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Gnommish Gnommish is the "fairy language" used in the Artemis Fowl series by Eoin Colfer. It is not actually a language at all, but the English language encoded into a letter-substitution cipher where each symbol represents a letter.
Gnomon School of Visual Effects Gnomon School of Visual Effects is a trade school based in Los Angeles, California that teaches the techniques of 3D Computer Graphics and Visual effects, primarily using the program Maya (software). Founded in 1997 by Alex Alvarez, the program features many industry professionals as instructors.
Gnomoradio Gnomoradio is an open source application for the GNOME desktop which manages a user's collection of audio files (typically encoded with lossy compression algorithms such as MP3 and Ogg Vorbis). It is very similar to iRATE radio, in that it can automatically fetch content under a license that allows redistribution.
Gnorm Gnat [Gnat was a comic strip created by Jim Davis] in the [[1970s for the Pendleton Times newspaper. Davis learned the skills and discipline necessary to become a syndicated cartoonist and began his own strip, "Gnorm Gnat.
Gnosall Gnosall is a large village in Staffordshire, England, with a population of approximately 5,000. It lies on the A518, approximately half-way between the towns of Newport (in Shropshire) and the county town of Staffordshire, Stafford.
Gnosall Rural District Gnosall was a rural district in Staffordshire, England from 1894 to 1934. It was formed under the Local Government Act 1894 from that part of the Newport rural sanitary district which was in Staffordshire (the rest forming Newport Rural District in Shropshire).
Gnosiology The term gnosiology (μελέτη της γνώσης) is derived from the Greek words gnosis ('knowledge', γνώση) and logos ('word' or 'discourse', λόγος). Linguistically, one might compare epistemology, which is derived from the Greek words episteme ('knowledge') and logos.
Gnosis The word gnosis (from the Greek word for knowledge, γνώσις) refers to a form of spiritual knowledge that is more commonly familiar to people as enlightenment. The word is cognate (from Proto-Indo-European) with the Sanskrit word gnana (pronounced nyana - also spelled jnana) that has an equivalent meaning in Buddhist and Hindu spiritual treatises.
Gnosjö region The Gnosjö region consists of the four municipalities of Sweden Gislaved, Gnosjö, Vaggeryd and Värnamo in the Jönköping County in southern Sweden. It is named after Gnosjö, but is more properly abbrevated as the GGVV-region.
Gnostic Apocalypse of Peter The Gnostic Apocalypse of Peter, not to be confused with the Apocalypse of Peter, is a text found amongst the Nag Hammadi library, and part of the New Testament apocrypha. Like the vast majority of texts in the Nag Hammadi collection, it is heavily gnostic.
Gnostic being The Gnostic Being in Sri Aurobindo's philosophy refers to the supramental state of divinised humanity, which (as described in the final chapters of The Life Divine) will emerge as a spirit-oriented future existence.
Gnostic Gospels The Gnostic Gospels are a class of writings about the life of Jesus which are associated with the early mystical trend of Gnostic Christianity. They are not accepted by mainstream Christianity as authentic, and are therefore declared heresy and not included in the standard Biblical canon.
Gnostic Society The Gnostic Society is an organization founded in Los Angeles in 1928 by James Morgan Pryse and his brother John Pryse for studies of gnosticism. It has strong ties to the Ecclesia Gnostica, an active gnostic church, and its current bishop
Gnosticism Gnosticism is a word derived from the Greek word gnosis, meaning knowledge. It is a term created by modern scholars to describe a diverse religious movement often associated with Christianity, although textual evidence for the movement contains distinctly non- and anti-Christian elements, as well as anti-Judaic elements.
Gnosticism in modern times Gnosticism includes a variety of ancient religions prevalent in the Mediterranean in the third century CE. Prior to the 20th century, little was known about the various Gnostic movements, due to paucity of original material available to scholars and the public.
Gnotobiosis Gnotobiosis (Greek: known life) is a condition in which all the forms of life present within an organism can be accounted for. Typically these organisms are germfree or gnotophoric (having only one contaminant).
Gnu-HALO Gnu-HALO is an experimental Linux distribution that incorporates some new and some old, but rarely used, ideas regarding Operating System Layout, User Interface Design and System Security. It boots and runs from removable media (either a CD-ROM or a USB drive) and is currently based off the SLAX distribution.
Gnu/communism GNU/communism is a term used to mock open source activist, and tag them as communists. Communist is used due to the resemblance between open source's philosophy of sharing the code among all humanity and communism's idea to share resources among all people.
Gnuboy gnuboy (all lowercase, but sometimes unofficially spelt GNU Boy) is a Free Software emulator released under the terms of the GNU General Public License ("GPL"). It is 99% execution-compatible with software targeted for the Game Boy ("DMG") and Game Boy Color ("CGB") handheld game consoles sold by Nintendo.
GnuCash GnuCash is a Free Software double-entry book-keeping personal finance system, written primarily in C, with a small fraction in Scheme."GnuCash is a large body of code maintained by a small group of developers who are comfortable in C and Scheme (Guile).
Gnuff Gnuff is a Danish comic book series about an anthropomorphic dragon who lives in a city with his wife Gnellie and his son Gnicky. They keep their wings hidden (they are compact enough to be concealed under their clothing) and generally try to live quietly, being considered 'outsiders' in a Carl Barks-like world of contemporary funny animals.
Gnumeric Gnumeric is a free spreadsheet program that is part of the GNOME desktop. It is intended to be a free replacement for proprietary spreadsheet programs such as Microsoft Excel, which it broadly and openly emulates.
Gnutella2 The Gnutella2 peer-to-peer protocol is a reworking of the Gnutella protocol, written mainly by Michael Stokes. It drops all of the old Gnutella protocol except for the connection handshake and adopts an entirely new search algorithm.
GnuWin32 The GnuWin32 project provides native ports in the form of runnable computer programs, patches, and source code for various GNU and open source tools and software, much of it modified to run on the 32-bit Windows platform. The ports included in the GnuWin32 packages are:
Gnuzilla Gnuzilla is a free software derivation of the Mozilla Application Suite created by the GNU Project as an attempt to be entirely free software. The reasons being that while the Mozilla project produces free and open software, the binaries released include additional non-free software.
Gnyozdovo Gnyozdovo () is a village in Smolensk Oblast, Russia, located on the right bank of the Dnieper River twelve kilometers downstream from Smolensk, in the proximity of Katyn. The village is noted for its extensive remains of a Slavic-Varangian settlement which flourished in the 10th century as a major trade station on the trade route from the Varangians to the Greeks.
GnYOUlinux GnYOUlinux is a freely available Linux distribution which is based on Red Hat's commercial Red Hat Enterprise Linux product. This rebuild project strives to be 100% binary compatible with the upstream product, and within its mainline and updates, to not vary from that goal.
GNewSense gNewSense (originally called Gnusiance, gnubuntu or Ubuntu-libre) is a GNU/Linux distribution based on Ubuntu aiming to provide a 100% free software distribution. It was designed for users who wish to only use free software, that is: software that is freely usable, modifiable, and distributable without major licensing restrictions.
GNOME The GNOME project is an international effort to create an easy-to-use computing platform built entirely from free software. This goal includes creating tools which help developers write new stand-alone application software, selecting applications for inclusion in the official product, and working on what is known as the desktop environment — the programs which manage application launching, file handling, and window and task management.
GNOME Hispano GNOME Hispano is the Spanish-speaking GNOME group, which tries to bring news, documentation and applications to all Spanish-speaking GNOME users and developers. Amongst its activities are included the translation of applications and documentation, writing of new documentation in Spanish, geared towards beginners, and the organization of some events, like the GUADEC conference held in Sevilla in April 2002.
GNOME-DB The GNOME-DB project aims to provide a free unified data access architecture to the GNOME project for all Unix platforms. GNOME-DB is useful for any application that accesses persistent data (not only databases, but data), since it now contains a pretty good data management API.
GNR (band) GNR is a Portuguese band founded in 1981. This band shares its acronym (Grupo Novo Rock (Group of New Rock)) with the Guarda Nacional Republicana (National Republican Guard) and is inseparable from the concept of Portuguese rock.
GNR Stirling 4-2-2 The Great Northern Railway (GNR) G class Stirling Single is a class of steam locomotive designed for express passenger work. Designed by Patrick Stirling, they are characterised by a single pair of large driving wheels which lead to the nickname "eight-footer".
GNRI AEC Class With finances following the end of World War 2 somewhat stretched, many railway companies, even in countries that had not been involved in the conflict, were looking to the introduction of diesel power to bring them into profitability. On the GNR(I) the summer of 1950 saw the introduction of the first of twenty diesel - mechanical railcars ordered from AEC Ltd.
GNRI Class Q The Q Class 4-4-0 steam locomotive was mainly used on cross border mixed traffic duties between Dublin and Belfast. It was built for the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) by Neilson Reid in Glasgow and was designed under the auspices of Charles Glifford.
GNS Science GNS Science (Māori: Te Pū Ao) is a New Zealand Crown Research Institute. It focuses on geology, geophysics (including seismology and volcanology), and nuclear science (particularly isotope science and carbon dating).
GNS Theory The GNS Theory, as originally developed by Ron Edwards, is a relatively amorphous body of work attempting to create a theory of how role-playing games work. Primarily, GNS Theory holds that participants in role-playing games make decisions which can be divided into three categories:
GNSS Augmentation Augmentation of a Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) is a method of improving system attributes such as accuracy, reliability, and availability through the integrated of external information into the calculation process. There are many such systems in place and they are generally named or described based on how the GNSS sensor receives the information.
GNU GNU (pronounced ) is a computer operating system - consisting of a kernel, libraries, system utilities, compilers, and end-user application software - composed entirely of free software. Its name is a recursive acronym for GNU's Not Unix, which was chosen because its design is Unix-like, but differs from Unix by being free software and by not containing any Unix code..
GNU arch In computing, GNU arch is a software revision control system that is part of the GNU Project and licensed under the GNU General Public License. It is used to keep track of the changes made to a source tree and to help programmers combine and otherwise manipulate changes made by multiple people or at different times.
GNU Anubis GNU Anubis is an outgoing mail processor. It goes between the Mail User Agent (MUA) and the Mail transport agent (MTA), and can perform various sorts of processing and conversion on the outgoing mail in accord with the sender's specified rules, based on a configurable regular expressions system.
GNU Assembler Gas, commanded as as when typed from the shell, is the GNU assembler. It is the default GNU Compiler Collection back-end and is used to compile Linux and other operating systems such as the GNU operating system.
GNU bison GNU bison is a free parser generator computer program written for the GNU project, and available for virtually all common operating systems. It is mostly compatible with Yacc, and offers several improvements over the earlier program.
GNU Binary Utilities The GNU Binary Utilities, or binutils, is a collection of programming tools for the manipulation of object code in various object file formats. The current versions were originally written by programmers at Cygnus Solutions using the BFD library.
GNU Coding Standards The GNU coding standards are a set of rules and guidelines for writing programs that work consistently within the GNU system. The standards document is part of the GNU Project and is available from the GNU website Though it focuses on writing free software] for GNU in [[C (programming language)|C, much of it can be applied more generally.
GNU Compiler Collection The GNU Compiler Collection (usually shortened to GCC) is a set of programming language compilers produced by the GNU Project. It is free software distributed by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) under the GNU General Public License (GNU GPL) and GNU Lesser General Public License
GNU Compiler for Java The GNU Compiler for Java (GCJ) is a free software compiler for the Java programming language that is part of the GNU Compiler Collection. It can compile Java source code to either Java Virtual Machine bytecode, or directly to machine code for any of a number of CPU architectures.
GNU Core Utilities The GNU Core Utilities or coreutils is a package of GNU software containing many of the basic tools such as cat, ls, and rm needed for Unix-like operating systems. It is a combination of a number of earlier packages, including textutils, shellutils, and fileutils along with some other miscellaneous utilities.
GNU Debugger The GNU Debugger, usually called just GDB, is the standard debugger for the GNU software system. It is a portable debugger that runs on many Unix-like systems and works for many programming languages, including Ada, C, C++, and FORTRAN.
GNU Enterprise GNU Enterprise (GNUe) is a meta-project and can be regarded as a sub-project of the GNU Project. GNUe's goal is to create free "enterprise-class data-aware applications" (enterprise resource planners etc.
GNU Free Documentation License The GNU Free Documentation License (GNU FDL or simply GFDL) is a copyleft license for free documentation, designed by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) for the GNU project. It is the counterpart to the GNU GPL that gives readers the same rights to copy, redistribute and modify a work and requires all copies and derivatives to be available under the same license.
GNU General Public License The GNU General Public License (GNU GPL or simply GPL) is a widely-used free software license, originally written by Richard Stallman for the GNU project. The latest version of the license, version 2, was released in 1991.
GNU GRUB GNU GRUB ("GRUB" for short) is a boot loader package from the GNU Project. GRUB is the reference implementation of the Multiboot Specification, which allows a user to have several different operating systems on their computer at once, and to choose which one to run when the computer starts.
GNU Lesser General Public License The GNU Lesser General Public License (formerly the GNU Library General Public License) is a free software license published by the Free Software Foundation. It was designed as a compromise between the strong-copyleft GNU General Public License and simple permissive licenses such as the BSD licenses and the MIT License.
GNU LibAntispam GNU LibAntispam is an API library that implements several anti-spam techniques (e-mail), including reverse DNS lookup, prohibited reverse DNS strings, DNSBL, greylisting and SPF. The library is intended for use with a mail transfer agent / SMTP server.
GNU LilyPond GNU LilyPond is a free software program for engraving sheet music for all common operating systems; it is written in C++ and assembled by a Scheme library (GNU Guile) which also allows user customization and extension"LilyPond is linked to GUILE, GNU's Scheme library for extension programming. The Scheme library provides the glue that holds together the low-level routines and separate modules which are written in C++.
GNU Linear Programming Kit The GNU Linear Programming Kit (GLPK) is a software package intended for solving large-scale linear programming (LP), mixed integer programming (MIP), and other related problems. It is a set of routines written in ANSI C and organized in the form of a callable library.
GNU Manifesto The GNU Manifesto was written by Richard Stallman and published in March 1985 in Dr. Dobb's Journal of Software Tools 10(3) as an explanation and definition of the goals of the GNU Project, and to call for participation and support.
GNU Multi-Precision Library The GNU Multiple-Precision Library, also known as GMP, is a free library for arbitrary precision arithmetic, operating on signed integers, rational numbers, and floating point numbers. There is no practical limit to the precision except the ones implied by the available memory in the machine GMP runs on.
GNU Parted GNU Parted is a program for creating, destroying, resizing, checking, and copying partitions, and the file systems on them. This is useful for creating space for new operating systems, reorganising hard disk usage, copying data between hard disks, and disk imaging.
GNU Pascal GNU Pascal (GPC) is a Pascal compiler comprised of a frontend to GCC, similar to the way Fortran and other languages were added to GCC. GNU Pascal is ISO 7185 compatible, and it implements "most" of the ISO 10206 Extended Pascal standard (according to the manual).
GNU Privacy Guard The GNU Privacy Guard (GnuPG or GPG) is a free software replacement for the PGP suite of cryptographic software, released under the GNU General Public License. It is a part of the Free Software Foundation's GNU software project, and has received major funding from the German government.
GNU Prolog GNU Prolog (also called gprolog) is a compiler developed by Daniel Diaz with an interactive debugging environment for Prolog available for Unix and Windows. It also supports some extensions to Prolog including constraint programming over a finite domain, parsing using definite clause grammars, and an operating system interface.
GNU Savannah GNU Savannah is a project of the Free Software Foundation, which serves as a collaborative software development management system for Free Software projects. Savannah currently offers CVS, GNU arch, mailing list, web hosting, file hosting, and bug tracking services.
GNU Scientific Library In computing, GNU Scientific Library (or GSL) is a software library written in the C programming language for numerical calculations in applied mathematics and science. The GSL is part of the GNU project and is distributed under the GNU General Public License.
GNU Sharutils GNU Sharutils is a set of utilities to handle shell archives. The GNU shar utility produces a single file out of many files and prepares them for transmission by electronic mail services, for example by converting binary data files into plain ASCII text.
GNU Shogi GNU Shogi is a free software program by the Free Software Foundation that plays Shogi. Although the program is ASCII based, most often it is used in conjunction with XShogi, much as XBoard is used for GNU Chess.
GNU Simpler Free Documentation License The GNU Simpler Free Documentation License (GSFDL) is a proposed version of the GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) that has no requirements to maintain Cover Texts and Invariant Sections. It is meant to provide a simpler licensing option for authors who do not wish to use these features in the GFDL.
GNU Zebra Zebra is a routing software package that provides TCP/IP based routing services with routing protocols support such as RIP, OSPF and BGP. Zebra also supports special BGP Route Reflector and Route Server behavior.
GNU-Darwin GNU-Darwin is a project to package applications for the Mac OS X and Darwin operating systems. They also distribute versions of the Darwin operating system (produced by Apple) and the OpenDarwin operating system which is based on Darwin, although the versions they distribute tend to lag behind the current releases.
GNU/DOS GNU/DOS is a distribution of FreeDOS that was discontinued on November 28, 2006 due to lack of developer time for the project, inability to meet the project's objectives, and superiority of FreeDOS, when combined with the DJGPP development tools.
GNU/Linux naming controversy GNU/Linux is the term promoted by the Free Software Foundation (FSF), its founder Richard Stallman, and its supporters, for operating systems that include the FSF's GNU utilities and the Linux kernel. Among others, notably Debian GNU/Linux uses this term in their name, but most people simply use the term "Linux" for the whole system.
GNUBrain GNUBrain is a framework for creating personal software agents, building a multi-agent system, manage your personal metadata and execute distributed algorithms. Brain stands for Brian relates any independent node and Brian itself stands for Brain implements a network.
GNUlib GNUlib, also called the GNU portability library, is a collection of software subroutines which are designed to be usable on many operating systems. The goal of the project is to make it easy for free software authors to make their software run on many operating systems.
GNUmed GNUmed is a free software/open source medical practice management software for Unix-like systems (BSD, Linux, and UNIX systems), Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X and other platforms. The GNUmed community is busy building a medical software package that will be open source, free, secure, respectful of patient privacy, based on open standards , flexible, fully featured.
GNUpedia GNUPedia (later renamed GNE) was a project to create a free content encyclopedia (licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License) under the auspices of the Free Software Foundation. The project was initially proposed by Richard Stallman in 1999 and officially started in January 2001.
GNUstep GNUstep is a free software implementation of NeXT's OpenStep Objective-C libraries (called frameworks), widget toolkit, and application development tools not only for Unix-like operating systems, but also for Microsoft Windows. It is part of the GNU project.
GNUstep Renaissance GNUstep Renaissance is a development framework that reads XML descriptions of graphical user interfaces from an application bundle and converts them into native widgets and connections at runtime under either GNUstep or Mac OS X.
GNUWin II GNUWin II is a large collection of free software for Microsoft Windows created by the Linux User Group of the EPFL (École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne). It is intended at easing the transition from proprietary applications and operation systems to free ones, by accustomating the user to widely used and cross-platform software.
Go (1973 TV series) Go was a television series for children that aired late-mornings on Saturdays on NBC between September of 1973 and September of 1976. It had the shortest title for a TV series until V debuted in 1984 on the same network.
Go (2001 film) Go is a 2001 movie by Isao Yukisada, starring Kubozuka YĹŤsuke (Sugihara/Lee) and KĹŤ Shibasaki (Tsubaki Sakurai). It tells the story of a Japanese boy of Korean origins (Kubozuka), and his love story with a Japanese girl (Shibasaki); however, the central theme of the movie is about the integration problems of a half-Japanese boy in Japanese society.
Go (board game) Go is a strategic board game for two players. Also known as Weiqi in Chinese (Traditional Chinese: 圍棋,Simplified Chinese: 围棋), Igo in Japanese (Kanji: 囲碁), Cờ Vây in Vietnamese (Chữ Hán Việt:圍棋), and Baduk in Korean (Hangul:바둑), Go originated in ancient China, likely centuries before its first reference c.
Go (game show) Go was a game show seen on NBC from October 3, 1983, to January 20, 1984. Two teams of five players created a series of questions one word at a time, hoping that a team member could guess a series of words and/or phrases being described.
Go (modern board game) Go was a family board game, based on international travel, manufactured by Waddingtons Ltd in the 1960's. The objective of the game is to travel the world, by air, sea, rail and road, collect a pre-determined number of souvenirs from each city visited, and to return to the starting point (London).
Go (Prison Break episode) "Go" is the twenty-first episode of the television series Prison Break and the penultimate episode of the first season. The episode is written by series producer Matt Olmstead and directed by Dean White.
Go (radio) Go is a Saturday morning entertainment show on the Radio One network of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, hosted by Brent Bambury. This show includes interviews, music, live performances, and comedy bits.
Go Ask Alice Go Ask Alice, an account of drug abuse that has been controversial on several levels, is considered a classic of American young adult literature. First published by Prentice Hall in 1971, the book purports to be the actual diary of an anonymous teenage girl who died of a drug overdose in the late 1960s.
Go Baby Go Baby is a series of short interstitial programs that airs within the Playhouse Disney programming block on the Disney Channel. The series features an African-American infant named Baby and his playmate, Sophie, both of whom are created by animating still photographs.
Go Betty Go Go Betty Go is a Los Angeles all-girl pop punk band consisting of Emily Wynne-Hughes (vocals), Aixa Vilar (drums), Betty Cisneros (guitar) and Michelle Rangel (bass). Their Latina origins influences their music, most obviously are the Spanish lyrics, which they often use.
Go Big Casino Go Big Casino is a Mesa, Arizona band formed by Jimmy Eat World lead singer and guitarist Jim Adkins. After Jimmy Eat World released their album "Clarity", they went on a break, but Adkins continued to write songs through a side project, which he called Go Big Casino.
Go Down (song) "Go Down" is a song by Australian hard rock band AC/DC. It is the first track of their Australian album Let There Be Rock, released in March 1977 (see 1977 in music), and was written by Angus Young, Malcolm Young, and Bon Scott.
Go Down Moses "Go Down Moses" is an African-American spiritual, that is a retelling of events in the Old Testament of the Bible (Exodus, chapters 3-12), in which God commands Moses to demand the release of the Israelites from bondage in Egypt.
Go Down, Moses Go Down, Moses is an episodic novel, by William Faulkner, consisting of seven short stories. The most prominent character and unifying voice is that of Isaac McCaslin, "Uncle Ike", who will live to be an old man; "uncle to half a county and father to no one.
Go equipment Go equipment refers to the objects which are necessary in order to play the game of Go. Although the equipment is simple, there is a varying degree of quality and material used in making the equipment, from the economical to the extremely valuable.
Go Fish (film) Go Fish is a 1994 lesbian-themed independent drama film. Directed and co-written (with her then-girlfriend Guinevere Turner) by Rose Troche, the film tells the story of the interrelationships of a small group of friends.
Go For Broke Monument The Go For Broke Monument in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles, California commemorates Japanese Americans who served overseas in the United States Military during World War II. It notes the segregated military units: the 100th Infantry Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, Military Intelligence Service, 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, 232nd Combat Engineer Company, and the 1399th Engineering Construction Battalion.
Go For Your Guns Go For Your Guns is a 1977 album released by The Isley Brothers on their T-Neck imprint. The album yielded three charted R&B singles including their #1 political funk anthem, "The Pride", the Top 40 pop record, "Livin' in the Life" and their Top 50 ballad, "Voyage to Atlantis", which became one of the Isleys' most beloved songs in their later years as well as the radio track, "Footsteps in the Dark", which instrumental was sampled by Ice Cube for his 1992 hit, "It Was a Good Day".
Go Go Gadgetinis Go Go Gadgetinis (known in some countries as Inspector Gadget and the Gadgetinis) is slightly different to all the previous Inspector Gadget series, in the fact that it follows an actual storyline. Gadget teams up with Inspector Prince, a smart, pretty and also somewhat clumsy purple haired lady, who also has gadgets of her own tucked away in her backpack.
Go Go Liza Jane "Go Go Liza Jane" was the A-side of the 1968 single released by Atco Records in order to capitalize on the growing success of The Band, whom had recorded the track along with two others ("The Stones I Throw" and "He Don't Love You") in 1965 under the moniker Levon and the Hawks. The song, an upbeat version of the traditional "Little Liza Jane", demonstrated three years before their debut LP, the way in which the voices of the singers in The Band, Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Levon Helm meshed together so brilliantly.
Go Home Go Home is a 1985 hit single released by American and Motown music great Stevie Wonder on the Tamla (Motown) label. The song showcased the narrator's plea to a young woman to go home though the girl tries to get the narrator to make love to her.
Information are taken from Wikipedia, the open encyclopedia, to which contribute many volunteers from around the whole world. Texts are available under the following conditions GNU Free Documentation License.

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