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Earthsea Earthsea is a fictional realm created by Ursula K. Le Guin for her short story "The Word of Unbinding", published in 1964, but that became more famous in her novel A Wizard of Earthsea, first published in 1968.
Earthsearch Earthsearch: A Ten-Part Adventure Serial in Time and Space is a BBC Radio 4 science fiction series written by James Follett, comprising ten half-hour episodes broadcast between January and March 1981. There is also a novelisation by Follett under the same title.
Earthsearch II Earthsearch 2: A New Adventure Serial in Time and Space is a BBC Radio 4 science fiction series written by James Follett, comprising ten half-hour episodes broadcast between January and March 1982. There is also a novelisation by Follett under the title Earthsearch 2: Deathship.
Earthshock Earthshock is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four twice-weekly parts from March 8 to March 16, 1982. This serial is the final regular appearance of Matthew Waterhouse as the Doctor's companion Adric.
Earthsiege Metaltech: Earthsiege is a mecha-style simulation game developed by Dynamix and released in 1994. Earthsiege is the first in a long line of games set in the same universe: Battledrome (1995), Earthsiege 2 (1995), Hunter Hunted (1996), Cyberstorm (1997), Cyberstorm 2 (1998), Starsiege (1999), Starsiege: Tribes (1999), Tribes 2 (2001), and Tribes: Vengeance (2004).
Earthsiege 2 Earthsiege 2 is a mecha-style simulation game developed by Dynamix and released in 1995. Earthsiege 2 is set the Earthsiege universe, which contains its predecessors Earthsiege (1994) and Battledrome (1995), as well as action game Hunter Hunted (1996), strategy games Cyberstorm (1997) and Cyberstorm 2 (1998), simulation Starsiege (1999), and first-person shooters Starsiege: Tribes (1999), Tribes 2 (2001), and Tribes: Vengeance (2004).
Earthsuit Earthsuit was a short-lived yet influential New Orleans-based Contemporary Christian Music band in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Earthsuit consisted of guitarist Dave Rumsey, keyboardist/vocalist Paul Meany, bassist Roy Mitchell, drummer David "Hutch" Hutchison, and vocalist Adam LaClave.
EarthSave EarthSave is an international, non-profit organization was founded in 1988 by celebrated author John Robbins. The organization was born out of the overwhelming reader response to Robbins' 1987 publication Diet for a New America which described wide-ranging human and social impacts of human food choices.
EarthStation 5 Earth Station 5 (ES5) is a Peer-to-peer network and file sharing program that has put special emphasis on providing anonymity to uploaders and downloaders. This P2P application supports UDP multi source downloading and "spoofing" to obscure the origin of the files traded, and proxies.
Earthtone9 earthtone9 was an alternative metal band hailing from Nottingham, UK. Their line up on most of their major releases was Karl Middleton on vocals, Owen "Oz" Packard and Joe Roberts on guitar, Graeme Watts on bass and Simon Hutchby on drums (the latter was replaced for their final EP Omega by Alex Baker).
Earthtrust Earthtrust is a non-governmental organization (NGO) dedicated to wildlife protection. Located in Hawai'i, Earthtrust has been involved in many high-profile activities, notably around using genetic analysis to demonstrate the prevalence of pirate whaling as well as public information campaigns around drift net fishing.
Earthwatch The Earthwatch Institute promotes the action and understanding necessary to sustain our environment. The institute supports scientific field research and education under the premise that conservation decisions should be based upon data.
Earthworks (engineering) In civil engineering, earthworks are engineering works created through the moving of massive quantities of soil or unformed stone. Engineers need to concern themselves with issues of geotechnical engineering (such as soil fluidity and friction) and with quantity estimation to ensure that soil volumes in the cuts match those of the fills, while minimising the distance of movement.
Earthworm Earthworm is the common name for the larger members of the Oligochaeta (which is either a class or subclass depending on the author) in the phylum Annelida. In classical systems they were placed in the order Opisthopora, on the basis of the male pores opening to the outside of body posterior to the female pores, even though the male segments are anterior to the female.
Earthworm eel The earthworm eels are a family (Chaudhuriidae) of small freshwater eel-like fish related to the swamp-eels and spiny eels. The nine known species (as of 2003) are literally the size and shape of earthworms, thus the family name.
Earthworm Jim Earthworm Jim is a run and gun platform video game starring an earthworm named Jim in a robotic suit who battles evil. The game was developed by Shiny Entertainment, released for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis in 1994, and subsequently ported to the SNES, Game Gear, Game Boy, and years later, the Game Boy Advance.
Earthworm Jim (TV series) Earthworm Jim is an animated television series which ran for 23 episodes in 2 seasons from 1995-1996 on the WB Network, based on a video game character created by Doug TenNapel for the 1994 video game Earthworm Jim. It follows the adventures of an earthworm named Jim, who is turned into a superhero by a robotic super suit.
Earthworm Jim 3D Earthworm Jim 3D is to date the last console game in the Earthworm Jim series. Created by Interplay and based more on the Television series than the canon of the previous games, Earthworm Jim 3D was released for Nintendo 64 and PC.
Earthworm Jim: Menace 2 the Galaxy Earthworm Jim: Menace 2 the Galaxy is a platform game starring Earthworm Jim, released in 1999 for the Game Boy Color. Evil Jim has kidnapped Princess What's-Her-Name and Earthworm Jim must embark on yet another adventure to save her.
Earwax Earwax, also known by the medical term cerumen, is a yellowish, waxy substance secreted in the ear canal of humans and many other mammals. It plays an important role in the human ear canal, assisting in cleaning and lubrication, and also provides some protection from bacteria, fungus, and insects.
Earwig Earwig is the common name given to the insect order Dermaptera characterized by membranous wings folded underneath short leathery forewings (hence the literal name of the order - "skin wings"). The abdomen extends well beyond the wings, and frequently, though not always, ends in a pair of forceps-like cerci.
Earworm Earworm, a loan translation of the German Ohrwurm, is a term for a song stuck in one's head, particularly an annoying one. Use of the English translation was popularised by James Kellaris, a professor of marketing at the University of Cincinnati.
Easby Abbey Easby Abbey or the Abbey of St Agatha is an abandoned Premonstratensian Abbey on the eastern bank of the River Swale on the outskirts of Richmond in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire. The site is maintained by English Heritage, it can be reached by a pleasant riverside walk from Richmond Castle.
Easdale Easdale (Scottish Gaelic: Eilean Eisdeal) is one of the Slate Islands, west of Argyll in Scotland. Originally home to large slate quarries, the small island now has a population of around sixty people and is home to a folk museum.
Ease of movement Ease of movement is an indicator used in technical analysis to relate an asset's price change to its volume. Usually, high positive values mean the price is moving upward on low volume, and strong negative values that it is dropping on low volume.
Ease of use Ease of use refers to the property of a product or thing that a user can operate without having to overcome a steep learning curve. Things with high ease of use will be intuitive to the average user in the target market for the product.
Easeful Court Easeful Court (青逸軒) is a public housing estate of Hong Kong Housing Authority on the Tsing Yi Island, Hong Kong. It was supposed to be sold under Home Ownership Scheme and changed to rental after policy change of Hong Kong Government to stablise the property price of Hong Kong.
Easement An easement is the right to do something or the right to prevent something over the real property of another. At common law, an easement came to be treated as a property right in itself and is still treated as a kind of property by most jurisdictions.
Easey Street murders The Easey Street murders refer to the killing of Suzanne Armstrong and Susan Bartlett, who were stabbed to death on 10 January 1977 in their home at 147 Easey Street in the inner Melbourne suburb of Collingwood.
Eashing Eashing is a small village in Surrey a couple of miles outside Godalming and was once part of the Godalming (hundred) but is now administered by Guildford Borough Council. The village is divided into Upper and Lower Eashing.
Easington Rec, Banbury The Easington Rec is a large area of grass and trees in the Easington ward of Banbury, Oxfordshire. It also includes a play park with swings, a slide and many climbing obstacles, as well as football goals and a cricket strip.
Easley McCain Recording Easley McCain Recording began as Doug Easley's rudimentary, four-track studio in the woods near the Wolf River bottoms in Memphis in the late 1970s recording blues musicians like Mose Vinson, as well as some local rock bands. In the early 1980s Easley operated "Easley Recording" out of a hand-built garage studio behind his home near University of Memphis.
Eason Jordan As Chief News Executive for CNN, Eason Jordan played a key role in planning CNN coverage of world events and conflicts. He worked at the news network from 1982 until his resignation in 2005 and was the recipient of two Emmy Awards, two Peabody Awards and the DuPont-Columbia Award.
East 105th Street (BMT Canarsie Line) East 105th Street is grade-level station on the BMT Canarsie Line of the New York City Subway. Located at the intersection of East 105th Street and Turnbull Avenue in Brooklyn, it is served by the train at all times.
East 149th Street (IRT Pelham Line) East 149th Street is a station on the IRT Pelham Line of the New York City Subway. It is served by the train and is located at the intersection of East 149th Street, Prospect Avenue, and Southern Boulevard in the Bronx.
East 15 Acting School East 15 is a professional acting school in Loughton, Essex. It is accredited by the National Council for Drama Training and its degrees are awarded by the University of Essex with which it merged on September 1, 2000.
East 180th Street Yard East 180th Street Yard is situated at 1145 East 180th Street in the Bronx, just east of the Bronx Zoo. The yard consists of eight storage tracks and an adjacent 12-track shop building, plus the nearby 19-track Unionport Yard.
East and Central African cricket team The East and Central African cricket team was a cricket team representing Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda and Zambia in international cricket matches. They were an associate member of the International Cricket Council from 1989 until 2003.
East and West East and West refers to a conceptual contrast between societies and cultures of the eastern Eurasian continent ( East, Near East, Middle East, Far East, Orientals, East Asia, Eastern society, Eastern culture, etc.) as distinct from those of the western Eurasian continent, (Western society and culture, etc.
East Africa East Africa or Eastern Africa is the easternmost region of the African continent, variably defined by geography or geopolitics. In the UN scheme of geographic regions, 19 territories constitute Eastern Africa:
East Africa and Uganda Protectorates East Africa and Uganda Protectorates was the name used by the combined postal service of the protectorates of British East Africa and Uganda between 1901 and 1920, when British East Africa was split into the colony and protectorate of Kenya.
East African Airways East African Airways was an airline jointly run by three countries in East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania; and Uganda, which were then part of an East African Community. When this was dissolved in 1977, each country established its own national airline: Kenya Airways, Uganda Airlines; and Air Tanzania.
East African Breweries East African Breweries is a large East African brewing company which owns Kenya Breweries, Uganda Breweries, Central Glass - a glass manufacturer, Kenya Maltings and United Distillers and Vintners (Kenya) Limited.
East African Campaign (World War II) The East African Campaign refers to the battles fought between British Commonwealth forces and Italian Empire forces in Italian East Africa during World War II. This campaign is often seen as part of the North African Campaign.
East African Court of Justice The East African Court of Justice is a treaty based judicial body to ensure adherence to law in the interpretation and application of and compliance with the East African Treaty of 1999. Its Judges, a maximum of six, are appointed by the highest organ of the community, the Summit, consisting of the heads of state, from among persons recommended by the Partner States who are of proven integrity, impartiality and independence and fulfil the conditions required in their own countries for high judicial office, or are jurists of recognised competence.
East African Currency Board The East African Currency Board (EACB) supplied and oversaw the currency of British colonies in East Africa from 1919 to 1966. It was established after Britain took control of mainland Tanzania from Germany at the end of World War I, and originally oversaw the territories of Uganda, Kenya, and Tanzania (excluding Zanzibar).
East African Development Bank The East African Development Bank (EADB) provides development finance in the East African countries of Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. Its mission is one of "strengthening socio-economic development and regional integration".
East African mountains The East African mountains are a mountain region in East Africa, encompassing Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda, and Burundi. The mountains are related to the East African Rift system.
East African Railways and Harbours Corporation The East African Railways and Harbours Corporation evolved from the Uganda Railway in Kenya and Uganda and the railways of Tanganyika (later Tanzania) between the World War I and 1977 when the East African Community dissolved.
East African shilling The East African Shilling was a currency issued for use in Kenya, British Somaliland, Italian Somaliland, Tanzania, Uganda and parts of Yemen during the time these areas were British colonies and protectorates. It is also the proposed name for a common currency that the East African Community plans to introduce by the end of 2009.
East African urban music East African urban music is a popular music genre of the three countries customarily grouped as "East Africa": Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda. The genre is basically an offshoot of western popular music, particularly hip hop and funk, somewhat influenced by more traditional African music.
East Allegheny (Pittsburgh) East Allegheny is a neighborhood on Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA's North Side. It has a ZIP Code of 15212, and has representation on Pittsburgh City Council by the council member for District 1 (North Central Neighborhoods).
East Allen County Schools The East Allen County school corporation, known as EACS for short, is an Allen County area public school district, and is one of the largest in area in Indiana. It is comprised of seven secondary schools and eleven elementary schools.
East Allen County Times The East Allen County Times is one of five community publications published by the Times Group Inc in Fort Wayne, Indiana. It is a freely circulated, monthly newspaper which is direct mailed to zip codes 46774 in New Haven, 46741 in Grabill, 46743 in Harlan, 45745 in Hoagland, 46797 in Woodburn and 46773 in Monroeville, Indiana with a circulation of over 13,000 addresses.
East Amherst, New York East Amherst is a hamlet, or unincorporated community, which straddles the boundary known as Transit Road (NY 78) separating the towns of Amherst and Clarence in Erie County, New York, United States of America. East Amherst covers approximately 15 square miles and is contained entirely within the perimeter of ZIP code 14051 (The nearby neighborhood of Swormsville also shares this ZIP code with East Amherst).
East Anglia East Anglia is a region of eastern England, named after one of the ancient Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, which was named after the homeland of the Angles, Angeln in northern Germany. The kingdom consisted of Norfolk and Suffolk ("North folk" and "South folk") but the region's boundaries are vague.
East Anglia Equestrian Properties East Anglia Equestrian Properties is an independent, family run, specialist estate agency dealing with properties that are, or have the potential to be used for equestrian purposes within the East Anglia region and surrounding counties. Which has become the benchmark for UK Equestrian Properties.
East Anglian derby The East Anglian Derby is a sobriquet used to describe football matches held between Ipswich Town and Norwich City. It is also described humorously as the Old Farm Derby, a reference to the Old Firm derby played between Celtic and Rangers.
East Anglian Railway Museum The East Anglian Railway Museum is located at Chappel and Wakes Colne railway station in Essex, which is situated on the former Great Eastern Railway branch line from Marks Tey to Sudbury. Services on the Sudbury Branch Line are operated by 'one'.
East Antarctica East Antarctica, also called Greater Antarctica, () is one of the two major regions of Antarctica, lying on the Indian Ocean side of the Transantarctic Mountains and comprising Coats Land, Queen Maud Land, Enderby Land, Mac. Robertson Land, Wilkes Land and Victoria Land.
East Antrim Hockey Club East Antrim Hockey Club is a men's field hockey club based in Glengormley, County Antrim, Northern Ireland, just 7 miles north of Belfast. It is affiliated to the Ulster Branch of the Irish Hockey Association and is one of the oldest clubs in Irish hockey history.
East Area Rapist East Area Rapist is the nickname for an unidentified serial rapist who terrorized Sacramento and Contra Costa Counties from June 1976 to July 1979. The rapist was never caught for the fifty sexual assaults attributed to his spree.
East Asia Economic Caucus The East Asia Economic Caucus is a regional free trade zone (FTA) proposed in 1990 by former Malaysian Prime Minister Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad and encompasses the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states, China, South Korea and Japan.
East Asia Regional Council of Overseas Schools The East Asia Regional Council of Overseas Schools (EARCOS) is an association of some 100 international schools in East Asia which use English as the primary medium of instruction. Its members have over 53,000 students from pre-kindergarten to grade 12.
East Asia Summit The East Asia Summit (EAS) is a pan-Asia forum to be held annually by the leaders of 16 countries in East Asia and the region, with ASEAN in a leadership position. Russia has applied for membership and as of 2005, attends on observer status.
East Asian age reckoning East Asian age reckoning is a concept used in East Asian countries originating in China. Several East Asian cultures, such as Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese, share a traditional way of counting a person's age.
East Asian American East Asian Americans were the first Asian immigrant group to the United States of America. This group includes Korean Americans, Chinese Americans, Japanese Americans, Mongolian Americans, and other immigrants from East Asia and their descendants.
East Asian Buddhism East Asian Buddhism is a collective term for the schools of Buddhism that developed in the East Asian region, most of which are part of the Mahayana transmission. These include Chinese Buddhism, Korean Buddhism, Japanese Buddhism, and Vietnamese Buddhism.
East Asian cinema East Asian cinema is a term used to refer to the film industry and films produced in and/or by natives of East Asia. It can be seen as a sub-section of Asian cinema, which in turn is a sub-section of world cinema, a catchall term used in the English-speaking world to refer to all foreign language films.
East Asian Cup 2005 The East Asian Cup is a football competition between teams from East Asian countries and territories; see East Asian Cup. The second ever cup was held from 31 July, 2005 to 7 August, 2005 in South Korea, with qualifiers held in March 2005.
East Asian Football Federation The East Asian Football Federation (EAFF), founded in May 28, 2002, is an association of the football playing nations in East Asia. Its members are China PR, Chinese Taipei, Guam, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea DPR, Korea Republic, Macau, Mongolia and Northern Mariana Islands (provisional).
East Asian Jewry While East Asia is hardly the first place one might expect to find Jews, communities do exist, and have existed for many years. Even as the majority of the Jewish people settled in the Holy Land, Europe, and America, in every period of history there were those that went the other way, traveling east and settling in strange and exotic lands.
East Asian languages East Asian languages or the East Asian sprachbund describe two notional groupings of languages in East and Southeast Asia, either (1) languages which have been greatly influenced by Classical Chinese, or the CJKV (Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese) area or (2) a larger grouping including the CJKV area as well as several language groups of Southeast Asia including other Sino-Tibetan languages, Tai-Kadai, and Austronesian languages.
East Asian monsoon The East Asian monsoon is a monsoonal flow which carries moist air from South Asia to East Asia. It affects approximately one-third of the global population, and the countries of China, Japan, North Korea, and South Korea.
East Asian rainy season The East Asian rainy season (梅雨), pronounced "meiyu" in Chinese and "baiu" or "tsuyu" in Japanese, refers to the frontal precipitation caused by mei-yu front, a persistent east-west zone of disturbed weather during spring which is quasi-stationary and stretches from the east China coast, across Taiwan, and eastward into the Pacific south of Japan.The rainy season usually lasts from June to July in Japan and the Chang Jiang] and [[Huai He region of China.
East Asian Radio Station Online EARS Online East Asian Radio Station Online (EARS Online 廣播線網上電台) is a website which is formerly known as “The Comline Online Radio”. It was launched on February 21, 1998 by Jason Leung Ki Lau (in Chinese: 劉亮祺)(also called Chek Thoon 赤鋒).
East Asian studies East Asian Studies is a distinct multidisciplinary field of scholarly enquiry and education that promotes a broad humanistic understanding of East Asia past and present. East Asian Studies is located within the broader field of Area studies and is also interdisciplinary in character, incorporating elements of the social sciences (anthropology, economics, sociology, politics etc.
East Asiatic Company The East Asiatic Company (EAC) was founded by Hans Niels Andersen in Copenhagen in 1897. Service which would eventually include both passenger and freight lines between the Danish capital, Bangkok and the far east was the initial objective.
East Atlanta East Atlanta is an area located east-southeast of downtown Atlanta, Georgia. It is generally considered to be the roughly 10% of Atlanta's area which was part of the 1909 annexation into a neighboring county, putting it into DeKalb while the remainder is in Fulton.
East Aurora Public School District 131 East Aurora Public School District 131 (also known as Aurora Public Schools: East Side) has a long history serving students in Aurora, Illinois. It is bounded by the county line between DuPage County and Kane County to the east, the county line between Kendall County and Kane County to the south, the Fox River to the west and the border with the neighboring West Aurora and Batavia School Districts to the north.
East Australia hotspot The East Australia hotspot is a volcanic hotspot in Eastern Australia that feeds magma to the volcanoes of Australia. The East Australia hotspot takes advantage of weak spots in the Indo-Australian Plate to feed lava to the volcanoes of Eastern Australia.
East Australian Current The East Australian Current (or EAC) can reach speeds of up to 7 knots in some of the shallower waters along the Australian continental shelf, but is generally measured at 2 or 3 knots. The EAC results in a current vortex in the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand.
East Ayrshire East Ayrshire (Siorrachd Inbhir Àir an Ear in Gaelic) is one of 32 unitary council regions in Scotland. It borders onto North Ayrshire, East Renfrewshire, South Lanarkshire, South Ayrshire and Dumfries and Galloway.
East Azarbaijan Province East Azarbaijan or East Azerbaijan (Persian: آذربایجان شرقی, Āzārbāijān-e Sharqi; Azeri: Şərqi Azərbaycan) is one of the 30 provinces of Iran. It is in the northwest of the country, bordering Armenia and the Republic of Azerbaijan, and the provinces of Ardabil, West Azarbaijan, and Zanjan.
East Baltic race In physical anthropology, the East Baltic race is one of the subcategories of the Europid (White; Caucasian) race into which it was divided by anthropologists in the early 20th century. The continued validity of these categories is disputed.
East Bay Daily News The East Bay Daily News is a free daily newspaper in Berkeley, California published 5 days a week with an average daily circulation of 10,000. The newspaper was founded May 20, 2005 by journalist Dave Price and Jim Pavelich, who also published the Palo Alto Daily News.
East Bay Electric Lines The East Bay Electric Lines was a division of the Southern Pacific Railroad which operated a system of electric interurban-type trains (technically, suburban) in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area starting in 1911. Some of the trains ran on tracks formerly served by SP (originally Central Pacific) local steam trains.
East Bay Municipal Utility District The East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD), colloquially referred to as "E B Mud", "East Bay Mud" or sometimes just pronounced as "ebmud", provides water and sewage treatment for customers in portions of Alameda County and Contra Costa County in California, on the eastern side of San Francisco Bay (including the cities of Oakland, Berkeley and several nearby suburbs).
East Bay Ray Raymond Pepperell, better known as East Bay Ray, is the lead guitarist for the well known West Coast punk band Dead Kennedys. Next to Jello Biafra's manic warble, East Bay Ray's tinny surf-inspired spastic guitar work was one of the defining factors of the music of the Dead Kennedys, and by extension, of the "second wave" of American punk.
East Bay Regional Park District The East Bay Regional Park District (EBRPD) is a public authority operating in Alameda County and Contra Costa County, California, within the East Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area. It maintains and operates a system of regional parks which is the largest urban park district in the United States.
East Beaver Creek (VIVA) East Beaver Creek is a Vivastation on York Region's Viva bus rapid transit system, north of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It opened on September 4, 2005, on the intersection of East Beaver Creek Road and Highway 7 in Markham/Richmond Hill, Ontario.
East Bedfont East Bedfont, or simply Bedfont, straddles the Staines Road at the west of the London Borough of Hounslow from Baber Bridge on the River Crane to the boundary with Ashford. Referred to in the Domesday Book as “Bedefunde”, the name is thought to be derived from Anglo-Saxon Bedfunta = "Bed’s spring", or Bydenfunta = "spring provided with a drinking-vessel".
East Belfast Observer The East Belfast Observer which first appeared on March 4 2004, is (as of June 2004) Northern Ireland's newest newspaper. Distributed throughout east Belfast and North Down, the East Belfast Observer has a print run of 10,000.
East Bengali Refugees A significant number of refugees and migrants left East Bengal following the partition of Bengal as part of the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947. Bengal was partitioned into the Indian state of West Bengal and the Pakistani province of East Bengal (later renamed East Pakistan, which subsequently broke away from Pakistan to form the independent country of Bangladesh in 1947.
East Bench, Salt Lake City, Utah The East Bench of Salt Lake City, Utah is a relatively affluent, and primarily residential, section of Salt Lake City that lies at the base of the Wasatch Range and extends west to approximately 2100 East. It is bordered on the north by the Federal Heights neighborhood and on the south by Interstate 80.
East Berbice-Corentyne East Berbice-Corentyne (Region 6) is one of ten regions in Guyana covering the whole of the east of the country. It borders the Atlantic Ocean to the north, Suriname to the east, Brazil to the south and the regions of Mahaica-Berbice, Upper Demerara-Berbice, Potaro-Siparuni and Upper Takutu-Upper Essequibo to the west.
East Bird's Head-Sentani languages The East Bird's Head-Sentani languages form a family of Papuan languages proposed by Malcolm Ross which combines the East Bird's Head and Sentani families along with the Burmeso and Tause language isolates. Sentani had been a branch of Stephen WĂĽrm's proposal for Trans-New Guinea.
East Blue (One Piece) The East Blue, is an ocean in the One Piece World and was the setting of the first six arcs of the manga and Anime. East Blue, like its sister seas, comprises almost entirely of ocean, with a few scattered islands and a border with Red Line.
East Boston Expressway The East Boston Expressway is an elevated freeway in East Boston, Massachusetts, carrying Route 1A from the Sumner and Callahan Tunnels past Logan Airport and the end of Interstate 90. It was the first freeway built in Boston.
East Boston gas surge The East Boston gas surge was a series of fires and at least one explosion that took place early on the morning of September 24, 1983, when an underground control that regulated the flow of natural gas failed, causing a surge of the fuel into the community of East Boston, Massachusetts. sudden swell of gas rushed into businesses and homes in the neighborhood, increasing the size of pilot lights] to as much as a foot high.
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