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BS.Player BS.Player is a media player for Windows 2000 and XP that plays back many kinds of multimedia files (including ASF, ASX, AVI, DAT, DivX, M2V, M2P, M3U, MKV, MP3, MP2, MPEG, MPG, OGG, OGM, VOB, WAV, WMV) and specializes in video playback.
BS2000 BS2000 or BS2000/OSD (indicating availability of POSIX-compliant routines) is an operating system from Fujitsu Siemens Computers (formerly Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme) for mainframes. It is an EBCDIC-based operating system.
BS4994 BS4994 (formally: British Standard 4994:1987) is the "specification for the design and construction of vessels and storage tanks in reinforced plastics". It specifies a code of practice for use by manufacturers of such containers.
BSA Manufacturing BSA Manufacturing Sdn Bhd, formed in 1995, is a Malaysian manufacturer of aluminum alloy wheels. The company started as an importer of alloy wheels from Germany, Italy, England, Japan and Taiwan but later manufactured its own products.
BSA Rocket 3/Triumph Trident The BSA Rocket Three/Triumph Trident was the first true modern superbike, and the last major motorcycle developed by the original (Triumph Engineering Ltd) Triumph company. It was effectively badge-engineered to be sold under both the Triumph and BSA marques.
BSBA BSBA or in long form British Sun Bathers Association was an early naturist organisation in the United Kingdom that existed from 1943 until 1964 when it merged with the FBSC to form the Central Council of British Naturism (CCBN), later known just as BN or British Naturism.
BSD and GPL licensing Two of the most common free software licenses are the BSD license and the GNU General Public License (GNU GPL). Whereas software released with either of these licenses is considered "free", the licenses differ substantially in the way the source code can be used.
BSD Authentication BSD Authentication, otherwise known as BSD Auth, is an authentication framework and software API employed by some Unix-like operating systems, specifically OpenBSD and BSD/OS, and accompanying system and application software such as OpenSSH and Apache. It originated with BSD/OS and although the specification and implementation were donated to the FreeBSD project by BSDi, ultimately OpenBSD chose to adopt the framework in release 2.
BSD disklabel In the BSD computer operating systems (including NetBSD, OpenBSD, and FreeBSD) and in related operating systems such as SunOS, a disklabel is a record stored on a data storage device such as a hard disk that contains information about the location of the partitions on the disk.
BSD Documentation License The BSD Documentation License / BDL is a derivative of the BSD License with terms more specifically worded as they apply to documentation. Originally written for the FreeBSD project in the form of the FreeBSD Documentation License, the BDL as shown below contains terms that are mostly project agnostic.
BSDeviant The BSDeviant project was started by Unixpunx and produces a free, FreeBSD-based Unix-like operating system. The distribution is currently (as of June 2004) under 210MB and fully operates from a mini-CD-ROM (or regular CD-ROM) without the need to install anything on the hard drive.
BSE Sensex The BSE Sensex or Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index is a value-weighted index composed of 30 stocks with the base April 1979 = 100. It consists of the 30 largest and most actively traded stocks, representative of various sectors, on the Bombay Stock Exchange.
BSix Sixth Form College BSix Sixth Form College: Brooke House is a sixth form college located in Upper Clapton, London in the United Kingdom. It officially opened in September 2002, giving students in Hackney the opportunity to study at a college close to where they live.
BSI Group Originally founded in 1901, the British Standards Institute grew up as industrialization of the twentieth century unfolded. BSI was the brainchild of a Victorian engineer who formed a committee to standardise the sizes and types of steel section used in construction to make British industry more competitive.
BSI Management Systems BSI Management Systems, a division of the BSI Group, works in partnership with organizations, helping them improve their businesses and achieve high benchmarks for the implementation and administration of their management systems and business processes.
BSI PAS 100 The British Composting Association Composting Association British Composting Association worked to establish an industry standard for the composts, the BSI PAS 100 certified by the British Standards Institute. The specification covers the entire process; from raw materials and production methods, through quality control and lab testing ensuring certified composts are quality assured traceable safe and reliable.
BSK * Binary shift keying (BSK) is the simplest form of digital modulation. Examples of this are: binary phase shift keying (BPSK), binary amplitude shift keying (also called on-off keying), binary frequency shift keying, etc.
BSL International BSL International was a United Kingdom software development house that developed the Fourth-generation programming language (4GL) market through its concentration on Nomad, FOCUS, and Ramis throughout the 1980s.
BSP (Editor) BSP is a freeware map creation program written by Yahn Bernier for id software's game, Quake, and games using the Quake engine. The name of the program refers to the Binary space partitioning data structure commonly used by such games and the .
BSS Group BSS Group plc is a British wholesaler of pipeline, heating, ventilation, plumbing and sanitaryware products headquartered in Leicester. It is listed on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 Index.
BSV Schwenningen BSV Schwenningen 07 is a German football club that plays in Schwenningen, Baden-WĂĽrttemberg. The 1974 merger of Schwenningen SC and VfR Schwenningen that formed BSV Schwenningen 07 brought together two separate threads of the club's history.
BtoB Magazine BtoB Magazine is a monthly New York based marketing and advertising magazine published by Crain Communications, Inc. Intended for an audience of business-to-business marketers, the publication provides news, analysis and strategies that cover all aspects of the discipline including e-mail marketing, direct marketing, vertical marketing, search marketing, CRM, online advertising, and advertising agencies.
BT 21CN The 21st Century Network (21CN) programme is the network transformation project of the UK telecommunications company BT Group plc. It will see the UK incumbent's telephone network move from the present AXE/System X Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) to an Internet Protocol (IP) system.
BT Ireland BT Communications Ireland Limited, (formerly Esat Telecommunications Limited), is a telecommunications and internet company in the Republic of Ireland. It is a subsidiary of BT Group plc (also known as British Telecom).
BT League Championship The BT League Championship is the national Rugby Union league for Scotland. Operated by the Scottish Rugby Union, and presently sponsored by the BT Group plc, it was formed as a league of six divisions in 1973 to replace the haphazard "unofficial championship" system that had been in operation until then.
BT site engineering code A BT site engineering code is a group of letters assigned by BT, or its predecessor the General Post Office, to a physical location which is equipped by the company with unusual amounts or types of telecommunications.
BT tank The Fast Tank (), was a series of Soviet 'cavalry tanks' which were produced in large numbers between 1932 and 1941. They were lightly armoured, but reasonably well-armed for their time, and had much better mobility than other contemporary tank designs.
BT Tower The BT Tower in London, previously the Post Office Tower and also the London Telecom Tower, is a tall cylindrical building at 60 Cleveland Street in Fitzrovia. The main structure is 175 metres (574 feet) tall, with a further section of aerial bringing the total height to 188 metres (620 feet).
BTAM BTAM, or Basic Telecommunications Access Method, was a low-level programming interface specified by IBM for use on the IBM System/360. Later, IBM specified higher-level interfaces (QTAM, VTAM) and entire architectures (TSO, SNA),
BTBA Nationals The BTBA Nationals (also known as the BTBA National Championships) is a prestigious Ten-pin bowling National Championship tournament held in the United Kingdom by the British Tenpin Bowling Association (BTBA). It is also sanctioned and governed by the BTBA and is held annually in March, since it's inaugural inception match in 1961.
BTC Racing BTC Racing is a UK auto racing team run by Bert Taylor. They plan to run 2 Lexus IS200 cars for Chris Stockton and Darren Dowling in the latter two rounds of the 2006 British Touring Car Championship season in preparation for a fuller campaign next season.
BTCP Most cancer patients will, from time to time, experience pain which is normally treated by pain medications. Pain which lasts for up to 12 hours a day is called persistent cancer pain, and this, too, can be treated, with stronger pain relievers.
BTeV The BTeV experiment was designed to challenge the Standard Model explanation of CP violation, mixing and rare decays of beauty and charm quark states. The Standard Model has been the baseline particle physics theory for several decades and BTeV aims to find out what lies beyond the Standard Model.
BTEC The Business & Technology Education Council (BTEC) was a subdegree-conferring council in the United Kingdom until 1996, when its functions were transferred to Edexcel. The council offered further and higher education awards, particularly to polytechnics, and in particular the BTEC Nationals and BTEC Higher Nationals awards which remain prominent.
BTN 2000 BTN 2000 (Bring the Noise 2000) is an industrial remix album of Public Enemy tracks, following their 1998 He Got Game album. The group's attempt to make it available to fans online was blocked by their record distributor, PolyGram.
BTP Productions BTP Productions is an independent video-producing organization based in North Carolina. Founded in May 2006, many of its films have been published on YouTube and Google Video, including its biggest hits France Defeats Brazil and , which both received thousands of views during the 2006 FIFA World Cup fever.
BTQ-7 BTQ-7 is the Brisbane station of the Australian Seven Network. BTQ-7 was the second television station to launch in Brisbane, going to air on 1 November1959, after QTQ-9 (station of the Nine Network) launched three months earlier.
BTR-4 The BTR-4 is a 8x8 wheeled armoured personnel carrier (APC) designed in Ukraine by the Kharkiv Morozov Machine Building Design Bureau (SOE KMDB) as a private venture. The prototype was unveiled at the Aviasvit'2006 exhibition held in Ukraine in June 2006.
BTR-70 The BTR-70 is an eight-wheeled armored personnel carrier originally developed during the late 1970s and fielded by the Warsaw Pact and allies beginning in the early 1980s. Introduced as a successor to the earlier BTR-60, it most closely resembles a BTR-60PB with a longer hull and an improved means of accessing the vehicle with doors on each side of the vehicle replacing the dangerous and unpopular roof hatches of the earlier model.
BTR-94 The BTR-94 amphibious armoured personnel carrier is an Ukrainian modification of the Soviet eight-wheeled BTR-80. The BTR-94's turret is larger than the BTR-80 and is fitted with a ZU-23-2 twin 23 mm gun, a coaxial PKT machinegun and a surveillance radar with a range of up to 20 km against ground targets and 30 km against aerial targets.
BTR-EMS-AKG Janakeeya Vedi BTR-EMS-AKG Janakeeya Vedi (BTR-EMS-AKG People's Forum) was a political group in the South Indian state of Kerala, a splinter-group of Communist Party of India (Marxist). The group was led by expelled CITU-leader V.
BTR-T The BTR-T (Russian: Bronetransporter-Tyazhelyy, â€Armoured Transporter–Heavy’) is a Russian heavy infantry combat vehicle, designed by the Design Bureau of Transport Machine-Building (Omsk Transmash) state-run production association. It is based on the hull of the obsolescent T-55 tank and answers the need for a heavy, well protected and well armed vehicle adapted to urban combat.
BTRON Business TRON (BTRON), is a computer operating system with graphical user interface (GUI) built upon Central TRON ([CTRON]), itself a subproject of The Real-time Operating system Nucleus (TRON). TRON was launched in Japan in 1984 as an initiative to create a single, universal operating system with an open architecture.
BTV (Bulgarian television channel) bTV is the first private-owned national television channel in Bulgaria. It is owned by Balkan News Corporation, a part of News Corporation, and is reportedly the Bulgarian television channel with the largest audience.
BTX (form factor) BTX (for Balanced Technology Extended) is a form factor for PC motherboards, originally slated to be the replacement for the aging ATX motherboard form factor in late 2004 and early 2005. It has been designed to alleviate some of the issues that arose from using newer technologies (which often demand more power and create more heat) on motherboards compliant with the circa-1996 ATX specification.
Bu de bu ai Bu De Bu Ai (Simplified Chinese: 不得不ç±, Traditional Chinese: 不得不愛) is a widely celebrated pop song in the People's Republic of China. It is widely popular in part because it is sung in both Chinese and English by the artist, Pan Wei Bo (or Wilber "Will" Pan), featuring Xian Zi.
Bu Dugen Bu Dugen the territorial chief of the Xian Bei tribe during the Three Kingdoms Period of China. Bu Dugen at one time retained his fallen independence by sending many gifts to the Kingdom of Wei during the reigns of Cao Cao, and his son Cao Pi.
Bua (Fijian Communal Constituency, Fiji) Bua Fijian Provincial Communal is an electoral division of Fiji, one of 23 communal constituencies reserved for indigenous Fijians. (Of the remaining 48 seats, 23 are reserved for other ethnic communities and 25, called Open Constituencies, are elected by universal suffrage).
Bua language The Bua language is spoken by some 7,708 people (as of 1993) north of the Chari River around Korbol and Gabil in Chad. It is the largest member of the small Bua subgroup of the Mbum-Day subgroup of the Adamawa languages.
Bua languages The Bua languages are a subgroup of the Mbum-Day subgroup of the Adamawa languages spoken by fewer than 30,000 people in southern Chad in an area stretching roughly between the Chari River and the Guera Massif. They are ultimately part of the Niger-Congo family, and have exerted a significant influence on Laal.
Bua Macuata West (Open Constituency, Fiji) Bua Macuata West Open is an electoral division of Fiji, one of 25 open constituencies elected by universal suffrage (the remaining 46 seats, called communal constituencies, are allocated by ethnicity). Like the other open electorates, it came into being in 1999 and was used for the parliamentary elections of 1999, 2001, and 2006.
Bua training Bua Training is an Irish company founded in 2001 in Dublin to provide professional training and consultancy. Its customer base consists mostly of companies in the financial services, pharmaceutical and building industries.
Buada Buada is a district and constituency in the country Nauru. It is in the southwestern part of the island, and covers the central lagoon (which is considered to be one of the most beautiful and romantic places in Nauru).
Bual Bual (or Boal) is a variety of grape used in the production of medium-rich fortified wines from Madeira Island. According to the Geisenheim DNA Database, the name is a synonym for each of at least four white wine-producing varieties.
Buangkok Buangkok is an area located in the North-East Region of Singapore. It encompasses an area of Hougang New Town and the medical hub of Buangkok Green Medical Park that includes the Institute of Mental Health north of Buangkok Green, and the public residential areas in the neighbourhood of Compassvale in Sengkang New Town north of Buangkok Drive.
Buatier De Kolta Buatier De Kolta (né Joseph Buatier, 1845 – 1903) was a French magician who successfully performed throughout the 1870s and 1880s in England and America. De Kolta was a contemporary of fellow French magician Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin.
Buñol Buñol (in Valencian orthography: Bunyol) is a town and municipality in the province of Valencia, Spain. The municipality has an area of some 112 km², and is situated approximately 38 km west of the provincial and autonomous community capital city, Valencia.
Buñuelos Buñuelos (alternatively spelled bimuelos, birmuelos, bermuelos, burmuelos, bunyols) are fritters of a mainly Spanish origin. They are a popular dessert in many Latin American countries, and are traditionally eaten at Christmas.
BuÄŤin BuÄŤin (Macedonian: Đ‘Ńчин) lies in the Kruševo district of the Republic of Macedonia on both banks of the Black River. The village maintains a unique bridge built during Ottoman subjugation, and is home to a unique old building constructed above the surface of the Black River.
Bub McAtee Michael James "Bub" McAtee (March, 1845 - October 18, 1876) was a Major League Baseball first baseman who played for the Chicago White Stockings (1871) and the Troy Haymakers (1872), both of the National Association. He stood 5'9" and weighed 160 lbs.
Bubba Bubba is a relationship nickname formed from brother, given to boys to indicate their role in the family, especially the oldest male sibling. For some boys and men, bubba is used so pervasively it replaces the given name.
Bubba Floyd Leslie Roe "Bubba" Floyd (June 23, 1917 - December 15, 2000) was a Major League Baseball shortstop who played in three games for the Detroit Tigers in 1944. The 26-year-old rookie stood 5'11" and weighed 160 lbs.
Bubba Church Emory Nicholas "Bubba" Church (September 12 1924 - September 17 2001) was an American right-handed starting pitcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Philadelphia Phillies (1950-52), Cincinnati Reds (1952-53) and Chicago Cubs (1953-55). He was born in Birmingham, Alabama.
Bubba Morton Wycliffe Nathaniel "Bubba" Morton (December 13 1931 - January 14 2006) was an American right fielder in Major League Baseball who played for the Detroit Tigers (1961-1963), Milwaukee Braves (1963) and California Angels (1966-1969). He batted and threw right-handed.
Bubba the lobster Bubba was a massive lobster heaved from the waters of Nantucket, Massachusetts in February of 2005. The majestic crustacean of 23 lbs was one of the largest ever recorded (though the largest lobster on record weighed 44 pounds, twice Bubba's size).
Bubba the Love Sponge Bubba the Love Sponge Clem (born Todd Clem in Warsaw, Indiana on April 21, 1966) is a Tampa, Florida radio talk show host who has had a colorful past. His radio show can be heard five days (Monday-Friday) a week between 3PM and 7PM (est) on Howard 101, a channel on Sirius Satellite Radio.
Bubba Vote The Bubba Vote is a term that refers to rural, southern US voters, particularly southern male voters. The "Bubba" in "Bubba Vote" is another term for male hillbilly and redneck and as such "Bubba Vote" plays on such stereotypes of the deep-south.
Bubba Watson Bubba Watson is an American professional golfer who was born November 5, 1978 in Bagdad, Florida, played golf at the University of Georgia in 2000 and 2001. Prior to playing at UGA, he played golf for Faulkner State Community College in Alabama, where he was a junior college All-American.
Bubbe meise Bubbe meise or "bobe maysse" () is an expression meaning "old wives tale", literally "grandmother's tale", essentially "a fairytale of something impossible". The Yiddish word "bubbe" is close to Slavic "grandmother", such as .
Bubble and squeak Bubble and squeak (sometimes just called bubble) is a traditional English dish made with the shallow-fried leftover vegetables from a roast dinner. The chief ingredients are potato and cabbage, but carrots, peas, brussels sprouts, and other vegetables can be added.
Bubble bath Bubble baths can be obtained by adding a product containing foaming surfactants like sodium dodecyl sulfate to water. The practice is popular, because the foam insulates the bath water, keeping it warm for longer, and also reduces the tendency of greasy buildup on the bath tub at the water level (the so-called "bath ring").
Bubble Bobble Part 2 Bubble Bobble Part 2 is a game in the Bubble Bobble series. Never released in the arcade, two versions of the game were developed independently from each other (for the NES and Game Boy formats), with each game receiving a different storyline as a result.
Bubble car Bubble car is a generic name given to a range of small economical automobiles — mainly produced in the 1950s and 1960s. Bubble cars became popular in Europe at this time as a demand for cheap personal motorised transport emerged and fuel prices were high due in part to the 1956 Suez Crisis.
Bubble fusion Bubble fusion or sonofusion is the common name for a nuclear fusion reaction hypothesized to occur during sonoluminescence, an extreme form of acoustic cavitation; officially, this reaction is termed acoustic inertial confinement fusion (AICF) since the inertia of the collapsing bubble wall confines the energy causing a rise in temperature. The high temperatures producible through sonoluminescence raises the possibility that it might be a means to achieve thermonuclear fusion.
Bubble chamber A bubble chamber is a vessel filled with a superheated transparent liquid used to detect electrically charged particles moving through it. The charged particle deposits sufficient energy in the liquid that it begins to boil along its path, forming a string of bubbles.
Bubble light A bubble light is a decorative device consisting of a liquid-filled vial that is heated and lighted by an incandescent light bulb. Because of the liquid's low boiling point, the modest heat generated by the lamp causes the liquid to boil and bubble up from the vial's base.
Bubble memory Bubble memory is a type of non-volatile computer memory that uses a thin film of a magnetic material to hold small magnetized areas, known as bubbles, which each store one bit of data. Bubble memory started out as a promising technology in the 1970s, but failed commercially as hard disk prices fell rapidly in the 1980s.
Bubble Man Bubble Man (Katakana: ăă–ă«ăžăł サăłăăŞăĽ), is a popular Japanese soft drink which is owned by the Suntory Group. Bubble Man features an Anime style character on the front similar to other anime characters such as Sentai Zyuranger.
Bubble nest Bubblenests, also spelled bubble nests or bubble-nests, created by some fish species, are floating masses of bubbles blown with an oral secretion, saliva bubbles, and occasionally aquatic plants, or an area for egg deposit attached at the bottom.
Bubble Puppy Bubble Puppy was a Texan psychedelic rock band formed in 1964 in Austin, Texas by Rod Prince and Roy Cox. Looking to form a "top gun rock band" based on the concept of dual lead guitars, Prince and Cox recruited Todd Potter; a gymnast, sax player and guitarist.
Bubble rafts A material's observable and measurable mechanical properties strongly depend on its atomic and microstructural configuration and characteristics. This fact is intentionally ignored in Continuum Mechanics, which assumes a material to have no underlying microstructure and be uniform and semi-infinite throughout.
Bubble ring A bubble ring is an underwater ring vortex where an air bubble occupies the core of the vortex, forming a ring shape. The ring of air as well as the nearby water spins toroidially as it travels through the water, much like a flexible bracelet might spin when it is rolled off a person's arm.
Bubble sort Bubble sort, sometimes shortened to bubblesort, also known as exchange sort, is a simple sorting algorithm. It works by repeatedly stepping through the list to be sorted, comparing two items at a time and swapping them if they are in the wrong order.
Bubble Struggle Bubble Struggle (also known as BS and originally called Bubble Trouble) is a popular computer game created by Croatian game designer Krešimir Cvitanović . It was released in late 2002 after approximately 6 months of development.
Bubble universe theory The bubble universe model is a variant of the inflationary model of the big bang. This model, proposed by physicist Andrei Linde, postulates that our universe is one of many that grew from a multiverse consisting of vacuum that had not yet decayed to its ground state.
Bubble wrap Bubble wrap is a pliable transparent plastic material commonly used for packing fragile items. Regularly spaced, protruding air-filled hemispheres ("bubbles") produce a debroiglie surface, providing cushioning for precious or breakable items.
Bubble-tip anemone The bubble-tip anemone, Entacmaea quadricolor, is a type of sea anemone that likes to host clownfish such as the tomato clownfish, the maroon clownfish and the orange-fin anemonefish. The anemone is known to reproduce asexually in aquariums with proper conditions and adequate food.
Bubbleator The Bubbleator was a large, bubble-shaped hydraulic elevator with transparent acrylic glass walls operated from an elevated chair built for the 1962 World's Fair in Seattle. These transparent walls gave the illusion of looking through an actual 'soap bubble' by refracting light to obtain a rainbow-like effect for the riders inside.
Bubblebed "Bubblebed" is Eggstone's debut release, a self-financed promotional single on their own Das Supersound Project label. It was issued in a limited edition of 500 copies and as such is fetching high prices among collectors today.
Bubblegum pop Bubblegum pop (bubblegum rock, bubblegum music, youth music, or simply bubblegum) is a genre of popular music. Some of the defining characteristics of bubblegum pop include catchy melodies, simple three-chord structures, simple harmonies, and repetitive riffs or "hooks".
Bubbles (video game) Bubbles is a arcade game from 1982 by Williams Electronics. The objection of the game is to collect objects in a sink so that your player (which resembles a bubble) expands in size, whereas gains you points and exceeds you to the next level.
Bubbles DeVere Denise 'Bubbles' DeVere (According to the stage show tie in programme guide) is a fictional character in the second and third series of the BBC television sketch show Little Britain. She is played by Matt Lucas.
Bubbles Hargrave Eugene Franklin "Bubbles" Hargrave (July 15 1892 - February 23 1969) was an American catcher in Major League Baseball who played for the Chicago Cubs (1913-1915), Cincinnati Reds (1921-1928) and for the New York Yankees for one season (1930). Born in New Haven, Indiana, Hargrave won the National League batting title in 1926 while playing for Cincinnati.
Bubbles Yablonsky Bubbles Yablonsky is the fictional protagonist of the Bubbles series of screwball mysteries by Sarah Strohmeyer. She first appeared in Bubbles Unbound, published in 2001; as of 2006, she has appeared in five novels by Strohmeyer, and a sixth one is in preparation (Bubbles All The Way).
Bubblicious Bubblicious is a brand of bubble gum produced by Cadbury Adams. Launched in the United States in 1977, there are 17 flavors of Bubblicious, 2 of which have been discontinued, and 1 of which was discontinued and then re-introduced:
Bubbling Over Bubbling Over was a 1973 Dolly Parton album. It was produced by Bob Ferguson (though, as with all of Parton's early RCA albums, Porter Wagoner also had an uncredited hand in the production), and included the country top twenty single "Traveling Man" (not to be confused with the Ricky Nelson song of the same name), a rerecording of a song which Parton first included on 1971's Coat of Many Colors album.
Bubbling Spring, West Virginia Bubbling Spring is an unincorporated community in Hampshire County, West Virginia, USA. Bubbling Spring is situated on Cacapon River Road (West Virginia Secondary Route 14) along the Cacapon River south of Capon Bridge and north of Hooks Mills.
Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles The Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles is a chart released weekly by Billboard in the United States. It is composed of 25 positions that represent songs that are making progress to chart on the main singles chart, the Billboard Hot 100.
Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles The Bubbling Under R&B/Hip-Hop Singles is a chart released weekly by Billboard in the United States. It is comprised of 25 positions that represent songs that are making progress to chart on the main R&B/hip-hop chart, the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks.
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