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Penguin Books
The Book of Imaginary Beings

Jorge Luis Borges was born in Buenos Aires in
and was educated in Europe. One of the major
writers of our time, he has published many
collections of poems, essays, and short stories. In
, Borges shared the International Publishers
Prize with Samuel Beckett. The Ingram Merrill
Foundation granted him its Annual Literary Award
in for his outstanding contri bution to
literature. Recently, he was awarded the degree of
Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, from both
Columbia and Oxford, and the same year won the
fifth biennial Jerusalem Prize. Time has called him
the greatest living writer in the Spanish language
today, while the New York Herald Tribune has
described him as unquestionably the most brilliant
South American writing today. He is Director of
the Argentine National Library.
Norman Thomas di Giovanni is an American now
living in Scotland. He worked with Borges in
Buenos Aires from to , and, to date, has
produced six volumes of Borgess verse and prose
in English.



Jorge Luis Borges
with Margarita Guerrero

The Book of Imaginary Beings
Revised, enlarged and translated by
Norman Thomas di Giovanni
in collaboration with the author

Penguin Books


Penguin Books Ltd, Harmondsworth,
Middlesex, England
Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Ringwood,
Victoria, Australia
El libro de los seres imaginarios
First published in Buenos Aires
Translation published in the U.S.A.

First published in Great Britain by Jonathan Cape
Published in Penguin Books
Copyright Editorial Kier, S.A., Buenos Aires,
Translation copyright Jorge Luis Borges and
Norman Thomas di Giovanni,
Assistance for the translation was given by the Center
for Inter-American Relations
Made and printed in Great Britain by
Cox & Wyman Ltd, London, Reading and Fakenham
Set in Linotype Pilgrim
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall
not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold,
hired out, or otherwise circulated without the
publishers prior consent in any form of binding or
cover other than that in which it is published
and without a similar condition including this condition
being imposed on the subsequent purchaser


Grateful acknowledgement is made for permission to
reprint the following material:
An Animal Imagined by Kafka, reprinted by
permission of Schocken Books Inc., from Dearest Father
by Franz Kafka, by Schocken Books Inc.
An Animal Imagined by C. S. Lewis and A Creature
Imagined by C. S. Lewis, reprinted by permission of
C. S. Lewis, from Perelandra, by C. S. Lewis.
Published by The Macmillan Company, New York, and
The Bodley Head, London.
A Crossbreed, reprinted by permission of Shocken
Books Inc., from Description of a Struggle by Franz
Kafka, , by Schocken Books Inc.
The Odradek, reprinted by permission of Schocken
Books Inc., from The Penal Colony by Franz Kafka,
by Schocken Books Inc.
The following pieces first appeared in the New Yorker,
October th, : A Bao A Qu, The Barometz, The
Celestial Stag, The Chinese Dragon, The Elves, Fauna
of Mirrors, Haniel, Kafziel, Azriel, and Aniel, The
Hundred-Heads, The Leveler, The Lunar Hare.
The Nymphs, The Pygmies, The Rain Bird, The Shaggy
Beast of La Fert-Bernard, The Sphinx, Swedenborgs
Angels, Swedenborgs Devils, Thermal Beings, Two
Metaphysical Beings, The Western Dragon.



Contents
Preface
Preface to the edition
Preface to the edition
A Bao A Qu
Abtu and Anet
The Amphisbaena
An Animal Imagined by Kafka
An Animal Imagined by C. S. Lewis
The Animal Imagined by Poe
Animals in the Form of Spheres
Antelopes with Six Legs
The Ass with Three Legs
Bahamut
Baldanders
The Banshee
The Barometz
The Basilisk
Behemoth
The Brownies
Burak
The Carbuncle
The Catoblepas
The Celestial Stag
The Centaur
Cerberus
The Cheshire Cat and the Kilkenny Cats
The Chimera
The Chinese Dragon
The Chinese Fox
The Chinese Phoenix
Chronos or Hercules




A Creature Imagined by C. S. Lewis
The Crocotta and the Leucrocotta
A Crossbreed
The Double
The Eastern Dragon
The Eater of the Dead
The Eight-Forked Serpent
The Elephant That Foretold the Birth of the
Buddha
The Eloi and the Morlocks
The Elves
An Experimental Account of What Was Known,
Seen, and Met by Mrs. Jane Lead in London
in
The Fairies
Fastitocalon
Fauna of Chile
Fauna of China
Fauna of Mirrors
Fauna of the United States
Garuda
The Gnomes
The Golem
The Griffon
Haniel, Kafziel, Azriel, and Aniel
Haokah, the Thunder God
Harpies
The Heavenly Cock
The Hippogriff
Hochigan
Humbaba
The Hundred-Heads
The Hydra of Lerna
Ichthyocentaurs
Jewish Demons
The Jinn


The Kami
A King of Fire and His Steed
The Kraken
Kujata
The Lamed Wufniks
The Lamias
Laudatores Temporis Acti
The Lemures
The Leveller
Lilith
The Lunar Hare
The Mandrake
The Manticore
The Mermecolion
The Minotaur
The Monkey of the Inkpot
The Monster Acheron
The Mother of Tortoises
The Nagas
The Nasnas
The Norns
The Nymphs
The Odradek
An Offspring of Leviathan
One-Eyed Beings
The Panther
The Pelican
The Peryton
The Phoenix
The Pygmies
The Rain Bird
The Remora
The Rukh
The Salamander
The Satyrs
Scylla


The Sea Horse
The Shaggy Beast of La Fert-Bernard
The Simurgh
Sirens
The Sow Harnessed with Chains
and Other Argentine Fauna
The Sphinx
The Squonk
Swedenborgs Angels
Swedenborgs Devils
The Sylphs
Talos
The Tao Tieh
Thermal Beings
The Tigers of Annam
The Trolls
Two Metaphysical Beings
The Unicorn
The Unicorn of China
The Uroboros
The Valkyries
The Western Dragon
Youwarkee
The Zaratan
Index




Preface
As we all know, there is a kind of lazy pleasure in useless
and out-of-the-way erudition. The compilation and translation of this volume have given us a great deal of such
pleasure; we hope the reader will share something of the fun
we felt when ransacking the bookshelves of our friends and
the mazelike vaults of the Biblioteca Nacional in search of
old authors and abstruse references. We have done our best
to trace all our quoted material back to original sources and
to translate it from the original tongues - medieval Latin,
French, German, Italian, and Spanish. Lemprire and the
Loeb and Bohn collections have, as is their wont, proved
most helpful with the classics. As for our invincible ignorance of Eastern languages, it enables us to be grateful for the
labours of such men as Giles, Burton, Lane, Waley, and Scholem.
The first edition of this book, containing eighty-two
pieces, was published in Mexico in . It was called then
Manual de zoologa fantstica (Handbook of Fantastic Zoology). In , a second edition - El libro de los seres imaginarios - was published in Buenos Aires with thirty-four
additional articles. Now, for this English-language edition,
we have altered a good number of the original articles, correcting, adding, or revising material, and we have also compiled a few brand-new ones. This latest edition contains
pieces.
We extend warm thanks for their help to Marian Skedgell, of E. P. Dutton, and to Jos Edmundo Clemente, Assistant Director of the Argentine National Library.
Buenos Aires, May

j.l.b. n.t. di g.




Preface to the Edition
The title of this book would justify the inclusion of Prince
Hamlet, of the point, of the line, of the surface, of n-dimensional hyperplanes and hypervolumes, of all generic
terms, and perhaps of each one of us and of the godhead. In
brief, the sum of all things - the universe. We have limited
ourselves, however, to what is immediately suggested by the
words imaginary beings; we have compiled a handbook of
the strange creatures conceived through time and space by
the human imagination.
We are ignorant of the meaning of the dragon in the same
way that we are ignorant of the meaning of the universe,
but there is something in the dragons image that fits mans
imagination, and this accounts for the dragons appearance
in different places and periods.
A book of this kind is unavoidably incomplete; each new
edition forms the basis of future editions, which themselves
may grow on endlessly.
We invite the eventual reader in Colombia or Paraguay to
send us the names, accurate description, and most conspicuous traits of their local monsters.
As with all miscellanies, as with the inexhaustible
volumes of Robert Burton, of Frazer, or of Pliny, The Book
of Imaginary Beings is not meant to be read straight
through; rather, we should like the reader to dip into these
pages at random, just as one plays with the shifting patterns
of a kaleidoscope.
The sources of this collection are manifold; they are recorded in each piece. May we be forgiven any accidental
omission.
Martnez, September



j.l.b. m.g.


Preface to the Edition
A small child is taken to the zoo for the first time. This child
may be any one of us or, to put it another way, we have
been this child and have forgotten about it. In these grounds
- these terrible grounds - the child sees living animals he has
never before glimpsed; he sees jaguars, vultures, bison, and what is still stranger - giraffes. He sees for the first time the
bewildering variety of the animal kingdom, and this spectacle, which might alarm or frighten him, he enjoys. He
enjoys it so much that going to the zoo is one of the
pleasures of childhood, or is thought to be such. How can we
explain this everyday and yet mysterious event?
We can, of course, deny it. We can suppose that children
suddenly rushed off to the zoo will become, in due time,
neurotic, and the truth is there can hardly be a child who
has not visited the zoo and there is hardly a grown-up who is
not a neurotic. It may be stated that all children, by
definition, are explorers, and that to discover the camel is in
itself no stranger than to discover a mirror or water or a
staircase. It can also be stated that the child trusts his
parents, who take him to this place full of animals. Besides,
his toy tiger and the pictures of tigers in the encyclopedia
have somehow taught him to look at the flesh-and-bone tiger
without fear. Plato (if he were invited to join in this discussion) would tell us that the child had already seen the
tiger in a primal world of archetypes, and that now on
seeing the tiger he recognizes it. Schopenhauer (even more
wondrously) would tell us that the child looks at the tigers
without fear because he is aware that he is the tigers and the
tigers are him or, more accurately, that both he and the
tigers are but forms of that single essence, the Will.
Let us pass now from the zoo of reality to the zoo of



mythologies, to the zoo whose denizens are not lions but
sphinxes and griffons and centaurs. The population of this
second zoo should exceed by far the population of the first,
since a monster is no more than a combination of parts of
real beings, and the possibilities of permutation border on
the infinite. In the centaur, the horse and man are blended; in
the Minotaur, the bull and man (Dante imagined it as having
the face of a man and the body of a bull); and in this way it
seems we could evolve an endless variety of monsters - combinations of fishes, birds, and reptiles, limited only by our
own boredom or disgust. This, however, does not happen;
our monsters would be stillborn, thank God. Flaubert had
rounded up, in the last pages of his Temptation of Saint
Anthony, a number of medieval and classical monsters and
has tried - so say his commentators - to concoct a few new
ones; his sum total is hardly impressive, and but few of them
really stir our imaginations. Anyone looking into the pages
of the present handbook will soon find out that the zoology
of dreams is far poorer than the zoology of the Maker.
We are as ignorant of the meaning of the dragon as we are
of the meaning of the universe, but there is something in the
dragons image that appeals to the human imagination, and
so we find the dragon in quite distinct places and times. It is, so
to speak, a necessary monster, not an ephemeral or accidental
one, such as the three-headed chimera or the catoblepas.
Of course, we are fully aware that this book, perhaps the
first of its kind, does not exhaust the sum total of imaginary
animals. We have delved into classical and Oriental literatures, but we feel that our subject goes on for ever.
We have deliberately excluded the many legends of men
taking the shapes of animals: the lobisn, the werewolf,
and so on.
We wish to acknowledge the help given us by Leonor
Guerrero de Coppola, Alberto DAversa, and Rafael Lpez
Pellegri.
Martnez, January



j.l.b. m.g.


A Bao A Qu
If you want to look out over the loveliest landscape in the
world, you must climb to the top of the Tower of Victory in
Chitor. There, standing on a circular terrace, one has a
sweep of the whole horizon. A winding stairway gives
access to this terrace, but only those who do not believe in
the legend dare climb up. The tale runs:
On the stairway of the Tower of Victory there has lived
since the beginning of time a being sensitive to the many
shades of the human soul and known as the A Bao A Qu. It
lies dormant, for the most part on the first step, until at the
approach of a person some secret life is touched off in it, and
deep within the creature an inner light begins to glow. At
the same time, its body and almost translucent skin begin to
stir. But only when someone starts up the spiralling stairs is
the A Bao A Qu brought to consciousness, and then it sticks
close to the visitors heels, keeping to the outside of the turning steps, where they are most worn by the generations of
pilgrims. At each level the creatures colour becomes more
intense, its shape approaches perfection, and the bluish form
it gives off is more brilliant. But it achieves its ultimate form
only at the topmost step, when the climber is a person who
has attained Nirvana and whose acts cast no shadows.
Otherwise, the A Bao A Qu hangs back before reaching the
top, as if paralysed, its body incomplete, its blue growing
paler, and its glow hesitant. The creature suffers when it
cannot come to completion, and its moan is a barely audible
sound, something like the rustling of silk. Its span of life is
brief, since as soon as the traveller climbs down, the A Bao A
Qu wheels and tumbles to the first steps, where, worn out
and almost shapeless, it waits for the next visitor. People say
that its tentacles are visible only when it reaches the middle



of the staircase. It is also said that it can see with its whole
body and that to the touch it is like the skin of a peach.
In the course of centuries, the A Bao A Qu has reached the
terrace only once.
This legend is recorded by C. C. Iturvuru in an appendix
to his now classic treatise On Malay Witchcraft ().

Abtu and Anet
As all Egyptians knew, Abtu and Anet were two life-sized
fishes, identical and holy, that swam on the lookout for
danger before the prow of the sun gods ship. Their course
was endless; by day the craft sailed the sky from east to
west, from dawn to dusk, and by night made its way underground in the opposite direction.

The Amphisbaena
The Pharsalia (IX, -) catalogues the real or imaginary
reptiles that Catos soldiers met up with on their scorching
march across the African desert. Among them are the
Pareas, content with its tail to cleave its track (or as a
seventeenth-century Spanish poet has it, which makes its
way, erect as a staff), and the Jaculi, which darts from trees
like javelins, and the dangerous Amphisbaena, also, that
moves on at both of its heads. Pliny uses nearly the same
words to describe the Amphisbaena, adding: as though one
mouth were not enough for the discharge of all its venom



Brunetto Latinis Tesoro - the encyclopedia which Latini
recommended to his old disciple in the seventh circle of Hell
- is less terse and clearer: The Amphisbaena is a serpent
having two heads, the one in its proper place and the other
in its tail; and it can bite with both, and run with agility, and
its eyes glare like candles. Sir Thomas Browne in his Vulgar
Errors () wrote that there is no species without a
bottom, top, front, back, left, and right, and he denied the
existence of the Amphisbaena, for the senses being placed at
both extreams, doth make both ends anterior, which is impossible . . . And therefore this duplicity was ill contrived to
place one head at both extreams . . . Amphisbaena, in Greek
means goes both ways. In the Antilles and in certain parts
of America, the name is given to a reptile commonly known
as the doble andadora (Both ways goer), the two-headed
snake, and mother of ants. It is said that ants nourish it.
Also that if it is chopped in half, its two parts will join
again.
The Amphisbaenas medicinal properties were celebrated
by Pliny.

An Animal Imagined by Kafka
It is the animal with the big tail, a tail many yards long
and like a foxs brush. How I should like to get my hands
on this tail some time, but it is impossible, the animal is
constantly moving about, the tail is constantly being flung
this way and that. The animal resembles a kangaroo, but
not as to the face, which is flat almost like a human face,
and small and oval; only its teeth have any power of expression, whether they are concealed or bared. Sometimes
I have the feeling that the animal is trying to tame me.



What other purpose could it have in withdrawing its tail
when I snatch at it, and then again waiting calmly until I
am tempted again, and then leaping away once more?
Franz Kafka: Dearest Father
(Translated from the German by
Ernst Kaiser and Eithne Wilkins)

An Animal Imagined by
C. S. Lewis
The noise was very loud now and the thicket very dense
so that he could not see a yard ahead, when the music
stopped suddenly. There was a sound of rustling and
broken twigs and he made hastily in that direction, but
found nothing. He had almost decided to give up the
search when the song began again a little farther away.
Once more he made after it; once more the creature
stopped singing and evaded him. He must have played
thus at hide-and-seek with it for the best part of an hour
before his search was rewarded.
Treading delicately during one of the loudest bursts of
music he at last saw through the flowery branches a black
something. Standing still whenever it stopped singing, and
advancing with great caution whenever it began again, he
stalked it for ten minutes. At last it was in full view, and
singing, and ignorant that it was watched. It sat upright
like a dog, black and sleek and shiny, but its shoulders
were high above Ransoms head, and the forelegs on
which they were pillared were like young trees and the
wide soft pads on which they rested were large as those of
a camel. The enormous rounded belly was white, and far



up above the shoulders the neck rose like that of a horse.
The head was in profile from where Ransom stood - the
mouth wide open as it sang of joy in thick-coming trills,
and the music almost visibly rippled in its glossy throat.
He stared in wonder at the wide liquid eyes and the quivering, sensitive nostrils. Then the creature stopped, saw him,
and darted away, and stood, now a few paces distant, on
all four legs, not much smaller than a young elephant,
swaying a long bushy tail. It was the first thing in Perelandra which seemed to show any fear of man. Yet it was
not fear. When he called to it it came nearer. It put its
velvet nose into his hand and endured his touch; but
almost at once it darted back and, bending its long neck,
buried its head in its paws. He could make no headway
with it, and when at length it retreated out of sight he did
not follow it. To do so would have seemed an injury to its
fawn-like shyness, to the yielding softness of its expression, its evident wish to be for ever a sound and only a
sound in the thickest centre of untravelled woods. He resumed his journey: a few seconds later the song broke
out behind him, louder and lovelier than before, as if in a
paean of rejoicing at its recovered privacy.
The beasts of that kind have no milk [said Perelandra]
and always what they bring forth is suckled by the shebeast of another kind. She is great and beautiful and
dumb, and till the young singing beast is weaned it is
among her whelps and is subject to her. But when it is
grown it becomes the most delicate and glorious of all
beasts and goes from her. And she wonders at its song.
C. S. Lewis: Perelandra




The Animal Imagined by Poe
In his Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, published in , Edgar Allan Poe attri buted to certain Antarctic islands an astounding yet credible fauna. In Chapter
XVIII, we read:
We also picked up a bush, full of red berries, like those of
the hawthorn, and the carcass of a singular-looking landanimal. It was three feet in length, and but six inches in
height, with four very short legs, the feet armed with long
claws of a brilliant scarlet, and resembling coral in substance. The body was covered with a straight silky hair,
perfectly white. The tail was peaked like that of a rat, and
about a foot and a half long. The head resembled a cats,
with the exception of the ears; these were flapped like the
ears of a dog. The teeth were of the same brilliant scarlet
as the claws.
No less remarkable was the water found in those southern
regions. Towards the close of the chapter, Poe writes:
On account of the singular character of the water, we
refused to taste it, supposing it to be polluted . . . I am at a
loss to give a distinct idea of the nature of this liquid, and
cannot do so without many words. Although it flowed
with rapidity in all declivities where common water
would do so, yet never, except when falling in a cascade,
had it the customary appearance of limpidity. It was,
nevertheless, in point of fact, as perfectly limpid as any
limestone water in existence, the difference being only in
appearance. At first sight, and especially in cases where
little declivity was found, it bore resemblance, as regards
consistency, to a thick infusion of gum-arabic in common



water. But this was only the least remarkable of its extraordinary qualities. It was not colourless, nor was it of any
one uniform colour - presenting to the eye, as it flowed,
every possible shade of purple, like the hues of a changeable silk . . . Upon collecting a basinful, and allowing it to
settle thoroughly, we perceived that the whole mass of
liquid was made up of a number of distinct veins, each of
a distinct hue; that these veins did not commingle; and
that their cohesion was perfect in regard to their own
particles among themselves, and imperfect in regard to
neighbouring veins. Upon passing the blade of a knife athwart the veins, the water closed over it immediately, as
with us, and also, in withdrawing it, all traces of the passage of the knife were instantly obliterated. If, however,
the blade was passed down accurately between the two
veins, a perfect separation was effected, which the power
of cohesion did not immediately rectify.

Animals in the Form of Spheres
The sphere is the most uniform of solid bodies since every
point on its surface is equidistant from its centre. Because of
this, and because of its ability to revolve on an axis without
straying from a fixed place, Plato (Timaeus, ) approved
the judgement of the Demiurge, who gave the world a
spherical shape. Plato thought the world to be a living being
and in the Laws () stated that the planets and stars were
living as well. In this way, he enriched fantastic zoology
with vast spherical animals and cast aspersions on those
slow-witted astronomers who failed to understand that the
circular course of heavenly bodies was voluntary.
In Alexandria over five hundred years later, Origen, one



of the Fathers of the Church, taught that the blessed would
come back to life in the form of spheres and would enter
rolling into Heaven.
During the Renaissance, the idea of Heaven as an animal
reappeared in Lucilio Vanini; the Neoplatonist Marsilio
Ficino spoke of the hair, teeth, and bones of the earth; and
Giordano Bruno felt that the planets were great peaceful
animals, warm-blooded, with regular habits, and endowed
with reason. At the beginning of the seventeenth century,
the German astronomer Johannes Kepler debated with the
English mystic Robert Fludd which of them had first conceived the notion of the earth as a living monster, whose
whalelike breathing, changing with sleep and wakefulness,
produces the ebb and flow of the sea. The anatomy, the
feeding habits, the colour, the memory, and the imaginative
and shaping faculties of the monster were sedulously studied
by Kepler.
In the nineteenth century, the German psychologist
Gustav Theodor Fechner (a man praised by William James
in his A Pluralistic Universe) rethought the preceding ideas
with all the earnestness of a child. Anyone not belittling his
hypothesis that the earth, our mother, is an organism - an
organism superior to plants, animals, and men - may look
into the pious pages of Fechners Zend-Avesta. There we
read, for example, that the earths spherical shape is that of
the human eye, the noblest organ of our body. Also, that if
the sky is really the home of angels, these angels are obviously the stars, for the sky has no other inhabitants.




Antelopes with Six Legs
It is said that Odins horse, the grey-coated Sleipnir - who
travels on land, in the air, and down into the regions of Hell
- is provided (or encumbered) with eight legs; a Siberian
myth attri butes six legs to the first Antelopes. With such an
endowment it was difficult or impossible to catch them;
Tunk-poj, the divine huntsman, made some special skates
with the wood of a sacred tree which creaked incessantly
and that the barking of a dog had revealed to him. The skates
creaked too and flew with the speed of an arrow; to control
or restrain their course, he found it necessary to wedge into
the skates some blocks made of the wood of another magic
tree. All over heaven Tunk-poj hunted the Antelope. The
beast, tired out, fell to the ground, and Tunk-poj cut off its
hindmost pair of legs.
Men, said Tunk-poj, grow smaller and weaker every
day. How are they going to hunt six-legged Antelopes if I
myself am barely able to?
From that day on, Antelopes have been quadrupeds.

The Ass with Three Legs
Pliny attri butes to Zarathustra, founder of the religion still
professed by the Parsis of Bombay, the composition of two
million verses; the Arab historian al-Tabari claims that Zarathustras complete works as set down by pious calligraphers
cover some twelve thousand cowhides. It is well known that
Alexander of Macedonia had these parchments burned in



Persepolis, but thanks to the retentive memory of the priests,
it was possible to preserve the basic texts, and from the
ninth century these have been supplemented by an encyclopedic work, the Bundahish, which contains this page:
Of the three-legged ass it is said that it stands in the middle
of the ocean and that three is the number of its hooves
and six the number of its eyes and nine the number of its
mouths and two the number of its ears and one the
number of its horn. Its coat is white, its food is spiritual,
and its whole being is righteous. And two of its six eyes
are in the place where eyes should be and two on the
crown of its head and two in its forehead; through the
keenness of its six eyes it triumphs and destroys.
Of its nine mouths, three are placed in the face and
three in the forehead and three on the inside of its loins . . .
Each hoof, laid on the ground, covers the space of a flock
of a thousand sheep, and under each of its spurs up to a
thousand horsemen can manoeuvre. As to its ears, they
overshadow [the north Persian province of] Mazanderan.
Its hom is as of gold and is hollow, and from it a thousand
branchlets have grown. With this horn will it bring down
and scatter all the machinations of the wicked.
Amber is known to be the dung of the three-legged ass. In
the mythology of Mazdaism, this beneficent monster is one
of the helpers of Ahura Mazdah (Ormuzd), the principle of
Life, Light, and Truth.




Bahamut
Behemoths fame reached the wastes of Arabia, where men
altered and magnified its image. From a hippopotamus or
elephant they turned it into a fish afloat in a fathomless sea;
on the fish they placed a bull, and on the bull a ruby mountain, and on the mountain an angel, and over the angel six
hells, and over these hells the earth, and over the earth seven
heavens. A Moslem tradition runs:
God made the earth, but the earth had no base and so
under the earth he made an angel. But the angel had no
base and so under the angels feet he made a crag of ruby.
But the crag had no base and so under the crag he made a
bull endowed with four thousand eyes, ears, nostrils,
mouths, tongues and feet. But the bull had no base and so
under the bull he made a fish named Bahamut, and under
the fish he put water, and under the water he put darkness, and beyond this mens knowledge does not reach.
Others have it that the earth has its foundation on the
water; the water, on the crag; the crag, on the bulls forehead; the bull, on a bed of sand; the sand, on Bahamut; Bahamut, on a stifling wind; the stifling wind on a mist. What lies
under the mist is unknown.
So immense and dazzling is Bahamut that the eyes of man
cannot bear its sight. All the seas of the world, placed in one
of the fishs nostrils, would be like a mustard seed laid in the
desert. In the th night of the Arabian Nights we are told
that it was given to Isa (Jesus) to behold Bahamut and that,
this mercy granted, Isa fell to the ground in a faint, and
three days and their nights passed before he recovered his
senses. The tale goes on that beneath the measureless fish is a
sea; and beneath the sea, a chasm of air; and beneath the air,



fire; and beneath the fire, a serpent named Falak in whose
mouth are the six hells.
The idea of the crag resting on the bull, and the bull on
Bahamut, and Bahamut on anything else, seems to be an
illustration of the cosmological proof of the existence of
God. This proof argues that every cause requires a prior
cause, and so, in order to avoid proceeding into infinity, a
first cause is necessary.

Baldanders
Baldanders (whose name we may translate as Soon-another
or At-any-moment-something-else) was suggested to the
master shoemaker Hans Sachs (-) of Nuremburg
by that passage in the Odyssey in which Menelaus pursues
the Egyptian god Proteus, who changes himself into a lion, a
serpent, a panther, a huge wild boar, a tree, and flowing
water. Some ninety years after Sachss death, Baldanders
makes a new appearance in the last book of the picaresquefantastic novel by Grimmelshausen, The Adventuresome
Simplicissimus (). In the midst of a wood, the hero
comes upon a stone statue which seems to him an idol from
some old Germanic temple. He touches it and the statue tells
him he is Baldanders and thereupon takes the forms of a
man, of an oak tree, of a sow, of a fat sausage, of a field of
clover, of dung, of a flower, of a blossoming branch, of a
mulberry bush, of a silk tapestry, of many other things and
beings, and then, once more, of a man. He pretends to teach
Simplicissimus the art of conversing with things, which by
their nature are dumb, such as chairs and benches, pots and
pans; he also makes himself into a secretary and writes these
words from the Revelation of St John: I am the first and the



last, which are the key to the coded document in which he
leaves the hero his instructions. Baldanders adds that his
emblem (like that of the Turk, and with more right to it than
the Turk) is the inconstant moon.
Baldanders is a successive monster, a monster in time. The
title page of the first edition of Grimmelshausens novel
takes up the joke. It bears an engraving of a creature having
a satyrs head, a human torso, the unfolded wings of a bird,
and the tail of a fish, and which, with a goats leg and vultures claws, tramples on a heap of masks that stand for the
succession of shapes he has taken. In his belt he carries a
sword and in his hands an open book showing pictures of a
crown, a sailing boat, a goblet, a tower, a child, a pair of
dice, a fools cap with bells, and a piece of ordnance.

The Banshee
Nobody seems to have laid eyes on this woman of the
fairies. She is less a shape than a mournful screaming that
haunts the Irish night and (according to Sir Walter Scotts
Demonology and Witchcraft) the Scottish highlands. Beneath the windows of the visited house, she foretells the
death of one of the family. She is held to be a token of pure
Celtic blood, with no mixture of Latin, Saxon, or Danish.
The Banshee has also been heard in Wales and in Brittany.
Her wail is called keening.




The vegetable Lamb of Tartary, also named Barometz and
Lycopodium barometz and Chinese lycopodium, is a plant
whose shape is that of a lamb bearing a golden fleece. It
stands on four or five root stalks. Sir Thomas Browne gives
this description of it in his Pseudodoxia Epidemica ():
Much wonder is made of the Boramez, that strange plantanimal or vegetable Lamb of Tartary, which Wolves delight to feed on, which hath the shape of a Lamb,
affordeth a bloody juyce upon breaking, and liveth while
the plants be consumed about it.
Other monsters are made up by combining various kinds of
animals; the Barometz is a union of animal and vegetable
kingdoms.
This brings to mind the mandrake, which cries out like a
man when it is ripped from the earth; and in one of the
circles of the Inferno, the sad forest of the suicides, from
whose torn limbs blood and words drip at the same time;
and that tree dreamed by Chesterton, which devoured the
birds nesting in its branches, and when spring came put out
feathers instead of leaves.

The Basilisk
Down through the ages, the Basilisk (also known as the
Cockatrice) grows increasingly ugly and horrendous until
today it is forgotten. Its name comes from the Greek and
means little king; to the Elder Pliny (VIII, ), it was a



serpent bearing a bright spot in the shape of a crown on its
head. Dating from the Middle Ages, it becomes a four-legged
cock with a crown, yellow feathers, wide thorny wings, and
a serpents tail ending either in a hook or in another cocks
head. The change in its image is reflected in a change in its
name; Chaucer in The Persones Tale speaks of the basilicok (the basilicok sleeth folk by the venim of his sighte).
One of the plates illustrating Aldrovandis Natural History
of Serpents and Dragons gives the Basilisk scales instead of
feathers, and the use of eight legs. (According to the Younger
Edda, Odins horse Sleipnir also had eight legs.)
What remains constant about the Basilisk is the deadly
effect of its stare and its venom. The Gorgons eyes turned
living beings into stone; Lucan tells us that from the blood of
one of them all the serpents of Libya sprang - the asp, the
amphisbaena, the ammodyte, and the Basilisk. We give the
following passages, in a literal translation, from Book IX of
Pharsalia:
In this body [Medusas] first did noxious nature produce
deadly plagues; from those jaws snakes poured forth
whizzing hisses with vibrating tongues, which, after the
manner of a womans hair flowing along the back, flapped
about the very neck of the delighted Medusa. Upon her
forehead turned towards you erect did serpents rise, and
vipers venom flowed from her combed locks.
What avails a Basilisk being pierced by the spear of the
wretched Murrus? Swift flies the poison along the
weapon, and fastens upon the hand; which, instantly, with
sword unshea thed, he smites, and at the same moment
severs it entirely from the arm; and, looking upon the
dreadful warning of a death his own, he stands in safety,
his hand perishing.
The Basilisk dwelled in the desert; or, more accurately, it
made the desert. Birds fell dead at its feet and the earths



fruits blackened and rotted; the water of the streams where
it quenched its thirst remained poisoned for centuries. That
its mere glance split rocks and burned grass has been attested
by Pliny. Of all animals, the weasel alone was unaffected by
the monster and could be counted on to attack it on sight; it
was also believed that the crowing of a rooster sent the Basilisk scurrying. The seasoned traveller was careful to provide
himself with either a caged rooster or a weasel before venturing into unknown territory. Another weapon was the
mirror, its own image would strike the Basilisk dead.
Isidore of Seville and the compilers of the Speculum Triplex (Threefold Mirror) rejected Lucans fables and sought a
rational explanation for the Basilisks origin. (They could
not deny its existence, since the Vulgate translates the
Hebrew word Tsepha, the name of a poisonous reptile, as
cockatrice.) The theory that gained most favour was that of
a misshapen egg laid by a cock and hatched by a snake or a
toad. In the seventeenth century, Sir Thomas Browne found
this explanation as farfetched as the monster itself. At much
the same time, Quevedo wrote his romance The Basilisk, in
which we read:
Si est vivo quien te vio,
Toda su historia es mentira,
Pues si no muri, te ignora,
Y si muri no lo afirma.
[If the man who saw you is still alive, your whole story is
a lie, since if he has not died he cannot have seen you, and
if he has died, he cannot tell what he saw.]




Behemoth
Four centuries before the Christian era, Behemoth was a
magnification of the elephant or of the hippopotamus, or a
mistaken and alarmist version of these animals; it is now precisely - the ten famous verses describing it in Job (XL:
-) and the huge being which these lines evoke. The rest
is wrangling and philology.
The word Behemoth is plural; scholars tell us it is the
intensive plural form of the Hebrew bhemah, which means
beast. As Fray Luis de Len wrote in his Exposicin del
Libro de Job: Behemoth is a Hebrew word that stands for
beasts; according to the received judgement of learned
men, it means the elephant, so called because of its inordinate size; and being but a single animal it counts for
many.
We are also reminded of the fact that in the first verse of
Genesis in the original text, the Hebrew name for God,
Elohm, is plural, though the form of the verb it takes is
singular - Bereshit bar Elohm et hashamim veet
haretz. Trinitarians, by the way, have used this incongruity as an argument for the concept of the godhead being
Three-in-One.
We give the ten verses in the translation from the Latin
Vulgate by Father Knox (XL: -):
Here is Behemoth, my creature as thou art, fed on the
same grass the oxen eat; yet what strength in his loins,
what lustihood in the navel of his belly! Stiff as cedarwood his tail, close-knit the sinews of his groin, bones like
pipes of bronze, gristle like plates of steel! None of Gods
works can vie with him, no weapon so strong in the hands
of its maker; whole mountainsides, the playground of his



fellow beasts, he will lay under tri bute, as he lies there
under the close covert of the marsh-reeds, thick boughs
for his shadow, among the willows by the stream. The
flooded river he drinks unconcerned; Jordan itself would
have no terrors for that gaping mouth. Like a lure it
would charm his eye, though it should pierce his nostrils
with sharp stakes.

The Brownies
Brownies are helpful little men of a brownish hue, which
gives them their name. It is their habit to visit Scottish farms
and, while the household sleeps, to perform domestic chores.
One of the tales by the Grimms deals with the same subject.
The famous writer Robert Louis Stevenson said he had
trained his Brownies in the craft of literature. Brownies
visited him in his dreams and told him wondrous tales; for
instance, the strange transformation of Dr Jekyll into the
diabolical Mr Hyde, and that episode of Olalla, in which the
scion of an old Spanish family bites his sisters hand.

Burak
In George Sales translation (), the opening verse of
Chapter XVII of the Koran consists of these words: Praise be
unto him, who transported his servant by night, from the
sacred temple of Mecca to his farther temple of Jerusalem,




the circuit of which we have blessed, that we might show
him some of our signs . . . Commentators say that the one
praised is God, that his servant is Mohammed, that the
sacred temple is that of Mecca, that the distant temple is
that of Jerusalem, and that from Jerusalem the Prophet was
transported to the seventh heaven. In the oldest versions of
the legend, Mohammed is guided by a man or an angel; in
those of a later date he is furnished with a heavenly steed,
larger than an ass and smaller than a mule. This steed is
Burak, whose name means shining. According to Richard
Burton, translator of The Book of a Thousand Nights and a
Night, Moslems in India usually picture Burak with a mans
face, the ears of an ass, a horses body, and the wings and tail
of a peacock.
One of the Islamic legends tells that Burak, on leaving the
ground, tipped a jar of water. The Prophet was taken up to
the seventh heaven, along the way speaking in each of the
heavens with the patriarchs and angels living there, and he
crossed the Unity and felt a coldness that chilled his heart
when the Lord laid a hand on his shoulder. Mans time is not
commensurate with Gods time; on his return the Prophet
raised the jar, out of which not a single drop had yet been
spilled.
Miguel Asm Palacios, the twentieth-century Spanish
Orientalist, speaks of a mystic from Murcia of the s
who, in an allegory entitled the Book of the Night Journey
to the Majesty of the All-Generous, has seen in Burak, a
symbol of divine love. In another text he speaks of the
Burak of the pureness of heart.




The Carbuncle
In mineralogy the carbuncle, from the Latin carbunculus, a
little coal, is a ruby; as to the carbuncle of the ancients, it is
supposed to have been a garnet.
In sixteenth-century South America, the name was given
by the Spanish conquistadors to a mysterious animal - mysterious because nobody ever saw it well enough to know
whether it was a bird or a mammal, whether it had feathers
or fur. The poet-priest Martn del Barco Centenera, who
claims to have seen it in Paraguay, describes it in his Argentina () only as a smallish animal, with a shining
mirror on its head, like a glowing coal . . . Another conquistador, Gonzalo Fernndez del Oviedo, associates this
mirror or light shining out of the darkness - two of which he
glimpsed in the Strait of Magellan - with the precious stone
that dragons were thought to have hidden in their brain. He
took his knowledge from Isidore of Seville, who wrote in his
Etymologies:
it is taken from the dragons brain but does not harden
into a gem unless the head is cut from the living beast;
wizards, for this reason, cut the heads from sleeping
dragons. Men bold enough to venture into dragon lairs
scatter grain that has been doctored to make these beasts
drowsy, and when they have fallen asleep their heads are
struck off and the gems plucked out.
Here we are reminded of Shakespeares toad (As You Like It,
II, i), which, though ugly and venomous, Wears yet a
precious jewel in his head . . .
Possession of the Carbuncles jewel offered fortune and
luck. Barco Centenera underwent many hardships hunting
the reaches of Paraguayan rivers and jungles for the elusive



creature; he never found it. Down to this day we know
nothing more about the beast and its secret head stone.

The Catoblepas
Pliny (VIII, ), relates that somewhere on the borders of
Ethiopia, near the head of the Nile,
there is found a wild beast called the catoblepas; an
animal of moderate size, and in other respects sluggish in
the movement of the rest of its limbs; its head is remarkably heavy, and it only carries it with the greatest
difficulty, being always bent down towards the earth.
Were it not for this circumstance, it would prove the destruction of the human race; for all who behold its eyes,
fall dead upon the spot.
Catoblepas, in Greek, means that which looks downward.
The French naturalist Cuvier has conjectured that the gnu
(contaminated by the basilisk and the gorgon) suggested the
Catoblepas to the ancients. At the close of The Temptation
of Saint Anthony, Flaubert describes it and has it speak in
this way:
black buffalo with the head of a hog, hanging close to the
ground, joined to its body by a thin neck, long and loose
as an emptied intestine.
It wallows in the mud, and its legs are smothered under
the huge mane of stiff bristles that hide its face.
Obese, downhearted, wary, I do nothing but feel under
my belly the warm mud. My head is so heavy that I
cannot bear its weight. I wind it slowly around my body;
with half-open jaws, I pull up with my tongue poisonous




plants dampened by my breath. Once, I ate up my forelegs unawares.
No one, Anthony, has ever seen my eyes; or else, those
who have seen them have died. If I were to lift my eyelids
- my pink and swollen eyelids - you would die on the
spot.

The Celestial Stag
We know absolutely nothing about the appearance of the
Celestial Stag (maybe because nobody has ever had a good
look at one), but we do know that these tragic animals live
underground in mines and desire nothing more than to reach
the light of day. They have the power of speech and implore
the miners to help them to the surface. At first, a Celestial
Stag attempts to bribe the workmen with the promise of
revealing hidden veins of silver and gold; when this gambit
fails, the beast becomes troublesome and the miners are
forced to overpower it and wall it up in one of the mine
galleries. It is also rumoured that miners outnumbered by
the Stags have been tortured to death.
Legend has it that if the Celestial Stag finds its way into the
open air, it becomes a foul-smelling liquid that can breed
death and pestilence.
The tale is from China and is recorded by G. WilloughbyMeade in his book Chinese Ghouls and Goblins.




The Centaur
The Centaur is the most harmonious creature of fantastic
zoology. Biform it is called in Ovids Metamorphoses, but
its heterogeneous character is easily overlooked, and we
tend to think that in the Platonic world of ideas there is an
archetype of the Centaur as there is of the horse or the man.
The discovery of this archetype took centuries; early archaic
monuments show a naked man to whose waist the body and
hind quarters of a horse are uncomfortably fixed. On the
west faade of the Temple of Zeus at Olympia, the Centaurs already stand on the legs of a horse, and from the place
where the animals neck should start we find a human
torso.
Centaurs were the offspring of Ixion, a king of Thessaly,
and a cloud which Zeus had given the shape of Hera (or
Juno); another version of the legend asserts that they were
the offspring of Centaurus, Apollos son, and Stilbia; a third,
that they were the fruit of a union of Centaurus with the
mares of Magnesium. (It is said that centaur is derived from
gandharva; in Vedic myth, the Gandharvas are minor gods
who drive the horses of the sun.) Since the art of riding was
unknown to the Greeks of Homeric times, it has been conjectured that the first Scythian horseman they came across
seemed to them all one with his horse, and it has also been
alleged that the cavalry of the conquistadors were Centaurs
to the Indians. A text quoted by Prescott runs as follows:
One of the riders fell off his horse; and the Indians, seeing
the animal fall asunder, up to now having deemed the
beast all one, were so filled with terror that they turned
and fled, crying out to their comrades that the animal had
made itself into two and wondering at this: wherein we




may detect the secret hand of God; since, had this not
happened, they might have slaughtered all the Christians.
But the Greeks, unlike the Indians, were familiar with the
horse; it is more likely that the Centaur was a deliberate
invention and not a confusion born of ignorance.
The best known of the Centaur fables is the one in which
they battle with the Lapiths followed a quarrel at a marriage
celebration. To the Centaurs wine was now a new experience; in the midst of the banqueting an intoxicated Centaur insulted the bride and, overturning the tables, started
the famous Centauromachy that Phidias, or a disciple of his,
would carve on the Par thenon, that Ovid would commemorate in Book XII of the Metamorphoses, and that
would inspire Rubens. Defeated by the Lapiths, the Centaurs were forced to leave Thessaly. Hercules, in a second
encounter with them, all but annihilated the race of Centaurs with his arrows.
Anger and rustic barbarism are symbolized in the Centaur, but Chiron, the most righteous of the Centaurs (Iliad,
XI, ), was the teacher of Achilles and Aesculapius, whom
he instructed in the arts of music, hunting, and war, as well
as medicine and surgery. Chiron stands out in Canto XII of
the Inferno, generally known as the Canto of the Centaurs.
The acute observations of Momigliano in his edition of
the Commedia should interest the curious.
Pliny (VII, ) says he saw a Hippocentaur embalmed in
honey that had been brought to Rome from Egypt in the
reign of Claudius.
In the Feast of the Seven Sages, Plutarch humorously tells
that one of the shepherds of Periander, a tyrant of Corinth,
brought his master, in a leather pouch, a newborn creature
that a mare had given birth to and whose face, neck, and
arms were human while its body was that of a horse. It cried
like a baby, and everyone thought it to be a frightening



omen. The sage Thales examined it, chuckled, and said to
Periander that really he could not approve his herdsmens
conduct.
In Book V of his poem De rerum natura, Lucretius declares the Centaur impossible since the equine species
reaches maturity before the human, and at the age of three
the Centaur would be a full-grown horse and a babbling
child. The horse would die fifty years before the man.

Cerberus
If Hell is a house, the house of Hades, it is natural that it
have its watchdog; it is also natural that this dog be fearful.
Hesiods Theogony gives it fifty heads; to make things
easier for the plastic arts, this number has been reduced and
Cerberus three heads are now a matter of public record.
Virgil speaks of its three throats; Ovid of its threefold bark;
Butler compares the triple-crowned tiara of the Pope, who is
Heavens doorman, with the three heads of the dog who is
the doorman of Hell (Hudibras, IV, ). Dante lends it human
characteristics which increase its infernal nature: a filthy
black beard, clawed hands that in the lashing rain rip at the
souls of the damned. It bites, barks, and bares its teeth.
Bringing Cerberus up into the light of day was the last of
Hercules tasks. (He drow out Cerberus, the hound of helle,
writes Chaucer in The Monkes Tale.) Zachary Grey, an English writer of the eighteenth century, in his commentary on
Hudibras interprets the adventure in this way:
This Dog with three Heads denotes the past, the present,
and the Time to come; which receive, and, as it were,
devour all things. Hercules got the better of him, which
shews that heroick Actions are always victorious over



Time, because they are present in the Memory of Posterity.
According to the oldest texts, Cerberus greets with his tail
(which is a serpent) those entering into Hell, and tears to
pieces those who try to get out. A later legend has him biting
the newly arrived; to appease him a honeycake was placed
in the coffin of the departed.
In Norse mythology, a blood-spattered dog, Garmr, keeps
watch over the house of the dead and will fight against the
gods when hells wolves devour the moon and sun. Some
give this dog four eyes; the dogs of Yama, the Brahman god
of death, also have four eyes.
Both Brahmanism and Buddhism offer hells full of dogs,
which, like Dantes Cerberus, are torturers of souls.

The Cheshire Cat
and the Kilkenny Cats
Everyone is familiar with the phrases grin like a Cheshire
cat, which means of course to put on a sardonic face. Many
explanations of its origin have been attempted. One is that
in Cheshire cheeses were sold in the shape of the grinning
head of a cat. Another, that Cheshire is a Palatine county or
earldom and that this mark of nobility provoked the hilarity
of its cats. Still another is that in the time of Richard III
there was a gamewarden named Caterling who used to
break into an angry smile whenever he crossed swords with
poachers.
In Alice in Wonderland, published in , Lewis Carroll
endowed the Cheshire Cat with the faculty of slowly disap


pearing to the point of leaving only its grin - without teeth
and without a mouth. Of the Kilkenny Cats it is told that
they got into raging quarrels and devoured each other, leaving behind no more than their tails. This story goes back to
the eighteenth century.

The Chimera
The first mention we have of the Chimera is in Book VI of
the Iliad. There Homer writes that it came of divine stock
and was a lion in its foreparts, a goat in the middle, and a
serpent in its hindparts, and that from its mouth it vomited
flames, and finally was killed by the handsome Bellerophon,
the son of Glaucus, following the signs of the gods. A lions
head, goats belly, and serpents tail is the most obvious
image conveyed by Homers words, but Hesiods Theogony
describes the Chimera as having three heads, and this is the
way it is depicted in the famous Arezzo bronze that dates
from the fifth century. Springing from the middle of the
animals back is the head of a goat, while at one end it has a
snakes head and at the other a lions.
The Chimera reappears in the sixth book of the Aeneid,
armed with flame; Virgils commentator Servius Honoratus
observed that, according to all authorities, the monster was
native to Lycia, where there was a volcano bearing its name.
The base of this mountain was infested with serpents, higher
up on its flanks were meadows and goats, and towards its
desolate top, which belched out flames, a pride of lions had
its resort. The Chimera would seem to be a metaphor of
this strange elevation. Earlier, Plutarch suggested that Chimera was the name of a pirate captain who adorned his ships
with the images of a lion, a goat, and a snake.



These absurd hypotheses are proof that the Chimera was
beginning to bore people. Easier than imagining it was to
translate it into something else. As a beast it was too heterogeneous; the lion, goat, and snake (in some texts, dragon)
do not readily make up a single animal. With time the Chimera tended to become chimerical; a celebrated joke of Rabelais (Can a chimera, swinging in the void, swallow second
intentions?) clearly marks the transition. The patchwork
image disappeared but the word remained, signifying the
impossible. A vain or foolish fancy is the definition of Chimera that we now find in dictionaries.

The Chinese Dragon
Chinese cosmogony teaches that the Ten Thousand Beings or
Archetypes (the world) are born of the rhythmic conjunction of the two complementary eternal principles, the
yin and the yang. Corresponding to the yin are concentration, darkness, passivity, even numbers, and cold; to
the yang, growth, light, activity, odd numbers, and heat.
Symbols of the yin are women, the earth, the colour orange,
valleys, riverbeds, and the tiger; of the yang, men, the sky,
blue, mountains, pillars, the dragon.
The Chinese Dragon, the lung, is one of the four magic
animals. (The others are the unicorn, the phoenix, and the
tortoise.) At best, the Western Dragon spreads terror; at
worst, it is a figure of fun. The lung of Chinese myth, however, is divine and is like an angel that is also a lion. We read
in the Historical Record of Ssu-ma Chien that Confucius
went to consult the archivist or librarian Lao-tzu, and after
his visit said:
Birds fly, fish swim, animals run. The running animal



can be caught in a trap, the swimmer in a net, and the
flyer by an arrow. But there is the Dragon; I dont know
how it rides on the wind or how it reaches the heavens.
Today I met Lao-tzu and I can say that I have seen the
Dragon.
It was a Dragon, or a Dragon Horse, which emerged from
the Yellow River to reveal to an emperor the famous circular diagram symbolizing the reciprocal play of the yang
and yin. A certain king had in his stables saddle Dragons and
draft Dragons; one emperor fed on Dragons, and his kingdom prospered. A famous poet, to illustrate the risks of
greatness, wrote: The unicorn ends up coldcuts; the dragon
as meat pie.
In the I Ching or Book of Changes, the Dragon signifies
wisdom. For centuries it was the imperial emblem. The emperors throne was called the Dragon Throne, his face the
Dragon Face. On announcing an emperors death, it was said
that he had ascended to heaven on the back of a Dragon.
Popular imagination links the Dragon to clouds, to the
rainfall needed by farmers, and to great rivers. The earth
couples with the dragon is a common phrase for rain. About
the sixth century, Chang Seng-yu executed a wall painting
that depicted four Dragons. Viewers complained that he had
left out their eyes. Annoyed, Chang picked up his brushes
again and completed two of the twisted figures. Then the air
was filled with thunder and lightning, the wall cracked and
the Dragons ascended to heaven. But the other two eyeless
Dragons remained in place.
The Chinese Dragon has horns, claws, and scales, and its
backbone prickles with spines. It is commonly pictured with
a pearl, which it swallows or spits up. In this pearl lies its
power; the Dragon is tamed if the pearl is taken from it.
Chuang Tzu tells us of a determined man who at the end
of three thankless years mastered the art of slaying Dragons,
and for the rest of his days was not given a single chance to
put his art into practice.



The Chinese Fox
In everyday zoology the Chinese Fox differs little from other
Foxes, but not so in fantastic zoology. Statistics give it a lifespan that varies between eight hundred and a thousand
years. The animal is considered a bad omen, and each part of
its anatomy enjoys some special power. It has only to strike
the ground with its tail to start a fire; it can see into the
future; and it can change into many forms, preferably into
old men, young ladies, and scholars. It is astute, wary, and
sceptical; its pleasures lie in playing pranks and in causing
torment. Men, when they die, may transmigrate with the
body of a Fox. Its dwelling is close by graves. There are
thousands of stories and legends concerning it; we transcribe
one, a tale by the ninth-century poet Niu Chiao, which is not
without its humorous side:
Wang saw two Foxes standing on their hind legs and leaning against a tree. One of them held a sheet of paper in its
hand, and they laughed together as though they were sharing a joke. Wang tried to frighten them off but they stood
their ground, and finally he shot at the one holding the page.
The Fox was hit in the eye and Wang took away the piece of
paper. At the inn Wang told the story to the other guests.
While he spoke a gentleman having a bandaged eye came in.
He listened to Wangs story with interest and asked if he
might not be shown the paper. Wang was just about to produce it when the innkeeper noticed that the newcomer had a
tail. Hes a Fox! he shouted, and on the spot the gentleman
turned into a Fox and fled. The Foxes tried time after time to
recover the paper, which was filled with indecipherable
writing, but were repeatedly set back. Wang decided at last
to return home. On the road he met his whole family, who
were on their way to the capital. They said that he had



ordered them to undertake the journey, and his mother
showed him the letter in which he asked them to sell off all
their property and join him in the city. Wang, studying the
letter, saw that the page was blank. Although they no longer
had a roof over their heads, he ordered, Lets go back.
One day a younger brother appeared whom everyone had
given up for dead. He asked about the familys misfortunes
and Wang told him the whole story. Ah, said the brother
when Wang came to the part about the Foxes, there lies the
root of all the evil. Wang showed him the page in question.
Tearing it from Wangs hand, the brother stuffed the sheet
into his pocket and said, At last I have back what I wanted.
Then, changing himself into a Fox, he made his escape.

The Chinese Phoenix
The sacred books of the Chinese may be disappointing for
the reason that they lack the pathetic element to which we
have been accustomed by the Bible. But occasionally, all at
once in their even-tempered discourse, we are moved by
some intimacy. This one, for instance, recorded in Book VII
of the Confucian Analects (Waley translation):
The Master said, How utterly have things gone to the
bad with me! It is long now indeed since I dreamed that I
saw the Duke of Chou.
Or this one from Book IX:
The Master said, The phoenix does not come; the river
gives forth no chart. It is all over with me!
The chart, or sign (explain the commentaries), refers to an
inscription on the back of a magical tortoise. As for the



Phoenix, it is a bird of brilliant colours, not unlike the pheasant and peacock. In prehistoric times it visited the gardens
and palaces of virtuous emperors as a visible token of celestial favour. The male (Feng), which had three legs, lived in
the sun. The female is the Huang; together they are the
emblem of everlasting love.
In the first century a.d., the daring unbeliever Wang
Chung denied that the Phoenix constituted a determined
species. He said that just as the serpent turns into a fish and
the rat into a tortoise, the stag in times of widespread prosperity takes the form of the unicorn, and the goose that of
the Phoenix. He explained these mutations by the wellknown liquid which, some , years b.c., in the courtyard
of Yao - who was one of the model emperors - had made the
grass grow scarlet. As may be seen, his information was
deficient, or rather, excessive.
In the Infernal Regions there is an imaginary structure
known as the Tower of the Phoenix.

Chronos or Hercules
The treatise Difficulties and Solutions of First Principles by
the Neoplatonist Damascus (born about a.d. ) records a
strange version of the theogony and cosmogony of Orphism,
in which Chronos - or Hercules - is a monster:
According to Hieronymus and Hellanicus (if the two are
not one), Orphic doctrine teaches that in the beginning
there was water and mud, with which the earth was
shaped. These two principles were taught to be the first:
water and earth. From them came the third, a winged
dragon, which in its foreparts had the head of a bull, in its
hindparts the head of a lion, and in its middle the face of a



god; this dragon was named the Unageing Chronos and
also Heracles. With him Necessity, also known as the Inevitable, was born and spread to the boundaries of the
Universe . . . Chronos, the dragon, drew from himself a
threefold seed: moist Ether, limitless Chaos, and misty
Erebus. Under them he laid an egg, from which the world
was to hatch. The last principle was a god who was man
and woman, with golden wings on its back, and bulls
heads on its sides, and on its head a huge dragon, like all
manner of beasts . . .
Perhaps because what is excessively monstrous seems less
fitting to Greece than to the East, Walter Kranz attri butes an
Oriental origin to these fancies.

A Creature Imagined
by C. S. Lewis
Slowly, shakily, with unnatural and inhuman movements
a human form, scarlet in the firelight, crawled out on to
the floor of the cave. It was the Un-man, of course: dragging its broken leg and with its lower jaw sagging open
like that of a corpse, it raised itself to a standing position.
And then, close behind it, something else came up out of
the hole. First came what looked like branches of trees,
and then seven or eight spots of light, irregularly grouped
like a constellation. Then a tubular mass which reflected
the red glow as if it were polished. His heart gave a great
leap as the branches suddenly resolved themselves into
long wiry feelers and the dotted lights became the many
eyes of a shell-helmeted head and the mass that followed
it was revealed as a large roughly cylindrical body.



Horrible things followed - angular, many jointed legs, and
presently, when he thought the whole body was in sight, a
second body came following it and after that a third. The
thing was in three parts, united only by a kind of wasps
waist structure - three parts that did not seem to be truly
aligned and made it look as if it had been trodden on - a
huge, many legged, quivering deformity, standing just
behind the Un-man so that the horrible shadows of both
danced in enormous and united menace on the wall of
rock behind them.
C. S. Lewis: Perelandra

The Crocotta
and the Leucrocotta
Ctesias, physician to Artaxerxes Mnemon in the fourth century b.c., made use of Persian sources to compile a
description of India, a work of incalculable value if we are
curious as to how Persians under Artaxerxes Mnemon imagined India. In Chapter , he gives an account of the cynolycus, or dog-wolf, from which Pliny seems to have
evolved his Crocotta. Pliny writes (VIII, ) that the Crocotta is an animal which looks as though it had been produced
by the coupling of the wolf and the dog, for it can break
anything with its teeth, and instantly on swallowing it
digest it with the stomach He goes on to describe
another Indian animal, the Leucrocotta, as follows:
a wild beast of great swiftness, the size of the wild ass,
with the legs of a stag, the neck, tail, and breast of a lion,
the head of a badger, a cloven hoof, the mouth slit up as
far as the ears, and one continuous bone instead of teeth;



it is said, too, that this animal can imitate the human
voice.
Later authorities seem to feel that Plinys Leucrocotta is a
cumbersome blend of the Indian antelope and the hyena. All
of these animals Pliny has fit into an Ethiopian landscape,
where he also lodges a wild bull with convenient movable
horns, a hide as hard as flint, and hair turned contrariwise.

A Crossbreed
I have a curious animal, half-cat, half-lamb. It is a legacy
from my father. But it only developed in my time; formerly it was far more lamb than cat. Now it is both in about
equal parts. From the cat it takes its head and claws, from
the lamb its size and shape; from both its eyes, which are
wild and changing, its hair, which is soft, lying close to its
body, its movements, which partake both of skipping and
slinking. Lying on the window-sill in the sun it curls itself
up in a ball and purrs; out in the meadow it rushes about
as if mad and is scarcely to be caught. It flies from cats
and makes to attack lambs. On moonlight nights its
favourite promenade is the tiles. It cannot mew and it
loathes rats. Beside the hen-coop it can lie for hours in
ambush, but it has never yet seized an opportunity for
murder.
I feed it on milk; that seems to suit it best. In long
draughts it sucks the milk into it through its teeth of a
beast of prey. Naturally it is a great source of entertainment for children. Sunday morning is the visiting hour. I
sit with the little beast on my knees, and the children of
the whole neighbourhood stand round me.
Then the strangest questions are asked, which no



human being could answer: Why there is only one such
animal, why I rather than anybody else should own it,
whether there was ever an animal like it before and what
would happen if it died, whether it feels lonely, why it
has no children, what it is called, etc.
I never trouble to answer, but confine myself without
further explanation to exhibiting my possession. Sometimes the children bring cats with them; once they actually brought two lambs. But against all their hopes there
was no scene of recognition. The animals gazed calmly at
each other with their animal eyes, and obviously accepted
their reciprocal existence as a divine fact.
Sitting on my knees the beast knows neither fear nor
lust of pursuit. Pressed against me it is happiest. It remains
faithful to the family that brought it up. In that there is
certainly no extraordinary mark of fidelity, but merely the
true instinct of an animal which, though it has countless
step-relations in the world, has perhaps not a single blood
relation, and to which consequently the protection it has
found with us is sacred.
Sometimes I cannot help laughing when it sniffs round
me and winds itself between my legs and simply will not
be parted from me. Not content with being lamb and cat,
it almost insists on being a dog as well. Once when, as
may happen to any one, I could see no way out of my
business difficulties and all that depends on such things,
and had resolved to let everything go, and in this mood
was lying in my rocking-chair in my room, the beast on
my knees, I happened to glance down and saw tears dropping from its huge whiskers. Were they mine, or were
they the animals? Had this cat, along with the soul of a
lamb, the ambitions of a human being? I did not inherit
much from my father, but this legacy is worth looking at.
It has the restlessness of both beasts, that of the cat and
that of the lamb, diverse as they are. For that reason its
skin feels too narrow for it. Sometimes it jumps up on the



armchair beside me, plants its front legs on my shoulder,
and puts its muzzle to my ear. It is as if it were saying
something to me, and as a matter of fact it turns its head
afterwards and gazes in my face to see the impression its
communication has made. And to oblige it I behave as if I
had understood and nod. Then it jumps to the floor and
dances about with joy.
Perhaps the knife of the butcher would be a release for
this animal; but as it is a legacy I must deny it that. So it
must wait until the breath voluntarily leaves its body,
even though it sometimes gazes at me with a look of
human understanding, challenging me to do the thing of
which both of us are thinking.
Franz Kafka: Description of a Struggle
(Translated from the German by
Tania and James Stern)

The Double
Suggested or stimulated by reflections in mirrors and in
water and by twins, the idea of the Double is common to
many countries. It is likely that sentences such as A friend is
another self by Pythagoras or the Platonic Know thyself were
inspired by it. In Germany this Double is called Doppelgnger, which means double walker. In Scotland
there is the fetch, which comes to fetch a man to bring him
to his death; there is also the Scottish word wraith for an
apparition thought to be seen by a person in his exact image
just before death. To meet oneself is, therefore, ominous.
The tragic ballad Ticonderoga by Robert Louis Stevenson
tells of a legend on this theme. There is also the strange
picture by Rossetti (How They Met Themselves) in which



two lovers come upon themselves in the dusky gloom of a
wood. We may also cite examples from Hawthorne
(Howes Masquerade), Dostoyevsky, Alfred de Musset,
James (The Jolly Corner), Kleist, Chesterton (The Mirror of
Madmen), and Hearn (Some Chinese Ghosts).
The ancient Egyptians believed that the Double, the ka,
was a mans exact counterpart, having his same walk and
his same dress. Not only men, but gods and beasts, stones
and trees, chairs and knives had their ka, which was invisible except to certain priests who could see the Doubles
of the gods and were granted by them a knowledge of things
past and things to come.
To the Jews the appearance of ones Double was not an
omen of imminent death. On the contrary, it was proof of
having attained prophetic powers. This is how it is explained
by Gershom Scholem. A legend recorded in the Talmud tells
the story of a man who, in search of God, met himself.
In the story William Wilson by Poe, the Double is the
heros conscience. He kills it and dies. In a similar way,
Dorian Gray in Wildes novel stabs his portrait and meets his
death. In Yeatss poems the Double is our other side, our
opposite, the one who complements us, the one we are not
nor will ever become.
Plutarch writes that the Greeks gave the name other self
to a kings ambassador.

The Eastern Dragon
The Dragon has the ability to assume many shapes, but these
are inscrutable. Generally, it is imagined with a head something like a horses, with a snakes tail, with wings on its
sides (if at all), and with four claws, each furnished with




four curved nails. We read also of its nine resemblances: its
horns are not unlike those of a stag, its head that of a camel,
its eyes those of a devil, its neck that of a snake, its belly that
of a clam, its scales those of a fish, its talons those of an
eagle, its footprints those of a tiger, and its ears those of an
ox. There are specimens of the Dragon that lack ears and
hear with their horns. It is customary to picture them with a
pearl, which dangles from their necks and is a symbol of the
sun. Within this pearl lies the Dragons power. The beast
is rendered helpless if its pearl is stolen from it.
History traces the earliest emperors back to Dragons.
Their teeth, bones, and saliva all possess medicinal qualities.
According to its will, the Dragon can become visible or invisible. In springtime it ascends into the skies; in the fall it
dives down into the depths of the seas. Some Dragons lack
wings yet fly under their own impetus. Science distinguishes
several kinds. The Celestial Dragon carries on its back the
palaces of the gods that otherwise might fall to earth, destroying the cities of men; the Divine Dragon makes the
winds and rains for the benefit of mankind; the Terrestrial
Dragon determines the course of streams and rivers; the Subterranean Dragon stands watch over treasures forbidden to
men. The Buddhists affirm that Dragons are no fewer in
number than the fishes of their many concentric seas; somewhere in the universe a sacred cipher exists to express their
exact number. The Chinese believe in Dragons more than in
any other deities because Dragons are frequently seen in the
changing formations of clouds. Similarly, Shakespeare has
observed, Sometime we see a cloud thats dragonish.
The Dragon rules over mountains, is linked to geomancy,
dwells near tombs, is connected with the cult of Confucius
is the Neptune of the seas and appears also on terra firma.
The Sea-Dragon Kings live in resplendent underwater
palaces and feed on opals and pearls. Of these Kings there
are five: the chief is in the middle, the other four correspond
to the cardinal points. Each stretches some three or four



miles in length; on changing position, they cause mountains
to tumble. They are sheathed in an armour of yellow scales,
and their muzzles are whiskered. Their legs and tail are
shaggy, their forehead juts over their flaming eyes, their ears
are small and thick, their mouths gape open, their tongues
are long, and teeth sharp. Their breath boils up and roasts
whole shoals of fishes. When these Sea Dragons rise to the
ocean surface, they cause whirlpools and typhoons; when
they take to the air they blow up storms that rip the roofs
off the houses of entire cities and flood the countryside. The
Dragon Kings are immortal and can communicate among
themselves, without recourse to words, in spite of any distance that separates them. It is during the third month that
they make their annual report to the upper heavens.

The Eater of the Dead
There is a strange literary genre which, spontaneously, has
sprung up in various lands and at various times. This is the
manual for the guidance of the dead through the Other
World. Heaven and Hell by Swedenborg, the writings of the
Gnostics, the Tibetan Bardo Thdol (which, according to
Evans-Wentz, should be translated as Liberation by Hearing
on the After-Death Plane), and the Egyptian Book of the
Dead do not exhaust the possible examples. The similarities
and differences of the latter two books have attracted the
attention of esoteric scholarship; for us, let it be enough to
recall that in the Tibetan manual the Other World is as illusory as this one, while to the Egyptians it has a real and
objective existence.
In both texts there is a Judgement Scene before a jury of
deities, some with the heads of apes; in both, a symbolical



weighing of evil and good deeds. In the Book of the Dead, a
heart and a feather are weighed against each other, the
heart representing the conduct or conscience of the deceased
and the feather righteousness or truth. In the Bardo
Thdol, white pebbles and black pebbles are placed on
either side of the balance. The Tibetans have demons or
devils who lead the condemned to the place of purgation in
a hell-world; the Egyptians have a grim monster attending
their wicked, an Eater of the Dead.
The dead man swears not to have caused hunger or
sorrow, not to have killed or to have made others kill for
him, not to have stolen the food set aside for the dead, not to
have used false weights, not to have taken the milk from a
babys mouth, not to have driven livestock from their pasturage, not to have netted the birds of the gods.
If he lies, the forty-two judges deliver him to the Eater,
who has the head of a crocodile, the trunk of a lion, and the
hinder parts of a hippopotamus. The Eater is assisted by
another animal Baba, of whom we know only that he is
frightening and that Plutarch identifies him with the Titan
who fathered the Chimera.

The Eight-Forked Serpent
The Eight-Forked Serpent of Koshi is prominent in the
mythical cosmogony of Japan. It was eight-headed and
eight-tailed; its eyes were red as the winter cherry, and pine
trees and mosses grew on its back, while firs sprouted on
each of its heads. As it crawled, it stretched over eight
valleys and eight hills, and its belly was always flecked with
blood. In seven years this beast had devoured seven maidens,
the daughters of a king, and in the eighth year was about to



eat up the youngest daughter, named Princess-CombRicefield. The Princess was saved by a god who bore the
name of Brave-Swift-Impetuous-Male. This knight built a circular enclosure of wood with eight gates and eight platforms at each gate. On the platforms he set tubs of rice beer.
The Eight-Forked Serpent came and, dipping a head into
each of the tubs, gulped down the beer and was soon fast
asleep. Then Brave-Swift-Impetuous-Male lopped the heads.
A river of blood sprang from the necks. In the Serpents tail a
sword was found that to this day commands veneration in
the Great Shrine of Atsuta. These events took place on the
mountain formerly named Serpent-Mountain and now
called Eight-Cloud Mountain. The number eight in Japan is a
magic number and stands for many, just as forty (When
forty winters shall besiege thy brow) did in Elizabethan
England. Japanese paper currency still commemorates the
killing of the Serpent.
It is superfluous to point out that the redeemer married
the redeemed, as in Hellenic myth Perseus married Andromeda.
In his English rendering of the cosmogonies and theogonies of old Japan (The Sacred Scriptures of the
Japanese), Post Wheeler also records analogous legends of
the Hydra of Greek myth, of Fafnir from the Germanic, and
of the Egyptian goddess Hathor, whom a god made drunk
with blood-red beer so that mankind would be saved from
annihilation.




The Elephant That Foretold
the Birth of the Buddha
Five centuries before the Christian era, Queen Maya, in
Nepal, had a dream that a white Elephant, which dwelled on
the Golden Mountain, had entered her body. This visionary
beast was furnished with six tusks. The Kings soothsayers
predicted that the Queen would bear a son who would
become either ruler of the world or the saviour of mankind.
As is common knowledge, the latter came true.
In India the Elephant is a domestic animal. White stands
for humility and the number six is sacred, corresponding to
the six dimensions of space: upward, downward, forward,
back, left, and right.

The Eloi and the Morlocks
The hero of the novel The Time Machine, which a young
writer Herbert George Wells published in , travels on a
mechanical device into an unfathomable future. There he
finds that mankind has split into two species: the Eloi, who
are frail and defenceless aristocrats living in idle gardens and
feeding on the fruits of the trees; and the Morlocks, a race of
underground proletarians who, after ages of labouring in
darkness, have gone blind, but driven by the force of the
past, go on working at their rusted intricate machinery that
produces nothing. Shafts with winding staircases unite the



two worlds. On moonless nights, the Morlocks climb up out
of their caverns and feed on the Eloi.
The nameless hero, pursued by Morlocks, escapes back
into the present. He brings with him as a solitary token of
his adventure an unknown flower that falls into dust and
that will not blossom on earth until thousands and thousands of years are over.

The Elves
The Elves are of Nordic origin. Little is known about what
they look like, except that they are tiny and sinister. They
steal cattle and children and also take pleasure in minor acts
of devilry. In England, the world elflock was given to a
tangle of hair because it was supposed to be a trick of the
Elves. An Anglo-Saxon charm, which for all we know may
go back to hea then times, credits them with the mischievous
habit of shooting, from afar, miniature arrows of iron that
break the surface of the skin without a trace and are at the
root of sudden painful stitches. In the Younger Edda, a distinction is noted between Light Elves and Dark: The Light
Elves are fairer than a glance of the sun, the Dark Elves
blacker than pitch. The German for nightmare is Alp; etymology traces the word back to elf, since it was commonly
believed in the Middle Ages that Elves weighed heavily upon
the breast of sleepers, giving them bad dreams.




An Experimental Account of What
Was Known, Seen, and Met by
Mrs Jane Lead in London in
Among the many writings of the blind English mystic Jane
Lead (or Leade) is to be found The Wonders of Gods Creation manifested in the variety of Eight Worlds, as they
were known experimentally unto the Author (London,
). About this time, as Mrs Leads fame spread throughout Holland and Germany, her work was done into Dutch
by an eager young scholar, H. van Ameyden van Duym. But
later on when, due to the jealousies of her disciples, the
au thenticity of certain manuscripts was disputed, it became
necessary for the van Duym versions to be retranslated into
English. On page ( B) of the Eight Worlds, we read:
Salamanders have their appointed Dwelling in Fire;
Sylphs in the Air; Nymphs in the flowing Waters; and
Gnomes in Ear then-burrows, but the creature whose substance is Bliss is everywhere at home. All sounds, even to
the roaring of Lions, the screeching of the nightly Owls,
the laments and groans of those entrapped in Hell, are as
sweet Musick to her. All odours, even to the foulest stench
of Corruption, are to her as the delight of roses and Lilies.
All savours, even to the banquet-table of the Harpys of
hea then lore, are as Sweet loaves and spiced Ale. Wandering at noon through the Waste-Places of the world, it
seems to her she is refreshed by Canopies of flocking
Angels. The earnest seeker will look for her in All places,
however dim and sordid, of this world or in the seven
others. Thrust a keen Sword-blade through her and it will



seem as a fountain of Divine and Pure pleasure. These
eyes, by Translation, have been given to see her ways; and
an equal gift as revealed by Wisdom is sometimes granted
the Child.

The Fairies
They meddle magically in human affairs, and their name is
linked to the Latin word latum (fate, destiny). It is said that
the Fairies are the most numerous, the most beautiful, and
the most memorable of the minor supernatural beings. They
are not restricted to a particular place or particular period.
Ancient Greeks, Eskimos, and Red Indians all tell stories of
heroes who have won the love of these creatures of the imagination. Such fortunes hold their perils; a Fairy, once its
whim is satisfied, may deal death to its lovers.
In Ireland and Scotl and the people of Faery are assigned
underground dwelling places, where they confine children
and men whom they have kidnapped. Believing that the flint
arrowheads they dig up in the fields once belonged to Fairies.
Irish farmers endow these objects with unfailing medical
powers. Yeatss early tales abound in accounts of village
people among the Fairies. In one a countrywoman tells him
that
she did not believe either in Hell or in ghosts. Hell was an
invention got up by the priest to keep people good; and
the ghosts would not be permitted, she held, to go trapsin
about the earth at their own free will; but there are
faeries and little leprechauns, and water-horses, and fallen
angels.
Fairies are fond of song and music and the colour green.



Yeats notes that The [little] people and faeries in Ireland are
sometimes as big as we are, sometimes bigger, and sometimes, as I have been told, about three feet high. At the end
of the seventeenth century a Scots churchman, the Reverend
Robert Kirk of Aberfoyle, wrote a work entitled The Secret
Commonwealth; or an Essay on the Nature and Actions of
the Subterranean (and for the most part) Invisible People
heretofoir going under the name of Faunes and Fairies, or
the lyke, among the Low Country Scots, as they are described by those who have the second sight. In , Sir
Walter Scott had the book reprinted. Of Mr Kirk it is told
that the Fairies snatched him away because he had revealed
their mysteries.
On the seas off Italy, especially in the Strait of Messina,
the fata morgana contrives mirages to confuse sailors and
lure them aground.

Fastitocalon
The Middle Ages attri buted to the Holy Ghost the composition of two books. The first was, as is well known, the
Bible; the second, the whole world, whose creatures had
locked up in them moral teachings. In order to explain these
teachings, Physiologi, or Bestiaries, were compiled in which
accounts of birds and beasts and fishes were laid over with
allegorical applications. Out of an Anglo-Saxon bestiary, we
take the following text, translated by R. K. Gordon:
Now by my wit I will also speak in a poem, a song,
about a kind of fish, about the mighty whale. He to our
sorrow is often found dangerous and fierce to all seafaring
men. The name Fastitocalon is given him, the floater on
ocean streams. His form is like a roughstone, as if the



greatest of seaweeds, girt by sand-banks, were heaving by
the waters shore, so that seafarers suppose they behold
some island with their eyes; and then they fasten the highprowed ships with cables to the false land, tie the sea
steeds at the waters edge, and then undaunted go up into
that island. The ships remain fast by the shore, encompassed by water. Then, wearied out, the sailors
encamp, look not for danger. On the island they kindle
fire, build a great blaze; the men, worn out, are in gladness, longing for rest. When he, skilled in treachery, feels
that the voyagers are set firmly upon him, are encamped,
rejoicing in the clear weather, then suddenly the ocean
creature sinks down with his prey into the salt wave,
seeks the depths, and then delivers the ships and the men
to drown in the hall of death.
He, the proud voyager, has another habit, yet more
wondrous. When on the ocean hunger harries him . . .
then the warden of the ocean opens his mouth, his lips
wide. A pleasant smell comes from within, so that other
kinds of fish are betrayed thereby; they swim swiftly to
where the sweet smell issues forth. They enter there in a
thoughtless throng, till the wide jaw is filled. Then suddenly the fierce jaws snap together, enclosing the plunder. Thus is it for every man who . . . lets himself be
snared by a sweet smell, a false desire, so that he is guilty
of sins against the King of glory.
This same story is told in the Arabian Nights, in St Brendans legend, and in Miltons Paradise Lost, which shows us
the whale slumbering on the Norway foam. Professor
Gordon tells us that In earlier versions the creature was a
turtle and was named Aspidochelone. In course of time the
name became corrupted, and the whale replaced the
turtle.




Fauna of Chile
Our chief authority on animals incubated by the Chilean
imagination is Julio Vicua Cifuentes, whose Myths and
Superstitions collects a number of legends drawn from oral
tradition. All of the following extracts but one are taken
from this work. The Calchona is recorded in Zorobabel
Rodrguez Dictionary of Chileanisms, published in Santiago de Chile in .
The Alicanto is a nocturnal bird that seeks its food in
veins of gold and silver. The variety that feeds on gold
may be identified by the golden light that gleams from its
wings when it runs with them open (for it cannot fly); the
silver-feeding Alicanto is known, as one might expect, by
a silvery light.
The fact that the bird is flightless is not due to its wings,
which are perfectly normal, but to the heavy metallic
meals that weigh down its crop. When hungry it runs
swiftly; when gorged it is hardly able to crawl.
Prospectors or mining engineers believe their fortune is
made if they are lucky enough to have an Alicanto for a
guide, since the bird may lead them to the discovery of
hidden ore. Nevertheless, the prospector should be very
careful, for, if the bird suspects it is being followed, it dims
its light and slips away in the dark. It may also suddenly
change its path and draw its pursuer towards a chasm.
The Calchona is a kind of Newfoundl and dog woollier
than an unshorn ram and more bearded than a billy goat.
White in colour, it chooses dark nights to appear before
mountain travellers, snatching their lunch baskets from
them and muttering sullen threats; it also scares horses,
hunts down outlaws, and works all sorts of evil.



The Chonchn has the shape of a human head; its ears,
which are extremely large, serve as wings for its flight on
moonless nights. Chonchnes are supposed to be endowed
with all the powers of wizards. They are dangerous when
molested, and many fables are told about them.
There are several ways to bring these flying creatures
down when they pass overhead intoning their ominous
tu, tu, tu, the only sign that betrays their presence,
since they are invisible to anyone not a wizard. The
following are judiciously advised: to recite or sing a
prayer known only to a few who stubbornly refuse to
divulge it; to chant a certain twelve words twice over; to
mark a Solomons seal on the ground; and lastly, to spread
open a waistcoat and lay it out in a specified way. The
Chonchn falls, flapping its wings furiously, and cannot
lift itself again no matter how hard it tries until another
Chonchn comes to its aid. Generally, the incident does
not conclude here, for sooner or later the Chonchn
wreaks its vengeance on whomever has mocked at
it.
Creditable witnesses have told the following story. In
a house in Limache where visitors had gathered one night,
the disorderly cries of a Chonchn were suddenly heard
outside. Someone made the sign of Solomons seal, and a
heavy object fell into the backyard; it was a large bird the
size of a turkey and had a head with red wattles. They
cut the head off, gave it to a dog, and threw the body up
on the roof. At once they heard a deafening uproar of
Chonchnes, at the same time noting that the dogs belly
had swollen as though the animal had gulped down the
head of a person. The next morning they searched in vain
for the Chonchn body; it had disappeared from the roof.
Somewhat later the town gravedigger reported that on
that same day several unknown persons had come to bury
a body which, when they had gone away, he found to be
headless.



The Hide is an octopus that lives in the sea and has the
dimensions and appearance of a cowhide stretched out
flat. Its edges are furnished with numberless eyes, and, in
that part which seems to be its head, it has four more eyes
of a larger size. Whenever persons or animals enter the
water, the Hide rises to the surface and engulfs them with
an irresistible force, devouring them in a matter of
moments.
The Huallepn is an amphibious animal that is fierce,
powerful, and shy; under three feet tall, it has a calfs
head and a sheeps body. On the spur of the moment it
mounts sheep and cows, fathering in them offspring of the
same species as the mother but which can be spotted by
their twisted hooves and sometimes by their twisted
muzzles. A pregnant woman who sees a Huallepn, or
hears its bellow, or who dreams of it three nights in a row,
gives birth to a deformed child. The same happens if she
sees an animal begotten by the Huallepn.
The Strong Toad is an imaginary animal different from
other toads in that its back is covered with a shell like that
of a turtle. This Toad glows in the dark like a firefly and is
so tough that the only way to kill it is to reduce it to
ashes. It owes its name to the great power of its stare,
which it uses to attract or repel whatever is in its range.

Fauna of China
The following list of strange animals is taken from the Tai
Ping Kuang Chi (Extensive Records Made in the Period of
Peace and Prosperity), completed in the year and published in :



The Celestial Horse is like a white dog with a black
head. It has fleshy wings and can fly.
The Chiang-liang has a tigers head, a mans face, long
limbs, four hooves, and a snake between its teeth.
In the region to the west of the Red Water dwells the
beast known as the Chou-ti, which has a head both front
and back.
The denizens of Chuan-Tou have human heads, the
wings of a bat, and a birds beak. They feed exclusively on
raw fish.
In the Country of Long Arms, the hands of the inhabitants dangle to the ground. They live by catching fish at
the edge of the sea.
The Hsiao is similar to the owl but has a mans face, an
apes body, and a dogs tail. Its presence foretells prolonged drought.
The Hsing-hsing are like apes. They have white faces
and pointed ears. They walk upright, like men, and climb
trees.
The Hsing-tien is a being that was decapitated for
having fought against the gods, and so it has remained
forever headless. Its eyes are in its chest and its navel is its
mouth. It hops up and down and jumps about in clearings
and other open places, and brandishes a shield and axe.
The Hua-fish, or flying snakefish, appears to be a fish
but has the wings of a bird. Its appearance forebodes a
period of drought.
The mountain Hui looks like a dog with a human head.
It is a fine jumper and moves with the swiftness of an
arrow; this is why its appearance is held to foretell the
coming of typhoons. On beholding a man, the Hui laughs
mockingly.



The Musical Serpent has a serpents head and four
wings. It makes sounds like those of the Musical Stone.
The Ocean Men have human heads and arms, and the
body and tail of a fish. They come to the surface in stormy
weather.
The Ping-feng, which lives in the country of Magical
Water, resembles a black pig with a head at each end.
In the region of the Queer Arm, people have a single
arm and three eyes. They are exceptionally skilful and
build flying chariots in which they travel on the winds.
The Ti-chiang is a supernatural bird dwelling in the
Mountains of the Sky. Its colour is bright red, it has six
feet and four wings, but has neither face nor eyes.

Fauna of Mirrors
In one of the volumes of the Lettres difiantes et curieuses
that appeared in Paris during the first half of the eighteenth
century, Father Fontecchio of the Society of Jesus planned a
study of the superstitions and misinformation of the
common people of Canton; in the preliminary outline he
noted that the Fish was a shifting and shining creature that
nobody had ever caught but that many said they had
glimpsed in the depths of mirrors. Father Fontecchio died in
, and the work begun by his pen remained unfinished;
some years later Herbert Allen Giles took up the interrupted task. According to Giles, belief in the Fish is part of a
larger myth that goes back to the legendary times of the
Yellow Emperor.
In those days the world of mirrors and the world of men



were not, as they are now, cut off from each other. They
were, besides, quite different; neither beings nor colours nor
shapes were the same. Both kingdoms, the specular and the
human, lived in harmony; you could come and go through
mirrors. One night the mirror people invaded the earth.
Their power was great, but at the end of bloody warfare the
magic arts of the Yellow Emperor prevailed. He repulsed the
invaders, imprisoned them in their mirrors, and forced on
them the task of repeating, as though in a kind of dream, all
the actions of men. He stripped them of their power and of
their forms and reduced them to mere slavish reflections.
Nonetheless, a day will come when the magic spell will be
shaken off.
The first to awaken will be the Fish. Deep in the mirror we
will perceive a very faint line and the colour of this line will
be like no other colour. Later on, other shapes will begin to
stir. Little by little they will differ from us; little by little
they will not imitate us. They will break through the barriers of glass or metal and this time will not be defeated. Side
by side with these mirror creatures, the creatures of water
will join the battle.
In Yunnan they do not speak of the Fish but of the Tiger
of the Mirror. Others believe that in advance of the invasion
we will hear from the depths of mirrors the clatter of
weapons.

Fauna of the United States
The yarns and tall tales of the lumber camps of Wisconsin
and Minnesota include some singular creatures, in which,
surely, no one ever believed.
There is the Hidebehind, which is always hiding behind



something. No matter how many times or whichever way a
man turns, it is always behind him, and thats why nobody
has been able to describe it, even though it is credited with
having killed and devoured many a lumberjack.
Then there is the Roperite. This animal is about the size of
a pony. It has a ropelike beak which it uses to snare even the
fleetest of rabbits.
The Teakettler owes its name to the noises it makes,
much like those of a boiling teakettle. Vaporous clouds fume
from its mouth and it walks backward. It has been seen very
few times.
The Axehandle Hound has a hatchet-shaped head, a
handle-shaped body, and stumpy legs. This North Woods
dachshund eats only the handles of axes.
Among the fish of this region we find the Upland Trout.
They nest in trees and are good fliers but are scared of
water.
Theres another fish, the Goofang, that swims backward
to keep the water out of its eyes. Its described as about the
size of a sunfish, only much bigger.
We shouldnt forget the Goofus Bird that builds its nest
upside down and flies backward, not caring where its going,
only where its been.
The Gillygaloo nested on the slopes of Paul Bunyans
famed Pyramid Forty, laying square eggs to keep them from
rolling down the steep incline and breaking. These eggs were
coveted by lumberjacks, who hard-boiled them and used
them as dice.
And finally theres the Pinnacle Grouse, which had a
single wing. This enabled it to fly in one direction only,
circling the top of a conical hill. The colour of its plumage
varied according to the season and according to the condition of the observer.




Garuda
Vishnu, second god of the triad that rules over the Hindu
pantheon, rides either on the serpent that fills the seas or on
the back of Garuda. Pictorially, Vishnu is represented as
blue and with four arms, holding in each hand the club, the
shell, the sphere, and the lotus. Garuda is half vulture and
half man, with the wings, beak, and talons of the one and
body and legs of the other. His face is white, his wings of a
bright scarlet, and his body golden. Figures of Garuda,
worked in bronze or stone, are worshipped in the temples of
India. One is found in Gwalior, erected more than a hundred years before the Christian era by a Greek, Heliodorus,
who became a follower of Vishnu.
In the Garuda Purana - one of the many Puranas, or traditions, of Hindu lore - Garuda expounds at length on
the beginnings of the universe, the solar essence of Vishnu,
the rites of his cult, the genealogies of the kings descended
from the sun and the moon, the plot of the Ramayana, and
various minor topics, such as the craft of verse, grammar,
and medicine.
In a seventh-century drama called the Mirth of the Snakes
and held to be the work of a king, Garuda kills and each day
devours a snake (probably the hooded cobra) until a Buddhist prince teaches him the value of abstinence. In the last
act, the penitent Garuda brings back to life the bones of the
many generations of serpents he has fed upon. Eggeling
holds that this work may be a Brahman satire on Buddhism.
Nimbarka, a mystic whose date is uncertain, has written
that Garuda is a soul saved forever, as are his crown, his
earrings, and his flute.



The Gnomes
The Gnomes are older than their name, which is Greek but
which was unknown to the ancients, since it dates from the
sixteenth century, Etymologists attri bute it to the Swiss alchemist Paracelsus in whose writings it appears for the first
time.
They are sprites of the earth and hills. Popular imagination pictures them as bearded dwarfs of rough and grotesque features; they wear tight-fitting brown clothes with
monastic hoods. Like the griffons of Greece and of the East
and the dragons of Germanic lore, the Gnomes watch over
hidden treasure.
Gnosis, in Greek, means knowledge; and Paracelsus may
have called them Gnomes because they know the exact
places where precious metals are to be found.

The Golem
In a book inspired by infinite wisdom, nothing can be left to
chance, not even the number of words it contains or the
order of the letters; this is what the Kabbalists thought, and
they devoted themselves to the task of counting, combining,
and permutating the letters of the Scriptures, fired by a
desire to penetrate the secrets of God. Dante stated that
every passage of the Bible has a fourfold meaning - the literal, the allegorical, the moral, and the spiritual. Johannes
Scotus Erigena, closer to the concept of divinity, had already
said that the meanings of the Scriptures are infinite, like the



hues in a peacocks tail. The Kabbalists would have approved this view; one of the secrets they sought in the Bible
was how to create living beings. It was said of demons that
they could make large and bulky creatures like the camel,
but were incapable of creating anything delicate or frail,
and Rabbi Eliezer denied them the ability to produce anything smaller than a barley grain. Golem was the name
given to the man created by combinations of letters; the
word means, literally, a shapeless or lifeless clod.
In the Talmud (Sanhedrin, b) we read:
If the righteous wished to create a world, they could do
so. By trying different combinations of the letters of the
ineffable names of God, Raba succeeded in creating a
man, whom he sent to Rabbi Zera. Rabbi Zera spoke to
him, but as he got no answer, he said: You are a creature
of magic; go back to your dust.
Rabbi Hanina and Rabbi Oshaia, two scholars, spent
every Sabbath eve studying the Book of Creation, by
means of which they brought into being a three-year-old
calf that they then used for the purposes of supper.
Schopenhauer, in his book Will in Nature, writes
(Chapter ): On page of the first volume of his Zauberbiblio thek [Magic Library], Horst summarizes the teachings
of the English mystic Jane Lead in this way: Whoever possesses magical powers can, at will, master and change the
mineral, vegetable, and animal kingdoms; consequently,
a few magicians, working in agreement, could make this
world of ours return to the state of Paradise.
The Golems fame in the West is owed to the work of the
Austrian writer Gustav Meyrink, who in the fifth chapter of
his dream novel Der Golem () writes:
It is said that the origin of the story goes back to the
seventeenth century. According to lost formulas of the
Kabbalah, a rabbi [Judah Loew ben Bezabel] made an
artificial man - the aforesaid Golem - so that he would



ring the bells and take over all the menial tasks of the
synagogue.
He was not a man exactly, and had only a sort of dim,
half-conscious, vegetative existence. By the power of a
magic tablet which was placed under his tongue and
which attracted the free sidereal energies of the universe,
this existence lasted during the daylight hours.
One night before evening prayer, the rabbi forgot to
take the tablet out of the Golems mouth, and the creature
fell into a frenzy, running out into the dark alleys of the
ghetto and knocking down those who got in his way,
until the rabbi caught up with him and removed the
tablet.
At once the creature fell lifeless. All that was left of
him is the dwarfish clay figure that may be seen today in
the New Synagogue.
Eleazar of Worms has preserved the secret formula for
making a Golem. The procedures involved cover some
twenty-three folio columns and require knowledge of the
alphabets of the gates, which must be recited over each
of the Golems organs. The word Emet, which means Truth,
should be marked on its forehead; to destroy the creature,
the first letter must be obliterated, forming the word met,
whose meaning is death.

The Griffon
Winged monsters, says Herodotus of the Griffons in his accounts of their continual warfare with the one-eyed Arimaspians; almost as sketchy, Pliny speaks of their ears and
their hooked beaks, yet judges them fabulous (X, ).
Perhaps the most detailed description of the Griffon comes



from the problematic Sir John Mandeville in Chapter of
his famous Travels:
From this land men shal go unto the land of Bactry,
where are many wicked men & fell, in that land are trees
that beare wol, as it were shepe, of which they make
cloth. In this land are ypotains [hippopotamuses] that
dwel sometime on land, sometime on water, and are halfe
a man and halfe a horse, and they eate not but men, when
they may get them. In this land are many gryffons, more
than in other places, and some say they haue the body
before as an Egle, and behinde as a Lyon, and it is trouth,
for they be made so; but the Griffen hath a body greater
than viii Lyons and stall worthier than a hundred Egles.
For certainly he wyl beare to his nest flying, a horse and a
man upon his back, or two Oxen yoked togither as they
go at plowgh, for he hath large nayles on hys fete, as great
as it were homes of Oxen, and of those they make cups
there to drynke of, and of his rybes they make bowes to
shoote with.
In Madagascar, another famous traveller, Marco Polo,
heard the rukh spoken of and at first understood this as a
reference to the uccello grifone, the Griffon bird (Travels,
III ).
In the Middle Ages, the symbolism of the Griffon is contradictory. An Italian bestiary says that it stands for the
Devil; usually it is an emblem of Christ, and this is how
Isidore of Seville explains it in his Etymologies: Christ is a
lion because he reigns and has great strength; and an eagle
because, after the Resurrection, he ascended to heaven.
In Canto XXIX of the Purgatorio, Dante has a vision of a
triumphal chariot (the Church), drawn by a Griffon; its eagle
portion is golden, its lion portion white mixed with red in
order to signify - according to the commentaries - Christs
human nature. (White slightly reddened gives the colour of
human flesh.) The commentators are recalling the descrip


tion of the beloved in the Song of Solomon (V: -): My
beloved is white and ruddy . . . His head is as the most fine
gold . . .
Others feel that Dante wished to symbolize the Pope, who
is both priest and king. Didron, in his Manuel diconographie
chrtienne (), writes: The pope, as pontiff or eagle, is
borne aloft to the throne of God to receive his commands,
and as lion or king walks on earth with strength and
might.

Haniel, Kafziel, Azriel, and Aniel
In Babylon, the prophet Ezekiel saw in a vision four beasts or
angels, And every one had four faces, and every one had
four wings and As for the likeness of their faces, they four
had the face of a man, and the face of a lion, on the right
side: and they four had the face of an ox on the left side;
they four also had the face of an eagle. They went where
the spirit carried them, every one straight forward, or as
the first Spanish Bible () has it, cada uno caminaua enderecho de su rostro (each one went in the direction of his
face) which of course is so unimaginable as to be uncanny.
Four wheels or rings, so high that they were dreadful went
with the angels and were full of eyes round about
them . . .
An echo from Ezekiel may have been in the mind of St
John the Divine when he spoke of animals in the fourth
chapter of Revelations:
And before the throne there was a sea of glass like unto
crystal: and in the midst of the throne, and round about
the throne, were four beasts full of eyes before and
behind.



And the first beast was like a lion, and the second beast
like a calf, and the third beast had a face as a man, and the
fourth beast was like a flying eagle.
And the four beasts had each of them six wings about
him; and they were full of eyes within: and they rest not
day and night, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty, which was, and is, and is to come.
In the most important of Kabbalistic works, the Zohar or
Book of Splendour, we read that these four beasts are called
Haniel, Kafziel, Azriel, and Aniel and that they face east,
north, south, and west. Stevenson remarked that if such
beings were to be found in Heaven, what might not be expected of Hell.
A beast full of eyes is sufficiently awful, but Chesterton
went further in the poem A Second Childhood:
But I shall not grow too old to see
Enormous night arise,
A cloud that is larger than the world
And a monster made of eyes.
The fourfold angels in Ezekiel are called Hayoth, or Living
Beings; according to the Sefer Yeirah, another of the Kabbalist books, they are the ten numbers that were used by
God, together with the twenty-two letters of the alphabet, to
create the world; according to the Zohar, they came down
from Heaven crowned with letters.
The Evangelists drew their symbols from the four faces of
the Hayoth: to Matthew fell the mans face, sometimes
bearded; to Mark, the lions; to Luke, the calfs; and to John,
the eagles. St Jerome in his commentary on Ezekiel has
attempted to reason out these attri butions. Matthew was
given the mans face because he emphasized the humanity
of Christ; Mark the lions because he declared Christs royal
standing; Luke the calfs because it is an emblem of sacrifice;
John the eagles because of Christs soaring spirit.



A German scholar, Dr Richard Hennig, looks for the
remote origin of these symbols in four zodiacal signs which
lie ninety degrees apart. The lion and the calf give no
trouble; the man has been linked to Aquarius, who has a
mans face; and the eagle is evidently Scorpio considered an
ill omen and therefore changed. Nicholas de Vore, in his Encyclopedia of Astrology, sustains the same hypothesis and
remarks that the four figures come together in the sphinx,
which may have a human head, the body of a bull, the claws
and tail of a lion, and the wings of an eagle.

Haokah the Thunder God
Among the Dakota Sioux, Haokah used the wind as sticks to
beat the thunder drum. His horned head also marked him as
a hunting god. He wept when he was happy and laughed in
his sadness; heat made him shiver and cold made him
sweat.

Harpies
In Hesiods Theogony, the Harpies are winged divinities
who wear long loose hair and are swifter than the birds and
winds, in the Aeneid (Book III), they are vultures with a
womans face, sharp curved claws and filthy underparts,
and are weak with a hunger they cannot appease. They
swoop down from the mountains and plunder tables laid
for feasts. They are invulnerable and emit an infectious



smell; they gorge all they see, screeching the whole while
and fouling everything with excrement. Servius, in his commentaries on Virgil, writes that just as Hecate is Proserpina
in hell, Diana on earth, and Luna in heaven, and is called a
threefold goddess, so the Harpies are Furies in hell, Harpies
on earth, and Dirae (or Demons) in heaven. They are also
confused with the Parcae, or Fates.
By order of the gods, the Harpies harried a Thracian king
who unveiled mens futures, or who bought a long life with
the price of his eyes, for which he was punished by the sun,
whose works he had insulted by choosing blindness. He had
prepared a banquet for all his court and the Harpies contaminated and devoured the dishes. The Argonauts put the
Harpies to flight; Apollonius of Rhodes and William Morris
(The Life and Death of Jason) tell the fantastic story. Ariosto
in Canto XXXIII of the Furioso transforms the Thracian
king into Prester John, fabled emperor of the Abyssinians.
Harpy comes from the Greek harpazein to snatch or carry
away. In the beginning they were wind goddesses, like the
Maruts of Vedic myth, who wielded weapons of gold (the
lightning) and milked the clouds.

The Heavenly Cock
According to the Chinese, the Heavenly Cock is a goldenplumed fowl that crows three times a day. The first, when
the sun takes its morning bath on the horizons of the sea; the
second, when the sun is at its height; the last, when it sinks
in the west. The first crowing shakes the heavens and stirs
mankind from sleep. Among the offspring of the Cock is the
yang, the male principle of the universe. The Cock has three
legs and perches in the fu-sang tree, which grows in the



lands of sunrise and whose height is measured by thousands
of feet. The Heavenly Cocks crowing is very loud, and its
bearing, lordly. It lays eggs out of which are hatched chicks
with red combs, who answer his song every morning. All the
roosters on earth are descended from the Heavenly Cock,
whose other name is the Bird of Dawn.

The Hippogriff
To signify impossibility or incongruence, Virgil spoke of
breeding horses with griffons. Four centuries later, his commentator Servius explained that the griffon is an animal
which in the top half of its body is an eagle and in the bottom
half a lion. To streng then his text he added that they detest
horses. In time, the expression Jungentur jam grypes equis
(To cross griffons with horses) came to be proverbial; at the
beginning of the sixteenth century, Ludovico Ariosto, remembering it, invented the Hippogriff. Eagle and lion are
united in the griffon of the ancients; horse and griffon in
Ariostos Hippogriff, which makes it a second generation
monster or invention. Pietro Micheli notes that it is more
harmonious than the winged horse Pegasus.
A detailed description of the Hippogriff, written as for a
handbook of fantastic zoology, is given in Orlando Furioso
(IV, ):
The steed is not imagined but real, for it was sired by a
Griffon out of a mare: like its fathers were its feathers
and wings, its forelegs, head, and beak; in all its other
parts it resembled its mother and was called Hippogriff;
they come, though rarely, from the Rhiphaean Mountains, far beyond the icebound seas.



The first mention of the strange beast is deceptively casual
(II, ):
And by the Rhone I came upon a man in arms, reining in a
great winged horse.
Other stanzas give us the wonder of this creature that
flies. The following (IV, ) is well known:
E vede loste e tutta la famiglia,
E chi a finestre e chi fuor ne la via,
Tener levati al ciel gli occhi e le ciglia,
Come lEcclisse o la Cometa sia.
Vede la Donna unalta maraviglia,
Che di leggier creduta non saria:
Vede passar un gran destriero alato,
Che porta in aria un cavalliero armato.
[And she saw the landlord and all his house, and some at
the windows and some in the street, their eyes and brows
lifted to the sky as though it were an Eclipse or Comet.
The Lady saw a wonder on high not easily to be believed:
she saw pass over a great winged steed, bearing through
the air a knight in arms.]
Astolpho, in one of the last cantos, unsaddles and unbridles the Hippogriff and sets it free.

Hochigan
Ages ago, a certain South African bushman, Hochigan, hated
animals, which at that time were endowed with speech. One
day he disappeared, stealing their special gift. From then on,
animals have never spoken again.



Descartes tells us that monkeys could speak if they
wished to, but that they prefer to keep silent so that they
wont be made to work. In , the Argentine writer
Lugones published a story about a chimpanzee who was
taught how to speak and died under the strain of the
effort.

Humbaba
What was the giant Humbaba like, who guards the mountain cedars in that pieced-together Assyrian epic Gilgamesh,
which may be the worlds oldest poem? Georg Burckhardt
has attempted to reconstruct it, and from his German version, published in Wiesbaden in , we give this passage:
Enkidu swung his axe and cut down one of the cedars. An
angry voice rang out: Who has entered my forest and cut
down one of my trees? Then they saw Humbaba himself
coming: he had the paws of a lion and a body covered
with horny scales; his feet had the claws of a vulture, and
on his head were the horns of a wild bull; his tail and male
member each ended in a snakes head.
In one of the later cantos of Gilgamesh, we are introduced
to creatures called Men-Scorpions who stand guard at the
gate of the mountain Mashu. Its twin peaks [in an English
version by N. K. Sandars] are as high as the wall of heaven
and its paps reach down to the underworld. It is into this
mountain that the sun goes down at night and from which it
returns at dawn. The Man-Scorpion is human in the upper
part of its body, while its lower part ends in a scorpions
tail.



The Hundred-Heads
The Hundred-Heads is a fish created by a hundred ill-tempered words uttered in the course of an otherwise blameless
life. A Chinese biography of the Buddha tells that he once
met some fishermen who were dragging in a net. After much
toil they hauled up on to the shore a huge fish with one head
of an ape, another of a dog, another of a horse, another of a
fox, another of a hog, another of a tiger, and so on, up to
one hundred. The Buddha asked the fish:
Are you Kapila?
Yes, I am, the Hundred-heads answered before dying.
The Buddha explained to his disciples that in a previous
incarnation Kapila was a Brahman who had become a monk
and whose knowledge of the holy texts was unrivalled.
Upon occasion, when his fellow students misread a word,
Kapila would call them ape-head, dog-head, horse-head, and
so forth. After his death, the karma of those many insults
caused him to be reborn as a sea monster, weighed down by
all the heads he had bestowed upon his companions.

The Hydra of Lerna
Typhon (the misshapen son of Tartarus and Terra) and Echidna, who was half beautiful woman and half serpent, gave
birth to the Hydra of Lerna. Lemprire tells us that It had
heads, according to Diodorus; fifty according to
Simonides; and nine according to the more received opinion
of Apollodorus, Hyginus &c. But what made the creature still



more awful was that as soon as one of its heads was cut off,
two more sprouted up in their place. It was said that the
heads were human and that the middle one was everlasting.
The Hydras breath poisoned the waters and turned the
fields brown. Even when it slept, the pollution in the air
surrounding it could cause a mans death. Juno fostered the
Hydra in her efforts to lessen Hercules fame.
This monster appears to have been destined for eternity.
Its den lay among the marshes near the lake of Lerna. Hercules and Iolaus went in search of it; Hercules lopped its
heads and Iolaus applied a burning iron to the bleeding
wounds, for only fire would stop the growth of the new
heads. The last head, which was deathless, Hercules buried
under a great boulder, and where it was buried it remains to
this day, hating and dreaming.
In succeeding tasks with other beasts, Hercules inflicted
deadly wounds with arrows dipped in the gall of the
Hydra.
A sea crab friendly to the Hydra nipped Hercules heel
when he stepped on it during his struggle with the manyheaded monster. Juno placed the crab in the heavens where
it is now a constellation and the sign of Cancer.

Ichthyocentaurs
Lycophron, Claudian, and the Byzantine grammarian John
Tzetzes have each at some time referred to the Ichthyocentaur; there are no other allusions to it in classical writings. Ichthyocentaur may be translated as Centaur-Fish.
The word is applied to beings that mythologists have also
called Centaur-Tritons. The image abounds in Greek and
Roman sculpture. They are human down to their waist,



with the tail of a dolphin, and have the forelegs of a horse
or a lion. Their place is among the gods of the ocean, close to
the sea horses.

Jewish Demons
Between the world of the flesh and the world of the spirit,
Jewish superstition imagined a middle ground inhabited by
angels devils. A census of its population left the bounds
of arithmetic far behind. Throughout the centuries, Egypt,
Babylonia, and Persia all enriched this teeming middle
world. Maybe because of Christian influence (suggests Trachtenberg), demonology, or the lore of devils, became of less
account than angelology, or the lore of angels.
Let us, however, single out Keteb Mereri, Lord of the
Noontide and of Scorching Summers. Some children on their
way to school once met up with him; all but two died.
During the thirteenth century Jewish demonology swelled
its ranks with Latin, French, and German intruders who
ended up becoming thoroughly integrated with the natives
recorded in the Talmud.

The Jinn
According to Moslem tradition, Allah created three different
species of intelligent beings: Angels, who are made of light;
Jinn (Jinnee or Genie in the singular), who are made of
fire; and Men, who are made of earth. The Jinn were created



of a black smokeless fire some thousands of years before
Adam, and consist of five orders. Among these orders we
find good Jinn and evil, male Jinn and female. The cosmographer al-Qaswini says that the Jinn are aerial animals,
with transparent bodies, which can assume various forms.
At first they may show themselves as clouds or as huge
undefined pillars; when their form becomes condensed, they
become visible, perhaps in the bulk of a man, a jackal, a
wolf, a lion, a scorpion, or a snake. Some are true believers;
others, heretics or atheists. The English Orientalist Edward
William Lane writes that when Jinn take the shape of
human beings they are sometimes of an enormously gigantic
size and if good, they are generally resplendently handsome: if evil, horribly hideous. They are also said to become
invisible at pleasure by a rapid extension or rarefaction of
the particles which compose them, when they may disappear into the air or earth or through a solid wall.
The Jinn often attain the lower heavens, where they overhear the conversations of angels about future events. This
enables them to help wizards and soothsayers. Certain scholars attri bute to them the building of the Pyramids or, under
the orders of Solomon, the great Temple of Jerusalem.
The usual dwelling-places of Jinn are ruined houses, water
cisterns, rivers, wells, crossroads, and markets. The Egyptians say that the pillarlike whirlwinds of sand raised in the
desert are caused by the flight of an evil Jinnee. They also
say that shooting stars are arrows hurled by Allah against
evil Jinn. Among the acts perpetrated by these evil-doers
against human beings, the following are traditional: the
throwing of bricks and stones at passers-by from roofs and
windows, the abduction of beautiful women, the persecution of anyone who tries to live in an uninhabited
house, and the pilfering of provisions. Invoking the name of
Allah the All Merciful, the Compassionate, is usually enough
to secure one against such depredations, however.
The ghoul, which haunts burial grounds and feeds upon



dead human bodies, is thought to be an inferior order of the
Jinn. Iblis is the father of the Jinn and their chief.
In , young Victor Hugo wrote a tumultuous fifteenstanza poem Les Djinns about a gathering of these beings.
With each stanza, as the Jinn cluster together, the lines grow
longer and longer, until the eighth, when they reach their
fullness. From this point on they dwindle to the close of the
poem, when the Jinn vanish.
Burton and Noah Webster link the word Jinn and the
Latin genius, which is from the verb beget. Skeat contradicts this.

The Kami
In a passage from Seneca, we read that Thales of Miletus
taught that the earth floats in a surrounding sea, like a ship,
and that these waters when tossed and driven by the tempests are the cause of earthquakes. Historians or mythologists of eighth-century Japan offer us a rather different
seismological system. In the Sacred Scriptures it is written:
Now beneath the Fertile-Land-of-Reed-Plains lay a Kami
in the form of a great cat-fish, and by its movement it
caused the earth to quake, till the Great Deity of Deer Island thrust his sword deep into the earth and transfixed
the Kamis head. So, now, when the evil Kami is violent,
he puts forth his hand and lays it upon the sword till the
Kami becomes quiet.
The hilt of this sword, carved in granite projects some three
feet out of the ground near the shrine of Kashima. In the
seventeenth century, a feudal lord dug for six days without
reaching the tip of the blade.



In popular belief, the Jinshin-Uwo, or Earthquake-Fish, is
an eel seven hundred miles long that holds Japan on its back.
It runs from north to south, its head lying beneath Kyoto
and its tail beneath Awomori. Some logical thinkers have
argued for the reverse of this order, for it is in the south of
Japan that earthquakes are more frequent, and it is easier to
equate this with the lashing of the eels tail. This animal is
not unlike the Bahamut of Moslem tradition or the Migarsormr of the Eddas.
In certain regions the Earthquake-Fish is replaced, with
little apparent advantage, by the Earthquake-Beetle (JinshinMushi). It has a dragons head, ten spider legs, and a scaly
body. It is an underground, not an undersea, creature.

A King of Fire and His Steed
Heraclitus taught us that the primal element, or root, is fire,
but this hardly means that there are beings made of fire,
carved of the shifting substance of flames. This almost unimaginable fancy was attempted by William Morris in the tale
The Ring Given to Venus from his cycle The Earthly Paradise (-). It runs as follows:
Most like a mighty king was he,
And crowned and sceptred royally;
As a white flame his visage shone,
Sharp, clear-cut as a face of stone;
But flickering flame, not flesh, it was;
And over it such looks did pass
Of wild desire, and pain, and fear,
As in his peoples faces were,
But tenfold fiercer: furthermore,



A wondrous steed the master bore,
Unnameable of kind or make,
Not horse, nor hippogriff, nor drake.
Like and unlike to all of these,
And flickering like the semblances
Of an ill dream . . .
Perhaps in the above lines there is an echo of the deliberately ambiguous personification of Death in Paradise Lost
(II, -):
The other shape,
If shape it might be called that shape had none
Distinguishable in member, joint, or limb.
Or substance might be calld that shadow seemd,
For each seemd either; black it stood as Night,
Fierce as ten Furies, terrible as Hell,
And shook a dreadful Dart; what seemd his head
The likeness of a Kingly Crown had on.

The Kraken
The Kraken is a Scandinavian version of the zaratan and of
the sea dragon, or sea snake of the Arabs.
In -, the Dane Erik Pontoppidan, Bihsop of Bergen,
published a Natural History of Norway, a work famous for
its hospitality or gullibility. In its pages we read that the
Krakens back is a mile and a half wide and that its tentacles
are capable of encompassing the largest of ships. The huge
back protrudes from the sea like an island. The Bishop formulates this rule: Floating islands are invariably Krakens. He
also writes that the Kraken is in the habit of turning the sea
murky with a discharge of liquid. This statement has in


spired the hypothesis that the Kraken is an enlargement of
the octopus.
Among Tennysons juvenilia we find this poem to the
curious creature:

The Kraken
Below the thunders of the upper deep,
Far, far beneath the abysmal sea,
His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep
The Kraken sleepeth: faintest sunlights flee
About his shadowy sides; above him swell
Huge sponges of millennial growth and height;
And far away into the sickly light,
From many a wondrous grot and secret cell
Unnumberd and enormous polypi
Winnow with giant arms the slumbering green.
There hath he lain for ages, and will lie
Battening upon huge sea-worms in his sleep,
Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;
Then once by man and angels to be seen,
In roaring he shall rise and on the surface die.

Kujata
In Moslem cosmology, Kujata is a huge bull endowed with
four thousand eyes, ears, nostrils, mouths, and feet. To get
from one ear to another or from one eye to another, no more
than five hundred years are required. Kujata stands on the
back of the fish Bahamut; on the bulls back is a great rock of
ruby, on the rock an angel, and on the angel rests our earth.
Under the fish is a mighty sea, under the sea a vast abyss of



air, under the air fire, and under the fire a serpent so great
that were it not for fear of Allah, this creature might swallow up all creation.

The Lamed Wufniks
There are on earth, and always were, thirty-six righteous
men whose mission is to justify the world before God. They
are the Lamed Wufniks. They do not know each other and
are very poor. If a man comes to the knowledge that he is a
Lamed Wufnik, he immediately dies and somebody else,
perhaps in another part of the world, takes his place. Lamed
Wufniks are, without knowing it, the secret pillars of the
universe. Were it not for them, God would annihilate the
whole of mankind. Unawares, they are our saviours.
This mystical belief of the Jews can be found in the works
of Max Brod. Its remote origin may be the eighteenth chapter of Genesis, where we read this verse: And the Lord said,
If I find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I will
spare all the place for their sakes.
The Moslems have an analogous personage in the Kutb.

The Lamias
According to the Greeks and Romans, Lamias lived in Africa.
From the waist up their form was that of a beautiful
woman; from the waist down they were serpents. Many
authorities thought of them as witches; others as evil mon


sters. They lacked the ability to speak, but they made a
whistling sound which was musical, and in the spaces of the
desert beguiled travellers in order to devour them. Their
remote origin was divine, having sprung from one of the
many loves of Zeus. In that section of his Anatomy of Melancholy () that deals with the power of love, Robert
Burton writes:
Philostratus, in his Fourth Book de vita Apollonii, hath a
memorable instance in this kind, which I may not omit, of
one Menippus Lycius a young man years of age, that
going betwixt Cenchreoe and Corinth, met such a phantasm in the habit of a fair gentlewoman, which, taking
him by the hand, carried him home to her house in the
suburbs of Corinth, and told him she was a Phoenician by
birth, and if he would tarry with her, he should hear her
sing and play, and drink such wine as never any drank,
and no man should molest him; but she being fair and
lovely would live and die with him, that was fair and
lovely to behold. The young man, a Philosopher, otherwise staid and discreet, able to moderate his passions,
though not this of love, tarried with her a while to his
great content, and at last married her, to whose wedding,
among other guests, came Apollonius, who by some probable conjectures found her out to be a serpent, a Lamia,
and that all her furniture was like Tantalus gold described by Homer, no substance, but mere illusions. When
she saw herself descried, she wept, and desired Apollonius
to be silent, but he would not be moved, and thereupon
she, plate, house, and all that was in it, vanished in an
instant: many thousands took notice of this fact, for it
was done in the midst of Greece.

Shortly before his death, John Keats was moved by this
reading of Burton to compose his extensive poem Lamia.




Laudatores Temporis Acti
The seventeenth-century Portuguese sea captain, Luiz da Silveira, in his De Gentibus et Moribus Asiae (Lisbon, )
refers somewhat obliquely to an Eastern sect - whether
Indian or Chinese we are not told - which he calls, using a
Latin tag, Laudatories Temporis Acti. The good captain is no
metaphysician or theologian, but he none the less makes
clear the nature of time past as conceived by the Worshippers. The past to us is merely a section of time, or a series of
sections that were once the present and that may now be
approximately recalled by memory or by history. Both
memory and history make these sections, of course, part of
the present. To the Worshippers, the past is absolute; it
never had a present, nor can it be remembered or even
guessed at. Neither unity nor plurality can be ascribed to it,
since these are attri butes of the present. The same may be
said of its denizens - if the plural be allowed - with respect
to their colour, size, weight, shape, and so on. Nothing about
the beings of this Once That Never Was can be either
affirmed or denied.
Silveira remarks on the utter hopelessness of the sect; the
Past, as such, could have no inkling of its being worshipped
and could afford no help or comfort to its votaries. Had the
captain given us the native name or some other clue about
this curious community, further investigation would be
easier. We know they had neither temples nor sacred books.
Are there still any Worshippers - or do they now, together
with their dim belief, belong to the past?




The Lemures
The ancients supposed that mens souls after death wandered all over the world and disturbed the peace of its
inhabitants. The good spirits were called Lares familiares,
and the evil ones were known by the name of Larvae, or
Lemures. They terrified the good, and continually haunted
the wicked and impious; and the Romans had the custom
of celebrating festivals in their honour, called Lemuria, or
Lemuralia, in the month of May. They were first instituted by Romulus to appease the ghost of his brother
Remus, from whom they were called Remuria, and, by
corruption, Lemuria. These solemnities continued three
nights, during which the temples of the gods were shut
and marriages were prohibited. It was usual for the
people to throw black beans on the graves of the deceased, or to burn them, as the smell was supposed to be
insupportable to them. They also muttered magical
words, and, by beating kettles and drums, they believed
that the ghosts would depart and no longer come to terrify their relations upon earth.
Lemprire: Classical Dictionary

The Leveller
Between and , the Father of Light (whom we may
also call the Inner Voice) granted the Bavarian musician and
schoolteacher Jakob Lorber an unbroken series of trustworthy revelations concerning the human population, the



fauna, and the flora of the celestial bodies of our solar
system. Among the domestic animals we have knowledge
of, thanks to these revelations, is found the Leveller, or
Ground-Flattener (Bodendrcker), which renders immeasurable services on Miron, the planet identified with
Neptune by Lorbers most recent editors.
The Leveller has ten times the girth of the elephant, to
which it bears a striking resemblance. It is provided with a
rather stumpy trunk and with long straight tusks; its hide is
of a sickly green. Its limbs, pyramid-shaped, widen enormously at the hoof; the apexes of these pyramids appear to
be pinned to the body. This noted plantigrade, in advance of
builders and bricklayers, is led to the rough terrain of a construction site, where, with the aid of its hooves, its trunk,
and its tusks, it proceeds to flatten out and tramp the
ground.
The Leveller feeds on roots and herbage and has no
enemies outside of one or two species of insects.

Lilith
For before Eve was Lilith, we read in an old Hebrew text.
This legend moved the English poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti
(-) to write the poem Eden Bower. Lilith was a serpent; she was Adams first wife and gave him
Shapes that coiled in the woods and waters,
Glittering sons and radiant daughters.
It was later that God created Eve; Lilith, to revenge herself
on Adams human wife, urged Eve to taste the forbidden
fruit and to conceive Cain, brother and murderer of Abel.
Such is the early form of the myth followed and bettered by



Rossetti. Throughout the Middle Ages the influence of the
word layil, Hebrew for night, gave a new turn to the myth.
Lilith is no longer a serpent; she becomes an apparition of
the night. At times she is an angel who rules over the procreation of mankind, at times a demon who assaults those
who sleep alone or those who travel lonely roads. In popular
imagination she is a tall silent woman with long black hair
worn loose.

The Lunar Hare
In the blotches of the moon, the English believe they make
out the form of a man; in A Midsummer Nights Dream there
are two or three references to the man in the moon. Shakespeare mentions its bundle, or bush, of thorn; in the last lines
of Canto XX of the Inferno, Dante had already spoken of
Cain and of these thorns. The commentary by Tommaso
Casini cites the Tuscan fable in which the Lord banished
Cain to the moon, condemning him to carry a bundle of
thorns to the end of time. Others have seen in the moon the
Holy Family; Leopoldo Lugones wrote in his Lunario sentimental:
Y est todo: la Virgen con el nio; al flanco,
San Jos (algunos tienen la buena fortuna
De ver su vara); y el buen burrito bianco
Trota que trota los campos de la luna.
[And everything is there: Virgin and Child; by her side,
Saint Joseph (some are lucky enough to see his staff); and
the good little white donkey that trots and trots over the
acres of the moon.]
The Chinese speak of a Lunar Hare. Buddha, in one of his



former lives, suffered hunger; in order to feed him, a Hare
leaped into a fire. The Buddha in gratitude sent the Hares
soul to the moon. There, under an acacia, the Hare pounds in
a magical mortar the herbs that make up the elixir of life. In
the common speech of certain provinces, this Hare is called
the Physician or the Precious Hare or the Hare of Jade.
The ordinary Hare is believed to live for a thousand years
and to turn white in its old age.
Shakespeare, by the way, refers to a dead mooncalf in The
Tempest (II, ii). This creature, according to commentators, is
an uncouth monster begotten on earth under the moons
influence.

The Mandrake
Like the barometz, the plant known as the Mandrake
borders on the animal kingdom, since it gives a cry when it
is torn up; this cry can drive those who hear it mad. We read
in Shakespeare (Romeo and Juliet, IV, iii):
And shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth,
That living mortals, hearing them, run mad . . .
Pythagoras called the plant anthropomorphic; the Roman
agronomist Lucius Columella called it semi-human; and Albertus Magnus wrote that the Mandrake is like man himself,
down to the distinction between the sexes. Earlier, Pliny had
said that the white Mandrake is the male and the black the
female. Also, that those who root it out first trace three
circles on the ground with a sword and look westward; the
smell of its leaves is so strong that ordinarily it can deprive
men of the power of speech. To uproot it was to run the risk
of terrible calamities. In the last book of his History of the



Jewish Wars, Flavius Josephus advises us to employ a
trained dog; the plant dug up, the dog dies, but the leaves are
useful as a narcotic, a laxative, and for the purposes of magic.
The Mandrakes supposed human form has suggested the
superstition that it grows at the foot of the gallows. Sir
Thomas Browne (Pseudodoxia Epidemica, ) speaks of
the grease of hanged men; the once popular German writer
Hanns Heinz Ewers wrote a novel (Alraune, ) around
the idea of the hanged mans seed being injected into a
harlot and producing a beautiful witch. In German, mandrake is Alraune; earlier it was Alruna, a word that comes
originally from rune, which stood for whisper or buzz.
Hence (according to Skeat) it meant a mystery . . . a writing,
because written characters were regarded as a mystery
known to the few. Perhaps, more simply, the idea of a visible mark standing for a sound baffled the Nordic mind, and
therein lay the mystery.
Genesis (XXX: -) has this strange account of the reproductive powers of the Mandrake:

And Reuben went in the days of wheat harvest, and
found mandrakes in the field, and brought them unto his
mother Leah. Then Rachel said to Leah, Give me, I pray
thee, of thy sons mandrakes.
And she said unto her, Is it a small matter that thou hast
taken my husband? and wouldest thou take away my
sons mandrakes also? And Rachel said, Therefore he shall
lie with thee tonight for thy sons mandrakes.
And Jacob came out of the field in the evening, and
Leah went out to meet him, and said, Thou must come in
unto me; for surely I have hired thee with my sons mandrakes. And he lay with her that night.
And God hearkened unto Leah, and she conceived, and
bare Jacob the fifth son.
In the twelfth century, a German-Jewish commentator on
the Talmud wrote this paragraph:



A kind of cord comes out of a root in the ground and
tied to the cord by its navel, like a squash or melon, is the
animal known as the yadua, but the yadua is in all respects like a man: face, body, hands, and feet. It uproots
and destroys all things around it as far as the cord reaches.
The cord should be cut by an arrow, and the animal
dies.
The physician Dioscorides (second century a.d.) identified
the Mandrake with the circea, or herb of Circe, of which we
read in the tenth book of the Odyssey:
At the root it was black, but its flower was like milk.
Moly the gods call it, and it is hard for mortal man to dig;
but the gods are all-powerful.

The Manticore
Pliny (VIII, ) informs us that according to Ctesias, the
Greek physician of Artaxerxes Mnemon, among the Ethiopians
there is an animal found, which he calls the mantichora; it
has a triple row of teeth, which fit into each other like
those of a comb, the face and ears of a man, and azure eyes,
is of the colour of blood, has the body of the lion, and a
tail ending in a sting, like that of the scorpion. Its voice
resembles the union of the sound of the flute and the trumpet; it is of excessive swiftness, and is particularly fond of
human flesh.
Flaubert has improved upon this description, and in the
last pages of The Temptation of Saint Anthony, we read:
The Manticore a gigantic red lion with a human face
and three rows of teeth.



The iridescence of my scarlet hide blends into the shimmering brightness of the desert sands. Through my nostrils I exhale the horror of the lonely places of the earth. I
spit out pestilence. I consume armies when they venture
into the desert.
My nails are twisted into talons, like drills, and my
teeth are cut like those of a saw; my restless tail prickles
with darts, which I shoot left and right, before me, behind.
Watch!
The Manticore shoots the quills of its tail, which spread
out like arrows on every hand. Drops of blood drip down,
spattering the leaves of the trees.

The Mermecolion
The Mermecolion is an inconceivable animal defined by Flaubert in this way: lion in its foreparts, ant in its hindparts,
with the organs of its sex the wrong way. The history of
this monster is also strange. In the Scriptures (Job IV: II) we
read: The old lion perisheth for lack of prey. The Hebrew
text has layish for lion; this word, an uncommon one for the
lion, seems to have produced an equally uncommon translation. The Septuagint version, harking back to an Arabian
lion that Aelian and Strabo call myrmex, forged the word
Mermecolion. After centuries, the origin of this was forgotten. Myrmex, in Greek, means ant; out of the puzzling
words The ant-lion perisheth for lack of prey grew a fantasy (translated below by T. H. White) that medieval bestiaries succeeded in multiplying:
The Physiologus said: It had the face (or fore-part) of a
lion and the hinder parts of an ant. Its father eats flesh,



but its mother grains. If then they engender the ant-lion,
they engender a thing of two natures, such that it cannot
eat flesh because of the nature of its mother, nor grains
because of the nature of its father. It perishes, therefore,
because it has no nutriment.

The Minotaur
The idea of a house built so that people could become lost in
it is perhaps more unusual than that of a man with a bulls
head, but both ideas go well together and the image of the
labyrinth fits with the image of the Minotaur. It is equally
fitting that in the centre of a monstrous house there be a
monstrous inhabitant.
The Minotaur, half bull and half man, was born of the
furious passion of Pasiphae, Queen of Crete, for a white bull
that Neptune brought out of the sea. Daedalus, who invented the artifice that carried the Queens unnatural desires to
gratification, built the labyrinth destined to confine and
keep hidden her monstrous son. The Minotaur fed on human
flesh and for its nourishment the King of Crete imposed on
the city of Athens a yearly tri bute of seven young men and
seven maidens. Theseus resolved to deliver his country from
this burden when it fell to his lot to be sacrificed to the
Minotaurs hunger. Ariadne, the Kings daughter, gave him a
thread so that he could trace his way out of the windings of
the labyrinths corridors; the hero killed the Minotaur and
was able to escape from the maze.
Ovid in a line that is meant to be clever speaks of the
Semibovemque virum, semivirumque bovem (the man half
bull, the bull half man). Dante, who was familiar with the
writings of the ancients but not with their coins or monu


ments, imagined the Minotaur with a mans head and a bulls
body (Inferno, XII, -).
The worship of the bull and of the two-headed axe (whose
name was labrys and may have been at the root of the word
labyrinth) was typical of pre-Hellenic religions, which held
sacred bullfights. Human forms with bull heads figured, to
judge by wall paintings, in the demonology of Crete. Most
likely the Greek fable of the Minotaur is a late and clumsy
version of far older myths, the shadow of other dreams still
more full of horror.

The Monkey of the Inkpot
This animal, common in the north, is four or five inches
long; its eyes are scarlet and its fur is jet black, silky, and
soft as a pillow. It is marked by a curious instinct - the
taste for India ink. When a person sits down to write, the
monkey squats cross-legged near by with one forepaw
folded over the other, waiting until the task is over. Then
it drinks what is left of the ink, and afterwards sits back
on its haunches, quiet and satisfied.
Wang Tai-hai ()

The Monster Acheron
Only one person, one time, ever saw the monster Acheron;
this took place in the twelfth century in the Irish town of
Cork. The original version of the story, written in Gaelic, is
now lost, but a Benedictine monk from Regensburg



(Ratisbon) translated it into Latin, and from this translation
the tale passed into a number of languages, among them
Swedish and Spanish. Of the Latin version there are some
fifty-odd manuscripts extant, agreeing in all the essentials.
Visio Tundali (Tundals Vision) is the storys name, and it has
been considered one of the sources of Dantes poem.
Let us begin with the word Acheron. In the tenth book of
the Odyssey it is one of the rivers of hell, flowing somewhere
on the western borders of the inhabited world. Its name is reechoed in the Aeneid, in Lucans Pharsalia, and in Ovids
Metamorphoses. Dante engraves it in a line: Su la trista riviera dAcheronte (On the sad shores of the Acheron).
In one myth, Acheron is a Titan suflering punishment; in
another, dating earlier, he is placed close to the South Pole,
below the constellations of the antipodes. The Etruscans had
books of fate that taught divination and books of Acheron
that taught the ways of the soul after bodily death. In time,
Acheron came to stand for hell.
Tundal was an Irish gentleman, well-mannered and brave,
but of hardly irreproachable habits. He once fell ill while at
the home of a lady friend, and for three days and nights was
taken for dead, except for a bit of warmth in his heart.
When he recovered his senses, he told that his guardian
angel had shown him the lands beyond this world. Of the
many wonders he saw, the one which interests us here is the
monster Acheron.
He is bigger than any mountain. His eyes flame and his
mouth is so large that nine thousand persons could fit in it.
Two damned men, like pillars or atlantes, prop it open; one
stands on his feet, the other on his head. Three throats lead
inside and belch undying fire. From deep in the beasts belly
comes the continuous wailing of the countless lost souls
who are being devoured. Devils tell Tundal that the monster
is called Acheron. His guardian angel deserts him, and
Tundal is swept inside with the others. There he finds himself in the midst of tears, darkness, gnashing teeth, fire, un


bearable burning, icy cold, dogs, bears, lions, and snakes. In
this legend, hell is a beast with other beasts inside it.
In , Emanuel Swedenborg wrote: It has not been
granted me to perceive Hells general shape, but I have been
told that in the same way that Heaven has a human shape.
Hell has the shape of a devil.

The Mother of Tortoises
Twenty-two centuries before the Christian era, the good emperor Y the Great travelled and measured with his steps
the Nine Mountains, the Nine Rivers, and the Nine Marshes,
and divided the land into Nine Provinces fit for virtue and
agriculture. In this way he held back the Waters that threatened to flood Heaven and Earth, and left us this account of
his Public Works (Legges translation):
I mounted my four conveyances (carts, boats, sledges, and
spiked shoes), and all along the hills hewed down the
woods, at the same time, along with Yi, showing the
multitudes how to get flesh to eat. I opened passages for
the streams throughout the nine provinces, and conducted
them to the sea. I deepened the channels and canals, and
conducted them to the streams, at the same time, along
with Chi, sowing grain, and showing the multitudes how
to procure the food of toil in addition to flesh meat.
Historians tell that the manner in which he divided his territory was revealed to him by a supernatural or sacred Tortoise that arose from the bed of a river. There are those who
claim that this amphibious creature, the mother of all Tortoises, was made of water and fire; others attri bute a less
common substance to it: starlight of the constellation



Sagittarius. On the Tortoises shell could be read a cosmic
treatise called the Hong Fan (Universal Rule), or a diagram
made of black and white dots of the Nine Subdivisions of
that treatise.
To the Chinese, the heavens are hemispherical and the
earth quadrangular, and so, in the Tortoise with its curved
upper shell and flat lower shell, they find an image or model
of the world. Moreover, Tortoises share in cosmic longevity;
it is therefore fitting that they should be included among the
spiritually endowed creatures (together with the unicorn,
the dragon, the phoenix, and the tiger) and that soothsayers
read the future in the pattern of their shells.
Than-Qui (Tortoise-Spirit) is the name of the creature that
revealed the Hong Fan to the emperor.

The Nagas
Nagas belong to the mythology of India. They are serpents
but often take the form of a man.
In one of the books of the Mahabharata, Arjuna is pursued by Ulupi, the daughter of a Naga king, and firmly but
gently has to remind her of his vow of chastity; the maiden
tells him that his duty lies in soothing the unhappy. The hero
grants her a night. The Buddha, meditating under a fig tree,
is chastised by the wind and the rain; a Naga out of pity
coils itself around him in a sevenfold embrace and opens
over him its seven heads so as to form a kind of umbrella.
The Buddha converts him to the Faith.
Kern in his Manual of Indian Buddhism, speaks of the
Nagas as cloudlike serpents. They live underground in deep
palaces. Believers in the Greater Vehicle tell that the Buddha
preached one law to mankind and another to the gods, and



that this latter - the secret law - was kept in the heavens
and palaces of the serpents, who revealed it centuries later
to the monk Nagarjuna.
We give an Indian legend set down by the Chinese pilgrim
Fa-hsien early in the fifth century:
King Asoka came to a lake near whose edge stood a
lofty pagoda. He thought of pulling it down in order to
raise a higher one. A Brahman let him into the tower and
once inside told him:
My human form is an illusion. I am really a Naga, a
dragon. My sins condemn me to inhabit this frightful
body, but I obey the law preached by the Buddha and
hope to work my redemption. You may pull down this
shrine if you believe you can build a better one.
The Naga showed him the vessels of the altar. The king
looked at them with alarm, for they were quite unlike
those made by the hands of men, and he left the pagoda
standing.

The Nasnas
Among the monstrous creatures of the Temptation is the
Nasnas, which has only one eye, one cheek, one hand, one
leg, half a torso and half a heart. A commentator, JeanClaude Margolin, credits the invention of this beast to Flaubert, but Lane in the first volume of The Arabian Nights
Entertainments () says it is believed to be the offspring
of the Shikk, a demonical creature divided longitudinally,
and a human being. The Nasnas, according to Lane (who
gives it as Nesns), resembles half a human being; having
half a head, half a body, one arm, and one leg, with which it
hops with much agility . . . It is found in the woods and



desert country of Yemen and Hadhramaut, and is endowed
with speech. One race has its face in the breast, like the
blemies, and a tail like that of a sheep. Its flesh is sweet and
much sought after. Another variety of Nasnas, having the
wings of a bat, inhabits the island of Rj (perhaps Borneo)
at the edge of the China seas. But God, adds the sceptical
authority, is All-Knowing.

The Norns
In medieval Norse mythology the Norns are the Fates. Snorri
Sturluson, who at the beginning of the thirteenth century
brought order to the scattered Northern myths, tells us that
the Norns are three and that their names are Urth (the past),
Verthandi (the present), and Skuld (the future). These three
heavenly Norns ruled the fate of the world, while at the birth
of every man three individual Norns were present, casting
the weird of his life. It may be suspected that the names of
the Norns are a refinement or addition of a theological
nature; ancient Germanic tribes were incapable of such abstract thinking. Snorri shows us three maidens by a fountain
at the base of the World Tree, Yggdrasil. Inexorably, they
weave our fate.
Time (of which they are made) seemed to have quite forgotten them, but around William Shakespeare wrote
the tragedy of Macbeth, in whose first scene they appear.
They are the three witches who predict what fate holds in
store for Banquo and Macbeth. Shakespeare calls them the
weird sisters (I, iii):
The weird sisters, hand in hand,
Posters of the seas and land,
Thus do go about, about . . .



Wyrd among the Anglo-Saxons was the silent goddess who
presided over the destiny of gods and men.

The Nymphs
Paracelsus limited their dominion to water, but the ancients
thought the world was full of Nymphs. They distinguished
them by names according to the places they haunted. The
Dryads, or Hamadryads, dwelled in trees, without being
seen, and died with them. Other Nymphs were held to be
immortal or, as Plutarch obscurely intimates, lived for
above , years. Among these were the Nereids and the
Oceanids, which presided over the sea. Nymphs of the lakes
and streams were Naiads; those of mountains and caves,
Oreads. There were also Nymphs of the glens, called Napaeae, and of groves called Alseids. The exact number of the
Nymphs is unknown; Hesiod gives us the figure three thousand. They were earnest young women and very beautiful;
their name may mean simply marriageable woman.
Glimpsing them could cause blindness and, if they were
naked, death. A line of Propertius affirms this.
The ancients made them offerings of honey, olive oil, and
milk. They were minor goddesses, but no temples were erected in their honour.




The Odradek
Some say the word Odradek is of Slavonic origin, and try
to account for it on that basis. Others again believe it to be
of German origin, only influenced by Slavonic. The uncertainty of both interpretations allows one to assume with
justice that neither is accurate, especially as neither of
them provides an intelligent meaning of the word.
No one, of course, would occupy himself with such
studies if there were not a creature called Odradek. At
first glance it looks like a flat star-shaped spool for thread,
and indeed it does seem to have thread wound upon it; to
be sure, they are only old, broken-off bits of thread, knotted and tangled together, of the most varied sorts and
colours. But it is not only a spool, for a small wooden
crossbar sticks out of the middle of the star, and another
small rod is joined to that at a right angle. By means of
this latter rod on one side and one of the points of the star
on the other, the whole thing can stand upright as if on
two legs.
One is tempted to believe that the creature once had
some sort of intelligible shape and is now only a brokendown remnant. Yet this does not seem to be the case; at
least there is no sign of it; nowhere is there an unfinished
or unbroken surface to suggest anything of the kind; the
whole thing looks senseless enough, but in its own way
perfectly finished. In any case, closer scrutiny is impossible, since Odradek is extraordinarily nimble and can
never be laid hold of.
He lurks by turns in the garret, the stairway, the
lobbies, the entrance hall. Often for months on end he is
not to be seen; then he has presumably moved into other
houses; but he always comes faithfully back to our house



again. Many a time when you go out of the door and he
happens just to be leaning directly beneath you against
the banisters you feel inclined to speak to him. Of course,
you put no difficult questions to him, you treat him - he is
so diminutive that you cannot help it - rather like a child.
Well, whats your name? you ask him. Odradek, he says.
And where do you live? No fixed abode, he says and
laughs; but it is only the kind of laughter that has no lungs
behind it. It sounds rather like the rustling of fallen leaves.
And that is usually the end of the conversation. Even
these answers are not always forthcoming; often he stays
mute for a long time, as wooden as his appearance.
I ask myself, to no purpose, what is likely to happen to
him? Can he possibly die? Anything that dies has had
some kind of aim in life, some kind of activity, which has
worn out; but that does not apply to Odradek. Am I to
suppose, then, that he will always be rolling down the
stairs, with ends of thread trailing after him, right before
the feet of my children, and my childrens children? He
does no harm to anyone that one can see; but the idea that
he is likely to survive me I find almost painful.
Franz Kafka: The Penal Colony
(Translated from the German by
Willa and Edwin Muir)

[This piece was originally titled Die Sorge des Hausvaters The Cares of a Family Man.]




An Offspring of Leviathan
In the Golden Legend, a thirteenth-century compendium of
lives of the saints written by the Dominican friar Jacobus de
Voragine, read and re-read in the Middle Ages but now
neglected, we find much curious lore. The book went
through numerous editions and translations, among them
the one into English printed by William Caxton. Chaucers
Second Nonnes Tale has its source in the Legenda aurea;
Longfellow also was inspired by the work of Jacobus, taking
the, title from the Golden Legend for one of the books of his
trilogy Christus.
Out of Jacobus medieval Latin, we translate the following from the chapter on St Martha (CV []):
There was at that time, in a certain wood above the
Rhone between Arles and Avignon, a dragon that was half
beast and half fish, larger than an ox and longer than a
horse. Armed with a pair of tusks that were like swords
and pointed as horns, it lay in wait in the river, killing
all wayfarers and swamping boats. It had come, however,
from the sea of Galatia in Asia Minor and was begotten by
Leviathan, the fiercest of all water serpents, and by the
Wild Ass, which is common to those shores . . .

One-Eyed Beings
Before it became the name of an optical instrument, the
word monocle was applied to beings who had a single eye.
So, in a sonnet composed at the beginning of the seventeenth
century, Gngora writes of the Monculo galn de Gal


atea (The monocle who yearns for Galatea) - referring, of
course, to Polyphemus, of whom he had previously written
in his Fbula de Polifemo:

Un monte era de miembros eminente
Este que, de Neptuno hijo fiero,
De un ojo ilustra el orbe de su frente,
mulo casi del mayor lucero;
Cclope a quien el pino ms valiente
Bastn le obedeca tan ligero,
Y al grave peso junco tan delgado,
Que un da era bastn y otro caiado.
Negro el cabello, imitador undoso
De las oscuras aguas del Leteo,
Al viento que le peina proceloso
Vuela sin orden, pende sin aseo;
Un torrente es su barba impetuoso
Que, adusto hijo de este Pirineo,
Su pecho inunda, o tarde o mal o en vano
Surcada an de los dedos de su mano.
[An eminent peak of limbs he was, this uncouth son of
Neptune, lighting the orb of his forehead with an eye
almost rivalling the greatest star; a Cyclops to whom the
stoutest pine obeyed as a light cane, and was to his bulky
mass a reed so slender that one day it was a walking-stick
and the next a shepherds crook.
Jet black his hair, a wavy imitator of the dark waters of
the Lethe, in the wind which stormily combs it, blowing in
a tangle and dangling in disorder; a plunging torrent is his
beard, which - stern son of this Pyrenee - overflows his
breast, too late or badly or in vain furrowed by the fingers
of his hand.]
These lines outdo and are weaker than others from the
third book of the Aeneid (praised by Quintilian), which in
turn outdo and are weaker than still other lines from the



ninth book of the Odyssey. This literary decline matches a
decline in the poets faith; Virgil wishes to impress us with
his Polyphemus, but scarcely believes in him; and Gngora
believes only in words or in verbal trickery.
The Cyclops were not the only race of men having one
eye; Pliny (VII, ) also mentions the Arimaspians,
a nation remarkable for having but one eye, and that
placed in the middle of the forehead. This race is said to
carry on a perpetual warfare with the Griffons, a kind of
monster, with wings as they are commonly represented,
for the gold which they dig out of the mines, and which
these wild beasts retain and keep watch over with a singular degree of cupidity, while the Arimaspi are equally desirous to get possession of it.
Five hundred years earlier, the first encyclopedist,
Herodotus of Halicarnassus, had written (III, ):
This is also plain, that to the north of Europe there is by
far more gold than elsewhere. In this matter again I cannot
with certainty say how the gold is got; some will have it
that one-eyed men called Arimaspians steal it from
griffons. But this too I hold incredible, that there can be
men in all else like other men, yet having but one eye.

The Panther
In medieval bestiaries the word panther deals with a very
different animal from the carnivorous mammal of presentday zoology. Aristotle had written that it gives off a sweet
smell attractive to other animals; Aelian - the Roman author
nicknamed Honey-Tongued for his perfect comm and of
Greek, a language he preferred to Latin - stated that this



odour was also pleasant to men. (In this characteristic some
see a confusion of the Panther with the civet cat.) Pliny
endowed the Panthers back with a large circular spot that
waxed and waned with the moon. To these marvellous circumstances came to be added the fact that the Bible, in the
Septuagint version, uses the word panther in a verse
(Hosea, V: ) that may be a prophetic reference to Jesus: I
am become as a panther to Ephraim.
In the Anglo-Saxon bestiary of the Exeter Book, the Panther is a gentle, solitary beast with a melodious voice and
sweet breath (likened elsewhere to the smell of allspice) that
makes its home in a secret den in the mountains. Its only foe
is the dragon, with which it fights incessantly. After a full
meal it sleeps and On the third day when he wakes, a lofty,
sweet, ringing sound comes from his mouth, and with the
song a most delightful stream of sweet-smelling breath,
more grateful than all the blooms of herbs and blossoms of
the trees. Multitudes of men and animals flock to its den
from the fields and castles and towns, drawn on by the
fragrance and the music. The dragon is the age-old enemy,
the Devil; the waking is the resurrection of the Lord; the
multitudes are the community of the faithful; and the Panther is Jesus Christ.
To attenuate the amazement this allegory can awaken, let
us remember that the Panther was not a wild beast to the
Saxons but an exotic sound unsupported by any very concrete image. It may be added, as a curiosity, that Eliots
poem Gerontion speaks of Christ the tiger.
Leonardo da Vinci notes:
The African panther is like a lion, but with longer legs,
and a more slender body. It is completely white, spattered
with black spots like rosettes. Its beauty delights the other
animals, which would all flock to it were it not for the
panthers terrible stare. Aware of this, the panther lowers
its eyes; other animals approach it to drink in such



beauty, and the panther pounces on the nearest of
them.

The Pelican
The Pelican of everyday zoology is a water bird with a wingspan of some six feet and a very long bill whose lower mandible distends to form a pouch for holding fish. The Pelican
of fable is smaller and its bill is accordingly shorter and
sharper. Faithful to popular etymology - pelicanus, whitehaired - the plumage of the former is white while that of
the latter is yellow and sometimes green. (The real origin of
pelican is from the Greek I hew with an axe, in a confusion
of its large bill with that of the woodpeckers.) But more
unusual than its appearance are its habits.
With its bill and claws, the mother bird caresses her
offspring with such devotion that she kills them. After three
days the father arrives and, despairing over the deaths of his
young, rips at his own breast with his bill. The blood that
spills from his wounds revives the dead birds. This is the
account given in medieval bestiaries, though St Jerome in a
commentary on the nd Psalm (I am like a pelican of the
wilderness: I am like an owl of the desert) attri butes the
death of the nestlings to the serpent. That the Pelican opens
its breast and feeds its young with its own blood is the
common version of the fable.
Blood that gives life to the dead suggests the Eucharist and
the cross, and so a famous line of the Paradiso (XXV, )
calls Jesus Christ nostro Pellicano - mankinds Pelican. The
Latin commentary by Benvenuto of Imola amplifies this
point: He is called pelican because he opened his side for our
salvation, like the pelican that revives its dead brood with



the blood of its breast. The pelican is an Egyptian Bird.
The Pelican is common in ecclesiastical heraldry and it is
still engraved on chalices. The bestiary by Leonardo da Vinci
describes the Pelican in this way:
It is greatly devoted to its young and, finding them in
the nest killed by snakes, tears at its breast, bathing them
with its blood to bring them back to life.

The Peryton
The Sibyl of Erythraea, it is said, foretold that the city of
Rome would finally be destroyed by the Perytons. In the
year a.d. 642 the record of the Sibyl's prophecies was consumed in the great conflagration of Alexandria; the gram
marians who undertook the task of restoring certain charred
fragments of the nine volumes apparently never came upon
the special prophecy concerning the fate of Rome.
In time it was deemed necessary to find a source that
would throw greater light upon this dimly remembered tradition. After many vicissitudes it was learned that in the
sixteenth century a rabbi from Fez (in all likelihood Jakob
Ben Chaim) had left behind a historical treatise in which he
quoted the now lost work of a Greek scholiast, which included certain historical facts about the Perytons obviously
taken from the oracles before the Library of Alexandria was
burned by Omar. The name of the learned Greek has not
come down to us, but his fragments run:
The Perytons had their original dwelling in Atlantis and
are half deer, half bird. They have the deers head and
legs. As for its body, it is perfectly avian, with corresponding wings and plumage . . .



Its strangest trait is that, when the sun strikes it, instead
of casting a shadow of its own body, it casts the shadow of
a man. From this, some conclude that the Perytons are the
spirits of wayfarers who have died far from their homes
and from the care of their gods . . .
. . . and have been surprised eating dry earth . . . flying
in flocks and have been seen at a dizzying height above
the Columns of Hercules.
. . . they [Perytons] are mortal foes of the human race;
when they succeed in killing a man, their shadow is that
of their own body and they win back the favour of their
gods.
. . . and those who crossed the seas with Scipio to
conquer Carthage came close to failure, for during the
passage a formation of Perytons swooped down on the
ships, killing and mangling many . . . Although our
weapons have no effect against it, the animal - if such it
be - can kill no more than a single man.
. . . wallowing in the gore of its victims and then fleeing
upward on its powerful wings.
. . . in Ravenna, where they were last seen, telling of
their plumage which they described as light blue in
colour, which greatly surprised me for all that is known
of their dark green feathers.
Though these excerpts are sufficiently explicit, it is to be
lamented that down to our own time no further intelligence
about the Perytons has reached us. The rabbis treatise,
which preserved this description for us, had been on deposit
until before the last World War in the library of the University of Dresden. It is painful to say that this document has
also disappeared, and whether as a consequence of bombardment or of the earlier book burning of the Nazis, it is
not known. Let us hope that one day another copy of the
work may be discovered and again come to adorn the
shelves of some library.



The Phoenix
In monumental effigies, in pyramids of stone, and in treasured mummies, the Egyptians sought eternity. It is therefore appropriate that their country should have given rise to
the myth of a cyclical and deathless bird, though its subsequent elaboration is the work of Greece and of Rome.
Adolf Erman writes that in the mythology of Heliopolis, the
Phoenix (benu) is the lord of jubilees or of long cycles of
time. Herodotus, in a famous passage (II, ), tells with insistent scepticism an early form of the legend:
Another bird also is sacred; it is called the phoenix. I
myself have never seen it, but only pictures of it; for the
bird comes but seldom into Egypt, once in five hundred
years, as the people of Heliopolis say. It is said that the
phoenix comes when his father dies. If the picture truly
shows his size and appearance, his plumage is partly
golden and partly red. He is most like an eagle in shape
and bigness. The Egyptians tell a tale of this birds devices
which I do not believe. He comes, they say, from Arabia
bringing his father to the Suns temple enclosed in myrrh,
and there buries him. His manner of bringing is this: first
he moulds an egg of myrrh as heavy as he can carry, and
when he has proved its weight by lifting it he then
hollows out the egg and puts his father in it, covering over
with more myrrh the hollow in which the body lies; so
the egg being with his father in it of the same weight as
before, the phoenix, after enclosing him, carries him to
the temple of the Sun in Egypt. Such is the tale of what is
done by this bird.
Some five hundred years later, Tacitus and Pliny took up
the wondrous tale; the former justly observed that all



antiquity is obscure, but that a tradition has fixed the intervals of the Phoenixs visits at , years (Annals, VI, ).
The latter also looked into the Phoenixs chronology; Pliny
records (X, ) that, according to Manilius, the birds life coincides with the period of the Platonic year, or Great Year. A
Platonic year is the time required by the sun, the moon, and
the five planets to return to their initial position; Tacitus in
his Dialogus de Oratoribus gives this as , common
years. The ancients believed that, upon fulfilment of this
vast astronomical cycle, the history of the world would
repeat itself in all its details under the repeated influence of
the planets; the Phoenix would be a mirror or an image of
this process. For a closer analogy between the cosmos and
the Phoenix, it should be recalled that, according to the
Stoics, the universe dies in fire and is reborn in fire and that
the cycle had no beginning and will have no end.
Time simplified the method of the Phoenixs generation.
Herodotus speaks of an egg and Pliny of a maggot, but the
poet Claudian at the end of the fourth century already celebrates an immortal bird that rises out of its own ashes, an
heir to itself and a witness of the ages.
Few myths have been as widespread as that of the Phoenix. In addition to the authors already cited, we may add:
Ovid (Metamorphoses, XV), Dante (Inferno, XXIV), Pellicer
(The Phoenix and its Natural History), Quevedo (Spanish
Parnassus, VI), and Milton (Samson Agonistes, in fine).
Shakespeare at the close of Henry VIII (V, iv) wrote these
fine verses:
But as when
The bird of wonder dies, the maiden phoenix,
Her ashes new create another heir,
As great in admiration as herself . . .
We may also mention the Latin poem De Arte Phoenice,
which has been attri buted to Lactantius, and an AngloSaxon imitation of it dating from the eighth century. Ter


tulius, St Ambrose, and Cyrillus of Jerusalem have used the
Phoenix as a proof of the resurrection of the flesh. Pliny
pokes fun at the physicians who prescribe pills compounded
of the nest and ashes of the Phoenix.

The Pygmies
In the knowledge of the ancients, this nation of dwarfs measuring twenty-seven inches in height - dwelled in the
mountains beyond the utmost limits of India or of Ethiopia. Pliny states that they built their cabins of mud mixed
with feathers and eggshells. Aristotle allots them underground dens. For the harvest of wheat they wielded axes, as
though they were out to chop down a forest. Each year they
were attacked by flocks of cranes whose home lay on the
Russian steppe. Riding rams and goats, the Pygmies retaliated by destroying the eggs and nests of their foes. These
expeditions of war kept them busy for the space of three
months out of every twelve.
Pygmy was also the name of a Carthaginian god whose
face was carved as a figurehead on warships in order to
spread terror among the enemy.

The Rain Bird
When rain is needed, Chinese farmers have at their disposal
- besides the dragon - the bird called the shang yang. It has
only one leg. Long ago, children hopped up and down on
one foot, wrinkling their brows and repeating: It will



thunder, it will rain, cause the shang yangs here again! The
tradition runs that the bird drew water from the rivers with
its beak and blew it out as rain on the thirsting fields.
An ancient wizard had tamed it and used to carry it perched on his sleeve. Historians tell us that it once paraded
back and forth before the throne of the Prince of Chi, hopping about and flapping its wings. The Prince, greatly taken
aback, sent his chief minister to the Court of Lu to consult
Confucius. The Sage foretold that the shang yang would
cause the whole countryside and near-by regions to be
flooded unless dikes and channels were built at once. The
Prince was not deaf to the Sages warning, and so in his
domain countless damage and disaster were avoided.

The Remora
Remora, in Latin, means delay or hindrance. This is the
strict meaning of the word which was figuratively applied to
the Echeneis, a genus of sucking fishes credited with the
power of holding a ship fast by clinging to it. The Remora is
a fish of an ashen hue; on the top of its head it has a cartilaginous disc with which it creates a vacuum that enables
it to cling to other underwater creatures. Here is Plinys acclamation of its powers (IX, ):

There is a quite small fish that frequents rocks, called
the sucking-fish. This is believed to make ships go more
slowly by sticking to their hulls, from which it has received its name; and for this reason it also has an evil
reputation for supplying a love-charm and for acting as a
spell to hinder litigation in the courts, which accusations
it counterbalances only by its laudable property of stopping fluxes of the womb in pregnant women and holding



back the offspring till the time of birth. It is not included
however among articles of diet. It is thought by some to
have feet, but Aristotle denies this, adding that its limbs
resemble wings.
(Pliny then goes on to describe the murex, a variety of
purple fish also credited with bringing ships under full sail to
a standstill: . . . it is a foot long and four inches wide, and
hinders ships, and moreover . . . when preserved in salt it has
the power of drawing out gold that has fallen into the deepest wells when it is brought near them.)
It is remarkable how from the idea of delaying ships the
Remora came to be associated with delays in lawsuits and
later with delayed births. Elsewhere, Pliny tells that a
Remora decided the fate of the Roman Empire in the Battle
of Actium, detaining the galley in which Mark Antony was
reviewing his fleet, and that another Remora stopped Caligulas ship despite the efforts of its four hundred oarsmen.
Winds blow and storms rage, exclaims Pliny, but the
Remora overmasters their fury and holds ships fast, achieving what the heaviest of anchors and the thickest of hawsers
could never achieve.
The mightiest power does not always prevail. A ship may
be detained by a small remora, repeats the fine Spanish
writer Diego de Saavedra Fajardo in his Political Emblems
().

The Rukh
The Rukh (or as it is sometimes given, roc) is a vast
magnification of the eagle or vulture, and some people have
thought that a condor blown astray over the Indian Ocean
or China seas suggested it to the Arabs. Lane rejects this idea



and considers that we are dealing rather with a fabulous
species of a fabulous genus or with a synonym for the Persian Simurgh. The Rukh is known to the West through the
Arabian Nights, The reader will recall that Sindbad (on his
second voyage), left behind by his shipmates on an island,
found
a huge white dome rising in air and of vast compass. I
walked all around it, but found no door thereto, nor could
I muster strength or nimbleness by reason of its exceeding
smoothness and slipperiness. So I marked the spot where I
stood and went round about the dome to measure its circumference which I found fifty good paces.
Moments later, a huge cloud hid the sun from him and
lifting my head . . . I saw that the cloud was none other
than an enormous bird, of gigantic girth and inordinately
wide of wing . . .
The bird was a Rukh and the white dome, of course, was its
egg. Sindbad lashes himself to the birds leg with his turban,
and the next morning is whisked off into flight and set down
on a mountaintop, without having excited the Rukhs attention. The narrator adds that the Rukh feeds itself on serpents
of such great bulk that they would have made but one gulp
of an elephant.
In Marco Polos Travels (III, ) we read:
The people of the island [of Madagascar] report that at
a certain season of the year, an extraordinary kind of
bird, which they call a rukh, makes its appearance from
the southern region. In form it is said to resemble the eagle
but it is incomparably greater in size; being so large and
strong as to seize an elephant with its talons, and to lift it
into the air, from whence it lets it fall to the ground, in
order that when dead it may prey upon the carcase.
Persons who have seen this bird assert that when the wings



are spread they measure sixteen paces in extent, from
point to point; and that the feathers are eight paces in
length, and thick in proportion.
Marco Polo adds that some envoys from China brought
the feather of a Rukh back to the Grand Khan. A Persian
illustration in Lane shows the Rukh bearing off three elephants in beak and talons; with the proportion of a hawk and
field mice, Burton notes.

The Salamander
Not only is it a small dragon that lives in fire, it is also
(according to one dictionary) an insectivorous batrachian
with intensely black smooth skin and yellow spots. Of these
two characters, the better known is the imaginary, and the
Salamanders inclusion in this book will surprise no one.
In Book X of his Natural History, Pliny states that the
Salamander is so intensely cold as to extinguish fire by its
contact, in the same way that ice does; later he thinks this
over, observing sceptically that if what magicians said about
the Salamander were true, it would be used to put out house
fires. In Book XI, he speaks of a four-footed, winged insect called the pyrallis or pyrausta - living in the coppersmelting furnaces of Cyprus, in the very midst of the fire; if
it comes out into the air and flies a short distance, it will
instantly die. The Salamander in mans memory has incorporated this now forgotten animal.
The phoenix was used as an argument by theologians to
prove the resurrection of the flesh; the Salamander, as a
proof that bodies can live in fire. In Book XXI of the City of
God by St Augustine, there is a chapter called Whether an



earthly body may possibly be incorruptible by fire, and it
opens in this way:

What then shall I say unto the unbelievers, to prove
that a body carnal and living may endure undissolved
both against death and the force of eternal fire. They will
not allow us to ascribe this unto the power of God, but
urge us to produce it to them by some example. We shall
answer them that there are some creatures that are indeed corruptible, because mortal, and yet do live untouched in the middle of the fire.
Poets, also, flock to the Salamander and phoenix as
devices of rhetorical emphasis. Quevedo in the sonnets of
the fourth book of his Spanish Parnassus, which celebrates
the exploits of love and beauty, writes:
Hago verdad la Fnix en la ardiente
Llama, en que renaciendo me renuevo;
Y la virilidad del fuego pruebo,
Y que es padre y que tiene descendiente.
La Salamandra fra, que desmiente
Noticia docta, a defender me atrevo,
Cuando en incendios, que sediento bebo,
Mi corazn habita y no los siente.
[I testify to the truth of the Phoenix in burning flames,
since I also burn and renew myself, and I prove the maleness of fire, which can be a father and have offspring.
I dare as well defend the cold Salamander, refuted by men
of learning, since my heart dwells in fires, which thirstily I
drink, and feels no pain.]
In the middle of the twelfth century, a forged letter supposedly sent by Prester John, the king of kings, to the Emperor of Byzantium, made its way all over Europe. This
epistle, which is a catalogue of wonders, speaks of gigantic
ants that dig gold, and of a River of Stones, and of a Sea of



Sand with living fish, and of a towering mirror that reflects
whatever happens in the kingdom, and of a sceptre carved
of a single emerald, and of pebbles that make a man invisible
or that light up the night. One of its paragraphs states: Our
realm yields the worm known as the salamander. Salamanders live in fire and make cocoons, which our court ladies
spin and use to weave cloth and garments. To wash and
clean these fabrics, they throw them into flames.
Of these indestructible linens or textiles, which are
cleansed by fire, there is mention in Pliny (XIX, ) and in
Marco Polo (I, ). The latter attests that the Salamander is a
substance, not an animal. Nobody, at first, believed him;
goods woven of asbestos and sold as the skins of Salamanders were an unanswerable proof of the Salamanders existence.
Somewhere in his Autobiography, Benvenuto Cellini
writes that at the age of five he saw a tiny animal like a
lizard playing in the fire. He told this to his father, who said
that the animal was a Salamander and gave his son a sound
beating so that the remarkable vision, seldom vouchsafed to
man, would stick forever in the boys memory.
To the alchemists the Salamander was the spirit of the
element fire. In this symbol and in an argument of
Aristotles, preserved for us by Cicero in the first book of his
On the Nature of the Gods, we find the reason why men
believed in the Salamander of legend. The Sicilian physician
Empedocles of Agrigentum had formulated the proposition
of the four roots, or elements of matter, whose opposition
and affinity, governed by Discord and Love, made up the
cosmic process. There is no death; there are only particles of
roots, which the Romans were to call elements, and which
are either falling apart or coming together. These elements
are fire, earth, air, and water. They are eternal and none is
stronger than any other. Now we know (now we think we
know) that this doctrine is false, but men once thought it
valuable, and it is generally held that it was on the whole



beneficial. Theodor Gomperz has written that The four elements which make up and support the world, and which
still survive in poetry and in popular imagination, have a
long and glorious history. The system demanded parity:
since there were animals of earth and water, animals of fire
were needed. For the dignity of science it was essential that
Salamanders exist. In a parallel fashion, Aristotle speaks of
animals of the air.
Leonardo da Vinci had it that the Salamander fed on fire
and in this way renewed its skin.

The Satyrs
Satyrs was the Greek name for them; Rome called them
Fauns, Pans, and Sylvans. In the lower part of the body they
were goats; their torso, arms, and head were human. Satyrs
were thickly covered with hair and had short horns, pointed
ears, active eyes, and hooked noses. They were lascivious
and fond of their wine. They attended Bacchus in his rollicking and bloodless conquest of India. They set ambushes for
nymphs, relished dancing, and their instrument was the
flute. Country people paid homage to them, offering them
the first fruits of the harvest. Lambs were also sacrificed in
their honour.
In Roman times, a specimen of these demigods was surprised asleep in his mountain den in Thessaly by some of
Sullas soldiers, who brought him before their general. The
Satyr uttered inarticulate sounds and was so loathsome to
the eyes and nostrils that Sulla had him at once sent back to
the wilderness.
A memory of the Satyrs lived on in the medieval image of
devils. The word satire seems to have no connection with



satyr; most etymologists trace satire back to satura lanx, a
composite dish, hence a mixed literary composition, like the
writings of Juvenal.

Scylla
Before becoming a monster and then turned into rocks,
Scylla was a nymph with whom Glaucus, one of the sea
gods, had fallen in love. In order to win her, Glaucus sought
the help of Circe whose knowledge of herbs and incantations was well known. But Circe became attached to
Glaucus on sight, only she was unable to get him to forget
Scylla, and so to punish her rival she poured the juice of
poisonous herbs into the fountain where the nymph bathed.
At this point, according to Ovid (Metamorphoses, XIV,
-)
Scylla comes and wades waist-deep into the water; when
all at once she sees her loins disfigured with barking monster-shapes. And at the first, not believing that these are
parts of her own body, she flees in fear and tries to drive
away the boisterous, barking things. But what she flees
she takes along with her; and, feeling for her thighs, her
legs, her feet, she finds in place of these only gaping dogsheads, such as a Cerberus might have. She stands on ravening dogs, and her docked loins and her belly are enclosed in a circle of beastly forms.
She then found herself supported by twelve feet, and she had
six heads, each with three rows of teeth. This metamorphosis so terrified her that she threw herself into the
strait separating Italy and Sicily, where the gods changed
her into rocks. During storms, sailors speak of the dreadful



roaring of the breakers when driven into the uneven cavities
of the rock.
This legend is also found in the pages of Homer and Pausanias.

The Sea Horse
Unlike most other imaginary animals, the Sea Horse is not a
composite creature; it is no more than a wild horse whose
dwelling place is the sea and who comes ashore only on
moonless nights when the breezes bring him the smell of
mares. On some undetermined island - maybe Borneo - the
herders hobble the kings finest mares along the coast and
hide themselves underground. Here Sindbad saw the stallion
that rose from the sea, watched it leap on to the female, and
heard its cry.
The definitive edition of the Book of a Thousand and One
Nights dates, according to Burton, from the thirteenth century; in this same century lived the cosmographer Zakariyya
al-Qaswini who in his treatise Wonders of Creation wrote
these words: The sea horse is like the horse of dry land, but
its mane and tail grow longer; its colour is more lustrous and
its hooves are cleft like those of wild oxen, while its height is
no less than the land horses and slightly larger than the asss.
He remarks that a cross between the sea and land species
produces a very beautiful breed, and singles out a certain
dark pony with white spots like pieces of silver.
An eighteenth-century Chinese traveller, Wang Tai-hai,
writes:
The sea horse usually appears along the coast in search
of a mare; sometimes he is caught. His coat is black and



shining, his tail is long and sweeps the ground. On dry
land he goes like any other horse, is very tame, and in a
day can travel hundreds of miles. But it is well not to
ba the him in the river, for as soon as he sees water he
recovers his ancient nature and swims off.
Ethnologists have looked for the origin of this Islamic
fiction in the Greco-Roman fiction of the wind that makes
mares fertile. In the third book of the Georgics, Virgil has set
this belief to verse. Plinys explanation (VIII, ) is more
rigorous:
It is known that in Lusitania in the neighbourhood of
Lisbon and along the Tagus, mares, when a west wind is
blowing, stand facing towards it and conceive the breath
of life; this produces a foal, and this is the way to breed a
very swift colt, but it does not live more than three
years.
The historian Justinus ventures the guess that the hyperbole sons of the wind, applied to very fast horses, gave rise
to this fable.

The Shaggy Beast of
La Fert-Bernard
Along the banks of the Huisne, an otherwise peaceful
stream, there roamed during the Middle Ages a creature that
became known as the Shaggy Beast (La velue). This animal
had somehow managed to survive the Flood despite its exclusion from the Ark. It was the size of a bull, and it had a
snakes head and a round body buried under long green fur.
The fur was armed with stingers whose wound was deadly.



The creatures also had very broad hooves that were similar
to the feet of the tortoise, and its tail, shaped like a serpent,
could kill men and cattle alike. When its anger was aroused,
the Shaggy Beast shot out flames that withered crops. At
night it raided stables. Whenever the farmers attempted to
hunt it down, it hid in the waters of the Huisne, causing the
river to flood its banks and drown the valley for miles.
The Shaggy Beast had a taste for innocent creatures, and
devoured maidens and children. It would choose the purest
of young womanhood, some Little Lamb (Lagnelle). One
day, it waylaid one such Little Lamb and dragged her,
mauled and bloody, to its lair in the riverbed. The victims
sweetheart tracked the monster, and with a sword sliced
into the Shaggy Beasts tail, its only vulnerable spot, and cut
it in two. The creature died at once. It was embalmed and its
death was celebrated with fifes and drums and dancing.

The Simurgh
The Simurgh is an immortal bird that nests in the branches
of the Tree of Knowledge; Burton compares it with the eagle
which, according to the Younger Edda, has knowledge of
many things and makes its nest in the branches of the
World Tree, Yggdrasil.
Both Southeys Thalaba () and Flauberts Temptation
of Saint Anthony () speak of the Simorg Anka; Flaubert
reduces the birds status to that of an attendant to the Queen
of Sheba, and describes it as having orange-coloured feathers
like metallic scales, a small silver-coloured head with a
human face, four wings, a vultures talons, and a long, long
peacocks tail. In the original sources the Simurgh is a far
more important being. Firdausi in the Book of Kings, which



compiles and sets to verse ancient Iranian legends, makes the
bird the foster father of Zal, father of the poems hero; Farid
al-Din Attar, in the twelfth century, makes it a symbol of
the godhead. This takes place in the Mantiq al-Tayr (Parliament of Birds). The plot of this allegory, made up of some
, couplets, is striking. The distant king of birds, the
Simurgh, drops one of his splendid feathers somewhere in
the middle of China; on learning of this, the other birds, tired
of their present anarchy, decide to seek him. They know
that the kings name means thirty birds; they know that his
castle lies in the Kaf, the mountain or range of mountains
that ring the earth. At the outset, some of the birds lose
heart: the nightingale pleads his love for the rose; the parrot
pleads his beauty, for which he lives caged; the partridge
cannot do without his home in the hills, nor the heron without his marsh, nor the owl without his ruins. But finally,
certain of them set out on the perilous venture; they cross
seven valleys or seas, the next to last bearing the name Bewilderment, the last the name Annihilation. Many of the pilgrims desert; the journey takes its toll among the rest.
Thirty, made pure by their sufferings, reach the great peak
of the Simurgh. At last they behold him; they realize that
they are the Simurgh, and that the Simurgh is each of them
and all of them.
Edward FitzGerald translated portions of the poem under
the playful title The Bird-parliament; A birds-eye view of
Fard-Uddn Attars Bird-parliament.
The cosmographer al-Qaswini, in his Wonders of Creation, states that the Simorg Anka lives for seventeen hundred years and that, upon the coming of age of its son, the
father burns himself on a funeral pyre. This, observes Lane,
reminds us of the phoenix.




Sirens
Through the course of time the image of the Sirens has
changed. Their first historian, Homer, in the twelfth book of
the Odyssey, does not tell us what they were like; to Ovid,
they are birds of reddish plumage with the faces of young
girls; to Apollonius of Rhodes, in the upper part of the body
they are women and in the lower part seabirds; to the Spanish playwright Tirso de Molina (and to heraldry), half
woman, half fish. No less debatable is their nature. In his
classical dictionary Lemprire calls them nymphs; in
Quicherats they are monsters, and in Grimals they are
demons. They inhabit a western island, close to Circes, but
the dead body of one of them, Par thenope, was found
washed ashore in Campania and gave her name to the famed
city now called Naples. Strabo, the geographer, saw her
grave and witnessed the games held periodically in her
memory.
The Odyssey tells that the Sirens attract and shipwreck
seamen, and that Ulysses, in order to hear their song and yet
remain alive, plugged the ears of his oarsmen with wax and
had himself lashed to the mast. The Sirens, tempting him,
promised him knowledge of all the things of this world:
For never yet has any man rowed past this isle in his black
ship until he has heard the sweet voice from our lips. Nay,
he has joy of it, and goes his way a wiser man. For we
know all the toils that in wide Troy the Argives and
Trojans endured through the will of the gods, and we
know all things that come to pass upon the fruitful earth.
A legend recorded by the mythologist Apollodorus in his
Biblio theca, tells that Orpheus, aboard the Argonauts ship,
sang more sweetly than the Sirens and that because of this



these creatures threw themselves into the sea and were
changed into rocks, for their fate was to die whenever their
spell went unheeded. The sphinx, also, threw herself from
a precipice when her riddle was solved.
In the sixth century, a Siren was caught and baptized in
northern Wales, and in certain old calendars took her place
as a saint under the name Murgen. Another, in , slipped
through a breach in a dike and lived in Haarlem until the
day of her death. Nobody could make out her speech, but
she was taught to weave and she worshipped the cross as if
instinctively. A chronicler of the sixteenth century argued
that she was not a fish because she knew how to weave and
that she was not a woman because she was able to live in
water.
The English language distinguishes between the classical
Siren and the mermaid, which has the tail of a fish. The
making of this later image may have been influenced by the
Tritons, who were lesser divinities in the court of Poseidon.
In the tenth book of Platos Republic, eight Sirens rule
over the revolution of the eight concentric heavens.
Siren: a supposed marine animal, we read in a brutally
frank dictionary.

The Sow Harnessed with Chains
and other Argentine Fauna
On page of his Dictionary of Argentine Folklore, Felix
Coluccio records:
In the northern part of Cordoba, especially around Quilinos, people speak of a sow harnessed with chains which
commonly makes its presence known in the hours of



night. Those living close to the railroad station maintain
that the sow slides on the tracks, and others assured us
that it is not unusual for the sow to run along the telegraph wires, producing a deafening racket with its
chains. As yet, nobody has caught a glimpse of the
animal, for as soon as you look for it, it vanishes unaccountably.
Belief in the Sow Harnessed with Chains (chancha con
cadenas), which also goes by the name of the Tin Pig (chancho de lata), is prevalent as well in the Province of Buenos
Aires in slums and towns along the riverside.
There are two Argentine versions of the werewolf. One of
them, common also to Uruguay and to southern Brazil, is the
lobisn; but since no wolves inhabit these regions, men are
supposed to take the shapes of swine or dogs. In certain
towns of Entre Ros, girls shun young men who live in the
vicinity of stockyards because on Saturday nights they are
said to turn into the aforementioned animals. In the midland
provinces, we find the tigre capiango. This beast is not a
jaguar but a man who, at will, can take the jaguars form.
Usually his purpose is to frighten friends in a spirit of rustic
jesting, but highwaymen have also availed themselves of the
guise. During the civil wars of the last century, General Facundo Quiroga was popularly supposed to have under his
comm and an entire regiment of capiangos.

The Sphinx
The Sphinx of Egyptian monuments (called by Herodotus
androsphinx, or man-sphinx, in order to distinguish it from
the Greek Sphinx) is a lion having the head of a man and
lying at rest; it stood watch by temples and tombs, and is



said to have represented royal authority. In the halls of
Karnak, other Sphinxes have the head of a ram, the sacred
animal of Amon. The Sphinx of Assyrian monuments is a
winged bull with a mans bearded and crowned head; this
image is common on Persian gems. Pliny in his list of Ethiopian animals includes the Sphinx, of which he details no
other features than brown hair and two mammae on the
breast.
The Greek Sphinx has a womans head and breasts, the
wings of a bird, and the body and feet of a lion. Some give it
the body of a dog and a snakes tail. It is told that it depopulated the Theban countryside asking riddles (for it had
a human voice) and making a meal of any man who could
not give the answer. Of Oedipus, the son of Jocasta, the
Sphinx asked, What has four legs, two legs, and three legs,
and the more legs it has the weaker it is? (So runs what
seems to be the oldest version. In time the metaphor was
introduced which makes of mans life a single day. Nowadays the question goes, Which animal walks on four legs in
the morning, two legs at noon, and three in the evening?)
Oedipus answered that it was a man who as an infant crawls
on all fours, when he grows up walks on two legs, and in old
age leans on a staff. The riddle solved, the Sphinx threw
herself from a precipice.
De Quincey, around , suggested a second interpretation, which complements the traditional one. The subject
of the riddle according to him is not so much man in general
as it is Oedipus in particular, orphaned and helpless at birth,
alone in his manhood, and supported by Antigone in his
blind and hopeless old age.




The Squonk
(Lacrimacorpus dissolvens)

The range of the squonk is very limited. Few people outside of Pennsylvania have ever heard of the quaint beast,
which is said to be fairly common in the hemlock forests
of that State. The squonk is of a very retiring disposition,
generally travelling about at twilight and dusk. Because of
its misfitting skin, which is covered with warts and moles,
it is always unhappy; in fact it is said, by people who are
best able to judge, to be the most morbid of beasts.
Hunters who are good at tracking are able to follow a
squonk by its tear-stained trail, for the animal weeps constantly. When cornered and escape seems impossible, or
when surprised and frightened, it may even dissolve itself
in tears. Squonk hunters are most successful on frosty
moonlight nights, when tears are shed slowly and the
animal dislikes moving about; it may then be heard weeping under the boughs of dark hemlock trees. Mr J. P.
Wentling, formerly of Pennsylvania, but now at St Anthony Park, Minnesota, had a disappointing experience
with a squonk near Mont Alto. He made a clever capture
by mimicking the squonk and inducing it to hop into a
sack, in which he was carrying it home, when suddenly
the burden lightened and the weeping ceased. Wentling
unslung the sack and looked in. There was nothing but
tears and bubbles.
William T. Cox:
Fearsome Creatures of the Lumberwoods,
With a Few Desert and Mountain Beasts




Swedenborgs Angels
For the last twenty-five years of his studious life, the eminent philosopher and man of science Emanuel Swedenborg (-) resided in London. But as the English are
not very talkative, he fell into the habit of conversing
with devils and Angels. God granted him the privilege of
visiting the Other World and of entering into the lives of its
inhabitants. Christ had said that souls, in order to be admitted into Heaven, must be righteous. Swedenborg added
that they must also be intelligent; later on Blake stipulated
that they should be artists and poets. Swedenborgs Angels
are those souls who have chosen Heaven. They need no
words; it is enough that an Angel only think of another in
order to have him at his side. Two people who have loved
each other on earth become a single Angel. Their world is
ruled by love; every Angel is a Heaven. Their shape is that of
a perfect human being; Heavens shape is the same. The
Angels, in whatever direction they look - north, east, south,
or west - are always face to face with God. They are, above
all, divines; their chief delight lies in prayer and in the unravelling of theological problems. Earthly things are but
emblems of heavenly things. The sun stands for the godhead.
In Heaven there is no time; the appearance of things changes
according to moods. The Angels garments shine according
to their intelligence. The souls of the rich are richer than the
souls of the poor, since the rich are accustomed to wealth. In
Heaven, all objects, furniture, and cities are more physical
and more complex than those of our earth; colours are more
varied and splendid. Angels of English stock show a tendency to politics; Jews to the sale of trinkets; Germans tote
bulky volumes which they consult before venturing an
answer. Since Moslems venerate Mohammed, God has



provided them with an Angel who impersonates the Prophet.
The poor in spirit and hermits are denied the pleasures of
Heaven, for they would be unable to enjoy them.

Swedenborgs Devils
In the works of the famous eighteenth-century Swedish
visionary, we read that Devils, like angels, are not a species
apart but derive from the human race. They are individuals who after death choose Hell. There, in that region
of marshlands, of desert wastes, of tangled forests, of
towns levelled by fire, of brothels, and of gloomy dens,
they feel no special happiness, but in Heaven they would
be far unhappier still. Occasionally, a ray of heavenly
light falls on them from on high; the Devils feel it as a
burning, a scorching, and it reaches their nostrils as a
stench. Each thinks himself handsome, but many have the
faces of beasts or have shapeless lumps of flesh where faces
should be; others are faceless. They live in a state of mutual
hatred and of armed violence, and if they come together it is
for the purpose of plotting against one another or of destroying each other. God has forbidden men and angels to
draw a map of Hell, but we know that its general outline
follows that of a Devil, just as the outline of Heaven follows
that of an angel. The most vile and loathsome Hells lie to the
west.




The Sylphs
To each of the four roots, or elements, into which the Greeks
divided all matter, a particular spirit was later made to correspond. Paracelsus, the sixteenth-century Swiss alchemist
and physician, gave them their names: the Gnomes of earth,
the Nymphs of water, the Salamanders of fire, and the Sylphs,
or Sylphides, of air. All of these words come from the Greek.
The French philologist Littr traced the etymology of sylph
to the Celtic languages, but it seems quite unlikely that Paracelsus, who gave us the name, knew anything about those
tongues.
No one any longer believes in the Sylphs, but the word is
used as a trivial compliment applied to a slender young
woman. Sylphs occupy an intermediate place between
supernatural and natural beings; Romantic poets and the
ballet have not neglected them.

Talos
Living beings made of metal or stone make up some of fantastic zoologys most alarming species. Let us recall the
angry bulls with brass feet and horns that breathed flames
and that Jason, helped by the magic arts of Medea, yoked to
the plough; Condillacs psychological statue of sensitive
marble; the boatman in the Arabian Nights, a man of brass
with a tablet of lead on his breast inscribed with talismans
and characts, who rescued the third Kalandar from the
Magnet Mountain; the girls of mild silver, or of furious



gold, which a goddess in William Blakes mythology caught
in silken nets for the delight of her lover; and the metal birds
who nursed Ares.
To this list we may also add a draft animal, the swift wild
boar Gullinbursti, whose name means golden-bristled. The
mythologist Paul Herrmann writes: This living piece of
metalwork came from the forge of skilful dwarfs; they
threw a pigskin into the fire and drew out a golden boar
with the power of travelling on land, sea, and air. However
dark the night, there is always light enough in the boars
path. Gullinbursti pulled the chariot of Freya, the Norse
goddess of love, marriage, and fertility.
And then there is Talos, the warden of the island of Crete.
Some consider this giant the work of Vulcan or of Daedalus;
Apollonius of Rhodes tells us about him in his Argonautica
(IV, -):
And Talos, the man of bronze, as he broke off the rocks
from the hard cliff, stayed them from fastening hawsers
to the shore, when they came to the roadstead of Dictes
haven. He was of the stock of bronze, of the men sprung
from ash-trees, the last left among the sons of the gods;
and the son of Cronos gave him to Europa to be the
warder of Crete and to stride round the island thrice a day
with his feet of bronze. Now in all the rest of his body and
limbs was he fashioned of bronze and invulnerable; but
beneath the sinew by his ankle was a blood-red vein; and
this, with its issues of life and death, was covered by a
thin skin.
It was through this vulnerable heel, of course, that Talos met
his end. Medea bewitched him with a hostile glance, and
when the giant again began heaving boulders from his cliff,
he grazed his ankle on a pointed crag, and the ichor gushed
forth like melted lead; and not long thereafter did he stand
towering on the jutting cliff.
In another version of the myth, Talos, burning red-hot,



would put his arms around a man and kill him. The bronze
giant this time met death at the hands of Castor and Pollux,
the Dioscuri, who were led on by the sorceress Medea.

The Tao Tieh
Poets and mythology seem to have ignored it, but everyone
at some time has discovered a Tao Tieh for himself at the
corner of a capital or in the middle of a frieze, and felt a
slight uneasiness. The dog that guarded the flocks of the
threefold Geryon had two heads and a single body, and luckily was killed by Hercules. The Tao Tieh inverts this order
and is still more horrible: its huge head is connected to one
body on the right and another on the left. Generally it has
six legs since the front pair serves for both bodies. Its face
may be a dragons, a tigers, or a persons; art historians call
it an ogres mask. It is a formal monster, inspired by the
demon of symmetry for sculptors, potters, and ceramicists.
Some fourteen hundred years b.c., under the Shang Dynasty,
it already figured on ceremonial bronzes.
Tao Tieh means glutton and it embodies the vices of
sensuality and avarice. The Chinese paint it on their dishes
in order to warn against self-indulgence.

Thermal Beings
It was revealed to the visionary and theosophist Rudolf Steiner (-) that this planet, before it was the earth we
now know, passed through a solar stage, and before that
through a Saturnian stage. Man today is composed of a



physical body, of an ethereal body, of an astral body, and of
an ego; at the start of the Saturnian period he was a physical
body only. This body was neither visible nor tangible, since
at that time there were on earth neither solids nor liquids
nor gases. There were only states of heat, thermal forms,
defining in cosmic space regular and irregular figures; each
man, each being, was an organism made of changing temperatures. According to the testimony of Steiner, mankind
during the Saturnian period was a blind, deaf, and insensitive multitude of articulated states of heat and cold. To
the investigator, heat is but a substance still subtler than a
gas, we read in one page of Steiners Die Geheimwissenschaft im Umriss (Outline of Occult Science). Before the solar
stage, fire spirits, or archangels, animated the bodies of those
men, who began to glow and shine.
Did Steiner dream these things? Did he dream them because they had occurred ages earlier? What is undeniable is
that they are far stranger than the demiurges, serpents, and
bulls of other cosmogonies.

The Tigers of Annam
To the Annamites, tigers, or spirits who dwell in tigers,
govern the four corners of space. The Red Tiger rules over
the South (which is located at the top of maps); summer and
fire belong to him. The Black Tiger rules over the North;
winter and water belong to him. The Blue Tiger rules over
the East; spring and plants belong to him. The White Tiger
rules over the West; autumn and metals belong to him.
Over these Cardinal Tigers is a fifth tiger, the Yellow Tiger,
who stands in the middle governing the others, just as the
Emperor stands in the middle of China and China in the



middle of the World. (Thats why it is called the Middle
Kingdom; thats why it occupies the middle of the map that
Father Ricci, of the Society of Jesus, drew at the end of the
sixteenth century for the instruction of the Chinese.)
Lao-tzu entrusted to the Five Tigers the mission of waging
war against devils. An Annamite prayer, translated into
French by Louis Cho Chod, implores the aid of the Five
Heavenly Tigers. This superstition is of Chinese origin; Sinologists speak of a White Tiger that rules over the remote
region of the western stars. To the South the Chinese place a
Red Bird; the East, a Blue Dragon; to the North, a Black
Tortoise. As we see, the Annamites have preserved the
colours but have made the animals one.
The Bhils, a people of Central India, believe in hells for
Tigers; the Malays tell of a city in the heart of the jungle
with beams of human bones, walls of human skin, and eaves
of human hair, built and inhabited by Tigers.

The Trolls
In England, after the advent of Christianity, the Valkyries
(or Choosers of the Slain) were relegated to the villages and
there degenerated into witches; in the Scandinavian countries the giants of hea then myth, who lived in Jotunnheim
and battled against the god Thor, were reduced to rustic
Trolls. In the cosmogony opening the Elder Edda, we read
that in the Twilight of the Gods, the giants, allied with a
wolf and a serpent, will scale the rainbow Bifrost, which
will break under their weight, thereby destroying the world.
The Trolls of popular superstition are stupid, evil elves who
dwell in mountain crannies or in ramshackle huts. Trolls of
distinction may bear two or three heads.



Henrik Ibsens dramatic poem Peer Gynt () assures
them their immortality. Ibsen depicts the Trolls as, above
all, nationalists. They think, or do their best to think, that
the foul concoction they brew is delicious and that their
hovels are palaces. So that Peer Gynt would not witness the
sordidness of his surroundings and the ugliness of the princess he is about to marry, the Trolls offer to put out his
eyes.

Two Metaphysical Beings
The mystery of the origin of ideas brings a pair of strange
creatures to imaginary zoology. One was evolved towards
the middle of the eighteenth century, the other a hundred
years later.
The first is Condillacs sensitive statue. Descartes professed the Platonic doctrine of innate ideas; tienne Bonnot
de Condillac, for the purposes of refuting him, conceived a
marble statue in the likeness of the human body and inhabited by a soul that had never perceived or thought. Condillac
begins by conferring on his statue a single sense, perhaps the
least complex of all - that of smell. A whiff of jasmine is the
start of the statues biography; for one moment there is
nothing but this odour in the whole universe - or, to be more
accurate, this odour is the universe, which a moment later
will be the odour of a rose, then of a carnation. In the
statues consciousness, once there is a single odour we have
attention; once an odour lasts after the stimulus has ceased
we have memory; once a present and a past impression
occupy the statues attention we have the ability to compare; once the statue perceives likeness and unlikeness we
have judgement; once the ability to compare and judgement



occur a second time we have reflection; once a pleasant
memory is more vivid than an unpleasant impression we
have imagination. Once the faculty of understanding is born,
the faculty of the will will be born: love and hate (attraction
and repulsion), hope and fear. The consciousness of having
passed through many states of mind will give the statue the
abstract notion of numbers; the consciousness of being the
odour of carnation and of having been the odour of jasmine,
the notion of the I.
The author will then endow his hypothetical man with
hearing, taste, sight, and finally, touch. This last sense will
reveal to him that space exists and that in space he exists in
a body; sounds, smells, and colours had been to him, before
this stage, mere variations or modifications of his consciousness.
The allegory just related is called Trait des sensations
and dates from ; for this summary we have made use of
the second volume of Brhiers Histoire de la philosophie.
The other creature raised by the problem of consciousness
is the hypothetical animal of Rudolf Hermann Lotze. Lonelier than the statue that smells roses and finally becomes a
man, this being has in its skin but one movable sensitive
point - at the extremity of an antenna. Its structure denies
it, as is obvious, more than one perception at a time. Lotze
argues that the ability to retract or extend its sensitive antenna will enable this all but bereft animal to discover the
external world (without the aid of the Kantian categories of
time and space) and distinguish a stationary from a moving
object. This fiction may be found in the book Medizinische
Psychologie (); it has been praised by Hans Vaihinger.




The Unicorn
The first version of the Unicorn is nearly identical with the
latest. Four hundred years b.c., the Greek historian and
physician Ctesias told that among the kingdoms of India
there were very swift wild asses with white coats, purple
heads, blue eyes, and in the middle of their foreheads a
pointed horn whose base was white, whose tip was red, and
whose middle was black. Pliny, more precise, wrote (VIII,
):
the fiercest animal is the unicorn, which in the rest of
the body resembles a horse, but in the head a stag, in the
feet an elephant, and in the tail a boar, and has a deep
bellow, and a single black horn three feet long projecting
from the middle of the forehead. They say that it is impossible to capture this animal alive.
Around , the Orientalist Schrader conjectured that the
Unicorn might have been suggested to the Greeks by certain
Persian bas-reliefs depicting bulls in profile with a single
horn.
In Isidore of Sevilles Etymologies, composed at the beginning of the seventh century, we read that one thrust of
the Unicorns horn may kill an elephant; this perhaps is
echoed in the similar victory, in Sindbads second voyage, of
the Karkadan, or rhinoceros, which can carry off a great
elephant on its horn. (We also find here that the rhinoceross horn cleft in twain, is the likeness of a man; alQaswini says it is the likeness of a man on horseback, and
others have spoken of birds and fishes.) Another of the Unicorns enemies was the lion, and a stanza in the tangled
allegory The Faerie Queene records the manner of their duel
in this way:



Like as a Lyon, whose imperiall powre
A prowd rebellious Unicom defyes,
T avoide the rash assault and wrathful stowre
Of his fiers foe, him to a tree applyes,
And when him ronning in full course he spyes,
He slips aside; the whiles that furious beast
His precious horne, sought of his enimyes,
Strikes in the stocke, ne thence can be releast,
But to the mighty victor yields a bounteous feast.
These lines (Book II, Canto V, Stanza X) date from the sixteenth century; at the beginning of the eighteenth century,
the union of the Kingdom of England with the Kingdom of
Scotl and brought together on the heraldic arms of Great
Britain the English Leopard, or Lion, and the Scottish Unicorn.
In the Middle Ages, bestiaries taught that the Unicorn
could be captured by a maiden; in the Greek Physiologus
we read: How it is captured. A virgin is placed before it and
it springs into the virgins lap and she warms it with love
and carries it off to the palace of kings. One of Pisanellos
medals and many famous tapestries illustrate this victory
whose allegorical applications are obvious. Leonardo da
Vinci attri butes the Unicorns capture to its lust, which
makes it forget its fierceness, lie in a girls lap, and so be
taken by hunters. The Holy Ghost, Jesus Christ, mercury,
and evil have all been represented by the Unicorn. In his
Psychologie und Alchemie (), Jung gives a history and an
analysis of these symbols.
A small white horse with the forelegs of an antelope, a
goats beard, and a long twisted horn projecting straight out
from its forehead is the picture usually given of this imaginary animal.




The Unicorn of China
The Chinese Unicorn, the ki-lin, is one of the four animals
of good omen; the others are the dragon, the phoenix, and
the tortoise. The Unicorn is foremost of all the creatures
that live on land. It has the body of a deer, the tail of an ox,
and the hooves of a horse. Its short horn, which grows out of
its forehead, is made of flesh; its coat, on its back, is of five
mixed colours, while its belly is brown or yellow. It is so
gentle that when it walks it is careful not to tread on the
tiniest living creature and will not even eat live grass but
only what is dead. Its appearance foretells the birth of an
upright ruler. To wound the Chinese Unicorn or to come
across its dead body is unlucky. The span of this animals
natural life is a thousand years.
When Confucius mother bore him in her womb, the
spirits of the five planets brought her an animal having the
shape of a cow, scales of a dragon, and a horn on its forehead. This is the way Soothill reports the annunciation; a
variant of this given by Wilhelm tells that the animal appeared on its own and spat out a jade tablet on which these
words were read:
Son of mountain crystal [or of the essence of water], when
the dynasty crumbles, thou shalt rule as a throneless
king.
Seventy years later, some hunters killed a ki-lin which still
had a bit of ribbon around its horn that Confucius mother
had tied there. Confucius went to look at the Unicorn and
wept because he felt what the death of this innocent and
mysterious animal foretold, and because in that ribbon lay
his past.
In the thirteenth century, a scouting expedition of the



Emperor Genghis Khan, who had undertaken the invasion of
India, met a creature in the desert like a deer, with a head
like that of a horse, one horn on its forehead, and green hair
on its body, which addressed them, saying, It is time for
your master to return to his own land. One of Genghis
Chinese ministers, upon consultation, explained to him that
the animal was a chio-tuan, a variety of the ki-lin. For four
years the great army has been warring in western regions,
he said. Heaven, which has a horror of bloodshed, gives
warning through the Chio-tuan. Spare the Empire for
Heavens sake; moderation will give boundless pleasure.
The Emperor desisted in his war plans.
Twenty-two centuries before the Christian era, one of the
judges of the Emperor Shun was in possession of a onehorned goat which refused to attack the wrongly accused
but would butt the guilty.
Margoulies Anthologie raisonn de la littrature chinoise () includes this mysterious, soft-spoken allegory,
the work of a ninth-century writer of prose:
It is universally held that the unicorn is a supernatural
being and of auspicious omen; so say the odes, the annals,
the biographies of worthies, and other texts whose
authority is unimpeachable. Even village women and children know that the unicorn is a lucky sign. But this
animal does not figure among the barnyard animals, it is
not always easy to come across, it does not lend itself to
zoological classification. Nor is it like the horse or bull,
the wolf or deer. In such circumstances we may be face to
face with a unicorn and not know for sure that we are.
We know that a certain animal with a mane is a horse and
that a certain animal with horns is a bull. We do not
know what the unicorn looks like.




The Uroboros
To us the ocean is a sea or a system of seas; to the Greeks it
was a simple circular river that ringed the land mass. All
streams flowed from it and it had neither outlets nor sources.
It was also a god or a Titan, perhaps the most ancient of all
Titans, since Sleep in Book XIV of the Iliad calls it the source
from whom the gods are sprung. In Hesiods Theogony, it is
the father of all the worlds rivers - three thousand in
number - the leading of which are the Alpheus and the Nile.
An old man with a flowing beard was the usual personification of the river-ocean; after centuries men found a
better symbol.
Heraclitus had said that in the circumference the beginning and the end are a single point. A third-century Greek
amulet, preserved in the British Museum, gives us the image
which best illustrates this endlessness: the serpent that bites
its own tail or, as the Argentine poet Martnez Estrada so
beautifully put it, that begins at the end of its tail. A story
runs that Mary Queen of Scots had engraved on a gold ring
the inscription In my end is my beginning, meaning perhaps that real life begins after death. Uroboros (Greek for
the one that devours its tail) is the learned name of this
creature which became the symbol adopted by alchemists
in the Middle Ages. The curious may read further in Jungs
study Psychologie und Alchemie.
A world-circling serpent is also found in Norse cosmology;
it is called the Miogarosormr - literally, the middle-yardsworm, middle-yard standing for the earth. In the Younger
Edda, Snorri Sturluson recorded that Loki fathered a wolf
and a serpent. An oracle warned the gods that these creatures
would be the earths downfall. The wolf, Fenrir, was kept on
a cord woven of six imaginary things: the noise of a cats



footfall, the beards of women, the roots of stones, the sinews
of bears, the breath of fish, and the spittle of birds. The
serpent, Jormungard, was thrown into the sea surrounding
the land and there it has grown so large that now it too
surrounds the earth and bites its own tail.
In Jotunnheim, the land of giants, Utgard-Loki challenges
the god Thor to pick up a cat; Thor, using all his strength,
barely manages to lift one of the cats paws off the ground.
The cat is really the serpent. Thor has been tricked by
magic.
At the Twilight of the Gods the serpent will devour the
earth and the wolf the sun.

The Valkyries
Valkyrie means, in early German languages, the chooser of
the slain. We do not know how the people of Germany and
of Austria imagined them; in Norse mythology they are
lovely maidens who bear weapons. Their usual number was
three, though in the Eddas the names of more than a dozen
are given.
In popular myth they took the souls of those slain in battle
and brought them to Odins epic paradise. There, in the Hall
of the Slain, Valhalla, whose ceiling was of gold and was
lighted by drawn swords and not lamps, the warriors battled
from daybreak to sunset. Then those of them who had been
killed were brought back to life, and all shared a divine feast
in which they were served the meat of an immortal wild
boar and inexhaustible hornfuls of mead. This idea of an
endless battle seems to be Celtic in origin.
An Anglo-Saxon charm against the pain of sudden stitches



describes the Valkyries without naming them; the lines, as
translated by Stopford A. Brooke, run this way:
Loud were they, lo! loud, as over the land they rode;
Fierce of heart were they, as over the hill they rode!

For the mighty maidens have mustered up their
strength . . .
Under the spreading influence of Christianity, the name
Valkyrie degenerated; in medieval England a judge had
burned at the stake an unlucky woman charged with being a
Valkyrie, that is to say, a witch.

The Western Dragon
A tall-standing, heavy serpent with claws and wings is
perhaps the description that best fits the Dragon. It may be
black, but it is essential that it also be shining; equally essential is that it belch forth fire and smoke. The above description refers, of course, to its present image; the Greeks seem
to have applied the name Dragon to any considerable reptile. Pliny informs us that in summer the Dragon craves elephant blood, which is notably cool. It will make a sudden
foray on the elephant, coil round it, and plunge its teeth into
it. The bloodless elephant rolls on the ground and dies; so
does the Dragon, crushed under the weight of its victim. We
also read that Ethiopian Dragons, in search of better pasturage, regularly cross the Red Sea and migrate to Arabia. To
accomplish this, four or five Dragons coil together and form
a kind of craft, with their heads lifted out of the water. In
Pliny there is also a chapter devoted to remedies derived



from the Dragon. Here we read that its eyes, dried and then
stirred with honey, make a liniment that is effective against
nightmares. The fat of the Dragons heart stored in the hide
of a gazelle and tied to the arm with the sinews of a stag
assures success in litigation; Dragon teeth, also bound to the
body, ensure the indulgence of masters and the mercy of
kings. With some scepticism Pliny cites a preparation that
renders men invincible. It is concocted of the skin of a lion, a
lions marrow, the froth of a horse which has just won a
race, the nails of a dog, and the tail and head of a Dragon.
In the eleventh book of the Iliad we read that there was a
blue three-headed Dragon on Agamemnons shield; centuries
later Norse pirates painted Dragons on their shields and
carved Dragon heads on the prows of their long ships.
Among the Romans, the Dragon was the insignia of the
cohort, as the eagle was of the legion; this is the origin of
present-day dragoons. On the standards of the Saxon kings
of England there were Dragons; the object of such images
was to impart fear to enemy ranks. In the ballad of Athis,
we read:
Ce souloient Romains porter,
Ce nous fait moult redouter.
[This was what the Romans used to bear, this which
makes us so feared.]
In the West, the Dragon was always thought of as evil.
One of the stock exploits of heroes (Hercules, Sigurd, St
Michael, St George) was to overcome and slay a Dragon. In
Germanic myth, the Dragon kept watch over precious
objects. And so in Beowulf, written in England in the seventh or eighth century, there is a Dragon that stands guard
over a treasure for some three hundred years. A runaway
slave hides in its lair and steals a cup. On waking, the
Dragon notices the theft and resolves to kill the thief, but
every once in a while goes back inside to make sure the cup



has not been merely mislaid. (How strange of the poet to
attri bute to his monster so human a misgiving.) The Dragon
begins to ravage the kingdom; Beowulf searches it out,
grapples with it, and kills it, dying himself soon after from a
mortal wound inflicted by the Dragons tusks.
People believed in the reality of the Dragon. In the middle
of the sixteenth century, the Dragon is recorded in Conrad
Gesners Historia Animalium, a work of a scientific
nature.
Time has notably worn away the Dragons prestige. We
believe in the lion as reality and symbol; we believe in the
Minotaur as symbol but no longer as reality. The Dragon is
perhaps the best known but also the least fortunate of fantastic animals. It seems childish to us and usually spoils the
stories in which it appears. It is worth remembering, however, that we are dealing with a modern prejudice, due
perhaps to a surfeit of Dragons in fairy tales. In the Revelations, St John speaks twice of the Dragon, that old serpent,
called the Devil and Satan . . . In the same spirit, St Augustine writes that the Devil is lion and dragon; lion for its rage,
dragon for its cunning. Jung observes that in the Dragon are
the reptile and the bird - the elements of earth and of air.

Youwarkee
In his Short History of English Literature, Saintsbury finds
the flying girl Youwarkee one of the most charming heroines of the eighteenth-century novel. Half woman and half
bird, or - as Browning was to write of his dead wife,
Elizabeth Barrett - half angel and half bird, she can open her
arms and make wings of them, and a silky down covers her
body. She lives on an island lost in Antarctic seas and was



discovered there by Peter Wilkins, a shipwrecked sailor, who
marries her. Youwarkee is a gawry (or flying woman) and
belongs to a race of flying people known as glumms. Wilkins
converts them to Christianity and, after the death of his
wife, succeeds in making his way back to England.
The story of this strange love affair may be read in the
novel Peter Wilkins () by Robert Paltock.

The Zaratan
There is one story that has ranged the whole of geography
and all epochs - the tale of mariners who land on an unknown island which then sinks into the sea and drowns
them because it is a living creature. This invention is found
in the first voyage of Sindbad and in Canto VI, Stanza , of
Orlando Furioso (Chella sia una isoletta ci credemo - We
believed it [the whale] to be a small island); in the Irish
legend of St Brendan and in the Greek bestiary of Alexandria; in the Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus
(Rome, ) by the Swedish ecclesiastic Olaus Magnus and
in this passage from the opening of Paradise Lost, in which
Satan, stretched out huge in length, is compared to a whale
(-):
Him haply slumbering on the Norway foam,
The pilot of some small night-foundered skiff
Deeming some island, oft, as seamen tell,
With fixed anchor in his scaly rind,
Moors by his side under the lee, while night
Invests the sea . . .
Paradoxically, one of the earliest versions of the legend
gives it in order to refute it. This is recorded in the Book of



Animals by al-Jahiz, the ninth-century Moslem zoologist.
We translate its words from the Spanish version by Miguel
Asn Palacios:

As for the zaratan, I never met anyone who actually
saw it with his own eyes.
There are sailors who assert that they have drawn
alongside certain sea islands, seeing wooded valleys and
crevices in the rock, and landed to light a big fire; and
when the heat of the flames reached the zaratans spine,
the beast began to slip under the waters with them on top
of him, and with all the plants growing on him, until only
those able to swim away were saved. This outdoes even
the boldest, most imaginative piece of fiction.
Let us now consider a thirteenth-century text by al-Qaswini, the Persian cosmographer who wrote in Arabic. It
comes from a work of his entitled Wonders of Creation, and
runs this way:
As for the sea turtle, it is of such huge size that people on
shipboard take it for an island. One merchant has reported:
Rising out of the sea we discovered an island with
green plants, and we went ashore and dug pits for a cooking fire, and the island began to move and the sailors said:
Back to the ship! Its a turtle! The heat of the fires has
wakened him and well be lost!
This story is repeated in the Navigation of St Brendan:
And than they sayled forth, and came soone after to
that lond; but bycause of the lytell dep the in some place,
and in some place were grete rockes, but at the last they
wente upon an ylonde, wenynge to them they had ben
safe, and made theron a fyre for to dresse theyr dyner, but
saynt Brandon abode styll in the shyppe. And whan the
fyre was ryght hote, and the meet nygh soden, than this



ylonde began to move; whereof the monkes were aferde,
and fledde anone to the shyppe, and lefte the fyre and
meet behynde them, and mervayled sore of the movying.
And saynt Brandon comforted them, and sayd that it was
a grete fisshe named Jasconye, whiche laboureth nyght
and daye to put his tayle in his mouth, but for gretnes he
may not.
In the Anglo-Saxon bestiary of the Exeter Book, the
dangerous island is a whale, skilled in treachery, that deliberately tricks seafarers. They camp on its back seeking rest
from their labours at sea; suddenly the Oceans Guest sinks
down and the men drown. In the Greek bestiary, the whale
stands for the whore of the Proverbs (Her feet go down to
death, her steps take hold on hell); in the Anglo-Saxon bestiary it stands for the Devil and Evil. These same symbolic
values will be found in Moby Dick, written ten centuries
later.



Index
A Bao A Qu, -
Abel,
Aberfoyle,
Abtu,
Abyssinia,
Acheron, -
Achilles,
Actium,
Adam, ,
Adventuresome Simplicissimus, The,
Aelian, ,
Aeneid, , , ,
Aesculapius,
Africa, , ,
Agamemnon,
Agnelle, l,
Ahura Mazdah,
Albertus Magnus,
Alchemists, , , ,
Aldrovandi, Ulisse,
Alexander of Macedonia,
Alexandria, , ,
Alice in Wonderland,
Allah, , ,
Alpheus,
Alraune,
Alseids,
Ambrose, St,
America,
Ammodyte,
Amon,
Amphisbaena, -,
Analects,
Anatomy of Melancholy,
Andromeda,
Androsphinx,
Anet,
Angels, , , , , , ,

, , , , , , ,
-, ,
Anglo-Saxons, , , ;
bestiaries, , , ;
charms, , -
Aniel, -
Annals,
Annam, -
Antarctic islands, ,
Antelopes, , ,
Anthologie raisonne de la
littrature chinoise,
Antigone,
Antilles,
Ant-lion,
Antony, Mark,
Ants, , ,
Apes, , , . See also
Chimpanzee, Monkeys
Apollo,
Apollodorus, ,
Apollonius of Rhodes, , ,

Apollonius of Tyana,
Arabia, , ,
Arabian Nights, , , , ,
,
Ares,
Arezzo,
Argentina,
Argentine fauna, -
Argives,
Argonautica,
Argonauts, ,
Ariadne,
Arimaspians, ,
Ariosto, ,
Aristotle, , , , ,




Ark,
Arles,
Artaxerxes Mnemon, ,
Asia Minor,
Asn Palacios, Miguel, ,
Asoka, King,
Asp,
Aspidochelone,
Asses, -, , , , ,

Assyria, ,
Astolpho,
As You Like It,
Athens,
Athis,
Atlantis,
Atsuta,
Attar, Farid al-Din,
Augustine, St, -,
Autobiography (Benvenuto
Cellini),
Avignon,
Awomori,
Azriel, -
Baba,
Babylonia, ,
Bacchus,
Bactry,
Badger,
Bahamut, -, ,
Baldanders, -
Banquo,
Banshee,
Barco Centenera, Martn del
-
Bardo Thdol, ,
Barometz, ,
Basilisk, -,
Bat, ,
Bears, ,
Beetle,
Behemoth, , -

Bellerophon,
Ben Chaim, Jakob,
Benu,
Benvenuto of Imola,
Beowulf, -
Bergen,
Bestiaries, , , , , ,
, , ,
Bezabel, Judah Loew ben, -
Bhils,
Bible, , , , , , ,
Biblio theca,
Bifrost,
Bird-Parliament . . ., The,
Birds, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , ,
, , , -, ,
, , , , , ,
, , . See also names
of species
Bison,
Blake, William, ,
Blemies,
Boar, , , ,
Bodendrcker,
Bombay,
Book of Animals,
Book of a Thousand and one
Nights and a Night, The. See
Arabian Nights
Book of Kings, -
Book of the Dead, ,
Book of the Night Journey . . .,

Borneo, ,
Brahmanism, , , ,
Brave-Swift-Impetuous-Male,

Brazil,
Brehier, Emile,
Brendan, St, , , -
British Museum,
Brittany,



Brod, Max,
Brooke, Stopford A.,
Browne, Sir Thomas, , ,
,
Brownies,
Browning, Elizabeth Barrett,

Browning, Robert,
Bruno, Giordano,
Buddha, , , , ,
Buddhism, , ,
Buenos Aires, Province of,
Buffalo,
Bulls, , , , , , , ,
, -, , , ,
, ,
Bundahish,
Bunyan, Paul,
Burak, -
Burckhardt, Georg,
Burton, Richard, , , ,
,
Burton, Robert, , ,
Bushmen,
Butler, Samuel,
Byzantium, ,
Cain, ,
Caligula,
Camel, , , ,
Campania,
Canton,
Carbuncle, -
Carroll, Lewis,
Carthage, ,
Casini, Tommaso,
Castor,
Caterling,
Cato,
Catoblepas, , -
Cats, , , , , ; Cheshire, -, Kilkenny,
Caxton, William,

Cellini, Benvenuto,
Centaurs, , -; CentaurFish, ; Centaur-Tritons,

Centaurus,
Cerberus, -,
Chang Seng-yu,
Charms, , -
Chaucer, Geoffrey, , ,
Chesterton, G. K., , ,
Chilean fauna, -
Chimera, , -,
Chimpanzee, . See also Apes,
Monkeys
China, , -, -, , -,
, , , , , ,
, , -, , ,
-, -
Chinese fauna, -
Chinese Ghouls and Goblins,

Chinese lycopodium,
Chio-tuan,
Chiron,
Chitor,
Cho Chod, Louis,
Christ. See Jesus Christ
Christus,
Chronos, -
Chuang Tzu,
Cicero,
Circe, , ,
City of God, -
Civet cat,
Clam,
Claudian, ,
Claudius,
Cobra,
Cock, , , -
Cockatrice, ,
Colombia,
Coluccio, Felix,
Columella, Lucius,



Condillac, tienne Bonnot de,

Condillacs statue, ,
Condor,
Confucius, -, , , ,

Conquistadores, ,
Cordoba,
Corinth, ,
Cork,
Cow, ,
Cox, William T.,
Crab,
Cranes,
Crete, , ,
Crocodile,
Crocotta, -
Cronos,
Ctesias, , ,
Cuvier, Baron Georges,
Cyclops, ,
Cynolycus,
Cyprus,
Cyrillus of Jerusalem,
Daedalus, ,
Damascius,
Dante Alighieri, , , , ,
, , -, ,
Deer, , ,
De Gentibus et Moribus Asiae,

Demiurges, ,
Demonology, ,
Demonology and Witchcraft,

Demons, , , , , , ,

De Quincey, Thomas,
De rerum natura,
Descartes, Ren, ,
Devils, , , , , , ,
, , , , ,

Dialogus de Oratoribus,
Diana,
Dictionary of Argentine Folklore,
Dictionary of Chileanisms,
Didron,
Difficulties and Solutions of
First Principles,
Diodorus,
Dioscorides,
Dioscuri,
Dirae,
Divina Commedia,
Doble andadora,
Dogs, , , , -, , ,
, , , , , , ,
, , ,
Dog-wolf,
Dolphin,
Donkey,
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor,
Doubles, -
Dragons, , , , -, ,
, -, , , , , ,
, , , , , ,
, -
Dresden,
Dryads,
Dwarfs, , ,

Eagle, , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Earthly Paradise, The,
Eater of the Dead, -
Echeneis,
Echidna,
Eddas, , ; Elder, ;
Younger, , , ,
Eel,
Eggeling,
Egypt, , , , , , ,
, , , , ,
Eleazer of Worms,




Elephants, , , , , ,
, , ,
Eliot, T. S.,
Eloi, -
Elves, ,
Empedocles,
Encyclopedia of Astrology,
England, , , , , ,
,
Enkidu,
Entre Rios,
Ephraim,
Erigena, Johannes Scotus,
Erman, Adolph,
Eskimos,
Ethiopia, , , , , ,

Etruscans,
Etymologies, , ,
Eucharist,
Europa,
Evans-Wenz,
Eve,
Ewers, Hanns Heinz,
Exeter Book, ,
Exposicin del Libro de Job,
Ezekiel, ,
Fabula de Polifemo,
Faerie Queen, The,
Fafnir,
Fa-hsien,
Fairies, , -
Falak,
Fastitocalon, -
Fata morgana,
Fates, ,
Fathers of the Church,
Fauna: of Argentina, -; of
Chile, -; of China, -;
of United States, -
Fauns, ,
Fechner, Gustav Theodor,

Fenrir,
Fernndez de Oviedo, Gonzalo,

Fert-Bernard, La, -
Fez,
Ficino, Marsilio,
Firdausi, -
Fishes, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Fitzgerald, Edward,
Flaubert, Gustave, , , ,
, ,
Flood,
Fludd, Robert,
Fontecchio, Father,
Foxes, , ; Chinese Fox,
-
Frazer, Sir James,
Freya,
Furies, ,
Galatea,
Galatia,
Gandharvas,
Garmr,
Garuda,
Garuda Purana,
Gawry,
Gazelle,
Geheimwissenschaft im Umriss, Die,
Genesis, , ,
Genghis Khan, ,
George, St,
Georgics,
Germany, , , , , , ,
, , ,
Geryon,
Gesner, Conrad,
Ghoul,
Giants, , , ,



Giles, Herbert Allen, ,
Gilgamesh,
Giraffe,
Glaucus, ,
Glumms,
Gnomes, , ,
Gnostics,
Gnu,
Goats, , , , , , ,
,
God, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, -
Golden Legend,
Golem, -
Golem, Der, -
Gomperz, Theodor,
Gngora y Argote, Luis de,
-,
Goose,
Gordon, R. K., ,
Gorgons, ,
Greater Vehicle,
Greece, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, ,
Grey, Zachary,
Griffons, , , -, ,
Grimal,
Grimmelshausen, Hans von,
,
Grimm brothers, the,
Ground-Flattener,
Gullinbursti,
Gwalior,
Haarlem,
Hades,
Hadhramaut,
Hamadryads,
Hamlet, Prince,
Haniel, -

Haokah,
Hare, -
Harpies, , -
Hathor,
Hawk,
Hawthorne, Nathaniel,
Hayoth,
Hearn, Lafcadio,
Heaven, , , , , , ,
, , , , , ,
-,
Heaven and Hell,
Hecate,
Heliodorus,
Heliopolis,
Hell, , , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
,
Hellanicus,
Hennig, Richard,
Henry VIII,
Hera. See Juno
Heracles. See Hercules
Heraclitus, ,
Heraldry, , ,
Hercules, , , -, , ,

Hercules, Columns of,
Herodotus, , , , ,

Heron,
Herrmann, Paul,
Hesiod, , , , ,
Hieronymus,
Hinduism,
Hippocentaur,
Hippogriff, -,
Hippopotamus, , , ,
Histoire de la philosophie,
Historia Animalium,
Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus,
Historical Record,



History of the Jewish Wars,
-
Hochigan,
Hog, , . See also Pig, Sow
Holland,
Holy Ghost, ,
Homer, , , , ,
Hong Fan,
Horses, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
-, , , , ,

Horst,
Hosea,
Hudibras,
Hugo, Victor,
Huisne,
Humbaba,
Hundred-Heads,
Hydra, , -
Hyena,
Hyginus,
Hypothetical animal,

Iblis,
Ibsen, Henrik,
I Ching,
Ichthyocentaurs, -
Iliad, , , ,
India, , , , , , ,
, , , , ,
Indians, American, , ,
Inferno, , , , ,
Iolaus,
Iran,
Ireland, , , ,
Isa,
Isidore of Seville, , , ,

Islam. See Moslemism
Italy,
Iturvuru, C. C.,
Ixion,

Jackal,
Jacob,
Jaculi,
Jaguar, ,
Jahiz, al-,
James, Henry,
James, William,
Japan, , , -
Jasconye,
Jason,
Jerome, St, ,
Jerusalem, ; Temple of,
Jesus Christ, , , , ,
, ,
Jews, , , ,
Jinn, -
John, St,
John the Divine, St, ,
Job, ,
Jocasta,
Jordan,
Jormungard,
Joseph, St,
Josephus, Flavius,
Jotunnheim, ,
Jung, Carl, , ,
Juno, ,
Justinus,
Juvenal,
Kabbalah, Kabbalists, , ,
Kaf,
Kafka, Franz, -, -,
-
Kafziel, -
Kalandar,
Kami, -
Kangaroo,
Kantian categories,
Kapila,
Karkadan,
Karnak,
Kashima,




Keats, John,
Kepler, Johannes,
Kern,
Keteb Mereri,
Ki-lin, -
Kings, Book of,
Kirk, Robert,
Kleist, Heinrich von,
Knowledge, Tree of,
Knox, Father Ronald,
Koran,
Koshi,
Kraken, -
Kranz, Walter,
Kujata,
Kutb,
Kyoto,
Labyrinths,
Lacrimacorpus dissolvens,
Lactantius,
Lamb of Tartary,
Lambs, , , , . See also
Ram, Sheep
Lamed Wufniks,
Lamias, -
Lane, William Edward, , ,
, -, ,
Lao-tzu, , ,
Lapiths,
Lares familiares,
Larvae,
Latini, Brunetto,
Laudatores Temporis Acti,
Laws,
Lead, Jane, -,
Leah,
Legenda aurea,
Legge, James,
Lemprire, John, , , ,
Lemures,
Len, Fray Luis de,

Leonardo da Vinci, , ,
,
Leopard,
Leprechauns, Co
Lerna,
Lethe,
Lettres difiantes et curieuses,

Leucrocotta, -
Leveller, -
Leviathan,
Lewis, C. S., -, -
Libya,
Life and Death of Jason, The,

Lilith, -
Lion, , , , , , , ,
, -, , , , ,
. , , , , , ,
, , ,
Lisbon, ,
Littr, Maximilien,
Lobisn, ,
Loki,
London, ,
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth,
Lorber, Jakob,
Lord. See God
Lotze, Rudolf Hermann,
Lucan, , ,
Lucretius,
Lugones, Leopoldo, ,
Luke, St,
Luna,
Lunario sentimental,
Lusitania,
Lycia,
Lycophron,
Lycopodium barometz,
Macbeth,
Madagascar, ,




Magellan, Strait of,
Magnesium,
Magnet Mountain,
Mahabharata,
Malays,
Mandeville, Sir John,
Mandrake, , -
Manilius, Marcus,
Manticore, -
Mantiq al-Tayr,
Manual of Indian Buddhism,

Manuel diconographie chrtienne,
Margolin, Jean-Claude,
Margoulies,
Mark, St,
Martha, St,
Martinez Estrada,
Maruts,
Mary, Queen of Scots,
Mashu,
Matthew, St,
Maya, Queen,
Mazdaism,
Mecca,
Medea, , ,
Meizinische Psychologie,

Medusa,
Menelaus,
Men-scorpions,
Mermaid,
Mermecolion, -
Messina, Strait of,
Metamorphoses, , , ,
,
Metaphysical beings, -
Meyrink, Gustav,
Mice,
Michael, St,
Micheli, Pietro,
Middle Kingdom,

Midsummer Nights Dream, A,

Migarsormr, ,
Milton, John, , ,
Minnesota, ,
Minotaur, , -,
Miron,
Mirrors, , , , -,
Mirth of the Snakes,
Moby Dick,
Mohammed, , -
Momigliano,
Monkeys, , . See also
Apes, Chimpanzee
Mooncalf,
Morlocks, -
Morris, William, ,
Moslemism, , , , , ,
, , -,
Mule,
Murcia,
Murex,
Murgen,
Musset, Alfred de,
Myrmex,
Myths and Superstitions,

Nagarjuna,
Nagas, -
Naiads,
Napaeae,
Naples,
Narrative of Arthur Gordon
Pym . . ., -
Nasnas, -
Natural History (Pliny),
Natural History of Norway,

Natural History of Serpents
and Dragons,
Navigation of St Brendan,
-




Panther, , -
Paracelsus, , ,
Paradise,
Paradise Lost, , ,
Paradiso,
Paraguay, ,
Parcae,
Pareas,
Paris,
Parrot,
Parsis,
Par thenon,
Partridge,
Pasiphae,
Pausanius,
Peacock, , , ,
Peer Gynt,
Pegasus,
Pelican, -
Pellicer,
Pennsylvania,
Oceanids,
Perelandra, ,
Octopus, ,
Periander, ,
Odin, , ,
Persepolis,
Odradek, -
Perseus,
Odyssey, , , , ,
Persia, , , , , ,
Oedipus,
, ,
Olaus Magnus,
Peryton, -
Olympia,
Peter Wilkins,
Omar,
Pharsalia, , ,
On Malay Witchcraft,
On the Nature of the Gods, Pheasant,
Phidias,
Oreads,
Philostratus,
Origen, -
Orlando Furioso, , -, Phoenicians,
Phoenix, , -, , -,
Orpheus,
, , , ; Tower of,
Orphism,
Ovid, , , , , , ,

Phoenix and its Natural His,
tory, The,
Owl, , , ,
Physiologus, , ,
Ox, , , , , ,
Pig, , . See also Hog, Sow
Pisanello, Antonio,
Paltock, Robert,
Plato, , , , , ,
Pans,

Nazis,
Neoplatonists, ,
Nepal,
Neptune, , , ; (planet),

Nereids,
Nightingale,
Nile, ,
Nimbarka,
Nirvana,
Niu Chiao,
Norns, -
Norse mythology, , , ,
,
Norse pirates,
Norway, , ,
Nuremberg,
Nymphs, , , , , ,

Ram, , , . See also
Lambs, Sheep
Ramayana,
Rat, , ,
Ravenna,
Red Sea,
Regensburg,
Remora, -
Remus,
Reptiles, , , , , .
See also Serpents, Snakes
Republic,
Resurrection,
Reuben,
Revelation of St John, , -,

Rhinoceros,
Rhiphaean Mountains,
Rhone, ,
Ricci, Father Matteo,
Richard III,
Rodrguez, Zorobabel,
Romantic poets,
Rome, , , , , , ,
, , , ,
Romeo and Juliet,
Romulus,
Rooster. See Cock
Rosetti, Dante Gabriel, ,
,
Rubens, Peter Paul,
Rukh, , -
Qaswini, Zakariyya al-, , , Russia,
, ,
Quevedo, Francisco Gmez de, Saavedra Fajardo, Diego de,
, ,

Quicherat, Louis,
Sachs, Hans,
Quintilian,
Sacred Scriptures of the JapanQuiroga, General Facundo,
ese, The,
Sagittarius, -
Rabbits,
Saintsbury, George Edward
Rabelais, Franois,
Bateman,
Rachel,
Salamanders, , -,

Pliny, , , , , , , ,
, -, , , , ,
, , , , -,
, , , , , -
Pluralistic Universe, A,
Plutarch, , , , ,
Poe, Edgar Allan, -,
Political Emblems,
Pollux,
Polo, Marco, , -,
Polyphemus, ,
Pontoppidan, Erik,
Poseidon,
Prescott, William Hickling,
Prestor, John, ,
Princess-Comb-Ricefield,
Propertius,
Proserpina,
Proteus,
Proverbs,
Psalms,
Pseudodoxia Epidemica, , ,

Psychologie und Alchemie, ,

Purgatorio,
Pygmies,
Pyrallis,
Pyrausta,
Pyrenees,
Pythagoras, ,




Sale, George,
Samson Agonistes,
Sandars, N. R.,
Satan, -
Saturnian period, ,
Satyrs, , -
Saxon kings,
Scholem, Gershom, ,
Scholiasts,
Schopenhauer, Arthur, ,
Schrader, Eberhard,
Scipio,
Scorpions, , ,
Scotland, , , , , ,

Scott, Sir Walter, ,
Scriptures. See Bible
Scylla, -
Sea Horses, , -
Second World War,
Secret Commonwealth . . ., The

Sefer Yeriah,
Seneca,
Septuagint, ,
Serpents, , , , , , ,
-, , , , , , ,
, , , , , ,
, , , , , .
See also Reptiles, Snakes
Servius Honoratius, , ,
Shakespeare, William, , ,
, , ,
Shang Dynasty,
Shang Yang, -
Sheba, Queen of,
Sheep, , , , . See also
Lambs, Ram
Shikk,
Short History of English Literature,
Shun, Emperor,
Siberia,

Sibyl of Erythraea,
Sicily, ,
Sigurd,
Silveira, Luiz da,
Simonides,
Simorg Anka, ,
Simurgh, , -
Sinbad, , , ,
Sioux Indians,
Sirens, -
Skeat, W. W., ,
Skuld,
Sleep,
Sleipnir, ,
Snake, , , , , , ,
, , , , , , ,
, , . See also
Reptiles, Serpents
Sodom,
Solomon,
Solomons seal,
Some Chinese Ghosts,
Song of Solomon,
Soothill,
South Africa,
South America,
Southey, Robert,
South Pole,
Sow, , -
Spanish Parnassus, ,
Speculum Triplex,
Spherical animals, -
Sphinx, , , , -
Spider,
Squonk,
Ssu-ma Chien,
Stag, , , , ,
Steiner, Rudolf, ,
Stevenson, Robert Louis, ,
,
Stilbia,
Stoics,
Strabo, ,




Sturluson, Snorri, ,
Sulla, Lucius Cornelius,
Swedenborg, Emanuel, ,
, -
Sylphs, ,
Sylvans,
Tabari, al-,
Tacitus, -
Tagus,
Tai Ping Kuang Chi,
Talmud, , , ,
Talos, , -
Tantalus,
Tao Tieh,
Tartarus,
Tempest, The,
Temple of Jerusalem,
Temple of Zeus,
Temptation of Saint Anthony,
, , -, ,
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord,
Terra,
Tertulius, -
Tesoro,
Thalaba,
Thales, ,
Thebes,
Theogony, , , ,
Thermal beings, -
Theseus,
Thessaly, ,
Thor, ,
Thrace,
Tibetans, -
Tigers, , , , , , ,
, , , -
Tigre capiango,
Timaeus,
Time Machine, The,
Tirso de Molina,
Titans, , ,
Toad, , ,

Tortoises, , , , -,
, , . See also Turtle
Tower of the Phoenix,
Tower of Victory,
Trachtenberg,
Trait des sensations,
Travels (Mandeville),
Travels (Polo), ,
Tree of Knowledge,
Tritons, ,
Trolls, -
Troy,
Tunk-poj,
Turkey,
Turtle, , , . See also
Tortoises
Twilight of the Gods, ,
Typhon,
Tzetzes, John,
Ulysses,
Unicom, , , , , -,
-
United States fauna, -
Un-man, -
Uroboros, -
Urth,
Uraquay,
Utgard-Loki,
Vaihinger, Hans,
Valhalla,
Valkyries, , -
Van Duym, H. van Ameyden,

Vanini, Lucilio,
Vedic myth, ,
Velue, La,
Venus,
Verthandi,
Victory, Tower of,
Vicua Cifuentes, Julio,
Viper,



Virgil, , , , , ,
Vishnu,
Visio Tundali,
Voragine, Jacobus de,
Vore, Nicholas de,
Vulcan,
Vulgar Errors, See Pseudodoxia
Epidemica
Vulgate, ,
Vultures, , , , , ,
,
Wales, ,
Waley, Arthur, ,
Wang Chung,
Wang Tai-hai, , -
Weasel,
Webster, Noah,
Wells, Herbert George,
Wentling, J. P.,
Werewolf, ,
Whale, -, ,
Wheeler, Post,
White, T. H.,
Wilde, Oscar,
Wilhelm,
Wilkins, Peter,
Will in Nature,
Willoughby-Meade, G.,
Wisconsin,
Witches, , , , ,
Wizards, , , ,

Wolves, , , , , , ,
, ,
Wonders of Creation, , ,

Wonders of Gods Creation . . .,
The, -
Woodpecker,
Wyrd,
Yadua,
Yama,
Yang, , ,
Yao,
Yeats, W. B., , ,
Yellow Emperor, ,
Yellow River,
Yemen,
Yggdrasil, ,
Yin, ,
Youwarkee, -
Yunnan,
Y the Great,

Zal,
Zaratan, , -
Zarathustra,
Zauberbiblio thek,
Zend-Avesta,
Zeus, , ; Temple of,
Zodiacal signs, ,
Zohar,



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Wikipedia - 0.0.0.0 -- Non-routable meta-IP-address
Wikipedia - 100 Days My Prince -- 2018 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - 101 Dalmatians (franchise) -- Disney media franchise about a large family of British Dalmatian dogs
Wikipedia - 101 Squadron SAAF -- Reserve squadron of the South African Air Force
Wikipedia - 102 Not Out -- 2017 film by Umesh Shukla
Wikipedia - 1079 Life -- Radio station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - 10cm (band) -- South Korean musical duo
Wikipedia - 10 Milner Street -- About a grade ll listed house in Chelsea, London
Wikipedia - 10 Squadron SAAF -- Squadron of the South African Air Force until 1943
Wikipedia - 10 Things I Hate About You (TV series) -- American television sitcom
Wikipedia - 10 Things I Hate About You -- 1999 film by Gil Junger
Wikipedia - 11:11 (numerology) -- Superstition about numbers
Wikipedia - 11 A.M. (film) -- 2013 South Korean science fiction film directed by Kim Hyun-seok
Wikipedia - 12 Paces Without a Head -- 2009 film
Wikipedia - 12 Squadron SAAF -- South African Air Force squadron
Wikipedia - 12th parallel south -- Circle of latitude
Wikipedia - 12 Years Promise -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - 1382 Dover Straits earthquake -- Magnitude 6 earthquake (21 May 1382) affecting south-eastern England and the Low Countries
Wikipedia - 14th Street (Washington, D.C.) -- Street in northwest and southwest quadrants of Washington, D.C., US
Wikipedia - 14th World Scout Jamboree
Wikipedia - 1592-1593 London plague -- Major plague outbreak in England
Wikipedia - 15& -- South Korean vocal duo
Wikipedia - 15 South Second Street, Newport, PA -- Historic home located in Newport, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - 15th World Scout Jamboree (cancelled) -- Cancelled 1979 Scout Jamboree in Iran
Wikipedia - 1600 Penn -- American single-camera sitcom series about a dysfunctional family living in the White House
Wikipedia - 1775-1795 in Western fashion -- Western fashion throughout the late 1700s
Wikipedia - 1808 mystery eruption -- Volcanic eruption in southwest Pacific
Wikipedia - 1835 Concepcion earthquake -- 1835 earthquake in South America
Wikipedia - 1840 United States presidential election in South Carolina
Wikipedia - 1846-1860 cholera pandemic -- The third major outbreak of cholera, 1846-1860 worldwide pandemic
Wikipedia - 1854 Broad Street cholera outbreak -- Severe outbreak of cholera that occurred in 1854 during the 1846-1860 cholera worldwide pandemic
Wikipedia - 1896 in the Philippines -- Article about events in a specific year or time period
Wikipedia - 1899 Porto plague outbreak -- Late 19th-century epidemic in Portugal
Wikipedia - 18 Again -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - 18th Division (South Vietnam) -- Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN)
Wikipedia - 1900-1950 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - 1901 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1902 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1903 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1904 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1905 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1906 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1906 malaria outbreak in Ceylon -- Malaria outbreak in Ceylon
Wikipedia - 1907 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1908 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1908 Messina earthquake -- Devastating 7.1 magnitude earthquake & tsunami in southern Italy
Wikipedia - 1909 Crystal Palace Scout Rally -- Historic Scout gathering in London
Wikipedia - 1909 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1910 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1911 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1912 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1913 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1914 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1915 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1916 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1917 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1918 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1919 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1919 South Wales race riots -- Outbreaks of violence in Newport, Cardiff and Barry in June 1919
Wikipedia - 1920 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1921 British Mount Everest reconnaissance expedition -- First attempt to find a route to climb Mount Everest
Wikipedia - 1921 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1922 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1923 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1924 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1925 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1926 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1927 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1928 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1929 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1930 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1931 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1932 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1933 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1934 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1935 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1936 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1937 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1938 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1939 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1940 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1941 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1942 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1943 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1944 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1945 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1946 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1947 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak -- A smallpox outbreak occurred in New York City in 1947
Wikipedia - 1948 Australian National Airways DC-3 crash -- Accident in New South Wales
Wikipedia - 1948 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1948 South African general election
Wikipedia - 1949 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1950 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1950s South-West Indian Ocean cyclone seasons -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - 1951 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1952 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1953 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1953 Rupertwildt -- asteroid from the outer region of the asteroid belt
Wikipedia - 1954 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1955 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1956 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1957 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1958 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1958 Mars Bluff B-47 nuclear weapon loss incident -- Accidental release of a nuclear weapon in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - 1959 in South African sport -- Sports-related events in South Africa during 1959
Wikipedia - 1959 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1959 Junior Springboks tour of South America -- A series of rugby union matches played in Argentina
Wikipedia - 1960 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1960 South African republic referendum
Wikipedia - 1960 South Africa referendum
Wikipedia - 1960 South Vietnamese coup attempt -- Failed coup against President Ngo M-DM-^PM-CM-,nh DiM-aM-;M-^Gm
Wikipedia - 1960s South Pacific cyclone seasons -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - 1961 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1962 in South African sport -- Sports-related events in South Africa during 1962
Wikipedia - 1962 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1962 South Vietnamese Independence Palace bombing -- Aerial attack in Saigon
Wikipedia - 1963 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1963 South Vietnamese coup
Wikipedia - 1964 (film) -- 2015 documentary film about the events of 1964
Wikipedia - 1964 in Israel -- article about events in a specific year or time period
Wikipedia - 1964 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1965 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1965 South Vietnamese coup -- 1965 coup attempt in South Vietnam
Wikipedia - 1966 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1967 Australian referendum (Aboriginals) -- Question 2 of 1967 Australian referendum, about counting Indigenous people in the census and allowing the government to legislate separately for them
Wikipedia - 1967 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1967 Palestinian exodus -- Flight of around 280,000 to 325,000 Palestinians out of the territories captured by Israel during and in the aftermath of the Six-Day War
Wikipedia - 1968 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1969 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1969 Libyan coup d'etat -- Coup d'etat carried out by the Libyan Free Unionist Officers Movement (1969)
Wikipedia - 1969 Santa Barbara oil spill -- Oil platform blow-out fouled the coast of California resulting in environmental legislation
Wikipedia - 1969 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1969 Southeast Asian Peninsular Games -- Multi-sport event
Wikipedia - 1970 British Annapurna South Face expedition -- First ascent of Himalayan mountain face using rock climbing techniques
Wikipedia - 1970 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1970 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1971 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1971 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1972 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1972 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1973 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1973 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1974 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1974 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1974 Super Outbreak -- April 1974, the 2nd-largest tornado outbreak ever in a 24-hour period
Wikipedia - 1974 White House helicopter incident -- 1974 incident in which a U.S. Army pilot landed a stolen helicopter on the South Lawn of the White House
Wikipedia - 1975 British Mount Everest Southwest Face expedition -- Himalayan ascent requiring rock climbing techniques
Wikipedia - 1975 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1975 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1975 South Pacific Games -- Fifth edition of the South Pacific Games, held in Guam
Wikipedia - 1975 Spring Offensive -- The final North Vietnamese campaign in the Vietnam War that led to the capitulation of South Vietnam
Wikipedia - 1976 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1976 Philadelphia Legionnaires' disease outbreak -- First occasion of a cluster of a pneumonia cases later identified as Legionnaires' disease
Wikipedia - 1976 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1977 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1977 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1978 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1978 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1979 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1979 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1980 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1980 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1981-82 South Pacific cyclone season -- South Pacific tropical cyclone season
Wikipedia - 1981 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1981 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1981 South Africa rugby union tour of New Zealand and the United States -- Controversial rugby tour of New Zealand and the US by the South African rugby team
Wikipedia - 1981 South Africa rugby union tour of New Zealand
Wikipedia - 1982 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1982 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1983 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1983 South African constitutional reform referendum
Wikipedia - 1983 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1984 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1984 South African Open (tennis)
Wikipedia - 1985 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1986 FBI Miami shootout -- Gun battle between eight FBI agents and two serial bank robbers and murderers in Miami in 1986
Wikipedia - 1986 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1987 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1988 Czechoslovak - New Zealand Mount Everest Southwest Face Expedition -- Mount Everest expedition
Wikipedia - 1988 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1988 Lion Cup -- Premier domestic rugby union knock-out competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1988 Santam Bank Trophy Division A -- Third tier of domestic South African rugby
Wikipedia - 1988 Santam Bank Trophy Division B -- Fourth tier of domestic South African rugby season
Wikipedia - 1988 Summer Olympics -- Games of the XXIV Olympiad, celebrated in Seoul (South Korea) in 1988
Wikipedia - 1989 Currie Cup Division A -- Premier domestic rugby union competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1989 Currie Cup Division B -- Second division of the Currie Cup Rugby competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1989 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1989 Lion Cup -- Premier domestic rugby union knock-out competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1989 Newcastle earthquake -- 28 December 1989 earthquake in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - 1989 Santam Bank Trophy Division A -- Third tier of domestic South African rugby
Wikipedia - 1989 Santam Bank Trophy Division B -- Fourth tier of domestic South African rugby
Wikipedia - 1990 Channel 10 Challenge Cup -- Pre-season rugby league competition in the New South Wales Rugby League
Wikipedia - 1990 Currie Cup Division A -- Top division of the premier domestic rugby union competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1990 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1991 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1992 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1992 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1992 South African apartheid referendum
Wikipedia - 1992 South African Referendum
Wikipedia - 1992 South Africa vs New Zealand rugby union match -- South Africa's first rugby test match since being banned due to apartheid
Wikipedia - 1993 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1994 Currie Cup -- South African sporting competition
Wikipedia - 1994 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1994 South African general election
Wikipedia - 1995 Dinar earthquake -- Earthquake in southwest Turkey
Wikipedia - 1995 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1995 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1995 University of Maryland conference on crime and genetics -- Conference held by the University of Maryland about genetics and crime
Wikipedia - 1996-97 strikes in South Korea -- Series of strikes in Asia
Wikipedia - 1996 Gangneung submarine infiltration incident -- Naval incident between North Korea and South Korea
Wikipedia - 1996 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1996 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1997-98 National League 2 South -- The eleventh season of rugby union
Wikipedia - 1997 Central Texas tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak in Texas
Wikipedia - 1997 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1997 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1997 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-1997
Wikipedia - 1998 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1998 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1998 Sokcho submarine incident -- Combat incident between North Korea and South Korea
Wikipedia - 1998 Yeosu submersible incident -- 1998 naval skirmish between North Korea and South Korea
Wikipedia - 1999 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 1999 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 1999 Oklahoma tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak in May 1999
Wikipedia - 1999 South Dakota Learjet crash -- 1999 plane crash in South Dakota
Wikipedia - 1:99 Concert -- Fund raiser concert for victims of the 2003 SARS outbreak at the Hong Kong Stadium
Wikipedia - 19 Gramercy Park South
Wikipedia - 19 South LaSalle Street
Wikipedia - 19 Squadron SAAF -- Squadron of the South African Air Force
Wikipedia - 1Malaysia for Youth -- Youth initiative by the Malaysian government
Wikipedia - 1M-CM-7x=1 (Undivided) -- album by South Korean boy group Wanna One
Wikipedia - 1. Outside
Wikipedia - 1 South African Infantry Battalion
Wikipedia - 1st/15th Royal New South Wales Lancers
Wikipedia - 1st Battalion, 4th Marines -- USMC infantry battalion based out of Camp Pendleton, California
Wikipedia - 1st Infantry Brigade (South Africa) -- South African Army combat formation
Wikipedia - 1st Infantry Division (South Korea)
Wikipedia - 1st K-Drama Star Awards -- 2012 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 1st Parachute Battalion (South Africa) -- Paratroop unit of the South African Army
Wikipedia - 1 Street Southwest station -- Railway station in Canada
Wikipedia - 1st World Festival of Youth and Students -- Youth festival, 1947
Wikipedia - 1the9 -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - 1 Thibault Square -- Building in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - 1TYM -- South Korean hip hop group
Wikipedia - 2000 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2000 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2000 South African municipal elections
Wikipedia - 2000 Southern United States heat wave -- Extreme weather event
Wikipedia - 2001-02 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season -- Cyclone season
Wikipedia - 2001 European Youth Olympic Winter Festival -- none
Wikipedia - 2001 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2001 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2001 South African motorcycle Grand Prix
Wikipedia - 2002-03 South Pacific cyclone season -- Cyclone season in the South Pacific ocean
Wikipedia - 2002 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2002 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2002 South African motorcycle Grand Prix
Wikipedia - 2003 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2003 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2003 Midwest monkeypox outbreak -- Outbreak of monkeypox in the United States
Wikipedia - 2003 South African motorcycle Grand Prix
Wikipedia - 2004 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2004 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2004 South African general election
Wikipedia - 2004 South African motorcycle Grand Prix
Wikipedia - 2005 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2005 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2006-07 Southeast Asian floods -- 2006-07 floods in Southeast Asia region
Wikipedia - 2006-07 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season -- Cyclone season in the South-West Indian ocean
Wikipedia - 2006 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2006 Pangandaran earthquake and tsunami -- Destructive tsunami earthquake south of Java Island
Wikipedia - 2006 Sao Paulo violence outbreak -- Clash between law enforcement officials and criminals in Brazil
Wikipedia - 2006 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2006
Wikipedia - 2006 Southern Leyte mudslide -- 2006 major landslide in the Philippines
Wikipedia - 2007-08 V-League (South Korea) -- Volleyball league season
Wikipedia - 2007 Greek forest fires -- Series of forest fires across Greece throughout summer 2007
Wikipedia - 2007 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2007 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2007 South Cambridgeshire District Council election
Wikipedia - 2007 South Korean presidential election
Wikipedia - 2007 South Pacific Games -- 13th Pacific Games held in Apia, Samoa
Wikipedia - 2008 Atlanta tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak in Atlanta
Wikipedia - 2008 attacks on Christians in southern Karnataka -- Attacks directed against Christian churches
Wikipedia - 2008 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2008 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2009 British and Irish Lions tour to South Africa -- International rugby union tour which took place in South Africa from May to July 2009
Wikipedia - 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup knockout stage -- Knockout stage of the 2009 FIFA Confederations Cup
Wikipedia - 2009 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2009 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2009
Wikipedia - 2010-11 I-League -- Fouth season of I-League
Wikipedia - 2010 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2010 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2010s Haiti cholera outbreak
Wikipedia - 2010 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2010
Wikipedia - 2011 dengue outbreak in Pakistan
Wikipedia - 2011 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2011 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2011 South Sudanese independence referendum -- Independence referendum
Wikipedia - 2011 Super Outbreak -- Largest, costliest tornado outbreak in United States history
Wikipedia - 2011 Vancouver Island Shootout -- World Curling Tour event
Wikipedia - 2012 India blackouts -- Power outage
Wikipedia - 2012 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2012 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2012 Iron Trail Motors Shoot-Out -- World Curling Tour event
Wikipedia - 2012 Luzon southwest monsoon floods -- Monsoon floods in the Philippines in 2012
Wikipedia - 2012 Mexico Learjet 25 crash -- American singer Jenni Rivera crashed south of Monterrey, Mexico
Wikipedia - 2012 Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus outbreak -- Epidemic of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus
Wikipedia - 2012 Vancouver Island Shootout -- World Curling Tour event
Wikipedia - 2013-14 South-West Indian Ocean cyclone season -- Event of tropical cyclone formation in the Indian Ocean
Wikipedia - 2013 Africa Cup of Nations knockout stage
Wikipedia - 2013 Annaberg shooting -- Police shootout
Wikipedia - 2013 dengue outbreak in Singapore -- Outbreak of dengue in Singapore
Wikipedia - 2013 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2013 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2013 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2013
Wikipedia - 2013 South Korea cyberattack -- Alleged cyber-warfare attack with wiping malware in March 2013
Wikipedia - 2014-15 Sunfoil Series -- Cricket competition in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2014 American immigration crisis -- Surge in immigration starting in 2014 to US along southern border from countries further south than Mexico
Wikipedia - 2014 FIFA World Cup knockout stage
Wikipedia - 2014 HDF Insurance Shoot-Out -- World Curling Tour event
Wikipedia - 2014 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2014 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2014 Orkney earthquake -- Magnitude 5.5 earthquake near Orkney, Klerksdorp, South Africa
Wikipedia - 2014 South African platinum strike
Wikipedia - 2014 South Napa earthquake -- Earthquake in California in 2014
Wikipedia - 2014 Syrian detainee report -- documented evidence about crimes against humanity in Syria
Wikipedia - 2015-16 New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Germany -- Overview about the 2015-16 New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Germany
Wikipedia - 2015 Canadian wildfires -- Wildfire outbreak
Wikipedia - 2015 Democratic Alliance Federal Congress -- South African political party conference
Wikipedia - 2015 Indian swine flu outbreak -- Outbreak of the 2009 pandemic H1N1 virus in India
Wikipedia - 2015 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2015 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2015 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2015
Wikipedia - 2015 South India floods -- 2015 Disastrous Floods
Wikipedia - 2015 Waco shootout -- Shootout that erupted at a Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, Texas, US
Wikipedia - 2016 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2016 in South Korean music
Wikipedia - 2016 MBC Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean MBC Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2016 SBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean SBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2016 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2016
Wikipedia - 2017-2018 South African listeriosis outbreak -- Widespread outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes food poisoning
Wikipedia - 2017 Asian Youth Games -- Multi-sport event
Wikipedia - 2017 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2017 in South Korean music -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - 2017 MBC Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean MBC Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2017 Queanbeyan stabbing attacks -- Terror attack in 2017 in Queanbeyan, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - 2017 SBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean SBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2017 Southeast Asian haze -- Haze over the Southeast Asia region in mid-2017
Wikipedia - 2017 UEFA Youth League Final -- International youth soccer final
Wikipedia - 2018 Brazil truck drivers' strike -- Strike involving truck drivers throughout Brazil in 2018
Wikipedia - 2018 Google walkouts
Wikipedia - 2018 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2018 KBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean KBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2018 Madagascar measles outbreak -- Measles outbreak in Antananarivo, Madagascar
Wikipedia - 2018 Malaysia HFMD outbreak -- Outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease among children in Malaysia
Wikipedia - 2018 MBC Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean MBC Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2018 SBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean SBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2018 Southeastern Provisions raid -- 2018 immigration raid in Grainger County, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - 2018 Southern Syria offensive
Wikipedia - 2019-2020 measles outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo -- Measles epidemic in the DRC in 2019
Wikipedia - 2019-20 South Pacific cyclone season -- Period of tropical cyclone activity in the South Pacific Ocean.
Wikipedia - 2019 Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay blackout -- Blackout affecting Argentina, Uruguay and parts of Paraguay
Wikipedia - 2019 Bihar encephalitis outbreak -- Outbreak of acute encephalitis syndrome in India
Wikipedia - 2019 Durban Easter floods -- 2019 flooding in Durban, South Africa
Wikipedia - 2019 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2019 Internet blackout in Iran -- A week-long total internet blackout ordered by Supreme National Security Council
Wikipedia - 2019 Java blackout -- Power Outage in Java, Indonesia
Wikipedia - 2019 KBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean KBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2019 K League 2 -- Seventh season of the K League 2, the second tier South Korean professional league
Wikipedia - 2019 Lahore bombing -- A suicide bomb attack on 8 May 2019 outside Data Darbar in Lahore, Pakistan
Wikipedia - 2019 League of Ireland Cup -- 46th season of the League of Ireland's secondary knockout competition
Wikipedia - 2019 MBC Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean MBC Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2019 measles outbreaks -- Global measles outbreaks in 2019
Wikipedia - 2019 New South Wales Waratahs season -- 2019 New South Wales Waratahs rugby union season
Wikipedia - 2019 New York measles outbreak -- Measles outbreak in New York state
Wikipedia - 2019 Oregon Senate Republican walkouts -- 2019 protest by Oregon State Senators
Wikipedia - 2019 Pacific Northwest measles outbreak -- Measles outbreak in the Portland metropolitan area
Wikipedia - 2019 Samoa measles outbreak -- Measles epidemic in Samoa in late 2019
Wikipedia - 2019 SBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean SBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2019 Sindh HIV outbreak -- In the Ratodero area in Sindh, Pakistan
Wikipedia - 2019 South Asian Games -- XIII South Asian Games
Wikipedia - 2019 Southeast Asian Games -- 30th edition of the Southeast Asian Games
Wikipedia - 2019 Southern Libya offensive
Wikipedia - 2019 Tonga measles outbreak -- Measles epidemic in Tonga in late 2019
Wikipedia - 2019 Venezuelan blackouts -- Nationwide power outages
Wikipedia - 2020 Easter tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak in southeast US
Wikipedia - 2020 Google services outages -- Global outage of Google services in 2020
Wikipedia - 2020 Icheon fire -- Fire in South Korea
Wikipedia - 2020 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2020 KBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean KBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2020 Khelo India Youth Games -- Multi-sport event season
Wikipedia - 2020 K League 2 -- Eighth season of the K League 2, the second tier South Korean professional league
Wikipedia - 2020 League of Ireland Cup -- 47th season of the League of Ireland's secondary knockout competition
Wikipedia - 2020 MBC Entertainment Awards -- 2020 South Korean MBC Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2020 SBS Entertainment Awards -- List of South Korean SBS Entertainment Awards
Wikipedia - 2020 South Carolina Democratic presidential primary -- 2020 South Carolina Democratic primary
Wikipedia - 2020 South West Aviation Antonov An-26 crash -- 22 August 2020 fatal aviation accident
Wikipedia - 2021 in South Africa
Wikipedia - 2021 in South Korea
Wikipedia - 2021 in South Sudan
Wikipedia - 2021 South Asian Games -- XIV South Asian Games
Wikipedia - 2021 Southeast Asian Games -- 31st edition of the Southeast Asian Games
Wikipedia - 2024 Winter Youth Olympics -- 2024 edition of the Winter Youth Olympics
Wikipedia - 20.3 cm/45 Type 41 naval gun -- Japanese naval gun and coastal artillery used throughout the first half of the 20th century
Wikipedia - 20 Dartmouth Hill
Wikipedia - 20th World Scout Jamboree -- 2002-2003 Scout jamboree in Thailand
Wikipedia - 20th Youth in Film Awards -- Awards presented by the presented by the Youth in Film Association
Wikipedia - 2-1-1 -- Telephone number for information quickly about health organizations
Wikipedia - 21st century Madagascar plague outbreaks -- Outbreaks of plague in Madagascar during the 21st century
Wikipedia - 220 Central Park South -- Residential skyscraper in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - 225 Park Avenue South -- Office building in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - 22nd South African Music Awards -- 2016 edition of the South African Music Awards
Wikipedia - 22nd South African Parliament -- Parliament of South Africa, 1994-1999
Wikipedia - 22 Squadron SAAF -- South Africa airforce squad
Wikipedia - 23rd Division (South Vietnam) -- Division of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam
Wikipedia - 240 Central Park South -- Residential building in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - 24th Field Artillery Regiment (United States) -- Philippine Scouts unit in 1922-1942
Wikipedia - 24th South African Parliament
Wikipedia - 26 Years -- 2012 South Korean film directed by Cho Geun-hyeon
Wikipedia - 279 Thule -- Outer main-belt asteroid
Wikipedia - 27th South African Parliament -- Current session of South African Parliament
Wikipedia - 2AM (band) -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - 2AM discography -- Discography of South Korean boy group 2AM
Wikipedia - 2BS 95.1 FM -- Radio station in Bathurst, New South Wales
Wikipedia - 2 Days & 1 Night -- South Korean reality-variety show
Wikipedia - 2Eyes -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 2 Hours Doing Nothing -- 2020 viral YouTube video
Wikipedia - 2nd APAN Star Awards -- 2013 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 2nd Marine Division (South Korea) -- Unit of the Republic of Korea Marine Corps
Wikipedia - 2NE1 -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 2 or 3 Things I Know About Him -- 2005 film by Malte Ludin
Wikipedia - 2% out of Sync
Wikipedia - 2PAR -- Community radio station in Ballina, New South Wales
Wikipedia - 2PM -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - 2TM -- Australian AM radio station in New South Wales
Wikipedia - 30 South Colonnade -- Commercial building in London
Wikipedia - 33rd Golden Disc Awards -- South Korean 33rd Golden Disc Awards
Wikipedia - 34mag -- Belarusian online youth magazine
Wikipedia - 34th Golden Disc Awards -- South Korean 34th Golden Disc Awards
Wikipedia - 35th Golden Disc Awards -- South Korean 35th Golden Disc Awards
Wikipedia - 365: Repeat the Year -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - 38 North -- Website about North Korea
Wikipedia - 3Blue1Brown -- YouTube personality
Wikipedia - 3 Days to Go -- 2019 South African drama film
Wikipedia - 3-Iron -- 2004 South Korean film directed by Kim Ki-duk
Wikipedia - 3MM-1 -- A star-forming galaxy about 12.5 billion light-years away that is obscured by clouds of dust
Wikipedia - 3rd APAN Star Awards -- 2014 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 3-South -- American animated TV series
Wikipedia - 3YE -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 408 Request Timeout (Mr. Robot)
Wikipedia - 43 (MBTA bus) -- Boston, Massachusetts bus route
Wikipedia - 442oons -- YouTube channel
Wikipedia - 49 Days -- 2011 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - 4 Legendary Witches -- 2014 South Korean TV drama
Wikipedia - 4L (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 4Minute -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 4 route du Champ d'EntraM-CM-.nement -- Government owned villa in Paris, France
Wikipedia - 4Ten -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - 4th APAN Star Awards -- 2015 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 4th Man Out -- 2015 film directed by Andrew Nackman
Wikipedia - 4th South Carolina Regiment -- South Carolina Regiment
Wikipedia - 4th Street (Manhattan) -- Northwest-southeast street in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - 503 Kingston Rd -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 504 King -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 505 Dundas -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 506 Carlton -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 508 Lake Shore -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 509 Harbourfront -- Streetcar route in Toronto, Canada
Wikipedia - 54th parallel south -- Circle of latitude
Wikipedia - 56 Sagittarii -- Star in the southern constellation of Sagittarius.
Wikipedia - 5EBI -- Ethnic radio station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - 5FM -- South African radio station
Wikipedia - 5MBS -- Community radio station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - 5-Minute Crafts -- Youtube channel
Wikipedia - 5RPH -- Radio reading service in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - 5 South African Infantry Battalion
Wikipedia - 5th APAN Star Awards -- 2016 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 63 Building -- Skyscraper in South Korea
Wikipedia - 6805 Abstracta -- carbonaceous Themistian asteroid and slow rotator from the outer region of the asteroid belt
Wikipedia - 6 & 8 Parramatta Square -- Skyscraper in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - 6ixBuzz -- Canadian music and Entertainment outlet
Wikipedia - 6th APAN Star Awards -- 2018 South Korean Television Award
Wikipedia - 6th Armoured Division (South Africa) -- South African Army combat formation
Wikipedia - 75D/Kohoutek -- lost comet
Wikipedia - 76P/West-Kohoutek-Ikemura -- Periodic comet with 6 year orbit
Wikipedia - 78 Lyndhurst Way -- 2000s occupied art space in south London
Wikipedia - 7 Days Out -- American docu-series
Wikipedia - 7th World Scout Jamboree -- Reunion of scouts held in Austria in August, 1951
Wikipedia - 80 South Street -- Canceled skyscraper in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - 89.1 Radio Blue Mountains -- Radio station in Katoomba, New South Wales
Wikipedia - 8 Man -- Franchise about superhero of the same name
Wikipedia - 8 Out of 10 Cats Does Countdown -- British television panel game show
Wikipedia - 8 Out of 10 Cats -- British television comedy panel game
Wikipedia - 91st Street (South Chicago) station -- Chicago rail station
Wikipedia - 947 (radio station) -- South African radio station
Wikipedia - 99% Invisible -- Radio program about design
Wikipedia - A1081 road -- Road in the south of England
Wikipedia - A1175 road -- Road in south-west Lincolnshire, England
Wikipedia - A149 road -- Road in Norfolk, linking Kings Lynn and Great Yarmouth
Wikipedia - A26 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A2X Markets -- South African stock exchange
Wikipedia - A30 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A31 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A32 autoroute -- Former road in France
Wikipedia - A35 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A3 road -- Major road connecting London and Portsmouth in England
Wikipedia - A40 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A4 autoroute -- French expressway connecting Paris and Strasbourg
Wikipedia - A507 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - A53 road -- Primary route in northern England
Wikipedia - A719 road -- A road in South Ayrshire, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - A88 autoroute -- Road in France
Wikipedia - Aardonyx -- Extinct genus of dinosaur of the Jurassic from South Africa
Wikipedia - Aargau Southern Railway -- Former railway company in Switzerland
Wikipedia - Aarlanderveen -- Place in South Holland, Netherlands
Wikipedia - AB6IX -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Abahlali baseMjondolo -- Shack dwellers' movement in South Africa
Wikipedia - A Ballad About Green Wood -- 1983 short film by JiM-EM-^Yi Barta
Wikipedia - ABA routing transit number -- Code used in U.S. check transactions
Wikipedia - Abas Basir -- Minister of higher education, Former Director-General of the South Asia Co-operative Environment Programme
Wikipedia - Abatia -- Genus of about ten species of Central and South American trees in the willow family Salicaceae
Wikipedia - Abbas Arnaout -- Jordanian director and writer
Wikipedia - Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet -- Industrial museum in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Abbott Records -- American record label operated by producer Fabor Robison from 1951 to about 1958
Wikipedia - ABC Australia (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Asia-Pacific pay television channel
Wikipedia - ABC Radio and Regional Content -- Radio output from Australian Broadcasting Corporation
Wikipedia - Abdallah Albert -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Abdelaziz Bouteflika -- Algerian politician, former President of Algeria
Wikipedia - Abdel Hamid Yacout -- Egyptian weightlifter
Wikipedia - Abdel Rahman Sule -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Abdi Waiss Mouhyadin -- Djiboutian athlete
Wikipedia - Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed -- Prime Minister of Djibouti (2013-present)
Wikipedia - Abductor digiti minimi muscle of foot -- Muscle which lies along the lateral (outer) border of the foot
Wikipedia - Abdullah Abdurahman -- South African politician, physician
Wikipedia - Abdullah Barghouti -- Commander of Hamas' armed wing serving 67 life-term sentences
Wikipedia - Abdul-Malik Badreddin al-Houthi -- Leader of the Zaidi revolution movement Ansar Allah
Wikipedia - Abdy -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - A Beautiful Mind (TV series) -- 2016 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Abel Alier -- South Sudanese politician and judge
Wikipedia - Abel Joel Grout -- American botanist
Wikipedia - Aberdeen (constituency) -- constituency in the Southern District, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Aberdeen Regional Airport -- Airport in South Dakota, U.S.
Wikipedia - Aberdeen, South Dakota
Wikipedia - Aberdeen Township, New Jersey -- Township in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Abergavenny Castle -- Ruined castle in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales
Wikipedia - Abigail Boyd -- Member of the New South Wales Legislative Council
Wikipedia - Abigail Mbalo-Mokoena -- South African chef and restaurateur
Wikipedia - A Bigger Splash (1973 film) -- 1973/1974 film about David Hockney
Wikipedia - Abkhazia -- Disputed territory in the South Caucasus
Wikipedia - Abolqasem Lahouti -- Persian poet
Wikipedia - Aboriginal Heritage Act 1988 -- South Australian legislation
Wikipedia - Aboriginal Lands Trust Act 1966 -- Act of the Parliament of South Australia, the first major recognition of Aboriginal land rights in Australia
Wikipedia - Aboriginal Legal Service (NSW/ACT) -- Organisation providing legal services to Indigenous people in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory
Wikipedia - Abortion -- Ending of a pregnancy before a fetus can survive outside the uterus
Wikipedia - About a Boy (film) -- 2002 film
Wikipedia - About Adam -- 2001 film by Gerard Stembridge
Wikipedia - About a Girl (2001 film) -- 2001 film by Brian Percival
Wikipedia - About a Girl (2014 film) -- 2014 film
Wikipedia - About a Girl (Sugababes song) -- 2009 single by Sugababes
Wikipedia - About an Inquest -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - ABOUTAsia Travel -- Cambodian travel company
Wikipedia - About a Wife, a Dream and Another... -- 2013 film by Alexander Pozhenskiy
Wikipedia - About.com
Wikipedia - About Endlessness -- 2019 film
Wikipedia - About Face (1942 film) -- 1942 film
Wikipedia - About Face (1952 film) -- 1952 film by Roy Del Ruth
Wikipedia - About Last Night (1986 film) -- 1986 film by Edward Zwick
Wikipedia - About Love (1970 film) -- 1970 film
Wikipedia - About Love. For Adults Only -- 2017 Russian film by Rezo Gigineishvili
Wikipedia - About.me -- Personal web hosting service
Wikipedia - About Mrs. Leslie -- 1954 film
Wikipedia - Aboutorab Naficy -- Iranian physician and heart specialist
Wikipedia - About Sara -- 2005 film
Wikipedia - About That Life (film) -- 2019 film
Wikipedia - About the Son -- 1921 film
Wikipedia - About Time (2013 film) -- 2013 British romantic comedy-drama film by Richard Curtis
Wikipedia - About Time (book) -- Essay by Paul Davies
Wikipedia - About Time (TV series) -- 2018 South Korean televisions series
Wikipedia - About URI scheme -- Internal URI scheme
Wikipedia - About Us (film) -- 2016 film
Wikipedia - About Us (novel) -- 1967 book
Wikipedia - AbOUT -- Canadian LGBT+ magazine
Wikipedia - A-bout! -- Manga
Wikipedia - About Work the Dancefloor -- 2019 single by Georgia
Wikipedia - About You (company) -- German online retailer
Wikipedia - About Your Sexuality
Wikipedia - Abraham Chiron -- founder of Freemasonry in South Africa
Wikipedia - Abraham Erasmus van Wyk -- South African plant taxonomist
Wikipedia - Abraham Pais Prize for History of Physics -- Annual prize recognizes outstanding scholarly achievements in the history of physics
Wikipedia - Abrahamskraal Formation -- Geological formation of the Beaufort Group in South Africa
Wikipedia - Abraham Vosloo -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Abram Onkgopotse Tiro -- South African activist
Wikipedia - Abrictosaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from the early Jurassic of southern Africa
Wikipedia - Abroad in Japan -- A Japan-focused YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Abrolhos Marine Park -- Australian marine park in the South-west Marine Parks network
Wikipedia - Absa Bank Limited -- Commercial bank in South Africa
Wikipedia - Absa Group Limited -- South African Bank
Wikipedia - Absent Without Leave (film) -- 1992 film
Wikipedia - Absinthiana -- The accoutrements surrounding the drink absinthe and its preparation
Wikipedia - Absolute geometry -- Geometry without the parallel postulate
Wikipedia - Abu Simbel temples -- UNESCO World Heritage Site in southern Egypt
Wikipedia - Abyss (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Acacia pycnantha -- Golden wattle, a tree of the family Fabaceae native to southeastern Australia
Wikipedia - Academic boycott of South Africa -- Series of boycotts of South African academic institutions and scholars
Wikipedia - Academic studies about Wikipedia -- Research on Wikipedia's usage and the quality of its content and administration
Wikipedia - Academy Charter High School -- Charter school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Academy of Allied Health & Science -- Magnet school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Academy of Science of South Africa -- National science academy
Wikipedia - A cappella -- Group or solo singing without instrumental sound
Wikipedia - Acaster South Ings -- Site of Special Scientific Interest in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Accelerating change -- Perceived increase in the rate of technological change throughout history
Wikipedia - Accent on Youth (film) -- 1935 film by Wesley Ruggles
Wikipedia - Accessibility without Exclusion -- Disability rights political party in Costa Rica
Wikipedia - Accident -- Unforeseen and unplanned event or circumstance, often with a negative outcome
Wikipedia - Accounting -- Measurement, processing and communication of financial information about economic entities
Wikipedia - Accreditation -- Procedure by which an authoritative body gives formal recognition that an organization is competent to carry out specific tasks (def: ISO 15189:2012)
Wikipedia - ACE TV -- Former community TV channel in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Achaeopsis -- Hotlips spider crab, endemic to South Africa
Wikipedia - Achmat Dangor -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Acholi dialect -- Southern Luo dialect
Wikipedia - Achomi language -- Iranian language spoken in the south of Iran
Wikipedia - Acid mine drainage -- Outflow of acidic water produced by sulfide oxidation from metal mines or coal mines
Wikipedia - Acinteyya -- Four issues that should not be thought about, since this distracts from practice, and hinders the attainment of liberation
Wikipedia - A Couple of Down and Outs -- 1923 film by Walter Summers
Wikipedia - Acrosome reaction -- The discharge, by sperm, of a single, anterior secretory granule following the sperm's attachment to the zona pellucida surrounding the oocyte. The process begins with the fusion of the outer acrosomal membrane with the sperm plasma membrane and ends
Wikipedia - Acrostic -- Writing in which the first letter, syllable or word of each line, paragraph or other recurring feature in the text spells out a word or a message
Wikipedia - Acting out -- Performing an action considered bad
Wikipedia - Action of 9 February 1799 (South Africa) -- Minor naval engagement of the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - ActionSA -- South African political party
Wikipedia - ActNow Theatre -- South Australian theatre company
Wikipedia - Act of God (film) -- 2009 Canadian documentary about lightning strikes directed by Jennifer Baichwal
Wikipedia - Actuarial Society of South Africa HIV/AIDS models -- Actuarial mathematical models used in assessing the impact of the epidemic in South Africa
Wikipedia - Acullico -- Small bolus of coca is placed in the mouth between the cheek and jaw
Wikipedia - AcuM-CM-1a Island -- A small island south of Point Rae, off the south coast of Laurie Island in the South Orkney Islands
Wikipedia - Acute Misfortune -- 2018 Australian drama film about artist Adam Cullen, made by Thomas M. Wright
Wikipedia - Ada Booyens -- South African race walker
Wikipedia - Ada, Delta -- Isoko town in Delta State, southern Nigeria
Wikipedia - Adamastor Ocean -- A Precambrian "proto-Atlantic" ocean in the Southern Hemisphere
Wikipedia - Adam Bell -- legendary English outlaw and archer
Wikipedia - Adam Film World -- American magazines about pornographic films
Wikipedia - Adam Kok III -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Adam Ragusea -- American YouTuber (born 1982)
Wikipedia - Adams Island, New Zealand -- island off Southern New Zealand
Wikipedia - A Dangerous Idea: Eugenics, Genetics and the American Dream -- 2016 documentary film about eugenics
Wikipedia - Adaptations of Puss in Boots -- Adaptations of a fairy tale about a cat
Wikipedia - A Day Without a Mexican -- 2004 film directed by Sergio Arau
Wikipedia - Adcock Ingram -- South African pharmaceutical company
Wikipedia - Adda (South Asian) -- Concept in South Asia, especially Bengal, conversation among a group of people
Wikipedia - Adderley Street -- Major street in CBD of Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Addis Ababa-Djibouti Railway -- International railway line serving Ethiopia and Djibouti
Wikipedia - Addo Elephant National Park Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area in the Eastern Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Addo Elephant National Park -- A diverse wildlife conservation park near Port Elizabeth in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Address space layout randomization
Wikipedia - Adelaide-Darwin rail corridor -- A series of five railway lines comprising Australia's north-south transcontinental railway route
Wikipedia - Adelaide Film Festival -- Film festival in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelaide Holocaust Museum and Andrew Steiner Education Centre -- Museum in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelaide Oval -- Stadium in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelaide Rams -- Defunct rugby league team in South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelaide Tambo -- 20th and 21st-century South African politician
Wikipedia - Adelaide -- Capital of South Australia
Wikipedia - Adelong Creek -- river in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos apiculatus -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae, native to the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos argyreus -- Species of shrub endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos barbiger -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos cacomorphus -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos cuneatus -- A shrub of the family Proteaceae native to the south coast of Western Australia.
Wikipedia - Adenanthos dobagii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southwestern Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos drummondii -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae, native to the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos filifolius -- Species of shrub endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos glabrescens -- Species of shrub endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos ileticos -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos labillardierei -- Species of shrub endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos linearis -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae, native to the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos macropodianus -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Kangaroo Island in South Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos M-CM-^W cunninghamii -- Species of hybrid shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos meisneri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos oreophilus -- Species of shrub endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos pungens -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Adenanthos stictus -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae, native to the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Aden Protectorate -- Former British protectorate in southern Arabia
Wikipedia - Ad hoc On-Demand Distance Vector Routing
Wikipedia - Adiantum viridimontanum -- A rare fern found only in outcrops of serpentine rock in New England and Eastern Canada
Wikipedia - Adirondack chair -- Outdoor lounge chair with wide armrests, and a tall slatted back
Wikipedia - Aditi Balan -- South Indian film actress
Wikipedia - Administrative detention -- Arrest and detention of individuals by the state without trial
Wikipedia - Administrative distance -- A number of arbitrary unit used in network routing decisions
Wikipedia - Admiral Island (South Africa) -- Manmade island and residential estate
Wikipedia - Admiralty Bay (South Shetland Islands) -- Bay of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Adobe Flores -- historic house in South Pasadena, California
Wikipedia - Adolf Goerz -- German-South African mining engineer
Wikipedia - Adolfo Clouthier -- Mexican athlete
Wikipedia - Adolphe (ship) -- Ship wrecked on Hunter River in New South Wales, Australia in 1904
Wikipedia - Adonis (cocktail) -- Sherry and vermouth cocktail
Wikipedia - Adoro Te Devote (I Devoutly Adore You)
Wikipedia - Adoy -- South Korean band
Wikipedia - Adriaan Teding van Berkhout -- Dutch jurist
Wikipedia - Adriana Marais -- South African theoretical physicist, quantum biologist and Martian astronaut candidate
Wikipedia - Adriana Randall -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Adrian Birrell -- South African cricketer and coach
Wikipedia - Adrian Gore -- South African businessman
Wikipedia - Adrien Auzout -- French astronomer
Wikipedia - Adrien Gouteyron -- French politician
Wikipedia - Adrienne Camp -- South African singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Adut Akech -- South Sudanese-Australian model
Wikipedia - Advancement Unification Party -- Defunct centre-right political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Adventure Activities Licensing Authority -- The licensing authority for outdoor activity centres for young people in Great Britain
Wikipedia - Adventure on the Southern Express -- 1934 film
Wikipedia - Adventurous Youth -- 1928 film
Wikipedia - Advertising Standards Authority (South Africa) -- Consumer organization in South Africa
Wikipedia - Advocates for Youth
Wikipedia - Adwick railway station -- Railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - AEC Routemaster -- a British double-decker bus
Wikipedia - Aegukga -- National anthem of South Korea
Wikipedia - Aelbrecht Bouts -- Flemish painter (c.1452-1549)
Wikipedia - Aengus -- Irish god of youth, love, and poetic inspiration
Wikipedia - Aerie (clothing retailer) -- Intimate apparel brand of American Eagle Outfitters
Wikipedia - Aer Lingus Flight 712 -- Flight which crashed en route from Cork to London on 24 March 1968
Wikipedia - Aernout Mik -- Dutch artist
Wikipedia - Aernout van Lennep -- Dutch equestrian
Wikipedia - Aerolineas Mundo -- Cargo airline out of Las Americas International Airport in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic
Wikipedia - Aerospace Data Facility-Southwest -- Satellite ground station operated by the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office
Wikipedia - Aero Spacelines Pregnant Guppy -- Outsize cargo conversion of the Boeing 377 Stratocruiser
Wikipedia - Aero Spacelines Super Guppy -- Turboprop conversion and enlarged version of outsize cargo carrier Pregnant Guppy
Wikipedia - Aerosud -- Aircraft manufacturer in South Africa
Wikipedia - Aethiopian Sea -- The name given to the southern part of the Atlantic Ocean in classical geographical works
Wikipedia - Aethiopia -- Geographical term in classical Greek literature for the upper Nile and areas south of the Sahara
Wikipedia - AEW All Out -- All Elite Wrestling pay-per-view series
Wikipedia - Afala Island -- Island in the South Shetlands Islands, Antarctica
Wikipedia - A Father Without Knowing It -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - AF+BG theorem -- About algebraic curves passing through all intersection points of two other curves
Wikipedia - A Few Words About Breasts -- May 1972 essay by Nora Ephron
Wikipedia - Affine geometry -- Euclidean geometry without distance and angles
Wikipedia - Afghanistan Papers -- Internal documents about the US war in Afghanistan
Wikipedia - Afghanistan -- Landlocked country in South-Central Asia
Wikipedia - Afisha Picnic -- Outdoor festival held in Moscow, Russia
Wikipedia - Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards -- Africa Magic Viewers' Choice Awards (AMVCA) is an annual accolade presented by Multichoice recognizing outstanding achievement in television and film.
Wikipedia - Africa Muslim Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Africanaspis -- Extinct genus of placoderm from Late Devonian South Africa
Wikipedia - African Bank Limited -- South African commercial bank
Wikipedia - African Biodiversity & Conservation -- South African peer-reviewed open access scientific journal
Wikipedia - African Change Academy -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - African Christian Democratic Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - African Congress of Democrats -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African Content Movement -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African Covenant -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African Democratic Change -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African diaspora -- People descending from native sub-Saharan Africans living outside Africa
Wikipedia - African Independent Congress -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African Leadership Academy -- Premier Pan-African high school in South Africa
Wikipedia - African Mantungwa Community -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - African National Congress -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - African National Congress Youth League
Wikipedia - African oystercatcher -- A large near-threatened wading species of bird redident on the shores of South Africa
Wikipedia - African People's Convention -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - African Renaissance Unity Party -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - African Security Congress -- South African political party
Wikipedia - African Theatre (Cape Town) -- Building that was a theatre in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - African Transformation Movement -- South African political party (e. 2019)
Wikipedia - Africa Scout Region (World Organization of the Scout Movement) -- Divisional office of the World Scout Bureau headquartered in Nairobi, Kenya
Wikipedia - Africa Tsoai -- South African actor and sound engineer
Wikipedia - AfriForum -- South African non-governmental organization
Wikipedia - Afrihost -- ISP in South Africa
Wikipedia - Afrikaans -- West Germanic language spoken in South Africa and Namibia
Wikipedia - Afrikan Alliance of Social Democrats -- Political party from South Africa
Wikipedia - Afrikaner self-determination Party -- South African far-right political party
Wikipedia - Afrikaners Landgenote -- South African Afrikaner folk song
Wikipedia - Afrikaners -- Southern African ethnic group descended from predominantly Dutch settlers
Wikipedia - Aftermath of Battles Without Honor and Humanity -- 1979 film by Eiichi Kudo
Wikipedia - After School (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Aftershow -- TV talk show about another TV show
Wikipedia - AFTV -- YouTube channel aimed at Arsenal F.C. supporters
Wikipedia - Against the Dying of the Light -- 2001 film about the National Screen and Sound Archive of Wales
Wikipedia - Agaricus deserticola -- Species of fungus in the family Agaricaceae endemic to southwestern and western North America
Wikipedia - Agathosma crenulata -- Species of plant in the family Rutaceae from southwestern South Africa
Wikipedia - Agency for Defense Development -- South Korean national agency for research and development of defense technology
Wikipedia - A Gentleman's Dignity -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Agglutination -- Process in linguistic morphology derivation in which complex words are formed by stringing together morphemes without changing them in spelling or phonetics
Wikipedia - Aging of wine -- Overview about the aging of wine
Wikipedia - Agnes Sam -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Agnetapark -- Area of workers' housing in South Holland
Wikipedia - Agouti (coloration) -- Multi-colored hair
Wikipedia - Agouti-signaling protein -- Protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens
Wikipedia - Agouti -- Genus of mammals
Wikipedia - Agout -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - A Grand Day Out -- 1989 short film directed by Nick Park
Wikipedia - Agriculture in South Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas Bank Complex Marine Protected Area -- An offshore marine conservation area south of Cape Agulhas in South Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas Bank -- The broad southernmost part of the African continental shelf
Wikipedia - Agulhas Current -- Western boundary current of the southwest Indian Ocean that flows down the east coast of Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas ecoregion -- Region of similar ecological characteristics on the continental shelf of the south coast of South Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas Front Marine Protected Area -- A offshore marine conservation area off the Eastern Cape in South Africa's EEZ
Wikipedia - Agulhas Muds Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area offshore of the Western Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas National Park -- National park on the coastal plain between Gansbaai and Struisbaai in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Agulhas Passage -- Abyssal channel south of South Africa between the Agulhas Bank and Agulhas Plateau
Wikipedia - Agulhas Return Current -- An ocean current in the South Indian Ocean flowing from the Agulhas retroflection along the subtropical front
Wikipedia - AH11 -- Asian Highway route in Laos and Cambodia
Wikipedia - AH19 -- Asian Highway route in Thailand
Wikipedia - AH1 -- Longest route of the Asian Highway Network
Wikipedia - AH2 -- Road in Southeast, South, Central and Western Asia
Wikipedia - AH31 -- Asian Highway route in Russia and China
Wikipedia - AH32 -- International Highway route in Asia
Wikipedia - AH60 -- Asian Highway route in Russia and Kazakhstan
Wikipedia - AH61 -- International Highway route in Asia
Wikipedia - AH62 -- International Highway route in Asia
Wikipedia - AH65 -- International Highway route in Asia
Wikipedia - AH6 -- Asian Highway route in Russia and China
Wikipedia - AH7 -- International Highway route in Asia
Wikipedia - A History of the Birds of Europe -- Nine-volume, late 19th century book about the history of European birds
Wikipedia - Ahmadnagar Sultanate -- 16th century Indian kingdom located in southern India
Wikipedia - Ahmedabad-Gorakhpur Express -- Indian express train route
Wikipedia - Ahmedabad-Mumbai Central Passenger -- Indian train route
Wikipedia - Ahmed Aboutaleb -- Dutch politician
Wikipedia - Ahmed Deedat -- South African writer and orator
Wikipedia - Ahn Byeong-keun -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Ahn Cheol-soo -- South Korean politician, medical doctor, businessperson and software entrepreneur
Wikipedia - Ahn Deok-su -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Ahn Do-gyu -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Eun-jin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ahn Gil-kang -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Gyu-back -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Ahn Ho-young -- South Korean diplomat
Wikipedia - Ahn Hyo-seop -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn In-sook -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ahn Jae-hwan -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Jae-hyun -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Jae-mo -- South Korean actor and singer
Wikipedia - Ahn Jae-sung -- South Korean curler and coach
Wikipedia - Ahn Jae-wook -- South Korean actor and singer
Wikipedia - Ahn Ji-ho (actor) -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Ji-hwan -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Ji-hyun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ahn Ji-young -- South Korean singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Ahn Joon-sung -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Ahn Nae-sang -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Na-kyung -- South Korean announcer
Wikipedia - Ahn Pan-seok -- South Korean director
Wikipedia - Ahn Sang-soo (born May 1946) -- South Korean politician born May 1946
Wikipedia - Ahn Sang-yeong -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Ahn Se-ha -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Seo-hyun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ahn Shi-hyun -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Ahn So-hee -- South Korean actress and singer
Wikipedia - Ahn Soo-kyeong -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Ahn Sung-ki -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Sun-ju -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Ahn Woo-yeon -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ahn Ye-eun -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Ahn Yoo-jin -- South Korean choreographer, dancer
Wikipedia - Ahn Young-mi -- South Korean comedian
Wikipedia - Ahom language -- Dead Southwestern Tai language of Northeast India
Wikipedia - A House Without Boundaries -- 1972 film
Wikipedia - AHRLAC Holdings Ahrlac -- Proposed COIN/light reconnaissance aircraft, South Africa
Wikipedia - Ah Young -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Ai-Ais/Richtersveld Transfrontier Park -- Transfrontier park in Namibia and South Africa
Wikipedia - Aidan Southall
Wikipedia - Aigle River (Desert River tributary) -- tributary of Desert river, in RCM La Vallee-de-la-Gatineau, in Outaouais, in Quebec, in Canada
Wikipedia - Aikaterini Mamouti -- Greek gymnast
Wikipedia - Aiken-Augusta Special -- Former American train route
Wikipedia - Aileen Frisch -- South Korean luger
Wikipedia - Ailing DojM-DM-^Min -- Hero of South Slavic epic poetry
Wikipedia - Aimee van Rooyen -- South African rhythmic gymnast
Wikipedia - Aim I -- Outdoor sculpture by Alexander Liberman
Wikipedia - AIMMS Outer Approximation (optimization software)
Wikipedia - Ain't Talkin' 'bout Love -- Song by Van Halen
Wikipedia - Aiphanes -- A genus of spiny palms native to tropical South and Central America and the Caribbean
Wikipedia - Aira Caldera -- A large flooded coastal volcanic caldera in the south of the island of KyM-EM-+shM-EM-+, Japan
Wikipedia - Air Base Speedway -- former motorsport track in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Air Busan -- Airline of South Korea
Wikipedia - Airbus Beluga -- Outsize cargo version of the A300-600 airliner
Wikipedia - Air China Flight 129 -- 2002 aviation accident in South Korea
Wikipedia - Air Djibouti -- Flag-carrier airline of Djibouti
Wikipedia - Air Force Base Bloemspruit -- Air base of the South African Air Force in Bloemfontein
Wikipedia - Air Force Base Overberg -- Airbase of the South African Air Force
Wikipedia - Air Incheon -- Airline of South Korea
Wikipedia - Air-independent propulsion -- Propulsion system for submarines which operates without access to atmospheric oxygen
Wikipedia - Airlink Cargo -- South African cargo airline
Wikipedia - Airplane Pt. 2 -- song by South Korean band BTS
Wikipedia - Airport South metro station (Nagpur) -- Metro station in Nagpur, India
Wikipedia - Airport South station (Guangzhou Metro) -- Guangzhou Metro station
Wikipedia - Air Seoul -- Airline of South Korea
Wikipedia - Air South (South Carolina) -- American low-cost airline
Wikipedia - AirSWIFT -- Filipino regional boutique airline
Wikipedia - Aitcho Islands (South Shetland Islands) -- Minor island group in Antarctica
Wikipedia - Aithne Rowse -- First South African women to over-winter in Antarctica
Wikipedia - Aix-en-Provence -- city and commune in southern France
Wikipedia - A-Jax (band) -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - Ajax, South Dakota -- Populated place in South Dakota, USA
Wikipedia - Ajey Nagar -- Indian Comedy YouTuber and Gamer
Wikipedia - Akakor -- Mythical South American underground city
Wikipedia - AKA (rapper) -- South African rapper
Wikipedia - Akhumzi Jezile -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Akidearest -- American YouTuber (born 1993)
Wikipedia - A Killer Without a Grave -- 1961 film
Wikipedia - Akita Prefectural Road Route 315 -- Road in Akita Prefecture, Japan
Wikipedia - AKMU -- South Korean vocal group
Wikipedia - Akolouthos -- Byzantine office
Wikipedia - A Korean Odyssey -- 2017 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Akuol de Mabior -- South Sudanese model, filmmaker, and women's rights activist
Wikipedia - Alabama Cooperative Extension System -- Educational outreach organization in Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Alabama Slammer -- Cocktail of amaretto, Southern Comfort, sloe gin and orange juice
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 114 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 121 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 128 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 138 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 151 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 201 -- State highway in Pike County, Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 208 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 21 -- State highway in Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 263 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 291 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 301 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 37 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama State Route 9 -- Highway in Alabama
Wikipedia - Alabama -- State in the southeastern United States
Wikipedia - Alan Becker -- American online animator and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Alan Clark (businessman) -- South African businessman
Wikipedia - Alan Gourley -- South African painter
Wikipedia - Alan Ridout -- British composer
Wikipedia - Alan Stout (composer) -- American composer
Wikipedia - Alan Stout (philosopher)
Wikipedia - Alan van Coller -- South African canoeist
Wikipedia - Alan William James Cousins -- (1903-2001) South African astronomer
Wikipedia - Alaoui Mohamed Taher -- Djiboutian judoka
Wikipedia - Alarm fur Cobra 11 - Die Autobahnpolizei -- German TV series about highway police
Wikipedia - Alaska Allstars Hockey Association -- Youth ice hockey organization in Alaska, United States
Wikipedia - Alaska Route 1 -- Highway in Alaska
Wikipedia - Alaska Route 2 -- Highway in Alaska
Wikipedia - Alaska State Troopers (TV series) -- American television series about the Alaska state police
Wikipedia - Albania at the Youth Olympics -- performance of Albania at the Youth Olympic Games
Wikipedia - Albanians -- ethnic group native to Southeast Europe
Wikipedia - Albania -- Country in Southeastern Europe
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Wikipedia - Apollo 20 hoax -- A hoax about extraterrestrials on the Moon
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Wikipedia - Apomixis -- Replacement of the normal sexual reproduction by asexual reproduction, without fertilization
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Wikipedia - A Question and Answer Guide to Astronomy -- Book about astronomy
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Wikipedia - Aquilaria crassna -- Species of agarwood tree from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Aquilaria cumingiana -- Species of agarwood tree from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Aquilaria hirta -- Species of agarwood tree from Southeast Asia
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Wikipedia - Aquilaria -- Genus of trees native to southeast Asia
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Wikipedia - Arabid race -- Outdated grouping of human beings
Wikipedia - Ara (constellation) -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
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Wikipedia - Archaeological record -- Body of physical (i.e. not written) evidence about the past
Wikipedia - Archaeology of the Americas -- Study of the archaeology of North, Central and South America and the Caribbean
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Wikipedia - Architecture of Central Asia -- Architectural styles of the societies that have occupied Central Asia throughout history
Wikipedia - Architecture of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Arcusaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from early Jurassic South Africa
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Wikipedia - Area code 334 -- Area code for southeastern Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 337 -- Area code for southwestern Louisiana, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 409 -- Area code in southeast Texas, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 434 -- Area code for southern Virginia, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 513 -- Area code for southwest Ohio, US
Wikipedia - Area code 520 -- Area code in southern Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 574 -- Area code that serves South Bend and mishawaka and north-central Indiana
Wikipedia - Area code 580 -- Area code for western and southern Oklahoma, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 605 -- Area code for all of South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 708 -- Area code for southern suburbs of Chicago, Illinois
Wikipedia - Area code 773 -- Area code of Chicago outside of Downtown
Wikipedia - Area code 864 -- Area code in upstate South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 870 -- Area code for eastern and southern Arkansas, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 910 -- Area code in southeastern North Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Area code 949 -- Telephone area code for southern Orange County, California
Wikipedia - Area code 952 -- Area code for southwest suburbs of Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota
Wikipedia - Area code 956 -- Area code in south Texas, United States
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Wikipedia - Area codes 270 and 364 -- Area codes that serves Kentucky's western and south central counties
Wikipedia - Area codes 408 and 669 -- Area codes that serve the southern San Francisco Bay Area, California
Wikipedia - Area codes 508 and 774 -- Area codes that serve south-central and most of southeastern Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Area codes 714 and 657 -- Area code covering areas of southern California
Wikipedia - Area codes 717 and 223 -- Telephone area codes in south central Pennsylvania, U.S.
Wikipedia - Area codes 760 and 442 -- Area codes for southern and eastern California
Wikipedia - Area codes 803 and 839 -- Area codes in central South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Area codes 812 and 930 -- Area codes that serve the southern third of the state of Indiana
Wikipedia - Area codes 860 and 959 -- Area codes that serve most of Connecticut, except its southwest
Wikipedia - Area codes 909 and 840 -- Area codes in southern California, United States
Wikipedia - Area codes 937 and 326 -- Area code for southwestern Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Area control center -- Air route control entity
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Wikipedia - Arenga westerhoutii -- Species of Asian palm
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Wikipedia - Areole -- Bumps on cacti out of which grow clusters of spines
Wikipedia - Arequipa-Antofalla -- A basement unit underlying the central Andes in northwestern Argentina, western Bolivia, northern Chile and southern Peru
Wikipedia - Are You Human? -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Argentina -- Country in South America
Wikipedia - Argentine Confederation -- 1831-1861 republic in South America
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Wikipedia - Argon (TV series) -- 2017 South Korean TV series
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Wikipedia - Arirang TV -- English-language television network based in South Korea
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Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 143 -- Freeway in the Phoenix metropolitan area, Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 181 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 202 -- Freeway in the Phoenix metropolitan area in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 69 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 71 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 73 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 74 -- highway in Arizona
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 75 -- Highway in Arizona
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 77 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 80 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 84 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 85 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 90 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 92 -- Former state highway in Arizona, United States
Wikipedia - Arizona State Route 98 -- State highway in Arizona, United States
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Wikipedia - Armenian Apostolic Diocese of Isfahan and Southern Iran -- Holy See of Cilicia
Wikipedia - Armenian Highlands -- Highland area in western Asia south of the Caucasus
Wikipedia - Arm (geography) -- A narrow extension of water extending out from a much larger body of water
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Wikipedia - Aromanian language -- Eastern Romance language spoken in Southeastern Europe
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Wikipedia - Arrack -- Distilled alcoholic drink typically produced in South and Southeast Asia
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Wikipedia - Articulated Wall -- Outdoor sculpture in Denver, Colorado
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Wikipedia - Asbury Park, New Jersey -- City in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Asbury Park Public Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - ASEAN -- International organisation of South East Asian countries
Wikipedia - Asenathi Jim -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Asexual reproduction -- Reproduction without a sexual process
Wikipedia - Asgardia -- Proposed nation based in outer space
Wikipedia - Ashes to Ashes (South African TV series) -- South African telenovela
Wikipedia - Ashfall (film) -- South Korean film
Wikipedia - Ashleigh Buhai -- South African professional golfer
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Wikipedia - Asiana Airlines -- Airline in South Korea
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Wikipedia - Association of Southeast Asian Nations
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Wikipedia - Associativity-based routing
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Wikipedia - A Story About a Tree
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Wikipedia - Astroloba -- Genus of flowering plants native to South Africa
Wikipedia - Astronomical Society of New South Wales -- Amateur astronomy club in the state of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Astronomica (Manilius) -- 1st century AD Latin didactic poem about celestial phenomena written by Marcus Manilius
Wikipedia - Astrooceanography -- The study of oceans outside planet Earth
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Wikipedia - Ataturk's Address To Turkish Youth -- Speech by Kemal Ataturk
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Wikipedia - Athabasca Valles -- Outflow channel on Mars
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Wikipedia - Athens, GA: Inside/Out -- 1987 film by Tony Gayton
Wikipedia - Athersley -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
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Wikipedia - Athletics at the 1977 Southeast Asian Games -- Medal results of sporting event
Wikipedia - Athletics at the 2018 Summer Youth Olympics - Boys' pole vault -- Athletics event
Wikipedia - Athlone Boys' High School -- A boys-only high school in Johannesburg, South Africa
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Wikipedia - Athlone Stadium -- Stadium in Athlone on the Cape Flats in Cape Town, South Africa
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Wikipedia - Athol Fugard -- South African playwright
Wikipedia - A Thousand Kisses (TV series) -- 2011 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Athrips flavida -- Species of moth in the family Gelechiidae from southern Africa
Wikipedia - Atikamekw language -- Cree language of southwestern Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Atikamekw -- Cree ethnic group of southwestern Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - A Time Out of War -- 1954 film
Wikipedia - ATK Reserves And Academy -- Youth system of Indian Super League side ATK
Wikipedia - Atlanta compromise -- Agreement between B.T. Washington, other Afro-American leaders, and Southern white leaders
Wikipedia - Atlantica -- An ancient continent formed during the Proterozoic about 2 billion years ago
Wikipedia - Atlantic coastal plain upland longleaf pine woodland -- Ecological region of southeastern US
Wikipedia - Atlantic Flyway -- Major north-south flyway for migratory birds in North America
Wikipedia - Atlantic Forest -- South American forest
Wikipedia - Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Atlantic Highlands School District -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Atlantic hurricane reanalysis project -- Project to add new information about past North Atlantic hurricanes
Wikipedia - Atlantic meridional overturning circulation -- system of currents in the Atlantic Ocean, having a northward flow of warm, salty water in the upper layers and a southward flow of colder, deep waters that are part of the thermohaline circulation
Wikipedia - Atlantic Meridional Transect -- A multi-decadal oceanographic programme that undertakes biological, chemical and physical research during annual voyages between the UK and destinations in the South Atlantic
Wikipedia - Atlantic yellow-nosed albatross -- A large seabird from the south Atlantic
Wikipedia - Atlantis Sand Fynbos -- Vegetation type from north of Cape Town, in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Atlantis, Western Cape -- Suburb of Cape Towm, in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Atmosphere of Mars -- Overview about the atmosphere of Mars
Wikipedia - Atmospheric circulation -- The large-scale movement of air, a process which distributes thermal energy about the Earth's surface
Wikipedia - Atmospheric entry -- Passage of an object through the gases of an atmosphere from outer space
Wikipedia - Atmospheric escape -- Loss of planetary atmospheric gases to outer space
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Wikipedia - A Trip Without a Load -- 1962 film
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Wikipedia - Attack of the Flesh Devouring Space Worms from Outer Space -- 1998 film
Wikipedia - Attack on the Pin-Up Boys -- 2007 South Korean high school mystery/comedy film by Lee Kwon
Wikipedia - Attention (bugle call) -- Bugle call sounded as a warning that troops are about to be called to attention.
Wikipedia - Atterbury House -- Office skyscraper in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Attorney General of New South Wales -- Chief law officer for the state of New South Wales, Australia
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Wikipedia - Aubrey K. Lucas Administration Building -- Building on the campus of the University of Southern Mississippi in the US
Wikipedia - Aubrey Levin -- South African-born Canadian psychiatrist charged with abuse.
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Wikipedia - Auckley -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
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Wikipedia - Australian Army enlisted rank insignia -- About ranks.
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Wikipedia - Australian Navy Cadets -- Youth military organisation of the Royal Australian Navy
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Wikipedia - Australia -- Country in the Southern Hemisphere
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Wikipedia - Austronesian languages -- Large language family mostly of Southeast Asia and the Pacific
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Wikipedia - Autoepistemic logic -- Formal logic for the representation and reasoning of knowledge about knowledge
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Wikipedia - Automaticity -- The ability to do things without occupying the mind with the low-level details required
Wikipedia - Automatic test equipment -- Apparatus used in hardware testing that carries out a series of tests automatically
Wikipedia - Automobile dependency -- Concept that city layouts may favor automobiles over bicycles, public transit, and walking.
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Wikipedia - Aventurera -- 1950 film by Alberto Gout M-CM-^@brego
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Wikipedia - Azanian People's Organisation -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Azerbaijan at the Youth Olympics -- performance of Azerbaijan at the Youth Olympic Games
Wikipedia - AZERTY -- Keyboard layout where the first line is "AZERTYUIOP", used for French
Wikipedia - Azores Current -- A generally eastward to southeastward-flowing current in the North Atlantic, originating near the Grand Banks of Newfoundland where it splits from Gulf Stream
Wikipedia - B1A4 discography -- Discography of South Korean idol group B1A4
Wikipedia - B1A4 -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - B25 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B26 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B29 (New York City bus) -- Former bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B38 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B41 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B42 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B43 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B45 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B46 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B47 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B48 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B52 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B54 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B60 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B61 and B62 buses -- Bus routes in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B63 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B65 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B67 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B68 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B69 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B75 (New York City bus) -- Former bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - B82 (New York City bus) -- Bus route in Brooklyn, New York
Wikipedia - Babai River -- River in South Asia
Wikipedia - Babalo Madikizela -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Babalwa Mathulelwa -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Babalwa Ndleleni -- South African weightlifter
Wikipedia - Babel 250 -- South Korean reality television series
Wikipedia - Bab-el-Mandeb -- Strait located between Yemen on the Arabian Peninsula, and Djibouti and Eritrea in the Horn of Africa
Wikipedia - Babel (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Babette Brown -- South African writer
Wikipedia - BABO -- 2008 South Korean film by Kim Jung-kwon
Wikipedia - Baby Cele -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Baby, It's Cold Outside -- Song written by Frank Loesser
Wikipedia - Baby's Day Out -- 1994 film by Patrick Read Johnson
Wikipedia - Baby Vox Re.V -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Baby Vox -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Bacchus Ladies -- Elderly prostitutes in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bachelorette party -- Party held for a woman who is about to get married
Wikipedia - Bachelor party -- Party held by a man who is about to get married
Wikipedia - Bachue -- Mother goddess in the South American Muisca religion
Wikipedia - Back Creek, New South Wales (Tweed) -- Suburb of Tweed Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Back Hye-ryun -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Backpacking (hiking) -- Outdoor recreation of carrying gear on one's back, while hiking for more than a day
Wikipedia - Backpressure routing
Wikipedia - Backstreet Rookie -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Back Yard Burgers -- American regional franchise chain of restaurants in the Southern and Midwestern US
Wikipedia - Bada (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Baden-Powell House -- Hostel and conference centre in South Kensington, London
Wikipedia - Baden-Powell Scouts' Association -- Voluntary Scouting association for young people
Wikipedia - Baden -- Historical territory in South Germany and North Switzerland
Wikipedia - Bad Guys 2 -- 2017 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Bad Guys (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Bad Housewife -- 2005 South Korean comedy-drama TV series
Wikipedia - Badia, South Tyrol
Wikipedia - Badjiri language -- Extinct Aboriginal Australian language of southern Queensland
Wikipedia - Badlands National Park -- National park in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Badreddin al-Houthi -- Yemeni politician and scholar
Wikipedia - BAE173 -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Bae Doona -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Bae Eun-hye -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Bae Eun-mi -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Bae Hyun-jin -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Bae Hyun-sung -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Bae Jae-jung -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Bae Jin-young -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bae Jong-ok -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Bae Jun-seo -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Baek A-yeon -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Baek Bong-ki -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Baek Chul-min -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Baek Eun-bi -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Baek Hee-na -- South Korean illustrator of childrens books
Wikipedia - Baekho (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Baekhyun -- South Korean singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Bae Ki-tae -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Baek Jin-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Baek Ji-young -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Baek Jong-won's Alley Restaurant -- South Korean cooking-variety program
Wikipedia - Baek Jong-won's Top 3 Chef King -- 2015 South Korean television program
Wikipedia - Baek-kimchi -- Kimchi made without the chili pepper powder
Wikipedia - Baek Kyu-jung -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Baek Min-hyun -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Baeksang Arts Awards -- South Korean film and television awards
Wikipedia - Baek Sang Eo (White Shark) torpedo -- South Korean submarine-launched torpedo
Wikipedia - Baek Sung-hyun -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Baek Ye-rin -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Baek Yoon-sik -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Baengnyeongdo -- Island of South Korea
Wikipedia - Bae Noo-ri -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Bae Sang-hee -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Bae Sang-moon -- South Korean professional golfer
Wikipedia - Bae Seong-woo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Bae Seul-ki -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Bae So-hee -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Bae Soo-bin -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Bae Suah -- South Korean author and translator
Wikipedia - Bae Sung-duk -- South Korean sports shooter
Wikipedia - Bae Suzy -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Bae Woo-hee -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Baffin Bay (Texas) -- Bay in South Texas
Wikipedia - Baffin Island Current -- An ocean current running south down the western side of Baffin Bay in the Arctic Ocean, along Baffin Island
Wikipedia - Bagh Express -- Indian express train route
Wikipedia - BahaM-JM- -- Religion of an area
Wikipedia - Bahk Jong-sun -- South Korean artist
Wikipedia - Bahmani Sultanate -- Former Muslim state in Southern India
Wikipedia - Bahr el Arab rift -- A major geological feature in the southwest Sudan
Wikipedia - Baidoa -- City in South West, Somalia
Wikipedia - Baik Sou-linne -- South Korean author
Wikipedia - Bailey-Morshead exploration of Tsangpo Gorge -- 1913 expedition that discovered route of Tsangpo River through Himalaya
Wikipedia - Bailout at 43,000 -- 1957 film
Wikipedia - Bailout block -- Valve block on diver's equipment for switching a diver's gas supply between main and emergency gas supply
Wikipedia - Bailout bottle -- Emergency gas supply cylinder carried by a diver
Wikipedia - Bailout cylinder -- Emergency gas supply cylinder carried by a diver
Wikipedia - Bailout (diving) -- To switch over to an emergency system during a dive
Wikipedia - Bailout gas -- Emergency breathing gas supply carried by the diver
Wikipedia - Bailout system -- System to provide emergency breathing gas to a diver
Wikipedia - Bail out to open circuit -- Abort a rebreather dive and surface using open circuit scuba
Wikipedia - Baji Rout -- Indian victim of British police violence (1926-1938)
Wikipedia - Bake-out
Wikipedia - Bakerloo line extension -- Proposed southern extension of the London Underground
Wikipedia - Bakers (bakery) -- South African food company
Wikipedia - Bak Ji-yun -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Bak Solmay -- South Korean writer
Wikipedia - Balatonlelle -- Town in Southern Transdanubia, Hungary
Wikipedia - Baleka Mbete -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Balele Mountains -- Mountain massif in the KwaZulu-Natal province in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bale Out -- Song performed by Lucian Piane
Wikipedia - Baleshare -- A flat tidal island in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland
Wikipedia - Balfour Formation -- Geological formation in the Beaufort Group of South Africa
Wikipedia - Balitora annamitica -- Species of freshwater fish from south-east Asia
Wikipedia - Ballad of Seodong -- 2005-2006 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Ballina Shire -- Local government area in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Ballinteer -- Southern suburb of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ballotpedia -- Nonprofit online encyclopedia about American politics
Wikipedia - Ballsbridge -- Southside suburb of Dublin city, Ireland
Wikipedia - Ballyhoura Mountains -- Mountain range, southwestern Ireland
Wikipedia - Balmoral Reef Plate -- A small tectonic plate in the south Pacific north of Fiji
Wikipedia - Balne railway station -- Disused railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Balondo Civilization -- The Balondo is a small ethnic group residing along the southwest coast of Cameroon with ethnic relatives in South Calabar.
Wikipedia - Baluch Liberation Front -- militant group operating in the Balochistan region of southwestern Asia
Wikipedia - Bamgogae-ro -- Road in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Bamseom Pirates -- Defunct South Korean grindcore band
Wikipedia - Bamseom -- Two islets in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Banana Culture -- South Korean entertainment company
Wikipedia - BancorpSouth Arena -- Arena and conference center in Tupelo, Mississippi
Wikipedia - Banda Sea Plate -- A minor tectonic plate underlying the Banda Sea in southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Band-backed wren -- Species of bird native to South and Central America
Wikipedia - Banded krait -- Species of south Asian elapid snake
Wikipedia - Bandile Masuku -- South African medical doctor and politician
Wikipedia - Banditti of the Prairie -- A group of loose-knit outlaw gangs, during the early-mid-19th century
Wikipedia - Band of Brothers (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Band-pass filter -- Filter that rejects signals outside a certain range
Wikipedia - Bandra Terminus-Bhavnagar Terminus Weekly Superfast Express -- Indian train route
Wikipedia - Bandra Terminus-Gorakhpur Antyodaya Express -- Indian express train route
Wikipedia - Bane in other media -- Depictions of Bane outside comic books
Wikipedia - Bangalore South (Vidhana Sabha constituency) -- Vidhana Sabha constituency in Karnataka, India
Wikipedia - Bangalow -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bangaru Adigalar -- South Indian spiritual guru
Wikipedia - Bang Eun-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Bang Gui-man -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Bang Hyo-mun -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Bang Hyun-joo -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Bangkok Knockout -- 2010 film by Panna Rittikrai
Wikipedia - Bangladesh -- Country in South Asia
Wikipedia - Bang Min-ah -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bang Min-ja -- South Korean wheelchair curler
Wikipedia - Bangmunsan -- Mountain in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bangsamoro Youth Model Parliamentarian Association -- youth organization in the Bangsamoro region in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Bang Sin-hye -- South Korean hurdler
Wikipedia - Bang Ye-dam -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Ban Hyo-jung -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Baniwa -- South American ethnic group
Wikipedia - BankBoston -- Bank in Massachusetts, US; bought out
Wikipedia - Banker horse -- A breed of feral horse living on barrier islands in North Carolina's Outer Banks
Wikipedia - Bank of Korea -- Central bank of South Korea
Wikipedia - Bank of New South Wales -- Banking company in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bank of South Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia aculeata -- Shrub of the family Proteaceae native to the southwest of Western Australia.
Wikipedia - Banksia acuminata -- Species of shrub in thefamily Proteaceae endemic to south-west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia attenuata -- A species of plant in the family Proteaceae found across much of the southwest of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia benthamiana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia borealis subsp. borealis -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia canei -- Shrub in the family Proteaceae found in subalpine areas of the Great Dividing Range in southeastern Australia.
Wikipedia - Banksia coccinea -- An erect shrub or small tree in the family Proteaceae native to the south west coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi subsp. agricola -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi subsp. dallanneyi -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi subsp. media -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi subsp. pollosta -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi subsp. sylvestris -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi var. dallanneyi -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dallanneyi var. mellicula -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia densa var. densa -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia densa var. parva -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia dentata -- A tree in the family Proteaceae which occurs across northern Australia, southern New Guinea and the Aru Islands
Wikipedia - Banksia dryandroides -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia epimicta -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia ericifolia subsp. macrantha -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Banksia ericifolia -- A woody shrub of the family Proteaceae native to Australia and found in Central and Northern New South Wales
Wikipedia - Banksia erythrocephala var. erythrocephala -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia fraseri var. fraseri -- Variety in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia fuscobractea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia gardneri var. gardneri -- Variety of plants in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia gardneri var. hiemalis -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia grossa -- A shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Southwest Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia ilicifolia -- A tree in the family Proteaceae endemic to southwest Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia incana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia insulanemorecincta -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia ionthocarpa subsp. ionthocarpa -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia laevigata subsp. fuscolutea -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia leptophylla var. leptophylla -- Variety in the plant family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia littoralis -- Species of tree in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia longicarpa -- Fossil species of tree or shrub in the family Proteaceae found in South Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia lullfitzii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia marginata -- Tree or woody shrub in the family Proteaceae found throughout much of southeastern Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia meisneri subsp. ascendens -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia meisneri subsp. meisneri -- Subspecies of plants in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia meisneri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia micrantha -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia nobilis subsp. nobilis -- Subspeciesof plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia novae-zelandiae -- Extinct species of shrub in the family Proteceae found in the South Island of New Zealand
Wikipedia - Banksia nutans var. cernuella -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia nutans var. nutans -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia oblongifolia -- A flowering plant in the family Proteaceae found along the eastern coast of Australia in New South Wales and Queensland
Wikipedia - Banksia octotriginta -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia pallida -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia paludosa -- A shrub in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia platycarpa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia plumosa subsp. plumosa -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia porrecta -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia prionotes -- Species of shrub or tree in the family Proteaceae native to the southwest of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia prolata subsp. archeos -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia prolata subsp. calcicola -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia prolata subsp. prolata -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia pteridifolia subsp. pteridifolia -- Subspecies in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia pulchella -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia quercifolia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. chelomacarpa -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. flavescens -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. magna -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. obliquiloba -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteacea eendemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. pumila -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. rufa -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia rufa subsp. tutanningensis -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia seminuda -- Species of tree in the family Proteaceae found in south west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia serratuloides subsp. serratuloides -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sessilis var. cordata -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae from the extreme south-west corner of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sessilis var. flabellifolia -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae from the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia solandri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from southwest Western Australia.
Wikipedia - Banksia speciosa -- Large shrub or small tree in the family Proteaceae found on the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa var. caesia -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa var. dolichostyla -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa var. latifolia -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa var. pumilio -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa var. sphaerocarpa -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae native to the Southwest Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia sphaerocarpa -- A shrub or tree in the family Proteaceae widely distributed across the southwest of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia splendida subsp. macrocarpa -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia splendida subsp. splendida -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia squarrosa subsp. squarrosa -- Subspecies of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia subpinnatifida var. subpinnatifida -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia tenuis var. reptans -- Variety of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia tenuis var. tenuis -- Varietyof plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West Botanical Province of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia tricuspis -- Species of shrub or small tree in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia vincentia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Banksia violacea -- A shrub or tree in the family Proteaceae found in low shrubland in southern regions of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Banksia xylothemelia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Bank Zero -- South African digital bank
Wikipedia - Banora Point -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Ban Se-jung -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Banstead Downs -- Biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Banstead in Surrey, South East England
Wikipedia - Banteng -- A species of wild cattle found in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Ban (title) -- Noble title used in Central and Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Bantu peoples in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bantu peoples of South Africa -- Ethnic descriptor in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bantustan -- Territory set aside for black inhabitants of South Africa and South West Africa (now Namibia), as part of the policy of apartheid
Wikipedia - Baodaiqiao South station -- Suzhou Metro station
Wikipedia - B.A.P (South Korean band) -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Baptist Sabit Frances -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Barack Obama religion conspiracy theories -- Overview about the religion conspiracy theories of Barack Obama
Wikipedia - Baraita -- Teachings "outside" of the six orders of the Mishnah
Wikipedia - Barangaroo, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Barauni-Gwalior Mail -- Train route in Bihar, India
Wikipedia - Barbara Adair -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Barbara Creecy -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Barberton Greenstone Belt -- Ancient granite-greenstone terrane on the eastern edge of the Kaapvaal craton in South Africa
Wikipedia - Barbie and the Rockers: Out of This World -- 1987 direct to video film based on the toy line directed by Bernard Deyries
Wikipedia - Bareback (sexual act) -- Sex without the use of a condom
Wikipedia - Bareboat charter -- Chartering or hiring of a ship without crew or provisions
Wikipedia - Barefooted Youth -- 1964 film
Wikipedia - Barefoot mailman -- 19th-century postal delivery route in Florida
Wikipedia - Bare-knuckle boxing -- Boxing without use of boxing gloves
Wikipedia - Bare machine -- Computer without an operating system
Wikipedia - Bare-metal stent -- Type of stent without a coating or covering
Wikipedia - Barents Sea Opening -- The sea between Bear Island in the south of Svalbard and the north of Norway through which water flows from the Atlantic into the Arctic Ocean
Wikipedia - Barff Peninsula -- Peninsula forming the east margin of Cumberland East Bay, South Georgia Island
Wikipedia - Bar joke -- Jokes about someone walking into a tavern
Wikipedia - Barkakana-Muri-Chandil line -- Railway route in India
Wikipedia - Barkat Gourad Hamadou -- Former Prime Minister of Djibouti
Wikipedia - Barksdale, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Barnaba Marial Benjamin -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Barnard's Star -- Low mass red dwarf star about six light-years from Earth
Wikipedia - Barney Barnato -- British businessman who made his fortune in South Africa
Wikipedia - Barnsley Interchange -- Railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Barnsley -- Town in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Baroness Burdett Coutts Drinking Fountain -- Drinking fountain in Victoria Park, London
Wikipedia - Bar One -- Popular chocolate bar manufactured by Nestle and sold in South Africa and India
Wikipedia - Baron Louth
Wikipedia - Barony (county division) -- Administrative division of a county in Scotland, Ireland and outlying parts of England
Wikipedia - Barra Airport -- Airport located on the island of Barra in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
Wikipedia - Barra Head -- Southernmost island of the Outer Hebrides in Scotland
Wikipedia - Barranbinya -- An Aboriginal Australian people of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Barratt House -- Historic home near Greenwood, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Barrelville, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Barrenjoey Head Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Barr Smith Library -- Academic library of the University of Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Barry C. Knestout -- Catholic bishop
Wikipedia - Barry Engelbrecht -- South African weightlifter
Wikipedia - Barry O'Farrell -- 43rd Premier of New South Wales and Minister for Western Sydney 2011-2014
Wikipedia - Barry Smith (organist) -- South African organist
Wikipedia - Barugh Green -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Barugh, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bascomville, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Based Down South -- 2010 film
Wikipedia - Bas Eickhout -- Dutch politician
Wikipedia - Baserri -- Traditional half-timbered or stone-built type of housebarn farmhouse found in the Basque Country in Northern Spain and Southwestern France
Wikipedia - Basick -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Basic Number Theory -- Book about number theory
Wikipedia - Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls
Wikipedia - Basilica of St. Lawrence outside the Walls
Wikipedia - Basil Malan -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Basil Schonland -- South African physicist
Wikipedia - Basil Yamey -- South African economist
Wikipedia - Basketmouth -- Nigerian Comedian
Wikipedia - Basra Sports City -- Sports complex in Basra, southern Iraq
Wikipedia - Bass Pro Shops -- American outdoor retailer
Wikipedia - Bastard Out of Carolina (film) -- 1996 film by Anjelica Huston
Wikipedia - Bas van 't Wout -- Dutch politician
Wikipedia - Batavia Stad Fashion Outlet -- Factory outlet center in the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Batch processing -- Execution of a series of jobs without manual intervention
Wikipedia - Batesville, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Bat hawk -- Species of raptor found in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia to New Guinea. It is named for its diet, which consists mainly of bats
Wikipedia - Bathurst, Eastern Cape -- Village in Eastern Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bathurst, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Batman: Gotham Knight -- Japanese animated superhero anthology film about Batman
Wikipedia - Bat Masterson -- American army scout, lawman, professional gambler, and journalist
Wikipedia - Baton Rouge, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Bat Out of Hell (song) -- 1979 single by Meat Loaf
Wikipedia - Batting average (cricket) -- Total number of runs that a player has scored divided by the number of times that player has been out
Wikipedia - Battle in Outer Space -- 1959 film
Wikipedia - Battle of Cassinga -- Controversial South African airborne attack on a SWAPO military base
Wikipedia - Battle of Daecheong -- Skirmish between the South Korean and North Korean navies
Wikipedia - Battle off the coast of Abkhazia -- Naval engagement during the 2008 South Ossetia War
Wikipedia - Battle of Leego (2015) -- Attack by al-Shabaab on an African Union base in southwestern Somalia
Wikipedia - Battle of Matewan -- 1920 shootout in Matewan, West Virginia
Wikipedia - Battle of Monmouth -- American Revolutionary War battle fought on June 28, 1778
Wikipedia - Battle of Musa Qala -- 2007 British-led military action in Helmand Province, southern Afghanistan
Wikipedia - Battle of Outpost Kelly -- Battle of the Korean War
Wikipedia - Battle of Palnadu -- 12th-century battle in Southern India
Wikipedia - Battle of Sanaa (2014) -- Battle between the Houthis and the Hadi-led government
Wikipedia - Battle of Sandfontein -- Battle fought between the Union of South Africa and the German Empire
Wikipedia - Battle of Sedgemoor -- Monmouth Rebellion battle, Somerset, UK, 1685
Wikipedia - Battle of Sio -- Breakout phase of the New Guinea Campaign of World War II
Wikipedia - Battle of Southern Buh
Wikipedia - Battle of South Mountain -- Battle of the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Battle of South Street -- 1934 violent confrontation in Worthing, England
Wikipedia - Battle of the Admin Box -- Battle on the Southern Front of the Burma Campaign during World War II
Wikipedia - Battle of the Berlin Outposts and Boulder City -- Battle of the Korean War
Wikipedia - Battle of the Southern Carpathians -- World War I battle
Wikipedia - Battle of Turnhout (1789) -- Battle during Brabant Revolution
Wikipedia - Battle of Ventersdorp -- Battle in Ventersdorp, South Africa
Wikipedia - Battle of Weymouth -- Battle during the First English Civil War
Wikipedia - Battles Without Honor and Humanity: Proxy War -- 1973 film by Kinji Fukasaku
Wikipedia - Battles Without Honor and Humanity -- Japanese yakuza film series
Wikipedia - Battle Without Honor or Humanity -- Song by Tomoyasu Hotei
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Wikipedia - Bauria -- Genus of therapsids from the Earlt Triassic of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Bavelile Hlongwa -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Baviaanskloof Mega Reserve -- Protected area in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa.
Wikipedia - B.A. -- South Korean boy band
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Wikipedia - Baxolile Nodada -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Baxter Theatre Centre -- Performing arts centre in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Baya weaver -- Species of bird found in southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Baymouth bar -- A depositional feature as a result of longshore drift, a sandbank that partially or completely closes access to a bay.
Wikipedia - Bay of Biscay -- Gulf of the northeast Atlantic Ocean located south of the Celtic Sea off the west coast of France and the north coast of Spain
Wikipedia - Bay of Campeche -- A bight in the southern area of the Gulf of Mexico
Wikipedia - Bay of Pigs Invasion -- Failed landing operation on the southwestern coast of Cuba, April 1961
Wikipedia - Bayou Metairie -- stranded distributary bayou in southeast Louisiana, with vestiges extant
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Wikipedia - Beak Jong-chul -- South Korean male curler and coach
Wikipedia - Bealey River -- River in South Island, New Zealand
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Wikipedia - Beasts of the Southern Wild -- 2012 film
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Wikipedia - Beaufort Group -- The third of the main subdivisions of the Karoo Supergroup in South Africa.
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Wikipedia - Beautiful Goodbye (Chen song) -- Song recorded by South Korean singer Chen
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Wikipedia - Begin A Game -- 2018 South Korean television show
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Wikipedia - Belgium at the Youth Olympics -- performance of Belgium at the Youth Olympic Games
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Wikipedia - Bengali-Assamese script -- A type of South Asian writing system
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Wikipedia - Benguela Current Commission -- Multi-sectoral inter-governmental, initiative of Angola, Namibia and South Africa
Wikipedia - Benguela Current -- The broad, northward flowing ocean current that forms the eastern portion of the South Atlantic Ocean gyre
Wikipedia - Benguela ecoregion -- Region of similar ecological characteristics on the continental shelf of the west coast of South Africa
Wikipedia - Benguela Muds Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area off the Western Cape province of South Africa
Wikipedia - Benjamin Franklin Jackson -- South Carolinian politician
Wikipedia - Benjamin Mouton (architect) -- French architect
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Wikipedia - Bentley Vass -- South African politician
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Wikipedia - Berenice Sinexve -- South African politician
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Wikipedia - Bermagui River -- river in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bermuda Scout Association -- A branch of The Scout Association of the United Kingdom in Bermuda
Wikipedia - Bernard M. Casper -- British South African rabbi
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Wikipedia - Bernstein-Kushnirenko theorem -- About the number of common complex zeros of Laurent polynomials
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Wikipedia - Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World
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Wikipedia - Bezout's theorem -- Number of intersection points of algebraic curves, and, more generally, hypersurfaces
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Wikipedia - Bhutan Scouts Association -- Scouting association in Bhutan
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Wikipedia - Bianca Buitendag -- South African professional surfer
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Wikipedia - Bible conspiracy theory -- Conspiracy theory that what is known about the Bible is a deception to suppress ancient truths
Wikipedia - Biblical inerrancy -- Belief that the Bible is without error
Wikipedia - Bibliography of Donald Trump -- List of books credited to or about Donald J. Trump
Wikipedia - Bibliography of Eleanor Roosevelt -- A bibliography of works by and about Eleanor Roosevelt.
Wikipedia - Bibliography of George Washington -- Selected list of works about George Washington
Wikipedia - Bibliography of Martin Van Buren -- A bibliography of books and journal articles about Martin Van Buren
Wikipedia - Bibliography of South America -- Wikipedia bibliography
Wikipedia - Bibliography of South Dakota history -- Wikipedia bibliography
Wikipedia - Bibliography of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands -- Wikipedia bibliography
Wikipedia - Bibliography of Stanislaw Lem -- List of works about Polish science fiction writer Stanislaw Lem
Wikipedia - Bibliography of Wikipedia -- List of books about Wikipedia
Wikipedia - Biblioteca de al-Andalus -- Spanish-language encyclopedia about Islamic Iberia.
Wikipedia - BibliOZ -- Online portal for locating and purchasing out of print, used, rare and collectible books
Wikipedia - Bice Oval -- Public park in South Australia
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Wikipedia - Bicolored wren -- Species of bird endemic to South America
Wikipedia - Bidar South (Vidhana Sabha constituency) -- Vidhana Sabha Seat
Wikipedia - Bids for the Youth Olympic Games -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Bienwald -- Forest in southwestern Germany
Wikipedia - Big Bad Voodoo Daddy -- Contemporary swing revival band from Southern California, US
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Wikipedia - Big Bang (band) -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - Big Bend Dam -- Dam on the Missouri River in South Dakota, US
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Wikipedia - Big Brother (South African TV series) -- Television series in South Africa produced by Endemol
Wikipedia - Big Day Out lineups by year -- Big Day out
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Wikipedia - Big Hit Entertainment -- South Korean entertainment company
Wikipedia - Big Issue (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Big Joe Turner -- American blues shouter
Wikipedia - Big Mama (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Big Maria Mountains -- Mountain range in southern California near the Colorado River
Wikipedia - Big Mouth Billy Bass -- Animatronic singing prop
Wikipedia - Big Mouth (Nikki Yanofsky song) -- 2018 song by Nikki Yanofsky
Wikipedia - Bigmouth Strikes Again
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Wikipedia - Big Muddy Ranch Airport -- Private airport located 13 miles southeast of Antelope in Wasco County, Oregon, USA
Wikipedia - Big Nate: Flips Out -- book by Lincoln Peirce
Wikipedia - Big Picture (web series) -- South Korea Web Television
Wikipedia - Big River (California) -- River in Mendocino County, California (USA), south of Mendocino Village
Wikipedia - Big River Way -- Road in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Big South Conference -- College athletic conference in southeastern USA
Wikipedia - Big South Fork National River and Recreation Area -- Protected area in central northeast Tennessee and southeastern Kentucky, United States
Wikipedia - Big Thing (TV series) -- 2010 South Korean television drama series
Wikipedia - Big Woods -- Type of temperate hardwood forest ecoregion found in western Wisconsin and south-central Minnesota, US
Wikipedia - Bila Kayf -- Without asking how
Wikipedia - Bilambil Heights -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bilambil, New South Wales -- Suburb of Tweed Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bildungsroman -- Literary genre that focuses on the psychological and moral growth of the protagonist from youth to adulthood (coming of age)
Wikipedia - Bill Ainslie -- South African artist, teacher and activist
Wikipedia - Billboard K-Town -- Online magazine column about K-pop
Wikipedia - Bill Downing -- American Wild West outlaw
Wikipedia - Billie Jean, Look at Me -- 2006-2007 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Billingley -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Billinudgel, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bill Longley (gunfighter) -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Bill of Rights 1689 -- United Kingdom legislation which sets out certain basic civil rights and clarifies who would be next to inherit the Crown
Wikipedia - Bill Rapson -- (1912-1999) New Zealand born organic chemist who worked in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bill Taylor (South Carolina politician) -- American Politician from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Billy Butlin -- British, South Africa-born entrepreneur
Wikipedia - Billy Downer -- South African prosecutor
Wikipedia - Billy Gallagher (chef) -- South African chef and businessman
Wikipedia - Billy Graham Evangelistic Association -- Christian outreach organization
Wikipedia - Billy the Kid Outlawed -- 1940 American Western film directed by Sam Newfield
Wikipedia - Billy the Kid -- American cattle rustler, gambler, horse thief, outlaw, cowboy and ranch hand
Wikipedia - Billy Walkabout -- United States Army soldier
Wikipedia - Biltong -- A form of dried, cured meat that originated in South Africa
Wikipedia - BiM-CM-*n HM-CM-2a Province -- Historic province of South Vietnam
Wikipedia - Bingham Park and Whiteley Woods -- Park and woods in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Binta Lake Fire -- Binta Lake Fire was a lightning-caused wildfire in Southeast of Burns Lake, British Columbia in 2010
Wikipedia - Binturong -- Species of mammal in the family Viverridae, native to South and Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Binx -- South African singer and musician
Wikipedia - Biodiversity of Djibouti -- The variety of life within Djibouti and its exclusive economic zone
Wikipedia - Biodiversity of South Africa -- The variety of life within South Africa and its exclusive economic zone
Wikipedia - Bioethics -- Study of ethics brought about by advances in biology and medicine
Wikipedia - Bioswale -- Landscape elements designed to remove debris and pollution out of surface runoff water
Wikipedia - Biotechnology High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Bipolar outflow -- Two continuous flows of gas from the poles of a star
Wikipedia - Biquadratic function -- Polynomial function of degree 4 without term of odd degree
Wikipedia - B.I (rapper) -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Birch and Swinnerton-Dyer conjecture -- Clay problem about the set of rational solutions to equations defining an elliptic curve
Wikipedia - Birch's theorem -- A statement about the representability of zero by odd degree forms
Wikipedia - Bird (1988 film) -- 1988 American biographical film about Charlie Parker directed by Clint Eastwood
Wikipedia - Birdie Kim -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Bird Island Nature Reserve (South Africa) -- Protected area in Lambert's Bay, South Africa
Wikipedia - BirdLife South Africa -- South African ornithological conservation organization
Wikipedia - Birds Canada -- Organization in Southern Ontario, Canada
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Wikipedia - Birds Without Names -- 2017 film
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Wikipedia - Birley -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Birrbay -- Indigenous Australian people of New South Wales
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Wikipedia - Bishop of Plymouth (Anglican) -- Episcopal title used in the Church of England Diocese of Exeter
Wikipedia - Bishop of Portsmouth (Catholic) -- Ordinary of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth
Wikipedia - Bishop of Taunton -- List of links to articles about suffragan bishops of Bath and Wells
Wikipedia - Bishopscourt, Cape Town -- A residential Southern Suburb of Cape Town
Wikipedia - Bisht (clothing) -- Outer cloak
Wikipedia - Bishuo language -- Moribund Southern Bantoid language of Cameroon
Wikipedia - Bismarck Sea -- Marginal sea in the southwestern Pacific Ocean northeast of the island of New Guinea and south of the Bismarck Archipelago and the Admiralty Islands
Wikipedia - Bissinger Wool Pullery -- Wool pullery in Troutdale, Oregon
Wikipedia - Bithumb -- Bitcoin exchange based in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bits and Bytes -- Canadian educational TV series about computers
Wikipedia - Bittereinder (band) -- South African Rap band
Wikipedia - Bitton -- Village in [[South Gloucestershire]], England
Wikipedia - Bizniz -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bjorkborn Manor -- Museum about Alfred Nobel in Karlskoga, Sweden
Wikipedia - BKK theorem -- About the number of common complex zeros of Laurent polynomials
Wikipedia - Blaauwberg Conservation Area -- Nature reserve in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Blabbermouth.net -- Website dedicated to heavy metal and hard rock news
Wikipedia - Black Bart (outlaw) -- English-born American outlaw
Wikipedia - Black Beat -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - Blackbirding -- Coerced labour, mainly in the south-east Pacific area
Wikipedia - Black box (phreaking) -- Electronic device used to illegally receive long-distance telephone calls without charge to the caller
Wikipedia - Black box -- system where only the inputs and outputs can be viewed, and not its implementation
Wikipedia - Black Christmas bushfires -- Series of fires in 2001-2002 in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Black Coffee (DJ) -- South African DJ and record producer
Wikipedia - Black Dog: Being A Teacher -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Black Economic Empowerment -- South-African government policy
Wikipedia - Black Eyed Pilseung -- South Korean producer duo
Wikipedia - Black-faced antthrush -- Species of bird found in Central America and northern South America
Wikipedia - Blackfoot diatreme -- Diatreme in southeastern British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Black-footed cat -- Small wild cat native to Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Black Forest house -- Type of house found in southwestern Germany
Wikipedia - Black Forest Railway (Baden) -- Railway line in southern Germany from Offenburg to Singen
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Wikipedia - Black Hills State Yellow Jackets -- Athletic teams representing Black Hills State University in South Dakota, USA
Wikipedia - Black Hills -- Mountain range in South Dakota and Wyoming
Wikipedia - Black hole (networking) -- Places in a network where incoming traffic is silently discarded without informing the source
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Wikipedia - Black Kettle -- Leader of the Southern Cheyenne
Wikipedia - Blackletter -- Old script typeface used throughout Western Europe
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Wikipedia - Blackout (1950 film) -- 1950 film by Robert S. Baker
Wikipedia - Black Out (1970 film) -- 1970 film
Wikipedia - Blackout (1986 film) -- 1986 film
Wikipedia - Blackout (2010 film) -- 2010 German film
Wikipedia - Black Out (2012 film) -- 2012 film by Arne Toonen
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Wikipedia - Blackout (broadcasting) -- Non-airing of programming (typically sports-related) in a certain media market
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Wikipedia - Blackout (David Bowie song) -- Song by David Bowie
Wikipedia - Blackout Day -- Digital social campaign occurring on a seasonal basis
Wikipedia - Blackout (Marcus Daniels) -- Name of two supervillains in Marvel Comics
Wikipedia - Black Out p.s. Red Out -- 1998 film
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Wikipedia - Black Reel Award for Outstanding Documentary -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Black River (Cape Town) -- River in Western Cape province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Blackrock, County Louth
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Wikipedia - Black (TV series) -- 2017 South Korean TV series
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Wikipedia - Blowhole (geology) -- Hole at the top of a sea-cave which allows waves to force water or spray out of the hole
Wikipedia - Blowout (book) -- 2019 non-fiction book by Rachel Maddow
Wikipedia - Blowout (geomorphology) -- Depressions in a sand dune ecosystem caused by the removal of sediments by wind
Wikipedia - Blowout (well drilling) -- Uncontrolled release of crude oil and/or natural gas from a well
Wikipedia - Blow Out -- 1981 film by Brian De Palma
Wikipedia - Blow the Wind Southerly -- Traditional song
Wikipedia - Blow Up the Outside World -- Song by Soundgarden
Wikipedia - Bluebell, Dublin -- Southside locality or small suburb, Dublin city, Ireland
Wikipedia - Blue Bell, South Dakota -- Unincorporated community in Custer County, South Dakota, US
Wikipedia - Bluebuck -- Extinct species of South African antelope
Wikipedia - Blue crane -- Species of large bird from southern Africa also known as Stanley crane and paradise crane
Wikipedia - Blue Dragon Film Award for Best Leading Actor -- Annual film award in South Korea
Wikipedia - Blue-faced honeyeater -- A passerine bird of the family Meliphagidae from northern and eastern Australia, and southern New Guinea.
Wikipedia - Blue House raid -- 1968 North Korean assassination attempt on South Korean President Park Chung-hee
Wikipedia - Blue House -- South Korean presidential residence
Wikipedia - Blue skies research -- Curiosity-driven scientific research, without a clear practical goal
Wikipedia - Bluestone, Pembrokeshire -- Holiday park in Pembrokeshire, southwest Wales
Wikipedia - Blue Train (South Africa) -- Luxury train in South Africa
Wikipedia - Blue-water diving -- Underwater diving in mid-water where the bottom is not visible and is out of diving range
Wikipedia - Blum's speedup theorem -- Rules out assigning to arbitrary functions their computational complexity
Wikipedia - Blyde River Canyon -- Large canyon in South Africa
Wikipedia - Blyth's frogmouth -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - BM-CM-,nh Tuy Province -- Historic province of South Vietnam
Wikipedia - BMW South Africa -- Automobile manufacturer based in Rosslyn, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bnei Akiva -- Largest religious Zionist youth movement in the world
Wikipedia - Boasting -- To speak with excessive pride and satisfaction about oneself
Wikipedia - BoA -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bobadah -- Village in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bobby Byrd -- American R&B/soul singer, songwriter, bandleader, talent scout, record producer, and musician
Wikipedia - Bobby Kim -- South Korean rapper and singer
Wikipedia - Bobby Locke -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Bobby (rapper) -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Bobby Southworth -- American mixed martial arts fighter
Wikipedia - Bobby Stevenson -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Bob Carr -- Former Premier of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Bob Dalton -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Bob Dylan bibliography -- List of books published by and about Bob Dylan
Wikipedia - Bob Girls -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Bob Glanzer -- American politician from South Dakota
Wikipedia - Bob Graham (New South Wales politician) -- Australian politician
Wikipedia - Bob Jones University -- Private evangelical university in Greenville, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Bobotie -- South African dish (food)
Wikipedia - Bo Bryan -- Southern writer, novelist
Wikipedia - B.O.B (song) -- 2000 song by OutKast
Wikipedia - Bob Standing -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Bob Stout -- American gymnast
Wikipedia - Bob Younger -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Bodden -- Brackish bodies of water often forming lagoons, along the southwestern shores of the Baltic Sea
Wikipedia - Bodo League massacre -- 1950 anti-communist massacre in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bodyguard (South Korean TV series) -- 2003 Korean television series
Wikipedia - Body without organs -- Concept in Deleuzian philosophy
Wikipedia - Body Without Soul -- 1996 film by Wiktor Grodecki
Wikipedia - Boeing Dreamlifter -- Outsize cargo conversion of the 747-400
Wikipedia - Boerestaat Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Boer Republics -- Former countries in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Boesmansgat -- Sinkhole and dive site in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bogangar -- Town on Tweed Coast, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bogart Man -- South African men's fashion brand
Wikipedia - Bohang Moeko -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Bohemian Rhapsody (film) -- 2018 biopic about Freddie Mercury
Wikipedia - Boi B -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Boitumelo Babuseng -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Boitumelo Moiloa -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Boity Thulo -- South African actress and rapper
Wikipedia - Bokeh -- Aesthetic quality of blur in the out-of-focus parts of an image
Wikipedia - Bokkeveld Group -- Devonian sedimentary rocks in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bokomo -- Breakfast cereal company in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bokoni -- Pre-colonial, agro-pastoral society in South Africa
Wikipedia - Boland Granite Fynbos -- Vegetation type endemic to the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bolaven Plateau -- Elevated region in southern Laos
Wikipedia - Bolbbalgan4 -- South Korean band
Wikipedia - Boletus aereus -- Edible species of fungus in the family Boletaceae found in Central and Southern Europe and North Africa
Wikipedia - Bolivia -- Landlocked country in South America
Wikipedia - Bollons Seamount -- A continental fragment seamount southeast of New Zealand
Wikipedia - Boll weevil (politics) -- American political term used in the mid- and late-20th century to describe conservative Southern Democrats
Wikipedia - Bolsheviks Party of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Bolsover South railway station -- Former railway station in Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Bolsterstone -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bolton upon Dearne -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Bolus Herbarium -- South African herbarium in Cape Town
Wikipedia - Bombardment of Yeonpyeong -- Artillery engagement between the North Korean military and South Korean forces
Wikipedia - Bombing of Chongqing -- Strategic air raids against the southwestern Chinese city of Chongqing by Imperial Japanese forces
Wikipedia - Bombing of the Bezuidenhout -- Aerial bombing operation during World War II
Wikipedia - Bombycomorpha bifascia -- Species of moth found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Bomi, Sierra Leone -- town in Southern Province, Sierra Leone
Wikipedia - Bom Kim -- South Korean businessman
Wikipedia - Bona (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bonchon Chicken -- South Korean fried chicken restaurant franchise
Wikipedia - Bond markets in East Asia and South East Asia
Wikipedia - Bongani Baloyi -- South African mayor (b. 1987)
Wikipedia - Bongani Mayosi -- South African researcher
Wikipedia - Bongeziwe Mabandla -- South African musician
Wikipedia - Bongiwe Mbinqo-Gigaba -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Bong Joon-ho -- South Korean film director and screenwriter
Wikipedia - Bongo Mbutuma -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Bongsan Art Fair -- Art fair held in Daegu, South Korea
Wikipedia - Bong Tae-gyu -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Bonnie Mbuli -- South African actress and radio presenter
Wikipedia - Bonnington Square -- Square in Vauxhall, south London, built in 1870s, squatted in 1980s
Wikipedia - Bonsallo Avenue -- Street in South Los Angeles, California, US
Wikipedia - Bontebok National Park -- National park near Swellendam in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bontle Modiselle -- South African actress and TV personality
Wikipedia - Boogie rock -- Music genre which came out of the hard heavy blues rock of the late 1960s
Wikipedia - Boohwal -- South Korean rock band
Wikipedia - Book design -- Styling, formatting and designing the layout of a book's contents
Wikipedia - Booked Out -- 2012 film
Wikipedia - Booking (clubbing) -- Common practice in South Korean night clubs of forced socialization
Wikipedia - Bookman, South Carolina -- Former settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Bookouture -- British digital publishing company.
Wikipedia - Books about New York City -- Overview of some of the most notable books about New York City, New York, United States
Wikipedia - Boom Boom Boom -- 1995 single by The Outhere Brothers
Wikipedia - Boom (entertainer) -- South Korean rapper, singer, actor, radio host, and television presenter
Wikipedia - Boom Shaka -- South African Kwaito Music Group
Wikipedia - Boo Seung-kwan -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Boosmansbos Wilderness Area -- Wilderness area in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Boo Soon-hee -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Boost ETP -- British independent boutique Exchange Traded Products provider
Wikipedia - Boot camp (correctional) -- Correctional facility for youth criminals
Wikipedia - Boot Rock -- Rock formation in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Bootstrapping -- A self-starting process that is supposed to proceed without external input
Wikipedia - Bophuthatswana -- Former bantustan in South Africa
Wikipedia - Borana calendar -- Calendar supposed to be used by Borena people who live in southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya
Wikipedia - Bordeaux, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Border Cave -- Rock shelter in South Africa
Wikipedia - Border, Eastern Cape -- Region of Eastern Cape province in South Africa
Wikipedia - Border Gateway Protocol -- Protocol for communicating routing information on the Internet
Wikipedia - Border Route Trail -- Long-distance hiking trail in the United States
Wikipedia - Boredom -- Experienced when an individual is left without anything to do
Wikipedia - Borehamwood -- Town in southern Hertfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Boreout
Wikipedia - Bore (South Georgia) -- Bay of the South Atlantic Ocean on the coast of South Georgia
Wikipedia - Boris Without Beatrice -- 2016 film
Wikipedia - Bor massacre -- Massacre of an estimated 2,000 civilians in Bor, South Sudan
Wikipedia - Born Again (TV series) -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Borneo campaign -- Last major Allied campaign in the South West Pacific Area during World War II
Wikipedia - Borneo -- Island in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Borno Youth Movement -- Defunct political party in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Boro, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Borough Market -- Food market in Southwark, Central London, England
Wikipedia - Borstal -- Type of youth detention centre
Wikipedia - Bose: Dead/Alive -- Indian historical drama web television miniseries about Subhas Chandra Bose
Wikipedia - Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Youth Olympics -- performance of Bosnia and Herzegovina at the Youth Olympic Games
Wikipedia - Bosniaks -- South Slavic ethnic group
Wikipedia - Bosnian language -- South Slavic language
Wikipedia - Boss Hogg Outlawz -- Hip hop duo
Wikipedia - Boss in the Mirror -- South Korean variety show
Wikipedia - Boston Alliance of Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Youth -- A non-profit organization located in Boston that works to protect, expand, and raise awareness for the rights of gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender, queer, and questioning youth (LGBTQ+)
Wikipedia - Bo-taoshi -- Japanese outdoor team sport
Wikipedia - Bothnian Sea -- Southern part of the Gulf of Bothnia
Wikipedia - Botopass -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Botswana -- Country in Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Bottema's theorem -- Theorem about the midpoint of a line connecting squares on two sides of a triangle
Wikipedia - Bottesford South railway station -- Former railway station In Nottinghamshire, England
Wikipedia - Bottom crawler -- An underwater exploration and recovery vehicle that moves about on the bottom with wheels or tracks
Wikipedia - Bouchra Jarrar -- French haute couture fashion designer
Wikipedia - Boulders Beach -- Beach in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bounce Out with That -- Song
Wikipedia - Bourchier Cove -- Cove in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica
Wikipedia - Bourne Free -- Annual LGBT event in Bournemouth, England
Wikipedia - Bournemouth and Poole College -- Educational provider in Bournemouth and Pool
Wikipedia - Bournemouth University
Wikipedia - Bourne Wood -- Area of predominantly coniferous woodland just south of Farnham, Surrey, England
Wikipedia - Boutaiba Sghir -- Algerian singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Boutaoshi! -- 2003 film directed by Tetsu Maeda
Wikipedia - Bouteloua chondrosioides -- Perennial bunchgrass native to North America
Wikipedia - Bouteloua eludens -- Perennial grass native to North America
Wikipedia - Bouteloua parryi -- Perennial grass native to North America
Wikipedia - Bouteloua radicosa -- Grama grass native to the American Southwest and Mexico
Wikipedia - Bouteloua repens -- Perennial grass native to North America
Wikipedia - Bouteloua simplex -- Perennial grass native to North America
Wikipedia - Boutenac -- Commune in Occitanie, France
Wikipedia - Boutervilliers -- Commune in M-CM-^Nle-de-France, France
Wikipedia - Boutheina Jabnoun Marai -- Tunisian journalist
Wikipedia - Boutigny-sur-Essonne -- Commune in M-CM-^Nle-de-France, France
Wikipedia - Boutique Air -- American commuter airline in California
Wikipedia - Boutique hotel -- Small, upscale hotel
Wikipedia - Boutokaan Kiribati Moa Party -- Kirbati political party
Wikipedia - Bout One -- Military operation
Wikipedia - Boutonniere -- Small floral arrangement worn on the lapel
Wikipedia - Bouton (synapse)
Wikipedia - Boutros Boutros-Ghali -- 6th Secretary-General of the United Nations
Wikipedia - Boutros Ghali -- Egyptian politician and prime minister (1846-1910)
Wikipedia - Boutros Harb -- Lebanese politician
Wikipedia - Boutros Salim AbouNader -- Lebanese civil aviation pilot
Wikipedia - Boutwell Memorial Auditorium -- Multi-purpose arena in Alabama, United States
Wikipedia - Bouvet Triple Junction -- Meeting point of the boundaries of the South American Plate, the African Plate, and the Antarctic Plate
Wikipedia - Bowden development -- South Australian urban development
Wikipedia - Bowers Ridge -- A currently seismically inactive ridge in the southern part of the Aleutian Basin
Wikipedia - Boxing at the 1977 Southeast Asian Games -- List of medalists at sporting event
Wikipedia - Boyar (caste) -- South Indian caste
Wikipedia - Boyfriend (band) -- South Korean boy group
Wikipedia - Boyfriend discography -- Discography of South Korean boy group Boyfriend
Wikipedia - Boy Mamabolo -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Boys24 -- South Korean boy group
Wikipedia - Boys' Brigade -- International interdenominational Christian youth organisation
Wikipedia - Boy Scouts of America -- Scouting organization in the United States
Wikipedia - Boy Scout
Wikipedia - Boys' Night Out (film) -- 1962 film
Wikipedia - Brabant Center for Music Traditions -- Museum and music center in Kempenhout, Belgium
Wikipedia - Brabejum -- Monotypic genus of trees in the family Proteaceae from the Western Cape of South Africa
Wikipedia - Brackenfell -- Town in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bracken Nature Reserve -- Protected land in Brackenfell in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Brad Binder -- South African motorcycle racer
Wikipedia - Brad Hazzard -- New South Wales politician
Wikipedia - Brad Leone -- American chef and YouTube personality
Wikipedia - Bradley Beach, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Bradleys Head Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bradley Singh -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Brady Haran -- educational YouTuber and podcaster
Wikipedia - Braeden Cloutier -- American soccer coach and former player
Wikipedia - Brahmi script -- Ancient script of Central and South Asia
Wikipedia - Brahui language -- Dravidian language of southern Pakistan and Afghanistan
Wikipedia - BrainCraft -- YouTube educational video series
Wikipedia - Brain-fficial -- South Korean web television program on History Korea
Wikipedia - Bramley, Rotherham -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - BranchOut
Wikipedia - Brandenkopf -- Mountain in southern Germany
Wikipedia - Brand of the Outlaws -- 1936 film
Wikipedia - Brandon Auret -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Brandon Rogers (YouTuber) -- American sketch comedian, actor, and writer
Wikipedia - Brandon Routh -- American actor
Wikipedia - Brandon Stone -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Brandy videography -- Videography about Brandy Norwood
Wikipedia - Bran -- Hard outer layers of cereal grain
Wikipedia - Brat (digital network) -- YouTube network
Wikipedia - Brave Girls -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Bravo My Life (TV series) -- 2017 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Brawlout -- 2017 fighting video game
Wikipedia - Bray Park, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Brazil Current -- A warm current that flows south along the Brazilian south coast to the mouth of the Rio de la Plata
Wikipedia - Brazilian cruiser Bahia -- Brazilian Scout cruiser
Wikipedia - Brazil -- Largest country in South America
Wikipedia - Breadboard -- Board with embedded spring clips that allows for electronics to be wired without soldering
Wikipedia - Bread bowl -- A round loaf of bread which has had a large portion of the middle cut out to create an edible bowl
Wikipedia - Bread, Love and Dreams (TV series) -- 2010 South Korean drama television series
Wikipedia - BreadTube -- Pseudo-group of left-wing YouTubers
Wikipedia - Breakout (1959 film) -- 1959 film
Wikipedia - Breakout (1975 film) -- 1975 film
Wikipedia - Breakout Brothers -- 2020 Hong Kong action film
Wikipedia - Breakout (Foo Fighters song) -- 2000 single by Foo Fighters
Wikipedia - Breakout Kings -- American drama television series
Wikipedia - Breakout (Miley Cyrus album) -- 2008 studio album by Miley Cyrus
Wikipedia - Breakout (Swing Out Sister song) -- 1986 single by Swing Out Sister
Wikipedia - Breakout (video game) -- 1976 Atari arcade game
Wikipedia - Breakwater Lodge -- Building in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Breasclete -- Village in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland
Wikipedia - Breathing -- Process of moving air into and out of the lungs
Wikipedia - Brecks -- Suburb of Rotherham in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Breedekloof -- Wine district in South Africa
Wikipedia - Breeden, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Breede River Valley -- River valley region in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Brenda Fassie -- South African pop singer
Wikipedia - Brenda Mathevula -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Brenda Wingfield -- South African Professor of genetics
Wikipedia - Brenden Pappas -- South African golfer
Wikipedia - Brendon Daniels (actor) -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Brett Cloutman -- Recipient of the Victoria Cross
Wikipedia - Brett Herron (politician) -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Brett Kebble -- South African businessman
Wikipedia - Brett Murray -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Brevet (military) -- The granting of a higher military rank title as a reward for service without granting actual rank
Wikipedia - Brewster SB2A Buccaneer -- Allied WWII monoplane scout/bomber aircraft
Wikipedia - BriaAndChrissy -- American YouTubers
Wikipedia - Brian Astbury -- South African theatre director
Wikipedia - Brian Connell (author) -- South African author
Wikipedia - Brian Currin -- South African lawyer
Wikipedia - Brian Dixon (bowls) -- South African international lawn bowler
Wikipedia - Brian Huntley -- South African conservation scientist (born 1944)
Wikipedia - Brian Jerling -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Brian Joo -- South Korean musician
Wikipedia - Brian van Mentz -- South African World War II flying ace
Wikipedia - BRICS -- Association of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa
Wikipedia - Bridal Mask -- 2012 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Bridelia micrantha -- Species of tree from tropical and southern Africa
Wikipedia - Bridge router -- Networking device that works as a bridge and as a router
Wikipedia - Bridget Allchin -- English archaeologist, specializing in South Asian archaeology
Wikipedia - Bridget Masango -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Bridgewater Triangle -- An area in southeastern Massachusetts claimed to be the site of paranormal phenomena
Wikipedia - Bridgitte Hartley -- South African canoeist
Wikipedia - Brielle, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - BrightBus -- Bus operator in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brightline West -- Proposed privately run high-speed rail route between Las Vegas and Southern California.
Wikipedia - Brightline -- Privately run inter-city rail route between Miami and West Palm Beach, Florida.
Wikipedia - Brighton Ngoma -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Brighton -- Seaside resort on the south coast of England
Wikipedia - Brigitte Bout -- French politician
Wikipedia - Bringing Out the Dead -- 1999 film directed by Martin Scorsese
Wikipedia - Bring the Soul: The Movie -- 2019 South Korean film
Wikipedia - Brinsworth -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - British Bryological Society -- British learned society about mosses, liverworts and hornworts
Wikipedia - British Indian Ocean Territory -- British overseas territory in South Asia
Wikipedia - British Oceanographic Data Centre -- A national facility for conserving and distributing data about the marine environment
Wikipedia - British re-armament -- Military rearmament carried out in the United Kingdom between 1934 and 1939
Wikipedia - British South Africa Company -- Former mining and colonial enterprises company
Wikipedia - Brittas, County Dublin -- Rural village in South Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Britt Dekker -- Dutch television presenter and youtuber
Wikipedia - Brittleness -- Liability of breakage from stress without significant plastic deformation
Wikipedia - Brixton -- District in the London Borough of Lambeth in south London
Wikipedia - BRLLNT -- South Korean DJ and producer
Wikipedia - Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment -- South African government policy
Wikipedia - Broad Fourteens -- An area of the southern North Sea
Wikipedia - Broad River (Carolinas) -- River in North and South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Broad-snouted catfish -- Species of catfish
Wikipedia - Broad Street (Charleston, South Carolina) -- Street in Charleston, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Brockley Whins Metro station -- Tyne and Wear Metro station in South Tyneside
Wikipedia - Broken Wings (ballet) -- Ballet about Frida Kahlo
Wikipedia - Bronchiole -- Passageways by which air passes through the nose or mouth to the alveoli of the lungs
Wikipedia - Bronze laver -- Jewish ritual object outside the Tabernacle
Wikipedia - Brooke Raboutou -- American rock climber
Wikipedia - Brookhouse, South Yorkshire -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brooklyn and Bailey McKnight -- YouTubers, musicians, and entrepreneurs.
Wikipedia - Brooklyn Mall -- Shopping mall in South Africa
Wikipedia - Brooklyn Park, South Australia
Wikipedia - Broomhead Hall -- Stately home in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Broomhill and Sharrow Vale -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Broom, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Brotherhood (2019 film) -- a 2019 survival film about an actual 1926 boating tragedy
Wikipedia - Brotherhood of Steel -- Fictional technology-worshiping organization in the post-apocalyptic Fallout video game franchise
Wikipedia - Brothers Gonna Work It Out -- 1998 DJ mix album by The Chemical Brothers
Wikipedia - Brothers Rocks -- Rock formation in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Brown Dog affair -- English political controversy about vivisection
Wikipedia - Brown Earth Presbyterian Church -- Historic building in South Dakota, US
Wikipedia - Brown Eyed Girls -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Brownies (Scouting) -- Section of the Girl Guides for younger girls
Wikipedia - Brown Lindiwe Mkhize -- South African musician and actress
Wikipedia - Brownout (band) -- American latin-funk band
Wikipedia - Brownout (electricity) -- Drop in voltage in an electrical power supply system
Wikipedia - Browns Bank Complex Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area south of the Western Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Browns Bank Corals Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area on the continental slope of South Africa
Wikipedia - Brownsea Island Scout camp -- Precursor to the Boy Scout organisation
Wikipedia - Browns Mountain -- A small submarine mountain in the south-western Pacific Ocean off the coast of New South Wales, Australia, east of Sydney.
Wikipedia - Brown trout -- Species of fish
Wikipedia - Bruce Keyter -- South African golfer
Wikipedia - Bruce Savage (sailor) -- Olympic sailor from South Africa
Wikipedia - Brukunga -- small town in the Adelaide Hills, South Australia
Wikipedia - Bruniaceae -- Family of flowering plants comprising South African heath-like shrubs
Wikipedia - Bruno Clerbout -- Belgian triathlete
Wikipedia - Brunswick Heads, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Brush Creek (South Moreau Creek tributary) -- Stream in Missouri, U.S.
Wikipedia - Brussels sprout -- Vegetable
Wikipedia - Bruxie -- Southern California-based fast casual restaurant
Wikipedia - Bryan Dechart -- American actor, Twitch streamer and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Bryan Schouten -- Dutch motorcycle racer
Wikipedia - BryanStars -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Bryce Courtenay -- South African-Australian novelist
Wikipedia - Bryce Easton -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - BtoB (band) -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - BtoB discography -- Discography of South Korean boy band BtoB
Wikipedia - BTS albums discography -- Discography of South Korean boy band BTS
Wikipedia - BTS singles discography -- Discography of South Korean boy band BTS
Wikipedia - BTS -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Buccaneer Field -- Multi-purpose stadium in North Charleston, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Bucie -- South African R&B and house singer
Wikipedia - Buck buck -- Outdoor children's game
Wikipedia - Buckminster Fuller: Thinking Out Loud
Wikipedia - Bucolion stygius -- South American cockroach
Wikipedia - Budae-jjigae -- South Korean sausage stew
Wikipedia - Buddhism in Myanmar -- Overview about the Buddhism in Myanmar
Wikipedia - Buddhism in Thailand -- Overview about the Buddhism in Thailand
Wikipedia - Buddhist crisis -- 1963 political and religious tension in South Vietnam
Wikipedia - Buddhist mummies -- Bodies of Buddhist monks and nuns that remain incorrupt, without any traces of deliberate mummification by another party
Wikipedia - Buddy breathing -- Technique for sharing breathing gas from a single mouthpiece
Wikipedia - Budgeted cost of work performed -- Budgeted cost of work that has actually been performed in carrying out a scheduled task during a specific time period
Wikipedia - Budi Lake -- Lake in southern Chile
Wikipedia - Buekorps -- Youth organization
Wikipedia - Buffalo Gals, Won't You Come Out Tonight
Wikipedia - Buffalo Gap National Grassland -- In southwestern South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Buffalo River (Eastern Cape) -- River in South Africa
Wikipedia - Buffelsfontein uranium mine -- Uranium mine in South Africa
Wikipedia - Buffelskloof Formation -- Geological formation in the Uitenhage Group of the Algoa Basin in South Africa
Wikipedia - Buheung-dong, Anyang -- Neighborhood of Anyang, South Korea
Wikipedia - Buhturids -- Clan whose chiefs served as the emirs of the Gharb area southeast of Beirut (12th-15th centuries)
Wikipedia - Build a better mousetrap, and the world will beat a path to your door -- Phrase about innovation
Wikipedia - Buka cloak -- Noongar South West Australian indigenous language word describing usually kangaroo skin cloak worn draped over one shoulder
Wikipedia - Bukbu Library -- Library in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bulbophyllum abbrevilabium -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Bulbophyllum aberrans -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Bulbophyllum acuminatum -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia known as the tapering flower bulbophyllum
Wikipedia - Bulbophyllum auricomum -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Bulbophyllum biflorum -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Bulgarian language -- South Slavic language
Wikipedia - Bulgaria -- Country in Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Bullock family -- Family name from Southern England
Wikipedia - Bumzu -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Bundang -- Urban area in Seongnam, South Korea
Wikipedia - Bundarra-Barraba Important Bird Area -- Important Bird Area in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Bund der Deutschen Katholischen Jugend -- German youth organization
Wikipedia - Bundesjugendorchester -- German national youth orchestra
Wikipedia - Bunhwangsa -- Buddhist temple in South Korea
Wikipedia - Bunjevci -- South Slavic ethnic group
Wikipedia - Bunny chow -- South African dish consisting of a hollowed-out loaf of white bread filled with curry
Wikipedia - Bunny Meyer -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Burgan field -- Oil field in the desert of southeastern Kuwait
Wikipedia - Burger Lambrechts -- South African shot putter
Wikipedia - Burgh Island -- A tidal island on the coast of South Devon in England
Wikipedia - Burghwallis -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Burma campaign -- Series of battles fought in the British colony of Burma, South-East Asian theatre of World War II
Wikipedia - Burma Plate -- A minor tectonic plate in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Burngreave (ward) -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Burning Mountain -- Common name for Mount Wingen, a hill near Wingen, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Burning mouth syndrome -- Human disease
Wikipedia - Burning of Southwark -- Battle in England in 1066
Wikipedia - Burning Sun scandal -- South Korean entertainment and sex scandal
Wikipedia - Burnout (film) -- 2017 film
Wikipedia - Burn Out (film) -- 2017 film directed by Yann Gozlan
Wikipedia - Burnout Paradise -- 2008 racing video game
Wikipedia - Burnout (psychology)
Wikipedia - Burnout (series) -- Video game series
Wikipedia - Burnout (vehicle) -- Practice of spinning wheels while keeping vehicle stationary
Wikipedia - Burnout (video game) -- Crash-oriented racing video game released in 2001
Wikipedia - Burn the Stage: The Movie -- 2018 South Korean film
Wikipedia - Burping -- Release of gas from the upper digestive tract through the mouth
Wikipedia - Burra, South Australia
Wikipedia - Burrewarra Point Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Burringbar, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Burrow Island -- A tidal island in Gosport overlooking Portsmouth
Wikipedia - Burry Stander -- South African mountain biker
Wikipedia - Burst of Youth for the Nation -- Political party in Mauritania
Wikipedia - Burt Alvord -- Lawman and later outlaw of the American Old West
Wikipedia - Burt Lake burn-out
Wikipedia - Buru language (Nigeria) -- Southern Bantoid language of Nigeria
Wikipedia - Busan Bank -- South Korean bank
Wikipedia - Busan Biennale -- South Korean biannual art show
Wikipedia - Busan-Gimhae Light Rail Transit -- Light metro system in South Korea
Wikipedia - Busan International Film Festival -- Annual film festival held in Busan, South Korea
Wikipedia - Busan Metro -- The subway system of Busan, South Korea
Wikipedia - Busan Subway fire -- 2014 disaster in South Korea
Wikipedia - Busan -- Metropolitan City in Yeongnam, South Korea
Wikipedia - Busardi -- Thai semi-couture fashion brand
Wikipedia - Buseoksa -- Buddhist temple in South Korea
Wikipedia - Buses in Portsmouth -- Public transport in the city of Portsmouth, England
Wikipedia - Bushveld Sandstone -- Geological formation of the Stormberg Group in Transvaal, South Africa
Wikipedia - Bushveld -- Sub-tropical woodland ecoregion of Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Bushy House -- Former royal residence in Teddington in South West London
Wikipedia - Business Day (South Africa) -- South African business newspaper
Wikipedia - Business process outsourcing in the Philippines
Wikipedia - Business routes of Arkansas Highway 1 -- Highway system
Wikipedia - Business routes of Interstate 40 -- Highway system
Wikipedia - Business routes of Interstate 5 -- Highway system
Wikipedia - Business routes of Interstate 94 in Michigan -- List of business route highways in Michigan
Wikipedia - Business routes of Interstate 96 -- List of highways in Michigan
Wikipedia - Business route -- Short special route connected to a parent numbered highway at its beginning, then routed through the central business district of a nearby city or town, and finally reconnecting with the same parent numbered highway again at its end
Wikipedia - Busisiwe Mkhwebane -- Public Protector of South Africa
Wikipedia - Busisiwe Shiba -- South African politician, Speaker of the Mpumalanga Provincial Legislature
Wikipedia - Busiswa -- South African Singer and Songwriter
Wikipedia - Bus Rapid Transit North -- South Yorkshire transport infrastructure
Wikipedia - Busted! -- South Korean variety show
Wikipedia - Busters (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Bust of Golda Meir -- Outdoor bronze sculpture of Golda Meir in Manhattan
Wikipedia - Bus turnout -- A spot on the side of a road reserved for buses to pick up and drop off passengers
Wikipedia - Busuu language -- Moribund Southern Bantoid language of Cameroon
Wikipedia - Butana Almond Nofomela -- South African security policeman convicted of murder
Wikipedia - Buttered cat paradox -- Joke about falling cats and toast
Wikipedia - Butterfield Overland Mail in Texas -- Route of mail service created in 1857
Wikipedia - Butterfly theorem -- About the midpoint of a chord of a circle, through which two other chords are drawn
Wikipedia - Buyeo -- 2nd century BCE to 494 CE kingdom in southern Manchuria and northern Korean
Wikipedia - Buyid dynasty -- Iranian dynasty which ruled over Iraq and central and southern Iran (934-1062)
Wikipedia - Bvndit -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - B. W. Countryman -- Member of the South Dakota House of Representatives
Wikipedia - Bx12 bus -- Bus route in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Bx15 bus -- Bus route in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Bx1 and Bx2 buses -- Bus routes in the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Bx23 and Q50 buses -- Bus routes in Queens and the Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Byangum -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Byeong Gi Lee -- South Korean engineer
Wikipedia - Byeongpungdo -- Island in Jindo County, South Korea
Wikipedia - Byeon Sang-su -- South Korean canoeist
Wikipedia - Byeon Woo-seok -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Byneskranskop -- Archaeological site in South Africa
Wikipedia - Byoungho Lee -- South Korean scientist
Wikipedia - By Quantum Physics: A Nightlife Venture -- 2019 South Korean crime film
Wikipedia - Byron Bay, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Byron Bekker -- South African speedway rider
Wikipedia - Byron G. Stout -- American politician
Wikipedia - Byron Shire -- Local government area in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Byul -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Byung Hun (entertainer) -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Byun Hee-bong -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Byun Ji-hyun -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Byun Jin-sub -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Byun Jung-soo -- South Korean model and actress
Wikipedia - Byun Kyung-soo -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Byun Se-jong -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Byun Sung-jin -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Byun Yo-han -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Byun Young-joon -- South Korean racewalker
Wikipedia - C21 road (Namibia) -- Secondary route in Namibia
Wikipedia - C22 road (Namibia) -- Secondary route in Namibia
Wikipedia - C23 road (Namibia) -- Secondary route in Namibia
Wikipedia - C2 (radio) -- Welsh language music and youth strand on BBC Radio Cymru
Wikipedia - C9 Entertainment -- South Korean entertainment company
Wikipedia - Cabarita Beach, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cabela's Outdoor Trivia Challenge -- 1999 video game
Wikipedia - Cabela's -- American outdoor recreational equipment retail chain
Wikipedia - Cabinet of Moon Jae-in -- South Korean government cabinet (2017-2020)
Wikipedia - Cabinet of Park Geun-hye -- South Korean government cabinet (2013-2017)
Wikipedia - Cabiyari language -- South American aboriginal language
Wikipedia - Cable television in the United States -- Historical and descriptive outline of the American cable television industry
Wikipedia - Cabo de Santa Maria (Faro) -- Southernmost point of mainland Portugal
Wikipedia - Cacau (novel) -- novel by the Brazilian writer Jorge Amado about the lives of those working on cocoa plantations in Brazil
Wikipedia - Cache Creek Terrane -- A geologic terrane in British Columbia and southern Yukon, Canada
Wikipedia - Cache manifest in HTML5 -- Software storage feature which provides the ability to access a web application even without a network connection
Wikipedia - Cactus and Succulent Society of America -- Organization about plants
Wikipedia - Cadamosto Seamount -- A seamount in the North Atlantic Ocean southwest off the island of Brava, Cape Verde
Wikipedia - Caddo -- Confederacy of several Southeastern Native American tribes
Wikipedia - Cadeby, South Yorkshire -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cadets of the Republic -- Youth organization of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
Wikipedia - Caelum -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Caesar Hull -- Southern Rhodesian World War II flying ace
Wikipedia - Caesar salad -- Green salad of romaine lettuce and croutons
Wikipedia - Caesars Head State Park -- State park in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Cafe Caprice -- Beach bar and restaurant in Camps Bay, Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cage Without a Key -- 1975 film by Buzz Kulik
Wikipedia - Caiphus Semenya -- South African composer and musician
Wikipedia - Caja de Muertos -- Island on southern coast of Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Cajon Pass -- Mountain pass in Southern California
Wikipedia - Calabi conjecture -- Theorem about the existence of certain Riemannian metrics on complex manifolds
Wikipedia - Calavera -- Mexican skull model made out of sugar or clay
Wikipedia - Calcomp plotter -- Computer graphics output device
Wikipedia - Calculation -- Deliberate process that transforms inputs to outputs with variable change
Wikipedia - Calcutta South Club
Wikipedia - Calcutta Youth Choir
Wikipedia - Caldicot railway station -- Railway station in Monmouthshire, Wales
Wikipedia - Calendar of saints (Anglican Church of Southern Africa)
Wikipedia - California County Routes in zone E -- California County Routes in zone E
Wikipedia - California Current -- A Pacific Ocean current that flows southward along the western coast of North America from southern British Columbia to the southern Baja California Peninsula
Wikipedia - California Environmental Resources Evaluation System -- program established to disseminate environmental and geoinformation electronic data about California
Wikipedia - California Inland Empire Council -- Boy Scouts council in California
Wikipedia - California's 8th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southeastern California
Wikipedia - California South Bay University -- Private university located in Sunnyvale, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 103 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 104 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 107 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 108 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 109 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 111 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 113 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 114 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 115 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 116 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 118 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 119 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 11 -- State highway in San Diego County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 120 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 121 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 123 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 124 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 125 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 126 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 127 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 128 -- Highway in California from the Mendocino coast to the Sacramento Valley
Wikipedia - California State Route 129 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 12 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 130 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 132 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 133 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 135 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 136 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 137 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 138 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 139 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 13 -- State highway in Alameda County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 140 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 142 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 144 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 145 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 146 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 147 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 149 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 14 -- State highway in Los Angeles and Kern counties in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 150 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 151 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 152 -- East-west highway in central California
Wikipedia - California State Route 153 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 154 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 155 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 156 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 158 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 160 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 161 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 162 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 163 -- State highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 165 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 166 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 167 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 168 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 169 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 16 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 172 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 173 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 174 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 175 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 177 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 178 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 17 -- State highway in Santa Cruz and Santa Clara counties in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 180 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 182 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 183 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 184 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 185 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 186 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 187 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 188 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 189 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 18 -- State route in Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 190 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 191 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 192 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 193 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 195 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 197 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 198 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 19 -- State highway in Los Angeles County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 1 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 200 -- State highway in Humboldt County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 201 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 202 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 203 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 204 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 207 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 209 -- Former highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 20 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 211 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 213 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 216 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 217 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 218 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 219 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 220 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 221 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 222 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 223 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 224 -- Former state highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 225 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 227 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 229 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 22 -- Highway in Los Angeles and Orange counties in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 232 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 233 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 236 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 237 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 238 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 23 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 241 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 242 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 243 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 244 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 245 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 246 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 247 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 24 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 253 -- Highway in Mendocino County, California
Wikipedia - California State Route 255 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 259 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 25 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 26 (1937-1964) -- Former state highway in Los Angeles
Wikipedia - California State Route 261 -- State highway toll road in Orange County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 262 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 263 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 265 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 266 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 267 -- State highway in Nevada and Placer counties in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 269 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 26 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 270 -- State highway in Mono County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 271 -- State highway in Humboldt and Mendocino Counties, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 273 -- State highway in Shasta County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 275 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 281 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 282 -- State highway in Coronado, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 283 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 284 -- State highway in Plumas County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 28 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 299 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 29 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 2 -- State highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 32 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 330 -- State highway in San Bernardino County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 33 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 34 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 35 (1934-1964) -- Former state highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 35 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 36 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 371 -- State highway in Riverside County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 37 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 38 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 39 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 41 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 42 -- Former highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 43 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 44 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 45 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 47 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 480 -- Former highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 4 -- State highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 52 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 53 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 54 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 55 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 56 -- East-west state highway in the U.S. state of California
Wikipedia - California State Route 58 -- Major state highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 59 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 60 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 61 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 62 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 63 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 65 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 66 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 67 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 68 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 70 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 7 (1934-1964) -- Former highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 71 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 72 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 73 -- Highway and toll road in Orange County, California
Wikipedia - California State Route 74 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 75 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 76 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 78 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 79 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 7 -- State highway in Imperial County, California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 82 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 83 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 84 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 85 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 86 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 87 -- Highway in San Jose, California
Wikipedia - California State Route 88 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 905 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 90 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 91 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 92 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 94 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 96 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 98 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - California State Route 99 -- state highway in California, United States
Wikipedia - California State Route 9 -- Highway in California
Wikipedia - Callawassie Island -- Island in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Calleva -- Outdoor education organization
Wikipedia - Callopatiria formosa -- A species of starfish in the family Asterinidae from South Africa
Wikipedia - Call-out culture
Wikipedia - Call Out My Name -- 2018 single by the Weeknd
Wikipedia - Call Out the Marines -- 1942 film
Wikipedia - Call stack -- Stack data structure that stores information about the active subroutines of a computer program
Wikipedia - Caloosahatchee River -- River on the southwest coast of Florida, US
Wikipedia - Calostoma cinnabarinum -- Species of fungus in the family Sclerodermataceae from eastern North America, Central America, northeastern South America, and East Asia
Wikipedia - Calum McSwiggan -- British YouTuber
Wikipedia - Calusa -- Native American people who lived on the coast and along the inner waterways of Florida's southwest coast
Wikipedia - Calvary -- Location outside Jerusalem
Wikipedia - Calverton-Westfarm Line -- Bus route
Wikipedia - Calvin Hartley -- South African archer
Wikipedia - Calvin Mokoto -- South African canoeist
Wikipedia - Calwalla, New South Wales -- Human settlement in Wingecarribee Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cambodia (1953-1970) -- 1953-1970 monarchy in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Cambodia -- Country in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Camdeboo National Park -- National park at Graaff-Reinet in the Eastern Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Camellia, New South Wales -- Suburb of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Camelots du Roi -- French far-right youth organization
Wikipedia - Cameron Bellamy -- South African endurance athlete
Wikipedia - Cameron Dugmore -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Camille Souter -- Irish artist
Wikipedia - Cam-in-block -- Valvetrain layout
Wikipedia - Camino de Santiago -- Pilgrimage routes to Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Wikipedia - Camopi Airport -- Airport in French Guiana, South America
Wikipedia - Camp Aranu'tiq -- Camp for transgender youth
Wikipedia - Camp Baharia -- U.S. military installation outside of Fallujah, Iraq
Wikipedia - Campbell Hill, New South Wales -- Mountain in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Campbell Plateau -- A large oceanic plateau south of New Zealand and the Chatham Rise
Wikipedia - Campbelltown, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Camp Bling -- Former road protest camp in Southend-on-Sea, England
Wikipedia - Campeiro Bulldog -- Dog breed developed in Southern Brazil
Wikipedia - Campfire ash ceremony -- Ceremony associated with Scouting
Wikipedia - Camp Gilboa -- U.S. summer camp in California for socialist-Zionist youth movement, Habonim Dror
Wikipedia - Camp Holland -- Temporary Dutch military base on the outskirts of Tarinkot
Wikipedia - Camp Humphreys -- United States Army garrison in South Korea
Wikipedia - Camping Out (film) -- 1919 film
Wikipedia - Camping -- Outdoor recreational activity
Wikipedia - Camp Kern -- Boy Scout camp in California, USA
Wikipedia - Camporee -- a local or regional gathering of Scouting units for a period of camping and common activities
Wikipedia - Camp Randall Stadium -- Outdoor stadium in Madison, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Camps Bay -- Suburb of Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Campsite -- Place used for overnight stay in the outdoors
Wikipedia - Canadian Young Judaea -- Canadian Zionist youth movement
Wikipedia - Canbelego -- Village in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Candice Boucher -- South African model and actress
Wikipedia - Candice Breitz -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Candice Goodwin -- South African scientific consultant, author and paranormal investigator
Wikipedia - Candice Hutchings -- Canadian YouTube personality, vegan chef, comedian, and author
Wikipedia - Candice Swanepoel -- South African model
Wikipedia - Candid photography -- Photograph captured without creating a posed appearance
Wikipedia - Candis Angelene -- South African singer
Wikipedia - Candy Moloi -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Candy (Southern and Hoffenberg novel)
Wikipedia - Cango Caves -- Limestone cave system near Oudtshoorn, in the Western Cape Province of South Africa
Wikipedia - Canigou -- Mountain in the Pyrenees of southern France
Wikipedia - Canis Major -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Canklow -- Suburb of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cannabis in Djibouti -- Use of Cannabis in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Cannabis in South Africa -- Use of cannabis in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cannabis in South Korea -- Use of cannabis in South Korea
Wikipedia - Canned hunt -- Trophy hunt without fair chase
Wikipedia - Cannibal Campout -- 1988 horror film directed by Jon McBride and Tom Fisher
Wikipedia - Canoeing at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games -- Canoeing at the 2019 Southeast Asian Games
Wikipedia - Cantabrian Sea -- Sea in the southern Bay of Biscay off the coast of Spain
Wikipedia - Cante Alentejano -- Polyphonic singing from Alentejo, southern Portugal
Wikipedia - Cantell School -- Secondary school in Southampton, England
Wikipedia - Cantera -- Youth academy and farm team organised by sports clubs
Wikipedia - Cantey, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Can't Get You Out of My Head -- 2001 single by Kylie Minogue
Wikipedia - Can't Get You Out of My Thoughts -- 2000 single by Dum Dums
Wikipedia - Can't Help Thinking About Me -- Song by David Bowie
Wikipedia - Cantley, South Yorkshire -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Can't Lose -- 2011 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Cantonese people -- Ethnic group native to parts of southern China
Wikipedia - Can't Stand Anymore -- 2013 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Caodaism -- A monotheistic syncretic religion officially established in the city of TM-CM-"y Ninh in southern Vietnam in 1926
Wikipedia - Caoutchouc (Picabia) -- 1909 painting by Francis Picabia
Wikipedia - Cao Van ViM-CM-*n -- South Vietnamese general
Wikipedia - Cape Agulhas -- Headland in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Baily Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Blanche -- Headland in South Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Borda Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in South Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Byron Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cape Canyon Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area off the Western Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Cobras -- Cricket team representing the Western Province, Boland, and South Western Districts
Wikipedia - Cape Colony -- Dutch and British colony in Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Doctor -- South-easterly wind in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Dutch architecture -- A traditional Afrikaner architectural style found mostly in the Western Cape of South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Flats Line -- Commuter rail line in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Flats -- Area of Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Fold Belt -- A late Paleozoic fold and thrust belt in southwestern South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Fold Mountains -- A series of parallel ranges along the south-western and southern coastlines of South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape gray mongoose -- Species of mongoose from southern Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Hooker (South Shetland Islands) -- Headland of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Cape jazz -- Genre of jazz that is performed in the very southern part of Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Juby -- Cape in southern Morocco
Wikipedia - Cape Leeuwin -- The most south-westerly mainland point of the Australian continent
Wikipedia - Cape Lookout (South Shetland Islands) -- Headland of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Cape Lowland Freshwater Wetland -- Vegetation type endemic to the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape May Seashore Lines -- Short line railroad in southern New Jersery, U.S.
Wikipedia - CapeNature -- Organisation responsible for managing wilderness areas and public nature reserves in Western Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape of Good Hope -- Headland of Cape Peninsula, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Peninsula University of Technology -- University in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Peninsula -- Rocky peninsula in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Point -- Headland in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Provinces -- Biogeographical area of South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Recife -- Point in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge -- Wildlife refuge located in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Cape Sable -- southenrmost mainland of Florida and contiguous US
Wikipedia - CapeTalk -- South African radio station
Wikipedia - Cape Town Civic Centre -- Headquarters of the City of Cape Town minucipality in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Cycle Tour -- Annual cycle race hosted in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town French School -- French international school in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town International Airport -- Airport in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town International Convention Centre -- Convention centre in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town International Jazz Festival -- Annual music festival held in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Marathon -- A City Marathon in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Opera -- Professional opera company in Cape Town, South Africa.
Wikipedia - Cape Town Philharmonia Choir -- South African choir based in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Philharmonic Orchestra -- Orchestra based in Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Pride -- Annual LGBT event in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Railway & Dock 0-4-0T -- First locomotive in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town Stadium -- Stadium in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town water crisis -- Period of severe water shortage in the Western Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Town -- Legislative capital of South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape -- Sleeveless outer garment of varying lengths, sometimes attached to a coat
Wikipedia - Cape Winelands Airfield -- Airport in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Winelands Biosphere Reserve -- Protected area in the Western Cape province of South Africa
Wikipedia - Cape Winelands Shale Fynbos -- Vegetation type endemic to the Boland of the Western Cape, South Africa.
Wikipedia - Capital Center South Tower -- High-rise office building in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Wikipedia - Capital City Stadium -- Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina, USA
Wikipedia - Capitalist Party of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Capital punishment in China -- Overview about capital punishment
Wikipedia - Capital Radio 604 -- Defunct South African radio station
Wikipedia - Capital South Coast -- English radio station
Wikipedia - Capitol Corridor -- Amtrak rail route in California
Wikipedia - Capo di Bove -- ancient Roman thermal baths on the Appian Way outside Rome
Wikipedia - Capoid race -- Outdated grouping of human beings
Wikipedia - Capricorn FM -- Radio station in Limpopo, South Africa
Wikipedia - Capricornus -- Zodiac constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Capri Theatre -- Heritage-listed cinema in Goodwood, Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Capri Village -- Suburb of Cape Town , South Africa
Wikipedia - Capsule wardrobe -- collection of clothing items that do not go out of fashion
Wikipedia - Captain Gallagher -- Irish outlaw
Wikipedia - Captain Harlock: Dimensional Voyage -- Manga series about space pirate Captain Harlock
Wikipedia - Captain Underpants and the Invasion of the Incredibly Naughty Cafeteria Ladies from Outer Space (and the Subsequent Assault of the Equally-Evil Lunchroom Zombie Nerds) {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Captain Underpants and the Invasion of the Incredibly Naughty Cafeteria Ladies from Outer Space (and the Subsequent Assault of the Equally-Evil Lunchroom Zombie Nerds)'' -- Captain Underpants and the Invasion of the Incredibly Naughty Cafeteria Ladies from Outer Space (and the Subsequent Assault of the Equally-Evil Lunchroom Zombie Nerds) {{DISPLAYTITLE:''Captain Underpants and the Invasion of the Incredibly Naughty Cafeteria Ladies from Outer Space (and the Subsequent Assault of the Equally-Evil Lunchroom Zombie Nerds)''
Wikipedia - Captivity of Mangalorean Catholics at Seringapatam -- Imprisonment of Mangalorean Catholics in southwest India (1784-1799)
Wikipedia - Capture the flag -- Traditional outdoor sport
Wikipedia - Carbonates on Mars -- Overview about the presencr of carbonates on Mars
Wikipedia - Carbon dioxide flooding -- A process to increase the output of oil
Wikipedia - Carbon fibers -- Material fibers about 5-10 M-NM-
Wikipedia - Cardiac output -- Cardiac output (CO) is a measurement of the amount of blood pumped by each ventricle in one minute.
Wikipedia - Cardiac transient outward potassium current -- Ion current
Wikipedia - Cardiff Ely bread riots -- Outbreak of violence in Ely, Wales, Cardiff in September 1991
Wikipedia - Cardiff South and Penarth (UK Parliament constituency) -- Parliamentary constituency in the United Kingdom, 1983 onwards
Wikipedia - Cardinal direction -- Directions of north, east, south and west
Wikipedia - Cardinal Mar Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir
Wikipedia - Carel Johannes Delport -- South African mass murderer
Wikipedia - Carel le Roux -- South African shot putter
Wikipedia - CARES Act -- Law intended to address the economic fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States
Wikipedia - Caribbean Community -- Organization of 15 nations and dependencies throughout the Americas
Wikipedia - Caribbean Current -- A warm ocean current that flows northwestward through the Caribbean from the east along the coast of South America into the Gulf of Mexico
Wikipedia - Caribbean Sea -- A sea of the Atlantic Ocean bounded by North, Central and South America
Wikipedia - CarimaM-CM-1ola -- A South American meat-pie in a torpedo-shaped yuca fritter,
Wikipedia - Carina (constellation) -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Carin Visser -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Carla Lalli Music -- American chef and YouTube personality
Wikipedia - Carl Anderson (South Carolina politician) -- American politician
Wikipedia - Carl Benjamin -- British YouTuber
Wikipedia - Carl Beukes -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Carl Coetzee -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Carlecotes -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Carlijn Schoutens -- Dutch-American speed skater
Wikipedia - Carlos de Paula Couto
Wikipedia - Carlton, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Carl Walter Meyer -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Carmel River (Nicolet Southwest River) -- River in Estrie, Quebec (Canada)
Wikipedia - Carmen Pretorius -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Carnatic music -- Music genre originating in southern India
Wikipedia - Carnegie Library, Herne Hill -- Public library in the London Borough of Lambeth in Herne Hill, South London
Wikipedia - Carnegie Ridge -- An aseismic ridge on the Nazca Plate that is being subducted beneath the South American Plate
Wikipedia - CarniK Con -- YouTube firearms comedy show
Wikipedia - Carol Beerwinkel -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Carole Souter
Wikipedia - Carol Gotbaum -- South African air traveler
Wikipedia - Carolina Coliseum -- Arena in Columbia, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Carolina First Center -- Building in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Carolina Routier -- Spanish triathlete
Wikipedia - Caroline Anne Southey
Wikipedia - Caroline Bijoux -- South African chess player
Wikipedia - Caroline Lucas -- Green Party politician, MP for Brighton Pavilion and former MEP for South-East England
Wikipedia - Caroline Virginia Krout -- United States author
Wikipedia - Caroline Vout -- British classicist
Wikipedia - Carol Joyce -- South African canoeist
Wikipedia - Carool, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Carowinds -- Amusement park in North and South Carolina
Wikipedia - Carpinteria Tar Pits -- Series of natural asphalt lakes situated in the southern part of Santa Barbara County in southern California
Wikipedia - Carrickmines -- Outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Carrie Southworth
Wikipedia - Carr, South Yorkshire -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Carry Out
Wikipedia - Car Talk -- Long-running NPR talk show about cars and automotive repair
Wikipedia - Cartersville, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Car, the Garden -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Cartoon Network (Russia and Southeastern Europe) -- Russian and Southeastern European feed of Cartoon Network
Wikipedia - Cartoon Network (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Southeast Asian pay television cartoon channel
Wikipedia - Caryn Seamount -- A seamount in the Atlantic Ocean southwest of the New England Seamounts
Wikipedia - Casal Rotondo -- ancient tomb on the Appian Way outside Rome, Italy
Wikipedia - Case fatality rate -- Proportion of patients who die of a particular medical condition out of all who have this condition within a given time frame
Wikipedia - Case knife -- Term used throughout the American South to refer to a table knife
Wikipedia - Casey Cole -- American Franciscan priest, writer and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Casey Neistat -- American YouTube personality, filmmaker and entrepreneur
Wikipedia - Cash Me Outside (song) -- 2017 single by DJ Suede the Remix God
Wikipedia - Cash, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Casino, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Casper (cat) -- Cat from Plymouth that commuted by bus
Wikipedia - Caspian expeditions of the Rus' -- Caspian Sea expeditions carried out by the Rus between the 9th and 11th centuries
Wikipedia - Cassiar Terrane -- Cretaceous terrane located in the Northern Interior of British Columbia and southern Yukon
Wikipedia - Cassie Kozyrkov -- South African data scientist
Wikipedia - Cassim Sema -- 20th-century South African Islamic cleric
Wikipedia - Cassper Nyovest -- South African rapper
Wikipedia - Castle Lake loop -- Hiking route in County Cavan, Ireland
Wikipedia - Castle Loch -- Lake in southern Scotland
Wikipedia - Castle of Good Hope -- 17th-century bastion fort in Cape Town, South African
Wikipedia - Castletown River -- River in Counties Armagh and Louth on the island of Ireland
Wikipedia - Casual sex -- Certain types of human sexual activity outside the context of a romantic relationship
Wikipedia - Casuarina, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Catalan mythology about witches -- Large number of legends about witches
Wikipedia - CataM-CM-1o Ferry -- Single route ferry service between CataM-CM-1o and San Juan, Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Catch the Ghost -- 2019 South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Catfish stew -- Fish stew from the American South
Wikipedia - Catford Studios -- Former British film studio in Catford, Southeast London
Wikipedia - Catharism -- Christian dualist movement that thrived in some areas of Southern Europe
Wikipedia - Cathelean du Plessis -- South African lawn bowler
Wikipedia - Catherine Coutelle -- French politician
Wikipedia - Catherine the Great (miniseries) -- Miniseries about Empress Catherine of Russia
Wikipedia - Catheryna Rombout Brett -- American landowner
Wikipedia - Cathkin Secondary School -- High School in South Africa
Wikipedia - Catholic Christian Outreach
Wikipedia - Catholic Church in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Catholic Church in South Africa
Wikipedia - Catholic Church in South Korea
Wikipedia - Catholic Church in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Catholic youth work
Wikipedia - Cathy Breen -- American politician from Falmouth, Maine
Wikipedia - Catoprion -- Fish genus native to South America
Wikipedia - Cat People (Putting Out Fire) -- Song by David Bowie
Wikipedia - Catriona Ida Macleod -- South African educational psychologist and researcher
Wikipedia - Catshaw -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Catskill Mountains -- Mountains in southeastern New York State, U.S.
Wikipedia - Cattle Annie -- American outlaw; bookkeeper
Wikipedia - Caucasian race -- Outdated grouping of human beings
Wikipedia - Caught Out There -- 1999 single by Kelis
Wikipedia - Causeway -- Route raised up on an embankment
Wikipedia - Cave of Aurignac -- Cave and archaeological site in southwestern France
Wikipedia - Cave of the Patriarchs massacre -- Shooting massacre carried out by American-Israeli Baruch Goldstein,
Wikipedia - Caviomorpha -- Sub-set of rodents in South America
Wikipedia - Cawthorne -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Cayley-Bacharach theorem -- A statement about cubic curves in the projective plane
Wikipedia - CBJ-FM -- Ici Radio-Canada Premiere radio station in Chicoutimi, Quebec
Wikipedia - CCP Records -- South African record label (e. 1972)
Wikipedia - Ceann Iar -- A tidal island in the Monach Isles, to the west of North Uist in the Outer Hebrides
Wikipedia - Cebu South Bus Terminal -- Public bus terminal in Cebu City, Philippines
Wikipedia - Cecile van der Merwe -- South African chess player
Wikipedia - Cecil Goodricke -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Cecil John Rhodes Statue -- Monument in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Cecil Kellaway -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Cecil Kirby -- Canadian outlaw biker and criminal
Wikipedia - Cecil McMaster -- South African racewalker
Wikipedia - Cecil Rhodes -- British businessman, mining magnate and politician in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cecil Williams South Carolina Civil Rights Museum -- Civil rights museum
Wikipedia - Cedar Creek, New South Wales (Tweed) -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cedar Mountain Range -- Mountain range in southwest Luna County, New Mexico, United States
Wikipedia - Cejkovice (Hodonin District) -- Municipality in South Moravia, Czech Republic
Wikipedia - Celeb Five -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Celeste Ntuli -- South African actress and comedian
Wikipedia - Celestial equator -- Projection of the Earth's equator out into space
Wikipedia - Cele -- River in south-western France
Wikipedia - Celine Boutier -- French professional golfer
Wikipedia - Cell membrane -- Biological membrane that separates the interior of a cell from its outside environment
Wikipedia - Celltrion Entertainment -- South Korean production and artist management company
Wikipedia - Celltrion -- South Korean biopharmaceutical company
Wikipedia - Celtic Manor Resort -- Golf, spa and leisure hotel and resort in Newport, south Wales
Wikipedia - Celtic Sea -- Atlantic Ocean sea south of Ireland
Wikipedia - Celtic settlement of Southeast Europe -- Military campaign by Celtic peoples in southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - CemAir -- Airline in South Africa
Wikipedia - Censorship in Kashmir -- Information about censorship in Indian State Kashmir
Wikipedia - Censorship in South Korea -- Overview of censorship in South Korea
Wikipedia - Censorship in Spain -- Suppression of speech in the southwestern European country
Wikipedia - Censorship of YouTube -- Overview of the censorship of YouTube
Wikipedia - Census -- Acquiring and recording information about the members of a given population
Wikipedia - Centaurus -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Centennial Circle -- Roundabout in New york
Wikipedia - Center for Jewish-Christian Understanding and Cooperation -- An educational institution in Israel where Christians can study the Hebrew Bible and learn about the Hebraic roots of Christianity
Wikipedia - Center for Talented Youth -- Gifted education program
Wikipedia - Center for Wooden Boats -- Museum on the south shore of Lake Union, Seattle, Washington, U.S.
Wikipedia - Central Alaskan Yup'ik language -- Language of the Yupik family, spoken in western and southwestern Alaska
Wikipedia - Central American Seaway -- A body of water that once separated North America from South America
Wikipedia - Central Australia Railway -- Former narrow-gauge railway line in the north of South Australia and in the Northern Territory
Wikipedia - Central Circular Route -- circular expressway in the Greater Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Central Coast Waves -- Rugby union team in Central Coast, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Central Committee of the South African Communist Party -- Decision making-structure of the South African Communist Party
Wikipedia - Central Eastern Marine Park -- Australian marine park offshore from the edge of the continental shelf off New South Wales
Wikipedia - Central Equatoria -- State of South Sudan
Wikipedia - Central Florida Council -- Scouting organization in Florida, USA
Wikipedia - Central Highlands (Vietnam) -- Mountainous region of Vietnam, that encompassed the southernmost part of the Annamite Range
Wikipedia - Central Juvenile Hall -- Youth detention center in Los Angeles County
Wikipedia - Central Kowloon Route -- Road project in Kowloon, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Central Library Cape Town -- Public library in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Central Line (Cape Town) -- Commuter rail service in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Central Lowlands -- A geologically defined area of relatively low-lying land in southern Scotland
Wikipedia - Central-Mid-Levels escalator -- outdoor escalator and walkway system in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Central processing unit -- Central component of any computer system which executes input/output, arithmetical, and logical operations
Wikipedia - Central South University -- A national university of China
Wikipedia - Central University of Technology -- University in Bloemfontein, South Africa
Wikipedia - Centrifugal force -- An inertial force directed away from an axis passing through the origin of a coordinate system and parallel to an axis about which the coordinate system is rotating
Wikipedia - Centrism -- Political outlook or specific position
Wikipedia - Centro-Sul -- Southern area of Brazil
Wikipedia - Centrum Arena (Prestwick) -- Former ice hockey arena in South Ayrshire, Scotland, UK
Wikipedia - Centuries (song) -- Fall Out Boy song
Wikipedia - CentzonhuM-DM-+tznahua -- The gods of the southern stars in Aztec mythology
Wikipedia - Ceor -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - Cerebral cortex -- Outer layer of the cerebrum of the mammalian brain
Wikipedia - Cere -- River in south-western France
Wikipedia - Ceridwen Dovey -- South African-Australian writer and anthropologist
Wikipedia - Cerou -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - Cesar Boutteville -- French-Vietnamese chess player
Wikipedia - Cesare Mazzolari -- Roman Catholic bishop in South Sudan
Wikipedia - C'est pas tout a fait la vie dont j'avais rM-CM-*ve -- 2005 film
Wikipedia - C file input/output -- Input/output functionality in the C programming language
Wikipedia - CFLT-FM -- Radio station in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
Wikipedia - CFTL-FM -- First Nations radio station in Big Trout Lake, Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - CGP Grey -- Educational YouTuber, podcaster, and streamer
Wikipedia - CGR 3rd Class 4-4-0 1884 -- Class of 2 South African 4-4-0 locomotives
Wikipedia - CGR 4th Class 4-6-0TT 1884 -- Class of 4 South African 4-6-0TT locomotives
Wikipedia - Chabad outreach -- Chabad philosophy
Wikipedia - Chad Hurley -- American businessman, co-founder of YouTube
Wikipedia - Cha Do-jin -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Cha Dong-min -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Chae Bin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Chaebol -- South Korean business conglomerate, often family-run
Wikipedia - Chae Gwang-seok -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Chae Ji-hoon -- South Korean short track speed skater
Wikipedia - Chae Jung-an -- South Korean actress and singer
Wikipedia - Chae Keun-bae -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Chae Sang-woo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Chae Seo-jin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Chae Shi-ra -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Chae Soo-bin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Cha Eun-woo -- South Korean singer, actor, and model
Wikipedia - Chae Yeon -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Chae Young-in -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Chaeyoung -- South Korean rapper, singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Cha In-ha -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Chain of Lakes (South Dakota) -- Group of lakes in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Cha In-pyo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Chaitenia -- A distinct fragment of Earth's crust in southern Chile
Wikipedia - Cha Jae-goan -- South Korean wheelchair curler
Wikipedia - Cha Jin-ho -- South Korean wheelchair male curler
Wikipedia - Cha Jung-won -- South Korean actress and model
Wikipedia - Cha Jun-hwan -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Chakra (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Chalcolithic Temple of Ein Gedi -- Public building in modern-day Israel, dating from about 3500 BCE
Wikipedia - Chalfont Viaduct -- Railway viaduct in south-east England, built in 1906
Wikipedia - Chalk Hills -- Mountain range in Southern California
Wikipedia - Chalkwell -- District in Southend-on-Sea, Essex, England
Wikipedia - Challacombe scale -- Medical scale measuring mouth dryness
Wikipedia - Challah (tractate) -- Talmudic tractate about separating dough and giving it to the priests
Wikipedia - Challenger Plateau -- A large submarine plateau west of New Zealand and south of the Lord Howe Rise
Wikipedia - Chamaeleon -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Cha Meeyoung -- South Korean data scientist
Wikipedia - Chameli Devi Jain Award for Outstanding Women Mediapersons -- Indian journalistic award
Wikipedia - Cha Min-kyu -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - CHAMP (mathematics outreach program) -- Mathematics and STEM outreach program
Wikipedia - Champ Pickens Trophy -- 1920s award to the champion of the Southern Conference
Wikipedia - Chancery Lane -- London street in the ward of Farringdon Without
Wikipedia - Chandler Scientific School -- Former school at Dartmouth College
Wikipedia - Chandra Parbat (South) -- Mountain in Uttarakhand, India
Wikipedia - Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu -- Ethno-religious clan of South Asia
Wikipedia - Chang Do-yong -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Changeable hawk-eagle -- Crested hawk-eagle (Nisaetus cirrhatus) from South and Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Changes to the Mosaic Law throughout history -- Changes made to the Law of Moses by Jews
Wikipedia - Chang Eun-kyung -- South Korean Olympic judoka
Wikipedia - Chang Ho-chirl -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Changjo -- South Korean singer and actor
Wikipedia - Chang Kang-myoung -- South Korean writer
Wikipedia - Chang Keun Choi -- South Korean martial artist
Wikipedia - Chang Mi-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Chang Myon -- South Korean politician (1899-1966)
Wikipedia - Chang Myung-su -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Changshan Commandery -- Historical commandery of China located in present-day southern Hebei province
Wikipedia - Changsha South Railway Station
Wikipedia - Chang Sung-hwan -- South Korean general, government minister and diplomat
Wikipedia - Changwon -- Specific city in South Gyeongsang, South Korea
Wikipedia - Chang Yong-suk -- South Korean esports player
Wikipedia - Chang Young-hee -- South Korean writer
Wikipedia - Channel A (TV channel) -- South Korean television channel
Wikipedia - Channel Islands (California) -- island chain in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of southern California along the Santa Barbara Channel
Wikipedia - Channel M (radio station) -- South Korean digital radio station
Wikipedia - Chan Sung Jung -- South Korean mixed martial artist
Wikipedia - Chantel King -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Chapalmalania -- Extinct genus of procyonid mammals from South America
Wikipedia - Chapati -- Unleavened wheat flatbread most frequently eaten in South Asia, and East Africa
Wikipedia - Chapeltown railway station -- Railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Chapin High School -- High school in Chapin, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Chapman's Peak -- Mountain on the Cape Peninsula, South Africa
Wikipedia - Chapo Trap House -- Comedic American podcast about politics
Wikipedia - Chaquen -- God of sports and fertility in the Muisca religion of South America
Wikipedia - Charbagh -- Four-part Islamic paradise garden layout
Wikipedia - Charl Cilliers (writer) -- South African author and poet
Wikipedia - Charl du Plessis (pianist) -- South African pianist Charl du Plessis
Wikipedia - Charles A. Boutelle -- American politician
Wikipedia - Charles A. Martin -- Scouting commissioner and leader
Wikipedia - Charles Bouguenon -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Charles Carnegie, 4th Earl of Southesk -- Scottish nobleman
Wikipedia - Charles Church, Plymouth
Wikipedia - Charles Daniel Marivate -- South African physician
Wikipedia - Charles Eastman -- Native American physician and scouting pioneer
Wikipedia - Charles Guiteau (song) -- Folk song about assassination of Garfield
Wikipedia - Charles H. Sheldon -- American politician and 2nd Governor of South Dakota
Wikipedia - Charles Jeffreys -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Charles L. Bouton -- American mathematician
Wikipedia - Charles N. F. Brisout
Wikipedia - Charles Parsons (British Army officer) -- British Army officer in South Africa
Wikipedia - Charles Pellew, 7th Viscount Exmouth -- British viscount and chemist
Wikipedia - Charles Richard Wilton -- South Australia newspaper editor
Wikipedia - Charles R. Imbrecht -- American politician from southern California
Wikipedia - Charles Rudd (cricketer) -- South-African born English cricketer (1873-1950)
Wikipedia - Charles Theodore Te Water -- South African diplomat
Wikipedia - Charles Thomas (umpire) -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Charleston church shooting -- Mass shooting in Charleston, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Charleston International Airport -- Airport serving Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Wikipedia - Charleston, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Charleston Southern University -- Baptist university in South Carolina, U.S.
Wikipedia - Charles Trippy -- American Youtuber and Internet Personality
Wikipedia - Charlie Blanton -- Racecar driver from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Charlie Brown's Roundabout -- Road junction on the North Circular Road in London, England
Wikipedia - Charlie Wi -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Charlie W. Johnson Stadium -- Stadium in Columbia, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Charlize Theron filmography -- Cataloging of performances by the South African-born American filmmaker
Wikipedia - Charlize Theron -- South African-American actress and producer
Wikipedia - Charlotte Harbor (estuary) -- Large bay on the southwest coast of Florida
Wikipedia - Charlotte, Monroe and Columbia Railroad -- Shortline railroad serving South Carolina
Wikipedia - Charlotte Premium Outlets -- Shopping mall in Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S.
Wikipedia - Charpai -- Traditional woven bed used in the South Asia
Wikipedia - Chartaprops v Silberman -- 2008 case in South African law
Wikipedia - Chartwell -- Country house south of Westerham, Kent, England
Wikipedia - Cha Seo-won -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Cha Seung-won -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Cha Seung-woo -- South Korean singer and actor
Wikipedia - Chasles' theorem (kinematics) -- Rigid body displacements reduce to a translation and a rotation about a parallel axis
Wikipedia - Chassezac -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - Cha Tae-hyun -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Chattanooga, Rome and Southern Railroad -- historical Georgia and Tennessee railroad
Wikipedia - Chattooga River -- River in the Southeastern USA
Wikipedia - Chautauqua Institution -- about origination place of the Chautauqua Movement
Wikipedia - Chavonnes Battery -- Historical fortification protecting Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Chav -- Stereotype of anti-social youth dressed in sportswear
Wikipedia - Cha Ye-ryun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Cha Young-chul -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Cha Young-hyun -- South Korean figure skater
Wikipedia - Cha Yu-ram -- South Korean pool player
Wikipedia - Ch-Check It Out -- 2004 single by Beastie Boys
Wikipedia - Che (2008 film) -- two-part 2008 film by Steven Soderbergh about Che Guevara
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Wikipedia - Choi Jin-young (writer) -- South Korean writer
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Wikipedia - Choi Min-jeong -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Choi Min-kyung -- South Korean short-track speed skater
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Wikipedia - Choi Min -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Choi Min-yong -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Choi Mi-seon (gymnast) -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Choi Mi-seon -- South Korean shot putter
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Wikipedia - Choi Myeong-jin -- South Korean equestrian
Wikipedia - Choi Myeong-suk -- South Korean athlete
Wikipedia - Choi Myung-hoon -- South Korean Go player
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Wikipedia - Choi Sook-ie -- South Korean Olympic judoka
Wikipedia - Choi Suk-hyeon -- South Korean triathlate
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Wikipedia - CJ E&M -- South Korean entertainment and mass media company
Wikipedia - CJ Entertainment -- South Korean film company
Wikipedia - CJ Group -- South Korean conglomerate holding company
Wikipedia - CJLS-FM -- Radio station in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia
Wikipedia - CJLU-FM -- Christian radio station in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
Wikipedia - CJMT (AM) -- Former radio station in Chicoutimi, Quebec
Wikipedia - Claflin University -- Claflin University is a private historically black university in Orangeburg, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Clairaut's theorem -- Theorem about gravitation
Wikipedia - Claire Coutinho -- British Conservative politician
Wikipedia - Claire Nebout -- French actress
Wikipedia - Claire Penn -- South African speech and language pathologist
Wikipedia - Claire Saffitz -- American pastry chef and YouTube video host
Wikipedia - Clairvoyance -- Ability to gain information about an object, person, location or physical event through extrasensory perception
Wikipedia - Clapham South tube station -- London Underground station
Wikipedia - Clara Southmayd Ludlow
Wikipedia - Claremont High School (Cape Town) -- Public high school in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Claremont railway station (Cape Town) -- Metrorail station on the Southern Line,
Wikipedia - Claremont, South Carolina -- Settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Clarence Alfred Cole -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina
Wikipedia - Clarence Griffin (Scouting) -- Irish scout pioneer
Wikipedia - Clarence Island (South Shetland Islands) -- Island of the South Shetland Islands
Wikipedia - Clarence River Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Clarence River (New South Wales)
Wikipedia - Clarence Valley Council -- Local government area in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Clarence van Riet Lowe -- (1894-1956) South African civil engineer and archaeologist
Wikipedia - Clarens Formation -- Geological formation of the Stormberg Group in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Clark's Lookout State Park -- Park in Montana, USA
Wikipedia - Clark Street (Chicago) -- Major north-south thoroughfare in Chicago, Illinois, United States
Wikipedia - Clash of Civilizations -- Published theory of Samuel P. Huntington about cultural geography
Wikipedia - Classic 8 Conference -- High school athletic conference in southeastern Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Classic -- Outstanding example of a particular style
Wikipedia - Classificatory disputes about art
Wikipedia - Classless inter-domain routing
Wikipedia - Classless Inter-Domain Routing -- Method for IP address allocation and routing
Wikipedia - Class of Lies -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Claud Cloete -- South African modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Claude de Boutroue d'Aubigny -- Intendent of New France
Wikipedia - Claude-Francois-Alexandre Houtteville -- French writer and churchman
Wikipedia - Claude Lecouteux -- French philologist
Wikipedia - Claudette Schreuders -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Claudia Cummins -- South African artistic gymnast
Wikipedia - Claudia Dey -- Canadian writer, based out of Toronto
Wikipedia - Claudia Heunis -- South African hurdler
Wikipedia - Claudia Kim -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Claudio Cecchetto -- Italian record producer and talent scout
Wikipedia - Clayton, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - CLC (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Cleanin' Out My Closet -- 2002 single by Eminem
Wikipedia - Clean room design -- Reverse-engineering without infringing copyright
Wikipedia - Clear Channel Outdoor -- Outdoor advertising company
Wikipedia - Clear Channel UK -- British outdoor advertising company
Wikipedia - Clearfield, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Clement Bahouth
Wikipedia - Clementia, South Carolina -- Former settlement in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Clemson Softball Stadium -- Softball stadium in South Carolina, U.S.A.
Wikipedia - Clemson University -- University in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Cleopas Maunye -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control Center -- Air traffic control center in Ohio, United States
Wikipedia - Cleveland National Forest -- Southernmost National forest of California
Wikipedia - Cleveland School fire -- Fire in Camden, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Cliffhanger (South Korean TV series) -- 2021 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Cliffortia -- genus of shrubs in the rose family from southern Africa
Wikipedia - Cliffwood, New Jersey -- Place in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Clifton, Doncaster -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Clifton, Rotherham -- Suburb of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Clifton Without -- Area of the City of York, North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Climate Change Denial -- 2011 non-fiction book about climate change denial by Haydn Washington and John Cook
Wikipedia - Climate change in South Africa
Wikipedia - Climate of London -- Overview about London's climate
Wikipedia - Climate of South Africa
Wikipedia - Climate of South Carolina -- Overview of the climate of the U.S. state of South Carolina
Wikipedia - Climbing route -- Path by which a climber reaches the top of a mountain, rock, or ice wall
Wikipedia - Cline Hill Summit (Lincoln County, Oregon) -- Mountain Pass, Oregon Coast Range, US Route 120, Lincoln County
Wikipedia - Clinic -- Health care facility, primarily focused on the care of outpatients
Wikipedia - Clint Brink -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Clinton Marius -- South African writer and performer
Wikipedia - Clinton River (New Zealand) -- River in Southland Region, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Clinus superciliosus -- Species of clinid rockfish endemic to Southern Africa. Highfin klipfish
Wikipedia - Clipper route -- Sailing route around the world
Wikipedia - Clivus Scauri -- short road following the route of an ancient Roman road in the centre of Rome, Italy
Wikipedia - Clockwork Zoo -- South African animation studio
Wikipedia - Cloonacauneen Castle -- Tower house on the outskirts of Galway, Ireland
Wikipedia - Closed system -- Does not allow certain types of transfers (such as transfer of matter) in or out of the system
Wikipedia - Close the Gap -- Australian social justice campaign about Indigenous health inequality
Wikipedia - Cloth face mask -- mask made of common textiles worn over the mouth and nose
Wikipedia - Clothiers Creek -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Clothing in India -- Garments in the south Asian country of India
Wikipedia - Clouds without Water
Wikipedia - Clout archery -- A form of archery involving shooting at flags from a distance
Wikipedia - Cloutierville, Louisiana -- unincorporated community in Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana, United States
Wikipedia - Clowne South railway station -- Former railway station in Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - CL (rapper) -- South Korean rapper and singer
Wikipedia - Club Deroes -- Australian outlaw motorcycle club
Wikipedia - Clwyd South (UK Parliament constituency) -- Parliamentary constituency in the UK
Wikipedia - Clynton Lehman -- Olympic sailor from South Africa
Wikipedia - CNA (bookstore) -- South African retail store chain
Wikipedia - CNBC Asia -- Southeast Asian pay television channel
Wikipedia - Cneoridium dumosum (Nuttall) Hooker F. Collected March 26, 1960, at an Elevation of about 1450 Meters on Cerro Quemazon, 15 Miles South of Bahia de Los Angeles, Baja California, Mexico, Apparently for a Southeastward Range Extension of Some 140 Miles -- 1962 five-word scholarly article
Wikipedia - CNET -- American media website about technology and consumer electronics
Wikipedia - CNN Airport -- Out-of-home television network
Wikipedia - CNN Checkout Channel -- Out-of-home advertising service
Wikipedia - CNN/YouTube presidential debates -- Series of televised debates sponsored by CNN and YouTube
Wikipedia - Coachella Valley -- Valley in Southern California
Wikipedia - Coal in South Africa -- Coal mining and consumption in South Africa
Wikipedia - Coal mining -- Process of getting coal out of the ground
Wikipedia - Coastal upwelling of the South Eastern Arabian Sea -- A typical eastern boundary upwelling system
Wikipedia - Coat -- Warming outerwear garment for men and women
Wikipedia - Cobaki Lakes, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cobaki, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Cobus de Swardt -- South African sociologist
Wikipedia - Cocaine & Rhinestones -- Podcast about country music
Wikipedia - Cockermouth railway station -- Former railway station in Cumberland, England
Wikipedia - Cockermouth School -- School in Cumbria, UK
Wikipedia - Cockermouth (UK Parliament constituency)
Wikipedia - Cockermouth
Wikipedia - Cocodrilo -- Outdoor sculpture in Mexico City
Wikipedia - Cocomelon -- American YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Coco River -- River in northern Nicaragua and southern Honduras
Wikipedia - CocoSori -- South Korean musical duo
Wikipedia - Code Kunst -- South Korean producer (born 1989)
Wikipedia - Codename: Knockout -- Comic
Wikipedia - Code of the Outlaw -- 1942 film
Wikipedia - Code refactoring -- Restructuring existing computer code without changing its external behavior
Wikipedia - Cod Grounds Marine Park -- Australian marine park off Laurieton, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Cody Ko -- Canadian YouTuber, comedian, podcaster, rapper, and musician
Wikipedia - Coenraad Johannes van Houten -- Dutch businessman
Wikipedia - CoEur devotional path -- devotional and hiking route in Italy and Switzerland
Wikipedia - Coffee, Do Me a Favor -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Coffee Friends -- South Korean reality show
Wikipedia - Coffee House (TV series) -- 2010 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Coffee Prince (2007 TV series) -- 2007 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Cofferdam -- Barrier allowing liquid to be pumped out of an enclosed area
Wikipedia - Coffin -- Container for transport, laying out and the burial of a corpse
Wikipedia - Co-fired ceramic -- Integrated circuit package made out of fired ceramic material
Wikipedia - Cofiroute USA -- Concession and construction group
Wikipedia - Cogmanskloof Pass -- Mountain pass in South Africa
Wikipedia - Cognitive inertia -- The tendency for a particular orientation in how an individual thinks about an issue, belief or strategy to endure or resist change
Wikipedia - CoinDesk -- News site about bitcoin and digital currencies, owned by Digital Currency Group
Wikipedia - Coins of the South African pound -- Obsolete currency
Wikipedia - Coldharbour Lane -- road in south London
Wikipedia - Coldplay: A Head Full of Dreams -- 2018 music documentary about the band Coldplay
Wikipedia - Cold war (general term) -- Warfare without direct military action
Wikipedia - Coleman (brand) -- Brand of outdoor recreation products
Wikipedia - Colin Bouwer -- South African-born doctor
Wikipedia - Colin Coleman -- South African banker and public figure
Wikipedia - Colin Furze -- British YouTube personality from Stamford, Lincolnshire
Wikipedia - Colin H. Livingstone -- Scouting pioneer and railway executive
Wikipedia - Colin Melville -- South African cricketer and educator
Wikipedia - Colin Moss (actor) -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Coliseo Ivan de Bedout -- Sports arena in Medellin, Colombia
Wikipedia - Collared mongoose -- Species of mongoose from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Collectors (film) -- South Korean heist thriller film
Wikipedia - Colleen Barrett -- Former president of Southwest Airlines
Wikipedia - Colleen Piketh -- South African lawn bowler
Wikipedia - College of Southern Idaho -- Public community college in Twin Falls, Idaho, United States
Wikipedia - College of Southern Maryland
Wikipedia - College of Southern Nevada -- College in Clark County, Nevada
Wikipedia - College of the Ozarks -- Liberal-arts college in Point Lookout, Missouri
Wikipedia - College station (MetroLink) -- St. Louis MetroLink Red Line station serving Southwestern Illinois College in Saint Clair County, Illinois
Wikipedia - Colloid -- A mixture of an insoluble or soluble substance microscopically dispersed throughout another substance
Wikipedia - Colombia -- Country in the northwestern part of South America
Wikipedia - Colonial Brazil -- Portuguese 1500-1822/1825 possession in South America
Wikipedia - Colony of New South Wales -- British colony which later became a state of Australia
Wikipedia - Colorado Coalfield War -- A 1913-1914 labor uprising in Southern Colorado
Wikipedia - Colorado's Copper Triangle -- Road cycling route in Colorado
Wikipedia - Color-blind casting -- The practice of casting without considering the actor's ethnicity, skin color, body shape, sex and/or gender
Wikipedia - Color Out of Space (film) -- 2020 horror film directed by Richard Stanley
Wikipedia - Coloureds -- Multiracial ethnic group of Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Coloured vote constitutional crisis -- 1950s constitutional crisis in South Africa
Wikipedia - Colts Neck High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Colts Neck Township, New Jersey -- Township in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Columbia Metropolitan Airport -- Airport in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Columbia, South Carolina in the American Civil War -- History of Columbia, SC during the U.S. Civil War
Wikipedia - Columbia, South Carolina, Sesquicentennial half dollar -- Commemorative coin
Wikipedia - Columbia, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Columbia Speedway -- Auto racing venue in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Columbia Sportswear -- United States company that manufactures and distributes outerwear and sportswear
Wikipedia - Comancheria -- Former region of the US Southwest occupied by the Comanche people
Wikipedia - Comberton -- Village and civil parish in South Cambridgeshire, England
Wikipedia - Comb generator -- Signal generator that produces multiple harmonic outputs
Wikipedia - Come and Hug Me -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Come Back Mister -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Come Drive In -- South Korean television program
Wikipedia - Comedy Big League -- South Korean television comedy show
Wikipedia - Comedy Central (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Asian pay television channel
Wikipedia - Come Out and Play (Billie Eilish song) -- 2018 single by Billie Eilish
Wikipedia - Come Out and Play (The Offspring song) -- 1994 single by the Offspring
Wikipedia - Come Out of the Kitchen -- 1919 lost silent drama film directed by John S. Robertson
Wikipedia - Come Outside (song) -- 1962 single by Wendy Richard and Mike Sarne
Wikipedia - Come Out, Ye Black and Tans -- Irish rebel song
Wikipedia - Comic Geek Speak -- Podcast about comics
Wikipedia - Coming Out Party -- 1934 film by John G. Blystone
Wikipedia - Coming Out Simulator 2014 -- Indie video game by Nicky Case
Wikipedia - Coming out -- Process of revealing one's sexual orientation or other attributes
Wikipedia - Command hierarchy -- Group of people who carry out orders based on others authority within the group
Wikipedia - Command-line interface -- Type of computer interface based on entering text commands and viewing text output
Wikipedia - Commando Drift Nature Reserve -- Nature reserve in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Commemoration of Ataturk, Youth and Sports Day -- Annual Turkish national holiday
Wikipedia - Commerce Street/South 11th Street station -- Tacoma Link light rail station
Wikipedia - Commercial diver registration in South Africa -- Registration of commercial divers by the South African Department of Employment andLabour
Wikipedia - Commercial Journal and Advertiser -- Defunct Australian newspaper, published in Sydney, New South Wales from the 1830s to the mid-1840s
Wikipedia - Common Romanian -- Hypothesis about an ancestor of Romanian language
Wikipedia - Commonsense knowledge (artificial intelligence) -- Facts about the everyday world that all humans are expected to know
Wikipedia - Commonwealth of the Philippines -- 1935-1946 republic in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Communalism (South Asia) -- Religious and ethnic divisions in South Asia
Wikipedia - Communications blackout -- Halt to communication abilities or utilization
Wikipedia - Communications High School -- Magnet high school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Communism -- Political ideology and socioeconomic system advocating common ownership without classes, money or the state
Wikipedia - Communist League of Indochina -- Political party in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Communist Party of Annam -- Political party in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Communist Party of Indochina -- Political party in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Communist Party of South Sudan -- Political party in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Communist Youth of Chile -- Political party in Chile
Wikipedia - Commuter town -- Urban community that is primarily residential, from which most of the workforce commutes out
Wikipedia - Como railway station, Sydney -- Railway station in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Company of Public Relations Practitioners -- Company without livery in the City of London
Wikipedia - Company's Garden -- Park and heritage site in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Comparison of layout engines (XHTML 1.1)
Wikipedia - Comparison of layout engines (XHTML)
Wikipedia - Comparison of the Amundsen and Scott expeditions -- Analysis of two expeditions to the South Pole.
Wikipedia - Comparison of top chess players throughout history
Wikipedia - Compatriots of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Complete blood count -- Routine laboratory test of blood cells
Wikipedia - Compositional Sketches for the Virgin Adoring the Christ Child, with and without the Infant St. John the Baptist -- 1480s sketch by Leonardo da Vinci
Wikipedia - Compound Interest (website) -- Website with infographics about chemicals
Wikipedia - Comprehensive layout
Wikipedia - Compsodon -- Extinct genus of synapsid from Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Compton Cookout -- 2010 student event mocking Black History Month
Wikipedia - Comptroller of Puerto Rico -- Office charged with carrying out post-audits of the use of public funds in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - CompuCom Systems -- Technology services provider based in South Carolina, U.S.
Wikipedia - Compulsive behavior -- Performing an act persistently and repetitively without it necessarily leading to an actual reward or pleasure
Wikipedia - Compute kernel -- Computing routine compiled for an accelerator
Wikipedia - Computer Clubhouse -- Out-of-school learning program
Wikipedia - Computer monitor -- Computer output device
Wikipedia - Computer says no -- Decision making based on data but without common sense
Wikipedia - Computer terminal -- Computer input/output device; an electronic or electromechanical hardware device that is used for entering data into, and displaying data from, a computer or a computing system update programming
Wikipedia - Compute!'s Gazette -- Defunct US magazine about the Commodore computers
Wikipedia - Conanby -- Suburb of Conisbrough in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Conan the Outcast -- Novel by Leonard Carpenter
Wikipedia - Conceicao das Pedras -- Municipality in Southeast, Brazil
Wikipedia - Concentric hypertrophy -- Hypertrophic growth of a hollow organ without overall enlargement
Wikipedia - Concise Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Wikipedia - Concurrency (computer science) -- Ability of different parts or units of a program, algorithm, or problem to be executed out-of-order or in partial order, without affecting the final outcome
Wikipedia - Concurrency (road) -- Road bearing more than one route number
Wikipedia - Condong, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Condor seamount -- A submarine mountain west-southwest of Faial Island in the Azores
Wikipedia - Confederate Defenders of Charleston -- Monument in Charleston, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Confederate Memorial Day -- Observance day in a number of Southern states in the U.S. to honor those who died fighting for the Confederate States during the American Civil War
Wikipedia - Confederate Monument (Fort Worth, Texas) -- Outdoor Confederate memorial installed in Fort Worth, Texas
Wikipedia - Confederate States Army -- Southern army in American Civil War
Wikipedia - Conference -- A meeting of people who "confer" about a topic
Wikipedia - Confession (2019 TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Confession Couple -- 2017 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Confidence-building measures in South America -- Confidence-building measures
Wikipedia - Confusion matrix -- Table layout for visualizing performance; also called an error matrix
Wikipedia - Confusion -- State of being bewildered or unclear in oneM-bM-^@M-^Ys mind about something
Wikipedia - Congaree National Park -- National park in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Congaree River -- River in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Congress of South African Trade Unions -- South African trade union federation
Wikipedia - Congress of the People (South African political party) -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Conjunctiva -- Outer protective layer/covering of sclera
Wikipedia - Connect2Wiltshire -- Demand responsive transport network in southern Wiltshire
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 137 -- Highway in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 138 -- Highway in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 14 -- Highway in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 176 -- American highway
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 2 -- State highway in Hartford and New London counties in Connecticut, United States
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 337 -- Highway in Connecticut, United States
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 3 -- Highway in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut Route 8 -- Highway in Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connecticut's 4th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southwestern Connecticut
Wikipedia - Connie Chen -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Connie Chiume -- South African filmmaker with Malawian descent
Wikipedia - Connie Glynn -- British voice actor, YouTuber, author
Wikipedia - Connie September -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Connor Franta -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Conny Nxumalo -- South African social worker
Wikipedia - Conor Maynard -- English singer-songwriter, record producer, YouTuber and actor
Wikipedia - Conrad H. Gesner -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota
Wikipedia - Conrad in Quest of His Youth -- 1920 film by William C. deMille
Wikipedia - Conrad Stoltz -- South African triathlete
Wikipedia - Conservatism in South Korea
Wikipedia - Conservative Judaism outreach -- Proselytism by Conservative Judaism to attract Jews or non-Jews
Wikipedia - Conservative Party of South Africa
Wikipedia - Conservative Party (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Conspiracy Series with Shane Dawson -- YouTube web series
Wikipedia - Conspiracy theories about Adolf Hitler's death
Wikipedia - Constance Mkhonto -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Constance Seoposengwe -- South African politician and anti-apartheid activist
Wikipedia - Constand Viljoen -- South African military officer and politician
Wikipedia - Constantiaberg -- Mountain on the Cape Peninsula, South Africa
Wikipedia - Constantine B. Scouteris -- Greek theologian
Wikipedia - Constant weight without fins -- Freediving discipline in which the diver descends and ascends only by swimming without the use of fins
Wikipedia - Constituent National Assembly (South Korea) -- Constituent National Assembly, 1948 to 1950
Wikipedia - Constitutional Court of South Africa -- Apex court in South Africa
Wikipedia - Constitution of South Africa -- Supreme and fundamental law of South Africa
Wikipedia - Constitution of South Carolina -- Principles, institutions and law of political governance in the U.S. state of South Carolina
Wikipedia - Constitution of South Korea -- Constitution
Wikipedia - Constructivism (philosophy of education) -- Philosophical viewpoint about the nature of knowledge; theory of knowledge
Wikipedia - Container deposit legislation in the United States -- Overview about the container deposit legislation in the United States
Wikipedia - Contaminated blood scandal in the United Kingdom -- Scandal in the United Kingdom about contaminated blood Red
Wikipedia - Contamination delay -- Minimum time for an input change to change output in digital logic
Wikipedia - Contemplation -- Profound thinking about something
Wikipedia - Contemporary culture of South Korea
Wikipedia - Continental Divide of the Americas -- principal hydrological divide of North and South America
Wikipedia - Contrayerva -- Medicinal root of Central/South American herb plants
Wikipedia - Contributions of Leonhard Euler to mathematics -- Overview about the contributions of Leonhard Euler to mathematics
Wikipedia - Control (2007 film) -- 2007 biographical film about the life of Ian Curtis directed by Anton Corbijn
Wikipedia - Controlled emergency swimming ascent -- A technique used by scuba divers to return to the surface in an out-of-gas emergency in shallow water
Wikipedia - Controlled Impact Demonstration -- Experiment involving purposeful crash of a Boeing 720, carried out for NASA and the FAA
Wikipedia - Control variable -- An experimental element which is not changed throughout the experiment.
Wikipedia - Controversies about labeling terrorism -- No consensus on a single, universal definition
Wikipedia - Controversies about Opus Dei
Wikipedia - Controversies about psychiatry
Wikipedia - Controversies about the 2004 Madrid train bombings
Wikipedia - Conus boutetorum -- Species of sea snail
Wikipedia - Conventional sex -- Conventional sex without fetish, kink or BDSM elements
Wikipedia - Convention of Southern Baptists of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands -- Group of churches affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention
Wikipedia - Convention on the Exercise of Liberal Professions of 1939 -- 1939 international treaty in South America
Wikipedia - Convention on the Rights of the Child -- International treaty about the rights of children
Wikipedia - Conway Reef Plate -- A small tectonic plate in the south Pacific west of Fiji
Wikipedia - Cooch Behar State -- Former kingdom located south of Bhutan, now in West Bengal, India
Wikipedia - Cook Island (New South Wales) -- Island in Australia
Wikipedia - Cook Islands -- Island country in the South Pacific Ocean
Wikipedia - Cool (band) -- South Korean pop group
Wikipedia - Cooley Distillery -- Whiskey distillery, County Louth, Ireland
Wikipedia - Cooley Mountains -- Mountains in County Louth, Ireland
Wikipedia - Cooling out -- Attitude adjustment for students
Wikipedia - Cooperation Sea -- A proposed sea name for part of the Southern Ocean, between Enderby Land and West Ice Shelf
Wikipedia - Copaiba -- Resin and essential oil from South American Copaifera trees
Wikipedia - Copper Basin (Tennessee) -- Geological area in southeastern Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Coptic Orthodox Church in South America -- In Bolivia and Brazil
Wikipedia - Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States
Wikipedia - Coral reef -- Outcrop of rock in the sea formed by the growth and deposit of stony coral skeletons
Wikipedia - Cordless -- Term used to refer to electrical or electronic devices that are powered by a battery or battery pack and can operate without a power cord or cable attached to an electrical outlet to provide mains power, allowing greater mobility
Wikipedia - Corduene -- Ancient region south of Lake Van, Turkey
Wikipedia - Core router -- Router used on the internet backbone and on internet exchanges
Wikipedia - Cork Mid, North, South, South East and West (Dail constituency) -- Former Dail Eireann constituency (1921-1923)
Wikipedia - Cormac Cullinan -- South African lawyer
Wikipedia - Corne Basson -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Corne Bornman -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Cornel Fredericks -- South African hurdler
Wikipedia - Cornelis Johannes van Houten
Wikipedia - Cornelius Botha -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Cornelius Hermanus Wessels -- South African farmer, statesman, and diplomat
Wikipedia - Corn Palace -- Multi-purpose venue in Mitchell, South Dakota
Wikipedia - Cornubian batholith -- Granite rock in southwest England
Wikipedia - Cornwallis, New South Wales -- Place in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Coromandel railway station -- Railway station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Corona Australis -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Coronavirus Tech Handbook -- Website about COVID-19
Wikipedia - Coroutines
Wikipedia - Coroutine
Wikipedia - Corrosion in space -- Corrosion of materials occurring in outer space
Wikipedia - Corruption in South Africa -- Institutional corruption in the country
Wikipedia - Corruption in South Korea -- Institutional corruption in the country
Wikipedia - Corruption in South Sudan -- Institutional corruption in the country
Wikipedia - Corruption Investigation Office for High-ranking Officials -- Government agency in South Korea
Wikipedia - Cortes Bank -- A shallow seamount in the North Pacific Ocean southwest of Los Angeles
Wikipedia - Corvus (constellation) -- Constellation in the Southern Celestial Hemisphere
Wikipedia - Cory Gardner -- Outgoing United States Senator from Colorado
Wikipedia - Cory Library for Historical Research -- research library in Grahamstown, South Africa
Wikipedia - Corymbium -- Genus of perennial plants in the family Asteraceae from South Africa
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Wikipedia - Cosmic ray -- High-energy particle, mainly originating outside the Solar system
Wikipedia - Cosmoclostis schouteni -- Species of plume moth
Wikipedia - Cosmopterix ancistraea -- Species of moth from South Africa
Wikipedia - Cosmopterix antichorda -- Species of moth from South Africa
Wikipedia - Cossacks -- Mixed ethnic group from the territory of present-day Ukraine and Southern Russia
Wikipedia - Costa Gazi -- South African anti-apartheid activist
Wikipedia - Costas Droutsas -- Greek politician
Wikipedia - Cost-effectiveness analysis -- Economic analysis that compares the relative costs and outcomes of different courses of action
Wikipedia - Cotswold Outdoor -- British retail chain
Wikipedia - Cotswolds -- protected area in south central England
Wikipedia - Cottonmouth (Burchell Clemens) -- Fictional comic book villain
Wikipedia - Cotton-Mouton effect -- Birefringence in a liquid in the presence of a constant transverse magnetic field
Wikipedia - Council for Geoscience -- A national science council of South Africa
Wikipedia - Council for Scientific and Industrial Research -- South Africa's central and premier scientific research and development organisation
Wikipedia - Counties of South Sudan
Wikipedia - Counting-out game -- Children's method of appointing position in a game
Wikipedia - Count Me Out (1997 film) -- 1997 film
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Wikipedia - County Borough of West Ham -- Historical local government district in the extreme south west of Essex
Wikipedia - County Louth -- County in the Republic of Ireland
Wikipedia - County of Neipperg -- Former county of southeastern Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Wikipedia - County of Portugal -- County in Southwestern Europe between 843-1139
Wikipedia - County Route 149 (Sullivan County, New York) -- County route in New York
Wikipedia - County Route 501 (New Jersey) -- Highway in New Jersey
Wikipedia - County Route 507 (New Jersey) -- Highway in New Jersey
Wikipedia - County Route 548 (New Jersey)
Wikipedia - County Route 579 (New Jersey) -- Highway in New Jersey
Wikipedia - County Route 66 (California) -- Road in California
Wikipedia - County routes in California -- County-operated highway system in California
Wikipedia - County routes in Lake County, California -- County routes in Lake County, California
Wikipedia - Coup d'etat of December Twelfth -- 1979 coup d'etat in South Korea that brought Chun Doo-hwan to power
Wikipedia - Court cairn -- Type of chamber tomb found in western and northern Ireland, and southwest Scotland
Wikipedia - Courtesan (film) -- 1948 film by Alberto Gout M-CM-^@brego
Wikipedia - Court of Disputed Returns (New South Wales) -- Special electoral jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Courts of South Africa
Wikipedia - Coutances Cathedral -- Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral in Normandy, France
Wikipedia - Coutens -- Commune in Occitanie, France
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Wikipedia - Couteuges
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Wikipedia - Coventry Carol -- Christmas carol about the massacre of the innocents
Wikipedia - COVID-19 in pregnancy -- Overview about the effects of COVID-19 infection on pregnancy
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Djibouti -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Djibouti
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Africa -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South Africa
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South America -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South America
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Asia -- Epidemiology of COVID-19 pandemic in Southern Asia
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Carolina -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Dakota -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in Southeast Asia -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Korea -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South Korea
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Ossetia -- Details of ongoing viral pandemic in Georgian occupied Region of South Ossetia
Wikipedia - COVID-19 pandemic in South Sudan -- Ongoing COVID-19 viral pandemic in South Sudan
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Wikipedia - Cowra breakout
Wikipedia - Cowra, New South Wales
Wikipedia - C.P. Hoogenhout Award -- awarded since 1960 to recognize the best original Afrikaans book for children between seven and twelve years of age
Wikipedia - Cr1tikal -- Twitch streamer and YouTube personality
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Wikipedia - Cradle of Humankind -- Paleoanthropological site near Johannesburg, South Africa
Wikipedia - Craig Foster (filmmaker) -- South African documentary filmmaker
Wikipedia - Craig Jackson (actor) -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Craig Joubert -- Rugby union referee from South Africa
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Wikipedia - Crane Flat Fire Lookout -- fire lookout in Yosemite National Park, USA
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Wikipedia - Crow's nest -- Structure in the upper part of the main mast of a ship, used as a lookout point
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Wikipedia - Cullen Bullen, New South Wales -- Village in New South Wales, Australia
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Wikipedia - Culture of honor (Southern United States)
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Wikipedia - Culture of South Korea -- Culture of an area
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Wikipedia - Cutthroat trout -- Species of fish
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Wikipedia - Cyclone Winston -- Category 5 South Pacific cyclone in 2016
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Wikipedia - Cymru Terrane -- An inferred fault bounded terrane of the basement rocks of the southern United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Cynariognathus -- Extinct genus of therapsids from the middle Permian of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Daegu Metro -- Rapid transit railway in Daegu, South Korea
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Wikipedia - Dalit -- Marginalized communities in the South Asian caste system
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Wikipedia - Dartmouth College's Rassias Center for World Languages and Cultures -- Non-profit organization at Dartmouth College
Wikipedia - Dartmouth College traditions -- Aspect of Dartmouth culture
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Wikipedia - Dartmouth Conference
Wikipedia - Dartmouth conference
Wikipedia - Dartmouth, Devon -- Town in Devon, England
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Wikipedia - Dartmouth Medical School
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Wikipedia - David du Plessis (sport shooter) -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - David Fanning (journalist) -- South African journalist
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Wikipedia - Delaware Route 17 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 1 -- Highway in Delaware
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 20 -- State highway in Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 23 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 24 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 26 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 273 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 279 -- State highway in Newark, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 2 -- Sate highway in New Castle, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 300 -- State highway in Kent County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 30 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 34 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 36 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 37 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 404 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 44 -- State highway in Delaware
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 52 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 58 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 5 -- State highway in Sussex County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 7 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 82 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 896 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 8 -- State highway in Kent County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Route 92 -- State highway in New Castle County, Delaware, United States
Wikipedia - Delaware Shakespeare Festival -- outdoor Shakespeare festival in Wilmington, Delaware
Wikipedia - Delaware State Route System -- Overview of the State Route System of Delaware
Wikipedia - Delaware State University shooting -- About Delaware State University shooting case.
Wikipedia - Delayed Justice -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Delhi-Kathmandu Bus -- Indian-Nepali bus route
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Wikipedia - Delisile Ngwenya -- South African politician
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Wikipedia - Delmaine Christians -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Del Monte (train) -- Former Southern Pacific passenger train
Wikipedia - Delta South Senatorial District -- |Senatorial District in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Demai (tractate) -- Tractate of the Talmud regarding agricultural produce about which there is a doubt whether it has been properly tithed
Wikipedia - Demand responsive transport -- Bus routes based on demand rather than fixed routes or timetables
Wikipedia - Demi-Leigh Nel-Peters -- South African model and former beauty queen
Wikipedia - De minimis -- Latin phrase: 'about minimal things'
Wikipedia - Democratic Change (South Sudan) -- Political party in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Democratic Justice Party -- Defunct political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Democratic Liberal Congress -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Democratic Nationalist Party (South Korea) -- Conservative political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Democratic Party of Korea -- Liberal-centrist political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Democratic Party (South Africa, 1973)
Wikipedia - Democratic Party (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Democratic Party (South Korea, 1990) -- Former political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Democratic Party (South Korea, 1991) -- Former political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Democratic Socialist Movement (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Demographics of South Africa -- Demographics of South Africa
Wikipedia - Demographics of South America -- Overview of the demographics of South America
Wikipedia - Demographics of South Dakota -- Overview of the demographics of South Dakota
Wikipedia - Demographics of South Korea -- Demographic features of the population of South Korea
Wikipedia - Demonology -- the study of demons or beliefs about demons
Wikipedia - De Morbis Artificum Diatriba -- The first book written specifically about occupational illness
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Wikipedia - Denay Jock Chagor -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Denazification -- Process carried out after World War II
Wikipedia - Dendrobium utile -- Species of orchid from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Denel NTW-20 -- A South African anti-materiel rifle
Wikipedia - Dengue fever outbreaks -- Disease outbreak
Wikipedia - Denham Fouts -- American prostitute
Wikipedia - Denham Roundabout -- Traffic roundabout in Buckinghamshire, England
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Wikipedia - D'Entrecasteaux Ridge -- A double oceanic ridge in the south-west Pacific Ocean, north of New Caledonia and west of Vanuatu Islands
Wikipedia - Deon Dreyer -- South African scuba diver who died in Bushman's Hole
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Wikipedia - Department of Environment, Forestry and Fisheries -- Department of the South African national government
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Wikipedia - Department of Mineral Resources (South Africa) -- Department of the national government of South Africa
Wikipedia - Department of State Security (South Africa)
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Wikipedia - Deputy President of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Derrick Hyman -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Descendants of the Sun -- 2016 South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Desery Finies -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Desi Bouterse -- Former president of Suriname
Wikipedia - Designated Survivor: 60 Days -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Desire -- Emotion of longing for a person, object or outcome
Wikipedia - Desktop publishing -- Creation of documents using page layout skills on a personal computer
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Wikipedia - Desmond Tutu -- South African churchman, archbishop, and Nobel Prize winner
Wikipedia - Desoutter Aircraft Company -- Defunct British aircraft manufacturer
Wikipedia - Desvonde Botes -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Detoxification (alternative medicine) -- Alternative medicine treatments without sound scientific basis for claims made.
Wikipedia - Deutscher Pfadfinderbund (1911-1933) -- First national German scouting association
Wikipedia - Deutsche Schule Durban -- Private school in South Africa
Wikipedia - Deutsches Jungvolk -- Part of Hitler Youth organization in Nazi Germany
Wikipedia - Deutsche Streicherphilharmonie -- German youth orchestra
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Wikipedia - Devadasy -- 2000 anime OVA about a giant human-piloted robot
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Wikipedia - Development Bank of Southern Africa -- Government finance company
Wikipedia - Development of the nervous system -- The process whose specific outcome is the progression of nervous tissue over time, from its formation to its mature state.
Wikipedia - Development theory -- Theories about how desirable change in society is best achieved
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Wikipedia - Devil (CLC song) -- 2019 song by South Korean girl group CLC
Wikipedia - Devilish Charm -- 2018 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - De Villiers Dam -- Dam on Table Mountain, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - De Villiers Graaff -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Devil's Peak (Cape Town) -- Mountain peak in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Devil's Peak Estate -- Suburb of Cape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Devil (Super Junior album) -- album by South Korean boy band Super Junior
Wikipedia - Devsisters -- South Korean video game developer
Wikipedia - De Waterkant -- Part of Gape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Dewees Island -- Island of South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - De Wet Basson -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - De Wet Medal -- A military long service medal in the Republic of South Africa
Wikipedia - De Wet Nel -- South African politician
Wikipedia - De Witt Island -- Island close to the south-western coast of Tasmania
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Wikipedia - DGB Financial Group -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Dhaka South City Corporation -- Municipal organization in Bangladesh
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Wikipedia - Dharwar Craton -- A part of the Indian Shield in south India
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Wikipedia - Dhoti -- Traditional men's garment of South Asia
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Wikipedia - DIA (group) -- South Korean girl group
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Wikipedia - Diamond Youth -- American alternative rock band
Wikipedia - Diana E. H. Russell -- South African sociologist and activist
Wikipedia - Diane Lebouthillier -- Canadian politician
Wikipedia - Diane Swanton -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Dianna Cowern -- Science educator and Youtuber
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Wikipedia - Diary of a Prosecutor -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Diastella fraterna -- Species of plant of the family Proteaceae native to South Africa.
Wikipedia - Dia Toutinji -- Syrian athlete
Wikipedia - Dick Dent Bird Sanctuary -- Reserve in Somerset West, South Africa
Wikipedia - Dick Enthoven -- South African Business man
Wikipedia - Dick Healey -- New South Wales politician
Wikipedia - Dick Mayhew -- Olympic sailor from South Africa
Wikipedia - Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway -- Former British cross-country railway
Wikipedia - Didinga Hills -- Mountain in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Did You Hear the One About the Traveling Saleslady? -- 1968 film
Wikipedia - Die Antwoord -- South African hip hop group
Wikipedia - Diederik van Silfhout -- Dutch dressage rider
Wikipedia - Diego de Torres Vargas -- Wrote first book about the history of Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Diena, Mali -- | small town and commune in southern-central Mali
Wikipedia - Diepkloof Rock Shelter -- Rock shelter in South Africa
Wikipedia - Dierdre A. Snijman -- South African botanist
Wikipedia - Die Rebellie van Lafras Verwey -- 1965 South African drama film
Wikipedia - Dieric Bouts -- 15th-century Dutch painter
Wikipedia - Die Storie van Klara Viljee -- 1992 South African drama film
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Wikipedia - Digging for Britain -- British documentary series about UK archaeology (2010{{ndash
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Wikipedia - Digital multimedia broadcasting -- The South Korean digital TV standard
Wikipedia - Digital Photography Review -- Website about digital cameras and digital photography
Wikipedia - Dik-dik -- Genus of antelopes found in eastern and southern Africa
Wikipedia - Dikgang Stock -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Dikhil Airport -- Airport in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Dikhil Region -- region of Djibouti
Wikipedia - Dikotsi Lekopa -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - Dikwankwetla Party of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Dileita Mohamed Dileita -- Djiboutian politician
Wikipedia - Dillegrout -- Medieval capon potage
Wikipedia - Diluvium -- Deposits created as a result of catastrophic outbursts of Pleistocene giant glacier-dammed lakes
Wikipedia - Dimbulukeni Nauyoma -- Namibian Youth Activist
Wikipedia - Dimethyl ether (data page) -- Information about a kind of ether
Wikipedia - Dimitrios Droutsas -- Greek lawyer and politician
Wikipedia - Dimitrios Koutsoukis -- Greek shot putter
Wikipedia - Dimitrios Soutsos -- Greek mayor
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Wikipedia - Dimitri Tsafendas -- Assassin of South African Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd
Wikipedia - Dimos Moutsis -- Greek singer-songwriter and composer
Wikipedia - Dinaric Alps -- Mountain range in the Balkan Peninsula of Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Dinaric Mountains mixed forests -- Terrestrial ecoregion in Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - DinDin -- South Korean rapper and entertainer
Wikipedia - Dingo (scout car) -- Australian scout car
Wikipedia - Dinka language -- Nilotic dialect cluster spoken by the Dinka people, the major ethnic group of South Sudan
Wikipedia - Dinka people -- Ethnic group in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Dinka religion -- Traditional religion the Dinka ethnic group of South Sudan
Wikipedia - Dinner Mate -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Dinnington and Laughton railway station -- Former railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dinnington High School -- Secondary school in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dinokeng Game Reserve -- South Africa wildlife sanctuary
Wikipedia - Diocese of Coutances
Wikipedia - Dion George -- South African politician.
Wikipedia - Dion River (Nicolet Southwest River tributary) -- River in Centre-du-Quebec, Quebec (Canada)
Wikipedia - Dioscorea elephantipes -- Species of flowering plant native to the dry interior of South Africa
Wikipedia - Dirk B. Paloutzian -- American lawyer
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Wikipedia - Dirk de Beer -- South African aerodynamicist
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Wikipedia - Dirty (Sonic Youth album)
Wikipedia - Disability in South Africa -- Disability in South Africa
Wikipedia - Disappearance of Tammy Kingery -- 2014 South Carolina missing-person case
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Wikipedia - Discogs -- Website and database about audio recordings
Wikipedia - Disconnected youth
Wikipedia - Discoveries of exoplanets -- Detecting planets located outside the Solar System
Wikipedia - Discovery Asia -- Southeast Asian pay television channel
Wikipedia - Discovery Channel (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Asian television channel
Wikipedia - Discovery Family -- Family and youth-oriented television channel in the United States
Wikipedia - Discovery Investigations -- A series of scientific cruises and shore-based investigations into the biology of whales in the Southern Ocean
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Wikipedia - Disease outbreak -- Sudden increase in occurrences of a disease
Wikipedia - Dis ek, Anna -- 2015 South African film
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Wikipedia - Disinvestment from South Africa
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Wikipedia - Disney Channel (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Southeast Asian pay television channel
Wikipedia - Disney Channel -- US youth-targeted television channel owned by the Walt Disney Company
Wikipedia - Disneyland with the Death Penalty -- Article about Singapore by William Gibson
Wikipedia - Disney XD (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Brand of TV channels in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Disparate system -- Data processing system without interaction with other computer data processing systems
Wikipedia - Display device -- Output device for presentation of information in visual form
Wikipedia - Dispute between a man and his Ba -- Ancient Egyptian text dating to the Middle Kingdom about a man deeply unhappy with his life, who has a dialogue between with his ba (soul)
Wikipedia - Disquotational principle -- Philosophical assertion about rational thought
Wikipedia - Disruptive coloration -- Camouflage to break up an object's outlines
Wikipedia - Dissipative system -- a thermodynamically open system which is operating out of, and often far from, thermodynamic equilibrium in an environment with which it exchanges energy and matter
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Wikipedia - Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol
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Wikipedia - Distinguished Service Order (Vietnam) -- Military award of South Vietnam
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Wikipedia - Districts of Djibouti
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Wikipedia - Ditidaht First Nation -- First Nations band of southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Ditidaht language -- Wakashan language of southern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - DITSELA -- South Africa union education organisation
Wikipedia - Dive center -- Service organisation providing recreational diver training, equipment and dive outings
Wikipedia - Diverticulum -- Medical or biological term for an outpouching of a hollow (or a fluid-filled) structure in the body
Wikipedia - Divine madness -- Unconventional, outrageous, unexpected, or unpredictable behavior linked to religious or spiritual pursuits
Wikipedia - Division of South Australia -- Former Australian federal electoral division
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Wikipedia - Dixie Outlet Mall -- Outlet mall in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Dixie Pipeline -- Oil pipeline in the southern US
Wikipedia - Dixon Hotel, Tooley Street -- Grade II listed hotel in Southwark, London, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Diya (lamp) -- Oil or ghee based candle from South Asia
Wikipedia - Diyari language -- Australian Aboriginal language of north-eastern South Australia
Wikipedia - Diya TV -- American South Asian broadcast television network
Wikipedia - DIY ethic -- Do-It-Yourself: Self-sufficiency by completing tasks without the aid of a paid expert
Wikipedia - Di Zi Gui -- Book based on the teachings of Confucius about the requisites for being a good person
Wikipedia - Djaru people -- Indigenous Australian people of the southern Kimberley region of Western Australia
Wikipedia - DJ Clock -- South African DJ and record producer
Wikipedia - Djellaba -- Long loose-fitting unisex outer robe with full sleeves, worn in the Maghreb region of North Africa
Wikipedia - Djibouti Air Force -- Air warfare branch of Djibouti's military
Wikipedia - Djiboutian Army -- Land warfare branch of Djibouti's military
Wikipedia - Djibouti (city) -- city and capital of Djibouti
Wikipedia - Djibouti Party for Development -- Political party in Djibouti
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Wikipedia - Djibouti
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Wikipedia - Dobrokoz -- Place in Southern Transdanubia, Hungary
Wikipedia - Docetism -- View that Jesus was mere semblance without any true reality
Wikipedia - Doctor Detective -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Doctor John (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Doctor Prisoner -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Doctor Stranger -- 2014 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Documentary research -- Use of outside sources to support the argument of an academic work
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Wikipedia - Do Do Sol Sol La La Sol -- South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Dog meat consumption in South Korea -- none
Wikipedia - D-O-G Me Out -- 1991 single by Guy
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Wikipedia - Do it yourself -- Building, modifying, or repairing something without the aid of experts or professionals
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Wikipedia - Dokdo-class amphibious assault ship -- Class of South Korean LPH assault ships
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Wikipedia - Dokgo Young-jae -- South Korean actor
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Wikipedia - D'Oliveira affair -- Controversy relating to scheduled 1968-69 tour of South Africa by the England cricket team
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Wikipedia - Dolores (2017 film) -- 2017 documentary about Dolores Huerta
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Wikipedia - Donald Dunstan (governor) -- Governor of South Australia
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Wikipedia - Donald Grant (politician) -- South African politician
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Wikipedia - Donald Mackay Medal -- Award for outstanding work in tropical health
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Wikipedia - Doncaster UTC -- University technical college in Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Doncaster -- Town in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Don Clarke (songwriter) -- South African singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Don Duckworth -- Racecar driver from South Carolina
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Wikipedia - Donga Science -- South Korean science magazine (e. 1986)
Wikipedia - Dongba -- religion and the priests of the Nakhi people of Southwest China
Wikipedia - Donggeochado -- Island in South Korea
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Wikipedia - Donghae station -- Train station in South Korea
Wikipedia - Donghai Commandery -- Historical commandery from the Qin to the Tang dynasties located in southern Shandong and northern Jiangsu
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Wikipedia - Donner Pass -- mountain pass in the northern Sierra Nevada above Donner Lake about 9 miles (14 km) west of Truckee, California
Wikipedia - Donovan Mitchell (poet) -- South African poet
Wikipedia - Donovan van den Heever -- South African chess player
Wikipedia - Don Pedro (Much Ado About Nothing) -- Character in Much Ado About Nothing
Wikipedia - Don's Fountain of Youth -- 1953 Donald Duck cartoon
Wikipedia - Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood -- 1996 film directed by Paris Barclay
Wikipedia - Don't be the First One! -- South Korean TV program
Wikipedia - Don't Dare to Dream -- 2016 South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Don't. Get. Out! -- 2018 film
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Wikipedia - Dorethea van der Merwe -- first South African woman to be hanged for murder under the Union of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Double-pushout approach
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Wikipedia - Draft:Cambridge Analytica (film) -- upcoming film about the Cambridge Analytica scandal
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Wikipedia - Draft:Kim Hong-joong -- South Korean singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Draft:Kingdom (TV series) -- 2021 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Draft:Konnect Entertainment -- South Korean entertainment management company
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Wikipedia - Draft:Modern Slavery in Nigeria -- Traditional slave trade in southeastern Nigeria
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Wikipedia - Draft:Moon Tae-il -- South Korean singer-songwriter
Wikipedia - Draft:Muhammed Akief -- YouTuber
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Wikipedia - Draft:Park Ji-sung (born 2002) -- South Korean singer-songwriter
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Wikipedia - Draft:Royal Secret Agent (TV series) -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Draft:Savanna News -- South African-based news agency
Wikipedia - Draft:ScammerRevolts -- |American scambaiter, Twitch streamer and YouTuber
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Wikipedia - Draft:Shammah Chenhaka -- A Youth Teacher & Pastor with Ministration Characterized by Undiluted Word of God, Prophecies & Miracles
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Wikipedia - Draft:Snow Deep -- South African DJ and Amapiano producer
Wikipedia - Draft:Snuff Out the Light (Yzma's Song) -- 2000 song by Eartha Kitt
Wikipedia - Draft:South Beach Hotel -- Hotel
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Wikipedia - Draft:Steve Cash -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Draft:SWGO -- Gamma ray observatory in South America
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Wikipedia - Draft:Tomuchcake (2) -- American YouTuber and Internet personality
Wikipedia - Draft:Toys and Little Gaby -- British YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Draft:Tricked Out Tractors -- British reality television series
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Wikipedia - Draft:Vivek Bindra -- Motivation Speaker, Leadership Trainer, YouTuber
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Wikipedia - Draft:Wandile Sihlobo -- South African agricultural economist
Wikipedia - Draft:Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider -- Book by Peter Gay
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Wikipedia - Draft:Yassuo Moe -- American Twitch streamer and YouTube personality
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Wikipedia - Draft:Yong (musician) -- Norwegian producer, singer, songwriter and YouTuber.
Wikipedia - Draft:YooA -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Draft:Yoon San-ha (South Korean Singer) -- Korean singer, actor and model
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Wikipedia - Draft:YouTube Rewind 2021 -- ''YouTube Rewind'' video released by YouTube
Wikipedia - Draft:Zamo Missie -- South African film producer
Wikipedia - Dragnet (franchise) -- Multiple radio and television series and films, usually about policeman Joe Friday
Wikipedia - Dragon Ball Z Collectible Card Game -- Out-of-print trading card game
Wikipedia - Dragon Lee -- South Korean-Hong Kong actor and martial artist
Wikipedia - Dragon's Back -- Ridge in southeastern Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Drainage basin -- Area of land where precipitation collects and drains off into a common outlet
Wikipedia - Drake, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Drakensberg alti-montane grasslands and woodlands -- High altitude ecoregion in South Africa
Wikipedia - Drakensberg Group -- Jurassic geological group in Lesotho and South Africa
Wikipedia - Drakensberg hiking -- Popular outdoor activity in South Africa
Wikipedia - Drakensberg montane grasslands, woodlands and forests -- Ecoregion in Swaziland, South Africa and Lesotho comprising grassy lower slopes of the Drakensberg
Wikipedia - Drakensberg -- Mountain range in South Africa
Wikipedia - Drakenstein Correctional Centre -- Prison in South Africa
Wikipedia - Drake Passage -- body of water between South America and the South Shetland Islands of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Scenic Design of a Play -- New York theater awards
Wikipedia - Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Set Design -- New York theater awards
Wikipedia - Drama Stage -- 2017 South Korean weekly television program
Wikipedia - Dravidian languages -- Language family mostly of southern India
Wikipedia - Dravidian peoples -- South Asian ethno-linguistic group
Wikipedia - Dravidulu -- Caste of Brahmins in southern India
Wikipedia - Dr. Dobb's Journal of Tiny BASIC Calisthenics > Orthodontia: Running Light Without Overbyte
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Wikipedia - Dreamcatcher discography -- Discography of South Korean girl group Dreamcatcher
Wikipedia - Dreamcatcher (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Dream Concert (South Korea) -- Annual K-pop joint concert
Wikipedia - Dream Girls (song) -- Music single by South Korean girl group I.O.I
Wikipedia - Dream High 2 -- 2012 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Dream High -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Dreaming Out Loud (film) -- 1940 American film directed by Harold Young starring Chester Lauck
Wikipedia - DreamNote -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Dream of the Emperor -- 2012-2013 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Dream (YouTuber) -- American video game YouTuber (born 1999)
Wikipedia - Dressing gown -- Type of clothing, loose-fitting outer garment
Wikipedia - Dr. Frost -- South Korean manhwa series
Wikipedia - Dricus du Plessis -- South African mixed martial artist
Wikipedia - Drifts Crisis -- Imperial-republican confrontation in South Africa in 1895
Wikipedia - Drinking culture of Korea -- Cultural phenomenon in South Korea
Wikipedia - Drinking Solo -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Drinking straw -- Thin tube used to suck liquids from a container into the mouth of the drinker
Wikipedia - Drippin -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Drive-by download -- Unintended download of computer software from the Internet, either M-bM-^QM- which a person has authorized but without understanding the consequences or M-bM-^QM-! download that happens without a person's knowledge, often a computer virus, spyware, malware
Wikipedia - Drive-through -- Service that motorists can use from their vehicle (without parking)
Wikipedia - DrLupo -- American Twitch streamer and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Droeshout engraving
Wikipedia - Droeshout portrait -- portrait of Shakespeare by Martin Droeshout
Wikipedia - Drogheda railway station -- Railway station in Drogheda, County Louth, Ireland
Wikipedia - Dropout Idol Fruit Tart -- Japanese manga series
Wikipedia - Dropout (neural networks)
Wikipedia - Dropout (streaming platform) -- Internet video on demand service
Wikipedia - Dropping out -- Leaving school before completion
Wikipedia - Drosera regia -- A species of carnivorous plant in the family Droseraceaea endemic to a single valley in South Africa
Wikipedia - Drovers' road -- Route for driving livestock on foot
Wikipedia - Dr. Petrus Molemela Stadium -- Sports stadium in South Africa
Wikipedia - Dr. Romantic 2 -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Dr. Romantic -- 2016 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Dry etching -- Controlled material removal, without the use of liquid substances
Wikipedia - Dry fire -- "Firing" of a firearm without loaded ammunition
Wikipedia - Dry toilet -- A toilet that operates without flush water
Wikipedia - Dry Tortugas Ferry to Fort Jefferson -- Ferry route in Key West, Florida
Wikipedia - DSME -- South Korean shipbuilding company
Wikipedia - DSP Media -- South Korean entertainment company
Wikipedia - DStv Mzansi Viewers' Choice Awards -- South African television awards
Wikipedia - Dual-route hypothesis to reading aloud
Wikipedia - Duane Strydom -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Dubai route numbering system -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Duble Sidekick -- South Korean music producer and songwriting team
Wikipedia - Dublin South FM -- Community radio station in South Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Dublin South-West (Dail constituency) -- Dail Eireann constituency (1981-)
Wikipedia - Dubrovnik-Neretva County -- County in southern Croatia
Wikipedia - Dubstep -- Genre of electronic dance music that originated in South London
Wikipedia - Dub Take the Voodoo Out of Reggae -- album by Mad Professor
Wikipedia - Dudley de Chair -- Royal Navy officer and Governor of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Duelist (2005 film) -- 2005 South Korean martial arts film directed by Lee Myeong-se
Wikipedia - Duel (South Korean TV series) -- 2017 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Due South -- Canadian crime drama series
Wikipedia - Dugout (shelter) -- Hole or depression used as shelter
Wikipedia - Duiker Island -- Small island seal colony off Hout Bay, South Africa
Wikipedia - Duke of Gloucester Barracks -- British Army barracks at South Cerney in Gloucestershire, England
Wikipedia - Duke Street Capital -- British private equity firm focused on leveraged buyout and growth capital investments
Wikipedia - Duk Sung Son -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Dukwon High School -- High school in Daegu, South Korea
Wikipedia - Dulcie September -- South African political activist
Wikipedia - Dulit frogmouth -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Dulton Adams -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Dumisani Mthenjane -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Dumka-Bhagalpur line -- Railway route in India
Wikipedia - Dumnonia -- Former kingdom in southwestern Britain
Wikipedia - Dunbible -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Duncan Coutts -- Canadian musician
Wikipedia - Duncan Johnson (actor) -- South African actor and presenter
Wikipedia - Duncan MacKinnon -- South African judoka (1970-)
Wikipedia - Duncan Mahlangu -- South African taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Dundalk -- County town of County Louth, Ireland
Wikipedia - Dundas Street -- Major arterial road in southwestern Ontario
Wikipedia - Dundrum Town Centre -- Large shopping centre in southern suburban Dublin
Wikipedia - Dunedin Southern Cemetery -- New Zealand cemetery
Wikipedia - Dunedin Southern Motorway -- Road in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Dunford Bridge -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dungay -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - D-Unit -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Dunoon, Cape Town -- Suburb of Cape Town, , South Africa
Wikipedia - Dun's gazette for New South Wales -- English language journal (1909-1958)
Wikipedia - Dunstan Ainani -- Former Bishop of Southern Malawi
Wikipedia - Dunsville -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Dupatta -- Cloth wrap worn as a shawl, scarf, or veil in South Asia
Wikipedia - DuQuoin State Fairgrounds Racetrack -- Racetrack in southern Illinois, United States
Wikipedia - Durban Botanic Gardens -- Africa's oldest surviving botanical gardens, in South Africa
Wikipedia - Durban Gen -- South African medical drama television series
Wikipedia - Durrance Route -- Climbing route, Devils Tower, Wyoming, USA
Wikipedia - D'Urville Sea -- A marginal sea of the Southern Ocean, north of the coast of Adelie Land, East Antarctica
Wikipedia - Dust mask -- A pad held over the nose and mouth to protect against dust
Wikipedia - Dusty Johnson -- U.S. Representative from South Dakota
Wikipedia - Dutch Brazil -- Dutch possession in South America between 1630-1654
Wikipedia - Dutch Crossing -- An academic journal about the ''low countries''
Wikipedia - Dutch Reformed Church in South Africa
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Wikipedia - Duthie's golden mole -- South African mammal
Wikipedia - Du Toits Peak -- Mountain range in South Africa
Wikipedia - Duty to warn -- Concept in the law of torts indicating liability in the case of failure to warn about a known hazard
Wikipedia - Duygu M-CM-^Vzaslan -- Turkish youtube personality
Wikipedia - Dvorak keyboard layout -- Keyboard layout
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Wikipedia - Dwesa-Cwebe Marine Protected Area -- A coastal marine conservation area in the Eastern Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Dwesa Nature Reserve -- Nature reserve in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Dwyka Group -- Geological group in the Karoo Supergroup from South Africa
Wikipedia - DXKI-AM -- Radio station in South Cotabato, Philippines
Wikipedia - DXOM-AM -- Radio station in South Cotabato, Philippines
Wikipedia - DXOM-FM -- Radio station in South Cotabato, Philippines
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Wikipedia - Dynamic apnea without fins
Wikipedia - Dynamic Duo (South Korean duo) -- South Korean hip hop duo
Wikipedia - Dynamic Source Routing
Wikipedia - Dyson conjecture -- Theorem about the constant term of certain Laurent polynomials
Wikipedia - Dysthanasia -- Common fault of modern medicine involving the extension of the life of a dying patient through technological means without regard to the person's quality of life
Wikipedia - Eagle-bone whistle -- Religious musical instrument used in certain ceremonies in the Southwest and Plains Native American cultures, made from bones of the American bald eagle or the American golden eagle
Wikipedia - Eagle Scout (Boy Scouts of America) -- Boy Scouting's highest award
Wikipedia - Eagle Scout Peak -- Mountain peak in California, United States
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Wikipedia - Early history of South Africa
Wikipedia - Early hominin expansions out of Africa
Wikipedia - Early Modern English Bible translations -- English bible translations made between about 1500 and 1800
Wikipedia - Early modern period -- Period between about 1500 and 1800 CE
Wikipedia - Earnings per share -- Value of earnings per outstanding share of common stock for a company
Wikipedia - Earth's crust -- Thin shell on the outside of Earth
Wikipedia - Earth's outer core -- Fluid layer composed of mostly iron and nickel between Earth's solid inner core and its mantle
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Wikipedia - East African mangroves -- An ecoregion of mangrove swamps along the Indian Ocean coast of East Africa in Mozambique, Tanzania, Kenya and southern Somalia
Wikipedia - Eastar Jet -- Airline of South Korea
Wikipedia - East Asian Youth Games
Wikipedia - East Australian Current -- The southward flowing western boundary current that is formed from the South Equatorial Current reaching the eastern coast of Australia
Wikipedia - East Boldon Metro station -- Tyne and Wear Metro station in South Tyneside
Wikipedia - East Branch South Fork Eel River -- River in Mendocino County, California, US
Wikipedia - East Caprivi -- Former bantustan in South-West Africa (now Namibia)
Wikipedia - East China Sea -- A marginal sea of the Pacific Ocean between the south of Korea, the south of Kyushu, Japan, the Ryukyu islands and mainland China
Wikipedia - East Clarendon High School -- South Carolina school
Wikipedia - East Coast Radio (South Africa) -- Commercial radio station in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Wikipedia - East Ecclesfield -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Eastern Africa Grain Council (EAGC) -- organization representing those involved in the grain trade in Eastern and Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Eastern Cape Parks -- Governmental organisation responsible for maintaining wilderness areas and public nature reserves in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Eastern Chalukyas -- South Indian dynasty
Wikipedia - Eastern Channel Pile Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eastern diamondback rattlesnake -- Species of reptile endemic to the southeastern US
Wikipedia - Eastern Equatoria -- State of South Sudan
Wikipedia - Eastern Gemini Seamount -- A seamount in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, about halfway between Vanuatu's Tanna and Matthew Islands
Wikipedia - Eastern golden weaver -- Bird in the family Ploceidae from eastern and southern Africa
Wikipedia - Eastern Orthodoxy in South Korea
Wikipedia - Eastern Protestant Christianity -- Protestant Christian denominations that developed outside of the West in the late 1800s
Wikipedia - Eastern Recherche Marine Park -- Australian marine park in the South-west Marine Parks network
Wikipedia - Eastern religions -- Religions that originated in East, South and Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Eastern South Asia
Wikipedia - Eastern Southland Art Gallery
Wikipedia - Easter weekend 1999 tornado outbreak -- Tornadoes in the United States on April 2-3, 1999
Wikipedia - East Gippsland Commonwealth Marine Reserve -- Australian marine protexted area near the New South Wales-Victoria border
Wikipedia - East Gulf coastal plain large river floodplain forest -- Ecological region of the southeastern US
Wikipedia - East Gulf coastal plain near-coast pine flatwoods -- Ecological region of the southeastern US
Wikipedia - East Gulf coastal plain savanna and wet prairie -- Ecological region of southeastern US
Wikipedia - East Howe -- Area of Bournemouth, England
Wikipedia - East Kildonan, Winnipeg -- Suburban community in southeast Manitoba.
Wikipedia - East Korea Warm Current -- An ocean current in the Sea of Japan which branches off from the Tsushima Current at the eastern end of the Korea Strait, and flows north along the southeastern coast of the Korean peninsula
Wikipedia - East L.A. walkouts -- 1968 protests
Wikipedia - East London Coast Nature Reserve -- Protected area in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - East Madagascar Current -- Current that flows southward on the east side of Madagascar and subsequently feeds the Agulhas Current
Wikipedia - East Mains, East Kilbride -- Area of the Scottish new town East Kilbride, in South Lanarkshire
Wikipedia - Eastmountainsouth
Wikipedia - East Portlemouth -- Village in the United Kingdom
Wikipedia - East South Central States
Wikipedia - East Street Market -- Market in Walworth, South London
Wikipedia - East Sydney (locality) -- Human settlement in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - East Tasman Plateau -- A submerged microcontinent south east of Tasmania
Wikipedia - East Timor -- Country in Southeast Asia
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Wikipedia - Eating Out: All You Can Eat -- 2009 film by Glenn Gaylord
Wikipedia - Eating Out: Drama Camp -- 2011 film by Q. Allan Brocka
Wikipedia - Eating Out: The Open Weekend -- 2012 film by Q. Allan Brocka
Wikipedia - Eating Out -- 2004 film by Q. Allan Brocka
Wikipedia - Eatontown, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Eatontown Public Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
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Wikipedia - Ebbsfleet Valley -- New town and redevelopment area in Kent, South East England
Wikipedia - EBella -- South African satellite TV channel
Wikipedia - Ebola outbreak
Wikipedia - E. Bower Carty -- Canadian scouting official
Wikipedia - ECB National Club Twenty20 -- Knockout cricket competition in England
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Wikipedia - Eccentric! Chef Moon -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Ecclesall -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ecclesfield Feoffees -- Trustees for Ecclesfield in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ecclesfield Priory -- Former monastery in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Echo Caves -- Cave system in South Africa
Wikipedia - Echoes of the Outlaw Roadshow -- Live album by Counting Crows
Wikipedia - Echo Point (lookout) -- Panoramic view in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eclaireuses et Eclaireurs israelites de France -- Jewish Scouting and Guiding organization in France
Wikipedia - EClerx -- Indian IT consulting and outsourcing company
Wikipedia - Ecology of the North Cascades -- Ecosystems of the Cascade mountain range in northern Washington state and southern British Columbia
Wikipedia - Econet Global -- Zimbabwean telecommunications group headquartered in South Africa
Wikipedia - Economic Emancipation Forum -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Economic Freedom Fighters -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Economic history of South Africa
Wikipedia - Economic indicator -- Measure, which allows statements about the economic situation in general of national economies
Wikipedia - Economic inequality in South Korea -- Overview of the economic inequality in South Korea
Wikipedia - Economy of Djibouti
Wikipedia - Economy of New South Wales -- Overview of the economy of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Economy of South Africa -- Overview of the economy of South Africa
Wikipedia - Economy of South America -- Overview of the economy of South America
Wikipedia - Economy of South Carolina -- Overview of the economy of South Carolina
Wikipedia - Economy of South Korea -- National economy
Wikipedia - ECOPEACE Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Ecoregions of South Africa -- Ecologically defined regions in South Africa
Wikipedia - Ectoderm -- Outside germ layer that forms the brain, spinal cord, epidermis, and more
Wikipedia - Ecuador -- Country in South America
Wikipedia - Edcon -- South African retail company
Wikipedia - Eddie Bauer (outdoorsman) -- American outdoorsman
Wikipedia - Eddie Kramer -- South African audio engineer and producer
Wikipedia - Eddystone Rocks (South Shetland Islands) -- Group of two rocks in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica.
Wikipedia - Edelweiss Pirates -- Loosely organized group of youth in Nazi Germany
Wikipedia - Edenthorpe -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Edeowie glass -- Natural glass found in South Australia
Wikipedia - Edessa -- Ancient city in upper Mesopotamia, modern day Urfa, Southeast Turkey
Wikipedia - Edgar Brookes -- South African politician
Wikipedia - EDGEOUT Records -- American record label
Wikipedia - Edible bird's nest -- Bird nests made out of solidified swiftlet saliva, harvested for human consumption
Wikipedia - Edith Layard Stephens -- South African botanist (1884-1966)
Wikipedia - Edlington -- Town and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Edmond Mazure -- South Australian vigneron
Wikipedia - Edmund Hamer Broadbent -- Plymouth Brethren missionary and author (1861-1945)
Wikipedia - Edmund the Martyr -- King of East Anglia from about 855 until 869
Wikipedia - Edna P. Plumstead -- South African palaeobotanist
Wikipedia - Edoid languages -- Subgroup of Volta-Niger languages of southern Nigeria
Wikipedia - Edo South Senatorial District -- Senatorial District in Nigeria
Wikipedia - Eduard Kokoity -- Former president of South Ossetia
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Wikipedia - Eduardo Souto de Moura -- Portuguese architect
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Wikipedia - Education in Djibouti
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Wikipedia - Education in Somalia -- Overview about education in Somalia
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Wikipedia - Edward Bickersteth (bishop of South Tokyo) -- 19th-century British Anglican bishop and missionary
Wikipedia - Edward Capehart O'Kelley -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Edward Close Jr. -- Pastoralist and politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Edward Cronin -- Founder of the Plymouth Brethren
Wikipedia - Edward George Hudson Oliver -- (1938 - ) South African botanist is the recognized world authority on the subfamily ''Ericoideae''
Wikipedia - Edward-John Bottomley -- South African journalist and author
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Wikipedia - Edward Page (umpire) -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth
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Wikipedia - Edwards v Canada (AG) -- 1929 Canadian court case about women's eligibility as senators
Wikipedia - Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge -- More than 40,000 acres of southern New Jersey Coastal Habitats and tidal wetlands
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Wikipedia - Eerste River -- River in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Eersterivier Secondary School -- Adrikaans-medium hgh school in Cape Town, South Africa
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Wikipedia - Elaine (singer) -- South African R&B singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - Eland armoured car -- South African light armoured car
Wikipedia - Elandskuil Dam -- Dam on the Swartleegte River, North West, South Africa
Wikipedia - Elands River (Olifants) -- River in South Africa
Wikipedia - E'Last -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Elberon, New Jersey -- Place in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Elberton, Gloucestershire -- Village in South Gloucestershire, England
Wikipedia - El Camino Real (California) -- Historic route in California
Wikipedia - Elcesaites -- Ancient Jewish Christian sect in Sassanid southern Mesopotamia
Wikipedia - El Dorado -- South American myth
Wikipedia - Eleanor Kasrils -- South African anti-apartheid activist
Wikipedia - Eleanor Southey Baker McLaglan -- New Zealand doctor
Wikipedia - Elections in South Africa
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Argyle -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ashfield -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ballina -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Balmain -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Balranald -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bankstown -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Barwon -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bathurst -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Baulkham Hills -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bega -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Blacktown -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bligh -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Blue Mountains -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Boorowa -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bourke -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bowral -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Braidwood -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Brisbane (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia in the Queensland area
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Broken Hill -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Bulli -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Burnett (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Burrendong -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Burwood (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Byron -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cabramatta -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Casino -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Castlereagh -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Central Cumberland -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Clarence -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cobar -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Condoublin -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cook's River -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Corowa -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Corrimal -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of County of Argyle -- Former New South Wales Legislative Council electoral district
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cowra -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Croydon (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cumberland Boroughs -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cumberland (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Cumberland (South Riding) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Darling Downs (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Darlington (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Deniliquin -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Dulwich Hill -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Durham -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Earlwood -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Eastern Division of Camden -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Eastern Suburbs (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of East Macquarie -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of East Maitland -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of East Moreton (New South Wales) -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of East Sydney -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Eastwood -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Eden -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Elizabeth (New South Wales) -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Enmore -- former state electoral district in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ermington -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Forbes -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Fuller -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Georges River -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Gladesville -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Glebe -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Glen Innes -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Gloucester -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Goldfields North -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Goldfields South -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Goldfields West -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Grafton -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Grenfell -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Gundagai -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Gunnedah -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Gwydir -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hamilton (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hartley (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hastings and Macleay -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hastings and Manning -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hay -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hume -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hunter -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Hurstville -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Illawarra -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Inverell -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ipswich (New South Wales) -- former electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Kahibah -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of King and Georgiana -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of King (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Kirribilli -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ku-ring-gai -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Kurri Kurri -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Lachlan -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Leichhardt (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Leichhardt, Queensland (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia in the Queensland area
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Lismore -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Liverpool Plains -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Lower Hunter -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Macleay -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Manning -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Marrickville -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of McKell -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Menai -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Merrylands -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Middle Harbour -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Minchinbury -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Molong -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Moorebank -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Moree -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Moreton, Wide Bay, Burnett and Maranoa -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Morpeth -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Moruya -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Mosman -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Mudgee -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Murray-Darling -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Murwillumbah -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Namoi -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Narellan -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Narrabri -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Nepean (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Neutral Bay -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Newcastle East -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Newcastle West -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of New England and Macleay -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of New England -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Newtown-Camperdown -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Newtown-Erskine -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Newtown-St Peters -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Northcott -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of North Eastern Boroughs -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of North Sydney -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Northumberland and Hunter -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Northumberland Boroughs (NSW Legislative Council) -- Former New South Wales Legislative Council electoral district
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Northumberland Boroughs -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Northumberland -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Paddington (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Paterson -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Patrick's Plains -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Peats -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Petersham -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Phillip -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Pyrmont -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Queanbeyan -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Quirindi -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Raleigh -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Randwick -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Redfern -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Richmond (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Robertson -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Rous -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Rozelle -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Ryde -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Rylstone -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sherbrooke -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Singleton -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Smithfield -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Southern Highlands -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Southern River -- State electoral district of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of South Sydney -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of St George -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of St Leonards -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of St Marys -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sturt (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Surry Hills -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sutherland -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Belmore -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Bligh -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney City -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Denison -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Fitzroy -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Flinders -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Gipps -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney Hamlets -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-King -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Lang -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Phillip -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Sydney-Pyrmont -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Tamworth -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Temora -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Tenterfield -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of The Bogan -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of The Darling -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of The Hastings (New South Wales) -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of The Hills -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Toongabbie -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Tuggerah -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Tumut -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Tweed -- State electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of United Counties of Murray and St Vincent -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of University of Sydney -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Uralla-Walcha -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Victoria and Albert -- Former state electoral district of South Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Waratah (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Warringah -- Former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Waterloo -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Waverley -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wellington (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wentworthville -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wentworth -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Western Suburbs -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of West Macquarie -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of West Maitland -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of West Moreton (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of West Sydney -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wickham (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wilcannia -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Williams (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Willyama -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Windsor (New South Wales) -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wollombi -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wollongong-Kembla -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Woollahra -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Woronora -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Wynyard -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Yass Plains -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Yass -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral district of Young -- former state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral districts of New South Wales -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the district of East Sydney -- results for state seat of East Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the district of Kiama -- state electoral district of New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the district of South Sydney -- results for state seat of South Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the district of Western Suburbs -- results for state seat of Western Suburbs, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the district of West Sydney -- results for state seat of West Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the Division of Darling -- results for federal electorate of Darling, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the Division of East Sydney -- results for federal seat of East Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electoral results for the Division of Gwydir -- results for federal seat of Gwydir, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Electrical outlet tester -- Device to verify the function of an electrical outlet
Wikipedia - Electric Raceabout -- All-electric sports car
Wikipedia - Electronic filter topology -- Electronic filter circuits without taking note of the values of the components used but only the manner in which those components are connected
Wikipedia - Elephant (2020 film) -- 2020 American nature documentary film about elephants
Wikipedia - Elephant and Castle -- Area in South London, England
Wikipedia - Eleven Men Out -- 2005 Icelandic film by Robert Ingi Douglas
Wikipedia - Eleventh Avenue (Manhattan) -- North-south avenue in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Elga Balk -- South African pair skater
Wikipedia - Elgin, Western Cape -- Region in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Elias Koutsoupias
Wikipedia - Elias Motsoaledi -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Elias Weekes -- Politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eli Capilouto -- American academic and dentist
Wikipedia - Eli Grant -- Fictional character from soap opera Days of Out Lives
Wikipedia - Eli P. Clark -- Southern California businessman
Wikipedia - Elisa Colberg -- Teacher, founder of Girl Scouting in Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Elite League (India) -- Youth league in India
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Anne Voigt -- South African museologist and zooarchaeologist
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Awut Ngor -- South Sudanese Anglican bishop
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Benson (sculptor) -- South African sculptor
Wikipedia - Elizabeth 'Nanna' Abrahams -- South African Communist Party politician
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Prout
Wikipedia - Elizabeth Strout -- American writer
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Wikipedia - Elize Cawood -- South African actress
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Wikipedia - Elkan Blout
Wikipedia - Elk Grove Unified School District -- School district in southern Sacramento County, California, United States
Wikipedia - Elle Mills -- Canadian YouTuber
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Wikipedia - Ellie Morrison -- national commissioner of the Boy Scouts of America
Wikipedia - Ellies Holdings -- South African electronics company
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Wikipedia - ElliM-CM-0aey -- Island south of Iceland
Wikipedia - Elliot Formation -- Lithostratigraphic layer of the Stormberg Group in South Africa
Wikipedia - Elliott Smith (book) -- 2007 book about musician Elliott Smith
Wikipedia - Ellsworth Air Force Base -- US Air Force base in Rapid City, South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Elma Postma -- South African actress and TV host
Wikipedia - Elmarie Gerryts -- South African pole vaulter
Wikipedia - Elmer Ernest Southard
Wikipedia - Elmer H. Inman -- American bank robber, jewel thief and outlaw
Wikipedia - El NiM-CM-1o-Southern Oscillation -- Irregularly periodic variation in winds and sea surface temperatures over the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean
Wikipedia - Elon Musk -- South African-born American entrepreneur
Wikipedia - El Paso and Southwestern Railroad -- Defunct American short-line railroad
Wikipedia - El Paso, Arkansas -- An unincorporated community in southwestern White County, Arkansas
Wikipedia - Elris -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Elsa Joubert -- South African writer
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Wikipedia - Elsecar railway station -- Railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Elsewhen -- SF novella by R. A. Heinlein about time travel and parallel universes; first published as "Elsewhere" in Sept. 1941 in Astounding Science Fiction under the pseudonym Caleb Saunders
Wikipedia - Elsieskraal River -- River in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Elsimar M. Coutinho -- Brazilian scientist
Wikipedia - El Sistema Sweden National Orchestra -- National youth orchestra of Sweden
Wikipedia - Elstree Studios -- Film studios based in or around the towns of Borehamwood and Elstree in southern Hertfordshire, England
Wikipedia - Eltanin impact -- Asteroid impact in the southeast Pacific Ocean
Wikipedia - Eltham -- District of southeast London, England
Wikipedia - Eluru outbreak -- Unknown disease outbreak in Andhra Pradesh, India, 2020
Wikipedia - Elvis Ain't Dead -- 2007 single by Scouting for Girls
Wikipedia - Ely Valley Railway -- Railway in south Wales, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Elzabe Rockman -- South African politician
Wikipedia - EMakhosini Ophathe Heritage Park -- Wildlife park and historic place in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Wikipedia - Emancipation reform of 1861 -- The first and most important of liberal reforms passed by Tsar Alexander II of Russia, which effectively abolished serfdom throughout the Russian Empire
Wikipedia - E-mart -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Embassy of France, Pretoria -- Diplomatic mission of France to the Republic of South Africa
Wikipedia - Embassy of South Korea, Washington, D.C. -- Diplomatic mission of South Korea to the United States
Wikipedia - Embeth Davidtz -- South African-American actress
Wikipedia - EMD FT36HCW-2 -- Model of American-built diesel locomotive used in South Korea
Wikipedia - Emeishan Traps -- Flood basalt igneous province in south-western China
Wikipedia - Emergency medical services -- Emergency services dedicated to providing out-of-hospital acute medical care and transport to definitive care
Wikipedia - Emerging infectious disease -- Infectious disease of emerging pathogen, often novel in its outbreak range or transmission mode
Wikipedia - E. Michael Southwick -- American diplomat
Wikipedia - Emile Boitout -- French sports shooter
Wikipedia - Emile Boutroux
Wikipedia - Emily Graslie -- American science communicator and YouTube educator
Wikipedia - Emily Hartridge -- English YouTuber and television presenter
Wikipedia - Emily Masanabo -- South African Naval Officer
Wikipedia - Emirates 24/7 -- Emirati media outlet
Wikipedia - Emma Blackery -- British musician, YouTuber, and author
Wikipedia - EMMA - Espoo Museum of Modern Art -- Art museum in Espoo in southern Finland
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Wikipedia - Emma Mills -- American author and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Emman Nimedez -- Filipino Youtuber
Wikipedia - Emmanuel Castis -- South African actor and singer
Wikipedia - Emmanuella -- NigerianM-BM- YouTube personality
Wikipedia - Emma Powell -- Member of Parliament of South Africa
Wikipedia - Emmett Dalton -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - EMovies -- South African satellite TV channel
Wikipedia - Empat perkataan -- Traditional Southeast Asian poetic form
Wikipedia - Empedocles (volcano) -- A large underwater volcano off the southern coast of Sicily
Wikipedia - Empire of Brazil -- 19th-century empire in South America
Wikipedia - Empress Ki (TV series) -- 2013-2014 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - ENCA -- South African TV news channel
Wikipedia - Encephalartos aemulans -- Species of cycad plant from South Africa
Wikipedia - Encephalocele -- Neural tube defect in which the brain protrudes out of the skull
Wikipedia - Encounter Bay -- Bay on the south central coast of South Australia
Wikipedia - Encounter (South Korean TV series) -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - EncyclopM-CM-&dia Iranica -- Encyclopedia about the history, culture, and civilization of Iranian peoples
Wikipedia - Endeavour Hydrothermal Vents -- A group of hydrothermal vents in the northeastern Pacific Ocean southwest of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Wikipedia - Endoplasmic reticulum -- Irregular network of membranes coterminous with the outer nuclear membrane in eukaryote cytoplasm that form a meshwork of tubular channels, often expanded into cisternae
Wikipedia - Endoreduplication -- Replication of the nuclear genome without mitosis
Wikipedia - Endorheic lake -- Depression within an endorheic basin where water collects with no visible outlet
Wikipedia - Endurance (film) -- 1999 docudrama film about Haile Gebrselassie directed by Bud Greenspan and Leslie Woodhead
Wikipedia - Enemies of Youth -- 1925 silent film
Wikipedia - Energy condition -- Simplifying assumptions about the behavior of the stress-energy tensor in general relativity
Wikipedia - Energy conversion efficiency -- Ratio between the useful output and the input of a machine
Wikipedia - Energy in South Africa
Wikipedia - Energy in South America
Wikipedia - Energy in South Korea -- Overview of the production, consumption, import and export of energy and electricity in South Korea
Wikipedia - Energy policy of Canada -- about Canada's federal and provincial energy policies
Wikipedia - Engelbrecht Cave -- Cave system in South Australia
Wikipedia - Engineers Without Borders International -- Organization
Wikipedia - Engineers Without Borders
Wikipedia - Engishiki -- Japanese book about laws and customs
Wikipedia - English Channel -- Arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates southern England from northern France
Wikipedia - English cricket team in South Africa in 1888-89 -- Cricket team that toured South Africa from December 1888 to March 1889
Wikipedia - English language in southern England
Wikipedia - Englishtown, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
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Wikipedia - Enhypen -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Enlightenment Guaranteed -- 2000 German film about two brothers seeking enlightenment through Zen Buddhism
Wikipedia - Enoi -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Enon Formation -- Jurassic-Cretaceous geological formation in the Uitenhage Group of South Africa
Wikipedia - Enoo Napa -- South African music producer and DJ
Wikipedia - En plein air -- Act of painting outdoors
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Wikipedia - Entertainer (TV series) -- 2016 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Entourage (South Korean TV series) -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Envelope detector -- Electronic circuit that takes a high-frequency amplitude modulated signal as input and provides an output which is the envelope of the original signal
Wikipedia - Eocursor -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from eary Jurassic South Africa
Wikipedia - EO (rapper) -- British YouTuber and rapper
Wikipedia - Epacris impressa -- A plant of the heath family, Ericaceae, that is native to southeast Australia
Wikipedia - Epaksa -- South Korean Techno-trot singer
Wikipedia - Ephebiphobia -- Fear of youth
Wikipedia - Epidemic curve -- Statistical method to visualise the onset of an outbreak
Wikipedia - Epigenetics -- Study of heritable DNA and histone modifications that affect the expression of a gene without a change in its nucleotide sequence.
Wikipedia - Episcopal Diocese of Southern Virginia
Wikipedia - Epistemicism -- Philosophical concept about vagueness
Wikipedia - Epistemological Letters -- former newsletter about quantum physics
Wikipedia - E pluribus unum -- Latin phrase on the great seal of United States, literally means "out of many, one"
Wikipedia - Epsilon Eridani -- K2 (orange) star in the southern constellation Eridanus
Wikipedia - Equality before the law -- Principle that each individual must be treated equally by the law without discrimination or privileges
Wikipedia - Equality of outcome
Wikipedia - Equatorial Spanish -- Dialect of Spanish spoken mainly in the coastal region of Ecuador, as well as in the bordering coastal areas of northern Peru and southern Colombia
Wikipedia - Erambie Mission -- Aboriginal community near Cowra, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eratosthenes Seamount -- A seamount in the Eastern Mediterranean south of western Cyprus
Wikipedia - EReality -- South African reality television channel
Wikipedia - Erica Park -- Multi-use stadium, in Belhar, Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Eric Beningfield -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Eric Bongers -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Eric Cartman -- Character in the animated television series South Park
Wikipedia - Eric Cook (sailor) -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Eric Halley -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Eric Kholwane -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Eric Lucke -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Eric Macheru -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Eric Mun -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Eric Nam -- South Korean musician
Wikipedia - Eric Norton -- South African cricketer and school headmaster
Wikipedia - Eric Simons -- South African cricketer and coach
Wikipedia - Eridanus (constellation) -- Constellation in the southern hemisphere
Wikipedia - Erika Costell -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Erik Laubscher -- South African artist (1927-2013)
Wikipedia - Erik van Lieshout
Wikipedia - Erik van Rooyen -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Erin Burnett OutFront -- Television news program hosted by Erin Burnett on CNN
Wikipedia - Erin Healy -- American politician from South Dakota
Wikipedia - Ernest DeCouto -- Speaker of the House of Assembly of Bermuda
Wikipedia - Ernest Keeley -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Ernest Leonard Johnson -- (1891-1977) South African Astronomer
Wikipedia - Ernest Moutoussamy -- Guadeloupean politician
Wikipedia - Ernie Els -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Erns Kleynhans -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Ernst Roets -- South African political activist, writer, and filmmaker
Wikipedia - Ernst van Dyk -- South African wheelchair racer
Wikipedia - Ernst van Heerden -- South African poet
Wikipedia - Erotic sexual denial -- Sexual practice or sex play in which a person is kept in a heightened state of sexual arousal for an extended length of time without orgasm
Wikipedia - Erotophobia -- Fear of sex or negative attitudes about sex
Wikipedia - Errol Arendz -- South African fashion designer
Wikipedia - Errol Stewart (South African sportsman) -- South African sportsman
Wikipedia - Error message -- Message displayed on a monitor screen or printout indicating that an incorrect instruction has been given or that there is an error resulting from faulty software or hardware
Wikipedia - Errors of Youth -- 1978 film
Wikipedia - Eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD -- Eruption of a stratovolcano in southern Italy during the Roman Empire
Wikipedia - Eruvin (Talmud) -- Talmudic tractate about Sabbath boundaries
Wikipedia - Ervin Pruitt -- Racecar driver from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Escalera's bat -- European bat in the family Vespertilionidae found in Spain, Portugal, and southern France.
Wikipedia - Escape from Tomorrow -- 2013 horror film made at Disney parks without permission
Wikipedia - Escape Routes (TV series) -- American reality television series
Wikipedia - Escopeteros -- Scouts in the Cuban revoloution
Wikipedia - Ese Ejja people -- Indigenous people of Bolivia and Peru, in the southwestern Amazon basin
Wikipedia - E Sens -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Esmari van Reenen -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Esme Kruger -- South African international lawn bowler
Wikipedia - Esme Quartet -- South Korean string quartet
Wikipedia - Esom -- South Korean actress and model
Wikipedia - ESPN International -- International outlets of ESPN
Wikipedia - ESteem -- South Korean model agency
Wikipedia - Estero Bay (Florida) -- Estuary southeast of Fort Myers Beach, Florida
Wikipedia - Esther Brand -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - Esther Mahlangu -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Eston Nab -- Rocky outcrop in North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Estovers -- Allowance out of an estate
Wikipedia - Estuary of Saint Lawrence -- body of water at the mouth of St Lawrence river, in Quebec, in Canada
Wikipedia - E^ST -- South African-born Australian singer-songwriter and musician
Wikipedia - Eswatini -- Landlocked kingdom in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Ethiopid race -- Outdated grouping of human beings
Wikipedia - Ethnic groups in South Africa -- none
Wikipedia - Ethnic groups in South America
Wikipedia - Ethnic groups of Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Etienne Marie Antoine Champion de Nansouty -- French cavalry commander during the French Revolutionary Wars
Wikipedia - Etika -- American YouTuber and live streamer
Wikipedia - Etiquette in South Korea
Wikipedia - EToonz -- South African children's television channel
Wikipedia - Etta Place -- American companion of the outlaws Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
Wikipedia - Etude House -- South Korean cosmetics brand
Wikipedia - E.tv News -- South African free-to-air digital satellite television news and sports channel
Wikipedia - E.tv -- Free-to-air television station in South Africa
Wikipedia - Etzikom Coulee -- Landform in southern Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - Eucalyptus globulus -- Species of tree endemic to southeastern Australia
Wikipedia - Eucalyptus marginata -- Species of plant in the family Myrtaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Euchambersia -- Extinct genus of therapsid from Late Permian South Africa
Wikipedia - Eucnemesaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaur of the Triassic in South Africa
Wikipedia - Eugeissona -- Genus of palms from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Eugene-Springfield Youth Orchestras -- Youth orchestra in Oregon
Wikipedia - Eugenia Cooney -- American YouTube personality and Twitch broadcaster
Wikipedia - Eugenius Harvey Outerbridge -- US businessman
Wikipedia - Euler's infinite tetration theorem -- About the limit of iterated exponentiation
Wikipedia - Eum Bit-na -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Eungbongsan (Seoul) -- Mountain in South Korea
Wikipedia - Eungella, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Eunha (singer) -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Eun Heekyung -- South Korean writer
Wikipedia - Eun Ji-won -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Eun Won-jae -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Euphorbia barnardii -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia bupleurifolia -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia clivicola -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia globosa -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia grandidens -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia groenewaldii -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia nesemannii -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia pulvinata -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euphorbia triangularis -- Species of succulent plant found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Eurasian Land Bridge -- Shipping route between East Asia and Europe
Wikipedia - Europaplein metro station -- Station on the North-South Line of the Amsterdam Metro
Wikipedia - European colonization of the Americas -- Settlement and conquest of North and South America by Europeans
Wikipedia - European dhole -- Paleosubspecies of the dhole which ranged throughout much of Western and Central Europe during the Middle and Late Pleistocene
Wikipedia - Europe and the People Without History
Wikipedia - European emigration -- European-descended people living outside Europe
Wikipedia - European Liberal Youth
Wikipedia - European route E019 -- Road in Kazakhstan
Wikipedia - European route E1
Wikipedia - European route E25 -- European road in the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, France, Switzerland and Italy
Wikipedia - European route E29 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E314 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E39
Wikipedia - European route E40 in Ukraine -- Road
Wikipedia - European route E40 -- Road between Calais, France and Ridder, Kazakhstan
Wikipedia - European route E411 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E421 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E44 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E45 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E52 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E572 -- Road in Slovakia
Wikipedia - European route E80 -- Road in Europe
Wikipedia - European route E90 -- Transnational highway in Europe
Wikipedia - European Route of Industrial Heritage -- A network of the most important industrial heritage sites in Europe
Wikipedia - European Southern Observatory -- Intergovernmental organization and observatory in Chile
Wikipedia - Europe-Jeunesse -- Neo-pagan Scouting and Guiding organization in France
Wikipedia - Euro-Skulptur -- Outdoor sculpture in Frankfurt am Main
Wikipedia - Euskelosaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from late Triassic southern Africa
Wikipedia - Euzophera hemileuca -- Species of snout moth
Wikipedia - Eva Gutowski -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Evan Cohen -- South African-born Israeli linguist
Wikipedia - Evans Head, New South Wales -- Seaside village in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Evektor EV-55 Outback -- Utility aircraft
Wikipedia - Eveleigh, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Evelyn Mase -- South African nurse and first wife of Nelson Mandela
Wikipedia - Everglow -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Everland -- Theme park in South Korea
Wikipedia - Evermore (anthology) -- Anthology of short stories about or in honor of Edgar Allan Poe
Wikipedia - Everybody Out! (album) -- album by Everybody Out!
Wikipedia - Everyday God Kisses Us On The Mouth -- 2001 film directed by SiniM-EM-^_a Dragin
Wikipedia - Everyday life -- Routine processes in humans daily and weekly cycle
Wikipedia - Everyday Stalinism -- Book about Stalinist urbanization and industrialization in the 1930s
Wikipedia - Every Frame a Painting -- Series of video essays about cinematography
Wikipedia - Every Man out of His Humour -- Play
Wikipedia - Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) (film) -- 1972 film by Woody Allen
Wikipedia - Eve's Hangout -- Historic lesbian bar in New York City
Wikipedia - Evian Resort Golf Club -- golf course in southeastern France
Wikipedia - Evinrude Outboard Motors -- Company
Wikipedia - Eviron, New South Wales -- Suburb of Tweed Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Evolutionary ideas of the Renaissance and Enlightenment -- Changes in thinking about evolution from religious and spiritual to more mechanistic and biological over the 17th and 18th centuries
Wikipedia - Evolution in Four Dimensions -- 2005 book about evolution
Wikipedia - Evolution of biological complexity -- The tendency for maximum complexity to increase over time, though without any overall direction
Wikipedia - Evolution of dinosaurs -- An outline and examples of dinosaur evolution
Wikipedia - EvoL -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Ewe language -- Niger-Congo language spoken in southeastern Ghana and southern Togo, Benin, and South Western Nigeria
Wikipedia - Ewing Seamount -- A seamount in the southern Atlantic in the Walvis Ridge
Wikipedia - Ewout Genemans -- Dutch actor, singer, presenter, and television producer
Wikipedia - Ewout W. Steyerberg -- Dutch biostatistician
Wikipedia - Exeter Airport -- Airport in Devon, South West England
Wikipedia - Exeter, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Exhalation -- Flow of the respiratory current out of an organism
Wikipedia - EXID -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Exmoor -- area of hilly open moorland in west Somerset and north Devon in South West England
Wikipedia - Exmouth (1818 brig) -- 19th c. English ship
Wikipedia - Exocannibalism -- Practice of eating the flesh of a human being outside one's community
Wikipedia - Exocomet -- A comet outside the Solar System
Wikipedia - Exo discography -- Discography of South Korean-Chinese boy band EXO
Wikipedia - Exogamy -- Social arrangement where marriage is allowed only outside a social group
Wikipedia - Exo (group) -- South Korean-Chinese boy group
Wikipedia - Exophthalmos -- Bulging of the eye anteriorly out of the orbit
Wikipedia - Exo Planet 2 - The Exo'luxion -- Second tour of South Korean-Chinese boy band Exo
Wikipedia - Exo Planet 5 - Exploration -- 5th Concert tour of South Korean-Chinese boy band EXO.
Wikipedia - Exoplanetology -- study of planets outside the Solar System
Wikipedia - Exorcism in Christianity -- Practice of casting out one or more demons from a person
Wikipedia - Exorcist -- Person who is believed to be able to cast out the devil or other demons
Wikipedia - Exosphere -- The outermost layer of an atmosphere
Wikipedia - Exoteric -- knowledge that is outside and independent from a person's experience
Wikipedia - Ex Parte Meier -- A case in South African succession law
Wikipedia - Experimental drug -- Medicinal product not yet approved for routine use
Wikipedia - Expert Review of Pharmacoeconomics > Outcomes Research
Wikipedia - Exploding the Gene Myth -- 1993 book about human genetics
Wikipedia - Exploration -- Act of traveling and searching for resources or for information about the land or space itself
Wikipedia - Explorer Scouts (The Scout Association) -- section of the Scout Association in the United Kingdom for 14- to 18-year-olds
Wikipedia - Exposure (heights) -- Climbing and hiking term; sections of a hiking path or climbing route are described as "exposed" if there is a high risk of injury in the event of a fall because of the steepness of the terrain
Wikipedia - Expressways in South Korea -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - Extended enterprise -- Firms that combine their economic output to provide products and services
Wikipedia - Extensive farming -- Agriculture systems that involve low inputs and outputs relative to land area
Wikipedia - External cause -- Associating a specific object or acute process that was caused by something outside the body
Wikipedia - Extracellular matrix -- Network of proteins and molecules outside cells that provides structural support for cells
Wikipedia - Extracurricular (TV series) -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Extragalactic planet -- Planet that is outside the Milky Way galaxy
Wikipedia - Extranuclear inheritance -- Transmission of genes occurring outside the nucleus
Wikipedia - Extraordinary You -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Extra-parochial area -- Geographic area of England outside any ecclesiastical or civil parish
Wikipedia - Extrapolation -- Method for estimating new data outside known data points
Wikipedia - Extraterrestrial diamonds -- Diamonds formed outside of Earth
Wikipedia - Extraterrestrial life -- Hypothetical life which may occur outside of Earth and which did not originate on Earth
Wikipedia - Extraterrestrial sky -- Extraterrestrial view of outer space
Wikipedia - Extravehicular activity -- Activity done by an astronaut or cosmonaut outside a spacecraft
Wikipedia - Exy (rapper) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Eyes of Youth -- 1919 film by Albert Parker
Wikipedia - Eyes Without a Face
Wikipedia - Eyewitness News (South Africa) -- South African news publisher
Wikipedia - Ezekiel Baker (politician) -- politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Ezemvelo KZN Wildlife -- Governmental organisation managing wildlife conservation areas and biodiversity in KwaZulu-Natal Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - F11 and Be There -- 2020 documentary film about Burk Uzzle
Wikipedia - Faber-Ward House -- House in Charleston, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Fabian Michaels -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Fabien Gouttefarde -- French politician
Wikipedia - Fabless manufacturing -- Semiconductor company which designs and sells chips whose physical manufacturing is outsourced to a foundry
Wikipedia - Fabrice Boutique -- Belgian actor of Braine-l'Alleud
Wikipedia - Face on Moon South Pole -- A region on the Moon which resembles a face
Wikipedia - Face-to-face interaction -- Social interaction carried out without any mediating technology
Wikipedia - Face with Tears of Joy emoji -- Emoji featuring a jovial face laughing, while also crying out tears
Wikipedia - Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World - and Why Things Are Better Than You Think -- 2018 book by Hans Rosling
Wikipedia - Fade Out Lines -- 2014 single by The Avener
Wikipedia - Fadi Zaghmout -- Jordanian writer and blogger
Wikipedia - Fadumo Ahmed Dhimbiil -- Djiboutian poet, rapper, singer, and songwriter
Wikipedia - Fagan Commission -- South African commission on race relations
Wikipedia - Faiez Jacobs -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Faifi language -- Old South Arabian language of southwestern Saudi Arabia
Wikipedia - Failed state -- A state which is no longer able, or seen to be able, to carry out its basic functions
Wikipedia - Failing badly -- Fails with a catastrophic result or mithout warning
Wikipedia - Fairfield County Airport (South Carolina) -- Airport in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Fair Haven, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Fair Haven Public Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Fairland Line -- Bus route
Wikipedia - Fairy circle (arid grass formation) -- Circular patches of land without vegetation but circled by growing grass in arid areas
Wikipedia - Faissal Ebnoutalib -- German taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Faith Cabin Library -- Libraries created in South Carolina and Georgia to provide library service to Black people
Wikipedia - Faith Mazibuko -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Faizel Samsoodien -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Fala Flow -- Protected area of upland bog in southern Scotland
Wikipedia - Falkland Current -- A cold water current that flows northward along the Atlantic coast of Patagonia as far north as the mouth of the Rio de la Plata
Wikipedia - Falkland Islands -- Group of islands in the South Atlantic
Wikipedia - Fallbacka -- Fallbacka farm in Vantaa, southern Finland
Wikipedia - Fallibilism -- Philosophical principle that human beings could be wrong about their beliefs, expectations, or their understanding of the world
Wikipedia - Falling Mirror -- South African rock band
Wikipedia - Fall of Saigon -- Capture of SaigonM-BM- by the PeopleM-bM-^@M-^Ys Army of Vietnam and the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam
Wikipedia - Fallout 2
Wikipedia - Fallout 3 -- 2008 action role-playing video game
Wikipedia - Fallout 4
Wikipedia - Fallout 76 -- 2018 online action multiplayer role-playing game
Wikipedia - Fall Out Boy -- American pop punk rock band
Wikipedia - Fallout (computer game)
Wikipedia - Fall Out Fall In -- 1943 Donald Duck cartoon
Wikipedia - Fallout: New Vegas
Wikipedia - Fallout (series)
Wikipedia - Fallout series
Wikipedia - Fallout shelter
Wikipedia - Fall Out (song) -- 1977 single by The Police
Wikipedia - Fallout Tactics: Brotherhood of Steel
Wikipedia - Fallout (video game)
Wikipedia - Fallowfield Loop -- Off-road cycle path, pedestrian and horse riding route in the south of Manchester, England
Wikipedia - Falmouth, Cornwall
Wikipedia - Falmouth Cutter 22 -- Sailboat class
Wikipedia - Falmouth Spur -- Highway in Maine
Wikipedia - Falmouth Stakes -- Flat horse race in Britain
Wikipedia - Falmouth University
Wikipedia - False awakening -- Vivid and convincing dream about awakening from sleep
Wikipedia - False Bay -- Large bay of the Atlantic Ocean at Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - False imprisonment -- Illegal restraint of a person in a bounded area without justification or consent
Wikipedia - Falster -- Island in south-eastern Denmark
Wikipedia - FamilyOFive -- Controversial YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Family Outing -- South Korean comedy-variety show
Wikipedia - Fana Mokoena -- South African actor and politician
Wikipedia - Fanatics (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Fandango on core -- out-of-bounds pointer effects
Wikipedia - Fan death -- South Korean misconception relating to the use of electric fans
Wikipedia - Fanie du Toit -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fanie Eloff -- South African sculptor
Wikipedia - Fanie Lombaard -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Fanie van der Merwe -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Fanout
Wikipedia - Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them -- 2001 book by J. K. Rowling about the magical creatures in the Harry Potter universe
Wikipedia - Fantastic Duo -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Fantasy couture -- Type of haute couture fashion
Wikipedia - Fanteakwa South (Ghana parliament constituency) -- Constituency for the Parliament of Ghana
Wikipedia - Fanuel Makamu -- South African serial killer
Wikipedia - Fareham -- Market town on Portsmouth Harbour, England
Wikipedia - Faremoutiers Abbey
Wikipedia - Farewell Herr Schwarz -- 2014 German-Israeli documentary about Holocaust survivor
Wikipedia - FarFarOut -- Trans-Neptunian object
Wikipedia - Far Gone and Out -- 1992 single by The Jesus and Mary Chain
Wikipedia - Farhad Ahmed Dockrat -- South African cleric and businessman accused of terrorist links
Wikipedia - Farida Karodia -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Farid Esack -- South African activist
Wikipedia - Farid Kharboutly -- Syrian sports shooter
Wikipedia - Far-infrared Outgoing Radiation Understanding and Monitoring -- Future ESA satellite to study Earth's radiation budget
Wikipedia - Farmingdale, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Far Out Space Nuts -- American 1975 children's television series
Wikipedia - Farrants Hill, New South Wales -- Suburb of Tweed Shire, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Farryl Purkiss -- South African musician
Wikipedia - Farthest South -- A record held for most Southerly latitude reached, before the South Pole itself was reached.
Wikipedia - Fasciated wren -- Species of bird native to South America
Wikipedia - Fascinating Youth -- 1926 film by Sam Wood
Wikipedia - Fashion accessory -- Item used to contribute to the wearer's outfit
Wikipedia - Fashion Moda -- art space in South Bronx, New York
Wikipedia - Fashion tourism -- Form of tourism about shopping in various clothing stores
Wikipedia - Fasiha Hassan -- South African lawyer and politician
Wikipedia - Fast, Cheap & Out of Control -- 1997 film by Errol Morris
Wikipedia - Fast, Cheap and Out of Control (album) -- album by HK119
Wikipedia - Fast, Cheap > Out of Control
Wikipedia - Fatal Promise -- 2020 South Korean TV revenge melodrama series
Wikipedia - Fat Chance (film) -- 1994 documentary film about fat acceptance directed by Jeff McKay
Wikipedia - Fates & Furies (TV series) -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Father, I'll Take Care of You -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Father Steps Out (1941 film) -- 1941 film by Jean Yarbrough
Wikipedia - Fatima Chohan -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Faurea macnaughtonii -- Species of tree in the family Proteaceae found in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Faure, South Africa -- Suburb of the City of Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Favorite (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Fawzia Rhoda -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fear of missing out -- Type of social anxiety
Wikipedia - Feast Festival -- Annual LGBT event in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Features of the Marvel Universe -- List about the Marvel Universe
Wikipedia - Fecal-oral route -- Disease transmission via pathogens from fecal particles
Wikipedia - Federal Air -- South African airline
Wikipedia - Federal Alliance (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Federal Marriage Amendment -- Proposed U.S. Constitutional amendment to outlaw the acknowledgement of homosexual marriages.
Wikipedia - Federal Ministry of Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth -- Ministry in the government of the Federal Republic of Germany
Wikipedia - Federal, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Federation of Democrats (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Federation of South African Trade Unions
Wikipedia - Fedmyster -- American Twitch streamer and YouTube personality
Wikipedia - Feel Good to Die -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Feelings (Zonke song) -- Song by South African singer Zonke Dikana
Wikipedia - Felicia cymbalariae -- a perennial plant in the daisy family from South Africa
Wikipedia - Felicia echinata -- a shrublet in the daisy family from South Africa
Wikipedia - Felix Finds Out -- 1924 film
Wikipedia - Felix-Gabriel-Marchand Bridge -- Covered bridge in southern Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Fellgate Metro station -- Tyne and Wear Metro station in South Tyneside
Wikipedia - Fellow traveller -- One who sympathizes and co-operates with an organization, without being a member
Wikipedia - Female hysteria -- Outdated diagnosis and treatment for patients with multiple symptoms of a neurological condition
Wikipedia - Femina (South Africa) -- Women's magazine
Wikipedia - Feminism in South Africa
Wikipedia - Feminism in South Korea
Wikipedia - Fengtai South railway station -- Railway station in Huainan, Anhui
Wikipedia - Fengu people -- Ethnic groups from South Africa
Wikipedia - Ferdinand Buchanan -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Fergana Valley -- valley in Central Asia spread across eastern Uzbekistan, southern Kyrgyzstan and northern Tajikistan
Wikipedia - Ferlon Christians -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fernand Arnout -- French weightlifter
Wikipedia - Fernand Petzl -- World-renowned caver and manufacturer of outdoor equipment under the brand name Petzl
Wikipedia - Ferndale Colliery -- Group of South Wales coal mines 1857-1959
Wikipedia - Fernvale, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Ferny Crofts Scout Activity Centre -- Network of activity centres
Wikipedia - Feroza Adam -- South African political activist
Wikipedia - Ferret Monogatari: Watashi no Okini Iri -- 2000 Game Boy Color game about ferrets
Wikipedia - Ferromanganese nodules -- The result of ion exchange reactions that precipitate ore components from the water (sedimentary) or out of the interstitial water of the sediments layers (diagenetic).
Wikipedia - Fester Abdu -- Turkish YouTube person
Wikipedia - Festival Pier -- Pier on the River Thames near the South Bank Centre
Wikipedia - Fever Night aka Band of Satanic Outsiders -- 2009 film
Wikipedia - Fezile Bhengu -- South African politician
Wikipedia - FFP standards -- Flexible pad held over the nose and mouth by elastic or rubber straps to protect against dust
Wikipedia - Fiat Oggi -- Subcompact car produced in South America by Fiat
Wikipedia - Fiction and Other Truths: A Film About Jane Rule -- 1995 Canadian documentary film
Wikipedia - Ficus albert-smithii -- Species of fig from South America
Wikipedia - Ficus broadwayi -- Species of fig from South America
Wikipedia - Ficus burtt-davyi -- Species of fig from Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Ficus castellviana -- Species of fig from South America
Wikipedia - Ficus catappifolia -- Species of fig from South America
Wikipedia - Ficus pulchella -- Species of fig tree from South America
Wikipedia - Ficus yoponensis -- Species of fig tree from Central and South America
Wikipedia - Field & Stream (retailer) -- U.S. outdoor goods retailer
Wikipedia - Field Day (festival) -- Yearly outdoor music festival in London
Wikipedia - Field recording -- Term used for an audio recording produced outside a recording studio
Wikipedia - Field research -- Collection of information outside a laboratory, library or workplace setting
Wikipedia - Fier County -- county in southern Albania
Wikipedia - Fiestar -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Fifteen-Twenty Fracture Zone -- A fracture zone on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at the migrating triple junction between the North American, South American, and Nubian plates
Wikipedia - Fifth and Madison Avenues Line -- Bus routes in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Fifth Avenue -- North-south avenue in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - Fighter in the Wind -- 2004 South Korean film by Yang Yun-ho
Wikipedia - Fight for My Way -- 2017 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Fighting Youth (1925 film) -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Fighting Youth -- 1935 film by Hamilton MacFadden
Wikipedia - Fight It Out -- 1920 film
Wikipedia - Fig Island -- Archaeological site in South Carolina, US
Wikipedia - Fig Tree Formation -- Stromatolite-containing geological formation in South Africa
Wikipedia - Fiji -- Country in the South Pacific
Wikipedia - Fikile Masiko -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fikile Mbalula -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fikile Mthwalo -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Filipe de Brito e Nicote -- Portuguese mercenary in southeastern Asia
Wikipedia - Filmography of the Ainu -- Films and videos about the life and culture of the Ainu people of northern Japan
Wikipedia - Film Sack -- Podcast about film and television
Wikipedia - Filmspotting -- Podcast about film
Wikipedia - Final stellation of the icosahedron -- outermost stellation of the icosahedron
Wikipedia - Financial services in South Korea -- Overview of financial services in South Korea
Wikipedia - Find Me in Your Memory -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Fine Music Radio -- Classical music and jazz radio station in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Fine Print (periodical) -- Periodical about book arts based in San Francisco, CA
Wikipedia - Fingal Head Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Finger food -- Food to be consumed without utensils
Wikipedia - Finglas -- Outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - Finkenhof House -- House in South Tyrol
Wikipedia - Fin.K.L -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Finlayson's squirrel -- Species of "beautiful" squirrel from Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Finningley railway station -- Former railway station in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Finnmark University College -- University college with three campuses throughout Finnmark, Norway
Wikipedia - FINO -- Humorous scheduling algorithm "First In, Nothing Out"
Wikipedia - Fin swimming at the 2011 Southeast Asian Games -- Watersport competition in Palembang, Indonesia
Wikipedia - Finuala Dowling -- South African poet and writer
Wikipedia - Fiona Coyne (presenter) -- South African actress, writer and television personality/presenter
Wikipedia - Firbeck -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Fire and Rescue New South Wales -- Emergency service in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Fire engine -- Emergency vehicle intended to put out fires
Wikipedia - Fire It Up (Kottonmouth Kings album) -- Kottonmouth Kings album
Wikipedia - Fire lookout tower -- Building to house a person who watches for wildfires
Wikipedia - Fire lookout
Wikipedia - Fire Maidens from Outer Space -- 1956 film by Cy Roth
Wikipedia - Fire of Australia opal -- 998 gram uncut opal mined in South Australia
Wikipedia - Firewood-gatherer -- Species of bird found in South America
Wikipedia - Firhouse -- Outer suburb of Dublin, Ireland
Wikipedia - First Avenue (Manhattan) -- North-south avenue in Manhattan, New York
Wikipedia - First Avenue South Bridge -- Highway drawbridge in Seattle, Washington, United States
Wikipedia - First Battle of Yeonpyeong -- 1999 naval incident between North Korea and South Korea
Wikipedia - First Berejiklian ministry -- New South Wales government ministry led by Gladys Berejiklian
Wikipedia - First Brazilian Republic -- 1889-1930 federal republic in South America
Wikipedia - First Cabinet of P.W. Botha -- Appointments to former South African governing council
Wikipedia - First contact (science fiction) -- Science fiction theme about the first meeting between humans and extraterrestrial life
Wikipedia - First Criminal Brigade -- 1962 film by Maurice Boutel
Wikipedia - First Day Out (Kodak Black song) -- Song by rapper Kodak Black
Wikipedia - FIRST Global Challenge -- STEM education and careers for youth
Wikipedia - First in, first out
Wikipedia - First information report -- Type of police document in South Asian and Southeast Asian countries
Wikipedia - First Republic of Korea -- Government of South Korea from 1948 to 1960
Wikipedia - First rib resection -- Thoracic outlet syndrome treatment
Wikipedia - First Russian Antarctic Expedition -- 1819-1821 expedition to explore the Southern Ocean and Antarctica
Wikipedia - First South Yorkshire -- Bus operator in South Yorkshire
Wikipedia - First Temperate Neolithic -- Archaeological horizon of Neolithic Southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - First voyage of James Cook -- Combined Royal Navy and Royal Society expedition to the south Pacific
Wikipedia - First We Feast -- Online food-culture magazine and YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Firth Park (ward) -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Fish flake -- Outdoor platform for drying cod in northern fishing villages
Wikipedia - Fish Hoek Library -- Public library in Fish Hoek in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Fishing Without Nets (2014 film) -- 2014 American drama film
Wikipedia - Fishkill Creek -- Tributary of the Hudson River in southern Dutchess County, New York
Wikipedia - Fish Lake Valley -- valley in southwest Nevada
Wikipedia - Fish Point (Houtman Abrolhos) -- Point in the north-eastern corner of East Wallabi Island in the Houtman Abrolhos island chain off the coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - FIVEaa -- Radio station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Five Acres and Independence -- Book about self-sustainable small-scale farming
Wikipedia - Five Dock, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Five Mountain System -- Network of state-sponsored Chan (Zen) Buddhist temples created in China during the Southern Song (1127-1279).
Wikipedia - Five-Year Plans of South Korea -- Economic development project
Wikipedia - Fixer (person) -- Person who carries out assignments or solves problems for others
Wikipedia - Flag of Antarctica -- Flags used to represent Antarctica, Earth's southernmost continent
Wikipedia - Flag of Azania -- State flag of Azania in southweastern Somalia
Wikipedia - Flag of Djibouti -- National flag
Wikipedia - Flag of South Africa (1928-1994) -- flag of the Union of South Africa and the Republic of South Africa between 1928 and 1994
Wikipedia - Flag of South Africa -- National flag
Wikipedia - Flag of South Australia -- State flag of South Australia
Wikipedia - Flag of South Carolina -- Flag of the U.S. state of South Carolina
Wikipedia - Flag of South Sudan -- National flag
Wikipedia - Flaite -- Chilean urban lower-class youth
Wikipedia - Flame of Youth (1920 film) -- 1920 silent film
Wikipedia - Flameout -- Run-down of a jet engine caused by the extinction of the flame in the combustion chamber
Wikipedia - Flame robin -- A small passerine bird native to southeastern Australia
Wikipedia - Flaming Youth (film) -- 1923 film
Wikipedia - Flandreau, South Dakota
Wikipedia - FlatOut 2 -- 2006 video game
Wikipedia - FlatOut 3: Chaos & Destruction -- 2011 video game
Wikipedia - FlatOut 4: Total Insanity -- 2017 racing video game
Wikipedia - Flat Out (horse) -- American Thoroughbred racehorse
Wikipedia - FlatOut (video game) -- 2004 video game
Wikipedia - FlatOut -- Video game series
Wikipedia - Flatulence -- bodily function of expelling intestinal gas out of the anus
Wikipedia - Flavors of Youth -- 2018 animated film
Wikipedia - Flemington railway station -- Railway station in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Fleur-de-lis in Scouting -- Main element in the logo of most Scouting organizations
Wikipedia - Fleur du Cap Theatre Awards -- Annual South African theatre awards
Wikipedia - Flexity Outlook (Toronto streetcar) -- Streetcar model operated by the TTC
Wikipedia - Flim-Flam! -- Book by James Randi about paranormal and pseudoscience claims.
Wikipedia - Flipped classroom -- instructional strategy delivering instructional content outside of the classroom and other reated activities into the classroom
Wikipedia - Float-out -- Event during ship construction marking the first time the ship is floated
Wikipedia - Flocculation -- Process by which colloidal particles come out of suspension to precipitate as floc or flake
Wikipedia - Flogging a dead horse -- Idiom about futile effort
Wikipedia - Floor crossing (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Floral formula -- Floral formula is a means to represent the structure of a flower using numbers, letters and various symbols, presenting substantial information about the flower in a compact form.
Wikipedia - Flora of South Georgia -- List of plants native to the Southern Atlantic island of South Georgia
Wikipedia - Flora Sinensis -- Natural history books about China
Wikipedia - Florence Berthout -- Mayor of 5th arrondissement of Paris
Wikipedia - Florence Center -- Multipurpose arena in Florence, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Florence Fuller -- South African-born Australian portrait and landscape painter (1867 - 1946)
Wikipedia - Florence Shoemaker Thompson -- First female sheriff in the United States of America to carry out an execution
Wikipedia - Florence, South Carolina shooting -- Mass shooting in Florence, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Florence Tito -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Flores -- Island of the Lesser Sunda Islands in Maritime Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Floretta Boonzaier -- South African psychologist
Wikipedia - Florida Bay -- The bay between the southern end of the Florida mainland and the Florida Keys in the United States
Wikipedia - Florida Current -- A thermal ocean current that flows from the Straits of Florida around the Florida Peninsula and along the southeastern coast of the United States before joining the Gulf Stream near Cape Hatteras
Wikipedia - Florida Man -- Internet meme about weird conduct by men from Florida
Wikipedia - Florida National High Adventure Sea Base -- Boy Scout high adventure program base
Wikipedia - Florida Southern Railway -- Historic railroad in Florida
Wikipedia - Florida's Tribute to the Women of the Confederacy -- Outdoor Confederate memorial installed in Jacksonville, Florida's Springfield Park
Wikipedia - Flower Crew: Joseon Marriage Agency -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Flower Grandpa Investigation Unit -- 2014 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Flowering Plants of Africa -- South African illustrated botanical magazine series published since 1920
Wikipedia - Flower of Evil (TV series) -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Flowers of the Prison -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Flowroute -- U.S. VoIP provider
Wikipedia - Floyd Shivambu -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Flu (film) -- 2013 South Korean disaster film
Wikipedia - Fly Gangwon -- Airline of South Korea
Wikipedia - Flying fish -- Family of marine fish that can make powerful, self-propelled leaps out of water
Wikipedia - Flying Lions Aerobatic Team -- South African formation aerobatic team.
Wikipedia - Flying Saucers from Outer Space -- Book by Donald Keyhoe
Wikipedia - Fly Shoot Dori -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Fly to the Sky -- South Korean R&B duo
Wikipedia - FM4 -- Austrian national youth radio station
Wikipedia - FNB Stadium -- Stadium in Johannesburg, South Africa
Wikipedia - FNC Entertainment -- South Korean entertainment company
Wikipedia - Foel Wen South Top -- Mountain in Wales, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Fogo Seamounts -- A group of seamounts offshore of Newfoundland and southwest of the Grand Banks
Wikipedia - Folio (magazine) -- trade magazine about magazines
Wikipedia - Folk devil -- A person or group of people who are portrayed in folklore or the media as outsiders and deviant
Wikipedia - Folk theorem (game theory) -- Class of theorems about Nash equilibrium payoff profiles in repeated games
Wikipedia - Folly Island -- Barrier island of South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Folweni -- |Township south of durban
Wikipedia - Fontbregoua Cave -- Cave and archaeological site in southern France
Wikipedia - Foodfight! -- 2012 animated film about a grocery store directed by Lawrence Kasanoff
Wikipedia - Foods of the Southwest Indian Nations -- Cookbook of Native American cuisine
Wikipedia - Food trucks in South Korea -- Type of mobile catering vehicle
Wikipedia - Food writing -- Literature about food
Wikipedia - Foolishness for Christ -- Deliberate flouting of society's conventions to serve a religious purpose
Wikipedia - Fool the World -- 2005 book about American rock band Pixies
Wikipedia - Forbidden City Tour -- album by the New Brunswick Youth Orchestra
Wikipedia - Forbidden Dream -- South Korean historical drama film
Wikipedia - Forbidden Quest -- 2006 South Korean drama film directed by Kim Dae-woo
Wikipedia - Force-based layout
Wikipedia - Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain -- 16th century edicts outlawing Islam in various kingdoms of Spain
Wikipedia - Forced labour under German rule during World War II -- use of unfree labour in Nazi Germany and throughout German-occupied Europe during the Second World War
Wikipedia - Forced marriage -- Marriage in which one or more of the parties is married without his or her consent or against his or her will
Wikipedia - Force of the South -- Defunct Italian political party
Wikipedia - Ford Southampton plant -- Ford motor vehicle assembly in Southampton, UK
Wikipedia - Foreign body -- Object originating outside the body of an organism
Wikipedia - Foreign exchange company -- About Foreign exchange company
Wikipedia - Foreign relations of South Africa during apartheid
Wikipedia - Foreign relations of South Africa
Wikipedia - Foreign relations of South Korea -- International relations of the East Asian nation
Wikipedia - Foreign trade of South Africa
Wikipedia - Foremark Reservoir -- Reservoir in south Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Foreshore, Cape Town -- Part of central Cape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Foreshore Freeway Bridge -- Incomplete bridge in South Africa
Wikipedia - Forest inventory -- Systematic collection of information about a forested area for assessment or analysis
Wikipedia - Forest raven -- A passerine bird in the family Corvidae native to Tasmania and parts of southern Victoria
Wikipedia - Forests of KwaZulu-Natal -- Forest vegetation type in South Africa
Wikipedia - Forest (TV series) -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Forget About It (film) -- 2006 film by BJ Davis
Wikipedia - Forgetting All About You -- 2017 single by Phoebe Ryan
Wikipedia - Form 4473 -- Form filled out when purchasing a firearm in the U.S.
Wikipedia - Formatting Output Specification Instance
Wikipedia - Former Zhao -- Former Southern Xiongnu country
Wikipedia - Fornax -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Forster ministry -- New South Wales government ministry led by William Forster
Wikipedia - Fort Amherst -- Fortification in South East England
Wikipedia - Fort Benning -- United States Army post outside Columbus, Georgia
Wikipedia - Fort Denison Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Fortescue Bay -- Bay in southeast Tasmania, Australia
Wikipedia - Fort Fordyce Nature Reserve -- Nature reserve in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - For the Cause of the South (1912 film) -- 1912 film
Wikipedia - For the Sake of My Intemperate Youth -- 1952 film
Wikipedia - For Those About to Rock: Monsters in Moscow -- 1992 film by Wayne Isham
Wikipedia - For Those About to Rock (We Salute You) -- 1982 single by AC/DC
Wikipedia - Fort James (South Dakota) -- Cavalry fort in South Dakota
Wikipedia - Fort Kinnaird -- Retail park in south-east Edinburgh, Scotland
Wikipedia - Fort Kiowa -- 19th-century fur trading post in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Fort Maurepas -- 1699 French settlement in southeastern USA
Wikipedia - Fort Meade (South Dakota) -- Military base in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Fort Myers Southern Railroad -- Shortline railroad in Southwest Florida
Wikipedia - Fort of Trafaria -- 17th-century fort south-west of Lisbon, Portugal
Wikipedia - Fort Prince George (South Carolina) -- Fort constructed in 1753 in northwest South Carolina
Wikipedia - Fortress of the Immaculate Conception -- Fortification in the village of El Castillo in southern Nicaragua.
Wikipedia - Fortress Wall of Seoul -- Invasion barrier wall(s) surrounding Seoul, South Korea built 1396-1398
Wikipedia - Fort Standish (Plymouth, Massachusetts) -- Fort in Massachusetts
Wikipedia - Fort Stewart -- US Army post in southeast Georgia
Wikipedia - Fortune-telling -- Practice of predicting information about a person's life
Wikipedia - Fort Wayne Scouts -- Professional softball team
Wikipedia - Fort Zumwalt South High School -- High school in Saint Peters, Missouri, U.S.
Wikipedia - Forum for Service Delivery -- South African political party
Wikipedia - Fossil Cave -- A flooded cave in the Limestone Coast area of South Australia
Wikipedia - Fossil-fuel phase-out
Wikipedia - Fossil fuel phase-out -- Stopping burning coal, oil and gas
Wikipedia - Foundation Seamounts -- A series of seamounts in the southern Pacific Ocean in a chain which starts at the Pacific-Antarctic Ridge
Wikipedia - Found Out About You -- 1989 song by Gin Blossoms
Wikipedia - Fountain of Youth Archaeological Park -- Private archaeological park
Wikipedia - Fountain of Youth
Wikipedia - Four Asian Tigers -- Economies of South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Four Corners Monument -- Marks the quadripoint in the Southwestern United States
Wikipedia - Four harmonious animals -- Story in Buddhist traditions, especially South Asian
Wikipedia - Four-letter word -- Words that are made out of four letters
Wikipedia - Four Out of Five -- 2018 single by Arctic Monkeys
Wikipedia - Four Rode Out -- 1971 film by John Peyser
Wikipedia - Four Seasons (song) -- Song recorded by South Korean singer Taeyeon
Wikipedia - Four-striped grass mouse -- Southern African species of mammals belonging to the mouse and rat family of rodents
Wikipedia - Fourth Raadsaal -- parliamentary building in Bloemfontein, South Africa
Wikipedia - Four Ways Out -- 1951 film
Wikipedia - Four Weddings -- British reality television series about weddings
Wikipedia - Fouta towel -- Wrap or towel in the Mediterranean region
Wikipedia - Foveaux Strait -- Strait separating South Island and Stewart Island
Wikipedia - Fox Movies (Southeast Asian TV channel) -- Movies-themed channel in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Fox Sports (Southeast Asian TV network) -- Southeast Asian pay television network
Wikipedia - Foxtail Peak -- Mountain in South Georgia
Wikipedia - Fox Went out on a Chilly Night: An Old Song -- 1962 Caldecott picture book
Wikipedia - Fradique Coutinho (Sao Paulo Metro) -- Sao Paulo Metro station
Wikipedia - Framing Youth -- 1937 film
Wikipedia - Francesco (2020 film) -- 2020 documentary directed by Evgeny Afineevsky about the life and the teaching of Pope Francis
Wikipedia - Frances Margaret Leighton -- South African botanist
Wikipedia - Franchise Group -- American holding company of Liberty Tax Service and Sears Outlet Stores
Wikipedia - Francis Barsan -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Francis Buekenhout -- Belgian mathematician
Wikipedia - Franciscan youth
Wikipedia - Francis Chouler -- South African actor from Cape Town
Wikipedia - Francis Cooke -- Original settler of Plymouth Colony (1583-1663)
Wikipedia - Francisco Vazquez de Coronado -- Spanish explorer of the American southwest
Wikipedia - Francis: Pray for Me -- 2015 film about Pope Francis
Wikipedia - Francis Rombouts
Wikipedia - Francis Southwell -- 16th-century English politician
Wikipedia - Francis William Reitz -- South African politician and statesman
Wikipedia - Franco-German Youth Office -- Organization
Wikipedia - Francois Boutin -- French Thoroughbred horse trainer
Wikipedia - Francois Rodgers -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Francois Van Coke -- South African singer
Wikipedia - Frank A. Southard, Jr. -- American economist
Wikipedia - Frank Brooks (sportsman) -- Southern Rhodesian sportsman (1884-1952)
Wikipedia - Franke and the Knockouts -- American pop rock band
Wikipedia - Frank Grey -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Franklin Island southwest Important Bird Area -- Important Bird Area of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Frank Southgate -- British painter (1872-1916)
Wikipedia - Frank Staff -- South African ballet dancer and choreographer
Wikipedia - Frank Stilwell -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Frank Vest -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Southern Virginia
Wikipedia - Frans Swart -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Fraser Valley -- Region of the Fraser River basin in southwestern British Columbia, downstream of the Fraser Canyon
Wikipedia - Freaking Me Out -- 2019 promotional single by Ava Max
Wikipedia - Freak Out! (Teenage Bottlerocket album) -- album
Wikipedia - Freak Out (TV series) -- American reality television series
Wikipedia - Freak the Freak Out -- 2010 single by Victorious cast
Wikipedia - Freda Levson -- South African political activist
Wikipedia - Fred C. Nelles Youth Correctional Facility -- Former youth detention center in Whittier, California
Wikipedia - Freddy and the Song of the South Pacific -- 1962 film
Wikipedia - Freddy Sonakile -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Frederick Augustus Cooper -- Politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Frederick Banbury, 1st Baron Banbury of Southam -- British politician
Wikipedia - Frederick Brownell -- South African herald, vexillologist and genealogist
Wikipedia - Frederick Carruthers Cornell -- English-born South African writer
Wikipedia - Frederick de Houtman -- Dutch navigator and colonial governor
Wikipedia - Frederick Luyt -- South African sportsman
Wikipedia - Frederick Payne (umpire) -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Frederick Robe -- Governor of South Australia
Wikipedia - Frederick Samuel Modise -- Former leader of a South African Pentecostal church
Wikipedia - Frederik Bouttats the Elder -- Flemish painter, engraver, printmaker, and dealer in prints
Wikipedia - Fredie Blom -- South African alleged supercentenarian
Wikipedia - Fred Morgan (sport shooter) -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - Fred Nel -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fredriech Pretorius -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - Fredy Hirsch -- German-Jewish youth leader
Wikipedia - Free Democrats (South Africa) -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Freediving blackout -- Loss of consciousness caused by cerebral hypoxia towards the end of a breath-hold dive
Wikipedia - Freediving -- Underwater diving without breathing apparatus
Wikipedia - Freedom Day (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Freedom Front Plus -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Freedom of religion in South Africa
Wikipedia - Freedom of religion in South America by country
Wikipedia - Freedom of religion in South Korea
Wikipedia - Freedom of religion -- human right to practise any or no religion without prejudice from government
Wikipedia - Free German Workers' Party -- Neo-Nazi political party outlawed in Germany in 1995
Wikipedia - Freehold Borough, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Freehold Borough Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Freehold High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Freehold Township High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Freehold Township, New Jersey -- Township in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Freehold Township Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Free range -- Method of farming where animals can roam freely outdoors
Wikipedia - Free Software Magazine -- Web site and magazine about free software
Wikipedia - Free South Africa Movement
Wikipedia - Free Southern Theater -- Former community theater group at Tougaloo College, MS, US
Wikipedia - Free State National Botanical Garden -- Botanical garden just outside Bloemfontein
Wikipedia - Free-to-play -- Method of video game distribution that give players access to a significant portion of their content without paying, but often with pay microtransactions to access additional content
Wikipedia - Free transfer (transport) -- Allowing a rider to switch from one vehicle to another without paying an additional fare
Wikipedia - Free university -- organizations offering uncredited, public classes without restrictions on teachers or learners
Wikipedia - Free will -- Ability to make choices without constraints
Wikipedia - French Basque Country -- Region in southwestern France
Wikipedia - French Broad and Atlantic Railway -- former railroad in South Carolina, USA
Wikipedia - French Indochina -- Former federal state in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - French language in the United States -- Overview about the French language in the United States
Wikipedia - French military administration in Fezzan -- 1947-1951 French rule of southwestern Libya as part of the Allied administration
Wikipedia - French onion soup -- Type of soup usually based on meat stock and onions, and often served gratineed with croutons or a larger piece of bread covered with cheese floating on top
Wikipedia - French Polynesia -- French overseas country in the Southern Pacific Ocean
Wikipedia - French Riviera -- Mediterranean coastline of the southeast corner of France including the Principality of Monaco
Wikipedia - French Without Tears (film) -- 1939 film
Wikipedia - Frene Ginwala -- South African journalist and politician
Wikipedia - Frequency response -- Quantitative measure of the output spectrum of a system or device in response to a stimulus
Wikipedia - Frequently Asked Questions About Time Travel -- 2009 film by Gareth Carrivick
Wikipedia - Fresh 92.7 -- Community radio station in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Fresh Outta London -- 2020 single by Jake Paul
Wikipedia - Fresh Out the Oven -- Song by Jennifer Lopez
Wikipedia - Frickley -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Friday Joy Package -- South Korean variety television series
Wikipedia - Friedrich August Bouterwek -- German artist
Wikipedia - Friendlyjordies -- Australian Youtuber
Wikipedia - Friend of My Youth -- Book by Alice Munro
Wikipedia - Fringe science -- Inquiries far outside of mainstream science
Wikipedia - Frits van Turenhout -- Dutch sports journalist
Wikipedia - Fritz Houtermans
Wikipedia - Fritz Joubert Duquesne -- South African journalist, German soldier, and spy
Wikipedia - Frock -- Various types of loose-fitting outer garment
Wikipedia - Frog cake -- Type of cake from South Australia
Wikipedia - Frogmore, South Carolina -- Unincorporated community in South Carolina, US
Wikipedia - Frogmouth -- Family of birds
Wikipedia - From Hand to Mouth -- 1919 film
Wikipedia - Fromis 9 -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - From Out of Nowhere (song) -- 1989 single by Faith No More
Wikipedia - From the Earth to the Moon (miniseries) -- 1998 American TV miniseries about NASA's Apollo program
Wikipedia - From the Sky Down -- 2011 documentary film about U2
Wikipedia - Frontal assault -- All-out full-force military attack
Wikipedia - Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy -- Political party in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Frontier Scout (1938 film) -- 1938 film directed by Sam Newfield
Wikipedia - Front National (South Africa) -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Front Range -- Mountain range of the Southern Rocky Mountains of North America
Wikipedia - Frost Great Outdoors -- American television network
Wikipedia - Fruit Without Love -- 1956 film
Wikipedia - Frum -- Yiddish word for a devout Jew
Wikipedia - F.T.A. -- Documentary about the 1971 anti-Vietnam War FTA Show
Wikipedia - F.T. Island -- South Korean band
Wikipedia - Fuck the Demon Outta Me -- album by The Guns
Wikipedia - Fuck the Golden Youth -- album by The Mint Chicks
Wikipedia - Fufe Makatong -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Fukagawa Route -- expressway in the Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Fuk Wat They Talkin Bout -- album by Tyga
Wikipedia - Fulcrum (sculpture) -- Sculpture outside Liverpool Street station in London, installed in 1987
Wikipedia - Fulfillment Amphitheater -- Outdoor amphitheater in Taichung, Taiwan
Wikipedia - Fulham Fallout -- album by The Lurkers
Wikipedia - Fulham -- Area of southwest London, England
Wikipedia - Full-face diving mask -- Diving mask that covers the mouth as well as the eyes and nose
Wikipedia - Fullwell Cross -- Area of outer east London
Wikipedia - Fulmar Bay -- Bay in the South Orkney Islands
Wikipedia - Fulton Allem -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Fulufhelo Nelwamondo -- Fulufhelo Nelwamondo (1982-) is a South African engineer and computer scientist known for his work on computational intelligence techniques
Wikipedia - Fulwood, Sheffield -- Suburb of Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Fulwood (ward), South Yorkshire -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Fumani Shilubana -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Function (mathematics) -- Mapping that associates a single output value to each input
Wikipedia - Fundacion -- Place in Columbia, South America
Wikipedia - Fundamental theorem of calculus -- Theorem about the relationship between derivatives and integrals
Wikipedia - Fundella argentina -- Species of snout moth
Wikipedia - Fundile Gade -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Funding Together -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Fundi Tshazibana -- South African economist (born c. 1977)
Wikipedia - Fundy Basin -- A sediment-filled rift basin on the Atlantic coast of southeastern Canada
Wikipedia - Fungal extracellular enzyme activity -- Enzymes produced by fungi and secreted outside their cells
Wikipedia - Funzie Girt -- Ancient dividing wall that was erected from north to south across the island of Fetlar in Shetland, Scotland
Wikipedia - Fur-bearing trout -- Legendary creature
Wikipedia - Furlong -- Unit of length equal to 660 feet or about 201 metres
Wikipedia - Furman University -- Private liberal arts college in Greenville, South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Furnace Town Living Heritage Museum -- Outdoor museum near Snow Hill, Maryland, United States
Wikipedia - Further (Outasight album) -- extended play by Outasight
Wikipedia - Fusion Arena -- Planned esports arena in south Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Futuna Plate -- A very small tectonic plate near the south Pacific island of Futuna
Wikipedia - Future Bounce -- South Korean producer duo
Wikipedia - Future Democratic Party -- Political party in South Korea
Wikipedia - Fuzhou-Xiamen high-speed railway -- High speed rail line in southeastern China
Wikipedia - Fuzzy logic -- System for reasoning about vagueness
Wikipedia - F. W. de Klerk -- South African politician
Wikipedia - F(x) discography -- Discography of South Korean girl group f(x)
Wikipedia - F(x) (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Fynbos -- Shrubland and heathland ecoregion of southwestern South Africa
Wikipedia - Gaba Cannal -- South African music producer and DJ
Wikipedia - Gabeba Baderoon -- South African poet and academic
Wikipedia - Gabe Khouth -- Canadian voice, film and television actor
Wikipedia - Gaborone Dam -- dam in South-East District
Wikipedia - Gabriel DropOut -- Japanese manga and anime series
Wikipedia - Gabriel Duop Lam -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Gabriel Mouton
Wikipedia - Ga Deuk-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Gaeinsan -- Mountain in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gaeko -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Gael Jean Campbell-Young -- South African taxonomist and actor
Wikipedia - Gaeunsa -- Buddhist temple in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gaeun -- Town in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gagasi 99.5 FM -- Radio station in Durban, South Africa
Wikipedia - Gaho -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Gajar ka halwa -- South Asian sweet
Wikipedia - Gajra -- Flower garland worn in the hair or on the wrist by South Asian women
Wikipedia - Galapagos Rise -- A divergent boundary between the South American coast and the triple junction of the Nazca Plate, the Cocos Plate, and the Pacific Plate
Wikipedia - Galathea Depth -- The portion the Philippine Trench exceeding 6,000-metre (20,000 ft) depths in the south-western Pacific Ocean
Wikipedia - Galaure -- River in southeastern France
Wikipedia - Galesaurus -- Extinct genus of cynodonts from the Triassic of South Africa
Wikipedia - Galeshewe -- Township in Kimberley, South Africa
Wikipedia - Galidor: Defenders of the Outer Dimension -- 2002 Canadian/American television series
Wikipedia - Galil Brinkhuis -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Gamal Lineveldt -- South African serial killer
Wikipedia - Gamberi -- Area on the outskirts of Jalalabad, Afghanistan
Wikipedia - Gambling in South Africa
Wikipedia - Gambling -- Wagering of money on a game of chance or event with an uncertain outcome
Wikipedia - GaM-EM-!inci Military Training Grounds -- United States Army post outside Columbus, Georgia
Wikipedia - Games People Play (Joe South song)
Wikipedia - Game Without Rules -- 1967 short story collection by Michael Gilbert
Wikipedia - Gamsung Camping -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Gamucha -- Thin, coarse cotton towel common in South and Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Gana (outlaw) -- Nigerian criminal (b. 1970s, d. 2020)
Wikipedia - Gan Chinese -- primary branch of Chinese spoken in southern China
Wikipedia - Gander Outdoors -- US based outdoors equipment retailer
Wikipedia - Gandhidham-Indore Weekly Express -- Indian train route
Wikipedia - Gangavva -- Indian Youtuber
Wikipedia - Gang Dong-won -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Ganges -- Major river in southern Asia
Wikipedia - Gang Gyeong-hyo -- South Korean modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Gang Mi-yeong -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Gangnam Beauty -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Gangnam Scandal -- 2018-2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Gang Su-il -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Ganief Hendricks -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Ganigobis Formation -- Late Carboniferous to Early Permian geological formation of the Dwyka Group in Southern Africa
Wikipedia - Gaogouli County -- Han Dynasty county in southern Manchuria and northern Korea
Wikipedia - Gaon Album Chart -- South Korean music chart
Wikipedia - Gaon Digital Chart -- South Korean music chart
Wikipedia - Gaon Music Chart -- South Korean music chart
Wikipedia - Gapyeong Cycling Team -- South Korean cycling team
Wikipedia - Garbage in garbage out
Wikipedia - Garbage in, garbage out
Wikipedia - Garden Route Botanical Garden -- Botanical Garden in George, Western Cape
Wikipedia - Garden Route National Park -- Coastal national park in the Garden Route region of the Western Cape and Eastern Cape provinces in South Africa
Wikipedia - Gardens, Cape Town -- Inner-city suburb of Cape Town in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Gardens Shul -- Jewish religious building in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Garden tourism -- Tourism about gardening history
Wikipedia - Gardian -- Mounted cattle herdsman in southern France
Wikipedia - Gardner Pinnacles -- Two barren rock outcrops surrounded by a reef in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands
Wikipedia - Gardon -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - Gareth Blanckenberg -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Gareth Cliff -- South African radio and television personality
Wikipedia - Garlicks -- Department store chain in South Africa
Wikipedia - Garlic routing -- Internet protocol
Wikipedia - Garosu-gil -- Area of Seoul, South Korea
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Wikipedia - Garth Erasmus -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Gart Westerhout
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Wikipedia - Gary Nagle -- South African business executive
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Wikipedia - Gary (rapper) -- South Korean rapper and television personality
Wikipedia - Gary Stroutsos -- American musician
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Wikipedia - Gary Wade -- South African canoeist
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Wikipedia - Gas Gang (Brixton gang) -- British gang from Brixton, South London
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Wikipedia - Gated recurrent unit -- Long short-term memory (LSTM) with a forget gate but not an output gate, used in recurrent nueral networks
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Wikipedia - Gateway Seminary -- Theological school affiliated with Southern Baptist Convention in the Western United States
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Wikipedia - Gatlinburg Bypass -- Bypass route in Tennessee, United States
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Wikipedia - Gaunilo of Marmoutiers
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Wikipedia - Gauss Moutinho Cordeiro
Wikipedia - Gautrain -- Rapid rail transport system in Gauteng, South Africa
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Wikipedia - Gawler Craton -- A province of the larger West Australian Shield in central South Australia
Wikipedia - Gay American History -- non-fiction book about the gay community in the United States
Wikipedia - Gay bowel syndrome -- Outdated medical term
Wikipedia - Gayniggers from Outer Space -- 1992 film by Morten Lindberg
Wikipedia - Gayville, Lawrence County, South Dakota -- Unincorporated community in the United States of America
Wikipedia - Gazania rigens -- A perennial plant in the daisy family from South Africa
Wikipedia - Gazankulu Liberation Congress -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Gazete Duvar -- Turkish online news outlet
Wikipedia - Gaziantep Synagogue -- Historic synagogue in southern Turkey
Wikipedia - GB84 -- Novel by David Peace about the 1984 UK miners' strike
Wikipedia - Gcina Nkosi -- South African actress
Wikipedia - G-Dragon -- South Korean singer-songwriter, rapper and record producer
Wikipedia - GD X Taeyang -- South Korean K-pop/hip hop duo
Wikipedia - Geastrum triplex -- Species of fungus in the family Geastraceae found in Asia, Australasia, Europe, North and South America
Wikipedia - Gecko (layout engine)
Wikipedia - Gecko (software) -- Free HTML layout engine
Wikipedia - Geeks (musical duo) -- South Korean hip hop duo
Wikipedia - Geissoloma -- Monotypic genus of flowering plants native to the Cape Province of South Africa
Wikipedia - Gelson's Markets -- Southern California-based supermarket chain
Wikipedia - Gemaingoutte -- Commune in Grand Est, France
Wikipedia - Gemel Peaks -- Mountain in King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica
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Wikipedia - Genadendal Residence -- Official Cape Town residence of the President of South Africa
Wikipedia - Gendered impact of the COVID-19 pandemic -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Gender in English -- Overview about gender in English
Wikipedia - Gene knockout
Wikipedia - General-purpose input/output -- User-controllable digital signal pin on an integrated circuit
Wikipedia - Generation of Youth for Christ -- Adventist organization
Wikipedia - Generation -- All of the people born and living at about the same time period, regarded collectively
Wikipedia - Generic Mapping Tools -- Open source collection of about 80 command-line tools for manipulating geographic and Cartesian data sets
Wikipedia - Generic Routing Encapsulation
Wikipedia - Gene Rockwell -- South African singer
Wikipedia - Gene theft -- Act of acquiring the genetic material of another individual, usually from public places, without the person's permission
Wikipedia - Genetics and archaeogenetics of South Asia
Wikipedia - Genevieve Hofmeyr -- South African film producer
Wikipedia - Genizah -- A storage area in a Jewish synagogue or cemetery designated for the temporary storage of worn-out Hebrew-language books and papers
Wikipedia - Gennady Bekoyev -- South Ossetian politician
Wikipedia - Gentle Monster -- South Korean sunglasses and optical glasses brand
Wikipedia - Genypterus capensis -- Species of fish from the South African coast
Wikipedia - Geocorona -- Luminous part of the outermost region of the Earth's atmosphere
Wikipedia - Geoff Mandy -- South African diver
Wikipedia - Geoff Marshall -- English video producer and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Geoff Myburgh -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Geoffrey Jenkins -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Geoffrey of Monmouth -- British cleric and historiographer
Wikipedia - Geoffrey Prout -- English boatbuilder and author
Wikipedia - Geoffrey Treadwell -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Geoff Stevens -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Geographe Marine Park -- Australian marine park in the South-west Marine Parks network
Wikipedia - Geography Cup -- An online, international competition between the United States and the United Kingdom, with the aim of determining which nation collectively knows more about geography
Wikipedia - Geography of South Africa -- Overview of the geography of South Africa
Wikipedia - Geography of South Dakota -- Overview of the geography of South Dakota
Wikipedia - Geography of southern California -- Overview of the geography of southern California
Wikipedia - Geography of South Korea -- Overview of the geography of South Korea
Wikipedia - Geological Society of South Africa -- A South African learned society for geology
Wikipedia - Geologists Seamounts -- A group of 9 seamounts in the Pacific Ocean south of Honolulu, Hawaii
Wikipedia - Geology of New South Wales -- Overview of the geology of New South Wales
Wikipedia - Geology of South Africa -- The origin and structure of the rock formations
Wikipedia - Geoncheonri Formation -- Early Cretaceous geologic formation in South Korea
Wikipedia - George Alexis Weymouth -- American artist
Wikipedia - George Biller Jr. -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of South Dakota
Wikipedia - George Bizos -- South African lawyer
Wikipedia - George Church (sport shooter) -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - George Claassen -- South African academic and journalist
Wikipedia - George Clark Southworth
Wikipedia - George Cloutier -- Canadian lacrosse player
Wikipedia - George Coetzee -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - George Cole (South Australian politician) -- Australian politician
Wikipedia - George C. Southworth
Wikipedia - George Everett Osterhout -- Botanist (1858-1937)
Wikipedia - George Frederick Stout
Wikipedia - George Hallett (photographer) -- South African photographer
Wikipedia - George Harvey (sport shooter) -- South African sport shooter
Wikipedia - George Hazle -- South African racewalker
Wikipedia - George Hunter (boxer) -- South African boxer, born 1927
Wikipedia - George Insole -- South Wales coal owner and shipper (1790-1851)
Wikipedia - George Johnston (British Marines officer) -- British Marines officer and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales (1764 - 1823)
Wikipedia - George Kambala -- Namibian Youth Activist
Wikipedia - George Lishman -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - Georg Elser -- German opponent of Nazism, planned and carried out an assassination attempt on Adolf Hitler on 8 November 1939
Wikipedia - George Maxwell Mears -- American politician from South Carolina
Wikipedia - George McCredie -- politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - George Moyer Alexander -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Upper South Carolina
Wikipedia - George Newcomb -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - George Oakes (Australian politician) -- Politician from New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - George Parry (umpire) -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - George Pilkington (painter) -- South African painter
Wikipedia - George Reddy -- Indian youth activist
Wikipedia - George Reid -- Australian politician, 4th Prime Minister of Australia and 12th Premier of New South Wales
Wikipedia - George Routledge -- British publisher
Wikipedia - Georges Chapouthier -- French neuroscientist and philosopher
Wikipedia - Georges Couthon
Wikipedia - Georges Halbout -- French sculptor
Wikipedia - George Sickler -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - George Southcote (1572-1638) -- English politician
Wikipedia - George Southcote (died 1589) -- English politician
Wikipedia - George Steer -- South African-born British journalist
Wikipedia - George Stinney -- 14-year-old African American sentenced to death and executed in South Carolina in 1944
Wikipedia - George Stout -- British philosopher and psychologist
Wikipedia - Georgetown, South Australia
Wikipedia - George Trout Bartley -- British politician
Wikipedia - George Washington in the French and Indian War -- Overview about George Washington in the French and Indian War
Wikipedia - George Whelan (sport shooter) -- South African sports shooter
Wikipedia - George W. Weymouth -- American politician from Massachusetts.
Wikipedia - Georgianna Stout -- American graphic designer
Wikipedia - Georgia Southern University -- Public university in Statesboro, Georgia, United States
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 109 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 10 Loop (Athens) -- State highway loop around most of Athens, Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 10 -- State highway in central Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 121 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 13 -- State highway in northeastern Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 15 -- State highway in eastern Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 166 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 16 -- State highway in central Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 185 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 19 -- State highway in central Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 21 -- State highway in east-central Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 236 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 237 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 243 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 28 -- State highway in northeastern and east-central Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 368 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 369 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 370 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 400 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 520 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 53 -- State highway in northern Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 55 -- State highway in southwestern Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 5 -- State highway in northern Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 74 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 75 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 91 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgia State Route 97 -- Highway in Georgia
Wikipedia - Georgios Koutles -- Greek soldier
Wikipedia - Georgios Skoutarides -- Greek athletics competitor
Wikipedia - Georgios Vroutos -- Greek sculptor
Wikipedia - GeoWizard -- British YouTuber
Wikipedia - Geplak -- Southeast Asian sweet snack, originating from Indonesia
Wikipedia - Gerald Baker (bowls) -- South African lawn bowler
Wikipedia - Gerald Desmond Bridge (1968-2020) -- Bridge in Southern California
Wikipedia - Ger C. Bout -- Dutch architect and artist based in Rotterdam, the Netherlands
Wikipedia - Gerda Roux -- South African archer
Wikipedia - Gerhard Hancke -- South African electrical engineer
Wikipedia - Gerhardminnebron -- Natural spring off Ventersdorp, South Africa
Wikipedia - German Garmendia -- Chilean YouTuber, comedian and writer (born 1990)
Wikipedia - German Inner Africa Research Expeditions -- Series of 14 expeditions to Africa carried out between 1904 and 1955
Wikipedia - German language in the United States -- Overview about the German language in the United States
Wikipedia - German Meteor expedition -- An oceanographic expedition that explored the South Atlantic ocean from the equatorial region to Antarctica in 1925-192
Wikipedia - German Question -- Mid-19th century debate about unification of Germany
Wikipedia - German rearmament -- Military rearmament carried out in Germany during the interwar period (1918-1939)
Wikipedia - German South West Africa
Wikipedia - German submarine U-1195 -- German submarine sunk by antisubmarine mortar to the southeast of the Isle of Wight
Wikipedia - German submarine U-352 -- German submarine sunk by depth charges south of Morehead City, North Carolina
Wikipedia - German Timber-Frame Road -- Tourist route
Wikipedia - German tourism industry -- Inbound and outbound tourism of Germany
Wikipedia - German youth language -- Linguistic patterns associated with young German speakers
Wikipedia - German Youth Movement -- German cultural and educational movement
Wikipedia - Germ theory of disease -- Prevailing theory about diseases
Wikipedia - Gerry (company) -- American outdoor sports clothing and gear brand
Wikipedia - Gerrymandering -- Manipulation of electoral borders to favor certain electoral outcomes
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Wikipedia - Gershgorin circle theorem -- Mathematical theorem about eigenvalues
Wikipedia - Gertrud Theiler -- South African parasitologist
Wikipedia - Gert van der Merwe -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Gesta Hungarorum -- The first extant Hungarian book about history
Wikipedia - Get Britain Out -- British lobbying group
Wikipedia - Getmore Sithole -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Get Out and Get Under -- 1920 film by Hal Roach
Wikipedia - Get Out, Give In -- 2005 single by Expatriate
Wikipedia - Get Out of Town -- 1938 song by Cole Porter
Wikipedia - Get Out of Your Own Way -- 2017 single by U2
Wikipedia - Get Out -- 2017 film by Jordan Peele
Wikipedia - Get Out Your Handkerchiefs -- 1978 film by Bertrand Blier
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Wikipedia - Get the Devil Out of Me -- 2012 single by Delain
Wikipedia - Get Thee Out -- 1991 film
Wikipedia - Getting to Yes -- Book about negotiation methods by Roger Fisher
Wikipedia - Geum Bo-ra -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Geumsan Insam Cello -- South Korean cycling team
Wikipedia - GFriend discography -- Discography of South Korean girl group Gfriend
Wikipedia - GFriend -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Ghanashyam Hemalata Institute of Technology and Management -- Private institute located in outside the city of Puri, India
Wikipedia - Gharara -- A traditional outfit similar to a flared skirt
Wikipedia - Ghat Roads -- Access routes into the mountainous Western and Eastern Ghats in India
Wikipedia - Ghat -- Series of steps leading down to a body of water, particularly a holy river in South Asia
Wikipedia - Ghen Co Vy -- 2020 song about the COVID-19 pandemic
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Wikipedia - Gibbering mouther
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Wikipedia - Gibbs Island (South Shetland Islands) -- Island of Antarctica
Wikipedia - Gibraltar Intermediate Cup -- knock-out soccer cup for under-23 sides in Gibraltar
Wikipedia - Gideon van Zyl -- South African judoka
Wikipedia - Gidion Vermeulen -- South African lawn bowler
Wikipedia - Gier Choung Aloung -- South Sudanese politician
Wikipedia - Gift van Staden -- South African politician
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Wikipedia - G.I. Joe: Operation Blackout -- Video game
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Wikipedia - Gi Ju-bong -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Gilbert Prouteau -- French poet
Wikipedia - Gilderoy (outlaw) -- Scottish outlaw and blackmailer
Wikipedia - Gildingwells -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Giles Bonnet -- South African field hockey coach
Wikipedia - Giles Stanley -- Olympic sailor from South Africa
Wikipedia - Gilgit Scouts -- A former paramilitary force of Pakistan
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Wikipedia - Gimhae Air Base -- Airbase in South Korea
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Wikipedia - Gim Un-chi -- South Korean curler
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Wikipedia - Girls and Boys Come Out To Play -- Nursery rhyme
Wikipedia - Girl Scouts of the USA -- Non-profit organization in the USA
Wikipedia - Girl's Day -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Girls' Generation discography -- Discography of South Korean girl group Girls' Generation
Wikipedia - Girls' Generation-TTS -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Girls' Generation -- South Korean girl group
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Wikipedia - Girls Nite Out (1982 film) -- 1982 film directed by Robert Deubel
Wikipedia - Girls Nite Out (Tyler Collins album) -- 1989 studio album by Tyler Collins
Wikipedia - Girls Nite Out (Tyler Collins song) -- 1990 single by Tyler Collins
Wikipedia - Girls Not Brides -- International non-governmental organization with the mission to end child marriage throughout the world
Wikipedia - Girls Without Rooms -- 1956 film
Wikipedia - Girl Without a Room -- 1933 musical comedy film directed by Ralph Murphy
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Wikipedia - Give Out, Sisters -- 1942 film by Edward F. Cline
Wikipedia - Givhan v. Western Line Consolidated School District -- 1979 U.S. Supreme Court case about free speech rights of public employees
Wikipedia - Giyani: Land of Blood -- South African TV drama series
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Wikipedia - Gizella Opperman -- Member of Parliament of South Africa
Wikipedia - GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary -- Annual award for LGBTQ documentary films
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Wikipedia - Gleadless Valley (ward) -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Glen Beach -- Beach on the west coast of Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Glencairn, Cape Town -- Seaside suburb of Cape Town in Western Cape, South Africa
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Wikipedia - Glen Grout -- Canadian diver
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Wikipedia - Glenugie Peak -- Geologic formation in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Global South
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Wikipedia - Glorious Youth -- 1929 film
Wikipedia - Glossary of Brexit terms -- Words about the UK's withdrawal from the EU
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Wikipedia - Glycocalyx -- A viscous, carbohydrate rich layer at the outermost periphery of a cell.
Wikipedia - Glynis Barber -- South African actress
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Wikipedia - G. Malcolm Trout
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Wikipedia - Gmina Jerzmanowice-Przeginia -- administrative district in southern Poland
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Wikipedia - G.NA -- Canadian singer active in South Korea
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Wikipedia - Gnomes (South Park)
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Wikipedia - Go Ara -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Goat cheese -- Cheese made out of the milk of goats
Wikipedia - Godfrey Khotso Mokoena -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - God Help the Outcasts
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Wikipedia - Godongsan -- A mountain in Gyeonggi-do, South Korea.
Wikipedia - Godrich Gardee -- South African Politician
Wikipedia - Gods of Youth -- 2000 film by Kate Twa
Wikipedia - God's Outlaw (1919 film) -- 1919 silent film directed by Christy Cabanne
Wikipedia - G.o.d -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - Godzilla, Mothra and King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack -- 2001 film by ShM-EM-+suke Kaneko
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Wikipedia - Go Gwang-gu -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Go Hyun-jung -- South Korean actress
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Wikipedia - Goianides Ocean -- An ocean in South America in Neoproterozoic
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Wikipedia - Going postal -- Slang for outbursts of anger or violence
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Wikipedia - Going South (book)
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Wikipedia - Go Kyung-pyo -- South Korean actor and comedian
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Wikipedia - Gold Dust (The Dirty Youth album) -- album by The Dirty Youth
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Wikipedia - Golden Arrow Bus Services -- Public transport bus service operator for Cape Town, South Africa,
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Wikipedia - Golden Disc Awards -- Annual South Korean music awards
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Wikipedia - Golden House (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Golden jackal -- wolf-like canid that is native to Southeast Europe, Asia and Arabia
Wikipedia - Golden mole -- Family of blind, burrowing moles endemic to South Africa
Wikipedia - Golden Oldies (TV program) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - GoldenPass Line -- Train route in the Swiss Alps
Wikipedia - Golden Reel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Dialogue and ADR for Feature Film -- Annual award given by the Motion Picture Sound Editors
Wikipedia - Golden Reel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Sound Effects and Foley for Feature Film -- Annual award
Wikipedia - Golden Reel Award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing - Sound Effects, Foley, Music, Dialogue and ADR for Non-Theatrical Feature Film Broadcast Media -- Sound editing award
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Wikipedia - Goodbye 20th Century: A Biography of Sonic Youth -- 2009 biography on the American alternative rock band Sonic Youth
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Wikipedia - Gordon E. Moore Medal for Outstanding Achievement in Solid State Science and Technology
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Wikipedia - Government of South Africa
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Wikipedia - Graig Wood -- Site of Special Scientific Interest in Monmouthshire, south east Wales
Wikipedia - Grandayy -- Maltese YouTuber and musician
Wikipedia - Grand Banks of Newfoundland -- A group of underwater plateaus south-east of Newfoundland on the North American continental shelf.
Wikipedia - Grand Chord -- Indian railway route
Wikipedia - Grand Howl -- scout and guide ceremony
Wikipedia - Grandma's Restaurant in Samcheong-dong -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Grandmaster Melle Mel and the Furious Five -- 1984 Sugarhill Records album, without Grandmaster Flash
Wikipedia - Grandpa Kitchen -- Indian youtube channel
Wikipedia - Grand Parade (Cape Town) -- Public square in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Grandpas Over Flowers -- South Korean travel-reality show
Wikipedia - Grand Portage South-East River -- River in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Grand Portage South-West River -- River in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean, Quebec, Canada
Wikipedia - Grand Prince (TV series) -- 2018 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Grand River (Michigan) -- tributary of Lake Michigan in southern Michigan
Wikipedia - Grand River National Grassland -- In northwestern South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Grand-Santi Airport -- Airport in French Guiana, South America
Wikipedia - Grand Strand -- Coastal area in South Carolina, US
Wikipedia - Grand Tour program -- NASA's cancelled space program intended to explore the outer solar system
Wikipedia - Grangemouth Stags -- Scottish rugby union club
Wikipedia - Granite Gear -- American outdoor company that sells backpacks, hiking and portage accessories.
Wikipedia - Grant Baker -- South African professional surfer
Wikipedia - Grant Morgan (cricketer) -- South African cricketer and coach
Wikipedia - Graphics Layout Engine -- Graphics programming language
Wikipedia - Grass Island, South Georgia -- Island in the South Atlantic South Georgian islands
Wikipedia - Grat Dalton -- American outlaw
Wikipedia - Graves Park (ward) -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Graves Without a Name -- 2018 film
Wikipedia - Gray Temple -- Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina
Wikipedia - Greasbrough -- Suburb of Rotherham, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Greaser (subculture) -- 1950s and 60s youth subculture in the United States
Wikipedia - Great Australian Bight Marine Park (2017) -- Marine protected area in the Great Australian Bight off South Australia
Wikipedia - Great Australian Bight -- Open bay off southern Australia
Wikipedia - Great capes -- The three major capes of the traditional clipper route
Wikipedia - Great Depression in South Africa
Wikipedia - Great Divide Basin -- endorheic basin adjoining the Continental Divide in southern Wyoming, USA
Wikipedia - Great Ejection -- Act of forcing several thousand Puritan ministers out of their positions in the Church of England
Wikipedia - Greater Addo Elephant National Park -- Megapark in the Eastern Cape of South Africa
Wikipedia - Greater Bangladesh -- A conspiracy theory about an expanded Bangladesh
Wikipedia - Greater Mapungubwe Transfrontier Conservation Area -- Transfrontier conservation area in South Africa, Botswana and Zimbabwe
Wikipedia - Greater Mekong Subregion -- Trans-national region of the Mekong River in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Greater South Africa
Wikipedia - Greater Southwest International Airport -- Closed airport in Fort Worth, Texas, US
Wikipedia - Great Escape (South Korean TV series) -- Korean television program
Wikipedia - Great Escarpment, Southern Africa -- Major topographical feature in southern Africa
Wikipedia - Greatest Hits Radio South -- British radio station
Wikipedia - Great Fish River Nature Reserve -- Nature reserve in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Wikipedia - Great Houghton, South Yorkshire -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park -- Transfrontier park in South Africa, Mozambique qnd Zimbabwe
Wikipedia - Great Meteor Seamount -- A large guyot in the Southern Azores Seamount Chain
Wikipedia - Great Migration (African American) -- Six million African Americans left Southern US to urban Northeast, Midwest, and West between 1916 and 1970.
Wikipedia - Great Ngaruawahia Music Festival -- Outdoor music festival in New Zealand
Wikipedia - Great Northern War plague outbreak -- Early 18th-century Yersinia pestis epidemic
Wikipedia - Great Plains Lutheran High School -- Wisconsin Synod Lutheran high school in Watertown, South Dakota
Wikipedia - Great South Australian Coastal Upwelling System -- A seasonal upwelling system in the eastern Great Australian Bight
Wikipedia - Great South Basin -- An area of mainly sea to the south of the South Island of New Zealand
Wikipedia - Great Southern and Western Railway -- Major railway company in Ireland (1844-1924)
Wikipedia - Great Southern Railways -- Irish railway company (1925-1945)
Wikipedia - Great Southern (train) -- Australian rail service
Wikipedia - Great South Wall -- Sea wall at the Port of Dublin in Ireland
Wikipedia - Great Stage Park -- outdoor concert venue in Manchester, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Great Storm of 1703 -- Major 1703 storm in England and out at the English Channel
Wikipedia - Great Victoria Desert -- desert in Western Australia and South Australia
Wikipedia - Great Western Highway -- Highway in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth Outer Harbour -- English port
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth Pleasure Beach -- Historic amusement park in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth railway station -- Railway station in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth (UK Parliament constituency)
Wikipedia - Great Yarmouth -- Town in Norfolk, England
Wikipedia - Greco-Buddhism -- Cultural syncretism in Central and South Asia in antiquity
Wikipedia - Greece runestones -- About 30 runestones about voyages made by Norsemen to the Byzantine Empire
Wikipedia - Greece -- Country in southeastern Europe
Wikipedia - Greek language question -- 19th and 20th century dispute in Greece about whether the popular language (Demotic) or a cultivated imitation of Ancient Greek (Katharevousa) should be official; settled in favour of the former
Wikipedia - Greek Youth Symphony Orchestra -- National youth orchestra of the Greece
Wikipedia - Greena Park -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Green Bay Southwest High School -- Public secondary school in Green Bay, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Green Cape Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Green Energy Hub -- Sustainable energy region in Southwestern Ontario, Canada
Wikipedia - Green Fins -- Organisation in South East Asia for preservation of coral reefs by improving diver behavior
Wikipedia - Greenhouse Canada -- National business magazine published out of Simcoe, Ontario
Wikipedia - Greenhouse gas emissions by India -- Climate changing gases from the south Asian country
Wikipedia - Greenland Sea -- body of water that borders Greenland to the west, the Svalbard archipelago to the east, south of the Fram Strait
Wikipedia - Greenlaw Moor -- Protected area of heather moorland in southern Scotland
Wikipedia - Green Line bus route 724 -- Home Counties bus route
Wikipedia - Green Line - Karachi Metrobus -- Future bus route of Karachi
Wikipedia - Greenmarket Square -- Historical square in old Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Greenmeadow -- Suburb of Cwmbran in Monmouthshire, Wales
Wikipedia - Green Party of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Green Point Common -- Park in Green Point, Cape Town, in South Africa
Wikipedia - Green Point Lighthouse, Cape Town -- Lighthouse in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Green Point Stadium -- Former sports stadium in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Greensand Ridge -- Range of hills in south east England, UK
Wikipedia - Green Versace dress of Jennifer Lopez -- outfit worn to 42nd Grammy Awards in 2000
Wikipedia - Greenville and Columbia Railroad -- 19th century railroad in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Greenville Classical Academy -- School in Simpsonville, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Greenville, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Greenville Zoo -- Zoological park in South Carolina, U.S.
Wikipedia - Greenwich Island -- Island of the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica
Wikipedia - Greg Clark (journalist) -- Canadian newspaperman, soldier, outdoorsman, humorist
Wikipedia - Greg Hamerton -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Gregory Alan Isakov -- South African musician
Wikipedia - Grenfell Centre -- High rise building in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Gresham's law -- a monetary principle on circulating currency; "bad money drives out good"
Wikipedia - Gretha Ferreira -- South African dressage rider
Wikipedia - Grevillea acerata -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea acrobotrya -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the southwest of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea acropogon -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea acuaria -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea alpina -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from Victoria and southern New South Wales.
Wikipedia - Grevillea aquifolium -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia and Victoria
Wikipedia - Grevillea arenaria -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the east of New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea argyrophylla -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-western Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea armigera -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea asparagoides -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea aspleniifolia -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea asteriscosa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west region of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea australis -- Species of plant in the family Protaceae from Tasmania andsouth-eastern mainland Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea banyabba -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae native to northern New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea baueri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-eastern New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea beadleana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea bemboka -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea brevifolia -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae native to Victoria and New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea bronwenae -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea buxifolia -- Species of plant of the family Proteaceae from coastal New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea cagiana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea capitellata -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea diminuta -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory
Wikipedia - Grevillea divaricata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea endlicheriana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the southwest of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea epicroca -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the southeastern New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea eriostachya -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Western Australia, Northern Territory, and South Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea evansiana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea floribunda -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea granulifera -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea hilliana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea huegelii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southern Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea iaspicula -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southern New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea ilicifolia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia, Victoria and New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea imberbis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Grevillea irrasa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea johnsonii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea juniperina -- A plant of the family Proteaceae native to eastern New South Wales and south-eastern Queensland in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea kedumbensis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea kennedyana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea lanigera -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Victoria and New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea lavandulacea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia and Victoria
Wikipedia - Grevillea linsmithii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Queensland Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea longifolia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea macleayana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea masonii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea M-CM-^W gaudichaudii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea mollis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea molyneuxii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea mucronulata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea nematophylla -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea obtusiflora -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea oldei -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea oleoides -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea oxyantha -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea parallelinervis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea parviflora -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea parvula -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Victoria and New South Wales,Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea patulifolia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Victoria and New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea polybractea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Victoria, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea quadricauda -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea quinquenervis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea ramosissima -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-eastern Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea raybrownii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea renwickiana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea reptans -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southeast Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea rhizomatosa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea rhyolitica -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea rivularis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea rosmarinifolia -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales and Victoria, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea sarissa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South and Western Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea scortechinii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Queensland and New South Wales Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea sericea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea shiressii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea speciosa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea treueriana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea triternata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea virgata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea viridiflava -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea wilkinsonii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevillea wiradjuri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Grevilleoideae -- Subfamily of plants in the family Proteaceae, mainly from the Southern Hemisphere
Wikipedia - Grey-cowled wood rail -- A bird in the family Rallidae from Central and South America
Wikipedia - Grey District Library -- Public library in Greymouth, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Grey market -- Commodity trade outside of original producer's distribution channel
Wikipedia - Grey monjita -- Species of tyrant flycatcher bird found in South America
Wikipedia - Greymouth Star -- Daily newspaper published in Greymouth, New Zealand
Wikipedia - Grey's Scouts -- Rhodesian mounted infantry unit
Wikipedia - Grey Towers National Historic Site -- Home of Gifford Pinchot, founder of U.S. Forest Service, outside Milford, Pennsylvania
Wikipedia - Grey wall sponge -- A species of demosponge in the family Ancorinidae from South Africa
Wikipedia - Grey water -- A type of wastewater generated in households without toilet wastewater
Wikipedia - Griffith Anthony -- Musician from South Wales
Wikipedia - Griffith, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Griko people -- Ethnic Greek community of Southern Italy
Wikipedia - Grimsay (South East Benbecula) -- A tidal island of the Outer Hebrides south east of Benbecula
Wikipedia - Grimsay -- A tidal island in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland
Wikipedia - GRM Daily -- UK urban music outlet
Wikipedia - Grocery Outlet -- American retail company
Wikipedia - Groote Schuur Hospital -- Teaching hospital in Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Grootvadersbosch Nature Reserve -- South African nature reserve
Wikipedia - Gross national income -- Total domestic and foreign economic output claimed by residents of a country
Wikipedia - Gross output -- Measure of total economic activity in the production of new goods and services in an accounting period
Wikipedia - Gross out
Wikipedia - Groswin -- Castle and territory along the southern Baltic Sea
Wikipedia - Grotte du Lazaret -- Cave and archaeological site in southern France
Wikipedia - Grotto Point Light -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Group 20 Rugby League -- Rugby league competition in Griffith, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Group of forces in battle with the counterrevolution in the South of Russia
Wikipedia - Grove Primary School (South Africa) -- school from pre-primary to Grade 7 in Claremont, Cape Town
Wikipedia - Growing American Youth -- LGBT social support organization in Missouri, US
Wikipedia - Growing Without Schooling -- Homeschooling newsletter founded by John Holt
Wikipedia - Grus (constellation) -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
Wikipedia - Gryponyx -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from early Jurassic South Africa
Wikipedia - GS25 -- South Korean convenience store chain
Wikipedia - GS Group -- South Korean conglomerate
Wikipedia - Guadalupe Mountains (Hidalgo County) -- long, sub-mountain range|range]] in southwest New Mexico adjacent the southeast border of Arizona
Wikipedia - Guangdong -- Most populous province of China, on the coast of the South China Sea
Wikipedia - Guangzhou South railway station -- Railway and metro interchange station in Guangzhou
Wikipedia - Guarani mythology -- Mythology of the Guarani people of South America
Wikipedia - Guardian: The Lonely and Great God -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Guasaule River -- River in northern Nicaragua and southern Honduras
Wikipedia - Guayama metropolitan area -- US Census Bureau defined Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) in southeastern Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Guayana Esequiba -- Disputed territory in South America
Wikipedia - Guaynia -- Southern coast of Puerto Rico in pre-Columbian era
Wikipedia - Guayra -- Historical region in South America
Wikipedia - Gu Bon-seung -- South Korean actor and singer
Wikipedia - Gudermannian function -- Function that relates the circular functions and hyperbolic functions without using complex numbers
Wikipedia - Guesalaga Peninsula -- Peninsula in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica
Wikipedia - Guest appearance -- Participation of an outsider performer in an event or a movie
Wikipedia - Gu Family Book -- 2013 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Gugudan SeMiNa -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Gugudan -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Gugu Gumede -- South African Actress
Wikipedia - Gugulethu -- Suburb of Cape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Gugyedong Formation -- Geologic formation in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gu Hyeon-suk -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Guianan mangroves -- A coastal ecoregion of southeastern Venezuela, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana
Wikipedia - Guiana Shield -- Precambrian geological formation in northeast South America, and one of three cratons of the South American Plate
Wikipedia - Guide book -- Book of information about a place, designed for the use of visitors or tourists
Wikipedia - Guiderius -- Legendary British king according to Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae
Wikipedia - Guillaume Bouteiller -- French composer
Wikipedia - Guillaume Boutheroue -- French engineer
Wikipedia - Guillaume Couture
Wikipedia - Guillaume d'Estouteville
Wikipedia - Guillotine -- Apparatus designed for carrying out executions by beheading
Wikipedia - Guil station -- Train station in South Korea
Wikipedia - Guilthwaite -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Guinea pig -- domesticated rodent species from South America
Wikipedia - Guiyang-Nanning high-speed railway -- High speed rail line in southwestern China
Wikipedia - Gu Ja-cheong -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - Gukje Market -- Market in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gulf of Darien -- The southernmost region of the Caribbean Sea, located north and east of the border between Panama and Colombia
Wikipedia - Gulf of Guayaquil-Tumbes mangroves -- An ecoregion in the Gulf of Guayaquil in South America, in northern Peru and southern Ecuador
Wikipedia - Gulf of Martaban -- An arm of the Andaman Sea in the southern part of Burma
Wikipedia - Gulf of Mexico -- An Atlantic Ocean basin extending into southern North America
Wikipedia - Gulf of Papua -- Region on the south coast of New Guinea
Wikipedia - Gulf of Saint Lawrence -- The outlet of the North American Great Lakes via the Saint Lawrence River into the Atlantic Ocean
Wikipedia - Gulf of Thailand -- A shallow inlet in the western part of the South China Sea
Wikipedia - Gulf of Tonkin -- Body of water located off the coast of northern Vietnam and southern China, northern arm of the South China Sea
Wikipedia - Gullah -- African American people in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida
Wikipedia - Gummy (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Gun (administrative division) -- Type of administrative unit in North and South Korea
Wikipedia - Gunditjmara -- Aboriginal Australian people of southwestern Victoria
Wikipedia - Gunfight at Blazer's Mill -- Shootout between the Lincoln County Regulators and Buckshot Roberts
Wikipedia - Gunfight at the O.K. Corral -- American Old West shootout
Wikipedia - Gunnar Berg (Scouting) -- American scouting leader
Wikipedia - Gunn Yang -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Guns & Talks -- 2001 South Korean film directed by Jang Jin
Wikipedia - Gunsan Airport -- Airport in Gunsan, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gunthwaite -- Hamlet in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Gunwharf Quays -- Shopping centre in Portsmouth, England
Wikipedia - Gupta family -- South African business family of Indian descent
Wikipedia - Gus Johnson (comedian) -- American YouTube comedian and podcast host
Wikipedia - Gustave Verheyen -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Guus Berkhout -- Dutch engineer and professor
Wikipedia - Guyana -- Country in South America
Wikipedia - Guyanese people -- South American ethnic group
Wikipedia - Guy Boutilier -- Canadian politician
Wikipedia - Guy Bricout -- French politician
Wikipedia - Guy Buttery -- South African musician
Wikipedia - Guy Caminsky -- South African ten-pin bowler
Wikipedia - Gwaebangsan (Gangwon) -- Mountain in Gangwon, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwak Dong-han -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Gwangalli Beach -- Beach in Busan, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangdeoksan (Gangwon/Gyeonggi) -- Mountain in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangjin A -- South Korean political division
Wikipedia - Gwangju Airport -- Airport in Gwangju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangju City Ballet -- South Korean ballet company
Wikipedia - Gwangju National Museum -- National museum located in Gwangju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangju station -- Train station in Gwangju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangju Uprising -- 1980 anti-government uprising in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gwangju -- Metropolitan City in Honam, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gweagal -- Clan of the Dharawal language group and Eora people, who inhabited southern Sydney area before colonisation
Wikipedia - Gwen Ngwenya -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Gwon Gyeong-min -- South Korean diver
Wikipedia - Gwon Sun-cheon -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - GWSN -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Gwyn Jones (figure skater) -- South African figure skater
Wikipedia - Gyeongdong Market -- Market in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyeonggi Provincial Office of Education -- Office of education in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyeongju Historic Areas -- Historic sites in South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyeongju National Museum -- National museum in Gyeongju, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gyeongsang-gamyeong Park -- Park located in Daegu Jung-gu, South Korea
Wikipedia - Gymnanthemum -- Genus of Asian, African and South American plants in the Vernonieae within the daisy family
Wikipedia - Gynatrix pulchella -- A dioecious flowering shrub in the family Malvaceae, endemic to south-east Australia
Wikipedia - H3h3Productions -- Comedy YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Habib Ayrout -- Egyptian architect
Wikipedia - Habit -- Routine of behavior that is repeated regularly and tends to occur subconsciously
Wikipedia - Ha Chan-seok -- South Korean Go player
Wikipedia - Hadean -- First eon of geological time, beginning with the formation of the Earth about 4.6 billion years ago
Wikipedia - Hadestown -- Broadway musical about Orpheus and Eurydice.
Wikipedia - Haechi (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Haeeunlee -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Haeji Kang -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Haesindang Park -- Park in Samcheok, South Korea
Wikipedia - Haesun Park -- South Korean American mathematician
Wikipedia - Haeundae Beach -- Beach in Busan, South Korea
Wikipedia - Haha (entertainer) -- South Korean entertainer
Wikipedia - Ha Hee-ra -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hahm Eun-jung -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Ha Hong-seon -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Ha Hyung-joo -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Haigh, West Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Haines Shoe House -- Shoe-shaped house in south-central Pennsylvania, U.S.
Wikipedia - Haisborough Group -- A Triassic lithostratigraphic group beneath the southern part of the North Sea
Wikipedia - Hajduk -- Peasant irregular infantry found in Central and Southeast Europe from the early 17th to mid 19th centuries
Wikipedia - Ha Jee-min -- South Korean sailor
Wikipedia - Ha Jeong-yeon -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Ha Ji-won -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ha Ji-young -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ha Joo-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ha-Joon Chang -- South Korean economist
Wikipedia - Ha Jun -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Hakea actites -- Species of plant of the Proteacea family native to New South Wales and Queensland
Wikipedia - Hakea adnata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to the south coast of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea aenigma -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea ambigua -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae found in the Stirling Ranges of southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea amplexicaulis -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea archaeoides -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea bakeriana -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales
Wikipedia - Hakea carinata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea chromatropa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae found in Southwest Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea corymbosa -- Species of plant of the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea cristata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae found in south west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea cucullata -- Species of in the family Proteaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea cycloptera -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea dactyloides -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae mainly found in southeastern New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea denticulata -- Species of shrub tree in the family Proteaceae endemic southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea dohertyi -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to central New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea drupacea -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae native to south west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea erinacea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea falcata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteacea endemic to southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea francisiana -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae native to Western Australia and South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea fraseri -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to northern New South Wales
Wikipedia - Hakea gibbosa -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae endemic to south eastern Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea hastata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to southern Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea ivoryi -- Species of shrub or small tree in the family Proteaceae endemic to Queensland and New South Wales
Wikipedia - Hakea lissosperma -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae from south eastern Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea mitchellii -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae from South Australia and Victoria
Wikipedia - Hakea oldfieldii -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae endemic to the South West region of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea pachyphylla -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea pandanicarpa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea petiolaris -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae endemic to south West Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea platysperma -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae native to south west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea propinqua -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea prostrata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea pulvinifera -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea purpurea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to Queensland and New South Wales in Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea repullulans -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae found in Victoria and South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea rostrata -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae, native to South Australia and Victoria
Wikipedia - Hakea scoparia -- Species of shrubin the family Proteaceae endemic to south-west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea sericea -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to New South Wales, Victoria and Tasmania, Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea tephrosperma -- Species of plant in the family Proteaceae from Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea trifurcata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea undulata -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae native to the south-west of Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea verrucosa -- Species of shrub in the family Proteaceae endemic to south-west Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hakea vittata -- Species of shrub of the family Proteaceae endemic to South Australia and eastern Victoria
Wikipedia - Hakhshara -- Centers where Zionist youth would learn technical skills necessary for their emigration to Israel and subsequent life in kibbutzim
Wikipedia - Haksal -- South Korean esports player
Wikipedia - HakuhM-EM-^M Line -- JR Bus Kanto route
Wikipedia - Ha Kwang-chul -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Haleigh Poutre -- American woman
Wikipedia - Hale Reservation -- Youth summer camps
Wikipedia - Half Moon Island -- Antarctic island in the South Shetland Islands
Wikipedia - Hallam FM -- Radio station in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hallasan -- Mountain in South Korea
Wikipedia - Halsey House (Southampton, New York) -- Historic American house, now the Southampton Historical Museum
Wikipedia - Hamar people -- Omotic ethnic group in southwestern Ethiopia
Wikipedia - Hamchang -- Place in South Korea
Wikipedia - Ham Dong-hee -- South Korean wheelchair curler
Wikipedia - Hamer, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Hamid Aboutalebi -- Former Iranian diplomat and ambassador
Wikipedia - Hamilton Dhlamini -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Ha Min-ah -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Haminoea alfredensis -- Species of marine opisthobranch mollusc from South Africa
Wikipedia - Hamites -- Outdated grouping of human beings
Wikipedia - H&D -- South Korean musical duo
Wikipedia - Hampole -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hampton Pinckney -- Neighborhood in Greenville, South Carolina
Wikipedia - Hampton Roads Educational Telecommunications Association -- Public broadcaster in southeast Virginia, United States
Wikipedia - Ham -- Pork from a leg cut that has been preserved by wet or dry curing, with or without smoking
Wikipedia - Hana Financial Group -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Hanahoe -- 1980s group of South Korean military officers headed by Chun Doo-hwan
Wikipedia - Hanam Pungsan station -- Metro station in Hanam city, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea
Wikipedia - Hanbit Nuclear Power Plant -- Nuclear power plant in South Korea
Wikipedia - Hanbok Party -- South Korean organization promoting the wearing of hanbok
Wikipedia - Han Bo-reum -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Byung-do -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Han Chae-ah -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Chae-young -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Cha Kyo -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Han Chung-sik -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Handoga -- Archaeological site in Djibouti
Wikipedia - Han Do-ryeong -- South Korean modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Han Do-woo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Handsome Tigers -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Hands Oval -- Sports stadium in South Bunbury, Western Australia
Wikipedia - Hands (TV series) -- Irish TV documentary series about crafts
Wikipedia - Haneda Route -- expressway in the Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Han Eun-jung -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ga-in -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hangang Bridge -- Road bridge over the Han River in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Hangang Railway Bridge -- Rail bridge over the Han River in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Hangberg -- Neighbourhood of Hout Bay in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Hanger Lane gyratory -- Large roundabout system in west London
Wikipedia - Hanging of Patrick O'Connor -- Execution carried out after the first murder trial in Iowa
Wikipedia - Hanging Wood, South Yorkshire -- Woodland in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hangklip Sand Fynbos -- Vegetation type endemic to the southern coastal portion of the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Han Go-eun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hangouts
Wikipedia - Hangout with Yoo -- South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Hangover (Psy song) -- Single by Psy, South Korean K-pop musician
Wikipedia - Han Gwang-ho -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Han Gyeong-hee -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - Han Gyeong-im -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Hangzoo -- South Korean rapper
Wikipedia - Hanhae -- South Korean rapper and singer
Wikipedia - Han Hee-ju -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Han Hee-won -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Han Hye-ja -- South Korean speed skater
Wikipedia - Han Hye-jin (actress) -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Hye-jin (model) -- South Korean model
Wikipedia - Han Hye-ri -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Haniff Hoosen -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Han Jae-suk -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Jeong-mi -- South Korean sailor
Wikipedia - Han Jeoung-ae -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Han Ji-an -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ji-eun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ji-hye -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ji-min -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hanjin Heavy Industries -- South Korean shipbuilding company
Wikipedia - Han Jin-hee -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Jin-seop -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Hanjin -- South Korean conglomerate
Wikipedia - Han Jin-won -- South Korean screenwriter
Wikipedia - Han Ji-sang -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Joo-wan -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Jung-soo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Hank McGregor -- South African canoeist
Wikipedia - Hankook Tire -- South Korean tire company
Wikipedia - Hank Parker Jr. -- American stock car racing driver and outdoorsman
Wikipedia - Hankuk University of Foreign Studies -- Private research university in South Korea
Wikipedia - Hank Vaughan -- American gambler and outlaw
Wikipedia - Han Kyeong-hwa -- South Korean voice actor
Wikipedia - Han Kyoo-hee -- South Korean voice actor
Wikipedia - Hanli Prinsloo -- South African freediver
Wikipedia - Han Mi-jin -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Han Min-soo -- South Korean shot putter
Wikipedia - Han Min-yong -- South Korean journalist and current JTBC Newsroom weekend anchor
Wikipedia - Han Myeong-mok -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Han Myung-hee -- South Korean biathlete
Wikipedia - Hannah Winkler -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Hannah Witton -- YouTuber, author, and British broadcaster
Wikipedia - Hannibal House -- Building in Southwark, London, England
Wikipedia - Hanobukten -- Bay on the east coast of SkM-CM-%ne, South Sweden
Wikipedia - Hanover Park, Cape Town -- Suburb of Cape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Han River (Korea) -- River in South Korea
Wikipedia - Han Sang-hyeok (voice actor) -- South Korean voice actor
Wikipedia - Han Sang-jin -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Seong-cheol -- South Korean judoka
Wikipedia - Han Seung-hun -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - Han Seung-woo (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Han Seung-woo -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Han shot first -- Controversy about a scene of Star Wars
Wikipedia - Hans Merensky -- South African geologist, conservationist & philanthropist
Wikipedia - Hans Meyer (actor) -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Han So-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hansol -- South Korean conglomerate
Wikipedia - Han Soo-yeon -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hans Strydom (actor) -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Han Suk-kyu -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Han Sung-yun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Sun-kyo -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hantam National Botanical Garden -- Botanical Garden just outside Nieuwoudtville in the Northern Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Han Wang-yong -- South Korean mountaineer
Wikipedia - Hanwha Aerospace -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Hanwha Group -- South Korean conglomerate
Wikipedia - Hanwha Techwin -- South Korean electronics and security camera company
Wikipedia - Hanyang University -- Private research university in South Korea
Wikipedia - Han Yeo-reum -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ye-ri -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Han Ye-seul -- South Korean actress and model
Wikipedia - Han Yujoo -- South Korean writer
Wikipedia - Han Yun-su -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Hapalomys gracilis -- fossil rodent from the genus Hapalomys found in Longgupo in South China
Wikipedia - Happy Ending (TV series) -- 2012 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Happy Face Entertainment -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Happy Home (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Happy Sekanka -- South African brewmaster
Wikipedia - Happy Sunday -- South Korea television series
Wikipedia - Harad -- Fictional land in Tolkien's Middle-earth, south of Gondor and Mordor
Wikipedia - Haralambiev Island -- One of the South Orkney Islands in the Southern Ocean
Wikipedia - Harbor Boulevard -- north-south road corridor in the counties of Los Angeles and Orange
Wikipedia - Harbor Island, South Carolina -- Island off coast of South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Harbour Town Light -- Lighthouse in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Harburg S-Bahn -- Railway line in southern Hamburg, Germany
Wikipedia - Hard (nautical) -- Firm or paved beach or slope by water that is convenient for hauling boats out of the water
Wikipedia - Hard out Here -- 2013 single by Lily Allen
Wikipedia - Hardware scout
Wikipedia - Hardy Caprio -- British singer, songwriter, record producer from South London
Wikipedia - Hardy Peninsula -- Peninsula in southern Chile
Wikipedia - Harlem Youth Opportunities Unlimited
Wikipedia - Harlington, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Harmony Gold Mine Cricket Club A Ground -- Cricket ground in Virginia, South Africa
Wikipedia - Harm van Houten -- Dutch politician
Wikipedia - Harold Cressy High School -- Public school in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Harold Fraser (weightlifter) -- South African weightlifter
Wikipedia - Harold Jeppe -- South African hurdler
Wikipedia - Harold McGluwa -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Harold Porter National Botanical Garden -- Conservation area at Betty's Bay in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Harold Simon -- South African pilot
Wikipedia - Harold Strachan -- South African artist, freedom fighter and writer
Wikipedia - Haroutioun Hovanes Chakmakjian
Wikipedia - Haroutiun Galentz -- Armenian painter (1910-1967)
Wikipedia - Harper's Mansion -- Heritage-listed house in New South Wales
Wikipedia - Harriet Manamela -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Harrison Point -- Cape in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
Wikipedia - Harrison T. Groutage -- American painter
Wikipedia - Harris Park, New South Wales
Wikipedia - Harrogate bus route 36 -- Leeds to Harrogate and Ripon bus
Wikipedia - Harry Adams (cricket umpire) -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Harry Bolus -- South African artist and botanist (1834-1911)
Wikipedia - Harry Hart (athlete) -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - Harry N. Routzohn -- American politician
Wikipedia - Harry Schmidt (pentathlete) -- South African modern pentathlete
Wikipedia - Harry Schwarz -- South African activist and politician
Wikipedia - Harry Tiebout -- American psychiatrist
Wikipedia - Harry Tracy -- American Old West outlaw (1875-1902)
Wikipedia - Harry Viljoen -- South African rugby union coach
Wikipedia - Harry Webber -- South African weightlifter
Wikipedia - Harry Wouters van den Oudenweijer -- Dutch equestrian
Wikipedia - Hartlaub's gull -- Seabird in the family Laridae endemic to the Atlantic coast of South Africa and Namibia
Wikipedia - Hartleyvale Stadium -- Field hockey stadium in Observatory, Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Harumi Route -- expressway in the Greater Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Haruwa-charuwa system -- Forced labour practice of south-eastern Nepal
Wikipedia - Harvard of the South (band) -- American rock band
Wikipedia - Harvey Nash -- London-based international outsourcing company
Wikipedia - Hasandong Formation -- Geologic formation in South Korea
Wikipedia - Ha Sangwook -- South Korean poet
Wikipedia - Haseenabanu Ismail -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Ha Seung-ri -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ha Seung-youn -- South Korean curler
Wikipedia - Hashima Island -- Abandoned island about 15 kilometres from Nagasaki, Japan
Wikipedia - HashTag (group) -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Has (region) -- Region of northeastern Albania and southwestern Kosovo
Wikipedia - Hasselborg Lake South Shelter Cabin -- United States historic place
Wikipedia - Hassen Dawood -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Hastings Point, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Ha Tae-keung -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hatfield, South Yorkshire -- Town in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hat Films -- English comedy and gaming YouTube channel
Wikipedia - Hathersage Road (Sheffield) -- Road in South Yorkshire and Derbyshire, England
Wikipedia - Hatia-Rourkela line -- Railway route in India
Wikipedia - Haute couture -- The creation of exclusive, custom-fitted clothing
Wikipedia - Hauteville family -- Norman noble family that rose to prominence in southern Italy
Wikipedia - Havenga prize -- annual prize awarded for original research in science in South Africa
Wikipedia - Hawaii (horse) -- South African-bred Thoroughbred racehorse
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 50 -- Highway in Hawaii
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 61 -- State highway in Hawaii County, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 63 -- State highway in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 64 -- State highway in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 72 -- State highway in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 8930 -- State highway in Kapolei, Hawaii, United States
Wikipedia - Hawaii Route 93 -- Highway in Hawaii
Wikipedia - Hawies Fourie -- South African rugby union coach
Wikipedia - Hawkins-Simon condition -- Result in mathematical economics on existence of a non-negative equilibrium output vector
Wikipedia - Hawkinsville and Florida Southern Railway -- Former railway that was founded in 1896, operating 43 miles (69 km) of track from Hawkinsville to Worth, Georgia, USA
Wikipedia - Haw Knob -- Mountain in the southeastern United States
Wikipedia - Hawthorn Formation -- Geologic formation in South Carolina, US
Wikipedia - Ha Yeo-jin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Ha Yong-jo -- South Korean pastor
Wikipedia - Hayward Gallery -- Art gallery in Southbank Centre, Central London, UK
Wikipedia - Hayward Kidson -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Hazel Hayes -- Irish YouTuber, filmmaker and author
Wikipedia - Hazel Sive -- American South-African-born Biologist & scholar
Wikipedia - Hazlet, New Jersey -- Township in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Hazlet Township Public Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Hazy-Sighted Link State Routing Protocol
Wikipedia - HBO Asia -- Southeast Asian pay television network
Wikipedia - Hbomberguy -- British YouTuber
Wikipedia - HD 147018 -- Star in the southern constellation of Triangulum Australe
Wikipedia - HD 90853 -- A single star in the southern constellation Carina
Wikipedia - HDC Hyundai Development Company -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Headin' South -- 1918 film
Wikipedia - Headlamp (outdoor) -- Light source affixed to the head
Wikipedia - Head shop -- Retail outlet for cannabis and tobacco products
Wikipedia - Healer (TV series) -- 2014-15 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Healthcare in South Africa
Wikipedia - Health effects of Bisphenol A -- Controversy centering on concerns about the biomedical significance of bisphenol A (BPA)
Wikipedia - Health in South Africa -- brief overview of aspects of health in South Africa
Wikipedia - Health Professions Council of South Africa
Wikipedia - Heart Essex (Chelmsford & Southend) -- Former commercial radio station in Essex, United Kingdom
Wikipedia - Heartless City -- 2013 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hearts of Youth -- 1921 film
Wikipedia - Heart South -- British radio station
Wikipedia - Heart Surgeons (TV series) -- 2018 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Heart to Heart (South Korean TV series) -- 2015 South Korean television drama
Wikipedia - Heart Without Mercy -- 1958 film
Wikipedia - Heather Bright -- American songwriter from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Heather Clark (surfer) -- South African surfer
Wikipedia - Heather Zar -- South African physician
Wikipedia - Heaven Peralejo -- Filipina actress, singer, YouTuber, and painter
Wikipedia - Hebburn Metro station -- Tyne and Wear Metro station in South Tyneside
Wikipedia - Hebe (mythology) -- Ancient Greek goddess of youth
Wikipedia - Hector Daniel -- South African Air Force general
Wikipedia - Hedgehog's dilemma -- Metaphor about the challenges of human intimacy
Wikipedia - Hedgehope Branch -- Branch railway line in the South Island of New Zealand
Wikipedia - Hee Il Cho -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Hee-kyung Seo -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Hee Oh -- South Korean American mathematician
Wikipedia - Hee Seo -- South Korean ballet dancer
Wikipedia - Heideveld -- Suburb of Athlone, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Heinrich April -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Hein Seyerling -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Heinz de Boer -- South African politician
Wikipedia - He Is Psychometric -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Heize -- South Korean singer and rapper
Wikipedia - Heke Peak -- Peak on the south wall of Mitchell Glacier
Wikipedia - Hekro Towers -- South African skyscraper
Wikipedia - Helderberg Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area in the Western Cape in South Africa
Wikipedia - Helderberg Mountain -- Part of the Hottentots-Holland mountain range in the Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Helderberg Nature Reserve -- Nature reserve in Cape Town, South Africa
Wikipedia - Helder Moutinho -- Portuguese singer and songwriter
Wikipedia - He Learned About Women -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - Helen King (oncologist) -- South African physician
Wikipedia - Helen Sebidi -- South African artist
Wikipedia - Helen Suzman Foundation -- independent, non-partisan think-tank in South Africa
Wikipedia - Helen Suzman -- South African anti-apartheid activist and Member of the House of Assembly
Wikipedia - Helen Vanderplank -- South African biologist
Wikipedia - Helen Zille -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Helicia -- Genus of plants in the family Proteaceae from tropical South and Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Hellaby -- Settlement and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hella Mega Tour -- Tour by American rock bands, Green Day, Fall Out Boy, and Weezer
Wikipedia - Hellbound (TV series) -- South Korean fantasy TV series by Yeon Sang-ho
Wikipedia - Hellenic Trench -- A long narrow depression bordering the Aegean Sea to the south
Wikipedia - Hell Is Other People -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hell Is Sold Out -- 1951 film
Wikipedia - Hell Joseon -- South Korean satirical term
Wikipedia - Hellmut Stauch -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Hello Baby -- South Korean reality show
Wikipedia - Hello Counselor -- South Korean reality show
Wikipedia - Hello Dracula -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hello My Teacher -- 2005 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hello, My Twenties! -- 2016 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Hello! Stranger -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hello Venus -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Hell Roaring Creek -- Creek in south Montana, part of the Missouri
Wikipedia - Helly's theorem -- Theorem about the intersections of d-dimensional convex sets
Wikipedia - Helmut Holzapfel (tenor) -- South African tenor
Wikipedia - HeloM-CM-/se Denner -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Help:About help pages
Wikipedia - Help:Authority control -- Wikipedia help page about authority control
Wikipedia - Help:Cite errors/Cite error refs without references -- historical document
Wikipedia - Help:Logging in -- Help page about logging into Wikimedia
Wikipedia - Help Me Out -- 2017 song performed by Maroon 5
Wikipedia - Help:Pictures -- Wikipedia Help page about adding pictures to articles.
Wikipedia - Help:Referencing for beginners without using templates
Wikipedia - Help:Special page -- help page about special pages on Wikipedia
Wikipedia - Help:Substitution -- Help about using templates
Wikipedia - Helston South (electoral division) -- An electoral division of Cornwall in the UK
Wikipedia - Hely-Hutchinson Dam -- Dam on Table Mountain, Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition -- Archaeological expedition
Wikipedia - Hemingfield -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Henda Swart -- South African mathematician
Wikipedia - Hendrik Buhrmann -- South African professional golfer
Wikipedia - Hendrik S. Houthakker
Wikipedia - Hendrik van der Bijl -- South African electrical engineer and industrialist
Wikipedia - Hendrik Verwoerd -- Prime Minister of South Africa from 1958 until his assassination in 1966
Wikipedia - Henk Booysen -- South African shot putter
Wikipedia - Henley High School (Adelaide, South Australia) -- High school in Adelaide, South Australia
Wikipedia - Hennie Bosman -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Hennops River -- River in South Africa
Wikipedia - Henri Coutard -- French oncologist
Wikipedia - Henriette Moller -- South African Olympic judoka
Wikipedia - Henri Schoeman -- South African triathlete
Wikipedia - Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth
Wikipedia - Henry Allan Fagan -- South African Chief Justice, writer and politician
Wikipedia - Henry Bradshaw Popham -- Soldier in the South African War and Governor of the Windward Islands 1937-1942
Wikipedia - Henry Cele -- South African actor
Wikipedia - Henry Clifford de Meillon -- South African painter
Wikipedia - Henry Cornelius -- South African film director
Wikipedia - Henry Coutts -- New Zealand cricketer and soldier
Wikipedia - Henry Fork (South Fork Catawba River tributary) -- Stream in North Carolina, USA
Wikipedia - Henry George Flanagan -- South African-born botanist (1861-1919)
Wikipedia - Henry Hudson Regional High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Henry Knollys (MP for Portsmouth) -- 16th-century English politician
Wikipedia - Henry Leonardus van den Houten -- Dutch-Australian painter, lithographer, and teacher
Wikipedia - Henry Lewis Routt -- American soldier
Wikipedia - Henry L. Shrewsbury -- Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives during the Reconstruction era
Wikipedia - Henry Robert Steel -- South African chess player
Wikipedia - Henry Shembeni -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Henry Southwell (politician) -- Irish politician and soldier
Wikipedia - Henry Wade Exit Route -- California Historic Landmark
Wikipedia - Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton -- 17th-century English noble
Wikipedia - Henze Boekhout -- Dutch artist/photographer
Wikipedia - Heo Chang-beom -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Heo Jang-kang -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Heo Jeong -- 6th Prime Minister of South Korea
Wikipedia - Heo Joon-ho -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Heo Jung-eun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Heo Kyung-hwan -- South Korean comedian
Wikipedia - Heo Min-ho -- South Korean triathlete
Wikipedia - Heo Seon-mi -- South Korean artistic gymnast
Wikipedia - Heosimcheong Spa -- Thermal springs in South Korea
Wikipedia - Heo Sol-ji -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Heo Uk-bong -- South Korean sports shooter
Wikipedia - Heo Yi-jae -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Heo Yool -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Heo Young-ho -- South Korean Go player
Wikipedia - Heo Young-ji -- South Korean singer and television personality
Wikipedia - Hera Hyesang Park -- South Korean soprano and singer
Wikipedia - Herault (river) -- River in southern France
Wikipedia - Herbert Beukes -- South African journalist and diplomat
Wikipedia - Herbert McWilliams -- South African sailor
Wikipedia - Herbert Phillips (athlete) -- South African athlete
Wikipedia - Herbert Vilakazi -- South African sociologist
Wikipedia - Herbie (franchise) -- Disney media franchise about a sentient 1963 Volkswagen Beetle
Wikipedia - Herd behavior -- How individuals in a group can act collectively without centralized direction
Wikipedia - Hereroland -- Former bantustan in South-West Africa (now Namibia)
Wikipedia - Herero Wars -- Series of German colonial wars in South West Africa
Wikipedia - Heritage Day (South Africa) -- South African public holiday
Wikipedia - Heritage Places Protection Act -- Act about the protection of cultural heritage of the Prince Edward Island
Wikipedia - Heritage preservation in South Korea -- Preservation of historical items in South Korea
Wikipedia - Heritage Western Cape -- Provincial heritage resources authority of South Africa
Wikipedia - Herman Charles Bosman -- South African writer
Wikipedia - Herman Groenewald -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Herman Ostrow School of Dentistry of USC -- Dental school of the University of Southern California
Wikipedia - Hermidale -- Village in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hermione Cronje -- South African prosecutor
Wikipedia - Hermitage Arboretum -- Arboretum outside Nashville, Tennessee, United States
Wikipedia - Hernandia moerenhoutiana -- Species of plant
Wikipedia - Herne Hill railway station -- Railway station in Lambeth, South London, England
Wikipedia - Her Night Out -- 1932 film
Wikipedia - Hero Bay -- Bay of the South Shetland Islands
Wikipedia - Heroes' Acre, Pretoria -- Cemetery in South Africa
Wikipedia - Heroes (South Korean TV series) -- 2010-2011 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Her Private Life (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Herstigte Nasionale Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Hesburgh (film) -- American documentary film about Fr. Theodore Hesburgh
Wikipedia - He's Out There -- 2017 film directed by Quinn Lasher
Wikipedia - Hesperia Planum -- Broad lava plain in the southern highlands of the planet Mars
Wikipedia - Hestan Island -- A small tidal island in the Solway Firth, Southwest Scotland
Wikipedia - Heterodontosaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaur from the early Jurassic of South Africa
Wikipedia - Hetton colliery railway -- First railway to operate without animal power (opened in 1822)
Wikipedia - Hetty Rock -- Rock in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica
Wikipedia - H-Eugene -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Heung Jin Moon -- South Korean unificiationist leader
Wikipedia - Hewett, South Australia
Wikipedia - Heworth Without -- Civil parish and ward in the City of York, North Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hexham Bridge, New South Wales -- Bridge in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Hex River Mountains -- Mountain range in the Western Cape province of South Africa
Wikipedia - Hey Ghost, Let's Fight -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Heyne (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Heyoon Jeong -- South Korean dancer, singer, rapper and choreographer
Wikipedia - Hey Ya! -- 2003 single by OutKast
Wikipedia - H. Frederik Nijhout -- American evolutionary biologist
Wikipedia - HGTV (British and Irish TV channel) -- Television channel about homes and gardens
Wikipedia - Hi Air -- Regional airline in South Korea
Wikipedia - Hiawatha Service -- Train route between Chicago, Illinois and Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Wikipedia - Hi Bye, Mama! -- 2020 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hickleton -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hicksbeachia pinnatifolia -- Species of tree in the family Proteaceae native to New South Wales and Queensland in Australia
Wikipedia - Hidden Singer (South Korean TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Hidden-variable theory -- Theory regarding quantum mechanics wherein its probabilistic outcomes are due to unobservable entities
Wikipedia - Hidden Years Music Archive -- South African music archive
Wikipedia - Hide-Out (1930 film) -- 1930 film
Wikipedia - Hideout (novel) -- 2013 book by Gordon Korman
Wikipedia - Hide-Out -- 1934 film by W. S. Van Dyke
Wikipedia - Hi! Dharma! -- 2001 South Korean comedy film by Park Chul-kwan
Wikipedia - Hierarchical routing
Wikipedia - Hieroglyphs Without Mystery -- Text by Karl-Theodor Zauzich
Wikipedia - Higashi-Osaka Route -- Expressway in Osaka, Japan
Wikipedia - Higgovale, Cape Town -- Suburb of Cape Town, in Western Cape, South Africa
Wikipedia - High1 Resort -- Ski resort in Jeongseon, South Korea
Wikipedia - High4 -- South Korean boyband
Wikipedia - Higham, South Yorkshire -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - High Commissioner for Southern Africa -- Wikimedia list article
Wikipedia - High Desert (California) -- geographic area of southern California
Wikipedia - Higher education in South Africa
Wikipedia - Higher education in South Korea
Wikipedia - Higher Education Mega Center South station -- Guangzhou Metro interchange station
Wikipedia - Highfields Lake -- Lake in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Highfields, South Yorkshire -- Highfields, South Yorkshire
Wikipedia - High Green -- Suburb of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - High Hopes in South Africa -- 2014 film
Wikipedia - High Hoyland -- Village and civil parish in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Highland copperhead -- Highly venomous snake native to southeastern Australia
Wikipedia - Highlands, New Jersey -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Highlands School District -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Highlight (band) -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - High-pressure nervous syndrome -- A reversible diving disorder that occurs when a diver descends below about 150 m using a breathing gas based on helium
Wikipedia - High Rainfall Zone -- One of three biogeographic zones into which south west Western Australia is divided
Wikipedia - High Rock (South Georgia) -- Mountain in Antarctica
Wikipedia - High School Rapper (season 1) -- 2017 South Korean survival TV show
Wikipedia - High School Rapper (season 2) -- 2018 South Korean survival TV show
Wikipedia - High Score (TV series) -- Netflix docuseries about video game history
Wikipedia - High-speed rail in South Korea
Wikipedia - High Street (Columbus, Ohio) -- North-south street in Columbus, Ohio
Wikipedia - High Street, Newport, Wales -- Historic main street of Newport, South Wales
Wikipedia - High Technology High School -- Magnet high school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Highveld -- Natural region of the South African inland plateau
Wikipedia - Highway shield -- Sign denoting the route number of a highway
Wikipedia - Highways in New South Wales -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - Hijra (South Asia) -- Third gender of South Asian cultures
Wikipedia - Hikayat Hang Tuah -- Malaysian hikayat, or folktale, about Malaccan warrior Hang Tuah
Wikipedia - Hikurangi Plateau -- An oceanic plateau in the South Pacific east of the North Island of New Zealand
Wikipedia - Hilarion Kapral -- 21st-century bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia
Wikipedia - Hilbert's Nullstellensatz -- Theorem: polynomials without common complex zeros generate the unit ideal
Wikipedia - Hilbert's syzygy theorem -- Theorem about linear relations in ideals and modules over polynomial rings
Wikipedia - Hilbre Islands -- Three tidal islands at the mouth of the estuary of the River Dee, England
Wikipedia - Hilda Dokubo -- Nigerian film actress and youth advocate
Wikipedia - Hilda Kuper -- South African anthropologist
Wikipedia - Hillcrest Youth Correctional Facility -- Juvenile correctional facility in Salem, Oregon
Wikipedia - Hillel Abbe Shapiro -- South African forensic pathologist (b. 1909, d. 1984)
Wikipedia - Hillel Yeshiva -- Private school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Hillsborough (ward) -- Electoral ward in the City of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Hillside Avenue buses -- Bus routes in Queens, New York
Wikipedia - Hills Radio -- Radio station in Mount Barker, South Australia
Wikipedia - Hilton Dennis -- South African civil servant
Wikipedia - Hilton House (White Lake, South Dakota) -- United States historic place
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Wikipedia - Himala -- 1982 Filipino film about Marian apparitions
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Wikipedia - Himouto! Umaru-chan -- Japanese manga and anime series
Wikipedia - Hinapia -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Hinduism in Southeast Asia -- Religion in southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Hindu views on evolution -- Range of viewpoints about the origin of life, and evolution
Wikipedia - Hinemoa Elder -- New Zealand youth forensic psychiatrist
Wikipedia - Hip Hop Pantsula -- South African musician
Wikipedia - Hippo APC -- South African armoured personnel carrier
Wikipedia - Hiroden lines and routes -- Wikimedia list article
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Wikipedia - His Day Out -- 1918 film
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Wikipedia - Hispanic America -- Countries in North and South America with predominantly Spanish-speaking populations
Wikipedia - Historical Monuments Commission -- Former government agency of South Africa
Wikipedia - Historical Vedic religion -- Religious ideas and practices among most Indo-Aryan-speaking peoples of ancient India after about 1500 BCE
Wikipedia - Historicity of King Arthur -- Debate about whether King Arthur was a historical person
Wikipedia - Historic Sites of South Korea
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Wikipedia - History of Armenian Americans in Los Angeles -- largest population of Armenians in the world outside of Armenia
Wikipedia - History of Cambodia -- Aspect of Southeast Asian history
Wikipedia - History of Canada -- Occurrences and people in Canada throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Charleston, South Carolina -- From 1663 to present day
Wikipedia - History of Colombia -- Occurrences and people in the Republic of Colombia throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Croatia -- Occurrences and people in Croatia throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Dell -- Overview about the history of Dell
Wikipedia - History of Djibouti -- Historical development of Djibouti
Wikipedia - History of education -- about the global history of education
Wikipedia - History of Finland -- Events in Finland throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Flagstaff, Arizona -- Occurrences in Flagstaff, Arizona throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Germany -- Occurrences and people in Germany throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Guyana -- History of South American country Guyana
Wikipedia - History of Iceland -- occurrences and people in Iceland throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Indonesia -- Aspect of Southeast Asian history
Wikipedia - History of Iranian Americans in Los Angeles -- Southern California has the largest concentration of Iranians in the world outside of Iran.
Wikipedia - History of Islam in southern Italy -- Wikipedia list article
Wikipedia - History of Laos -- Aspect of Southeast Asian history
Wikipedia - History of Latin America -- Occurrences and people in the Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries of the New World throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Latvia -- Occurrences and people in Latvia throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Malaysia -- Aspect of Southeast Asian history
Wikipedia - History of Munich -- Occurrences and people in Munich throughout history
Wikipedia - History of Myanmar -- Aspect of Southeast Asian history
Wikipedia - History of New South Wales -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of Peru -- History of human settlement in Peru, South America
Wikipedia - History of Philosophy without any gaps
Wikipedia - History of Plymouth -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of Russia -- |Russia throughout history
Wikipedia - History of self-driving cars -- Overview about the history of self-driving cars
Wikipedia - History of South Africa -- South African history
Wikipedia - History of South America -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of South Dakota -- Aspect of history
Wikipedia - History of Southeast Asia -- Aspect of Asian history
Wikipedia - History of Southern Africa
Wikipedia - History of South India -- Article on history of southern India
Wikipedia - History of South Korea -- Wikimedia history article
Wikipedia - History of spaceflight -- Aspect of the history of astronautics, and of the exploration or conquest of outer space and of the solar system outside Earth
Wikipedia - History of Thailand -- Aspect of Southeast-Asian history
Wikipedia - History of the Cape Colony from 1806 to 1870 -- History of the first European colony in South Africa (1806-1870)
Wikipedia - History of the Cape Colony from 1870 to 1899 -- History of the first European colony in South Africa (1870-1899)
Wikipedia - History of the Democratic Alliance (South Africa)
Wikipedia - History of the Eagles -- 2013 documentary about the American rock group the Eagles
Wikipedia - History of the Jews in Djibouti
Wikipedia - History of the Jews in South Africa
Wikipedia - History of the Jews in South Korea
Wikipedia - History of the Saints (TV series) -- television documentary about Mormon Pioneers
Wikipedia - History of the Southern Pacific -- History article of United States company
Wikipedia - History of the United States -- Occurrences and people in the US throughout history
Wikipedia - History of YouTube -- Overview of the history of YouTube
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Wikipedia - Hit104.9 The Border -- Radio station in Albury, New South Wales, Australia
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Wikipedia - Hit-and-Run Squad -- South Korean action police procedural film
Wikipedia - Hitchcock/Truffaut -- 1966 book by Francois Truffaut about Alfred Hitchcock
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Wikipedia - Hitler Youth -- Youth organisation of the Nazi Party
Wikipedia - Hitman: Agent Jun -- 2020 South Korean action comedy film
Wikipedia - Hit South Queensland -- Commercial radio station in Queensland, Australia
Wikipedia - HIV/AIDS denialism in South Africa -- Prevalence in South Africa of the belief, contradicted by conclusive evidence, that human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) does not cause acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS)
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Wikipedia - Hlengiwe Mkhaliphi -- South African politician
Wikipedia - HloM-CM-0skviM-CM-0a -- Old Norse epic poem about a battle of Goths and Huns.
Wikipedia - Hluleka Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area in the Eastern Cape in South Africa
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Wikipedia - HMNB Portsmouth -- British Royal Navy base
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Wikipedia - HMSAS Protea -- Survey ship of the South African Navy
Wikipedia - HMS Birmingham (C19) -- Southampton-class cruiser
Wikipedia - HMS Dartmouth (1911) -- Weymouth-class light cruiser
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Wikipedia - HMS Kent (1901) -- Monmouth-class armoured cruiser finished in 1903
Wikipedia - HMS Minerva (1759) -- 32-gun Southampton-class warship of the Royal Navy
Wikipedia - HMS Southampton (83) -- Town-class cruiser
Wikipedia - HMS Southsea Castle (1697) -- A 1694 Group 32-Gunner-class Fifth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy
Wikipedia - HMT Elk (1902) -- British trawler sunk off Plymouth in 1940, now a recreational dive site.
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Wikipedia - Hoatzin -- Species of bird in South America
Wikipedia - Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union -- Social-political organisation in Vietnam
Wikipedia - Hockerwood -- Former deer park of Southwell, Nottinghamshire
Wikipedia - Hodgson's frogmouth -- Species of bird
Wikipedia - Hofmeyria -- Extinct genus of therapsids from the late Permian South Africa
Wikipedia - Hohepa Te Umuroa -- Te Ati Haunui-a-Paparangi youth
Wikipedia - Hola Hola (Kard song) -- 2017 song by South Korean group Kard
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Wikipedia - Holdout (sports) -- A professional sports term
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Wikipedia - Hollywood Foreign Press Association -- Organization of journalists who report on the US entertainment industry for media outside the US
Wikipedia - Holmdel High School -- High school in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Holmdel Township, New Jersey -- Township in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Holmdel Township Public Schools -- School district in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Hololive Production -- Japanese virtual YouTuber talent agency
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Wikipedia - Homelessness in South Africa
Wikipedia - Homemade Love Story -- 2020-21 South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Homodontosaurus -- Extinct genus of therapsids the Late Permian of South Africa.
Wikipedia - Homo gautengensis -- Name proposed for an extinct species of hominin from South Africa
Wikipedia - Homo Hill -- Neighborhood in Itaewon, Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Homo naledi -- Small-brained South African archaic human
Wikipedia - Homopus -- Genus of small tortoises from southern Africa
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Wikipedia - Honey Butter Chips -- Brand of fried potato chips in South Korea
Wikipedia - Hong Ah-reum -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Byung-sik -- South Korean biathlete
Wikipedia - Hong Chun Gi -- Upcoming South Korean romantic fantasy television series
Wikipedia - Hongdae, Seoul -- Region in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - Hong Hwa-ri -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Ihk-pyo -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hong Jin-joo -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Hong Jin-kyung -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Jin-young -- South Korean trot singer, actress, and entertainer.
Wikipedia - Hong Ji-yoon -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Jong-hyun -- South Korean actor and model
Wikipedia - Hong Joon-pyo -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hong Jung-min -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hong Kong Strategic Route and Exit Number System -- Trunk road numbering system in Hong Kong
Wikipedia - Hong Kwang-ho -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Hong Kyung-min -- South Korean singer and actor
Wikipedia - Hong Kyung-pyo -- South Korean cinematographer
Wikipedia - Hong Min-pyo -- South Korean Go player
Wikipedia - Hong Moon-jong -- South Korean politician
Wikipedia - Hong River -- River in southwest China and northern Vietnam
Wikipedia - Hong Sang Eo -- South Korean anti-submarine missile
Wikipedia - Hong Sang-soo -- South Korean film director
Wikipedia - Hong Seok-cheon -- South Korean actor, television personality, restaurateur
Wikipedia - Hongseong County -- County in South Chungcheong, South Korea
Wikipedia - Hong Seong-hui -- South Korean rhythmic gymnast
Wikipedia - Hong Seung-pyo -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Hong Shin-seon -- South Korean poet
Wikipedia - Hong Song-dam -- South Korean artist
Wikipedia - Hong Soo-ah -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Soo-hyun -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Suk-man -- South Korean Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Hong Sung-chil -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - Hong Yeo-jin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hong Yo-seob -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Hong Young-ok -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Hong Young-pyo -- South Korean politician
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Wikipedia - Honor system -- Process of governing without enforcement
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Wikipedia - Hornby Lighthouse -- Lighthouse in New South Wales, Australia
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Wikipedia - Horn of Africa -- Peninsula in East Africa including Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia
Wikipedia - Horologium (constellation) -- Constellation in the southern celestial hemisphere
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Wikipedia - Horse Outside -- 2010 single by The Rubberbandits
Wikipedia - Horseshoe Bay, Bonchurch, Isle of Wight -- A bay on the south-east coast of the Isle of Wight near Bonchurch
Wikipedia - Horseshoe Bay, Isle of Wight -- A bay on the south-east coast of the Isle of Wight near Culver Down
Wikipedia - Horseshoe route -- Flying boat route between Sydney, Australia, and Durban, South Africa
Wikipedia - Horton Run (South Branch French Creek tributary) -- Stream in Pennsylvania, USA
Wikipedia - Hoshaiah Rabbah -- Amora of the first amoraic generation (about 200 CE)
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Wikipedia - Hospitalized cases in the vaping lung illness outbreak
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Wikipedia - H.O.T. (band) -- South Korean boy band
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Wikipedia - Hotel Shilla -- South Korean hotel company
Wikipedia - Hot Place -- South Korean girl group
Wikipedia - Hotshot (band) -- South Korean boy group
Wikipedia - Hot Standby Router Protocol -- Network system for establishing a fault-tolerant default gateway
Wikipedia - Hot Stove League (TV series) -- 2019 South Korean television series
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Wikipedia - Houston Outlaws -- American professional esports team
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Wikipedia - Houtgracht -- Canal in Amsterdam
Wikipedia - Houthi movement -- A political-religious armed movement in Yemen
Wikipedia - Houthis
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Wikipedia - Houtkopersburgwal -- Canal in Amsterdam
Wikipedia - Houttuynia -- Genus of flowering plants in the family Saururaceae
Wikipedia - Hovertravel -- Ferry company operating routes between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight
Wikipedia - Hove -- Town on the south coast of England, part of city of Brighton & Hove
Wikipedia - How Am I Supposed to Live Without You -- 1982 song written by Doug James and Michael Bolton
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Wikipedia - How Long Is the Coast of Britain? Statistical Self-Similarity and Fractional Dimension -- Paper by BenoM-CM-.t Mandelbrot discussing the nature of fractals (without using the term)
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Wikipedia - How Long's a Tear Take to Dry? -- 1999 single by The Beautiful South
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Wikipedia - Howrah-Nagpur-Mumbai line -- Indian railway route
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Wikipedia - Human Cognitive Abilities -- Book about human intelligence measurement
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Wikipedia - Human skin -- The outer covering of the body.
Wikipedia - Human trafficking in Southeast Asia
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Wikipedia - Hungary in World War I -- Overview about the position of Hungary during World War I
Wikipedia - Hungry Run (South Branch French Creek tributary) -- Stream in Pennsylvania, USA
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Wikipedia - Hurricane Ivan tornado outbreak -- Tornado outbreak caused by Hurricane Ivan in the Southern United States
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Wikipedia - Hwang Sun-hee -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Hwang Sun-won (equestrian) -- South Korean equestrian
Wikipedia - Hwang U-won -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Hwang Woo-jin -- South Korean modern pentathlete
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Wikipedia - ICC profile -- File format that characterizes a color input or output device
Wikipedia - Ice melange -- A mixture of sea ice types, icebergs, and snow without a clearly defined floe
Wikipedia - Ice Seguerra -- Filipino actor singer and Chairman of the National Youth Commission
Wikipedia - Ichida Souta -- Japanese photographer
Wikipedia - IC layout editor
Wikipedia - I Corps (South Vietnam) -- Corps of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam
Wikipedia - Icticephalus -- Extinct genus of therapsids from Permian South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidochampsa -- Extinct genus of therapsids from the Late Permian of South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidodon -- Extinct genus of therapsids from Permian South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidodraco -- Extinct genus of therapsids from the Late Permian of South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidognathus -- Extinct genus of therapsids of Late Permian South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidostoma -- Extinct genus of synapsid from the late Permian of South Africa
Wikipedia - Ictidosuchoides -- Extinct genus of therapsids from the late Permian and early Triassic of South Africa
Wikipedia - Icy Strait Point -- Privately owned tourist destination just outside the small village of Hoonah, Alaska
Wikipedia - I'd Die Without You -- 1992 single by P.M. Dawn
Wikipedia - Identity by descent -- Identical nucleotide sequence due to inheritance without recombination from a common ancestor
Wikipedia - Identity fraud -- Use by one person of another person's personal information, without authorization
Wikipedia - I Did a Thing -- Australian YouTuber and comedian
Wikipedia - Idiopathic hypersomnia -- Sleep disorder characterised by excessive sleep and daytime sleepiness without a known cause
Wikipedia - Idiotape -- South Korean electronic music band
Wikipedia - Idlewild (Outkast album) -- 2006 studio album / soundtrack album by Outkast
Wikipedia - Idli -- A common Breakfast originating from South India
Wikipedia - I Do, I Do (TV series) -- 2012 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - Idol Drama Operation Team -- 2017 South Korean television show
Wikipedia - Idol on Quiz -- South Korean variety show
Wikipedia - Idol Radio -- South Korean radio show
Wikipedia - Idol School (2017 TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Idols South Africa (season 9) -- Season of television series
Wikipedia - I Don't Wanna Live Without Your Love -- 1988 single by Chicago
Wikipedia - I Don't Want to Talk About It (film) -- 1993 film
Wikipedia - If the South Woulda Won -- 1988 single by Hank Williams Jr.
Wikipedia - If We Were a Season -- 2017 South Korean television drama
Wikipedia - If Youth But Knew -- 1926 film
Wikipedia - I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes) -- Musical setting; song composed by Hoagy Carmichael, lyrics based on a poem by Jane Brown Thompson;
Wikipedia - Igle Gledhill -- South African scientist
Wikipedia - Ignace Francois Broutin -- French architect
Wikipedia - Ignavusaurus -- Extinct genus of dinosaurs from the early Jurassic in southern Adfrica
Wikipedia - Igneri -- Indigenous Arawak people of the southern Lesser Antilles in the Caribbean
Wikipedia - I Go Out and You Stay Here -- 1931 film
Wikipedia - I Have a Lover -- 2015 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream (video game) -- Point-and-click adventure video game
Wikipedia - I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream -- Short story by Harlan Ellison
Wikipedia - Ikebukuro Route -- expressway in the Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Ikeda Route -- expressway in the Osaka area
Wikipedia - Ike Moriz -- German-South African singer Ike Moriz
Wikipedia - I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings -- 1969 autobiography about the early years of African-American writer and poet Maya Angelou
Wikipedia - IKon discography -- Discography of South Korean boy band iKon
Wikipedia - Ikoro (Ekiti State) -- Town in southwest Nigeria
Wikipedia - Ilene Hamann -- South African actress and model
Wikipedia - Ilhee Lee -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising -- Revolt against the Ottoman Empire in Southeastern Europe 1903
Wikipedia - I Live Alone (TV series) -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Iljig Formation -- Geologic formation in South Korea
Wikipedia - Illawarra Health & Medical Research Institute -- Medical research institute at the University of Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 103 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 106 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 111 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 114 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 116 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 117 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 173 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 17 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 1 -- State highway in Illinois, United States
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 21 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 255 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 26 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 2 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 336 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 390 -- Highway in northeastern Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 394 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 40 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 49 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 4 -- Highway in Illinois, USA
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 57 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 64 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 6 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 75 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 78 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 89 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 92 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 93 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 94 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - Illinois Route 98 -- Highway in Illinois
Wikipedia - I'll Make a Man Out of You -- Song from Disney's Mulan
Wikipedia - I'll Never Get Out of This World Alive -- Original song written and composed by Fred Rose, Hank Williams
Wikipedia - Illtyd Buller Pole-Evans -- South African botanist and mycologist (1879-1968)
Wikipedia - Ilse Hayes -- South African Paralympic athlete
Wikipedia - Ilse Klink -- South African actress
Wikipedia - Iluka, New South Wales -- Town in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - IM 67118 -- Old Babylonian clay tablet about a problem in geometry
Wikipedia - I'm a Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here! (British series 19) -- 19th series of British tv show
Wikipedia - Imagine Asia -- South Korean company
Wikipedia - Imatong Mountains -- Mountains in South Sudan
Wikipedia - Imbewu: The Seed -- South African drama series
Wikipedia - I'm Bout It -- 1997 film directed by Master P
Wikipedia - Im Chae-moo -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - I'm Coming Out -- 1980 Diana Ross song
Wikipedia - Im Dong-gi -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Im Dong-hyun -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - I'm Good (album) -- album by Yukmouth
Wikipedia - Im Ha-na -- South Korean sport shooter
Wikipedia - Im Ha-ryong -- South Korean actor and comedian
Wikipedia - Im Ho-geun -- South Korean shot putter
Wikipedia - Im Ho -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Hui-sik -- South Korean archer
Wikipedia - Im Hye-jin -- South Korean gymnast
Wikipedia - Im Hyuk -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Hyung-joon -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Hyun-sik -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Ji-kyu -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Jyoung-hwa -- South Korean weightlifter
Wikipedia - Immanentize the eschaton -- Trying to bring about the eschaton in the immanent world
Wikipedia - Immigration to South Africa
Wikipedia - Immortal Songs: Singing the Legend -- South Korean television music competition program
Wikipedia - I'm Not a Robot -- 2017 South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Imogen Wright -- South African software developer and bioinformatician
Wikipedia - Impact Knockouts -- Female talent in Impact Wrestling
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on domestic violence -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Hajj -- Effect of viral outbreak on Muslim pilgrimage
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on journalism -- Consequences of COVID-19 outbreak for media and publishing
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on long-term care facilities -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on other health issues -- Health consequences of outbreak beyond the COVID-19 disease itself
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on public transport -- Effects of COVID-19 viral outbreak on public transport
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on social media -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the arts and cultural heritage -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the environment -- Impact of coronavirus outbreak on environmental issues|2=noreplace
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the performing arts -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on The Walt Disney Company -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - Impala -- medium-sized antelope found in eastern and southern Africa
Wikipedia - Imperator torosus -- Species of fungus in the family Boletaceae native to southern Europe east to the Caucasus and Israel.
Wikipedia - Imperial Highway -- Thoroughfare in southern California, United States
Wikipedia - Imperial Roman army -- Roman Empire from about 30 BC to 476 AD
Wikipedia - Impulsivity -- Tendency to act on a whim without considering consequences
Wikipedia - Impurity of the land of the nations -- Rabbinic decree declaring land outside the Land of Israel to be ritually impure
Wikipedia - Im Sang-soo -- South Korean film director
Wikipedia - Im Se-mi -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Im Si-wan -- South Korean singer and actor
Wikipedia - Im Soo-hyang -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Im Soo-jung -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Im Sung-jae -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Im Won-hee -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Im Ye-jin -- South Korean actress
Wikipedia - Im Yoon-ah -- South Korean singer and actress
Wikipedia - Im Yun-ji -- South Korean diver
Wikipedia - In & Out (Crispy song) -- 2000 single by Crispy
Wikipedia - In & Out (film) -- 1997 comedy film directed by Frank Oz
Wikipedia - In and Out of Love (Bon Jovi song) -- Song by Bon Jovi
Wikipedia - In and Out of the Kitchen (TV series) -- British comedy television series
Wikipedia - Ina Plug -- South African archaeozoologist
Wikipedia - Inbee Park -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Incheon Chinatown -- Chinatown in Incheon, South Korea
Wikipedia - Incheon Heungkuk Life Pink Spiders -- South Korean women's volleyball club
Wikipedia - Incheon International Airport -- Largest airport in South Korea, completed in 2001 near the city of Incheon
Wikipedia - Incheon National University -- National university of South Korea
Wikipedia - Incheon Subway Line 2 -- Subway line in Incheon, South Korea
Wikipedia - Incheon -- Metropolitan City in Seoul National Capital Area, South Korea
Wikipedia - Indefinite detention -- Incarceration without a trial
Wikipedia - Indefinite pronoun -- Pronoun without a definite referent
Wikipedia - Independence movement in Puerto Rico -- Initiatives by inhabitants throughout the history of Puerto Rico
Wikipedia - Independent agencies of the United States government -- agencies that exist outside of the federal executive departments
Wikipedia - Independent Civic Organisation of South Africa -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Independent Commission Against Corruption (New South Wales) -- Anti-corruption agency in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Independent Electoral Commission (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Independent film -- Film done outside major film studio system
Wikipedia - Independent Party (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Independent Republic Quarterly -- Publication from South Carolina
Wikipedia - Independent Youth Theatre -- Platform for youth performance in Ireland
Wikipedia - Index-based insurance -- insurance method that relates payouts to an index correlated to agricultural production losses rather than to the actual losses incurred
Wikipedia - Index of biology articles -- Alphabetic listing of articles about biology topics
Wikipedia - Index of Djibouti-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index of philosophy -- An alphabetical index for articles about Philosophy
Wikipedia - Index of protected areas of South Africa -- Alphabetical listing of articles about protected areas in South Africa
Wikipedia - Index of South Africa-related articles
Wikipedia - Index of South Carolina-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index of South Dakota-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index of South Korea-related articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Index of underwater divers -- Alphabetical listing of articles about underwater divers
Wikipedia - Index of youth articles -- Wikipedia index
Wikipedia - Indiana's 6th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southeastern Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 8th congressional district -- U.S. House district in southwestern Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana's 9th congressional district -- U.S. House district in south central Indiana
Wikipedia - Indiana University Bloomington -- Public research university located in Bloomington, Indiana, United States (this is about the Bloomington campus, not the system of universities)
Wikipedia - Indiana University Southeast -- Public regional campus of university of Indiana
Wikipedia - Indian black turtle -- Species of reptile found in South Asia
Wikipedia - Indian brown mongoose -- Species of mongoose from South Asia
Wikipedia - Indian mathematics -- Development of mathematics in South Asia
Wikipedia - Indian Ocean coastal belt -- Afrotropic terrestrial biome in South Africa
Wikipedia - Indian Ocean Gyre -- A large systems of rotating ocean currents. The Indian Ocean gyre is composed of two major currents: the South Equatorial Current, and the West Australian Current
Wikipedia - Indian Slavery Act, 1843 -- Act passed in British India, outlawing economical transactions associated with slavery
Wikipedia - Indian South Africans
Wikipedia - Indian subcontinent -- Peninsular region in south-central Asia south of the Himalayas
Wikipedia - India -- Country in South Asia
Wikipedia - Indiction -- Any of the years in a 15-year cycle used to date medieval documents throughout Europe
Wikipedia - Indigenous peoples of the Southeastern Woodlands -- Indigenous groups in the US
Wikipedia - Individualism -- Moral stance, political philosophy, ideology and social outlook that emphasizes the moral worth of the individual
Wikipedia - Indo-Aryan peoples -- Indo-European speaking ethnolinguistic groups in South Asia
Wikipedia - Indochina mangroves -- A large mangrove ecoregion on the coasts of Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Malaysia in Southeast Asia
Wikipedia - Indo-European migrations -- |Migrations out of the Pontic-Caspian steppe
Wikipedia - Indonesian National Route 1 -- Road in Indonesia
Wikipedia - Indonesia -- Country in Southeast Asia and Oceania
Wikipedia - Inductive output tube
Wikipedia - Industrial Bank of Korea -- South Korean bank
Wikipedia - Industrial Workers of the World (South Africa)
Wikipedia - Indus Valley Civilisation -- Bronze Age civilisation in South Asia
Wikipedia - Indus-Yarlung suture zone -- A tectonic suture in southern Tibet and across the north margin of the Himalayas where the Indian and Eurasian plates meet
Wikipedia - Indy Neidell -- American actor, documentarian, and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Inedia -- Belief that a person could live without consuming food
Wikipedia - Inez Clare Verdoorn -- South African botanist
Wikipedia - Infamous Gaming -- South American esports organization
Wikipedia - Infinite (band) -- South Korean boy band
Wikipedia - Infinite Challenge -- South Korean variety show
Wikipedia - Infobox -- Template used to collect and present a subset of information about a subject
Wikipedia - Information processing -- Process in which input information is analysed or transformed in order to produce information as output
Wikipedia - Information technology outsourcing
Wikipedia - Infosys -- Indian multinational consulting, IT services, software engineering and outsourcing company
Wikipedia - Ingalalla Waterfalls -- Waterfall in South Australia
Wikipedia - Ingbirchworth -- Village in South Yorkshire, England
Wikipedia - Ingrid Andersen -- South African poet
Wikipedia - Ingrid Jonker Prize -- South African literary award
Wikipedia - Ingrid Jonker -- South African poet
Wikipedia - Ingrid Nilsen -- American make-up artist and YouTuber
Wikipedia - Ingrid van Houten-Groeneveld -- Dutch astronomer
Wikipedia - In-group and out-group
Wikipedia - Ingroup and outgroup
Wikipedia - Ingroups and outgroups
Wikipedia - In Gyo-jin -- South Korean actor
Wikipedia - Inherit the Wind (play) -- American play about the Scopes trial
Wikipedia - In Ho Lee -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - Inkatha Freedom Party -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - Inkigayo -- South Korean television program
Wikipedia - INK (operating system) -- Operating system that runs on the input output nodes of the IBM Blue Gene supercomputer
Wikipedia - Inkosi mine -- Open pit platinum mine in South Africa
Wikipedia - In Kyo-don -- South Korean taekwondo practitioner
Wikipedia - In-Kyung Kim -- South Korean golfer
Wikipedia - Inland Valley Daily Bulletin -- Southern California newspaper
Wikipedia - In Mo Yang -- South Korean violininst
Wikipedia - In My Mind (film) -- Documentary about Patrick McGoohan
Wikipedia - Inner Circular Route -- expressway in the Tokyo area
Wikipedia - Inner Kitsissut -- Island group in southern Greenland
Wikipedia - Inner Seas off the West Coast of Scotland -- A marine area between the Scottish mainland, the Outer Hebrides and Ireland
Wikipedia - Inner West Light Rail -- Light rail line in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Innisfree (brand) -- South Korean cosmetic brand
Wikipedia - Innocence (2020 film) -- 2020 South Korean drama film
Wikipedia - Innocent Defendant -- 2017 South Korean TV series
Wikipedia - In-N-Out Burger -- American fast food chain
Wikipedia - Innsmouth (film) -- 2015 short horror film by Izzy Lee, inspired by the works of H. P. Lovecraft
Wikipedia - Innsmouth no Yakata -- 1995 horror video game
Wikipedia - Innsmouth
Wikipedia - Innuendo Studios -- American YouTuber
Wikipedia - Inode pointer structure -- Hierarchy/layout for directing inodes in a Unix File System
Wikipedia - Input and output
Wikipedia - Input offset voltage -- The differential DC voltage required between the inputs of an amplifier to make the output zero
Wikipedia - Input-output analysis
Wikipedia - Input/output automaton
Wikipedia - Input/Output Control System -- logical record API
Wikipedia - Input/output (C++) -- C++ standard library header for input/output
Wikipedia - Input/output stream
Wikipedia - Input/Output Supervisor
Wikipedia - Input/Output
Wikipedia - Input/output -- Communication between an information processing system and the outside world
Wikipedia - Inrunner -- Electric motor whose outer shell is static; it does not move during operation.
Wikipedia - InScript keyboard -- Standard keyboard layout for Indian scripts
Wikipedia - In Shifting Sands: The Truth About Unscom and the Disarming of Iraq -- 2000 film by Scott Ritter
Wikipedia - Inside-Looking Out -- 1966 single by The Animals
Wikipedia - Inside Out (2011 film) -- 2011 crime-drama film by Artie Mandelberg
Wikipedia - Inside Out (2015 film) -- 2015 American animated film produced by Pixar
Wikipedia - Inside Out (Bobby Darin album) -- album by Bobby Darin
Wikipedia - Inside Out (Britney Spears song) -- 2011 song by Britney Spears
Wikipedia - Inside Out (Bryan Adams song) -- 2000 song by Bryan Adams
Wikipedia - Inside Out (Eve 6 song) -- 1998 single by Eve 6
Wikipedia - Inside/Out (film) -- 1997 film
Wikipedia - Inside Out Music -- German music label specialised in progressive rock
Wikipedia - Insider trading -- Trading of a public company's stock or other securities by individuals with access to nonpublic information about the company
Wikipedia - Insooni -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Inspiring Generation -- South Korean television series
Wikipedia - Instability -- Characterized by some of the outputs or internal states growing without bounds
Wikipedia - Institut d'emission d'outre-mer -- French banking organization
Wikipedia - Institute for Democratic Alternatives in South Africa
Wikipedia - Institute of Lutheran Theology -- Seminary in Brookings, South Dakota, US
Wikipedia - Institute of Physics Michael Faraday Medal and Prize -- Award for outstanding contributions to experimental physics
Wikipedia - Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
Wikipedia - Instructional scaffolding -- Support given to a student by an instructor throughout the learning process
Wikipedia - Instrumental convergence -- Hypothesis about intelligent agents
Wikipedia - Instrumental -- Music without vocals
Wikipedia - Insular Cases -- U.S. Supreme Court cases about the status of U.S. territories acquired in the Spanish-American War
Wikipedia - Insular region of Colombia -- Oceanic islands outside the continental territory
Wikipedia - Insurrection (TV series) -- Irish docudrama about the 1916 Easter Rising
Wikipedia - Intangible Cultural Property (South Korea) -- Traditions and customs in Korea designated for official preservation
Wikipedia - Integrated circuit layout design protection
Wikipedia - Integrated circuit layout
Wikipedia - Integrated Ocean Observing System -- An organization of systems that routinely and continuously provides quality controlled data and information on current and future states of the oceans and Great Lakes
Wikipedia - Intellectual Sacrifice and Other Mimetic Paradoxes -- 2018 book about sacrifice by Paolo Diego Bubbio
Wikipedia - Intelligence outsourcing
Wikipedia - Intel Outstanding Researcher Award
Wikipedia - Intensive farming in Almeria -- Greenhouse agriculture in southern Spain.
Wikipedia - Intensive farming -- Type of agriculture using high inputs to try to get high outputs
Wikipedia - Intensive outpatient programs
Wikipedia - Intensive outpatient program
Wikipedia - Interest Project -- Earned award in the Girl Scouts of the USA
Wikipedia - Interior gateway protocol -- Class of routing protocols
Wikipedia - Interior Gateway Routing Protocol
Wikipedia - Inter-Korean Liaison Office -- A de facto embassy between South and North Korea
Wikipedia - Interlaken, New Jersey -- Borough in Monmouth County, New Jersey, United States
Wikipedia - Intermontane Plate -- Ancient oceanic tectonic plate on the west coast of North America about 195 million years ago
Wikipedia - Internal resistance to apartheid -- Social movement about apartheid
Wikipedia - International adoption of South Korean children -- International adoption of South Korean children
Wikipedia - International aid related to the COVID-19 pandemic -- Aspect of viral outbreak
Wikipedia - International Catholic Conference of Scouting
Wikipedia - International Conference for Economic Sanctions Against South Africa
Wikipedia - International cricket in South Africa from 1971 to 1981 -- Cricket in South Africa
Wikipedia - International Federation of Liberal Youth
Wikipedia - International Journal of South American Archaeology -- Electronic academic journal
Wikipedia - International Knockout Mouse Consortium
Wikipedia - International Link of Orthodox Christian Scouts -- International body committed to promoting and supporting Orthodox Scout associations
Wikipedia - International maritime signal flags -- Flag used to communicate something about the ship flying it from a distance
Wikipedia - International Organization for Succulent Plant Study -- Organization about plants
Wikipedia - International rankings of South Africa -- national rating on multiple scales
Wikipedia - International recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia -- International recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
Wikipedia - International Revelation Congress -- Political party in South Africa
Wikipedia - International Sailing Schools Association -- A non-profit international association which provides a framework of common standards of quality and safety for sailing and windsurfing schools throughout the world.
Wikipedia - International Socialist League (South Africa)
Wikipedia - International Union of Guides and Scouts of Europe
Wikipedia - International Union of Socialist Youth
Wikipedia - International Young Democrat Union -- Global association of centre-right political youth groups
Wikipedia - International Youth and Students for Social Equality -- Student Trotskyist organization
Wikipedia - Internet censorship in India -- Overview about the Internet censorship in India
Wikipedia - Internet censorship in South Korea
Wikipedia - Internet in South Africa -- Overview of the Internet in South Africa
Wikipedia - Internet in South Korea -- Overview of the Internet in South Korea
Wikipedia - Internet outage -- Loss of internet functionality over a small or large area
Wikipedia - Internet router
Wikipedia - Internet vigilantism -- Vigilante activities carried out through the Internet
Wikipedia - Internment -- Imprisonment or confinement of groups of people without trial
Wikipedia - Interposer -- Layer between an integrated circuit and a printed circuit board, used to spread and reroute connections
Wikipedia - Intersex rights in South Africa
Wikipedia - Interstate 10 -- Interstate highway across the southern US
Wikipedia - Interstate 110 and State Route 110 (California) -- Interstate and state highway in California
Wikipedia - Interstate 126 -- Highway in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 15 Business (Great Falls, Montana) -- Business route in Montana
Wikipedia - Interstate 15 in California -- North-south Interstate and state highway in the U.S. state of California
Wikipedia - Interstate 185 (South Carolina) -- Highway in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 190 (South Dakota) -- Highway in South Dakota
Wikipedia - Interstate 210 and State Route 210 (California) -- Interstate and state highway in California
Wikipedia - Interstate 229 (South Dakota) -- Auxiliary Interstate Highway in Lincoln and Minnehaha counties, South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Interstate 26 in South Carolina -- Section of Interstate Highway in South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Interstate 381 and State Route 381 (Virginia) -- Highway in Virginia
Wikipedia - Interstate 520 -- Interstate Highway in Georgia and South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 526 -- Highway in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 585 -- Highway in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 710 and State Route 710 (California) -- Interstate and state highway in California
Wikipedia - Interstate 73 in South Carolina -- Highway in South Carolina
Wikipedia - Interstate 90 in South Dakota -- Section of Interstate Highway in South Dakota, United States
Wikipedia - Interstellar probe -- Space probe that can travel out of the Solar System
Wikipedia - Intertextual production of the Gospel of Mark -- Viewpoint that there are identifiable textual relationships such that any allusion or quotation from another text forms an integral part of the Markan text, even when it seems to be out of context
Wikipedia - Interventional pain management -- Medical subspeciality about treating pain
Wikipedia - Intestacy -- Condition of the estate of a person who dies without having made a valid will or other binding declaration
Wikipedia - In the Absence -- South Korean short documentary film
Wikipedia - In the Mouth of Madness -- 1994 US horror film by John Carpenter
Wikipedia - In the Valleys of the Southern Rhine -- 1925 film
Wikipedia - Intrathecal administration -- Route of administration of a drug into the sheath space around spinal cord to reach the cerebrospinal fluid
Wikipedia - Intrinsic semiconductor -- Pure semiconductor without any significant dopant species present
Wikipedia - Introduction to the Devout Life
Wikipedia - Invasion of South Kasai -- Congolese military action
Wikipedia - Inverell railway line -- Closed railway line in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Inverness Highlands South, Florida -- Census-designated place in Florida, US
Wikipedia - Inverse care law -- Adage about availability of health care
Wikipedia - Inverted totalitarianism -- political theory about illiberal democracies
Wikipedia - Investigator Group -- Archipelago off the western coast of the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia
Wikipedia - Investigator Strait -- A body of water in South Australia lying between the Yorke Peninsula, on the Australian mainland, and Kangaroo Island
Wikipedia - Investment outsourcing -- Outsourcing of Investment Management responsibilities
Wikipedia - Invisible Hitchcock -- 1986 outtakes album by Robyn Hitchcock
Wikipedia - In vitro muscle testing -- Testing of living muscle tissue outside of an organism
Wikipedia - In vitro -- Latin term meaning outside a natural biological environment
Wikipedia - Inwangsan -- Mountain in Seoul, South Korea
Wikipedia - In-Young Ahn -- South Korean scientist
Wikipedia - Ioannis Koutsis (sport shooter) -- Greek sports shooter
Wikipedia - Ioannis Koutsis -- Greek painter
Wikipedia - Ionian Sea -- Part of the Mediterranean Sea south of the Adriatic Sea
Wikipedia - IP load tester -- Protocol analyzers for routers
Wikipedia - IP routing -- Process used to determine which path a packet or datagram can be sent
Wikipedia - Ipse dixit -- An assertion without proof
Wikipedia - Ireland and the International Monetary Fund -- Relations between Ireland and the IMF, including the bailout of 2010
Wikipedia - Irene Charnley -- South African trade unionist and businesswoman
Wikipedia - Irene Grootboom -- South African housing rights activist
Wikipedia - Irene Schouten -- Dutch speed skater
Wikipedia - Irene's Cunt -- 1928 novel by Louis Aragon/Albert de Routisie
Wikipedia - Irene (singer) -- South Korean singer
Wikipedia - Iriri River (Rio de Janeiro) -- River of Rio de Janeiro state in southeastern Brazil
Wikipedia - Irish backstop -- proposed rule about Brexit and the Irish border, to come into effect only if alternative arrangements have not succeeded
Wikipedia - Irish diaspora -- Irish people and their family living outside Ireland (over 12 million claim Irish descent)
Wikipedia - Irma Stern -- South African artist (1894-1966)
Wikipedia - Irminger Current -- A north Atlantic current setting westward off the southwest coast of Iceland
Wikipedia - Irminger Sea -- A marginal sea of the North Atlantic Ocean southeast of Greenland between the Denmark Strait and the Labrador Sea
Wikipedia - Iron John: A Book About Men -- Book by Robert Bly
Wikipedia - Iron Pipeline -- Route used to smuggle firearms
Wikipedia - Irritable bowel syndrome -- functional bowel disorder characterized by chronic issues without an organic cause
Wikipedia - Irshaad Sayed -- South African martial artist
Wikipedia - Irumide Belt -- a Mesoproterozoic terrane on the southern margin of the Bangweulu Block in Zambia
Wikipedia - Irvin van Kerwel -- South African cricket umpire
Wikipedia - Isaac Lesiba Maphotho -- South African anti-apartheid activist
Wikipedia - Isaac Mafanya -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Isaac Newton Wallop, 5th Earl of Portsmouth -- British Peer
Wikipedia - Isaac Nichols -- farmer, shipowner and public servant in New South Wales, Australia
Wikipedia - Isaac Seitlholo -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Isabelle Boutron -- Professor of epidemiology
Wikipedia - Isabelle Mouthon-Michellys -- French triathlete
Wikipedia - Isak Fritz -- South African politician
Wikipedia - Isak N Jiyeon -- South Korean music duo
Wikipedia - Is Anybody Out There? -- 2012 single by K'naan
Wikipedia - I Saw the Devil -- 2010 South Korean action thriller film
Wikipedia - Ischys (organisation) -- Cyprus youth organization
Wikipedia - Iselin Seamount -- A seamount in the Southern Ocean off Antarctica
Wikipedia - ISET Policy Institute -- Economic think-tank in the South Caucasus
Wikipedia - Is Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? -- Memoir by Mindy Kaling
Wikipedia - Isfahan City Center -- Shopping Mall on south of isfahan
Wikipedia - I Shout Love -- 2001 film by Sarah Polley
Wikipedia - Isidingo -- Soap opera from South Africa
Wikipedia - ISimangaliso Marine Protected Area -- A marine conservation area in northern kwaZulu-Natal in South Africa
Wikipedia - Isipho -- South African TV drama series
Wikipedia - IS-IS -- Computer network routing protocol
Wikipedia - Isla del Sol -- Island in the southern part of Lake Titicaca
Wikipedia - Islamic banking and finance -- Overview about the Islamic banking and finance
Wikipedia - Islam in Indonesia -- Overview about the Islam in Indonesia
Wikipedia - Islam in South Asia -- History of Islam in the Subcontinent
Wikipedia - Island Davaar -- A tidal island at the mouth of Campbeltown Loch off the east coast of Kintyre, in Argyll and Bute, Scotland.
Wikipedia - Island Hopper -- Airline route from Hawaii to Guam
Wikipedia - Island House, Laugharne -- Historic home in south west Wales
Wikipedia - Island House, Plymouth -- Grade II listed building in Plymouth
Wikipedia - Island Lake South -- Summer village in Alberta, Canada
Wikipedia - Island Line (brand) -- Brand of South Western Railway operating railway services on the Isle of Wight
Wikipedia - Islay -- Southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides of Scotland
Wikipedia - Isle of Palms, South Carolina -- Barrier island on the coast of South Carolina, United States
Wikipedia - Isles of Scilly -- Chain of islands off the south-westernmost point of mainland Britain
Wikipedia - Islets of Ksamil -- Group of islands in southern Albania
Wikipedia - IsmaM-CM-/l Omar Guelleh -- President of Djibouti (1999-present)
Wikipedia - Ismania FitzRoy, Baroness Southampton -- Irish aristocrat
Wikipedia - ISO 128 -- International standard about the graphical representation of objects on technical drawings
Wikipedia - Isobaric counterdiffusion -- Diffusion of gases into and out of biological tissues under a constant ambient pressure after a change of gas composition
Wikipedia - Isobel Dixon -- South African poet
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last updated: 2022-02-04 09:29:22
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