1867—1958), poet and short story writer ; Karel Absolon (1877—1960), archaeologist and speleologist ; Karel Čapek (1890—1938), author and journalist ; Lev Blatný (1894—1930), poet ; Ondrej Sekora (1899—1967), painter and author ; Růžena Vacková (1901—1982), art historian ; Ivan Blatny (1919—1990), poet ; Zdeněk Rotrekl (1920—2013), poet ; Felix Maria Davídek (1921—1988), Roman Catholic bishop ; Jan Novak (1921—1984), composer ; Josef Koukl (1926—2010), Roman Catholic Bishop of Litoměřice ; Milan Kundera (born 1929), novelist ; Jiří Zlatuška (born 1957), ANO 2011 politician ; Petr Fiala (born 1964), politician, leader of the Civic Democratic Party ; Petr Zelenka (born 1967), film director ; Pavel Blatny (born 1968), chess grandmaster ; Jaroslav Suchy (born 1971), figure skater and politician ; Katerina Mrazova (born 1972), figure skater ; Martin Špinar (born 1972), footballer ; Radka Kovarikova (born 1975), figure skater ; Kateřina Tučková (born 1980), writer ; Jakub Hrůša (born 1981), conductor ; Mario Holek (born 1986), footballer ",
"score": "1.3794396"
},
{
"id": "12334043",
"title": "Richard Pokorný",
"text": " Pokorný was born in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czechoslovakia. After graduating from high school (Gymnázium Františka Martina Pelcla) there, he studied the higher vocational school in Tábor and the Faculty of Environment on Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem. Since 2004 he stay on the Faculty of Environment as the assistant, later as assistant professor, in 2015 he worked temporarily as the vice-dean for study. At university he teaches subjects related to inanimate nature, most of the time he devoted to research projects and research activities and curatorship of the geological collections. He lives in Litoměřice city, he is married and ",
"score": "1.3746411"
},
{
"id": "12530576",
"title": "Petr Hlaváček",
"text": " Petr Hlavacek (February 23, 1950 – January 10, 2014) was a Czech shoe expert, university lecturer and researcher. His professional focus was to study the preparation and production of shoe materials, footwear, footwear ergonomics (especially for diabetics ) and historical footwear. ",
"score": "1.3713663"
},
{
"id": "29975162",
"title": "Petr Luxa",
"text": " Petr Luxa (born 3 March 1972) is a retired professional tennis player from Czech Republic. He mainly played doubles, winning three titles partnering fellow countryman Radek Štěpánek.",
"score": "1.3670796"
},
{
"id": "7281357",
"title": "Petr Kašpar",
"text": " He began business career with traded fruit, clothing and furniture from Hungary, which were exported to the Czech Republic. Later he continued as a FK DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda club officer. Then he moved to Artmedia Petržalka as club officer. From 2010 he is a director general of ŠK Slovan Bratislava.",
"score": "1.3666312"
},
{
"id": "28610916",
"title": "Petr Švancara",
"text": " Petr Švancara (born 5 November 1977) is a former Czech football player. Švancara started his football career in his native Brno, eventually playing for the local side 1. FC Brno, and, later, for several other Gambrinus liga clubs. In 2008, his goal for FK Viktoria Žižkov in a match against Bohemians Prague was voted Gambrinus liga goal of the year. In June 2012, Švancara, the captain of Brno, signed a two-year extension to his contract to keep him at the club until 2014.",
"score": "1.3642814"
},
{
"id": "5095764",
"title": "Václav Mls",
"text": " Václav Mls (born 17 July 1949) is a Czech rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.3597356"
},
{
"id": "3788916",
"title": "Jan Těsnohlídek",
"text": " After K. V. Raise grammar school in Hlinsko he had many jobs - worked in bookstores, coffee shops, construction sites as a bricklayer, electrician, in galleries, in a fast-food restaurant, in the notary and attorney's office, etc. After he moved to Prague he briefly studied library studies and information studies at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague. Since 2008 to 2011 he has been editor and deputy editor of the magazine for contemporary poetry Psí víno. In 2009 he founded with Petr Štengl publishing house called Petr Štengl, and in 2011 he established his own publishing house JT's. His poems have been translated into English, German, Italian, Finnish, Slovenian, Spain, Dutch and Polish, and printed in Czech and foreign journals and anthologies. He cooperated with music bands Umakart and Lesní zvěř. Since 2009 he started organize and since 2011 he is an appointed judge of the literary competition for young poets called Competition Ortenova Kutná Hora. he is the youngest member of Czech PEN Club. Since 2012 to 2016 he lived in Krakow, Poland.",
"score": "1.3596573"
},
{
"id": "13251634",
"title": "Petr Fical",
"text": " Petr Fical (born 23 September 1977) is a Czech-born German former professional ice hockey player. Fical competed with the Germany men's national ice hockey team at the 2006 Winter Olympics. He also competed with Team Germany at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, and at the 2005, 2007, and 2008 IIHF World Championships.",
"score": "1.3582101"
},
{
"id": "29882075",
"title": "Petr Galuška",
"text": " Petr Galuška (born 8 July 1996) is a Czech professional football forward who last played for Pohronie in Fortuna Liga. He previously played for Slovácko and Karviná in the Czech First League.",
"score": "1.3545144"
},
{
"id": "4262141",
"title": "Petr Rosol",
"text": " Petr Rosol (born June 20, 1964) is a Czech former professional ice hockey forward. He played in the 1992 Olympic ice hockey for Czechoslovakia where he won a bronze medal. He was drafted 75th overall by the Calgary Flames in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft.",
"score": "1.3539786"
},
{
"id": "25917412",
"title": "Petr Rajnoha",
"text": " Petr Rajnoha (born in 1974) is a Czech organist. He is a graduate of the Conservatory in Brno and the Faculty of Music of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague under the tutelage of Prof. Jaroslav Tůma. In 1996 – 1997 he continued his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris under Professor Susan Landale. In 2006, Rajnoha recorded the Five Concert Fantasies by Josef Klička for the Czech label ARTA Records.",
"score": "1.3519411"
},
{
"id": "27448503",
"title": "Petr Šiška",
"text": " Petr Šiška (born 4 May 1965, in Třinec) is a Czech TV presenter, screenwriter, musician, and occasional songwriter. He is currently the host of the Czechia game show Nic než pravda (English: Moment of truth) on the Czechia TV channel Prima, based on the American game show The Moment of Truth. In addition to his television career, he is a successful songwriter, having written lyrics and music for singers such as Czech icon Karel Gott, Helena Vondráčková, Hana Zagorová, Leona Machálková, and others. He is also a member of the rock band Legendy se vrací (The Legends return). Since 1997, Petr Šiška has been CEO and chairman of the board of directors of Petarda Production a.s., a production company that organizes benefit concerts, charity events, art exhibitions, and offers companies public relation services. The company also represents young talented artists and musicians. In 2016, he was the screenwriter for The Fountain for Zuzana, a movie that pays tribute to the Czech-Polish-Slovak border area, its music, and to the musicians from all genres. Much of the film showed concert footage of famous groups and musicians like Jarek Nohavica, Peter Cmorik, and Roman Izzi Iziáš.",
"score": "1.349994"
},
{
"id": "32450398",
"title": "Petr Nečas",
"text": " Nečas was born in Uherské Hradiště, Czech Republic, on 19November 1964. He attended gymnasium in Uherské Hradiště from 1979 to 1983. He graduated from the Faculty of Science at the University of J.E. Purkyně in Brno in 1988. Nečas met his future wife, Radka Nečasová, at school when he was18. In 2013, he filed for divorce and not long after married his former chief of staff, Jana Nagyová.",
"score": "1.3491905"
}
] | [
"Petr Mlsna\n Petr Mlsna (born 13 November 1978) is a Czech politician, who served as Head of the Government Legislative Council and Minister without Portfolio of the Czech Republic from December 2012 to July 2013. He was appointed to Petr Nečas' Cabinet as an independent on 12 December 2012.",
"Petr Hlaváček\n He grew up in South Moravia in Boršice, near Buchlov Castle. From 1965 to 1969 he studied at the Secondary Technical School in Zlin leather. Upon graduation he worked at a shoe factory, Svit, as a production foreman. From 1970 to 1979 he studied at the Faculty of Technology VUT Brno. In 1979, he began working as a lecturer at the Faculty of Technology. He was Dean of the Faculty of Technology at Tomas Bata University in Zlin from 2007 to 2011. On June 15, 2007, he was elected to the position by the Academic Senate of FT and on July 1, 2007 he was appointed by ",
"Petr Kolář\n Kolář graduated from Charles University in Prague in 1986 with majors in information technology, library science and ethnography. His interests are international politics, sport, literature, history, fine arts. Kolář is married and has two children.",
"Petr Nárožný\n Petr Nárožný (born 14 April 1938 in Prague ) is a Czech actor and television presenter. Petr Nárožný attended Czech Technical University in Prague (civil engineering, graduate in 1968). He began his career as a presenter of the band Rangers in 1968. From 1973, he was engaged as an actor in the Semafor Theatre in Prague, together with Luděk Sobota and Miloslav Šimek. As of 2011, he is a member of The Drama Club.",
"Martin C. Putna\n Putna was born in Písek, Czech Republic. Between 1986 and 1991 he studied Philology at the Charles University in Prague. Since 1992 he has worked at the Charles University. He also studied Theology at the University of South Bohemia in České Budějovice. He was visiting scholar at the University of Regensburg. He worked as a director of Vaclav Havel Presidential Library during the years 2009–2011. He is a regular contributor to the daily paper Lidové noviny, replacing Ludvík Vaculík as a core column author after Vaculík's death in 2015.",
"Petr Kalina\n Petr Kalina (born 9 July 1997) is a Czech professional ice hockey player. He is currently playing for HC Sparta Praha of the Czech Extraliga. Kalina made his Czech Extraliga debut playing with Mountfield HK during the 2015–16 Czech Extraliga season.",
"Gymnázium třída Kapitána Jaroše\nAlfons Mucha (1860—1939), artist ; Vilem Mrstik (1863—1912), writer ; Petr Bezruč (1867—1958), poet and short story writer ; Karel Absolon (1877—1960), archaeologist and speleologist ; Karel Čapek (1890—1938), author and journalist ; Lev Blatný (1894—1930), poet ; Ondrej Sekora (1899—1967), painter and author ; Růžena Vacková (1901—1982), art historian ; Ivan Blatny (1919—1990), poet ; Zdeněk Rotrekl (1920—2013), poet ; Felix Maria Davídek (1921—1988), Roman Catholic bishop ; Jan Novak (1921—1984), composer ; Josef Koukl (1926—2010), Roman Catholic Bishop of Litoměřice ; Milan Kundera (born 1929), novelist ; Jiří Zlatuška (born 1957), ANO 2011 politician ; Petr Fiala (born 1964), politician, leader of the Civic Democratic Party ; Petr Zelenka (born 1967), film director ; Pavel Blatny (born 1968), chess grandmaster ; Jaroslav Suchy (born 1971), figure skater and politician ; Katerina Mrazova (born 1972), figure skater ; Martin Špinar (born 1972), footballer ; Radka Kovarikova (born 1975), figure skater ; Kateřina Tučková (born 1980), writer ; Jakub Hrůša (born 1981), conductor ; Mario Holek (born 1986), footballer ",
"Richard Pokorný\n Pokorný was born in Rychnov nad Kněžnou, Czechoslovakia. After graduating from high school (Gymnázium Františka Martina Pelcla) there, he studied the higher vocational school in Tábor and the Faculty of Environment on Jan Evangelista Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem. Since 2004 he stay on the Faculty of Environment as the assistant, later as assistant professor, in 2015 he worked temporarily as the vice-dean for study. At university he teaches subjects related to inanimate nature, most of the time he devoted to research projects and research activities and curatorship of the geological collections. He lives in Litoměřice city, he is married and ",
"Petr Hlaváček\n Petr Hlavacek (February 23, 1950 – January 10, 2014) was a Czech shoe expert, university lecturer and researcher. His professional focus was to study the preparation and production of shoe materials, footwear, footwear ergonomics (especially for diabetics ) and historical footwear. ",
"Petr Luxa\n Petr Luxa (born 3 March 1972) is a retired professional tennis player from Czech Republic. He mainly played doubles, winning three titles partnering fellow countryman Radek Štěpánek.",
"Petr Kašpar\n He began business career with traded fruit, clothing and furniture from Hungary, which were exported to the Czech Republic. Later he continued as a FK DAC 1904 Dunajská Streda club officer. Then he moved to Artmedia Petržalka as club officer. From 2010 he is a director general of ŠK Slovan Bratislava.",
"Petr Švancara\n Petr Švancara (born 5 November 1977) is a former Czech football player. Švancara started his football career in his native Brno, eventually playing for the local side 1. FC Brno, and, later, for several other Gambrinus liga clubs. In 2008, his goal for FK Viktoria Žižkov in a match against Bohemians Prague was voted Gambrinus liga goal of the year. In June 2012, Švancara, the captain of Brno, signed a two-year extension to his contract to keep him at the club until 2014.",
"Václav Mls\n Václav Mls (born 17 July 1949) is a Czech rower. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1976 Summer Olympics.",
"Jan Těsnohlídek\n After K. V. Raise grammar school in Hlinsko he had many jobs - worked in bookstores, coffee shops, construction sites as a bricklayer, electrician, in galleries, in a fast-food restaurant, in the notary and attorney's office, etc. After he moved to Prague he briefly studied library studies and information studies at the Faculty of Arts of Charles University in Prague. Since 2008 to 2011 he has been editor and deputy editor of the magazine for contemporary poetry Psí víno. In 2009 he founded with Petr Štengl publishing house called Petr Štengl, and in 2011 he established his own publishing house JT's. His poems have been translated into English, German, Italian, Finnish, Slovenian, Spain, Dutch and Polish, and printed in Czech and foreign journals and anthologies. He cooperated with music bands Umakart and Lesní zvěř. Since 2009 he started organize and since 2011 he is an appointed judge of the literary competition for young poets called Competition Ortenova Kutná Hora. he is the youngest member of Czech PEN Club. Since 2012 to 2016 he lived in Krakow, Poland.",
"Petr Fical\n Petr Fical (born 23 September 1977) is a Czech-born German former professional ice hockey player. Fical competed with the Germany men's national ice hockey team at the 2006 Winter Olympics. He also competed with Team Germany at the 2004 World Cup of Hockey, and at the 2005, 2007, and 2008 IIHF World Championships.",
"Petr Galuška\n Petr Galuška (born 8 July 1996) is a Czech professional football forward who last played for Pohronie in Fortuna Liga. He previously played for Slovácko and Karviná in the Czech First League.",
"Petr Rosol\n Petr Rosol (born June 20, 1964) is a Czech former professional ice hockey forward. He played in the 1992 Olympic ice hockey for Czechoslovakia where he won a bronze medal. He was drafted 75th overall by the Calgary Flames in the 1984 NHL Entry Draft.",
"Petr Rajnoha\n Petr Rajnoha (born in 1974) is a Czech organist. He is a graduate of the Conservatory in Brno and the Faculty of Music of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague under the tutelage of Prof. Jaroslav Tůma. In 1996 – 1997 he continued his studies at the Conservatoire de Paris under Professor Susan Landale. In 2006, Rajnoha recorded the Five Concert Fantasies by Josef Klička for the Czech label ARTA Records.",
"Petr Šiška\n Petr Šiška (born 4 May 1965, in Třinec) is a Czech TV presenter, screenwriter, musician, and occasional songwriter. He is currently the host of the Czechia game show Nic než pravda (English: Moment of truth) on the Czechia TV channel Prima, based on the American game show The Moment of Truth. In addition to his television career, he is a successful songwriter, having written lyrics and music for singers such as Czech icon Karel Gott, Helena Vondráčková, Hana Zagorová, Leona Machálková, and others. He is also a member of the rock band Legendy se vrací (The Legends return). Since 1997, Petr Šiška has been CEO and chairman of the board of directors of Petarda Production a.s., a production company that organizes benefit concerts, charity events, art exhibitions, and offers companies public relation services. The company also represents young talented artists and musicians. In 2016, he was the screenwriter for The Fountain for Zuzana, a movie that pays tribute to the Czech-Polish-Slovak border area, its music, and to the musicians from all genres. Much of the film showed concert footage of famous groups and musicians like Jarek Nohavica, Peter Cmorik, and Roman Izzi Iziáš.",
"Petr Nečas\n Nečas was born in Uherské Hradiště, Czech Republic, on 19November 1964. He attended gymnasium in Uherské Hradiště from 1979 to 1983. He graduated from the Faculty of Science at the University of J.E. Purkyně in Brno in 1988. Nečas met his future wife, Radka Nečasová, at school when he was18. In 2013, he filed for divorce and not long after married his former chief of staff, Jana Nagyová."
] |
What sport does Leonardo Torres play? | [
"association football",
"football",
"soccer"
] | sport | Leonardo Torres | 4,949,006 | 57 | [
{
"id": "4262633",
"title": "Leonardo Torres",
"text": " Torres began his career with Belgrano de Córdoba and has played for several clubs in Argentina including Racing Club de Avellaneda and Unión de Santa Fe. Torres also had a brief stint playing with Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors in South Korea.",
"score": "1.7875845"
},
{
"id": "2189074",
"title": "Leonardo Bedolla",
"text": " Leonardo Bedolla Torres (born July 31, 1993 in Ayutla, Jalisco), known as Leonardo Torres, is a professional Mexican football.",
"score": "1.668834"
},
{
"id": "32169494",
"title": "Leonardo Sottani",
"text": " Leonardo Sottani (born 1 November 1973 in Figline Valdarno) is a retired water polo player from Italy, who represented his native country at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There the attacking forward (1m97) was a member of the men's national team that claimed the bronze medal. He participated at the 1996, 2000, and 2008 Summer Olympics representing the Italian National Waterpolo team. He played for the most successful waterpolo team in the world, Pro Recco, and helped the team win the Italian League and Coppa Italia in 2006 and 2007. He also played for RN Florentia.",
"score": "1.6250134"
},
{
"id": "4262632",
"title": "Leonardo Torres",
"text": " César Leonardo Torres (born 27 October 1975 in Córdoba) is an Argentine retired football midfielder.",
"score": "1.6142468"
},
{
"id": "3806045",
"title": "Óscar Torres (basketball)",
"text": " Torres became the first Venezuelan-born player in National Basketball Association (NBA) history, when he signed with the Houston Rockets, for the 2001–02 NBA season. Torres averaged 6.0 points over the course of the season, and scored an NBA career-high 28 points against the Cleveland Cavaliers, on December 11, 2001. He spent the next season with the Golden State Warriors, and averaged 3.1 points per game. Torres led the Russian team Khimki Moscow Region to the 2006 EuroCup finals, before losing to DKV Joventut. Torres was transferred CSKA Moscow, from Khimki, in February 2007, and with them, he won the Russian Championship and the Russian Cup. He was released from CSKA in June that year. On August 21, 2007, he signed with the Italian League team Climamio Bologna.",
"score": "1.5873606"
},
{
"id": "16235182",
"title": "Lionel Torres",
"text": " Lionel Torres (born 16 March 1975 in Perpignan, France), is a French athlete who competes in recurve archery. He competed at the 2000 Olympic Games, qualifying in 11th place but losing in the first knockout round, and has won two individual medals at the World Archery Championships and was the world number one archer from May 2002 to February 2003.",
"score": "1.5797588"
},
{
"id": "8049959",
"title": "Erick Torres (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": " In 2012 Torres Participated in the 2012 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament with the Mexico U23 national team, appearing 3 times and scoring one goal against Panama in extra time winning the match 1–0. Mexico won the Tournament defeating Honduras in the Final. However Erick did not make the final cut for those players participating in the 2012 Summer Olympics where Mexico won its first olympic gold medal in football. On 18 September 2015 Erick Torres was selected by coach Raul Gutierrez to play in the 2015 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship",
"score": "1.5701773"
},
{
"id": "28336379",
"title": "Hugo Torres",
"text": " Torres started his career in 1979, playing for his hometown club, Tala Rugby Club until 1987, when he moved to Italy playing for CUS Roma Rugby in the 1987-88 season, then for Rugby Roma Olimpic between 1988 and 1995. From 1995, he returned to CUS Roma Rugby, where he started as player-coach, between 1998 and 2001 he moved to Unione Rugby Capitolina and then, for Castel San Pietro, being player-coach in both clubs. Torres retired in the 2003 season. Torres was called in the Argentina national rugby union team during the 1987 Rugby World Cup, but never saw action.",
"score": "1.5630887"
},
{
"id": "8557168",
"title": "Gabriel Torres (Brazilian footballer)",
"text": " Torres played three years of college soccer at the University of the District of Columbia from 2016 to 2018. While playing with the Firebirds, Torres made 55 appearances, scoring 34 goals and tallying 21 assists.",
"score": "1.5581436"
},
{
"id": "13961812",
"title": "Leonardo Binchi",
"text": " Leonardo Binchi (born 27 August 1975) is an Italian water polo player who competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics, in the 2004 Summer Olympics, and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. height: 200cm",
"score": "1.552444"
},
{
"id": "1290831",
"title": "Rainer Torres",
"text": " Rainer Torres began in Academia Cantolao and Sport Boys. He then moved to Europe to play for the German club MSV Duisburg and Austrian club DSV Leoben. He then returned to Peru to play for Universitario. However, problems between Torres and the directors of the club caused him to sign with Sporting Cristal where he would play for four seasons and win one national championship. He returned to Universitario in 2008 but was unable to play in the first 7 games of the season because of an injury in the preseason. Torres has made 19 appearances for the Peru national football team.",
"score": "1.5512874"
},
{
"id": "26563518",
"title": "Aureliano Torres",
"text": " Aureliano Torres Román (born 16 June 1982) is a Paraguayan footballer who plays for 12 de Octubre in the Paraguayan División Intermedia. At club level, Torres achieved the 2002 Emperor's Cup in Japan, the Torneo Clausura of the 2006–07 Argentine Primera División and the 2012–13 Uruguayan Primera División of Uruguay, and with Paraguay he achieved the silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics Men's tournament and runners-up of the 2011 Copa América.",
"score": "1.5512853"
},
{
"id": "25258773",
"title": "Caio Torres",
"text": " A member of the senior men's Brazilian national basketball team, Torres played with the squad at the 2006 FIBA World Championship, where Brazil finished in 19th place. He also played at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.5494657"
},
{
"id": "31521169",
"title": "Leonardo Pais",
"text": " Pais played for both under-17 and under-20 levels, also appearing in 2011 Pan American Games.",
"score": "1.548121"
},
{
"id": "15462646",
"title": "Bubba Torres",
"text": " Michael \"Bubba\" Torres (born October 31, 1991) is an ice sledge hockey player and Paralympic gold medalist. Competing at the 2010 Winter Paralympics, he won a gold medal in the men's ice sledge hockey tournament.",
"score": "1.5476465"
},
{
"id": "26193240",
"title": "Jorge Torres Nilo",
"text": " In 2007 Coach René Isidoro García selected Jorge Torres Nilo to participate in the 2007 Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro. Mexico won Bronze after defeating Bolivia in the 3rd place match. Jorge Torres Nilo also participated in the 2007 Digicel Shield with Mexico U-23, he only played in the final against Trinidad and Tobago in which Mexico would receive second place after losing 2–1 in the final. Torres-Nilo was called up as one of 3 other overage players to represent Mexico at the 2016 Olympics held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.",
"score": "1.5475522"
},
{
"id": "8049962",
"title": "Erick Torres (footballer, born 1993)",
"text": "CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament: 2012 ; Central American and Caribbean Games: 2014 ; CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament: 2015 ; FIFA U-20 World Cup: 3rd place 2011 MLS All-Star: 2014 ; CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship Best XI: 2015 Mexico Youth Individual",
"score": "1.5447383"
},
{
"id": "27586413",
"title": "Juan Pablo Torres (soccer)",
"text": " Juan Pablo Torres (born July 26, 1999) is an American professional soccer player who plays as a midfielder.",
"score": "1.5389872"
},
{
"id": "3806046",
"title": "Óscar Torres (basketball)",
"text": " Torres also played with the senior Venezuelan national basketball team at the 2002 and 2006 editions of the FIBA World Cups.",
"score": "1.5368928"
},
{
"id": "7021414",
"title": "Leonardo Di Lorenzo",
"text": " Di Lorenzo started playing soccer in the professional ranks in 2000, with San Lorenzo, where he was part of the team that reached the National A Division closing tournament, and helped the club achieve its first international success by winning the Mercosur Cup. Later on he had spells with Atlético Rafaela and Argentinos Juniors.",
"score": "1.5343027"
}
] | [
"Leonardo Torres\n Torres began his career with Belgrano de Córdoba and has played for several clubs in Argentina including Racing Club de Avellaneda and Unión de Santa Fe. Torres also had a brief stint playing with Jeonbuk Hyundai Motors in South Korea.",
"Leonardo Bedolla\n Leonardo Bedolla Torres (born July 31, 1993 in Ayutla, Jalisco), known as Leonardo Torres, is a professional Mexican football.",
"Leonardo Sottani\n Leonardo Sottani (born 1 November 1973 in Figline Valdarno) is a retired water polo player from Italy, who represented his native country at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There the attacking forward (1m97) was a member of the men's national team that claimed the bronze medal. He participated at the 1996, 2000, and 2008 Summer Olympics representing the Italian National Waterpolo team. He played for the most successful waterpolo team in the world, Pro Recco, and helped the team win the Italian League and Coppa Italia in 2006 and 2007. He also played for RN Florentia.",
"Leonardo Torres\n César Leonardo Torres (born 27 October 1975 in Córdoba) is an Argentine retired football midfielder.",
"Óscar Torres (basketball)\n Torres became the first Venezuelan-born player in National Basketball Association (NBA) history, when he signed with the Houston Rockets, for the 2001–02 NBA season. Torres averaged 6.0 points over the course of the season, and scored an NBA career-high 28 points against the Cleveland Cavaliers, on December 11, 2001. He spent the next season with the Golden State Warriors, and averaged 3.1 points per game. Torres led the Russian team Khimki Moscow Region to the 2006 EuroCup finals, before losing to DKV Joventut. Torres was transferred CSKA Moscow, from Khimki, in February 2007, and with them, he won the Russian Championship and the Russian Cup. He was released from CSKA in June that year. On August 21, 2007, he signed with the Italian League team Climamio Bologna.",
"Lionel Torres\n Lionel Torres (born 16 March 1975 in Perpignan, France), is a French athlete who competes in recurve archery. He competed at the 2000 Olympic Games, qualifying in 11th place but losing in the first knockout round, and has won two individual medals at the World Archery Championships and was the world number one archer from May 2002 to February 2003.",
"Erick Torres (footballer, born 1993)\n In 2012 Torres Participated in the 2012 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament with the Mexico U23 national team, appearing 3 times and scoring one goal against Panama in extra time winning the match 1–0. Mexico won the Tournament defeating Honduras in the Final. However Erick did not make the final cut for those players participating in the 2012 Summer Olympics where Mexico won its first olympic gold medal in football. On 18 September 2015 Erick Torres was selected by coach Raul Gutierrez to play in the 2015 CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship",
"Hugo Torres\n Torres started his career in 1979, playing for his hometown club, Tala Rugby Club until 1987, when he moved to Italy playing for CUS Roma Rugby in the 1987-88 season, then for Rugby Roma Olimpic between 1988 and 1995. From 1995, he returned to CUS Roma Rugby, where he started as player-coach, between 1998 and 2001 he moved to Unione Rugby Capitolina and then, for Castel San Pietro, being player-coach in both clubs. Torres retired in the 2003 season. Torres was called in the Argentina national rugby union team during the 1987 Rugby World Cup, but never saw action.",
"Gabriel Torres (Brazilian footballer)\n Torres played three years of college soccer at the University of the District of Columbia from 2016 to 2018. While playing with the Firebirds, Torres made 55 appearances, scoring 34 goals and tallying 21 assists.",
"Leonardo Binchi\n Leonardo Binchi (born 27 August 1975) is an Italian water polo player who competed in the 2000 Summer Olympics, in the 2004 Summer Olympics, and in the 2008 Summer Olympics. height: 200cm",
"Rainer Torres\n Rainer Torres began in Academia Cantolao and Sport Boys. He then moved to Europe to play for the German club MSV Duisburg and Austrian club DSV Leoben. He then returned to Peru to play for Universitario. However, problems between Torres and the directors of the club caused him to sign with Sporting Cristal where he would play for four seasons and win one national championship. He returned to Universitario in 2008 but was unable to play in the first 7 games of the season because of an injury in the preseason. Torres has made 19 appearances for the Peru national football team.",
"Aureliano Torres\n Aureliano Torres Román (born 16 June 1982) is a Paraguayan footballer who plays for 12 de Octubre in the Paraguayan División Intermedia. At club level, Torres achieved the 2002 Emperor's Cup in Japan, the Torneo Clausura of the 2006–07 Argentine Primera División and the 2012–13 Uruguayan Primera División of Uruguay, and with Paraguay he achieved the silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics Men's tournament and runners-up of the 2011 Copa América.",
"Caio Torres\n A member of the senior men's Brazilian national basketball team, Torres played with the squad at the 2006 FIBA World Championship, where Brazil finished in 19th place. He also played at the 2012 Summer Olympics.",
"Leonardo Pais\n Pais played for both under-17 and under-20 levels, also appearing in 2011 Pan American Games.",
"Bubba Torres\n Michael \"Bubba\" Torres (born October 31, 1991) is an ice sledge hockey player and Paralympic gold medalist. Competing at the 2010 Winter Paralympics, he won a gold medal in the men's ice sledge hockey tournament.",
"Jorge Torres Nilo\n In 2007 Coach René Isidoro García selected Jorge Torres Nilo to participate in the 2007 Pan American Games held in Rio de Janeiro. Mexico won Bronze after defeating Bolivia in the 3rd place match. Jorge Torres Nilo also participated in the 2007 Digicel Shield with Mexico U-23, he only played in the final against Trinidad and Tobago in which Mexico would receive second place after losing 2–1 in the final. Torres-Nilo was called up as one of 3 other overage players to represent Mexico at the 2016 Olympics held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.",
"Erick Torres (footballer, born 1993)\nCONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament: 2012 ; Central American and Caribbean Games: 2014 ; CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Tournament: 2015 ; FIFA U-20 World Cup: 3rd place 2011 MLS All-Star: 2014 ; CONCACAF Men's Olympic Qualifying Championship Best XI: 2015 Mexico Youth Individual",
"Juan Pablo Torres (soccer)\n Juan Pablo Torres (born July 26, 1999) is an American professional soccer player who plays as a midfielder.",
"Óscar Torres (basketball)\n Torres also played with the senior Venezuelan national basketball team at the 2002 and 2006 editions of the FIBA World Cups.",
"Leonardo Di Lorenzo\n Di Lorenzo started playing soccer in the professional ranks in 2000, with San Lorenzo, where he was part of the team that reached the National A Division closing tournament, and helped the club achieve its first international success by winning the Mercosur Cup. Later on he had spells with Atlético Rafaela and Argentinos Juniors."
] |
In what city was Anne Brusletto born? | [
"Geilo"
] | place of birth | Anne Brusletto | 3,827,230 | 44 | [
{
"id": "2393098",
"title": "Anne Paolucci",
"text": " She was born on July 31, 1926, in Rome, Italy. At the age of eight, she moved to New York City with her widowed mother and two siblings. She attended Barnard College, graduating with a B.A. in English in 1947. She studied Italian literature under Giuseppe Prezzolini and Dino Bigongiari at Columbia University, receiving her M.A. in 1950. She spent a year as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Rome. Her doctoral dissertation on The Women in Dante's Divine Comedy and Spenser's Faerie Queene earned her a Woodbridge Honorary Fellowship, and she received a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Columbia in 1963.",
"score": "1.6748497"
},
{
"id": "610204",
"title": "Anne Burrell",
"text": " Burrell was born September 21, 1969, in Cazenovia, New York. She attended Canisius College in Buffalo and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in English and Communications in 1991. A year later, Burrell enrolled at the Culinary Institute of America, eventually graduating in 1996 with an Associate in Occupational Studies (A.O.S.). She also studied at the Italian Culinary Institute for Foreigners in Asti in the Piedmont region.",
"score": "1.6595927"
},
{
"id": "26658199",
"title": "Anne Casale",
"text": " Anne Lovi was born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey and raised in North Plainfield, New Jersey, the daughter of Amadeo M. Lovi and Rose F. Guarnieri Lovi. She had a twin sister, Louise. Her father ran a restaurant, and she worked in his kitchen as a girl. \"I swore I would never get into food, and here I am,\" she recalled in 1988, while promoting her third cookbook. She graduated from North Plainfield High School in 1948, and attended a nearby secretarial school.",
"score": "1.6566851"
},
{
"id": "1924557",
"title": "Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti",
"text": " Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti was born in Bologna. Her father Paolo Enriques was Jewish; her mother Maria Clotilde Agnoletti Fusconi was Catholic. Neither of her parents was religiously observant, so Anna Maria and her brother Enzo received a lay education. Her father was an important biologist who taught at various universities. Because of his job, the family moved to various Italian cities; he was in Naples, Sassari and finally in Florence. Anna Maria attended her studies at the Liceo Classico Michelangelo in Florence. In 1926 she began studying for her Letter and Philosophy degree. In 1930 she obtained her degree discussing her thesis with Nicolaj Ottokar. ",
"score": "1.6536397"
},
{
"id": "25664412",
"title": "Anne Bancroft",
"text": " Bancroft was born Anna Maria Louisa (or Luisa) Italiano in the Bronx, New York City, the middle of three daughters of Mildred (née DiNapoli), a telephone operator, and Michael G. Italiano, a dress pattern maker. Her parents were Italian immigrants. In an interview, she stated that her family was originally from Muro Lucano, in the province of Potenza. She was of Roman Catholic faith. Bancroft was raised in Little Italy, Bronx, in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx, attended P.S. 12, later moving to 1580 Zerega Ave. and graduating from Christopher Columbus High School in 1948. She later attended HB Studio, the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, the Actors Studio and the American Film Institute's Directing Workshop for Women at the University of California, Los Angeles. After appearing in a number of live television dramas, including Studio One and The Goldbergs under the name Anne Marno, later, at Darryl Zanuck's insistence, she chose the less Mediterranean surname of Bancroft \"because it sounded dignified\".",
"score": "1.6325086"
},
{
"id": "11670447",
"title": "Anne Balsamo",
"text": " Anne Marie Balsamo (born January 7, 1959) is a writer who focuses on the connections between art, culture, gender, and technology.",
"score": "1.631731"
},
{
"id": "28328264",
"title": "Lauren Ambrose",
"text": " Lauren Anne D'Ambruoso was born in New Haven, Connecticut on February 20, 1978. She is the daughter of Frank D'Ambruoso, a caterer and Anne (née Wachtel), an interior designer. She is of Italian descent on her father's side, and German, English, and Irish on her mother's. Ambrose attended Choate Rosemary Hall, Wilbur Cross High School, High School in the Community, and the ACES Educational Center for the Arts in New Haven as part of the class of 1996. She is also a trained opera singer who studied voice and opera at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute.",
"score": "1.5998116"
},
{
"id": "26141750",
"title": "Anne Polinario",
"text": " Polinario was born on 5 August 1979 in Havana, Cuba and now resides in Montreal, Quebec. She had Drop Foot Paralysis in her left foot at birth. She started swimming at a young age and moved to Canada as a teenager. She made it into Canada's national swimming team while her mother and father were in Cuba's National Swimming Team.",
"score": "1.5900223"
},
{
"id": "8004265",
"title": "Anne Pramaggiore",
"text": " Anne Pramaggiore was born on August 9, 1958 to Alfred Pramaggiore and Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore. Alfred Pramaggiore was born in Brooklyn, NY to parents who emigrated from Italy. After graduating from City College of New York, Alfred pursued a career as a civil engineer. Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore was a girl scout leader who later worked on political campaigns. She also served as a president of the Ohio Genealogical Society. Pramaggiore graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in theater. She later attended DePaul University College of Law and served as the editor-in-chief of the school's Law Review. She earned her law degree in 1989.",
"score": "1.5879238"
},
{
"id": "15760456",
"title": "Anne Bremer",
"text": " Anne Milly Bremer was born in San Francisco on May 21, 1868, to upper-middle-class German-Jewish immigrants Joseph and Minna Bremer. In 1880-81, she traveled in Europe with her parents, and they brought back a cousin, Albert Bender, from Dublin, Ireland, to live with them and work for another uncle, William Bremer. She studied art with Emil Carlsen at the San Francisco Art Students League and with Arthur Mathews and others at the California School of Design, Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, receiving a Certificate of Proficiency in 1898. By the time she graduated, she was on the board of the Sketch Club, an ",
"score": "1.5859054"
},
{
"id": "30775893",
"title": "Mercedes Bresso",
"text": " Bresso was born in Sanremo, Province of Imperia, Liguria. In 1969, she received her degree in Economics; since 1973, she is a University professor of economic institutions at the Politecnico di Torino (Faculty of Engineering).",
"score": "1.5847726"
},
{
"id": "9427930",
"title": "Ann Marie Buerkle",
"text": " Buerkle was born Ann Marie Colella in 1951 in Auburn, New York, the daughter of Sadie M. (née Fiduccia) and Alfred D. \"Al\" Colella. All of her grandparents were born in Italy. After graduating as a registered nurse from St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing in Syracuse, New York, she worked at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City and at St. Joseph's. She was a substitute school nurse for many years before obtaining her J.D. degree from Syracuse University School of Law. She was married to August Buerkle from 1972 to 1997. She served as an Assistant New York State Attorney General from 1997 to 2010. She also served one term on the Syracuse, New York Common Council. Buerkle is divorced and has six children.",
"score": "1.5833967"
},
{
"id": "10912205",
"title": "Minnie Minoprio",
"text": " Born Virginia Anne Minoprio in Ware, Hertfordshire, Minoprio after graduating from the Arts Educational School, where she studied acting and singing, debuted at 15 in a stage version of \"Cinderella\". Two years later moved in Italy where she starred in the revue Io e Margherita, alongside Walter Chiari. At the same time she began a career as a jazz singer, recording a music album of dixieland and collaborating with other musicians; just with a duet with another singer, Fred Bongusto, she obtained in 1971 her major discographic success, the song \"Quando mi dici così\", which ranked 20 in the Italian hit parade. Her variegated career also includes radio, television, cinema and two novels, Il passaggio (1992) and Benvenuti a bordo (2007).",
"score": "1.575321"
},
{
"id": "30046482",
"title": "Cecilia Zoppelletto",
"text": " She was born and raised in Padua, Italy. Since 1994, she has been based in London. She has a PhD in Film Studies from the University of Westminster.",
"score": "1.5749165"
},
{
"id": "26658198",
"title": "Anne Casale",
"text": " Anne Lovi Casale (July 15, 1930 – December 2, 2002) was an Italian-American cookbook author.",
"score": "1.574719"
},
{
"id": "30692396",
"title": "Anne Frasier",
"text": " Iowa, a river town settled by German, Irish, and Dutch immigrants. Her blue-collar parents divorced when she was six, and the next twelve years were spent in poverty, moving to and from Florida, Iowa, California, Illinois, and New Mexico. She graduated from Artesia High School, Artesia, New Mexico. After high school she worked as a waitress, a factory worker at Albuquerque's Levi Strauss (where she sewed the Levi's logo on the back pocket of jeans), followed by a secretarial position at Wally's LP Gas in Santa Fe, New Mexico. At age nineteen, she joined her uncle at his bar in rural ",
"score": "1.5742545"
},
{
"id": "28846433",
"title": "Anna Ogino",
"text": " Ogino was born as Anna Gaillard in Naka-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, to a Japanese mother and a French-American father. She was naturalized during elementary school, and received her undergraduate and master's degree in French literature from Keio University, as well as receiving a scholarship to Paris-Sorbonne University to study Rabelais. In 2002 she became a full professor at Keio.",
"score": "1.5710351"
},
{
"id": "786771",
"title": "Anne MacLeod",
"text": "Standing by Thistles (1997) ; Just the Caravaggio (1999) Anne MacLeod (born 1951) is a Scottish writer. She was born in Aberfeldy and grew up in Inverness. MacLeod studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen and works as a dermatologist. She is the mother of four children. MacLeod lives on the Black Isle. She has published two collections of poetry: both of which were well-received by critics. She has also published two novels The Dark Ship (2001) and The Blue Moon Book (2004).",
"score": "1.5676845"
},
{
"id": "6289642",
"title": "Ippolita Rostagno",
"text": " Born December 10, 1963 in Florence, Italy, Ippolita Rostagno is the daughter of an American artist and an Italian intellectual. Raised and educated in the hills of Tuscany, Ippolita attended elementary school in a one-room medieval schoolhouse and went on to study sculpture and earn her baccalauréat degree from the Istituto D’Arte in Florence. Ippolita immigrated to the United States at age 18, moving to Los Angeles where she continued her studies at Occidental College and founded an alternative poetry and dance company called Rime together with Anna Stump in 1984. After completing her BA in English Literature, Ippolita moved to New York City in 1986 and married a fashion photographer and gave birth to her daughter Maya in 1988.",
"score": "1.5674286"
},
{
"id": "7326926",
"title": "DJ Baby Anne",
"text": " DJ Baby Anne (born Marianne Breslin; November 17, 1972 ) is an Orlando-based DJ who works with live sets and original mixes that fuse Electro with Miami Bass and funky breaks.",
"score": "1.5672293"
}
] | [
"Anne Paolucci\n She was born on July 31, 1926, in Rome, Italy. At the age of eight, she moved to New York City with her widowed mother and two siblings. She attended Barnard College, graduating with a B.A. in English in 1947. She studied Italian literature under Giuseppe Prezzolini and Dino Bigongiari at Columbia University, receiving her M.A. in 1950. She spent a year as a Fulbright Scholar at the University of Rome. Her doctoral dissertation on The Women in Dante's Divine Comedy and Spenser's Faerie Queene earned her a Woodbridge Honorary Fellowship, and she received a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Columbia in 1963.",
"Anne Burrell\n Burrell was born September 21, 1969, in Cazenovia, New York. She attended Canisius College in Buffalo and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in English and Communications in 1991. A year later, Burrell enrolled at the Culinary Institute of America, eventually graduating in 1996 with an Associate in Occupational Studies (A.O.S.). She also studied at the Italian Culinary Institute for Foreigners in Asti in the Piedmont region.",
"Anne Casale\n Anne Lovi was born in Perth Amboy, New Jersey and raised in North Plainfield, New Jersey, the daughter of Amadeo M. Lovi and Rose F. Guarnieri Lovi. She had a twin sister, Louise. Her father ran a restaurant, and she worked in his kitchen as a girl. \"I swore I would never get into food, and here I am,\" she recalled in 1988, while promoting her third cookbook. She graduated from North Plainfield High School in 1948, and attended a nearby secretarial school.",
"Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti\n Anna Maria Enriques Agnoletti was born in Bologna. Her father Paolo Enriques was Jewish; her mother Maria Clotilde Agnoletti Fusconi was Catholic. Neither of her parents was religiously observant, so Anna Maria and her brother Enzo received a lay education. Her father was an important biologist who taught at various universities. Because of his job, the family moved to various Italian cities; he was in Naples, Sassari and finally in Florence. Anna Maria attended her studies at the Liceo Classico Michelangelo in Florence. In 1926 she began studying for her Letter and Philosophy degree. In 1930 she obtained her degree discussing her thesis with Nicolaj Ottokar. ",
"Anne Bancroft\n Bancroft was born Anna Maria Louisa (or Luisa) Italiano in the Bronx, New York City, the middle of three daughters of Mildred (née DiNapoli), a telephone operator, and Michael G. Italiano, a dress pattern maker. Her parents were Italian immigrants. In an interview, she stated that her family was originally from Muro Lucano, in the province of Potenza. She was of Roman Catholic faith. Bancroft was raised in Little Italy, Bronx, in the Belmont neighborhood of the Bronx, attended P.S. 12, later moving to 1580 Zerega Ave. and graduating from Christopher Columbus High School in 1948. She later attended HB Studio, the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, the Actors Studio and the American Film Institute's Directing Workshop for Women at the University of California, Los Angeles. After appearing in a number of live television dramas, including Studio One and The Goldbergs under the name Anne Marno, later, at Darryl Zanuck's insistence, she chose the less Mediterranean surname of Bancroft \"because it sounded dignified\".",
"Anne Balsamo\n Anne Marie Balsamo (born January 7, 1959) is a writer who focuses on the connections between art, culture, gender, and technology.",
"Lauren Ambrose\n Lauren Anne D'Ambruoso was born in New Haven, Connecticut on February 20, 1978. She is the daughter of Frank D'Ambruoso, a caterer and Anne (née Wachtel), an interior designer. She is of Italian descent on her father's side, and German, English, and Irish on her mother's. Ambrose attended Choate Rosemary Hall, Wilbur Cross High School, High School in the Community, and the ACES Educational Center for the Arts in New Haven as part of the class of 1996. She is also a trained opera singer who studied voice and opera at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute.",
"Anne Polinario\n Polinario was born on 5 August 1979 in Havana, Cuba and now resides in Montreal, Quebec. She had Drop Foot Paralysis in her left foot at birth. She started swimming at a young age and moved to Canada as a teenager. She made it into Canada's national swimming team while her mother and father were in Cuba's National Swimming Team.",
"Anne Pramaggiore\n Anne Pramaggiore was born on August 9, 1958 to Alfred Pramaggiore and Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore. Alfred Pramaggiore was born in Brooklyn, NY to parents who emigrated from Italy. After graduating from City College of New York, Alfred pursued a career as a civil engineer. Jeanne Lacy Pramaggiore was a girl scout leader who later worked on political campaigns. She also served as a president of the Ohio Genealogical Society. Pramaggiore graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio in 1980 with a bachelor's degree in theater. She later attended DePaul University College of Law and served as the editor-in-chief of the school's Law Review. She earned her law degree in 1989.",
"Anne Bremer\n Anne Milly Bremer was born in San Francisco on May 21, 1868, to upper-middle-class German-Jewish immigrants Joseph and Minna Bremer. In 1880-81, she traveled in Europe with her parents, and they brought back a cousin, Albert Bender, from Dublin, Ireland, to live with them and work for another uncle, William Bremer. She studied art with Emil Carlsen at the San Francisco Art Students League and with Arthur Mathews and others at the California School of Design, Mark Hopkins Institute of Art, receiving a Certificate of Proficiency in 1898. By the time she graduated, she was on the board of the Sketch Club, an ",
"Mercedes Bresso\n Bresso was born in Sanremo, Province of Imperia, Liguria. In 1969, she received her degree in Economics; since 1973, she is a University professor of economic institutions at the Politecnico di Torino (Faculty of Engineering).",
"Ann Marie Buerkle\n Buerkle was born Ann Marie Colella in 1951 in Auburn, New York, the daughter of Sadie M. (née Fiduccia) and Alfred D. \"Al\" Colella. All of her grandparents were born in Italy. After graduating as a registered nurse from St. Joseph's Hospital School of Nursing in Syracuse, New York, she worked at Columbia-Presbyterian Hospital in New York City and at St. Joseph's. She was a substitute school nurse for many years before obtaining her J.D. degree from Syracuse University School of Law. She was married to August Buerkle from 1972 to 1997. She served as an Assistant New York State Attorney General from 1997 to 2010. She also served one term on the Syracuse, New York Common Council. Buerkle is divorced and has six children.",
"Minnie Minoprio\n Born Virginia Anne Minoprio in Ware, Hertfordshire, Minoprio after graduating from the Arts Educational School, where she studied acting and singing, debuted at 15 in a stage version of \"Cinderella\". Two years later moved in Italy where she starred in the revue Io e Margherita, alongside Walter Chiari. At the same time she began a career as a jazz singer, recording a music album of dixieland and collaborating with other musicians; just with a duet with another singer, Fred Bongusto, she obtained in 1971 her major discographic success, the song \"Quando mi dici così\", which ranked 20 in the Italian hit parade. Her variegated career also includes radio, television, cinema and two novels, Il passaggio (1992) and Benvenuti a bordo (2007).",
"Cecilia Zoppelletto\n She was born and raised in Padua, Italy. Since 1994, she has been based in London. She has a PhD in Film Studies from the University of Westminster.",
"Anne Casale\n Anne Lovi Casale (July 15, 1930 – December 2, 2002) was an Italian-American cookbook author.",
"Anne Frasier\n Iowa, a river town settled by German, Irish, and Dutch immigrants. Her blue-collar parents divorced when she was six, and the next twelve years were spent in poverty, moving to and from Florida, Iowa, California, Illinois, and New Mexico. She graduated from Artesia High School, Artesia, New Mexico. After high school she worked as a waitress, a factory worker at Albuquerque's Levi Strauss (where she sewed the Levi's logo on the back pocket of jeans), followed by a secretarial position at Wally's LP Gas in Santa Fe, New Mexico. At age nineteen, she joined her uncle at his bar in rural ",
"Anna Ogino\n Ogino was born as Anna Gaillard in Naka-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa Prefecture, to a Japanese mother and a French-American father. She was naturalized during elementary school, and received her undergraduate and master's degree in French literature from Keio University, as well as receiving a scholarship to Paris-Sorbonne University to study Rabelais. In 2002 she became a full professor at Keio.",
"Anne MacLeod\nStanding by Thistles (1997) ; Just the Caravaggio (1999) Anne MacLeod (born 1951) is a Scottish writer. She was born in Aberfeldy and grew up in Inverness. MacLeod studied medicine at the University of Aberdeen and works as a dermatologist. She is the mother of four children. MacLeod lives on the Black Isle. She has published two collections of poetry: both of which were well-received by critics. She has also published two novels The Dark Ship (2001) and The Blue Moon Book (2004).",
"Ippolita Rostagno\n Born December 10, 1963 in Florence, Italy, Ippolita Rostagno is the daughter of an American artist and an Italian intellectual. Raised and educated in the hills of Tuscany, Ippolita attended elementary school in a one-room medieval schoolhouse and went on to study sculpture and earn her baccalauréat degree from the Istituto D’Arte in Florence. Ippolita immigrated to the United States at age 18, moving to Los Angeles where she continued her studies at Occidental College and founded an alternative poetry and dance company called Rime together with Anna Stump in 1984. After completing her BA in English Literature, Ippolita moved to New York City in 1986 and married a fashion photographer and gave birth to her daughter Maya in 1988.",
"DJ Baby Anne\n DJ Baby Anne (born Marianne Breslin; November 17, 1972 ) is an Orlando-based DJ who works with live sets and original mixes that fuse Electro with Miami Bass and funky breaks."
] |
What genre is Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1? | [
"fantasy",
"fantasy fiction",
"short story",
"tale",
"pripovijetka"
] | genre | Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1 | 5,895,036 | 70 | [
{
"id": "11086609",
"title": "Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1",
"text": " Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume One is a 2009 collection of 12 fantasy and science fiction short stories by author Tanith Lee, published by Wildside Press. Only one story, '\"God and the Pig\", is a previously unpublished work. The book includes Lee's very first published short story, \"Eustace\", originally issued in 1968. The book includes an introduction by Donald Wollheim. The story \"The Lady of Shalott House\" was nominated for a British Science Fiction Award, and \"Where Does the Town Go at Night?\" was nominated for a British Fantasy Award. Volume Two of this collection, titled Hunting The Shadows, was released in December 2009.",
"score": "2.118466"
},
{
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"title": "Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1",
"text": "\"Tiger I\" ; \"Death Loves Me\" ; \"Anna Medea\" ; \"Ondralume\" ; \"After I Killed Her\" ; \"God and the Pig\" ; \"The Kingdoms of the Air\" ; \"Eustace\" ; \"These Beasts\" ; \"Cain\" ; \"The Lady of Shalott House\" ; \"Where Does the Town Go at Night?\" Tempting the Gods contains the following tales: ",
"score": "2.07628"
},
{
"id": "485778",
"title": "Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two",
"text": " Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two is a 2009 collection of 12 fantasy and science fiction short stories by author Tanith Lee, published by Wildside Press. Only one story, \"Queens in Crimson\", is a previously unpublished work. The book includes an introduction by Donald Wollheim. Most of the stories of the volume were written in the 1990s, the oldest one having been published in 1989. The story \"Doll Skulls\" is part of Lee's The Secret Books of Paradys series. Volume one, titled Tempting The Gods, was previously published in February 2009.",
"score": "1.8704188"
},
{
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"title": "The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)",
"text": " Critics agreed that the Gods Are Thirsty was beautifully written despite Tanith Lee's inexperience with historical fiction. Tanith Lee is known as a science fiction writer, but The Gods Are Thirsty is an historical novel However critics were divided on other aspects of the book, citing its length and switches between first and third person narrative which made it confusing to read and difficult to understand, the bloodiness of the narrative, and the density of the research. The Gods Are Thirsty was given a 3.3 out of 5 average customer review.",
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{
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"title": "Tanith Lee",
"text": " and over again. Lee has also dabbled in the historical novel with The Gods are Thirsty, set during the French Revolution. During the late 80's she published three collections - Dreams of Dark and Light (1986), Women as Demons (1989) and The Forests of the Night (1989). A large part of her output was children's fantasy, which has spanned her entire career from The Dragon Hoard in 1971 to the more recent The Claidi Journals containing Wolf Tower, Wolf Star, Wolf Queen and Wolf Wing in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Lee was published by various imprints, particularly depending on whether she is offering adult fiction or children's ",
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{
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"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": " ; Women as Demons: The Male Perception of Women through Space and Time (1989) (collection of various short stories) ; Nightshades: Thirteen Journeys Into Shadow (1993) (collection of short stories and a novella) ; Fatal Women (2004) (as Esther Garber) ; Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume One (2009) ; Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two (2009) ; Sounds and Furies: Seven Faces of Darkness (2010) ; Disturbed By Her Song (2010) ; Cold Grey Stones (2012) ; Animate Objects (2013) ; Space is Just a Starry Night (2013) short story collection, Aqueduct Press, Seattle ",
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},
{
"id": "16437115",
"title": "The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)",
"text": " The Gods Are Thirsty is a 1996 historical novel by British author Tanith Lee set during the French Revolution. It follows the rise and fall of journalist Camille Desmoulins, who launches the Revolution and is eventually sent to the guillotine.",
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{
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"text": " Her earlier children's fantasy novels were published in hardcover by Macmillan UK and subsequently printed as paperbacks in the US often by DAW, with occasional hardcovers by St. Martin's Press. Some of her work was only printed in paperback, mainly in the US by DAW in the 1970s to the early 1980s. She has received some small press treatment, such as the Arkham House edition of short stories Dreams of Dark and Light: The Great Short Fiction of Tanith Lee in 1986, and in the first \"Night Visions\" instalment published by Dark Harvest. Some of her work has been released exclusively in the UK with US publications often pending.",
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},
{
"id": "292780",
"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": " Colder Greyer Stones (2013) ; Phantasya (2014) ; Dancing Through The Fire (2015) ; Blood 20: Tales of Vampire Horror (2015) ; Legenda Maris (2015) ; Redder Than Blood (2017) ; The Weird Tales of Tanith Lee (2017) ; Tanith by Choice: The Best of Tanith Lee (2017) ; Venus Burning: Realms (2018) ; Tanith Lee A-Z (2018) ; Strindberg's Ghost Sonata and Other Uncollected Tales (2019) ; Love in a Time of Dragons & Other Rare Tales (2019) ; A Wolf at the Door and Other Rare Tales (2019) ; The Heart of the Moon (2019) ; The Empress of Dreams (2021) ",
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},
{
"id": "292778",
"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": "Princess Hynchatti & Some Other Surprises (1972) (collection of original fairy tales) ; Unsilent Night (1981) ; Cyrion (1982) (collection of short stories framed by a novella, all centred on the title character) ; Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer (1983) (collection of fantasy retellings of fairy tales) ; Tamastara, or The Indian Nights (1984) (collection of stories and novellas themed around India) ; The Gorgon and Other Beastly Tales (1985) (collection of various short stories) ; Dreams of Dark and Light: The Great Short Fiction of Tanith Lee (1986) (collection of various short stories) ; Forests of The Night (1989) ",
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},
{
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"title": "The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)",
"text": " Tanith Lee began writing The Gods Are Thirsty in 1982, and finished her first draft in the beginning of 1985. This was her only book that she wrote multiple drafts on. She got inspired to write this book because Lee watched a play on the television called Danton's Death, which covered Georges Jacques Danton's trial and death. She also read about a newspaperman who was intimately associated with both Danton and Maximilien Robespierre. However, people said it would be a poor decision because it was too horrible so she held off on writing it for a while. When she actually got around to writing the novel in a diary style, she put much effort ",
"score": "1.6616831"
},
{
"id": "292764",
"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": "Don't Bite the Sun (1976) ; Drinking Sapphire Wine (1977) ; Drinking Sapphire Wine (1979) (omnibus of both novels) ",
"score": "1.6445575"
},
{
"id": "30676584",
"title": "Tanith Lee",
"text": " writer and stop doing \"stupid and soul-killing jobs.\" During the 90's her books were not published due to the changes in publishing. The style that made her whole career met strict objections from publishers at that time. She produced adult and young adult novels, science fiction, fantasy, horror, crime, spy fiction, erotica, a historical novel, radio plays and two episodes of the television space opera Blake's 7. Yet all her work shares a tone – Lee captured like few other modern writers a gothic, not to say goth, sensibility in which the relentless pursuit of personal autonomy and sensual fulfillment leads her characters to the brink of ",
"score": "1.6279917"
},
{
"id": "292765",
"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": "Ghosteria Volume One: The Stories (2014) ; Ghosteria Volume Two: Zircons May Be Mistaken (2014) ",
"score": "1.6222018"
},
{
"id": "30676578",
"title": "Tanith Lee",
"text": " Tanith Lee (19 September 1947 – 24 May 2015) was a British science fiction and fantasy writer. She wrote more than 90 novels and 300 short stories, and was the winner of multiple World Fantasy Society Derleth Awards, the World Fantasy Lifetime Achievement Award and the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement in Horror. She also wrote a children's picture book (Animal Castle), and many poems. Additionally, she wrote two episodes of the BBC science fiction series Blake's 7. She was the first woman to win the British Fantasy Award best novel award (also known as the August Derleth Award), for her book Death's Master (1980).",
"score": "1.6212225"
},
{
"id": "12141705",
"title": "The Book of the Damned (Tanith Lee)",
"text": " While writing The Book of the Damned, Lee was already an award-winning horror writer. She created another world that involved demons, vampires and supernaturals. Lee said that her writing process came naturally to her; she didn't plot her stories out before writing them, but rather started with an idea, and the rest just came to her. \"All ... [she] need[ed] [to] do is dive in for a swim,\" and if she couldn't think of a certain detail, she went to her \"backbrain,\" which poured out all of the unknown to her.",
"score": "1.6202042"
},
{
"id": "31313740",
"title": "The Empress of Dreams",
"text": " The Empress of Dreams is a collection of fantasy short stories by British author Tanith Lee. It was first published in trade paperback and ebook by DMR Books in February 2021.",
"score": "1.6158354"
},
{
"id": "292781",
"title": "Tanith Lee bibliography",
"text": "The Betrothed (1968) ; Animal Castle (1972) ; Companions on the Road (1975) ; The Winter Players (1976) ; Companions on the Road and The Winter Players: Two Novellas (1977) (omnibus) ; The Beautiful Biting Machine (1984) ; Madame Two Swords (1988) ; Into Gold (1991) ; Louisa the Poisoner (1996) ",
"score": "1.6095512"
},
{
"id": "30676586",
"title": "Tanith Lee",
"text": " Lee had \"quietly phenomenal sales\" at certain periods throughout her career. When she tried changing her genre some of her works were liked by critics and published by small publishers, but it made no difference. The royalties were good before the publishers went bankrupt.",
"score": "1.6093394"
},
{
"id": "485779",
"title": "Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two",
"text": "\"The Woman in Scarlet\" ; \"Zelle's Thursday\" ; \"Unlocking the Golden Cage\" ; \"The Eye in the Heart\" ; \"Vermilia\" ; \"Flower Water\" ; \"Doll Skulls\" ; \"Queens in Crimson\" ; \"All the Birds of Hell\" ; \"The Persecution Machine\" ; \"Antonius Bequeathed\" Hunting The Shadows contains the following tales: \"One for Sorrow\"",
"score": "1.6016536"
}
] | [
"Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1\n Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume One is a 2009 collection of 12 fantasy and science fiction short stories by author Tanith Lee, published by Wildside Press. Only one story, '\"God and the Pig\", is a previously unpublished work. The book includes Lee's very first published short story, \"Eustace\", originally issued in 1968. The book includes an introduction by Donald Wollheim. The story \"The Lady of Shalott House\" was nominated for a British Science Fiction Award, and \"Where Does the Town Go at Night?\" was nominated for a British Fantasy Award. Volume Two of this collection, titled Hunting The Shadows, was released in December 2009.",
"Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume 1\n\"Tiger I\" ; \"Death Loves Me\" ; \"Anna Medea\" ; \"Ondralume\" ; \"After I Killed Her\" ; \"God and the Pig\" ; \"The Kingdoms of the Air\" ; \"Eustace\" ; \"These Beasts\" ; \"Cain\" ; \"The Lady of Shalott House\" ; \"Where Does the Town Go at Night?\" Tempting the Gods contains the following tales: ",
"Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two\n Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two is a 2009 collection of 12 fantasy and science fiction short stories by author Tanith Lee, published by Wildside Press. Only one story, \"Queens in Crimson\", is a previously unpublished work. The book includes an introduction by Donald Wollheim. Most of the stories of the volume were written in the 1990s, the oldest one having been published in 1989. The story \"Doll Skulls\" is part of Lee's The Secret Books of Paradys series. Volume one, titled Tempting The Gods, was previously published in February 2009.",
"The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)\n Critics agreed that the Gods Are Thirsty was beautifully written despite Tanith Lee's inexperience with historical fiction. Tanith Lee is known as a science fiction writer, but The Gods Are Thirsty is an historical novel However critics were divided on other aspects of the book, citing its length and switches between first and third person narrative which made it confusing to read and difficult to understand, the bloodiness of the narrative, and the density of the research. The Gods Are Thirsty was given a 3.3 out of 5 average customer review.",
"Tanith Lee\n and over again. Lee has also dabbled in the historical novel with The Gods are Thirsty, set during the French Revolution. During the late 80's she published three collections - Dreams of Dark and Light (1986), Women as Demons (1989) and The Forests of the Night (1989). A large part of her output was children's fantasy, which has spanned her entire career from The Dragon Hoard in 1971 to the more recent The Claidi Journals containing Wolf Tower, Wolf Star, Wolf Queen and Wolf Wing in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Lee was published by various imprints, particularly depending on whether she is offering adult fiction or children's ",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\n ; Women as Demons: The Male Perception of Women through Space and Time (1989) (collection of various short stories) ; Nightshades: Thirteen Journeys Into Shadow (1993) (collection of short stories and a novella) ; Fatal Women (2004) (as Esther Garber) ; Tempting The Gods: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume One (2009) ; Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two (2009) ; Sounds and Furies: Seven Faces of Darkness (2010) ; Disturbed By Her Song (2010) ; Cold Grey Stones (2012) ; Animate Objects (2013) ; Space is Just a Starry Night (2013) short story collection, Aqueduct Press, Seattle ",
"The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)\n The Gods Are Thirsty is a 1996 historical novel by British author Tanith Lee set during the French Revolution. It follows the rise and fall of journalist Camille Desmoulins, who launches the Revolution and is eventually sent to the guillotine.",
"Tanith Lee\n Her earlier children's fantasy novels were published in hardcover by Macmillan UK and subsequently printed as paperbacks in the US often by DAW, with occasional hardcovers by St. Martin's Press. Some of her work was only printed in paperback, mainly in the US by DAW in the 1970s to the early 1980s. She has received some small press treatment, such as the Arkham House edition of short stories Dreams of Dark and Light: The Great Short Fiction of Tanith Lee in 1986, and in the first \"Night Visions\" instalment published by Dark Harvest. Some of her work has been released exclusively in the UK with US publications often pending.",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\n Colder Greyer Stones (2013) ; Phantasya (2014) ; Dancing Through The Fire (2015) ; Blood 20: Tales of Vampire Horror (2015) ; Legenda Maris (2015) ; Redder Than Blood (2017) ; The Weird Tales of Tanith Lee (2017) ; Tanith by Choice: The Best of Tanith Lee (2017) ; Venus Burning: Realms (2018) ; Tanith Lee A-Z (2018) ; Strindberg's Ghost Sonata and Other Uncollected Tales (2019) ; Love in a Time of Dragons & Other Rare Tales (2019) ; A Wolf at the Door and Other Rare Tales (2019) ; The Heart of the Moon (2019) ; The Empress of Dreams (2021) ",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\nPrincess Hynchatti & Some Other Surprises (1972) (collection of original fairy tales) ; Unsilent Night (1981) ; Cyrion (1982) (collection of short stories framed by a novella, all centred on the title character) ; Red as Blood, or Tales from the Sisters Grimmer (1983) (collection of fantasy retellings of fairy tales) ; Tamastara, or The Indian Nights (1984) (collection of stories and novellas themed around India) ; The Gorgon and Other Beastly Tales (1985) (collection of various short stories) ; Dreams of Dark and Light: The Great Short Fiction of Tanith Lee (1986) (collection of various short stories) ; Forests of The Night (1989) ",
"The Gods Are Thirsty (Tanith Lee)\n Tanith Lee began writing The Gods Are Thirsty in 1982, and finished her first draft in the beginning of 1985. This was her only book that she wrote multiple drafts on. She got inspired to write this book because Lee watched a play on the television called Danton's Death, which covered Georges Jacques Danton's trial and death. She also read about a newspaperman who was intimately associated with both Danton and Maximilien Robespierre. However, people said it would be a poor decision because it was too horrible so she held off on writing it for a while. When she actually got around to writing the novel in a diary style, she put much effort ",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\nDon't Bite the Sun (1976) ; Drinking Sapphire Wine (1977) ; Drinking Sapphire Wine (1979) (omnibus of both novels) ",
"Tanith Lee\n writer and stop doing \"stupid and soul-killing jobs.\" During the 90's her books were not published due to the changes in publishing. The style that made her whole career met strict objections from publishers at that time. She produced adult and young adult novels, science fiction, fantasy, horror, crime, spy fiction, erotica, a historical novel, radio plays and two episodes of the television space opera Blake's 7. Yet all her work shares a tone – Lee captured like few other modern writers a gothic, not to say goth, sensibility in which the relentless pursuit of personal autonomy and sensual fulfillment leads her characters to the brink of ",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\nGhosteria Volume One: The Stories (2014) ; Ghosteria Volume Two: Zircons May Be Mistaken (2014) ",
"Tanith Lee\n Tanith Lee (19 September 1947 – 24 May 2015) was a British science fiction and fantasy writer. She wrote more than 90 novels and 300 short stories, and was the winner of multiple World Fantasy Society Derleth Awards, the World Fantasy Lifetime Achievement Award and the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement in Horror. She also wrote a children's picture book (Animal Castle), and many poems. Additionally, she wrote two episodes of the BBC science fiction series Blake's 7. She was the first woman to win the British Fantasy Award best novel award (also known as the August Derleth Award), for her book Death's Master (1980).",
"The Book of the Damned (Tanith Lee)\n While writing The Book of the Damned, Lee was already an award-winning horror writer. She created another world that involved demons, vampires and supernaturals. Lee said that her writing process came naturally to her; she didn't plot her stories out before writing them, but rather started with an idea, and the rest just came to her. \"All ... [she] need[ed] [to] do is dive in for a swim,\" and if she couldn't think of a certain detail, she went to her \"backbrain,\" which poured out all of the unknown to her.",
"The Empress of Dreams\n The Empress of Dreams is a collection of fantasy short stories by British author Tanith Lee. It was first published in trade paperback and ebook by DMR Books in February 2021.",
"Tanith Lee bibliography\nThe Betrothed (1968) ; Animal Castle (1972) ; Companions on the Road (1975) ; The Winter Players (1976) ; Companions on the Road and The Winter Players: Two Novellas (1977) (omnibus) ; The Beautiful Biting Machine (1984) ; Madame Two Swords (1988) ; Into Gold (1991) ; Louisa the Poisoner (1996) ",
"Tanith Lee\n Lee had \"quietly phenomenal sales\" at certain periods throughout her career. When she tried changing her genre some of her works were liked by critics and published by small publishers, but it made no difference. The royalties were good before the publishers went bankrupt.",
"Hunting The Shadows: The Selected Stories of Tanith Lee, Volume Two\n\"The Woman in Scarlet\" ; \"Zelle's Thursday\" ; \"Unlocking the Golden Cage\" ; \"The Eye in the Heart\" ; \"Vermilia\" ; \"Flower Water\" ; \"Doll Skulls\" ; \"Queens in Crimson\" ; \"All the Birds of Hell\" ; \"The Persecution Machine\" ; \"Antonius Bequeathed\" Hunting The Shadows contains the following tales: \"One for Sorrow\""
] |
In what city was Gustavo Grondona born? | [
"Buenos Aires",
"Buenos Ayres",
"Autonomous City of Buenos Aires",
"CABA",
"Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires"
] | place of birth | Gustavo Grondona | 4,300,406 | 56 | [
{
"id": "3997821",
"title": "Gustavo Grondona",
"text": " Gustavo Grondona (born 16 June 1968 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine football midfielder and is currently the assistant manager of Colo Colo football club from Chile. Gustavo Grondona is the son of Héctor Grodona, brother of Julio Humberto Grondona. He made his playing debut in 1989 for the club founded by his father, Arsenal de Sarandí. Unlike his father Gustavo managed to step up to play at the highest level, appearing in the Argentine Primera División for Independiente, Huracán and Deportivo Español in the 1990s. In 1998, he joined Peruvian club Universitario de Deportes where he was part of three championship winning squads between 1998 and 2000. After a short spell with Sporting Cristal in 2001, he returned to Argentina to play out his career with Arsenal during their first ever season in the Argentine Primera.",
"score": "1.9008386"
},
{
"id": "6419026",
"title": "Gustavo Moncayo",
"text": " Gustavo Guillermo Moncayo Rincón, popularly known as \"'El caminante por la paz\" (Spanish for \"the Walker for Peace\"), (born on November 29, 1952 in Santiago, Putumayo ) is a Colombian teacher who in 2007 walked 1,186 km from his hometown Sandoná, in the department of Nariño in the south of Colombia to the capital city Bogotá, seeking to promote an agreement for the release of his son Pablo Emilio who had been a prisoner of the guerrilla group FARC since 1997.",
"score": "1.7407807"
},
{
"id": "31144459",
"title": "Gustavo Mohme Llona",
"text": " He was born on April 25, 1930, in the Morropón province, Chulucanas in the Piura region. His parents were Gustavo Mohme and Stella Llona. He was a descendant of the scientist Scipión Llona. After attending high school in Lima, at the San Andrés school (Anglo-Peruvian College), he studied at the National University of Engineering from which he graduated, in 1955, with the title of civil engineer.",
"score": "1.7059124"
},
{
"id": "8784503",
"title": "Mariano Grondona",
"text": " Mariano Grondona (born 19 October 1932, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine lawyer, sociologist, political scientist, essayist and commentator. He has been a journalist for several decades, appearing in print media and on television, and has written several books. He has also taught in several universities, both in Argentina and abroad.",
"score": "1.6998559"
},
{
"id": "13174813",
"title": "Gustavo Brambila",
"text": " He was born in Jalisco, Mexico in 1953 and moved with his family to Rutherford in the Napa Valley in 1957.",
"score": "1.6658251"
},
{
"id": "9173965",
"title": "Gustavo Coleoni",
"text": " Born in Córdoba, Coleoni was a Talleres youth graduate. During his youth, due to his low height, the club paid a growth hormone treatment similar as to Lionel Messi's, but it never fully worked. After only playing two friendlies in the first team, Coleoni resumed his career with Peru's San Agustín and Chile's Magallanes, aside from lower league sides in his native region.",
"score": "1.6651206"
},
{
"id": "3997822",
"title": "Gustavo Grondona",
"text": "Primera División Peruana 1998 ; Primera División Peruana 1999 ; Primera División Peruana 2000 ",
"score": "1.6646091"
},
{
"id": "7842192",
"title": "Gustavo Arias Murueta",
"text": " Gustavo Arias Murueta was born in Los Angeles, California and was of Spanish descent. His parents were Esteban Arias Renovato and Elisa Murueta Andrade. In 1934, he entered primary school in Torreón, Coahuila, but changed schools when the family moved to Mexico City in 1939. He entered the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in 1946 to study architecture where he met a number of important painters such as Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco. He married Lourdes Chávez Correa in 1949. The couple had four children: Lila (1953), Gustavo (1954), Hugo (1956) and Livia (1965). He was an artist, writer, sculptor and poet. He began creating isolated drawings and studies and experimental theater around 1956, with his first exhibitions in the early 1960s. He lived in Europe and the United States and traveled in Asia as well as some other countries, mostly to visit museums and study the works of great masters. However, from 1974 until his death in 2019, he was based in Mexico City. He died on April 15, 2019, aged 95. Among his teachers was Japanese artist Yukio Fukasawa, through a seminar on printmaking in Mexico City.",
"score": "1.6618819"
},
{
"id": "626723",
"title": "Enrique Grau",
"text": " Grau was born in Panama City, Panama, just like many of the children of his time with Colombian parents, and raised in Cartagena, Colombia. He was the son of Enrique Grau Velez and Carmen Araujo Jimenez.",
"score": "1.6500732"
},
{
"id": "30063357",
"title": "Gustavo Ojeda",
"text": " Born in Havana, Cuba, Ojeda emigrated with his family in 1967, first to Spain and then to the United States, eventually settling in Fairfax, Virginia. At 17, he moved to New York City to attend Parsons School of Design, where his teachers included the painters William Clutz and Kestutis Zapkus. Upon graduation, he was awarded a fellowship from the Cintas Foundation (see Oscar B. Cintas) allowing him to spend a year painting in Spain, an experience which, according to Ojeda, \"served to get school out of my system.\" It was in Spain that Ojeda first began experimenting with nightscapes, a mode which would come to predominate his work throughout his short life. After ",
"score": "1.6394839"
},
{
"id": "32404894",
"title": "Gustavo Santaolalla",
"text": " Gustavo Alfredo Santaolalla was born in Ciudad Jardín Lomas del Palomar on 19 August 1951, and grew up during the Dirty War.",
"score": "1.6130748"
},
{
"id": "10136444",
"title": "Santiago Grondona",
"text": " Santiago Grondona (born 25 July 1998) is an Argentine rugby union player who plays for the Exeter Chiefs. On 21 November 2019, he was named in the Jaguares squad for the 2020 Super Rugby season.",
"score": "1.6102326"
},
{
"id": "9521928",
"title": "Julián Cardona (photojournalist)",
"text": " Julián Cardona was born in Zacatecas, Mexico on August 18, 1960. His family moved to the city of Juarez when he was a young child. Raised by his grandparents, and with only a ninth grade education, he taught himself to use a camera professionally by age twenty. He worked in the maquiladora industry until 1991, when he moved back to Zacatecas to teach photography.",
"score": "1.6068475"
},
{
"id": "15675120",
"title": "Luis Fernando Ochoa",
"text": " Luis Fernando Ochoa was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States on August 16, 1968. He lived in Chicago and at age 17 arrived in Medellin. From an early age, he became used to spending whole hours stuck to the sound system in which his parents heard songs from Elvis Presley, Engelbert Humperdinck and cumbias that they received from Colombia. Although not from a family with a great musical vein, his great-grandmother did play the piano very well and it was through that instrument that he began to discover the first notes.",
"score": "1.6007525"
},
{
"id": "28443640",
"title": "Gustavo Montoya",
"text": " Gustavo Montoya (July 9, 1905 – July 12, 2003) was a Mexican artist considered to be a late adherent to the Mexican School of Painting, most often associated with Mexican muralism. He was born in Mexico City, from a family associated with the Porfirio Díaz regime and who had to hide during part of the Mexican Revolution. He attended the Academy of San Carlos despite his father's objections. He later met and married artist Cordelia Urueta, with whom he lived in Paris, developing his artistic talents. He was not heavily involved in Mexico's artistic circles but was a founding member of the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios and the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana. His best-selling work was that of children in regional traditional Mexican clothing, but he also painted many street scenes in Mexico City as well as portraits and still lifes.",
"score": "1.5989046"
},
{
"id": "29258171",
"title": "Gustavo",
"text": "Gustavo Angel (born 1968), Mexican singer of Los Temerarios ; Gustavo Assis-Brasil, Brazilian jazz guitarist ; Gustavo Becerra-Schmidt (born 1925), Chilean composer ; Gustavs Butelis (born 1978), Latvian rapper and producer known professionally as Gustavo ; Gustavo Gonzalez, also known as Big Duke, member of American hip-hop group Psycho Realm ; Gustavo Cerati (1959-2014), Argentine artist and songwriter ; Gustavo Cordera (born 1964), Argentine rock musician ; Gustavo Dudamel (born 1981), Venezuelan conductor ; Gustavo Lapis Ahumad, founding member of American goth rock band Bitter Grace ; Gustavo Ramírez Reyes, Mexican musician and composer ; Gustavo Santander, Colombian composer ; Gustavo Santaolalla (born 1952), Argentine musician, producer, and composer ",
"score": "1.5887351"
},
{
"id": "25040209",
"title": "Gustavo Esteva",
"text": "Terán, Gustavo: Conversations with Mexican nomadic storyteller, Gustavo Esteva : learning from lives on the margins, Dissertation, University of Vermont, 2002. ; Aram Ziai: \"Gustavo Esteva (born 1936). Selbstbestimmte Gemeinwesen statt Entwicklung\" in: eins. Entwicklungspolitik. Information Nord Süd, No. 23/24, 2005, 48-50 ",
"score": "1.5863075"
},
{
"id": "104042",
"title": "Gustavo Santander",
"text": " He was born in Santiago de Cali, Colombia and he raised in La Flora, a typical upper-middle-class neighborhood of Cali. His father was doctor, poet and guitarist Flavio Santander and his mother is Judith. His brother is composer and producer Kike Santander. Gustavo Santander began his career as a composer in 2000. He was awarded three times by the American Society of Composers (ASCAP), at the Nokia Theatre Times Square in New York. In 2002 he was awarded for the song \"Azul\" (in Spanish: Blue), performed by Cristian Castro, in 2004 for the song \"Entre el Delirio y la Locura\" (Between Delirium and Madness), sung by Jennifer Peña, and in 2007 he received an award Regional Mexican ",
"score": "1.5858867"
},
{
"id": "6187442",
"title": "Francisco Gabilondo Soler",
"text": " Gabilondo was born in the city of Orizaba, Veracruz. Both his parents were children of Spanish immigrants to Mexico. During his childhood he read the stories of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, as well as the adventure stories of such writers as Jules Verne and Emilio Salgari. He also taught himself to play the pianola. In 1928, he entered the National Observatory of Mexico to study astronomy but, unfortunately, his studies were cut short by a lack of resources. Before dedicating himself to music full-time, he practiced boxing, bullfighting and swimming. He also worked for a time as a linotypist. When he was 25 years old, he began performing as a professional musician, interpreting humorous subjects of his inspiration. At first he played in public ",
"score": "1.5823205"
},
{
"id": "28443641",
"title": "Gustavo Montoya",
"text": " He was born in Mexico City on July 9, 1905, to Adolfo Montoya and Concepción Carranco. His father was part of the Porfirio Díaz government, so when that government fell at the beginning of the Mexican Revolution, the family went into hiding from Mexico City into the state of Morelos. At this time, Gustavo was only seven years old, but he remembered hearing that the Zapatistas had killed two neighboring families. To protect the family, the father moved them frequently, often going to one house at night and Gustavo waking up in another. At one point, they were at the house of a ",
"score": "1.577085"
}
] | [
"Gustavo Grondona\n Gustavo Grondona (born 16 June 1968 in Buenos Aires) was an Argentine football midfielder and is currently the assistant manager of Colo Colo football club from Chile. Gustavo Grondona is the son of Héctor Grodona, brother of Julio Humberto Grondona. He made his playing debut in 1989 for the club founded by his father, Arsenal de Sarandí. Unlike his father Gustavo managed to step up to play at the highest level, appearing in the Argentine Primera División for Independiente, Huracán and Deportivo Español in the 1990s. In 1998, he joined Peruvian club Universitario de Deportes where he was part of three championship winning squads between 1998 and 2000. After a short spell with Sporting Cristal in 2001, he returned to Argentina to play out his career with Arsenal during their first ever season in the Argentine Primera.",
"Gustavo Moncayo\n Gustavo Guillermo Moncayo Rincón, popularly known as \"'El caminante por la paz\" (Spanish for \"the Walker for Peace\"), (born on November 29, 1952 in Santiago, Putumayo ) is a Colombian teacher who in 2007 walked 1,186 km from his hometown Sandoná, in the department of Nariño in the south of Colombia to the capital city Bogotá, seeking to promote an agreement for the release of his son Pablo Emilio who had been a prisoner of the guerrilla group FARC since 1997.",
"Gustavo Mohme Llona\n He was born on April 25, 1930, in the Morropón province, Chulucanas in the Piura region. His parents were Gustavo Mohme and Stella Llona. He was a descendant of the scientist Scipión Llona. After attending high school in Lima, at the San Andrés school (Anglo-Peruvian College), he studied at the National University of Engineering from which he graduated, in 1955, with the title of civil engineer.",
"Mariano Grondona\n Mariano Grondona (born 19 October 1932, in Buenos Aires) is an Argentine lawyer, sociologist, political scientist, essayist and commentator. He has been a journalist for several decades, appearing in print media and on television, and has written several books. He has also taught in several universities, both in Argentina and abroad.",
"Gustavo Brambila\n He was born in Jalisco, Mexico in 1953 and moved with his family to Rutherford in the Napa Valley in 1957.",
"Gustavo Coleoni\n Born in Córdoba, Coleoni was a Talleres youth graduate. During his youth, due to his low height, the club paid a growth hormone treatment similar as to Lionel Messi's, but it never fully worked. After only playing two friendlies in the first team, Coleoni resumed his career with Peru's San Agustín and Chile's Magallanes, aside from lower league sides in his native region.",
"Gustavo Grondona\nPrimera División Peruana 1998 ; Primera División Peruana 1999 ; Primera División Peruana 2000 ",
"Gustavo Arias Murueta\n Gustavo Arias Murueta was born in Los Angeles, California and was of Spanish descent. His parents were Esteban Arias Renovato and Elisa Murueta Andrade. In 1934, he entered primary school in Torreón, Coahuila, but changed schools when the family moved to Mexico City in 1939. He entered the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in 1946 to study architecture where he met a number of important painters such as Rufino Tamayo, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco. He married Lourdes Chávez Correa in 1949. The couple had four children: Lila (1953), Gustavo (1954), Hugo (1956) and Livia (1965). He was an artist, writer, sculptor and poet. He began creating isolated drawings and studies and experimental theater around 1956, with his first exhibitions in the early 1960s. He lived in Europe and the United States and traveled in Asia as well as some other countries, mostly to visit museums and study the works of great masters. However, from 1974 until his death in 2019, he was based in Mexico City. He died on April 15, 2019, aged 95. Among his teachers was Japanese artist Yukio Fukasawa, through a seminar on printmaking in Mexico City.",
"Enrique Grau\n Grau was born in Panama City, Panama, just like many of the children of his time with Colombian parents, and raised in Cartagena, Colombia. He was the son of Enrique Grau Velez and Carmen Araujo Jimenez.",
"Gustavo Ojeda\n Born in Havana, Cuba, Ojeda emigrated with his family in 1967, first to Spain and then to the United States, eventually settling in Fairfax, Virginia. At 17, he moved to New York City to attend Parsons School of Design, where his teachers included the painters William Clutz and Kestutis Zapkus. Upon graduation, he was awarded a fellowship from the Cintas Foundation (see Oscar B. Cintas) allowing him to spend a year painting in Spain, an experience which, according to Ojeda, \"served to get school out of my system.\" It was in Spain that Ojeda first began experimenting with nightscapes, a mode which would come to predominate his work throughout his short life. After ",
"Gustavo Santaolalla\n Gustavo Alfredo Santaolalla was born in Ciudad Jardín Lomas del Palomar on 19 August 1951, and grew up during the Dirty War.",
"Santiago Grondona\n Santiago Grondona (born 25 July 1998) is an Argentine rugby union player who plays for the Exeter Chiefs. On 21 November 2019, he was named in the Jaguares squad for the 2020 Super Rugby season.",
"Julián Cardona (photojournalist)\n Julián Cardona was born in Zacatecas, Mexico on August 18, 1960. His family moved to the city of Juarez when he was a young child. Raised by his grandparents, and with only a ninth grade education, he taught himself to use a camera professionally by age twenty. He worked in the maquiladora industry until 1991, when he moved back to Zacatecas to teach photography.",
"Luis Fernando Ochoa\n Luis Fernando Ochoa was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States on August 16, 1968. He lived in Chicago and at age 17 arrived in Medellin. From an early age, he became used to spending whole hours stuck to the sound system in which his parents heard songs from Elvis Presley, Engelbert Humperdinck and cumbias that they received from Colombia. Although not from a family with a great musical vein, his great-grandmother did play the piano very well and it was through that instrument that he began to discover the first notes.",
"Gustavo Montoya\n Gustavo Montoya (July 9, 1905 – July 12, 2003) was a Mexican artist considered to be a late adherent to the Mexican School of Painting, most often associated with Mexican muralism. He was born in Mexico City, from a family associated with the Porfirio Díaz regime and who had to hide during part of the Mexican Revolution. He attended the Academy of San Carlos despite his father's objections. He later met and married artist Cordelia Urueta, with whom he lived in Paris, developing his artistic talents. He was not heavily involved in Mexico's artistic circles but was a founding member of the Liga de Escritores y Artistas Revolucionarios and the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana. His best-selling work was that of children in regional traditional Mexican clothing, but he also painted many street scenes in Mexico City as well as portraits and still lifes.",
"Gustavo\nGustavo Angel (born 1968), Mexican singer of Los Temerarios ; Gustavo Assis-Brasil, Brazilian jazz guitarist ; Gustavo Becerra-Schmidt (born 1925), Chilean composer ; Gustavs Butelis (born 1978), Latvian rapper and producer known professionally as Gustavo ; Gustavo Gonzalez, also known as Big Duke, member of American hip-hop group Psycho Realm ; Gustavo Cerati (1959-2014), Argentine artist and songwriter ; Gustavo Cordera (born 1964), Argentine rock musician ; Gustavo Dudamel (born 1981), Venezuelan conductor ; Gustavo Lapis Ahumad, founding member of American goth rock band Bitter Grace ; Gustavo Ramírez Reyes, Mexican musician and composer ; Gustavo Santander, Colombian composer ; Gustavo Santaolalla (born 1952), Argentine musician, producer, and composer ",
"Gustavo Esteva\nTerán, Gustavo: Conversations with Mexican nomadic storyteller, Gustavo Esteva : learning from lives on the margins, Dissertation, University of Vermont, 2002. ; Aram Ziai: \"Gustavo Esteva (born 1936). Selbstbestimmte Gemeinwesen statt Entwicklung\" in: eins. Entwicklungspolitik. Information Nord Süd, No. 23/24, 2005, 48-50 ",
"Gustavo Santander\n He was born in Santiago de Cali, Colombia and he raised in La Flora, a typical upper-middle-class neighborhood of Cali. His father was doctor, poet and guitarist Flavio Santander and his mother is Judith. His brother is composer and producer Kike Santander. Gustavo Santander began his career as a composer in 2000. He was awarded three times by the American Society of Composers (ASCAP), at the Nokia Theatre Times Square in New York. In 2002 he was awarded for the song \"Azul\" (in Spanish: Blue), performed by Cristian Castro, in 2004 for the song \"Entre el Delirio y la Locura\" (Between Delirium and Madness), sung by Jennifer Peña, and in 2007 he received an award Regional Mexican ",
"Francisco Gabilondo Soler\n Gabilondo was born in the city of Orizaba, Veracruz. Both his parents were children of Spanish immigrants to Mexico. During his childhood he read the stories of the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Andersen, as well as the adventure stories of such writers as Jules Verne and Emilio Salgari. He also taught himself to play the pianola. In 1928, he entered the National Observatory of Mexico to study astronomy but, unfortunately, his studies were cut short by a lack of resources. Before dedicating himself to music full-time, he practiced boxing, bullfighting and swimming. He also worked for a time as a linotypist. When he was 25 years old, he began performing as a professional musician, interpreting humorous subjects of his inspiration. At first he played in public ",
"Gustavo Montoya\n He was born in Mexico City on July 9, 1905, to Adolfo Montoya and Concepción Carranco. His father was part of the Porfirio Díaz government, so when that government fell at the beginning of the Mexican Revolution, the family went into hiding from Mexico City into the state of Morelos. At this time, Gustavo was only seven years old, but he remembered hearing that the Zapatistas had killed two neighboring families. To protect the family, the father moved them frequently, often going to one house at night and Gustavo waking up in another. At one point, they were at the house of a "
] |
In what city was James M. Bingham born? | [
"Perry",
"Town of Perry"
] | place of birth | James M. Bingham | 4,626,488 | 98 | [
{
"id": "6420543",
"title": "James M. Bingham",
"text": " James M. Bingham (February 3, 1828January 8, 1885) was an American lawyer and Republican politician. He served as the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and the 20th speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly.",
"score": "1.7442843"
},
{
"id": "2932003",
"title": "James Bingham",
"text": " James Bingham (23 January 1925 – 8 December 2009) was a Belfast-based painter. He spent thirty years in London working as a signwriter with his brother. In 1967 he returned to Belfast where he met fellow Belfast artist Daniel O'Neill. They became friends and from 1968 he worked with O'Neill in his studio until O'Neill's death in 1974. Bingham was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland and died there in 2009, after a long illness.",
"score": "1.7344368"
},
{
"id": "13708699",
"title": "Henry H. Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 4, 1841. He graduated from Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1862, where he became a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He received a LLD degree in 1902 from Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pennsylvania.",
"score": "1.7241794"
},
{
"id": "1816596",
"title": "George Caleb Bingham",
"text": " George Caleb Bingham (March 20, 1811 – July 7, 1879) was an American artist, soldier and politician known in his lifetime as \"the Missouri Artist\". Initially a Whig, he was elected as a delegate to the Missouri legislature before the American Civil War where he fought against the extension of slavery westward. During that war, although born in Virginia, Bingham was dedicated to the Union cause and became captain of a volunteer company which helped keep the state from joining the Confederacy, and then served four years as Missouri's Treasurer. During his final years, Bingham held several offices in Kansas City, while also serving as Missouri's Adjutant General. His paintings of American frontier life along the Missouri River exemplify the Luminist style.",
"score": "1.7023323"
},
{
"id": "7285032",
"title": "George G. Bingham",
"text": " George Greenwood Bingham (November 25, 1855 – October 4, 1924) was an American judge and legal educator in the state of Oregon. A native of Wisconsin, his family immigrated to Oregon in his teens, though he returned to the Midwest for his legal education. Bingham served as the second dean at the Willamette University College of Law and was also a judge for Multnomah County after previously serving as a district attorney for Salem and the state. His former home in Salem, the Dr. Luke A. Port House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"score": "1.6848757"
},
{
"id": "6420544",
"title": "James M. Bingham",
"text": " He was born in Perry, New York, in 1828, and moved to Palmyra, Wisconsin, in 1854, where he practiced law. Bingham served in the 40th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment as a major. A Republican, he served terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1863, 1864, 1869, 1870, and 1874 and was elected its speaker in 1870. He moved to Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in 1870. In 1878 he was elected the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin under Governor William E. Smith, an office he held for two terms until 1882. He died in 1885 in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.",
"score": "1.6831608"
},
{
"id": "7285033",
"title": "George G. Bingham",
"text": " George Bingham was born in West Salem, Wisconsin, on November 25, 1855, to William Henry Bingham and Maria Bingham (née Kentner) as the first of four children. The family moved to neighboring Barre by 1860 and to Carrollton, Missouri, by 1870. In 1872, the family moved to Oregon and settled in Yamhill County. After receiving his education in the public schools of Yamhill County, he attended what became Linfield College in McMinnville. Bingham attended the University of Michigan Law School in Ann Arbor where he graduated with a bachelor of laws degree in 1880.",
"score": "1.6721544"
},
{
"id": "10118731",
"title": "Walter V. Bingham",
"text": " Walter Van Dyke Bingham was born in Swan Lake City, Iowa to Lemuel and Martha Bingham. Deemed an exceptional student early on, Bingham skipped the 3rd and 4th grades, graduating high school at the age of 16. He was an industrious youth, selling enough popcorn at the train station to pay his way to Chicago's 1893 World's Fair. Upon graduating from high school, Walter took a job as a rodman on the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway. His first job outside of the home was a printer's devil, inking forms for the weekly edition of the Emmet County Republican. Bingham was ",
"score": "1.6718328"
},
{
"id": "14122636",
"title": "Robert Jefferson Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born in Billesdon, Leicestershire, England, where he was baptised in March 1824. His parents were John Cowener Bingham and his wife, Martha. In 1853, at the British Embassy in Paris, he married Emma Reeve, daughter of surgeon John Reed of Kinver, Staffordshire. She died 15 years later at their home on rue de La Rochefoucauld in Paris.",
"score": "1.6635523"
},
{
"id": "28367888",
"title": "Andrew Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born in Buxton and was raised there before his family moved to Chapel-en-le-Frith. He attended Long Lane Comprehensive School (now known as Chapel-en-le-Frith High School). He worked as a Director in his father's business before being elected to parliament, supplying engineering equipment to companies across the High Peak and North West England.",
"score": "1.6575005"
},
{
"id": "14764180",
"title": "George W. Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born on April 6, 1860 in Friendship, Wisconsin. In 1888, he married Nellie A. Wilbur. He died on March 10, 1947.",
"score": "1.655891"
},
{
"id": "9071600",
"title": "Kinsley S. Bingham",
"text": " Bingham (whose first name is sometimes spelled Kingsley) was born to the farmer family of Calvin and Betsy (Scott) Bingham in Camillus, New York in Onondaga County. He attended the common schools and studied law in Syracuse. In 1833, while still in New York, Bingham married Margaret Warden, who had recently moved with her brother Robert Warden and family from Scotland.",
"score": "1.6503999"
},
{
"id": "1816597",
"title": "George Caleb Bingham",
"text": " Born on a farm in Augusta County, Virginia, George Caleb Bingham was the second of seven children that Mary Amend (1789–1851) bore with her husband Henry Vest Bingham (1784–1823). Upon their marriage, Mary's father Matthias Amend gave the Binghams ownership of the family mill, 1180 acre land, and several slaves with the agreement that Matthias could live with the family for the rest of his life. Henry Bingham offered the land and mill as surety for a friend's debt and, when the friend died in 1818, all was lost. In 1819, the Bingham family (including grandfather Amend) moved to Franklin, Howard County, ",
"score": "1.6492565"
},
{
"id": "14164072",
"title": "Eugene C. Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born on 8 December 1878 in Cornwall, Vermont. He was awarded the Franklin Institute's Certificate of Merit in 1921 for his variable pressure viscometer. In 1922, as chairman of the Metric Committee of the American Chemical Society, he campaigned for the United States to adopt the metric system. Bingham died on 6 November 1945 in Easton, Pennsylvania.",
"score": "1.6446056"
},
{
"id": "31059445",
"title": "Walter Bingham (sportswriter)",
"text": " Bingham was born on August 27, 1930, in Orange, New Jersey. He graduated from The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, attended Yale University for one semester before moving to Los Angeles where he took courses at UCLA and worked as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Examiner. During the Korean War he enlisted with the United States Air Force.",
"score": "1.6294458"
},
{
"id": "30395009",
"title": "Joan Bingham",
"text": " Bingham was born in Steubenville, Ohio to Edward and Helen Williamson Stevens. Her father was the chief executive of United Oil Company in Pittsburgh. Bingham graduated in art history from Connecticut College in 1957 and received a master's in European history from Georgetown University in the 1980s. Bingham married Robert Worth Bingham III in 1960. Robert died in a freak accident in 1966. She was briefly married to George Packard in the late 1970s. James Chace was a long time companion of Bingham. Bingham helped found the Grove Atlantic in 1993 and was instrumental in acquiring and publishing writers including Kiran Desai and Kay Ryan. Former colleague Juliet Nicolson described her as \"an indefatigable champion for her authors\". Her son Robert died from a drug overdose in 1999. She died in Manhattan from pneumonia.",
"score": "1.6287793"
},
{
"id": "1816601",
"title": "George Caleb Bingham",
"text": " remain active throughout his life). He also considered becoming a lawyer. His elder brother Matthias Bingham would travel to Texas to fight for its independence in 1836, and remain in Mexico until his death in 1861, becoming a large landowner in the process but never marrying. By age nineteen, Bingham was painting portraits for $20.00 apiece, often completing the works in a single day. He found clients in Howard and Saline counties and nearby areas. Though his painting abilities were still developing, he impressed his patrons by strong draftsmanship as well as his native ability to capture his subject's likeness, and ",
"score": "1.6285795"
},
{
"id": "1457658",
"title": "Henry Bingham Towner",
"text": " He was born and raised in Uckfield, Sussex. After giving up on becoming a Roman Catholic priest, he studied architecture.",
"score": "1.6269755"
},
{
"id": "11136467",
"title": "Jeremy Bingham",
"text": " Jeremy Bingham (Born. 16 March 1936) is an Australian property development consultant, solicitor and New South Wales local government politician who was Lord Mayor of Sydney and an Alderman of the Sydney City Council from 1974 to 1991 and Hunter's Hill Municipal Council from 1965 to 1971.",
"score": "1.6178607"
},
{
"id": "6420545",
"title": "James M. Bingham",
"text": " His former home, now known as the Cook-Rutledge House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"score": "1.6121864"
}
] | [
"James M. Bingham\n James M. Bingham (February 3, 1828January 8, 1885) was an American lawyer and Republican politician. He served as the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin and the 20th speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly.",
"James Bingham\n James Bingham (23 January 1925 – 8 December 2009) was a Belfast-based painter. He spent thirty years in London working as a signwriter with his brother. In 1967 he returned to Belfast where he met fellow Belfast artist Daniel O'Neill. They became friends and from 1968 he worked with O'Neill in his studio until O'Neill's death in 1974. Bingham was born in Belfast, Northern Ireland and died there in 2009, after a long illness.",
"Henry H. Bingham\n Bingham was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on December 4, 1841. He graduated from Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, in 1862, where he became a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. He received a LLD degree in 1902 from Washington and Jefferson College in Washington, Pennsylvania.",
"George Caleb Bingham\n George Caleb Bingham (March 20, 1811 – July 7, 1879) was an American artist, soldier and politician known in his lifetime as \"the Missouri Artist\". Initially a Whig, he was elected as a delegate to the Missouri legislature before the American Civil War where he fought against the extension of slavery westward. During that war, although born in Virginia, Bingham was dedicated to the Union cause and became captain of a volunteer company which helped keep the state from joining the Confederacy, and then served four years as Missouri's Treasurer. During his final years, Bingham held several offices in Kansas City, while also serving as Missouri's Adjutant General. His paintings of American frontier life along the Missouri River exemplify the Luminist style.",
"George G. Bingham\n George Greenwood Bingham (November 25, 1855 – October 4, 1924) was an American judge and legal educator in the state of Oregon. A native of Wisconsin, his family immigrated to Oregon in his teens, though he returned to the Midwest for his legal education. Bingham served as the second dean at the Willamette University College of Law and was also a judge for Multnomah County after previously serving as a district attorney for Salem and the state. His former home in Salem, the Dr. Luke A. Port House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.",
"James M. Bingham\n He was born in Perry, New York, in 1828, and moved to Palmyra, Wisconsin, in 1854, where he practiced law. Bingham served in the 40th Wisconsin Infantry Regiment as a major. A Republican, he served terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1863, 1864, 1869, 1870, and 1874 and was elected its speaker in 1870. He moved to Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in 1870. In 1878 he was elected the 13th Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin under Governor William E. Smith, an office he held for two terms until 1882. He died in 1885 in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin.",
"George G. Bingham\n George Bingham was born in West Salem, Wisconsin, on November 25, 1855, to William Henry Bingham and Maria Bingham (née Kentner) as the first of four children. The family moved to neighboring Barre by 1860 and to Carrollton, Missouri, by 1870. In 1872, the family moved to Oregon and settled in Yamhill County. After receiving his education in the public schools of Yamhill County, he attended what became Linfield College in McMinnville. Bingham attended the University of Michigan Law School in Ann Arbor where he graduated with a bachelor of laws degree in 1880.",
"Walter V. Bingham\n Walter Van Dyke Bingham was born in Swan Lake City, Iowa to Lemuel and Martha Bingham. Deemed an exceptional student early on, Bingham skipped the 3rd and 4th grades, graduating high school at the age of 16. He was an industrious youth, selling enough popcorn at the train station to pay his way to Chicago's 1893 World's Fair. Upon graduating from high school, Walter took a job as a rodman on the Burlington, Cedar Rapids and Northern Railway. His first job outside of the home was a printer's devil, inking forms for the weekly edition of the Emmet County Republican. Bingham was ",
"Robert Jefferson Bingham\n Bingham was born in Billesdon, Leicestershire, England, where he was baptised in March 1824. His parents were John Cowener Bingham and his wife, Martha. In 1853, at the British Embassy in Paris, he married Emma Reeve, daughter of surgeon John Reed of Kinver, Staffordshire. She died 15 years later at their home on rue de La Rochefoucauld in Paris.",
"Andrew Bingham\n Bingham was born in Buxton and was raised there before his family moved to Chapel-en-le-Frith. He attended Long Lane Comprehensive School (now known as Chapel-en-le-Frith High School). He worked as a Director in his father's business before being elected to parliament, supplying engineering equipment to companies across the High Peak and North West England.",
"George W. Bingham\n Bingham was born on April 6, 1860 in Friendship, Wisconsin. In 1888, he married Nellie A. Wilbur. He died on March 10, 1947.",
"Kinsley S. Bingham\n Bingham (whose first name is sometimes spelled Kingsley) was born to the farmer family of Calvin and Betsy (Scott) Bingham in Camillus, New York in Onondaga County. He attended the common schools and studied law in Syracuse. In 1833, while still in New York, Bingham married Margaret Warden, who had recently moved with her brother Robert Warden and family from Scotland.",
"George Caleb Bingham\n Born on a farm in Augusta County, Virginia, George Caleb Bingham was the second of seven children that Mary Amend (1789–1851) bore with her husband Henry Vest Bingham (1784–1823). Upon their marriage, Mary's father Matthias Amend gave the Binghams ownership of the family mill, 1180 acre land, and several slaves with the agreement that Matthias could live with the family for the rest of his life. Henry Bingham offered the land and mill as surety for a friend's debt and, when the friend died in 1818, all was lost. In 1819, the Bingham family (including grandfather Amend) moved to Franklin, Howard County, ",
"Eugene C. Bingham\n Bingham was born on 8 December 1878 in Cornwall, Vermont. He was awarded the Franklin Institute's Certificate of Merit in 1921 for his variable pressure viscometer. In 1922, as chairman of the Metric Committee of the American Chemical Society, he campaigned for the United States to adopt the metric system. Bingham died on 6 November 1945 in Easton, Pennsylvania.",
"Walter Bingham (sportswriter)\n Bingham was born on August 27, 1930, in Orange, New Jersey. He graduated from The Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, attended Yale University for one semester before moving to Los Angeles where he took courses at UCLA and worked as a copy boy at the Los Angeles Examiner. During the Korean War he enlisted with the United States Air Force.",
"Joan Bingham\n Bingham was born in Steubenville, Ohio to Edward and Helen Williamson Stevens. Her father was the chief executive of United Oil Company in Pittsburgh. Bingham graduated in art history from Connecticut College in 1957 and received a master's in European history from Georgetown University in the 1980s. Bingham married Robert Worth Bingham III in 1960. Robert died in a freak accident in 1966. She was briefly married to George Packard in the late 1970s. James Chace was a long time companion of Bingham. Bingham helped found the Grove Atlantic in 1993 and was instrumental in acquiring and publishing writers including Kiran Desai and Kay Ryan. Former colleague Juliet Nicolson described her as \"an indefatigable champion for her authors\". Her son Robert died from a drug overdose in 1999. She died in Manhattan from pneumonia.",
"George Caleb Bingham\n remain active throughout his life). He also considered becoming a lawyer. His elder brother Matthias Bingham would travel to Texas to fight for its independence in 1836, and remain in Mexico until his death in 1861, becoming a large landowner in the process but never marrying. By age nineteen, Bingham was painting portraits for $20.00 apiece, often completing the works in a single day. He found clients in Howard and Saline counties and nearby areas. Though his painting abilities were still developing, he impressed his patrons by strong draftsmanship as well as his native ability to capture his subject's likeness, and ",
"Henry Bingham Towner\n He was born and raised in Uckfield, Sussex. After giving up on becoming a Roman Catholic priest, he studied architecture.",
"Jeremy Bingham\n Jeremy Bingham (Born. 16 March 1936) is an Australian property development consultant, solicitor and New South Wales local government politician who was Lord Mayor of Sydney and an Alderman of the Sydney City Council from 1974 to 1991 and Hunter's Hill Municipal Council from 1965 to 1971.",
"James M. Bingham\n His former home, now known as the Cook-Rutledge House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places."
] |
In what country is Tigra? | [
"India",
"Bharat",
"Hindustan",
"Bharatvarsh",
"in",
"IN",
"Republic of India",
"🇮🇳",
"IND",
"Aryavratt"
] | country | Tigra (gaon) | 5,992,288 | 78 | [
{
"id": "29888987",
"title": "Tigray Region",
"text": " The Tigray Region (ክልል ትግራይ; ትግራይ ክልል), officially the Tigray National Regional State (ብሔራዊ ክልላዊ መንግስቲ ትግራይ), is the northernmost regional state in Ethiopia. The Tigray Region is the homeland of the Tigrayan, Irob and Kunama people. Tigray is also known as Region 1 according to the federal constitution. Its capital and largest city is Mekelle. Tigray is the fifth-largest by area, the fifth-most populous, and the fifth-most densely populated of the 11 regional states. Tigray's official language is Tigrinya, similar to that spoken in Eritrea just to the North. The total population (based on the 2020 Census, CSA) is 7,070,260. The majority of the population (c. 80%) are agriculturalists, contributing 46% to the regional gross domestic product (2009). The highlands have the highest population density, especially in eastern and central Tigray. The much less densely populated lowlands comprise 48 per cent of Tigray's ",
"score": "1.612003"
},
{
"id": "5414338",
"title": "Tigray Province",
"text": " Tigray Province (Amharic, ትግራይ) is a historical province of northern Ethiopia that exists in the present day Afar and Tigray regions. It encompassed most of the territories of Tigrinya-speakers (and a few minority groups closely linked with them) in Ethiopia. Tigray was separated from the northern Tigrinya speaking territories by the Mareb River, now serving as the state border to Eritrea (formerly Eritrea Province before its independence). The great majority of inhabitants were Orthodox Christians (95.5% in 1994), with the exception of a small, but important Muslim subgroup (Jeberti) and a few Catholics (mainly Irob). Protestantism is only a very recent urban phenomenon. ",
"score": "1.5674098"
},
{
"id": "25012916",
"title": "Adigrat",
"text": " Tihlo is a dish unique to Adigrat and the wider Eastern Tigray. It is prepared by kneading barley flour into softballs and preparing a meat stew with berbere, an Ethiopian spice, onions, tomato paste, water, and salt. The dish is eaten using a fork-shaped twig, which is unique in Ethiopian cuisine. The beles, a cactus pear, grown in Adigrat is considered to be of high-quality. The city is renowned for its white honey and tej, an Ethiopian honey-wine.",
"score": "1.5625782"
},
{
"id": "29888988",
"title": "Tigray Region",
"text": " 96 per cent of Tigrayans are Orthodox Christian. Tigray is bordered by Eritrea to the north, Sudan to the west, the Amhara Region to the south and the Afar Region to the east and southeast. Besides Mekelle, major cities include Adigrat, Aksum, Shire, Humera, Adwa, Adi Remets, Alamata, Wukro, Maychew, Sheraro, Abiy Adi, Korem, Qwiha, Atsbi, Hawzen, Mekoni, Dansha, Adi Gudom, Indabaguna, Mai Tsebri, and Zalambessa. The government of Tigray consists of the executive branch, led by the president; the legislative branch, which comprises the state council; and the judicial branch, which is led by the state supreme court. In early November 2020, a conflict between the Tigray Region, involving the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and the Ethiopian federal government began, in which Eritrea took part on the side of the federal government, rapidly escalating into the Tigray War and destabilizing the region.",
"score": "1.5507107"
},
{
"id": "9398357",
"title": "Opel Tigra",
"text": " The Opel Tigra name has been applied to two different cars engineered and produced by the German automaker Opel, both based on different iterations of the Corsa supermini, the first built in Spain, the second in France. The first Tigra was a small 2+2 coupé, produced from 1994 to 2001. The later compact hard topped convertible roadster model was introduced in May 2004. The Tigra was sold in the United Kingdom as the Vauxhall Tigra, in Australia as the Holden Tigra, and was sold in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico as the Chevrolet Tigra.",
"score": "1.5495474"
},
{
"id": "28270946",
"title": "Maychew",
"text": " The population comprises mainly Tigraians. Amharic is frequently used as trade language. Tigraians are dominantly Orthodox Christians. Based on the 2007 national census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia (CSA), this town has a total population of 23,419, of whom 11,024 are men and 12,395 women. 95.28% of the population said they were Orthodox Christians, and 4.24% were Muslim. The 1994 census reported it had a total population of 19,757 of whom 8,894 were men and 10,863 were women.",
"score": "1.5375448"
},
{
"id": "29889021",
"title": "Tigray Region",
"text": " With 96.55% of the local population, the region is predominantly inhabited by the Tigrinya-speaking Tigrayan people. The Tigrinya language belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family of languages. Most other residents hail from other Afro-Asiatic-speaking communities, including the Amhara, Irob, Afar, Agaw and Oromo. Partly assimilated Oromo live in remoter villages in Raya Azebo and Alamata (woreda), whereas there are Agaw in Abergele (woreda). There are also Nilo-Saharan-speaking Kunama as well.",
"score": "1.5365444"
},
{
"id": "25012897",
"title": "Adigrat",
"text": " Adigrat (ዓዲግራት, ʿaddigrat, also called ʿAddi Grat) is a city and separate woreda in the Tigray Regional State of Ethiopia. It is located in the Misraqawi Zone at longitude and latitude 14.26667°N, 39.45°W, with an elevation of 2457 m above sea level and below a high ridge to the west. Adigrat is the last important Ethiopian city south of the border with Eritrea, and is considered to be a strategically important gateway to Eritrea and the Red Sea. Adigrat was part of Ganta Afeshum woreda before a separate woreda was created for the city. Currently, Adigrat serves as the capital of the Eastern Tigray zone. Adigrat is one of the most important cities of Tigray, which evolved from earlier political centers and camps of regional governors. Antalo, Aläqot and Adigrat were a few of them. The decline of Antalo was followed by the rise of Adigrat as another prominent, yet short-lived, capital of Tigray. It used to serve as the capital of Agame.",
"score": "1.5294912"
},
{
"id": "25652285",
"title": "Tigranocerta",
"text": " Tigranocerta (Τιγρανόκερτα, Tigranόkerta; Tigranakert; Տիգրանակերտ), also called Cholimma or Chlomaron in antiquity, was a city and the capital of the Armenian Kingdom between 77 and 69 BCE. It bore the name of Tigranes the Great, who founded the city in the first century BC. There is so far no common agreement on the precise location of Tigranakert; it was either near present-day Silvan, Arzan (Arzn, in the Armenian province of Arzanene or Aghdznik), east of Diyarbakır, Turkey, or in the valley of the Garzan river where is mentioned by T.A Sinclair. It was one of four cities in historic Armenia named Tigranakert. The others were in Nakhichevan, Artsakh and Utik, the 4 cities being in the old Armenian provinces Aldznik, Goghtn, Utik, Artsakh.",
"score": "1.5238745"
},
{
"id": "25037040",
"title": "Tigrayan nationalism",
"text": " Tigrayan nationalism is an ethnic nationalism seeking marginalization and independence of Tigray people from Ethiopia. It was traced by during post-invasion of Ethiopian Empire by Kingdom of Italy in early 1940s, in response to perceived imperial Amhara dominance. It was furtherly propagated during the EPRDF coalition regime who was dominated by ethnic nationalist party TPLF since 1990s, ruling Ethiopia for 27 years until they ousted from power by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in 2018.",
"score": "1.5219927"
},
{
"id": "25012907",
"title": "Adigrat",
"text": " There are different sights near Adigrat that can be visited by tourists like:- Debre Damo is the name of a flat-topped mountain, or amba, and a 6th-century monastery in northern Ethiopia. The mountain is a steeply rising plateau of trapezoidal shape, about 1000 by 400 m in dimension. It is northwest of Adigrat, in the Mehakelegnaw Zone of the Tigray Region, close to the border with Eritrea. Gunda Gunde is an Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo monastery located to the south of Adigrat in the Misraqawi (Eastern) Zone of the northern Tigray Region in Ethiopia. It is known for its prolific scriptorium, as well as its library of Ge'ez manuscripts. This collection of over 220 volumes, all but one dating from before the 16th century, is one of the largest collections of its kind in Ethiopia.",
"score": "1.5202212"
},
{
"id": "14607682",
"title": "ACHPR Tigray investigation",
"text": " The Commission's headquarters are in Banjul, with the aim of travelling to Ethiopia and \"neighbouring countries when conditions are met\".",
"score": "1.51998"
},
{
"id": "30515930",
"title": "Tigray War",
"text": " The Tigray War (ውግእ ትግራይ) is an ongoing civil war that began on 3 November 2020 in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. The local Tigray Defense Forces (TDF) are fighting the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF), the Ethiopian Federal Police, regional police, and gendarmerie forces of the neighbouring Amhara and Afar regions with the involvement of the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF). All sides, particularly the ENDF, EDF, and TDF have committed war crimes during the conflict. Due to the onset of the war, a deep humanitarian crisis has developed. In 2019, to distance the country from ethnic federalism and ethnic nationalist politics, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed merged the ethnic and ",
"score": "1.5185701"
},
{
"id": "31235432",
"title": "Transitional Government of Tigray",
"text": " As of 23 November 2020, the conquered Tigrayan town of Humera in Mi'irabawi Zone (Western Tigray) was administered by officials and security forces from Amhara Region. According to a refugee from Humera, Gush Tela, the Fano vigilante youth group took control of a judicial court in Humera. By 10 January 2021, according to Europe External Programme with Africa (EEPA), the zone as a whole was divided by its Amharan administration into Telemt (Tselemti), with May Tebri (May Tsebri) as its capital and Humera–Welqayt–Tegede zone, with Humera as capital. , the new head of Humera–Welqayt–Tegede zone was Yeabsira Eshete, and the administration was composed of ethnic Amharans, according to EEPA. ",
"score": "1.5146607"
},
{
"id": "31700160",
"title": "Tahtay Adiyabo",
"text": " On 26 September 1976, on the eve of Meskel, the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF) turned back an advance by an armed detachment of 250 Ethiopian Democratic Union fighters at Chiameskebet, a village near Shiraro, on 26 September 1976, forcing them to retreat across the Tekezé. Both sides suffered heavy casualties; amongst the TPLF wounded was their general, Mehari Tekle (\"Mussie\"), who was fatally wounded in the battle and died a few days later. Flooding by the Tekezé in August 2006 damaged 68.5 hectares planted in fruits and vegetables and buried 21 water pumps. A violent storm in the second week of the same month also damaged 48.5 hectares of crops. During the 2020-2021 Tigray War, attacks were carried out on Tahtay Adiyabo by the joint Ethiopian and Eritrean armies. On 19 December 2020, a foreign diplomat stated that “thousands” of Eritrean soldiers are engaged in Tigray. Two diplomats stated that Eritrean troops entered Ethiopia through three northern border towns: Zalambessa, Rama and Badme.",
"score": "1.5140703"
},
{
"id": "26002225",
"title": "Tigra (gaon)",
"text": " Tighra is a mid-sized village located in the district of Gurgaon in the state of Haryana in India. It has a population of about 5000 persons living in around 1000 households. Tighra gaon is dominated by Tanwar Gujjars and BHARDWAJ Brahmins. Near by sectors are 50, 57 A and Dlf Phase III.Mohan Ram Mandir also situated in Tighra gaon. This village is popular for baba mohan Ram Mandir.every month on the day of ekadhasi lot of people visit baba mohan ram mandir.",
"score": "1.5134407"
},
{
"id": "14309908",
"title": "Tigra Dam",
"text": " Tigra Dam (also spelled \"Tig Dam\") creates a freshwater reservoir on the Sank River, about 23 km from Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India It plays a crucial role in supplying water to the city. It is beautiful and is an important tourism spot of Gwalior. The dam is 24 metres high at its crest, and 1341 m long. The reservoir has a capacity of 4.8 million cubic metres and the spillway structure can pass up to 1274 cubic metres per second.",
"score": "1.5128239"
},
{
"id": "29889007",
"title": "Tigray Region",
"text": " Tigray is situated between 12° – 15°N and 36° 30' – 40° 30'E. A 2006 national statistics report stated the land area as 50079 km2. The 2011 National Statistics gave an area of 41410 km2, but the sum of the figures it gave for the Tigray zones was substantially different, rendering the 2011 report internally inconsistent. The figure of 50,079 km2 is supported by the Google Maps area calculator.",
"score": "1.5125573"
},
{
"id": "29889016",
"title": "Tigray Region",
"text": "Adigrat (home of Adigrat University, Debre Damo monastery and Addis Pharmaceuticals) ; Adwa (home of Adwa Pan African University,) ; Axum (home of Aksum University,) ; Maychew (home of Raya University) Mekelle, home to Mekelle University, Mekelle Institute of Technology, Microlink College, Nile College, and Mekelle College of Teacher Education is the capital of Tigray, near the geographic center of the state. Other Tigray cities functioning as centers of Ethiopian metropolitan areas include: Of the 10 largest cities in Tigray, Maychew has the highest elevation at 2479 meter above sea level. Plenty of smaller towns, like Atsbi and Edaga Hamus are located at even higher elevations. Of the large cities, Humera is located at the lowest altitude (585 m).",
"score": "1.5107429"
},
{
"id": "30515954",
"title": "Tigray War",
"text": " of their bodies near Mahibere Dego. On 6 May 2021, Ethiopia's House of Peoples’ Representatives declared the TPLF as a terrorist organization. On 21 May, Ethiopia's military prosecutors convicted 3 soldiers of rape and pressed charges against over 50 others suspected of killing civilians in Tigray or committing rape and other forms of sexual violence. The statement also confirmed reports of two massacres in Tigray, stating that 229 civilians were killed in the town of Mai Kadra at the beginning of November, and accusing troops from Eritrea of killing 110 civilians in the city of Axum on 27 and 28 November.",
"score": "1.5021315"
}
] | [
"Tigray Region\n The Tigray Region (ክልል ትግራይ; ትግራይ ክልል), officially the Tigray National Regional State (ብሔራዊ ክልላዊ መንግስቲ ትግራይ), is the northernmost regional state in Ethiopia. The Tigray Region is the homeland of the Tigrayan, Irob and Kunama people. Tigray is also known as Region 1 according to the federal constitution. Its capital and largest city is Mekelle. Tigray is the fifth-largest by area, the fifth-most populous, and the fifth-most densely populated of the 11 regional states. Tigray's official language is Tigrinya, similar to that spoken in Eritrea just to the North. The total population (based on the 2020 Census, CSA) is 7,070,260. The majority of the population (c. 80%) are agriculturalists, contributing 46% to the regional gross domestic product (2009). The highlands have the highest population density, especially in eastern and central Tigray. The much less densely populated lowlands comprise 48 per cent of Tigray's ",
"Tigray Province\n Tigray Province (Amharic, ትግራይ) is a historical province of northern Ethiopia that exists in the present day Afar and Tigray regions. It encompassed most of the territories of Tigrinya-speakers (and a few minority groups closely linked with them) in Ethiopia. Tigray was separated from the northern Tigrinya speaking territories by the Mareb River, now serving as the state border to Eritrea (formerly Eritrea Province before its independence). The great majority of inhabitants were Orthodox Christians (95.5% in 1994), with the exception of a small, but important Muslim subgroup (Jeberti) and a few Catholics (mainly Irob). Protestantism is only a very recent urban phenomenon. ",
"Adigrat\n Tihlo is a dish unique to Adigrat and the wider Eastern Tigray. It is prepared by kneading barley flour into softballs and preparing a meat stew with berbere, an Ethiopian spice, onions, tomato paste, water, and salt. The dish is eaten using a fork-shaped twig, which is unique in Ethiopian cuisine. The beles, a cactus pear, grown in Adigrat is considered to be of high-quality. The city is renowned for its white honey and tej, an Ethiopian honey-wine.",
"Tigray Region\n 96 per cent of Tigrayans are Orthodox Christian. Tigray is bordered by Eritrea to the north, Sudan to the west, the Amhara Region to the south and the Afar Region to the east and southeast. Besides Mekelle, major cities include Adigrat, Aksum, Shire, Humera, Adwa, Adi Remets, Alamata, Wukro, Maychew, Sheraro, Abiy Adi, Korem, Qwiha, Atsbi, Hawzen, Mekoni, Dansha, Adi Gudom, Indabaguna, Mai Tsebri, and Zalambessa. The government of Tigray consists of the executive branch, led by the president; the legislative branch, which comprises the state council; and the judicial branch, which is led by the state supreme court. In early November 2020, a conflict between the Tigray Region, involving the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) and the Ethiopian federal government began, in which Eritrea took part on the side of the federal government, rapidly escalating into the Tigray War and destabilizing the region.",
"Opel Tigra\n The Opel Tigra name has been applied to two different cars engineered and produced by the German automaker Opel, both based on different iterations of the Corsa supermini, the first built in Spain, the second in France. The first Tigra was a small 2+2 coupé, produced from 1994 to 2001. The later compact hard topped convertible roadster model was introduced in May 2004. The Tigra was sold in the United Kingdom as the Vauxhall Tigra, in Australia as the Holden Tigra, and was sold in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico as the Chevrolet Tigra.",
"Maychew\n The population comprises mainly Tigraians. Amharic is frequently used as trade language. Tigraians are dominantly Orthodox Christians. Based on the 2007 national census conducted by the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia (CSA), this town has a total population of 23,419, of whom 11,024 are men and 12,395 women. 95.28% of the population said they were Orthodox Christians, and 4.24% were Muslim. The 1994 census reported it had a total population of 19,757 of whom 8,894 were men and 10,863 were women.",
"Tigray Region\n With 96.55% of the local population, the region is predominantly inhabited by the Tigrinya-speaking Tigrayan people. The Tigrinya language belongs to the Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family of languages. Most other residents hail from other Afro-Asiatic-speaking communities, including the Amhara, Irob, Afar, Agaw and Oromo. Partly assimilated Oromo live in remoter villages in Raya Azebo and Alamata (woreda), whereas there are Agaw in Abergele (woreda). There are also Nilo-Saharan-speaking Kunama as well.",
"Adigrat\n Adigrat (ዓዲግራት, ʿaddigrat, also called ʿAddi Grat) is a city and separate woreda in the Tigray Regional State of Ethiopia. It is located in the Misraqawi Zone at longitude and latitude 14.26667°N, 39.45°W, with an elevation of 2457 m above sea level and below a high ridge to the west. Adigrat is the last important Ethiopian city south of the border with Eritrea, and is considered to be a strategically important gateway to Eritrea and the Red Sea. Adigrat was part of Ganta Afeshum woreda before a separate woreda was created for the city. Currently, Adigrat serves as the capital of the Eastern Tigray zone. Adigrat is one of the most important cities of Tigray, which evolved from earlier political centers and camps of regional governors. Antalo, Aläqot and Adigrat were a few of them. The decline of Antalo was followed by the rise of Adigrat as another prominent, yet short-lived, capital of Tigray. It used to serve as the capital of Agame.",
"Tigranocerta\n Tigranocerta (Τιγρανόκερτα, Tigranόkerta; Tigranakert; Տիգրանակերտ), also called Cholimma or Chlomaron in antiquity, was a city and the capital of the Armenian Kingdom between 77 and 69 BCE. It bore the name of Tigranes the Great, who founded the city in the first century BC. There is so far no common agreement on the precise location of Tigranakert; it was either near present-day Silvan, Arzan (Arzn, in the Armenian province of Arzanene or Aghdznik), east of Diyarbakır, Turkey, or in the valley of the Garzan river where is mentioned by T.A Sinclair. It was one of four cities in historic Armenia named Tigranakert. The others were in Nakhichevan, Artsakh and Utik, the 4 cities being in the old Armenian provinces Aldznik, Goghtn, Utik, Artsakh.",
"Tigrayan nationalism\n Tigrayan nationalism is an ethnic nationalism seeking marginalization and independence of Tigray people from Ethiopia. It was traced by during post-invasion of Ethiopian Empire by Kingdom of Italy in early 1940s, in response to perceived imperial Amhara dominance. It was furtherly propagated during the EPRDF coalition regime who was dominated by ethnic nationalist party TPLF since 1990s, ruling Ethiopia for 27 years until they ousted from power by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in 2018.",
"Adigrat\n There are different sights near Adigrat that can be visited by tourists like:- Debre Damo is the name of a flat-topped mountain, or amba, and a 6th-century monastery in northern Ethiopia. The mountain is a steeply rising plateau of trapezoidal shape, about 1000 by 400 m in dimension. It is northwest of Adigrat, in the Mehakelegnaw Zone of the Tigray Region, close to the border with Eritrea. Gunda Gunde is an Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo monastery located to the south of Adigrat in the Misraqawi (Eastern) Zone of the northern Tigray Region in Ethiopia. It is known for its prolific scriptorium, as well as its library of Ge'ez manuscripts. This collection of over 220 volumes, all but one dating from before the 16th century, is one of the largest collections of its kind in Ethiopia.",
"ACHPR Tigray investigation\n The Commission's headquarters are in Banjul, with the aim of travelling to Ethiopia and \"neighbouring countries when conditions are met\".",
"Tigray War\n The Tigray War (ውግእ ትግራይ) is an ongoing civil war that began on 3 November 2020 in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia. The local Tigray Defense Forces (TDF) are fighting the Ethiopian National Defense Force (ENDF), the Ethiopian Federal Police, regional police, and gendarmerie forces of the neighbouring Amhara and Afar regions with the involvement of the Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF). All sides, particularly the ENDF, EDF, and TDF have committed war crimes during the conflict. Due to the onset of the war, a deep humanitarian crisis has developed. In 2019, to distance the country from ethnic federalism and ethnic nationalist politics, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed merged the ethnic and ",
"Transitional Government of Tigray\n As of 23 November 2020, the conquered Tigrayan town of Humera in Mi'irabawi Zone (Western Tigray) was administered by officials and security forces from Amhara Region. According to a refugee from Humera, Gush Tela, the Fano vigilante youth group took control of a judicial court in Humera. By 10 January 2021, according to Europe External Programme with Africa (EEPA), the zone as a whole was divided by its Amharan administration into Telemt (Tselemti), with May Tebri (May Tsebri) as its capital and Humera–Welqayt–Tegede zone, with Humera as capital. , the new head of Humera–Welqayt–Tegede zone was Yeabsira Eshete, and the administration was composed of ethnic Amharans, according to EEPA. ",
"Tahtay Adiyabo\n On 26 September 1976, on the eve of Meskel, the Tigrayan People's Liberation Front (TPLF) turned back an advance by an armed detachment of 250 Ethiopian Democratic Union fighters at Chiameskebet, a village near Shiraro, on 26 September 1976, forcing them to retreat across the Tekezé. Both sides suffered heavy casualties; amongst the TPLF wounded was their general, Mehari Tekle (\"Mussie\"), who was fatally wounded in the battle and died a few days later. Flooding by the Tekezé in August 2006 damaged 68.5 hectares planted in fruits and vegetables and buried 21 water pumps. A violent storm in the second week of the same month also damaged 48.5 hectares of crops. During the 2020-2021 Tigray War, attacks were carried out on Tahtay Adiyabo by the joint Ethiopian and Eritrean armies. On 19 December 2020, a foreign diplomat stated that “thousands” of Eritrean soldiers are engaged in Tigray. Two diplomats stated that Eritrean troops entered Ethiopia through three northern border towns: Zalambessa, Rama and Badme.",
"Tigra (gaon)\n Tighra is a mid-sized village located in the district of Gurgaon in the state of Haryana in India. It has a population of about 5000 persons living in around 1000 households. Tighra gaon is dominated by Tanwar Gujjars and BHARDWAJ Brahmins. Near by sectors are 50, 57 A and Dlf Phase III.Mohan Ram Mandir also situated in Tighra gaon. This village is popular for baba mohan Ram Mandir.every month on the day of ekadhasi lot of people visit baba mohan ram mandir.",
"Tigra Dam\n Tigra Dam (also spelled \"Tig Dam\") creates a freshwater reservoir on the Sank River, about 23 km from Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, India It plays a crucial role in supplying water to the city. It is beautiful and is an important tourism spot of Gwalior. The dam is 24 metres high at its crest, and 1341 m long. The reservoir has a capacity of 4.8 million cubic metres and the spillway structure can pass up to 1274 cubic metres per second.",
"Tigray Region\n Tigray is situated between 12° – 15°N and 36° 30' – 40° 30'E. A 2006 national statistics report stated the land area as 50079 km2. The 2011 National Statistics gave an area of 41410 km2, but the sum of the figures it gave for the Tigray zones was substantially different, rendering the 2011 report internally inconsistent. The figure of 50,079 km2 is supported by the Google Maps area calculator.",
"Tigray Region\nAdigrat (home of Adigrat University, Debre Damo monastery and Addis Pharmaceuticals) ; Adwa (home of Adwa Pan African University,) ; Axum (home of Aksum University,) ; Maychew (home of Raya University) Mekelle, home to Mekelle University, Mekelle Institute of Technology, Microlink College, Nile College, and Mekelle College of Teacher Education is the capital of Tigray, near the geographic center of the state. Other Tigray cities functioning as centers of Ethiopian metropolitan areas include: Of the 10 largest cities in Tigray, Maychew has the highest elevation at 2479 meter above sea level. Plenty of smaller towns, like Atsbi and Edaga Hamus are located at even higher elevations. Of the large cities, Humera is located at the lowest altitude (585 m).",
"Tigray War\n of their bodies near Mahibere Dego. On 6 May 2021, Ethiopia's House of Peoples’ Representatives declared the TPLF as a terrorist organization. On 21 May, Ethiopia's military prosecutors convicted 3 soldiers of rape and pressed charges against over 50 others suspected of killing civilians in Tigray or committing rape and other forms of sexual violence. The statement also confirmed reports of two massacres in Tigray, stating that 229 civilians were killed in the town of Mai Kadra at the beginning of November, and accusing troops from Eritrea of killing 110 civilians in the city of Axum on 27 and 28 November."
] |
Who was the director of One of Those? | [
"Aldo Fabrizi",
"Aldo Fabbrizi"
] | director | One of Those | 2,941,210 | 81 | [
{
"id": "28537224",
"title": "Robert Altman",
"text": " As director",
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},
{
"id": "32206158",
"title": "Robert Mandel",
"text": " Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.",
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{
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"title": "New York University Press",
"text": "Arthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ",
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},
{
"id": "26431129",
"title": "Director (2009 film)",
"text": " Director is a 2009 action film directed by Aleks Rosenberg, produced by Alex Cohen, and starring Claudia Davilla, Stephane Kay, Mike Paris and Wu-Tang Clan-affiliated group's Prodigal Sunn. The film is set in Miami, Florida.",
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{
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"title": "John C. Zak",
"text": "Coordinating Producer (1989) ; Producer (1989-1996) ; Supervising Producer (1996-1999) ; Director (1990's) Director (1986) Director (1980's) Lighting Director (1976-1982) ; Director (1987-1988) Director (2004-2005) Director (1980's) Director (1984-1985) Director (2001) Director (1980's) The Bold and the Beautiful Capitol Days of Our Lives General Hospital One Life to Live Rituals Santa Barbara Spyder Games The Young and the Restless",
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{
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"title": "Armondo Linus Acosta",
"text": "Touch of Evil (1958), Orson Welles, director ; Two Women or La Ciociara (1960), Vittorio De Sica, director ; El Cid (1961), Anthony Mann, director ; Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), Stanley Kramer, director ; Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Experiment in Terror (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Lawrence of Arabia (1962), David Lean, director ; The Connection (1962), Shirley Clarke, director ; What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), Robert Aldrich, director ; War Hunt (1962), Denis Sanders, director ; \"The Soldier\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; \"Wonder\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; Gay Purr-ee (1962), animated film, Abe Levitow, director ; The Lord is My Shepherd (1962) from the PSALMS ; \"The Escape\" (1962) from the PSALMS ; The Young Racers (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Haunted Palace (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Birds (1963), Alfred Hitchcock, director ; It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) Stanley Kramer, director ; The Pink Panther (1963), Blake Edwards, director ; Battle Beyond the Sun (1967), Roger Corman, director ",
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{
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"title": "List of film director and editor collaborations",
"text": " (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ",
"score": "1.3461192"
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{
"id": "27840506",
"title": "Peter Mandelson",
"text": " In 1985, the Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock appointed him as the party's Director of Communications. As Director, he was one of the first people in Britain to whom the term \"spin doctor\" was applied; he was thus called \"the Prince of Darkness\". In 1986 Mandelson ran the campaign at the Fulham by-election in which Labour defeated the Conservative Party. For the 1987 election campaign, Mandelson commissioned film director Hugh Hudson, whose Chariots of Fire (1981) had won an Oscar as Best Picture, to make a party political broadcast promoting Neil Kinnock as a potential prime minister. Tagged \"Kinnock – the Movie\", it led ",
"score": "1.3449943"
},
{
"id": "3526914",
"title": "George Marshall (director)",
"text": " director ; Texas (1941) – director ; Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) – director ; Valley of the Sun (1942) – director ; The Forest Rangers (1942) – director ; True to Life (1943) – director ; Riding High (1943) – director ; And the Angels Sing (1944) – director ; Murder, He Says (1945) – director ; Hold That Blonde (1945) – director ; Incendiary Blonde (1945) – director ; The Blue Dahlia (1946) – director ; Monsieur Beaucaire (1946) – director ; The Perils of Pauline (1947) – director ; Variety Girl (1947) – director, cameo ; Hazard (1948) – director ",
"score": "1.3411663"
},
{
"id": "14947161",
"title": "Peter Brinckerhoff",
"text": "Director (1989) Director (1983) Director (1984) Director (entire run, 1999–2008) Director (1991–1993) Stage Manager (1980) Director (entire run, 2001) Director (entire run, 1997–1999) Director (1993–2009) Director (all eps of season two) Director (December 23, 2008–present) Director (May 5, 2009–present) Another World As the World Turns Capitol Passions Santa Barbara Search for Tomorrow Spyder Games Sunset Beach General Hospital General Hospital: Night Shift Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless",
"score": "1.3393548"
},
{
"id": "4093862",
"title": "Irving Lerner",
"text": " unit director) (uncredited) ; Valley Town (1940) (second unit director) ; One Third of a Nation (1939) (second unit director) (uncredited) Hay que matar a B. (1975) ; On Camera (1 episode, 1955) ; Pie in the Sky (1935) The Savage Eye (1960) (technical advisor) ; God's Little Acre (1958) (associate to director) ; Robot Monster (1953) (production associate) New York, New York (1977) (supervising editor) ; Executive Action (1973) (associate editor) Men in War (1957) (production supervisor) The Land (1942) New York, New York (1977) (our gratitude and respect to) As Director As Producer As Editor As Second Unit Director or Assistant Director As Actor As Miscellaneous Crew Editing Department Production Manager As Cinematographer Dedicatee",
"score": "1.3377615"
},
{
"id": "15401256",
"title": "Norman Dyhrenfurth",
"text": " Dyhrenfurth was second unit director and technical advisor for the 1982 film Five Days One Summer, starring Sean Connery.",
"score": "1.3359554"
},
{
"id": "1107086",
"title": "The Director (novel)",
"text": " The Director (ISBN: 0-380-00669-3) is a novel by United States author Henry Denker, published in 1971. The novel is about an ambitious young film director, named Jock Finley, who uses two prominent film stars Carr and Daisy Donnel (ostensibly based on John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe) to rebuild his already damaged career. The novel is laced with sharp dialogue and explicit sexual encounters in line with the counterculture of the 1970s. The Underlying theme of the novel is the clash of generations as of values.",
"score": "1.3350691"
},
{
"id": "10011892",
"title": "Aaron Director",
"text": " Aaron Director (September 21, 1901 – September 11, 2004) was a Russian-born American economist and academic who played a central role in the development of the field Law and Economics and the Chicago school of economics. Director was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and together with his brother-in-law, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, Director influenced some of the next generation of jurists, including Robert Bork, Richard Posner, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.",
"score": "1.3327312"
},
{
"id": "9163596",
"title": "One of Those",
"text": " One of Those (Una di quelle, also known as Totò, Peppino e... una di quelle) is a 1953 Italian comedy-drama film produced, written, directed and starred by Aldo Fabrizi.",
"score": "1.3326781"
},
{
"id": "14735658",
"title": "James A. Baffico",
"text": "Occasional Director (2004, 2005) ; Director (1993-1998; 2000-2004) executive producer (1981-1982) Producer/Director (1981-1985) Director (1998-1999) Director (1989; 2006- August 16, 2007) ; Occasional Director (2004, 2005, 2006) ; Occasional Script Writer (2003) All My Children The Doctors Another World As the World Turns Days of Our Lives",
"score": "1.3306724"
},
{
"id": "3048765",
"title": "William P. Cartlidge",
"text": "The Adventurers (1970), assistant director ; Fragment of Fear (1970), assistant director ; The Last Valley (1971), assistant director ; Friends (1971), assistant director ; Nearest and Dearest (1972), assistant director ; Young Winston (1972), assistant director ; Phase IV (1974), assistant director ; That's Your Funeral (1974), assistant director ; Paul and Michelle (1974), associate producer ; Seven Nights in Japan (1976), associate producer ; The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), associate producer ; Moonraker (1979), associate producer ",
"score": "1.3266459"
},
{
"id": "14550730",
"title": "William Ludel",
"text": "Director (1972-1974) Director (1994-present) Occasional Director (1990s) Another World General Hospital Days of Our Lives",
"score": "1.326179"
},
{
"id": "32564150",
"title": "Robin Duval",
"text": " Robin Arthur Philip Duval (born 1941) was Director of the British Board of Film Classification, (the \"Film Censor\"), from 1999 to 2004. Duval was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham before reading history at University College London (UCL) during which he took part in the first series of University Challenge. He subsequently studied at the University of Michigan as a Fulbright Scholar. He began his career in BBC radio and as a TV advertisement writer and producer at J. Walter Thompson. In 1968 he joined the Central Office of Information (COI), eventually becoming their Head of Television and Film Production. He then became Deputy Director of Programmes at the Independent Television Commission before succeeding James Ferman as Director of the BBFC in 1999. His directorship was marked by his 2000 decision no longer to cut films for adults (unless they broke criminal law). He also abolished the '12' ",
"score": "1.3252872"
},
{
"id": "32550821",
"title": "Jack Kinney",
"text": " (1945) ; Tiger Trouble (director) (1945) ; The Story of Menstruation (short documentary) (director) (uncredited; 1946) ; Goofy Gymnastics (director) (1949) ; Tennis Racquet (director) (1949) ; Hold That Pose (director) (1950) ; Motor Mania (director) (1950) ; The Brave Engineer (director) (1950) ; How to Ride a Horse (director) (1950) ; Lion Down (director) (1951) ; Father's Lion (director) (1951) ; No Smoking (director) (1951) ; Fathers Are People (director) (1951) ; Get Rich Quick (director) (1951) ; Tomorrow We Diet! (director) (1951) ; Cold War (1951) (director) ; Home Made Home (director) (1951) ; Cold Storage (director) (1951) ; How to Be a Detective (1952) ; Two Weeks Vacation (director) (1952) ; Teachers Are People (director) (1952) ; Two Gun Goofy ",
"score": "1.3219333"
}
] | [
"Robert Altman\n As director",
"Robert Mandel\n Festival at Lincoln Center. Mandel went on to become a successful film director, as well as a television series director, having directed Lost, Nash Bridges and The Practice. He was the director of the pilot for The X-Files and the sixth episode of Prison Break. Mandel was the original director hired on for what was then titled Carrie 2: Say You're Sorry but quickly left the production over \"creative differences.\" Katt Shea took over as director for the film, which was eventually released as The Rage: Carrie 2. Mandel was the dean of AFI Conservatory for nine years from 2005 to 2014. He was the first alumnus of the program to be selected a dean.",
"New York University Press\nArthur Huntington Nason, 1916–1932 ; no director, 1932–1946 ; Jean B. Barr (interim director), 1946–1952 ; Filmore Hyde, 1952–1957 ; Wilbur McKee, acting director, 1957–1958 ; William B. Harvey, 1958–1966 ; Christopher Kentera, 1966–1974 ; Malcolm C. Johnson, 1974–1981 ; Colin Jones, 1981–1996 ; Niko Pfund, 1996–2000 ; Steve Maikowski, 2001–2014 ; Ellen Chodosh, 2014–present ",
"Director (2009 film)\n Director is a 2009 action film directed by Aleks Rosenberg, produced by Alex Cohen, and starring Claudia Davilla, Stephane Kay, Mike Paris and Wu-Tang Clan-affiliated group's Prodigal Sunn. The film is set in Miami, Florida.",
"John C. Zak\nCoordinating Producer (1989) ; Producer (1989-1996) ; Supervising Producer (1996-1999) ; Director (1990's) Director (1986) Director (1980's) Lighting Director (1976-1982) ; Director (1987-1988) Director (2004-2005) Director (1980's) Director (1984-1985) Director (2001) Director (1980's) The Bold and the Beautiful Capitol Days of Our Lives General Hospital One Life to Live Rituals Santa Barbara Spyder Games The Young and the Restless",
"Armondo Linus Acosta\nTouch of Evil (1958), Orson Welles, director ; Two Women or La Ciociara (1960), Vittorio De Sica, director ; El Cid (1961), Anthony Mann, director ; Judgment at Nuremberg (1961), Stanley Kramer, director ; Days of Wine and Roses (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Experiment in Terror (1962), Blake Edwards, director ; Lawrence of Arabia (1962), David Lean, director ; The Connection (1962), Shirley Clarke, director ; What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), Robert Aldrich, director ; War Hunt (1962), Denis Sanders, director ; \"The Soldier\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; \"Wonder\" (1962), from the PSALMS ; Gay Purr-ee (1962), animated film, Abe Levitow, director ; The Lord is My Shepherd (1962) from the PSALMS ; \"The Escape\" (1962) from the PSALMS ; The Young Racers (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Haunted Palace (1963), Roger Corman, director ; The Birds (1963), Alfred Hitchcock, director ; It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) Stanley Kramer, director ; The Pink Panther (1963), Blake Edwards, director ; Battle Beyond the Sun (1967), Roger Corman, director ",
"List of film director and editor collaborations\n (1983). ; Randal Kleiser: Jeff Gourson (1986–1998), Shadow of Doubt (1998). ; Stanley Kubrick: Ray Lovejoy (1968–1980), 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968). ; Spike Lee: Samuel D. Pollard (1990–2000), 4 Little Girls (1997). ; Mervyn LeRoy: Harold F. Kress (1941–1954), Random Harvest (1942). ; Kevin Lima: Gregory Perler (1995-2007), Enchanted (2007). ; Justin Lin: Kelly Matsumoto (2006–2016), Fast & Furious (2013). ; Jerry London: Michael Brown (1988–1998), Beauty (1998). ; Joseph Losey: Reginald Mills (1954–1964), The Servant (1963). ; Baz Luhrmann: Jill Bilcock (1992–2002), Moulin Rouge! (2002). ; David Lynch: Mary Sweeney (1992–2001), Mulholland Drive (2001). ; David Mackenzie: Jake Roberts (2002–present), Hell ",
"Peter Mandelson\n In 1985, the Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock appointed him as the party's Director of Communications. As Director, he was one of the first people in Britain to whom the term \"spin doctor\" was applied; he was thus called \"the Prince of Darkness\". In 1986 Mandelson ran the campaign at the Fulham by-election in which Labour defeated the Conservative Party. For the 1987 election campaign, Mandelson commissioned film director Hugh Hudson, whose Chariots of Fire (1981) had won an Oscar as Best Picture, to make a party political broadcast promoting Neil Kinnock as a potential prime minister. Tagged \"Kinnock – the Movie\", it led ",
"George Marshall (director)\n director ; Texas (1941) – director ; Star Spangled Rhythm (1942) – director ; Valley of the Sun (1942) – director ; The Forest Rangers (1942) – director ; True to Life (1943) – director ; Riding High (1943) – director ; And the Angels Sing (1944) – director ; Murder, He Says (1945) – director ; Hold That Blonde (1945) – director ; Incendiary Blonde (1945) – director ; The Blue Dahlia (1946) – director ; Monsieur Beaucaire (1946) – director ; The Perils of Pauline (1947) – director ; Variety Girl (1947) – director, cameo ; Hazard (1948) – director ",
"Peter Brinckerhoff\nDirector (1989) Director (1983) Director (1984) Director (entire run, 1999–2008) Director (1991–1993) Stage Manager (1980) Director (entire run, 2001) Director (entire run, 1997–1999) Director (1993–2009) Director (all eps of season two) Director (December 23, 2008–present) Director (May 5, 2009–present) Another World As the World Turns Capitol Passions Santa Barbara Search for Tomorrow Spyder Games Sunset Beach General Hospital General Hospital: Night Shift Days of Our Lives The Young and the Restless",
"Irving Lerner\n unit director) (uncredited) ; Valley Town (1940) (second unit director) ; One Third of a Nation (1939) (second unit director) (uncredited) Hay que matar a B. (1975) ; On Camera (1 episode, 1955) ; Pie in the Sky (1935) The Savage Eye (1960) (technical advisor) ; God's Little Acre (1958) (associate to director) ; Robot Monster (1953) (production associate) New York, New York (1977) (supervising editor) ; Executive Action (1973) (associate editor) Men in War (1957) (production supervisor) The Land (1942) New York, New York (1977) (our gratitude and respect to) As Director As Producer As Editor As Second Unit Director or Assistant Director As Actor As Miscellaneous Crew Editing Department Production Manager As Cinematographer Dedicatee",
"Norman Dyhrenfurth\n Dyhrenfurth was second unit director and technical advisor for the 1982 film Five Days One Summer, starring Sean Connery.",
"The Director (novel)\n The Director (ISBN: 0-380-00669-3) is a novel by United States author Henry Denker, published in 1971. The novel is about an ambitious young film director, named Jock Finley, who uses two prominent film stars Carr and Daisy Donnel (ostensibly based on John Wayne and Marilyn Monroe) to rebuild his already damaged career. The novel is laced with sharp dialogue and explicit sexual encounters in line with the counterculture of the 1970s. The Underlying theme of the novel is the clash of generations as of values.",
"Aaron Director\n Aaron Director (September 21, 1901 – September 11, 2004) was a Russian-born American economist and academic who played a central role in the development of the field Law and Economics and the Chicago school of economics. Director was a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, and together with his brother-in-law, Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, Director influenced some of the next generation of jurists, including Robert Bork, Richard Posner, Antonin Scalia and Chief Justice William Rehnquist.",
"One of Those\n One of Those (Una di quelle, also known as Totò, Peppino e... una di quelle) is a 1953 Italian comedy-drama film produced, written, directed and starred by Aldo Fabrizi.",
"James A. Baffico\nOccasional Director (2004, 2005) ; Director (1993-1998; 2000-2004) executive producer (1981-1982) Producer/Director (1981-1985) Director (1998-1999) Director (1989; 2006- August 16, 2007) ; Occasional Director (2004, 2005, 2006) ; Occasional Script Writer (2003) All My Children The Doctors Another World As the World Turns Days of Our Lives",
"William P. Cartlidge\nThe Adventurers (1970), assistant director ; Fragment of Fear (1970), assistant director ; The Last Valley (1971), assistant director ; Friends (1971), assistant director ; Nearest and Dearest (1972), assistant director ; Young Winston (1972), assistant director ; Phase IV (1974), assistant director ; That's Your Funeral (1974), assistant director ; Paul and Michelle (1974), associate producer ; Seven Nights in Japan (1976), associate producer ; The Spy Who Loved Me (1977), associate producer ; Moonraker (1979), associate producer ",
"William Ludel\nDirector (1972-1974) Director (1994-present) Occasional Director (1990s) Another World General Hospital Days of Our Lives",
"Robin Duval\n Robin Arthur Philip Duval (born 1941) was Director of the British Board of Film Classification, (the \"Film Censor\"), from 1999 to 2004. Duval was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham before reading history at University College London (UCL) during which he took part in the first series of University Challenge. He subsequently studied at the University of Michigan as a Fulbright Scholar. He began his career in BBC radio and as a TV advertisement writer and producer at J. Walter Thompson. In 1968 he joined the Central Office of Information (COI), eventually becoming their Head of Television and Film Production. He then became Deputy Director of Programmes at the Independent Television Commission before succeeding James Ferman as Director of the BBFC in 1999. His directorship was marked by his 2000 decision no longer to cut films for adults (unless they broke criminal law). He also abolished the '12' ",
"Jack Kinney\n (1945) ; Tiger Trouble (director) (1945) ; The Story of Menstruation (short documentary) (director) (uncredited; 1946) ; Goofy Gymnastics (director) (1949) ; Tennis Racquet (director) (1949) ; Hold That Pose (director) (1950) ; Motor Mania (director) (1950) ; The Brave Engineer (director) (1950) ; How to Ride a Horse (director) (1950) ; Lion Down (director) (1951) ; Father's Lion (director) (1951) ; No Smoking (director) (1951) ; Fathers Are People (director) (1951) ; Get Rich Quick (director) (1951) ; Tomorrow We Diet! (director) (1951) ; Cold War (1951) (director) ; Home Made Home (director) (1951) ; Cold Storage (director) (1951) ; How to Be a Detective (1952) ; Two Weeks Vacation (director) (1952) ; Teachers Are People (director) (1952) ; Two Gun Goofy "
] |
In what city was Fernando García born? | [
"Santiago",
"Santiago de Chile",
"Santiago, Chile"
] | place of birth | Fernando García (composer) | 551,266 | 87 | [
{
"id": "3255667",
"title": "Fernando Luis García",
"text": " García (birth name: Fernando Luis García Ledesma ) was born in Utuado, Puerto Rico where he received his primary and secondary education. He moved to San Juan where he was hired by the Texas Company as a file clerk.",
"score": "1.8494431"
},
{
"id": "30056649",
"title": "Fernando García (composer)",
"text": " Fernando García (born July 4, 1930 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean composer. Active since 1956 he has done orchestral music, chamber music, etc. He studied with Juan Orrego-Salas and Gustavo Becerra-Schmidt, among others. His style is strongly influenced by serialism and aleatoric procedures. He also played a role in the beginnings of electroacoustic music in Chile, after a trip he made to France in the early 1950s where he heard musique concrete. He worked for the Instituto de Extensión Musical of the University of Chile, and in 1962 he premiered his most important piece, the cantata América Insurrecta, which won an award at the Chilean Music Festival. After the Chilean coup-d'état, he was forced into exile, first in Perú (1973-1979), and then in Cuba (1979-1990). He returned to his country in 1989 and joined the Faculty of Arts of the University of Chile where he taught musicology until 2009. In 2002, he received the National Prize for Musical Arts.",
"score": "1.7133133"
},
{
"id": "29173832",
"title": "Juan García Postigo",
"text": " García was born on January 19, 1982 in Málaga, Costa del Sol, Andalusia, Spain. He attended the Colegio Público Ramón Simonet for his primary education. As a teenager, García played indoor soccer and was his school team's goalkeeper. He was discovered at seventeen (17) years old by Manuel Beltrán, a director of a talent management agency in Málaga, while García was commencing studies for a business management degree at the University of Malaga. His foray into modeling and beauty pageant competitions, and then consequently acting, was accidental and with much hesitation at first. García's parents, especially his mother, wanted him to pursue and complete his degree before anything else. His parents did not want him to get distracted from his studies.",
"score": "1.6928201"
},
{
"id": "28784372",
"title": "Jorge Garcia",
"text": " Garcia was born in Omaha, Nebraska. His mother, Dora Mesa, is a Cuban-born professor, and his father, Humberto Garcia, is a Chilean-born doctor. He grew up in San Juan Capistrano in Orange County, California and went to San Clemente High School. He wrestled in high school, where he was given the nickname \"Baby-Faced Killer\". As a senior, he was selected by the faculty as \"Triton of the Year\", the highest award given to a graduating senior. Garcia graduated from the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1995 as a Communication Studies major. He also studied acting at the Beverly Hills Playhouse acting school.",
"score": "1.6814213"
},
{
"id": "30056132",
"title": "Fernando García Roel",
"text": " Fernando García Roel (14 August 1921 – 26 February 2009) was a Mexican chemical engineer. He served as the second rector of the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (ITESM, 1960–1984). García Roel was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, into a family composed by Mario A. García and María Roel, sister of prominent historian Santiago Roel. He received a bachelor's degree in Chemical Engineering from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (1943) and a master's degree in the same discipline from the University of Wisconsin–Madison (1948). In 1966 he was given the University of Wisconsin–Madison's Distinguished Service Award and in 1984 the Víctor Márquez Domínguez Prize of the Mexican Institute of Chemical Engineers. He was conferred an honorary doctorate by the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1979. One of the streets crossing the main campus of the Monterrey Institute of Technology is named in his honor.",
"score": "1.6766708"
},
{
"id": "29879356",
"title": "Manuel Pereiras García",
"text": " Pereiras García was born in Cifuentes, Cuba, in 1950. His works have been performed at Mercy College, Dumé Spanish Theatre, Stonewall Repertory Theatre, Theater for the New City, and INTAR Theatre. Pereiras García has also written about the history of theater with a focus on Cuban and Spanish drama. In 1998, his complete plays were published by Presbyter's Peartree. He currently resides in New York City.",
"score": "1.6381717"
},
{
"id": "29624728",
"title": "Fernando Colunga",
"text": " Born in Mexico City, Colunga is the only son of engineers, Fernando Colunga and Margarita Olivares. He earned a degree in civil engineering and operated a hardware store after graduation. He has also worked as an auto dealer, clerk, and bartender.",
"score": "1.637716"
},
{
"id": "30855439",
"title": "Jorge García Usta",
"text": " García was born in the San Jerónimo hospital of Montería as grandson of Syro-Lebanese immigrants, and was son of the physician José Antonio García Schotborgh and his wife Nevija Usta Zaruf, who lived in Ciénaga de Oro. When he was three years old, his father died in Puebla, Mexico, his mother died in 1988. In 1979 he matriculated at Universidad de Cartagena, where he lectured later, to study law, but soon changed to Saint Thomas Aquinas University, where he did his studies of philosophy and literature. In 1989 he married Rocío García. García worked for several Colombian journals and was president of the Circle of Journalists in Cartagena (Círculo de Periodistas de Cartagena and of the Cultural Foundation Héctor Rojas Herazo. In 1984 he was awarded with the national León de Greiff poetry award. Due to a cerebral disease he died in the hospital of Bocagrande.",
"score": "1.6376097"
},
{
"id": "3897168",
"title": "Fernando García (sportsperson)",
"text": " Fernando García (born 18 April 1935) is a Filipino sportsperson who competed in wrestling and judo. He competed in two wrestling events at the 1964 Summer Olympics and in two judo events at the 1972 Summer Olympics.",
"score": "1.6375315"
},
{
"id": "6172123",
"title": "Fernando Garcia Ponce",
"text": " García Ponce was born in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico on August 25, 1933 to Juan García Rodes, immigrant from Spain, and María \"Monina\" Ponce G. Cantón, a member of the so-called \"casta divina\" of Yucatán. At the age of 11, García Ponce's family moved to Mexico City. In 1952, García Ponce enrolled at the National Autonomous University of Mexico to study architecture. In 1967, García Ponce met the French Canadian actress Denise Brosseau, who had previously been married to Alejandro Jodorowsky. Brosseau and García Ponce married and had one child, Esteban García Brosseau. On July 11, 1987, García Ponce died of a heart attack in Coyoacán, Mexico City; García Ponce was 53 at the time. His elder brother, Juan Garcia Ponce, was a well known author and has published works about his brother's art and life.",
"score": "1.6293111"
},
{
"id": "9747314",
"title": "Fernando Luis Alvarez",
"text": " Alvarez was born in Greenwich, Connecticut, and he was moved to Colombia at the age of three, where he lived with his grandmother till the age of twelve. Alvarez went through the school system from elementary to Greenwich High School. He then moved to London to pursue higher study from Richmond, The American International University in London in International Business & Finance, Economics and Political Science. In 2008, he started working with collector and gallerist Allan Stone. In the same year, while working at the Stone residence, he started the solo studio, Greenwich Soho Factory in Greenwich and in 2009 he founded the Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery in Stamford,Connecticut which opened its second wing in the year 2013.",
"score": "1.5999638"
},
{
"id": "3764567",
"title": "Dora García",
"text": " García was born in Valladolid, Spain and studied Fine Arts at the University of Salamanca, Spain, and the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, Holland. She is represented by Michel Rein Gallery, Paris/Brussels, ProjecteSD Barcelona, galería Juana de Aizpuru, Madrid, and Ellen de Bruijne Projects, Amsterdam.",
"score": "1.594625"
},
{
"id": "2791550",
"title": "Adrian Garcia",
"text": " Garcia was born in Houston, Texas to Maria and Ignacio Garcia, the youngest of six children. His parents immigrated to the US after his father received a guest-worker visa before his birth, after which he petitioned to be re-admitted to the US under a work visa. In his youth, Adrian Garcia helped at his parents’ automotive shop fixing cars.",
"score": "1.5927256"
},
{
"id": "6872208",
"title": "Gabriel García Román",
"text": " Born in Zacatecas, Mexico, in 1973, García Román and his family immigrated to the United States when he was two years old. He lived with his family in the San Francisco Bay Area for three years. At the age of five they moved to North Side of Chicago where he spent his formative years. Growing up in a Mexican working-class household he was always afraid of coming out to his family and hid his sexuality. This gave him a chance to blend into the background and observe life's smaller details. At the age of twenty-six he moved to New York to reinvent himself and live life.",
"score": "1.5827119"
},
{
"id": "28716765",
"title": "Andrés García",
"text": " Andrés García (born May 24, 1941) is a Dominican-Mexican actor. He is one of the more popular and well known actors in Mexico and Latin America and among Hispanic people in the United States. He was also a scuba diving instructor.",
"score": "1.5826545"
},
{
"id": "29222616",
"title": "Pablo García Pérez de Lara",
"text": " He was born in 1970 in Barcelona, Spain. He studied at the Center d'Estudis Cinematogràfics de Catalunya (CECC).",
"score": "1.5780549"
},
{
"id": "12617331",
"title": "David García (footballer, born 1994)",
"text": " Born in Pamplona, Navarre, García finished joined CA Osasuna's youth setup in 2003, aged nine. He made his senior debut in 2011–12 season with the reserves in Segunda División B, but appeared more regularly with the Juvenil side. García was called up to the main squad for the pre-season by manager Jan Urban in the summer of 2014, and scored the last of a 4–0 win against Brentford. He played his first match as a professional on 30 August, starting in a 1–1 away draw with Real Zaragoza for the Segunda División. On 26 January 2015, García signed a contract extension with the club running until 2019. He scored his first ",
"score": "1.5775234"
},
{
"id": "28284444",
"title": "David García (footballer, born 1981)",
"text": " Born in Manresa, Barcelona, Catalonia, García was a product of RCD Espanyol's youth system, and made his La Liga debut on 8 January 2000 in a 0–0 home draw against Deportivo de La Coruña, becoming a regular fixture in the 2001–02 season and also being named second team captain after Raúl Tamudo, the only player to have been on Espanyol's books for longer; on 23 March 2003 he scored the first of only two competitive goals during his career, helping to a 1–1 draw at Valencia CF. In early 2007, García renewed his link to the Pericos for a further two seasons, stating about the deal: \"I want to finish my career here. I can't imagine myself wearing any other ",
"score": "1.5752032"
},
{
"id": "28716766",
"title": "Andrés García",
"text": " Andrés García was born and raised in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He is the son of Spanish exiles from the Spanish Civil War who received refuge in the country during the regime of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo. His father was a famous Spanish Republican combat aviator named Andrés García La Calle. Garcia emigrated to Mexico, where he pursued a career in show business. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, he became a sex symbol in Mexico and the rest of Latin America, participating in movies, Spanish soap operas and photo-romance novels (magazine featuring photos of actors who create a story—a popular phenomenon across Latin America during the 1970s). In 1984 García participated in Tú o nadie, with Lucía Mendez and Salvador Pineda. Tú o nadie became a major hit and helped García to receive many international offers. He accepted an offer to go to Puerto Rico in 1986, where he acted in the soap operas Amame, with Johanna Rosaly, and Escándalo, with Iris Chacón and Charytín. Escándalo flopped, and the number of episodes recorded for that soap opera was cut in half by the television channel.",
"score": "1.5741472"
},
{
"id": "4497702",
"title": "Alfred García",
"text": " García was born on 14 March 1997 in El Prat de Llobregat, Catalonia. He began formal training in vocals and trombone at the age of seven. García is also a self-taught guitarist, drummer, and keyboardist. He received musical training at the Unió Filharmònica del Prat. García is studying for a degree in audiovisual communication, as well as being in his third year of a higher degree in music and jazz and modern music studies at the Taller de Músics, a music school in Barcelona.",
"score": "1.5732896"
}
] | [
"Fernando Luis García\n García (birth name: Fernando Luis García Ledesma ) was born in Utuado, Puerto Rico where he received his primary and secondary education. He moved to San Juan where he was hired by the Texas Company as a file clerk.",
"Fernando García (composer)\n Fernando García (born July 4, 1930 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean composer. Active since 1956 he has done orchestral music, chamber music, etc. He studied with Juan Orrego-Salas and Gustavo Becerra-Schmidt, among others. His style is strongly influenced by serialism and aleatoric procedures. He also played a role in the beginnings of electroacoustic music in Chile, after a trip he made to France in the early 1950s where he heard musique concrete. He worked for the Instituto de Extensión Musical of the University of Chile, and in 1962 he premiered his most important piece, the cantata América Insurrecta, which won an award at the Chilean Music Festival. After the Chilean coup-d'état, he was forced into exile, first in Perú (1973-1979), and then in Cuba (1979-1990). He returned to his country in 1989 and joined the Faculty of Arts of the University of Chile where he taught musicology until 2009. In 2002, he received the National Prize for Musical Arts.",
"Juan García Postigo\n García was born on January 19, 1982 in Málaga, Costa del Sol, Andalusia, Spain. He attended the Colegio Público Ramón Simonet for his primary education. As a teenager, García played indoor soccer and was his school team's goalkeeper. He was discovered at seventeen (17) years old by Manuel Beltrán, a director of a talent management agency in Málaga, while García was commencing studies for a business management degree at the University of Malaga. His foray into modeling and beauty pageant competitions, and then consequently acting, was accidental and with much hesitation at first. García's parents, especially his mother, wanted him to pursue and complete his degree before anything else. His parents did not want him to get distracted from his studies.",
"Jorge Garcia\n Garcia was born in Omaha, Nebraska. His mother, Dora Mesa, is a Cuban-born professor, and his father, Humberto Garcia, is a Chilean-born doctor. He grew up in San Juan Capistrano in Orange County, California and went to San Clemente High School. He wrestled in high school, where he was given the nickname \"Baby-Faced Killer\". As a senior, he was selected by the faculty as \"Triton of the Year\", the highest award given to a graduating senior. Garcia graduated from the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) in 1995 as a Communication Studies major. He also studied acting at the Beverly Hills Playhouse acting school.",
"Fernando García Roel\n Fernando García Roel (14 August 1921 – 26 February 2009) was a Mexican chemical engineer. He served as the second rector of the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (ITESM, 1960–1984). García Roel was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, into a family composed by Mario A. García and María Roel, sister of prominent historian Santiago Roel. He received a bachelor's degree in Chemical Engineering from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (1943) and a master's degree in the same discipline from the University of Wisconsin–Madison (1948). In 1966 he was given the University of Wisconsin–Madison's Distinguished Service Award and in 1984 the Víctor Márquez Domínguez Prize of the Mexican Institute of Chemical Engineers. He was conferred an honorary doctorate by the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1979. One of the streets crossing the main campus of the Monterrey Institute of Technology is named in his honor.",
"Manuel Pereiras García\n Pereiras García was born in Cifuentes, Cuba, in 1950. His works have been performed at Mercy College, Dumé Spanish Theatre, Stonewall Repertory Theatre, Theater for the New City, and INTAR Theatre. Pereiras García has also written about the history of theater with a focus on Cuban and Spanish drama. In 1998, his complete plays were published by Presbyter's Peartree. He currently resides in New York City.",
"Fernando Colunga\n Born in Mexico City, Colunga is the only son of engineers, Fernando Colunga and Margarita Olivares. He earned a degree in civil engineering and operated a hardware store after graduation. He has also worked as an auto dealer, clerk, and bartender.",
"Jorge García Usta\n García was born in the San Jerónimo hospital of Montería as grandson of Syro-Lebanese immigrants, and was son of the physician José Antonio García Schotborgh and his wife Nevija Usta Zaruf, who lived in Ciénaga de Oro. When he was three years old, his father died in Puebla, Mexico, his mother died in 1988. In 1979 he matriculated at Universidad de Cartagena, where he lectured later, to study law, but soon changed to Saint Thomas Aquinas University, where he did his studies of philosophy and literature. In 1989 he married Rocío García. García worked for several Colombian journals and was president of the Circle of Journalists in Cartagena (Círculo de Periodistas de Cartagena and of the Cultural Foundation Héctor Rojas Herazo. In 1984 he was awarded with the national León de Greiff poetry award. Due to a cerebral disease he died in the hospital of Bocagrande.",
"Fernando García (sportsperson)\n Fernando García (born 18 April 1935) is a Filipino sportsperson who competed in wrestling and judo. He competed in two wrestling events at the 1964 Summer Olympics and in two judo events at the 1972 Summer Olympics.",
"Fernando Garcia Ponce\n García Ponce was born in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico on August 25, 1933 to Juan García Rodes, immigrant from Spain, and María \"Monina\" Ponce G. Cantón, a member of the so-called \"casta divina\" of Yucatán. At the age of 11, García Ponce's family moved to Mexico City. In 1952, García Ponce enrolled at the National Autonomous University of Mexico to study architecture. In 1967, García Ponce met the French Canadian actress Denise Brosseau, who had previously been married to Alejandro Jodorowsky. Brosseau and García Ponce married and had one child, Esteban García Brosseau. On July 11, 1987, García Ponce died of a heart attack in Coyoacán, Mexico City; García Ponce was 53 at the time. His elder brother, Juan Garcia Ponce, was a well known author and has published works about his brother's art and life.",
"Fernando Luis Alvarez\n Alvarez was born in Greenwich, Connecticut, and he was moved to Colombia at the age of three, where he lived with his grandmother till the age of twelve. Alvarez went through the school system from elementary to Greenwich High School. He then moved to London to pursue higher study from Richmond, The American International University in London in International Business & Finance, Economics and Political Science. In 2008, he started working with collector and gallerist Allan Stone. In the same year, while working at the Stone residence, he started the solo studio, Greenwich Soho Factory in Greenwich and in 2009 he founded the Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery in Stamford,Connecticut which opened its second wing in the year 2013.",
"Dora García\n García was born in Valladolid, Spain and studied Fine Arts at the University of Salamanca, Spain, and the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam, Holland. She is represented by Michel Rein Gallery, Paris/Brussels, ProjecteSD Barcelona, galería Juana de Aizpuru, Madrid, and Ellen de Bruijne Projects, Amsterdam.",
"Adrian Garcia\n Garcia was born in Houston, Texas to Maria and Ignacio Garcia, the youngest of six children. His parents immigrated to the US after his father received a guest-worker visa before his birth, after which he petitioned to be re-admitted to the US under a work visa. In his youth, Adrian Garcia helped at his parents’ automotive shop fixing cars.",
"Gabriel García Román\n Born in Zacatecas, Mexico, in 1973, García Román and his family immigrated to the United States when he was two years old. He lived with his family in the San Francisco Bay Area for three years. At the age of five they moved to North Side of Chicago where he spent his formative years. Growing up in a Mexican working-class household he was always afraid of coming out to his family and hid his sexuality. This gave him a chance to blend into the background and observe life's smaller details. At the age of twenty-six he moved to New York to reinvent himself and live life.",
"Andrés García\n Andrés García (born May 24, 1941) is a Dominican-Mexican actor. He is one of the more popular and well known actors in Mexico and Latin America and among Hispanic people in the United States. He was also a scuba diving instructor.",
"Pablo García Pérez de Lara\n He was born in 1970 in Barcelona, Spain. He studied at the Center d'Estudis Cinematogràfics de Catalunya (CECC).",
"David García (footballer, born 1994)\n Born in Pamplona, Navarre, García finished joined CA Osasuna's youth setup in 2003, aged nine. He made his senior debut in 2011–12 season with the reserves in Segunda División B, but appeared more regularly with the Juvenil side. García was called up to the main squad for the pre-season by manager Jan Urban in the summer of 2014, and scored the last of a 4–0 win against Brentford. He played his first match as a professional on 30 August, starting in a 1–1 away draw with Real Zaragoza for the Segunda División. On 26 January 2015, García signed a contract extension with the club running until 2019. He scored his first ",
"David García (footballer, born 1981)\n Born in Manresa, Barcelona, Catalonia, García was a product of RCD Espanyol's youth system, and made his La Liga debut on 8 January 2000 in a 0–0 home draw against Deportivo de La Coruña, becoming a regular fixture in the 2001–02 season and also being named second team captain after Raúl Tamudo, the only player to have been on Espanyol's books for longer; on 23 March 2003 he scored the first of only two competitive goals during his career, helping to a 1–1 draw at Valencia CF. In early 2007, García renewed his link to the Pericos for a further two seasons, stating about the deal: \"I want to finish my career here. I can't imagine myself wearing any other ",
"Andrés García\n Andrés García was born and raised in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He is the son of Spanish exiles from the Spanish Civil War who received refuge in the country during the regime of Rafael Leónidas Trujillo. His father was a famous Spanish Republican combat aviator named Andrés García La Calle. Garcia emigrated to Mexico, where he pursued a career in show business. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, he became a sex symbol in Mexico and the rest of Latin America, participating in movies, Spanish soap operas and photo-romance novels (magazine featuring photos of actors who create a story—a popular phenomenon across Latin America during the 1970s). In 1984 García participated in Tú o nadie, with Lucía Mendez and Salvador Pineda. Tú o nadie became a major hit and helped García to receive many international offers. He accepted an offer to go to Puerto Rico in 1986, where he acted in the soap operas Amame, with Johanna Rosaly, and Escándalo, with Iris Chacón and Charytín. Escándalo flopped, and the number of episodes recorded for that soap opera was cut in half by the television channel.",
"Alfred García\n García was born on 14 March 1997 in El Prat de Llobregat, Catalonia. He began formal training in vocals and trombone at the age of seven. García is also a self-taught guitarist, drummer, and keyboardist. He received musical training at the Unió Filharmònica del Prat. García is studying for a degree in audiovisual communication, as well as being in his third year of a higher degree in music and jazz and modern music studies at the Taller de Músics, a music school in Barcelona."
] |
In what country is Oborín? | [
"Slovakia",
"Slovak Republic",
"sk",
"🇸🇰",
"SVK"
] | country | Oborín | 3,376,044 | 73 | [
{
"id": "26846857",
"title": "Oborino",
"text": " Oborino (Оборино) is a rural locality (a village) in Vladimir, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 47 as of 2010. There is 1 street.",
"score": "1.7220196"
},
{
"id": "26846858",
"title": "Oborino",
"text": " Oborino is located 12 km west of Vladimir. Spasskoye is the nearest rural locality.",
"score": "1.6339881"
},
{
"id": "3265521",
"title": "Sergei Oborin",
"text": " Sergei Grigoryevich Oborin (Сергей Григорьевич Оборин; born 12 December 1956) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player.",
"score": "1.4702694"
},
{
"id": "294017",
"title": "Obinna Oleka",
"text": " Obinna Oleka (born November 4, 1993) is an American professional basketball player for BC Beroe of the Bulgarian National Basketball League. He played college basketball at Arizona State.",
"score": "1.4664605"
},
{
"id": "14705604",
"title": "Stepan Oborin",
"text": " Oborin was born on 15 August 1892 in the village of Kamenka in Tver Governorate to a working-class family. He graduated from the parish school in 1903 and became a textile worker. In October 1913, he was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army. He served as a Rjadovoy in the 1st Siberian Division. Oborin graduated from a training unit a year later and became a non-commissioned officer. He fought in World War I on the Western Front in a Siberian Howitzer Artillery Battalion as an artillery observer. He was wounded. Oborin's last rank in the Imperial Army was Junior Feuerwerker. In February 1917, Oborin was discharged from the army due to illness. ",
"score": "1.4628218"
},
{
"id": "27315553",
"title": "Ödeshög",
"text": "🇧🇾 Obol, Belarus ",
"score": "1.4626411"
},
{
"id": "5441798",
"title": "Aborino",
"text": " Aborino is located 15 km west of Noginsk (the district's administrative centre) by road. Oborino Lyuks is the nearest rural locality.",
"score": "1.4592968"
},
{
"id": "32045141",
"title": "Corruption in Equatorial Guinea",
"text": " In 2007, French police uncovered assets in the tens of millions belonging to the Obiang family, including several luxury cars owned by Teodorin worth a combined $6.3 million. In 2010, a French judge ruled that a related corruption case brought by human rights groups against the Obiangs, along with several other ruling African families, could proceed with investigations and hearings. The French government charged Teodorin with money-laundering and seized his massive, multi-million dollar Paris mansion and his fleet of luxury cars. On July 13, 2012, French authorities issued an arrest warrant for Teodorin, for failing to appear at a French money-laundering investigation to answer questions about his spending millions of dollars despite supposedly earning only a modest government salary. In September 2012, Equatorial Guinea sued France in the International Criminal Court after French police raided a Paris mansion owned by Teodorin and found luxury goods worth millions of Euros. The complaint called on the ICC to prohibit France from interfering in its internal affairs and to order France to stop legal action against its representatives.",
"score": "1.4505261"
},
{
"id": "5441797",
"title": "Aborino",
"text": " Aborino (Аборино) is a rural locality (a village) in Aksyono-Butyrskoye Rural Settlement of Noginsky District, Moscow Oblast, Russia. The population was 69 as of 2010. There are 3 streets.",
"score": "1.449338"
},
{
"id": "32045109",
"title": "Corruption in Equatorial Guinea",
"text": " Teodoro Nguema Obiang, known as Teodorin, is the President's oldest son and was for many years the country's minister of forestry. He has been sardonically called \"the world's richest minister of agriculture and forestry.\" Through his solely owned firm Grupo Sofana and its affiliate Somagui Forestal, Teodorin owned, and may still own, \"exclusive rights of exploiting and exporting timber in Equatorial Guinea.\" Teodorin also owns the nation's only TV station, as well as Radio Asonga, the nation's main radio station. In May 2012, he was removed from the ministry and given the title of \"second vice president\", a position that is not mentioned in the nation's constitution, and placed in ",
"score": "1.4438094"
},
{
"id": "3265522",
"title": "Sergei Oborin",
"text": " On 16 October 2019, he left FC Fakel Voronezh by mutual consent after the club gained 3 draws and 3 losses in last 6 league games and dropped to last place in the FNL table.",
"score": "1.412967"
},
{
"id": "14705603",
"title": "Stepan Oborin",
"text": " Stepan Ilyich Oborin (Степан Ильич Оборин; 15 August 1892 – 16 October 1941) was a Red Army major general. Oborin served as a gunner in the Imperial Russian Army in World War I and subsequently joined the Red Army. He fought in the Russian Civil War and became an artillery officer. He led the artillery of the 19th Rifle Corps in the Winter War. After the end of the war he became commander of the 136th Rifle Division and then the 14th Mechanized Corps. The corps was destroyed in the Battle of Białystok–Minsk after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Oborin was wounded during the battle and flew back to Moscow for treatment. He was arrested for desertion, sentenced to death and shot on 16 October 1941. Oborin was posthumously rehabilitated in 1957.",
"score": "1.4039451"
},
{
"id": "29508731",
"title": "Victor Obinna",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.398402"
},
{
"id": "29508730",
"title": "Victor Obinna",
"text": " Source:",
"score": "1.398402"
},
{
"id": "31485585",
"title": "Zorilor",
"text": " Zorilor is a southern district of Cluj-Napoca in Romania. It consists largely of blocks of flats ranging from 4 to 10 storeys. The district is home to the Observator student housing campus. Two 35-floor towers are projected to be constructed in the Sigma area of Zorilor.",
"score": "1.3878202"
},
{
"id": "7900368",
"title": "Ilorin East",
"text": " Ilorin East is a Local Government Area in Kwara State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Oke Oyi. It has an area of 486 km2 and a population of 204,310 at the 2006 census. The postal code of the area is 240.",
"score": "1.3792994"
},
{
"id": "294018",
"title": "Obinna Oleka",
"text": " Oleka grew up in Washington, D.C. with his mother and brother. He played high school basketball at Florida Christian Institute in Cape Coral, Florida, where he averaged 24 points and 11 rebounds as a senior. He also played AAU ball with DC Assault.",
"score": "1.3751911"
},
{
"id": "8165060",
"title": "Obolon (company)",
"text": "Bershad (Vinnytsia Oblast), ; Fastiv (Kyiv Oblast), ; Krasyliv and Chemerivtsi (Khmelnytskyi Oblast), ; Kolomyia (Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast) ; Oleksandria (Kirovohrad Oblast), ; Okhtyrka (Sumy Oblast) ; Rokytne (Rivne Oblast) ; Sevastopol. Obolon has its main site in Kyiv and 8 facilities in Ukraine:",
"score": "1.3686675"
},
{
"id": "14705606",
"title": "Stepan Oborin",
"text": " Between 1921 and 1922 Oborin was a battery commander in the 30th Rifle Division. He became a reservist in December 1922 and returned to active duty in March 1923, continuing as a battery commander in the 30th Artillery Regiment. Oborin graduated from the artillery officers' refresher courses in 1926 and became head of the regimental school from January 1927. In November, he became a battalion commander in the 30th Artillery Regiment. In September 1930, Oborin became assistant to the commander of the 123rd Howitzer Artillery Regiment. From September 1931, Oborin was chief of artillery of the 2nd Mechanized Brigade. In November 1933, he became the commander and commissar of the 73rd Artillery Regiment. Oborin again graduated from the artillery officers' refresher courses in 1934 and in March became head of the course. In April 1936, Oborin became commander of the 11th Rifle Division's artillery regiment. In February 1938, he became head of the divisional artillery.",
"score": "1.3634703"
},
{
"id": "5810605",
"title": "Ilorin",
"text": " For other uses, see Ilorin (disambiguation) Ilorin is the state capital of Kwara State in Western Nigeria. As of the 2006 census, it had a population of 777,667, making it the 7th largest city by population in Nigeria.",
"score": "1.3612349"
}
] | [
"Oborino\n Oborino (Оборино) is a rural locality (a village) in Vladimir, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 47 as of 2010. There is 1 street.",
"Oborino\n Oborino is located 12 km west of Vladimir. Spasskoye is the nearest rural locality.",
"Sergei Oborin\n Sergei Grigoryevich Oborin (Сергей Григорьевич Оборин; born 12 December 1956) is a Russian professional football coach and a former player.",
"Obinna Oleka\n Obinna Oleka (born November 4, 1993) is an American professional basketball player for BC Beroe of the Bulgarian National Basketball League. He played college basketball at Arizona State.",
"Stepan Oborin\n Oborin was born on 15 August 1892 in the village of Kamenka in Tver Governorate to a working-class family. He graduated from the parish school in 1903 and became a textile worker. In October 1913, he was drafted into the Imperial Russian Army. He served as a Rjadovoy in the 1st Siberian Division. Oborin graduated from a training unit a year later and became a non-commissioned officer. He fought in World War I on the Western Front in a Siberian Howitzer Artillery Battalion as an artillery observer. He was wounded. Oborin's last rank in the Imperial Army was Junior Feuerwerker. In February 1917, Oborin was discharged from the army due to illness. ",
"Ödeshög\n🇧🇾 Obol, Belarus ",
"Aborino\n Aborino is located 15 km west of Noginsk (the district's administrative centre) by road. Oborino Lyuks is the nearest rural locality.",
"Corruption in Equatorial Guinea\n In 2007, French police uncovered assets in the tens of millions belonging to the Obiang family, including several luxury cars owned by Teodorin worth a combined $6.3 million. In 2010, a French judge ruled that a related corruption case brought by human rights groups against the Obiangs, along with several other ruling African families, could proceed with investigations and hearings. The French government charged Teodorin with money-laundering and seized his massive, multi-million dollar Paris mansion and his fleet of luxury cars. On July 13, 2012, French authorities issued an arrest warrant for Teodorin, for failing to appear at a French money-laundering investigation to answer questions about his spending millions of dollars despite supposedly earning only a modest government salary. In September 2012, Equatorial Guinea sued France in the International Criminal Court after French police raided a Paris mansion owned by Teodorin and found luxury goods worth millions of Euros. The complaint called on the ICC to prohibit France from interfering in its internal affairs and to order France to stop legal action against its representatives.",
"Aborino\n Aborino (Аборино) is a rural locality (a village) in Aksyono-Butyrskoye Rural Settlement of Noginsky District, Moscow Oblast, Russia. The population was 69 as of 2010. There are 3 streets.",
"Corruption in Equatorial Guinea\n Teodoro Nguema Obiang, known as Teodorin, is the President's oldest son and was for many years the country's minister of forestry. He has been sardonically called \"the world's richest minister of agriculture and forestry.\" Through his solely owned firm Grupo Sofana and its affiliate Somagui Forestal, Teodorin owned, and may still own, \"exclusive rights of exploiting and exporting timber in Equatorial Guinea.\" Teodorin also owns the nation's only TV station, as well as Radio Asonga, the nation's main radio station. In May 2012, he was removed from the ministry and given the title of \"second vice president\", a position that is not mentioned in the nation's constitution, and placed in ",
"Sergei Oborin\n On 16 October 2019, he left FC Fakel Voronezh by mutual consent after the club gained 3 draws and 3 losses in last 6 league games and dropped to last place in the FNL table.",
"Stepan Oborin\n Stepan Ilyich Oborin (Степан Ильич Оборин; 15 August 1892 – 16 October 1941) was a Red Army major general. Oborin served as a gunner in the Imperial Russian Army in World War I and subsequently joined the Red Army. He fought in the Russian Civil War and became an artillery officer. He led the artillery of the 19th Rifle Corps in the Winter War. After the end of the war he became commander of the 136th Rifle Division and then the 14th Mechanized Corps. The corps was destroyed in the Battle of Białystok–Minsk after the German invasion of the Soviet Union. Oborin was wounded during the battle and flew back to Moscow for treatment. He was arrested for desertion, sentenced to death and shot on 16 October 1941. Oborin was posthumously rehabilitated in 1957.",
"Victor Obinna\n Source:",
"Victor Obinna\n Source:",
"Zorilor\n Zorilor is a southern district of Cluj-Napoca in Romania. It consists largely of blocks of flats ranging from 4 to 10 storeys. The district is home to the Observator student housing campus. Two 35-floor towers are projected to be constructed in the Sigma area of Zorilor.",
"Ilorin East\n Ilorin East is a Local Government Area in Kwara State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Oke Oyi. It has an area of 486 km2 and a population of 204,310 at the 2006 census. The postal code of the area is 240.",
"Obinna Oleka\n Oleka grew up in Washington, D.C. with his mother and brother. He played high school basketball at Florida Christian Institute in Cape Coral, Florida, where he averaged 24 points and 11 rebounds as a senior. He also played AAU ball with DC Assault.",
"Obolon (company)\nBershad (Vinnytsia Oblast), ; Fastiv (Kyiv Oblast), ; Krasyliv and Chemerivtsi (Khmelnytskyi Oblast), ; Kolomyia (Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast) ; Oleksandria (Kirovohrad Oblast), ; Okhtyrka (Sumy Oblast) ; Rokytne (Rivne Oblast) ; Sevastopol. Obolon has its main site in Kyiv and 8 facilities in Ukraine:",
"Stepan Oborin\n Between 1921 and 1922 Oborin was a battery commander in the 30th Rifle Division. He became a reservist in December 1922 and returned to active duty in March 1923, continuing as a battery commander in the 30th Artillery Regiment. Oborin graduated from the artillery officers' refresher courses in 1926 and became head of the regimental school from January 1927. In November, he became a battalion commander in the 30th Artillery Regiment. In September 1930, Oborin became assistant to the commander of the 123rd Howitzer Artillery Regiment. From September 1931, Oborin was chief of artillery of the 2nd Mechanized Brigade. In November 1933, he became the commander and commissar of the 73rd Artillery Regiment. Oborin again graduated from the artillery officers' refresher courses in 1934 and in March became head of the course. In April 1936, Oborin became commander of the 11th Rifle Division's artillery regiment. In February 1938, he became head of the divisional artillery.",
"Ilorin\n For other uses, see Ilorin (disambiguation) Ilorin is the state capital of Kwara State in Western Nigeria. As of the 2006 census, it had a population of 777,667, making it the 7th largest city by population in Nigeria."
] |
What is Pierre Abraham's occupation? | [
"journalist",
"journo",
"journalists"
] | occupation | Pierre Abraham | 2,573,242 | 76 | [
{
"id": "1937579",
"title": "Jean Philippe Abraham",
"text": " Jean Philippe Abraham (born June 21, 1982) is a former Canadian football linebacker for the Edmonton Eskimos. In his single season with the Eskimos, he appeared in 9 regular season games and made a single tackle.",
"score": "1.7266248"
},
{
"id": "547199",
"title": "Pol Abraham",
"text": " Hippolyte Pierre \"Pol\" Abraham (11 March 1891 in Nantes, France – 21 January 1966 in Paris) was a French architect. He graduated in 1920 from the atelier of Jean-Louis Pascal at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, then followed a course in the Ecole du Louvre from 1921 to 1924. He was a member of the Société des Architectes Diplômés par le Gouvernement (SADG) and magazine editor from 1923 to 1924. After the First World War, he participated in reconstruction work in northern France. Then in 1923, he opened his office in Paris, in association with Paul Sinoir, and produced many public and private buildings in the Île-de-France: His mastery of construction techniques and concrete, in particular, is ",
"score": "1.7013204"
},
{
"id": "30213929",
"title": "Abraham François",
"text": " Abraham François (born 7 June 1977) is a Canadian retired footballer. He competed in the 1997 Canada Games with Quebec, winning the competition. He was then selected to represent Canada at the Francophonie Games in Madagascar, also winning the competition. His career spanned from 1998 to 2016.",
"score": "1.6468737"
},
{
"id": "28848175",
"title": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard",
"text": " Pierre Abraham Lorillard was born in Montbéliard (France) in 1742, the son of Jean Lorillard (b. 1707) and Anne Catherine Rossel. He had five brothers, Jean George, George David, Charles Christophe, Jean Abraham, and Leopold Frederick, and a sister, Anne Marguerite. The naturalization recorded in New York on April 21, 1762, of 'Peter Louillard', a stocking weaver and French Protestant, is probably that of Lorillard. This followed the naturalization on October 27, 1760, of John George Lorillard, described as a French Protestant yeoman of New York City.",
"score": "1.597378"
},
{
"id": "16446035",
"title": "Marc Abraham",
"text": "As writer ",
"score": "1.5857037"
},
{
"id": "28848174",
"title": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard",
"text": " Pierre Abraham Lorillard (1742 – 1776) was a French-American tobacconist who founded the business which developed into the Lorillard Tobacco Company, which claimed to be the oldest tobacco firm in the United States and in the world. His name is also sometimes given as Peter Abraham Lorillard, Peter Lorillard and Pierre Lorillard I.",
"score": "1.5578675"
},
{
"id": "32666447",
"title": "Jean-Pierre Isaac",
"text": " Jean-Pierre Isaac main expertises are: Composing, Arranging, Programming, Recording, Producing & Mastering. His main instruments are Computers, Guitars, Bass, Keyboards, Drums & Percussions, and also performs as a Lead & Backup Singer, for studio sessions.",
"score": "1.553093"
},
{
"id": "32277967",
"title": "Henri Abraham",
"text": " Henri Abraham was born July 12, 1868 in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. After brilliant studies at Chaptal secondary school, from 1886 to 1889 he pursued scientific graduate studies at the École Normale Supérieure, where he attended the lectures of physics professors Jules Violle and Marcel Brillouin, and the Faculty of Paris, where he studied physics with Gabriel Lippmann and Edmond Bouty and obtained degrees in physical sciences and in mathematical sciences. He was then appointed for one year preparer physics laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure, then led by Jules Violle, where he wrote his thesis for the doctorate in physical sciences: \"New determination of the ",
"score": "1.5410025"
},
{
"id": "25672479",
"title": "Xavier Abraham",
"text": " Xavier Abraham is a Catalan poet, cultural activist and bookseller born in Palma de Mallorca, Spain in 1945. He is the author of three collections: Iceberg (1986), Les mosques, la por (The Flies, the Fear 1991) and Sagitari (Sagittarius,1998). His poetry includes elements of realism, delicate lyricism and avant-gardism. Abraham has been the promoter of cultural activities such as the poetry-lecture series Poemes a l’Havanna (1990–93, published as an anthology in 1996), the Traficants de Poesia convention (1996) and the exhibition Art i poesia (Art and poetry, 1996). Abraham was the commissioner for the exhibition Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, poet (1996) and Dos amics de vint anys: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel (Two friends of twenty years: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, 2002). In collaboration with Pere Rossello Bover, he has published Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, a la llum (Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, In the Light, 1999). In 1994, he opened the bookstore Sagitari (Sagittarius) in Palma de Mallorca, specializing in poetry.",
"score": "1.5103594"
},
{
"id": "30213940",
"title": "Abraham François",
"text": " François's father was a footballer in Haiti.",
"score": "1.5051339"
},
{
"id": "5349823",
"title": "Pierre Kartner",
"text": " Petrus Antonius Laurentius \"Pierre\" Kartner (born 11 April 1935) is a Dutch musician, singer-songwriter and record producer who performs under the stage name Vader Abraham (Father Abraham). He has written around 1600 songs.",
"score": "1.501514"
},
{
"id": "32666446",
"title": "Jean-Pierre Isaac",
"text": " Jean-Pierre Isaac (born 5 January 1956) in Belgium, emigrated to Quebec in 1961. Jean-Pierre Isaac is a bilingual lyricist, composer, programmer, DJ, recording studio owner (located in Montreal's Le Plateau-Mont-Royal borough) and a music producer. His contributions to music and his national and international success have earned him many awards.",
"score": "1.5003152"
},
{
"id": "4598193",
"title": "Hérard Abraham",
"text": " Hérard Abraham (born July 28, 1940) is a former Haitian political figure.",
"score": "1.4979279"
},
{
"id": "28057613",
"title": "Julien Abraham",
"text": " Prior becoming a filmmaker, he studied Economics and Management at the Sorbonne. His first film as a director was a documentary \"L'odyssée de musiques\" in 2001; his feature films followed a decade later.",
"score": "1.4934331"
},
{
"id": "2477019",
"title": "Abraham Peyrenc de Moras",
"text": " Abraham, the fourth of the Peyrenc children, was born in 1684 and baptized as a Protestant in the church at Aulas, a few miles northwest of Le Vigan. His father was a licensed surgeon. A country surgeon, whose profession dealt with the body, could at times serve as barber. He was able to purchase the post of secretary to the king and lands at Saint-Cyr. Some of his children left France for England in order to continue to exercise their faith. Abraham left le Vigan around 1703. According to some, he fled to Geneva. where he met with members of ",
"score": "1.4910264"
},
{
"id": "28057612",
"title": "Julien Abraham",
"text": " Julien Abraham (born on 14 May 1976 in Enghien-les-Bains) is a French film director and screenwriter.",
"score": "1.4875917"
},
{
"id": "14112271",
"title": "Ralph Abraham (mathematician)",
"text": " Abraham earned his B.S.E. (1956), M.S. (1958) and Ph.D. (1960) from the University of Michigan. Prior to joining Santa Cruz, he held positions at the University of California, Berkeley (research lecturer in mathematics; 1960-1962), Columbia University (postdoctoral fellow and assistant professor of mathematics; 1962-1964) and Princeton University (assistant professor of mathematics; 1964-1968). He has also held visiting positions in Amsterdam, Paris, Warwick, Barcelona, Basel, and Florence. He founded the Visual Math Institute at Santa Cruz in 1975; at that time, it was called the \"Visual Mathematics Project\". He is editor of World Futures and for the International Journal of Bifurcations and Chaos. Abraham is a member of cultural historian William Irwin Thompson's Lindisfarne Association. Abraham has ",
"score": "1.4797285"
},
{
"id": "1727110",
"title": "Luke Abraham",
"text": " Luke Abraham (The AK47) (born 26 September 1983 in Leicester) is a former professional rugby union player, who played for Lyon OU in the French Top 14 and the Sale Sharks and Leicester Tigers in the Premiership Rugby league in England. A strong and pacy Leicester-born back-row player, Abraham came through the ranks after joining the Leicester Tigers at the age of 15. He took up the sport three years earlier at Bushloe High School and joined his local club, the Leicester Vipers, before becoming part of the Tigers set-up. He played an important role in the 2006–07 Guinness Premiership and the 2006-07 Heineken Cup double-winning campaign, making 12 Guinness Premiership appearances including eight starts as well ",
"score": "1.4750748"
},
{
"id": "30343715",
"title": "1676 in France",
"text": "Abraham Bosse, artist (born c.1602 – 1604). ; Isaac La Peyrère, theologian (born 1594 or 1596). ; Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, military officer (born 1612) ; Pierre Patel, painter (born 1605) ",
"score": "1.4668846"
},
{
"id": "10860155",
"title": "Stephen Abraham",
"text": " Abraham currently works for the Law Offices of Stephen Abraham in Newport Beach, California.",
"score": "1.4624691"
}
] | [
"Jean Philippe Abraham\n Jean Philippe Abraham (born June 21, 1982) is a former Canadian football linebacker for the Edmonton Eskimos. In his single season with the Eskimos, he appeared in 9 regular season games and made a single tackle.",
"Pol Abraham\n Hippolyte Pierre \"Pol\" Abraham (11 March 1891 in Nantes, France – 21 January 1966 in Paris) was a French architect. He graduated in 1920 from the atelier of Jean-Louis Pascal at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, then followed a course in the Ecole du Louvre from 1921 to 1924. He was a member of the Société des Architectes Diplômés par le Gouvernement (SADG) and magazine editor from 1923 to 1924. After the First World War, he participated in reconstruction work in northern France. Then in 1923, he opened his office in Paris, in association with Paul Sinoir, and produced many public and private buildings in the Île-de-France: His mastery of construction techniques and concrete, in particular, is ",
"Abraham François\n Abraham François (born 7 June 1977) is a Canadian retired footballer. He competed in the 1997 Canada Games with Quebec, winning the competition. He was then selected to represent Canada at the Francophonie Games in Madagascar, also winning the competition. His career spanned from 1998 to 2016.",
"Pierre Abraham Lorillard\n Pierre Abraham Lorillard was born in Montbéliard (France) in 1742, the son of Jean Lorillard (b. 1707) and Anne Catherine Rossel. He had five brothers, Jean George, George David, Charles Christophe, Jean Abraham, and Leopold Frederick, and a sister, Anne Marguerite. The naturalization recorded in New York on April 21, 1762, of 'Peter Louillard', a stocking weaver and French Protestant, is probably that of Lorillard. This followed the naturalization on October 27, 1760, of John George Lorillard, described as a French Protestant yeoman of New York City.",
"Marc Abraham\nAs writer ",
"Pierre Abraham Lorillard\n Pierre Abraham Lorillard (1742 – 1776) was a French-American tobacconist who founded the business which developed into the Lorillard Tobacco Company, which claimed to be the oldest tobacco firm in the United States and in the world. His name is also sometimes given as Peter Abraham Lorillard, Peter Lorillard and Pierre Lorillard I.",
"Jean-Pierre Isaac\n Jean-Pierre Isaac main expertises are: Composing, Arranging, Programming, Recording, Producing & Mastering. His main instruments are Computers, Guitars, Bass, Keyboards, Drums & Percussions, and also performs as a Lead & Backup Singer, for studio sessions.",
"Henri Abraham\n Henri Abraham was born July 12, 1868 in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. After brilliant studies at Chaptal secondary school, from 1886 to 1889 he pursued scientific graduate studies at the École Normale Supérieure, where he attended the lectures of physics professors Jules Violle and Marcel Brillouin, and the Faculty of Paris, where he studied physics with Gabriel Lippmann and Edmond Bouty and obtained degrees in physical sciences and in mathematical sciences. He was then appointed for one year preparer physics laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure, then led by Jules Violle, where he wrote his thesis for the doctorate in physical sciences: \"New determination of the ",
"Xavier Abraham\n Xavier Abraham is a Catalan poet, cultural activist and bookseller born in Palma de Mallorca, Spain in 1945. He is the author of three collections: Iceberg (1986), Les mosques, la por (The Flies, the Fear 1991) and Sagitari (Sagittarius,1998). His poetry includes elements of realism, delicate lyricism and avant-gardism. Abraham has been the promoter of cultural activities such as the poetry-lecture series Poemes a l’Havanna (1990–93, published as an anthology in 1996), the Traficants de Poesia convention (1996) and the exhibition Art i poesia (Art and poetry, 1996). Abraham was the commissioner for the exhibition Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, poet (1996) and Dos amics de vint anys: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel (Two friends of twenty years: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, 2002). In collaboration with Pere Rossello Bover, he has published Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, a la llum (Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, In the Light, 1999). In 1994, he opened the bookstore Sagitari (Sagittarius) in Palma de Mallorca, specializing in poetry.",
"Abraham François\n François's father was a footballer in Haiti.",
"Pierre Kartner\n Petrus Antonius Laurentius \"Pierre\" Kartner (born 11 April 1935) is a Dutch musician, singer-songwriter and record producer who performs under the stage name Vader Abraham (Father Abraham). He has written around 1600 songs.",
"Jean-Pierre Isaac\n Jean-Pierre Isaac (born 5 January 1956) in Belgium, emigrated to Quebec in 1961. Jean-Pierre Isaac is a bilingual lyricist, composer, programmer, DJ, recording studio owner (located in Montreal's Le Plateau-Mont-Royal borough) and a music producer. His contributions to music and his national and international success have earned him many awards.",
"Hérard Abraham\n Hérard Abraham (born July 28, 1940) is a former Haitian political figure.",
"Julien Abraham\n Prior becoming a filmmaker, he studied Economics and Management at the Sorbonne. His first film as a director was a documentary \"L'odyssée de musiques\" in 2001; his feature films followed a decade later.",
"Abraham Peyrenc de Moras\n Abraham, the fourth of the Peyrenc children, was born in 1684 and baptized as a Protestant in the church at Aulas, a few miles northwest of Le Vigan. His father was a licensed surgeon. A country surgeon, whose profession dealt with the body, could at times serve as barber. He was able to purchase the post of secretary to the king and lands at Saint-Cyr. Some of his children left France for England in order to continue to exercise their faith. Abraham left le Vigan around 1703. According to some, he fled to Geneva. where he met with members of ",
"Julien Abraham\n Julien Abraham (born on 14 May 1976 in Enghien-les-Bains) is a French film director and screenwriter.",
"Ralph Abraham (mathematician)\n Abraham earned his B.S.E. (1956), M.S. (1958) and Ph.D. (1960) from the University of Michigan. Prior to joining Santa Cruz, he held positions at the University of California, Berkeley (research lecturer in mathematics; 1960-1962), Columbia University (postdoctoral fellow and assistant professor of mathematics; 1962-1964) and Princeton University (assistant professor of mathematics; 1964-1968). He has also held visiting positions in Amsterdam, Paris, Warwick, Barcelona, Basel, and Florence. He founded the Visual Math Institute at Santa Cruz in 1975; at that time, it was called the \"Visual Mathematics Project\". He is editor of World Futures and for the International Journal of Bifurcations and Chaos. Abraham is a member of cultural historian William Irwin Thompson's Lindisfarne Association. Abraham has ",
"Luke Abraham\n Luke Abraham (The AK47) (born 26 September 1983 in Leicester) is a former professional rugby union player, who played for Lyon OU in the French Top 14 and the Sale Sharks and Leicester Tigers in the Premiership Rugby league in England. A strong and pacy Leicester-born back-row player, Abraham came through the ranks after joining the Leicester Tigers at the age of 15. He took up the sport three years earlier at Bushloe High School and joined his local club, the Leicester Vipers, before becoming part of the Tigers set-up. He played an important role in the 2006–07 Guinness Premiership and the 2006-07 Heineken Cup double-winning campaign, making 12 Guinness Premiership appearances including eight starts as well ",
"1676 in France\nAbraham Bosse, artist (born c.1602 – 1604). ; Isaac La Peyrère, theologian (born 1594 or 1596). ; Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, military officer (born 1612) ; Pierre Patel, painter (born 1605) ",
"Stephen Abraham\n Abraham currently works for the Law Offices of Stephen Abraham in Newport Beach, California."
] |
In what city was Giovanni Speranza born? | [
"Gießen",
"Giessen"
] | place of birth | Giovanni Speranza | 714,110 | 68 | [
{
"id": "9233780",
"title": "Giovanni Speranza de' Vajenti",
"text": " Giovanni Speranza (c. 1470 – 1540s) was an Italian painter. He was born and was active in Vicenza, where he was a follower of Benedetto Montagna. His exact birth and death years are not confirmed with one claiming he was born in 1480 and died in 1546. He is mentioned briefly by Giorgio Vasari, in his entry on Jacopo Sansovino. He later claims both Montagna and Speranza were pupils of Andrea Mantegna. It is unclear if he is related to the Baroque painter Giovanni Battista Speranza.",
"score": "1.8498394"
},
{
"id": "25291451",
"title": "Roberto Speranza",
"text": " Roberto Speranza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, in 1979. During the 2000s he graduated in political science at the Luiss Guido Carli of Rome.",
"score": "1.8192393"
},
{
"id": "5225611",
"title": "Giovanni Speranza",
"text": " Giovanni Speranza (born 6 March 1982 in Giessen) is a German-Italian footballer.",
"score": "1.690717"
},
{
"id": "5130776",
"title": "Giovanni Frezza",
"text": " Giovanni Frezza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, Italy.",
"score": "1.6464934"
},
{
"id": "32253586",
"title": "Alessandro Speranza",
"text": " Alessandro Speranza (1728 - 17 November 1797) was an Italian composer. His opera I due Figaro was very popular during his lifetime and enjoyed revivals in Italy after his death well into the 19th century; including at La Scala in 1840 with Raffaele Scalese in the title role.",
"score": "1.6327746"
},
{
"id": "2712554",
"title": "Speranza Scappucci",
"text": " Speranza Scappucci (born 9 April 1973 in Rome) is an Italian conductor and pianist.",
"score": "1.6207235"
},
{
"id": "28219907",
"title": "Giovanni Capellini",
"text": " Giovanni Capellini was born on 23 August 1833 in La Spezia, Liguria, son Pietro Francesco Capellini and Margherita Ferrarini. His family originated in Porto Venere. His parents intended that he should make a career as a musician, and then in the church. As a boy he collected interesting natural objects. In 1853 the future King Umberto I of Italy visited La Spezia, and Capellini was presented to him when he came to view the collection. Later Umberto called Capellini his oldest friend. Capellini remained in the monks' school until his father died in 1854. To make a living he worked as a bookbinder, a teacher in a college of La Spezia and a manufacturer of electrical equipment. He was finally able to devote himself to geology thanks to the Rector of the Seminary of Pontremoli, who offered him the post of prefect at the seminary, and he continued his studies thanks to the Municipality of La Spezia, which paid for his costs at the University of Pisa. After graduating he embraced the profession of a geologist, and began his exploratory research on the Apuan Alps.",
"score": "1.6041899"
},
{
"id": "15283173",
"title": "Cerreto di Spoleto",
"text": " The Renaissance humanist and poet Iovianus Pontanus (Giovanni Gioviano Pontano) was born here in 1426—although after his father had been murdered in a civil brawl his mother escaped with the boy to Perugia.",
"score": "1.5883462"
},
{
"id": "14320285",
"title": "Giovanni Spagnolli",
"text": " He was born on 26 October 1907 in Rovereto, a city in the Austro-Hungarian Tyrol at the time. He began his high school studies at the Imperial Regio Ginnasio in Rovereto. Refugee with his family (originally from Isera) in Dornbirn, in Vorarlberg during the Great War, he returned to his city after 1918, to complete his studies there until the end of high school. At 19, he chose Milan for the university, convinced that this \"leap from the province\" could benefit his future: he earned two degrees, and Agostino Gemelli retained him as Administrative Deputy Secretary of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. The Feltrinelli Legnami company, with many contacts in Trentino, called him in turn as administrator. During the years of the Resistance, he worked in Brianza and Milan to shake consciences and organize the ranks of the new party of the Christian Democrats, of which he became the Milanese secretary. He collaborated from Rome in the reconstruction of Italy through UNRRA-CAASAS plans to give new homes to millions of homeless.",
"score": "1.5833641"
},
{
"id": "14314074",
"title": "Sfera Ebbasta",
"text": " Sfera was born in the Milanese town of Sesto San Giovanni, but grew up in the neighbouring town of Cinisello Balsamo. His parents separated two years after his birth, and his father died when he was only 13. He dropped out of school at the age of 14.",
"score": "1.5790284"
},
{
"id": "16372590",
"title": "Joseph Speranza",
"text": " Joseph Speranza (born 4 February 1840) was a British army officer who joined the Royal Malta Fencibles Artillery at a young age and rose to be its Colonel. He was also one of the founders of the Philatelic Society, London, which later became The Royal Philatelic Society London. On 2 December 1926, Major J.E. Speranza presented to the Royal Philatelic Society the original pages of their meetings of April, May, and October, 1869, together with two photographs of his father, one probably taken on 13 April 1869. In recognition of this gift, Major J.E. Speranza was elected an honorary fellow of the society.",
"score": "1.5771389"
},
{
"id": "13132305",
"title": "Giovanni Pontano",
"text": " Pontano was born at Cerreto in the Duchy of Spoleto, where his father was murdered in one of the frequent civil brawls which then disturbed the peace of Italian towns. His date of birth is given in various sources between 1421 and 1429; it is often given as 1426, but may have been 1429. His mother escaped with the boy to Perugia, and it was here that Pontano received his first instruction in languages and literature. Failing to recover his patrimony, he abandoned Umbria, and at the age of twenty-two established himself at Naples, which continued to be his chief place of residence ",
"score": "1.5673066"
},
{
"id": "25514267",
"title": "Giovanni Merlini",
"text": " Giovanni Merlini was born in Spoleto on 28 August 1795 as the third of thirteen children to Luigi Merlini and Antonia Claudi. His father - who settled in Spoleto - was descended from a noble Sicilian line but set up a business in Spoleto. He attended school in his hometown where he was noted for his pious temperament and he received his First Communion in 1808 in the Sant'Ansano church from the Barnabite Bishop (and future cardinal) Antonio Maria Cadolini. He decided to pursue the priesthood despite his parents making their objections known to him and commenced his studies for the priesthood in 1809 in Spoleto. He received his ",
"score": "1.5670202"
},
{
"id": "6296700",
"title": "Sperone Speroni",
"text": " Born April 12, 1500 in Padua, Sperone was the second child of Bernardino Speroni degli Alvarotti and Lucia Contarini. In 1518 he obtained the artibus degree from the University of Padua and joined the Guild (Sacro Collegio) of artists and physicians. He lectured on philosophy at Padua, under the Chair of Logic. He interrupted his teachings to study at Bologna under Pietro Pomponazzi but, after Pietro's death, returned to Padua where he obtained an Extraordinary Chair of Philosophy, a post he held for another three years. His literary career began with the publication of the Dialoghi (\"Dialogues\") at Venice (1542). Very famous and influential ",
"score": "1.5652444"
},
{
"id": "28395582",
"title": "Carlo Alberto Sperati",
"text": " Carlo Alberto Sperati (December 29, 1860 – September 12, 1945) was a Norwegian-American composer and music professor. Sperati was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway, the son of the conductor Paolo Sperati. He went to sea in 1877, and then enrolled in theological studies at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa in 1884. He graduated in 1888. He married Emma Hoffoss in 1891 and became a priest in the Lutheran church that same year. He became a teacher in Tacoma, Washington in 1894, and he also worked at Pacific Lutheran University, where, among other events, he conducted a band that played on Mount Rainier. Sperati is best known for his work at Luther College, where he was a professor of music from 1905 to 1943. He conducted the Luther College Concert Band on tours in Europe and the United States.",
"score": "1.5425483"
},
{
"id": "27804651",
"title": "Christopher Speranzo",
"text": " He was born on October 24, 1972 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and graduated from St. Joseph Central High School. He graduated from Boston College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science and later a Master of Philosophy degree in history from the University of Cambridge. He later earned his J.D. degree from Boston College Law School in 2001. After graduating from the University of Cambridge he worked for the municipal government of Pittsfield negotiating city and state projects with General Electric.",
"score": "1.538542"
},
{
"id": "4875947",
"title": "Giovanni Spertini",
"text": " Giovanni Spertini (Pavia, 1821 - Milan, 1895) was an Italian sculptor. Beginning in 1836, he studied sculpture at the Brera Academy, and then privately under Gianmaria Benzoni, Giovanni Antonio Labus, and Pietro Magni (sculptor). He became an honorary associate at the Brera. His first main work as: La scrittrice, also known as the Leggitrice del Magni, which was donated to the Brera. His Columbus Messenger was awarded a prize at the 1876 Exposition of Philadelphia. He won a national contest to sculpt a bust of Mazzini once found in Campidoglio. His statue of Un colpo sicuro was sold at the 1878 Paris Exposition. Among his other notable works, are the larger than life busts of Amilcare Ponchielli and Victor Hugo (stucco, 1886 Exhibition of Fine Arts in Milan). He won ",
"score": "1.5290385"
},
{
"id": "10232816",
"title": "Giovanni (name)",
"text": " (1810–1887), Italian archaeologist ; Giovanni Bernardo Gremoli, Catholic bishop ; Giovanni Jona-Lasinio (born 1932), Italian theoretical physicist ; Giovanni Lapentti (born 1983), Ecuadorian tennis player ; Giovanni Lavaggi (born 1958), Italian racing driver ; Giovanni Marradi (1852–1922), Italian poet ; Giovanni Marradi (musician) (born 1952), pianist, composer and arranger ; Giovanni Giorgio Moroder (born 1940), Italian record producer, songwriter, performer, and DJ ; Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), Italian composer ; Giovanni Palandrani (born 1996), American drag queen better known by the stage name Aquaria ; Giovanni Papini (1881–1956), Italian journalist, essayist, literary critic, poet, and novelist ; Giovanni I Participazio ",
"score": "1.5252345"
},
{
"id": "12329921",
"title": "Marco Speranza",
"text": " Marco Speranza is an Italian footballer who plays as a left back for Pisa in the Lega Pro Prima Divisione. He is on loan from Milan.",
"score": "1.5239902"
},
{
"id": "26658152",
"title": "Paolo Sperati",
"text": " Paolo Agostino Sperati (March 26, 1821 – May 20, 1884) was an Italian conductor, musician, and composer that was active in the theater and opera life of Christiania (now Oslo), Norway in the 19th century.",
"score": "1.5237229"
}
] | [
"Giovanni Speranza de' Vajenti\n Giovanni Speranza (c. 1470 – 1540s) was an Italian painter. He was born and was active in Vicenza, where he was a follower of Benedetto Montagna. His exact birth and death years are not confirmed with one claiming he was born in 1480 and died in 1546. He is mentioned briefly by Giorgio Vasari, in his entry on Jacopo Sansovino. He later claims both Montagna and Speranza were pupils of Andrea Mantegna. It is unclear if he is related to the Baroque painter Giovanni Battista Speranza.",
"Roberto Speranza\n Roberto Speranza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, in 1979. During the 2000s he graduated in political science at the Luiss Guido Carli of Rome.",
"Giovanni Speranza\n Giovanni Speranza (born 6 March 1982 in Giessen) is a German-Italian footballer.",
"Giovanni Frezza\n Giovanni Frezza was born in Potenza, Basilicata, Italy.",
"Alessandro Speranza\n Alessandro Speranza (1728 - 17 November 1797) was an Italian composer. His opera I due Figaro was very popular during his lifetime and enjoyed revivals in Italy after his death well into the 19th century; including at La Scala in 1840 with Raffaele Scalese in the title role.",
"Speranza Scappucci\n Speranza Scappucci (born 9 April 1973 in Rome) is an Italian conductor and pianist.",
"Giovanni Capellini\n Giovanni Capellini was born on 23 August 1833 in La Spezia, Liguria, son Pietro Francesco Capellini and Margherita Ferrarini. His family originated in Porto Venere. His parents intended that he should make a career as a musician, and then in the church. As a boy he collected interesting natural objects. In 1853 the future King Umberto I of Italy visited La Spezia, and Capellini was presented to him when he came to view the collection. Later Umberto called Capellini his oldest friend. Capellini remained in the monks' school until his father died in 1854. To make a living he worked as a bookbinder, a teacher in a college of La Spezia and a manufacturer of electrical equipment. He was finally able to devote himself to geology thanks to the Rector of the Seminary of Pontremoli, who offered him the post of prefect at the seminary, and he continued his studies thanks to the Municipality of La Spezia, which paid for his costs at the University of Pisa. After graduating he embraced the profession of a geologist, and began his exploratory research on the Apuan Alps.",
"Cerreto di Spoleto\n The Renaissance humanist and poet Iovianus Pontanus (Giovanni Gioviano Pontano) was born here in 1426—although after his father had been murdered in a civil brawl his mother escaped with the boy to Perugia.",
"Giovanni Spagnolli\n He was born on 26 October 1907 in Rovereto, a city in the Austro-Hungarian Tyrol at the time. He began his high school studies at the Imperial Regio Ginnasio in Rovereto. Refugee with his family (originally from Isera) in Dornbirn, in Vorarlberg during the Great War, he returned to his city after 1918, to complete his studies there until the end of high school. At 19, he chose Milan for the university, convinced that this \"leap from the province\" could benefit his future: he earned two degrees, and Agostino Gemelli retained him as Administrative Deputy Secretary of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. The Feltrinelli Legnami company, with many contacts in Trentino, called him in turn as administrator. During the years of the Resistance, he worked in Brianza and Milan to shake consciences and organize the ranks of the new party of the Christian Democrats, of which he became the Milanese secretary. He collaborated from Rome in the reconstruction of Italy through UNRRA-CAASAS plans to give new homes to millions of homeless.",
"Sfera Ebbasta\n Sfera was born in the Milanese town of Sesto San Giovanni, but grew up in the neighbouring town of Cinisello Balsamo. His parents separated two years after his birth, and his father died when he was only 13. He dropped out of school at the age of 14.",
"Joseph Speranza\n Joseph Speranza (born 4 February 1840) was a British army officer who joined the Royal Malta Fencibles Artillery at a young age and rose to be its Colonel. He was also one of the founders of the Philatelic Society, London, which later became The Royal Philatelic Society London. On 2 December 1926, Major J.E. Speranza presented to the Royal Philatelic Society the original pages of their meetings of April, May, and October, 1869, together with two photographs of his father, one probably taken on 13 April 1869. In recognition of this gift, Major J.E. Speranza was elected an honorary fellow of the society.",
"Giovanni Pontano\n Pontano was born at Cerreto in the Duchy of Spoleto, where his father was murdered in one of the frequent civil brawls which then disturbed the peace of Italian towns. His date of birth is given in various sources between 1421 and 1429; it is often given as 1426, but may have been 1429. His mother escaped with the boy to Perugia, and it was here that Pontano received his first instruction in languages and literature. Failing to recover his patrimony, he abandoned Umbria, and at the age of twenty-two established himself at Naples, which continued to be his chief place of residence ",
"Giovanni Merlini\n Giovanni Merlini was born in Spoleto on 28 August 1795 as the third of thirteen children to Luigi Merlini and Antonia Claudi. His father - who settled in Spoleto - was descended from a noble Sicilian line but set up a business in Spoleto. He attended school in his hometown where he was noted for his pious temperament and he received his First Communion in 1808 in the Sant'Ansano church from the Barnabite Bishop (and future cardinal) Antonio Maria Cadolini. He decided to pursue the priesthood despite his parents making their objections known to him and commenced his studies for the priesthood in 1809 in Spoleto. He received his ",
"Sperone Speroni\n Born April 12, 1500 in Padua, Sperone was the second child of Bernardino Speroni degli Alvarotti and Lucia Contarini. In 1518 he obtained the artibus degree from the University of Padua and joined the Guild (Sacro Collegio) of artists and physicians. He lectured on philosophy at Padua, under the Chair of Logic. He interrupted his teachings to study at Bologna under Pietro Pomponazzi but, after Pietro's death, returned to Padua where he obtained an Extraordinary Chair of Philosophy, a post he held for another three years. His literary career began with the publication of the Dialoghi (\"Dialogues\") at Venice (1542). Very famous and influential ",
"Carlo Alberto Sperati\n Carlo Alberto Sperati (December 29, 1860 – September 12, 1945) was a Norwegian-American composer and music professor. Sperati was born in Kristiania (now Oslo), Norway, the son of the conductor Paolo Sperati. He went to sea in 1877, and then enrolled in theological studies at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa in 1884. He graduated in 1888. He married Emma Hoffoss in 1891 and became a priest in the Lutheran church that same year. He became a teacher in Tacoma, Washington in 1894, and he also worked at Pacific Lutheran University, where, among other events, he conducted a band that played on Mount Rainier. Sperati is best known for his work at Luther College, where he was a professor of music from 1905 to 1943. He conducted the Luther College Concert Band on tours in Europe and the United States.",
"Christopher Speranzo\n He was born on October 24, 1972 in Pittsfield, Massachusetts and graduated from St. Joseph Central High School. He graduated from Boston College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science and later a Master of Philosophy degree in history from the University of Cambridge. He later earned his J.D. degree from Boston College Law School in 2001. After graduating from the University of Cambridge he worked for the municipal government of Pittsfield negotiating city and state projects with General Electric.",
"Giovanni Spertini\n Giovanni Spertini (Pavia, 1821 - Milan, 1895) was an Italian sculptor. Beginning in 1836, he studied sculpture at the Brera Academy, and then privately under Gianmaria Benzoni, Giovanni Antonio Labus, and Pietro Magni (sculptor). He became an honorary associate at the Brera. His first main work as: La scrittrice, also known as the Leggitrice del Magni, which was donated to the Brera. His Columbus Messenger was awarded a prize at the 1876 Exposition of Philadelphia. He won a national contest to sculpt a bust of Mazzini once found in Campidoglio. His statue of Un colpo sicuro was sold at the 1878 Paris Exposition. Among his other notable works, are the larger than life busts of Amilcare Ponchielli and Victor Hugo (stucco, 1886 Exhibition of Fine Arts in Milan). He won ",
"Giovanni (name)\n (1810–1887), Italian archaeologist ; Giovanni Bernardo Gremoli, Catholic bishop ; Giovanni Jona-Lasinio (born 1932), Italian theoretical physicist ; Giovanni Lapentti (born 1983), Ecuadorian tennis player ; Giovanni Lavaggi (born 1958), Italian racing driver ; Giovanni Marradi (1852–1922), Italian poet ; Giovanni Marradi (musician) (born 1952), pianist, composer and arranger ; Giovanni Giorgio Moroder (born 1940), Italian record producer, songwriter, performer, and DJ ; Giovanni Paisiello (1740–1816), Italian composer ; Giovanni Palandrani (born 1996), American drag queen better known by the stage name Aquaria ; Giovanni Papini (1881–1956), Italian journalist, essayist, literary critic, poet, and novelist ; Giovanni I Participazio ",
"Marco Speranza\n Marco Speranza is an Italian footballer who plays as a left back for Pisa in the Lega Pro Prima Divisione. He is on loan from Milan.",
"Paolo Sperati\n Paolo Agostino Sperati (March 26, 1821 – May 20, 1884) was an Italian conductor, musician, and composer that was active in the theater and opera life of Christiania (now Oslo), Norway in the 19th century."
] |
Who was the screenwriter for Democracy? | [
"Sidney Morgan"
] | screenwriter | Democracy (film) | 1,413,015 | 82 | [
{
"id": "31289617",
"title": "Democracy (Numbers)",
"text": " \"Democracy\" marked the return of Oswald Kittner. Originally a one-time role, fans and executive producer Cheryl Heuton enjoyed having Jay Baruchel's performance as Oswald Kittner on the show. As a result of fans' request for a return appearance of Kittner, writers wrote \"Democracy\" and decided to feature Kittner.",
"score": "1.6144009"
},
{
"id": "31289609",
"title": "Democracy (Numbers)",
"text": " \"Democracy\" is the 18th episode of the third season of the American television show Numbers. Written by Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci, the episode highlights a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation into the murder of one of their math consultant's friends while an agent learns that she has been selected for a United States Department of Justice (DOJ) assignment. Heuton and Falacci also brought back fan favorite Oswald Kittner, portrayed by Jay Baruchel. The episode marks series regular Diane Farr's final appearance before delivering her baby. Her pregnancy during season three presented writers and producers with the challenge of deciding whether to include a pregnancy into the season's storyline. They decided against it and opted to hide her pregnancy. While filming \"Democracy\", Farr had her baby. \"Democracy\" first aired in the United States on March 9, 2007. Critics gave the episode positive reviews.",
"score": "1.6098521"
},
{
"id": "2581280",
"title": "The Movies",
"text": " Using The Movies, Alex Chan, a French resident with no previous filmmaking experience, took four days to create The French Democracy, a short machinima political film about the 2005 civil unrest in France.",
"score": "1.5966703"
},
{
"id": "31289615",
"title": "Democracy (Numbers)",
"text": " \"Democracy\" marks the temporary exit of Diane Farr. During the start of season three, series regular Diane Farr learned that she was pregnant. The series' writers and producers discussed whether to include the pregnancy in the storyline for the season. At the time, series writers and producers planned for Larry to romance Megan during season three. They decided against a story involving pregnancy, feeling that it was too early in Larry and Megan's relationship to discuss pregnancy. They also felt that it was too early in the series to explore working mothers in the FBI. Furthermore, series regular Peter MacNicol's temporary departure for 24 complicated the storyline even further, as the potential father would be absent for part of a season.",
"score": "1.5469344"
},
{
"id": "25552089",
"title": "Democracy (play)",
"text": " Democracy is a play by Michael Frayn which premiered in London at the Royal National Theatre on September 9, 2003. Directed by Michael Blakemore, and starring Roger Allam as Willy Brandt and Conleth Hill as Günter Guillaume, it won the Evening Standard and Critics' Circle awards for Best Play. Democracy premiered on Broadway at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on November 18, 2004, and ran for 173 performances. It was nominated for the Tony Award and Drama Desk Award as Best Play. It has also been staged in Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki (2005), Wellington, Vancouver, Toronto and Moscow (2016). A revival of the play, directed by Paul Miller at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, transferred to London's Old Vic Theatre in 2012. The play, based on actual events, deals with the decision West German chancellor Willy Brandt had to make about exposing the Communist spy Günter Guillaume who worked as his secretary and had heard some of the state's most important secrets.",
"score": "1.5356935"
},
{
"id": "1341043",
"title": "Democracy: An American Novel",
"text": " Democracy: An American Novel is a political novel written by Henry Brooks Adams and published anonymously in 1880. Only after the writer's death in 1918 did his publisher reveal Adams's authorship although, upon publication, the novel had immediately become popular. Contemporaneous conjecture placed the book under the joint authorship of Clarence King, John Hay and Henry Adams and their spouses who lived side by side on H street in Washington, D.C. and were collectively sometimes called \"the Five of Hearts.\" In January 2005, the Washington National Opera premiered Democracy: An American Comedy, an opera by Scott Wheeler and Romulus Linney based upon Henry Adams' book. Democracy is a novel about political power, its acquisition, ",
"score": "1.5321351"
},
{
"id": "26278318",
"title": "Robert Ellis (author)",
"text": " the New York Film Festival. His work in film continued, particularly in advertising where he won a regional Emmy in Philadelphia for CBS News. In 1988, Ellis found representation as a writer-director in feature films and moved to Los Angeles where he ghostwrote the final draft of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. Maintaining a keen interest in politics ever since the Vietnam War, Ellis became associated with The Campaign Group. During political years, he wrote, produced, directed, and often shot and edited, more than fifteen hundred television ads for political candidates seeking every type of office, including President of the United States, and won numerous Pollie Awards from the AAPC, and the esteemed My Opponent Is Not A Nice Person Award from the Democratic Caucus.",
"score": "1.5198009"
},
{
"id": "32399194",
"title": "David Kuo (author)",
"text": " at one time learning how to write screenplays. Kuo also had experience working in the political arena. For example, he worked on the Presidential Commission on Women in the Military and after the 1992 election, he was hired as Deputy Policy Director of Empower America (an organization started by Bill Bennett and Jack Kemp). A speechwriter during this period, he worked with politicians and businessmen ranging from Bob Dole to Steve Case. Kuo left politics in 1996 to help start a now defunct charity, The American Compass, which was created to distribute money to small charities that served the poor.",
"score": "1.5138209"
},
{
"id": "1013403",
"title": "Brad Mays",
"text": " a Los Angeles distribution company dedicated to serving the independent film community. It was subsequently awarded a 2010 California Film Awards \"Diamond Award.\" In 2009, Brad Mays finished work on the feature-length political documentary The Audacity of Democracy, which followed the 2008 race for the Democratic Presidential Nomination and focused in particular on the notorious PUMA movement. In multiple Blog-Radio interviews, the director expressed dissatisfaction with the project, revealing that he had not been allowed to complete shooting in the manner originally agreed to. On June 6, 2011, Brad Mays discussed his personal and working relationship with his late wife Lorenda ",
"score": "1.5115061"
},
{
"id": "32787764",
"title": "Richard Burton (comics)",
"text": "\"Democracy,\" a Judge Dredd storyline inherited from MacManus and published through 1991 ; Zenith (Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell), launched in 1987 ; Friday (Dave Gibbons and Will Simpson), launched in 1989 ; The Dead Man (John Wagner and John Ridgway), published in 1989–1990 ; \"Necropolis\" (John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra), 26-part Judge Dredd storyline published in 1990 ; Time Flies (Garth Ennis and Philip Bond), launched in 1990 ; Finn (Pat Mills), acquired in 1991 ; \"Judgement Day\" (Garth Ennis), published in 1992 ; Firekind (John Smith and Paul Marshall), published in 1993 After turning down a job offer with DC Comics, Burton was hired as an assistant editor at Marvel UK in March 1978, working for top editor Dez Skinn ",
"score": "1.5090597"
},
{
"id": "31691538",
"title": "Alexander Payne",
"text": " Constantine Alexander Payne (born February 10, 1961) is an American film director, screenwriter and producer, He is best known for the films, Citizen Ruth (1996), Election (1999), About Schmidt (2002), Sideways (2004), The Descendants (2011), Nebraska (2013) and Downsizing (2017). They are noted for their dark humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. Payne is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and a three-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director. In 2017, Metacritic ranked Payne 2nd on its list of the 25 best film directors of the 21st century.",
"score": "1.5041754"
},
{
"id": "8246251",
"title": "Jai Ho Democracy",
"text": " 'Jai Ho! Democracy', is a 2015 Indian comedy film written and directed by Ranjit Kapoor, who was also the dialogue writer of Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro and has been produced by Bikramjeet Bhullar of Indian Production House. It is a dark satire on Indian politics and takes a dig at the existing social and political morass India is staring at currently. It stars an ensemble cast that includes the likes of Om Puri, Annu Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Adil Hussain and Seema Biswas. The film's trailer was released on 18 March 2015. and is scheduled to release on 24 April 2015. It is about the murky world of India's political class, where ministers and leaders procrastinate over everything, even on something as grave as border security. Jai Ho! Democracy also takes a satirical look at the media's desperation to stay ahead in the TRP game, sensationalizing even the most trivial situation without any qualms.",
"score": "1.4976637"
},
{
"id": "1396851",
"title": "Paul D. Zimmerman",
"text": " He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.",
"score": "1.4962602"
},
{
"id": "4508634",
"title": "Anthony Barnett (writer)",
"text": " Barnett was a student at Cambridge University, where he was active in the Labour Club, and lodged with Nicholas Kaldor. A former member of the editorial committee of New Left Review, Barnett has written for the New Statesman, The Guardian and Prospect. He conceived the television film England's Henry Moore (1988), which concerned the sculptor's co-option by the British establishment. Barnett is a campaigner for democracy. He was the first Director of Charter 88 from 1988 to 1995 and Co-Director of the Convention on Modern Liberty (2008–2009) with Henry Porter. In 2001 he founded openDemocracy with Paul Hilder, Susie Richards and David Hayes and was ",
"score": "1.4957416"
},
{
"id": "2445996",
"title": "Lincoln (film)",
"text": " While consulting on a Steven Spielberg project in 1999, Goodwin told Spielberg she was planning to write Team of Rivals, and Spielberg immediately told her he wanted the film rights. DreamWorks finalized the deal in 2001, and by the end of the year, John Logan signed on to write the script. His draft focused on Lincoln's friendship with Frederick Douglass. Playwright Paul Webb was hired to rewrite, and filming was set to begin in January 2006, but Spielberg delayed it out of dissatisfaction with the script. Liam Neeson said Webb's draft covered the entirety of Lincoln's term as president. Tony Kushner replaced Webb. Kushner considered Lincoln \"the greatest democratic leader in the world\" and found the writing assignment daunting because ",
"score": "1.4920808"
},
{
"id": "4814109",
"title": "Robert E. Sherwood",
"text": " that eventually evolved to \"arsenal of democracy\", a frequent catchphrase in Roosevelt's wartime speeches. Sherwood was quoted on May 12, 1940 by The New York Times\" \"This country is already, in effect, an arsenal for the democratic Allies.\" After serving as director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information from 1943 until the conclusion of the war, he returned to dramatic writing with the movie The Best Years of Our Lives, directed by William Wyler. The 1946 film, which explores changes in the lives of three soldiers after they return home from war, earned Sherwood an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.",
"score": "1.4919894"
},
{
"id": "32305332",
"title": "Democracy (film)",
"text": " Democracy is a 1918 British silent war film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Bruce Gordon, Queenie Thomas and Alice O'Brien.",
"score": "1.4910057"
},
{
"id": "26232963",
"title": "Lee Hae-jun",
"text": "Coming Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ",
"score": "1.4894083"
},
{
"id": "7648185",
"title": "Ron Dermer",
"text": " Dermer worked as a political consultant for Natan Sharansky in the 1999 campaign, and from January 2001 for nearly three years he wrote a column \"The Numbers Game\" for The Jerusalem Post. In 2004, he and Sharansky co-wrote the best-selling book The Case For Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror, famously endorsed by then US-President George W. Bush. In 2005, while Benjamin Netanyahu served as Finance Minister under Ariel Sharon, Dermer was appointed economic envoy at the Israeli embassy in Washington, a post for which he had to give up his American citizenship. In 2008, after his return ",
"score": "1.4852014"
},
{
"id": "1341049",
"title": "Democracy: An American Novel",
"text": " When, on December 1, Madeleine Lee boards the train that takes her from New York to the capital she wants to find \"the mysterious gem which must lie hidden somewhere in politics\". However, what she encounters both in her parlour and elsewhere is an ill-assorted group of men corrupted by greed, money and power; protégés and office-seekers; and, generally, people who, for various reasons, are wholly unsuited for any political office. Her suitor, 50-year-old Silas P. Ratcliffe, is a case in point. A former governor of Illinois, he now serves as Senator from that state but is toying with the idea of running ",
"score": "1.4835021"
}
] | [
"Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" marked the return of Oswald Kittner. Originally a one-time role, fans and executive producer Cheryl Heuton enjoyed having Jay Baruchel's performance as Oswald Kittner on the show. As a result of fans' request for a return appearance of Kittner, writers wrote \"Democracy\" and decided to feature Kittner.",
"Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" is the 18th episode of the third season of the American television show Numbers. Written by Cheryl Heuton and Nicolas Falacci, the episode highlights a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigation into the murder of one of their math consultant's friends while an agent learns that she has been selected for a United States Department of Justice (DOJ) assignment. Heuton and Falacci also brought back fan favorite Oswald Kittner, portrayed by Jay Baruchel. The episode marks series regular Diane Farr's final appearance before delivering her baby. Her pregnancy during season three presented writers and producers with the challenge of deciding whether to include a pregnancy into the season's storyline. They decided against it and opted to hide her pregnancy. While filming \"Democracy\", Farr had her baby. \"Democracy\" first aired in the United States on March 9, 2007. Critics gave the episode positive reviews.",
"The Movies\n Using The Movies, Alex Chan, a French resident with no previous filmmaking experience, took four days to create The French Democracy, a short machinima political film about the 2005 civil unrest in France.",
"Democracy (Numbers)\n \"Democracy\" marks the temporary exit of Diane Farr. During the start of season three, series regular Diane Farr learned that she was pregnant. The series' writers and producers discussed whether to include the pregnancy in the storyline for the season. At the time, series writers and producers planned for Larry to romance Megan during season three. They decided against a story involving pregnancy, feeling that it was too early in Larry and Megan's relationship to discuss pregnancy. They also felt that it was too early in the series to explore working mothers in the FBI. Furthermore, series regular Peter MacNicol's temporary departure for 24 complicated the storyline even further, as the potential father would be absent for part of a season.",
"Democracy (play)\n Democracy is a play by Michael Frayn which premiered in London at the Royal National Theatre on September 9, 2003. Directed by Michael Blakemore, and starring Roger Allam as Willy Brandt and Conleth Hill as Günter Guillaume, it won the Evening Standard and Critics' Circle awards for Best Play. Democracy premiered on Broadway at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre on November 18, 2004, and ran for 173 performances. It was nominated for the Tony Award and Drama Desk Award as Best Play. It has also been staged in Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki (2005), Wellington, Vancouver, Toronto and Moscow (2016). A revival of the play, directed by Paul Miller at Sheffield's Crucible Theatre, transferred to London's Old Vic Theatre in 2012. The play, based on actual events, deals with the decision West German chancellor Willy Brandt had to make about exposing the Communist spy Günter Guillaume who worked as his secretary and had heard some of the state's most important secrets.",
"Democracy: An American Novel\n Democracy: An American Novel is a political novel written by Henry Brooks Adams and published anonymously in 1880. Only after the writer's death in 1918 did his publisher reveal Adams's authorship although, upon publication, the novel had immediately become popular. Contemporaneous conjecture placed the book under the joint authorship of Clarence King, John Hay and Henry Adams and their spouses who lived side by side on H street in Washington, D.C. and were collectively sometimes called \"the Five of Hearts.\" In January 2005, the Washington National Opera premiered Democracy: An American Comedy, an opera by Scott Wheeler and Romulus Linney based upon Henry Adams' book. Democracy is a novel about political power, its acquisition, ",
"Robert Ellis (author)\n the New York Film Festival. His work in film continued, particularly in advertising where he won a regional Emmy in Philadelphia for CBS News. In 1988, Ellis found representation as a writer-director in feature films and moved to Los Angeles where he ghostwrote the final draft of A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master. Maintaining a keen interest in politics ever since the Vietnam War, Ellis became associated with The Campaign Group. During political years, he wrote, produced, directed, and often shot and edited, more than fifteen hundred television ads for political candidates seeking every type of office, including President of the United States, and won numerous Pollie Awards from the AAPC, and the esteemed My Opponent Is Not A Nice Person Award from the Democratic Caucus.",
"David Kuo (author)\n at one time learning how to write screenplays. Kuo also had experience working in the political arena. For example, he worked on the Presidential Commission on Women in the Military and after the 1992 election, he was hired as Deputy Policy Director of Empower America (an organization started by Bill Bennett and Jack Kemp). A speechwriter during this period, he worked with politicians and businessmen ranging from Bob Dole to Steve Case. Kuo left politics in 1996 to help start a now defunct charity, The American Compass, which was created to distribute money to small charities that served the poor.",
"Brad Mays\n a Los Angeles distribution company dedicated to serving the independent film community. It was subsequently awarded a 2010 California Film Awards \"Diamond Award.\" In 2009, Brad Mays finished work on the feature-length political documentary The Audacity of Democracy, which followed the 2008 race for the Democratic Presidential Nomination and focused in particular on the notorious PUMA movement. In multiple Blog-Radio interviews, the director expressed dissatisfaction with the project, revealing that he had not been allowed to complete shooting in the manner originally agreed to. On June 6, 2011, Brad Mays discussed his personal and working relationship with his late wife Lorenda ",
"Richard Burton (comics)\n\"Democracy,\" a Judge Dredd storyline inherited from MacManus and published through 1991 ; Zenith (Grant Morrison and Steve Yeowell), launched in 1987 ; Friday (Dave Gibbons and Will Simpson), launched in 1989 ; The Dead Man (John Wagner and John Ridgway), published in 1989–1990 ; \"Necropolis\" (John Wagner and Carlos Ezquerra), 26-part Judge Dredd storyline published in 1990 ; Time Flies (Garth Ennis and Philip Bond), launched in 1990 ; Finn (Pat Mills), acquired in 1991 ; \"Judgement Day\" (Garth Ennis), published in 1992 ; Firekind (John Smith and Paul Marshall), published in 1993 After turning down a job offer with DC Comics, Burton was hired as an assistant editor at Marvel UK in March 1978, working for top editor Dez Skinn ",
"Alexander Payne\n Constantine Alexander Payne (born February 10, 1961) is an American film director, screenwriter and producer, He is best known for the films, Citizen Ruth (1996), Election (1999), About Schmidt (2002), Sideways (2004), The Descendants (2011), Nebraska (2013) and Downsizing (2017). They are noted for their dark humor and satirical depictions of contemporary American society. Payne is a two-time winner of the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay, and a three-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director. In 2017, Metacritic ranked Payne 2nd on its list of the 25 best film directors of the 21st century.",
"Jai Ho Democracy\n 'Jai Ho! Democracy', is a 2015 Indian comedy film written and directed by Ranjit Kapoor, who was also the dialogue writer of Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro and has been produced by Bikramjeet Bhullar of Indian Production House. It is a dark satire on Indian politics and takes a dig at the existing social and political morass India is staring at currently. It stars an ensemble cast that includes the likes of Om Puri, Annu Kapoor, Satish Kaushik, Adil Hussain and Seema Biswas. The film's trailer was released on 18 March 2015. and is scheduled to release on 24 April 2015. It is about the murky world of India's political class, where ministers and leaders procrastinate over everything, even on something as grave as border security. Jai Ho! Democracy also takes a satirical look at the media's desperation to stay ahead in the TRP game, sensationalizing even the most trivial situation without any qualms.",
"Paul D. Zimmerman\n He was a film critic for Newsweek magazine from 1967 to 1975, and also wrote for television shows including Sesame Street, but is best known for writing The King of Comedy (1982), directed by Martin Scorsese. He was also the co-writer of Lovers and Liars (1979) and Consuming Passions (1988) Zimmerman was the author of many other screenplays, mostly unproduced, as well as the books The Open Man, The Year the Mets Lost Last Place and The Marx Brothers at the Movies (1968). Active in the Nuclear Freeze movement, he managed to become a member of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Republican Party convention in 1984 in order to be the only person to vote against Ronald Reagan. Zimmerman died of colon cancer.",
"Anthony Barnett (writer)\n Barnett was a student at Cambridge University, where he was active in the Labour Club, and lodged with Nicholas Kaldor. A former member of the editorial committee of New Left Review, Barnett has written for the New Statesman, The Guardian and Prospect. He conceived the television film England's Henry Moore (1988), which concerned the sculptor's co-option by the British establishment. Barnett is a campaigner for democracy. He was the first Director of Charter 88 from 1988 to 1995 and Co-Director of the Convention on Modern Liberty (2008–2009) with Henry Porter. In 2001 he founded openDemocracy with Paul Hilder, Susie Richards and David Hayes and was ",
"Lincoln (film)\n While consulting on a Steven Spielberg project in 1999, Goodwin told Spielberg she was planning to write Team of Rivals, and Spielberg immediately told her he wanted the film rights. DreamWorks finalized the deal in 2001, and by the end of the year, John Logan signed on to write the script. His draft focused on Lincoln's friendship with Frederick Douglass. Playwright Paul Webb was hired to rewrite, and filming was set to begin in January 2006, but Spielberg delayed it out of dissatisfaction with the script. Liam Neeson said Webb's draft covered the entirety of Lincoln's term as president. Tony Kushner replaced Webb. Kushner considered Lincoln \"the greatest democratic leader in the world\" and found the writing assignment daunting because ",
"Robert E. Sherwood\n that eventually evolved to \"arsenal of democracy\", a frequent catchphrase in Roosevelt's wartime speeches. Sherwood was quoted on May 12, 1940 by The New York Times\" \"This country is already, in effect, an arsenal for the democratic Allies.\" After serving as director of the Overseas Branch of the Office of War Information from 1943 until the conclusion of the war, he returned to dramatic writing with the movie The Best Years of Our Lives, directed by William Wyler. The 1946 film, which explores changes in the lives of three soldiers after they return home from war, earned Sherwood an Academy Award for Best Screenplay.",
"Democracy (film)\n Democracy is a 1918 British silent war film directed by Sidney Morgan and starring Bruce Gordon, Queenie Thomas and Alice O'Brien.",
"Lee Hae-jun\nComing Out (2000) - screenwriter ; Kick the Moon (2001) - original idea ; Conduct Zero (2002) - screenwriter ; Au Revoir, UFO (2004) - screenwriter ; Arahan (2004) - script editor ; Antarctic Journal (2005) - screenwriter ; Like a Virgin (2006) - director, screenwriter ; Castaway on the Moon (2009) - director, screenwriter ; A Hard Day (2014) - script editor ; My Dictator (2014) - director, screenwriter ; Golden Slumber (2017) - screenwriter ; Ashfall (2019) - director ",
"Ron Dermer\n Dermer worked as a political consultant for Natan Sharansky in the 1999 campaign, and from January 2001 for nearly three years he wrote a column \"The Numbers Game\" for The Jerusalem Post. In 2004, he and Sharansky co-wrote the best-selling book The Case For Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror, famously endorsed by then US-President George W. Bush. In 2005, while Benjamin Netanyahu served as Finance Minister under Ariel Sharon, Dermer was appointed economic envoy at the Israeli embassy in Washington, a post for which he had to give up his American citizenship. In 2008, after his return ",
"Democracy: An American Novel\n When, on December 1, Madeleine Lee boards the train that takes her from New York to the capital she wants to find \"the mysterious gem which must lie hidden somewhere in politics\". However, what she encounters both in her parlour and elsewhere is an ill-assorted group of men corrupted by greed, money and power; protégés and office-seekers; and, generally, people who, for various reasons, are wholly unsuited for any political office. Her suitor, 50-year-old Silas P. Ratcliffe, is a case in point. A former governor of Illinois, he now serves as Senator from that state but is toying with the idea of running "
] |