Encyclopedia > T > 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315
Trapinch are one of the fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the Pokémon media franchise. In Pokémon games, anime, and manga, Charizard battles wild Pokémon and Pokémon owned by other Pokémon trainers, like all Pokémon.
Trapp mixture The Trapp mixture is a specific mixture of organic solvents for chemical reactions taking place at very low temperatures. The mixture THF:diethyl ether: pentane (4:4:1) is a liquid down to -110 °C and the same (4:1:1) mixture is liquid down to â’120 °C.
Trapped (novel) Trapped is a science fiction novel written by the Canadian author James Alan Gardner and published in 2002 by HarperCollins Publishers under its various imprints.HarperCollins, HarperCollins Canada, SFBC/Avon-Eos; paperback edition 2002, Eos Books.
Trapped in a Forest Fire Trapped in a Forest Fire was a 1913 American silent short film directed by Allen Dwan starring Charlotte Burton, Sydney Ayres, Jacques Jaccard, Violet Knights (as Violet Neitz), Louise Lester, Jack Richardson, Vivian Rich
Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11 Trapped in the Towers: The Elevators of 9/11 is a 1-hour long documentary about people who were trapped inside elevators inside the World Trade Center during the 9/11 attacks. It is shown chiefly as a re-enactment intercut with interviews of some survivors.
Trapped with a Vengeance Trapped With A Vengeance' is the 36th episode of Dexter's Lab, the episode is a direct parody of the movie Die Hard starring Bruce Willis, but the title is a spoof on the third sequel to the movie,Die Hard With A Vengeance
Trapper Creek Wilderness The small Trapper Creek Wilderness area consists of 5,970 acres in Southwest Washington in the Gifford Pinchot National Forest. The wilderness covers nearly the whole Trapper Creek drainage and is the only pristine fish habitat in the Wind River watershed.
Trapper Keeper A Trapper Keeper is a brand of loose-leaf binder created by Mead. Popular with students of all grades in the United States and parts of Latin America during the 1980s and early 1990s, it featured sliding plastic rings (instead of standard snap-closed metal binder rings), folders and pockets to keep schoolwork and papers, and a wraparound flap with a Velcro closure but originally had a metal snap closure.
Trapping (Martial Arts) In violence and martial arts, trapping refers both to a combat range and a type of technique to immobilize an opponent in such a way that they cannot get away and are still susceptible to very close range striking. The trapping range is usually entered from the boxing or punching range, where the majority of the punching takes place; although not always.
Trappist Haven Monastery The Trappist Haven Monastery (Traditional Chinese:熙篤ćśçĄžć¨‚院 or č–母神樂院) is a monastery at Tai Shui Hang (Chinese: 大水坑), on Lantau Island, Hong Kong. It is home to a number of Roman Catholic monks of the Cistercian Order of the Strict Observance, or Trappists.
Traprain Law Traprain Law is a hill about 221m (724 feet) in elevation, located 6km (4 miles) east of Haddington in East Lothian, Scotland. It is the site of an oppidum or hill fort, which covered at its maximum extent about 16 ha (40 acres) and must have been a veritable town.
Traquero A traquero is a railroad track worker, especially a Mexican or Mexican American railroad track worker ("gandy dancer" in American English usage). The word derives from "traque", Spanglish for "track".
Traralgon railway station, Victoria Traralgon Railway Station is a major railway station on the Bairnsdale railway line, in Traralgon Victoria, Australia. It immediately follows Morwell railway station and precedes Rosedale railway station as the line continues to Bairnsdale.
Traralgon, Victoria Traralgon is a regional city located in the Latrobe Valley in the Gippsland region of Victoria, Australia. Traralgon was the former administrative centre of Latrobe City, although this has now moved to the neighbouring city of Morwell.
Tras Street Tras Street (Chinese: é“拉实街) is a street located in Tanjong Pagar in the Outram Planning Area and Downtown Core in Singapore. The road connects Enggor Street and Gopeng Street to Cook Street, and is intersected by Wallich Street.
Trasformismo Trasformismo was the process of creating a flexible, centrist coalition of government which isolated the extremes of the left and the right. The process was initiated by Agostino Depretis, the Italian Prime Minister in 1883, who was a member of the Constitutional Left party.
Trash (poet) Trash is the pseudonym for a London-based UK poet. Born in the UK Trash is a performance poet, comedienne, MC, film maker and writer, a regular fixture at Glastonbury and other summer festivals, she has had several residencies including the Great Eastern Hotel in London’s East End and has regularly contributed to both Radio and Television in the UK.
Trash (song) Trash is the first single off the album Coming Up by Suede, released on July 29, 1996 on Nude Records. It is the first single in which all the songs on it were written without guitarist Bernard Butler, since Richard Oakes had taken his place.
Trash Aesthetics Trash Aesthetics is an independent record label founded in 2004 by Rob Fawkes and Claire Hewitson. Based in South London, it specialises in releasing limited-edition runs of singles by both local bands and international acts whose work is difficult to come by in the UK.
Trash rock Trash rock is a genre of rock'n'roll that shares the same influences as early punk, but diverges in that it's largely apolitical, often containing 1930's-70's pulp fiction novel and B-movie themes and imagery. It's earliest origins are in the rockabilly, surf music and garage rock of the 1950's-60's, when rock'n'roll was considered disposable trash on a par with exploitation B-movies and pulp fiction novels by its critics and opponents.
Trash traffic The term trash traffic refers to web site visitors that do not convert into sales because they are "bots" or people incentivized to click. For example, if you purchase 1,000,000 clicks on an Ebay auction for only 99 cents you will probably get worthless clicks.
Trash80 Trash80 is a micromusic/bitpop project from Timothy Lamb, a pioneer of independent Game Boy music. He has published several songs online under the Creative Commons License (Attribution, NoDerivs, NonCommercial) under the Trash80 and Tresk banners.
Trashcan diagnosis A medical or psychiatric diagnosis which seems to overgeneralise to a wide variety of complaints and symptoms, is often known as a trashcan diagnosis, and is often given when there's obviously something wrong but the doctor doesn't know what it is.
Trashspotting Trashspotting is an outdoor activity that involves the observation and analyzing of curbside recycling and general refuse of a household, especially with a long-term view. In essence, participants wander through urban and suburban areas at regular intervals and look for unusual patterns or products appearing in the recycling or garbage of said neighborhoods.
Trashware Trashware is computer equipment assembled from old hardware, using parts from different computers, for use by disadvantaged people to bridge the digital divide. Most trashware uses free software such as the Linux operating system.
Trasianka Trasianka or trasyanka (be: траŃянка) is a Belarusian–Russian patois or a kind of interlanguage (from the linguistic point of view). It is often labeled "pidgin" or even "creole", which is not correct by any widespread definition of pidgin or creole language.
Trasilla and Emiliana Saints Trasilla (Tarsilla, Tharsilla, Thrasilla) and Emiliana were aunts of St. Gregory the Great, virgins in the sixth century, given in the Roman Martyrology, the former on 24 December, the latter on 5 January.
Trask River The Trask River is a river, approximately 12 mi (19 km) long, in northwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a mountainous timber-producing area of the Coastal Range west of Portland into the Pacific Ocean .
Trass Trass is the local name of a volcanic tuff occurring in the Eifel, where it is worked for hydraulic mortar. It is a grey or cream-coloured fragmental rock, largely composed of pumiceous dust, and may be regarded as a trachytic tuff.
Trastámara The House of Trastámara was a dynasty of kings in the Iberian Peninsula, which governed in Castile from 1369 to 1504, in Aragón from 1412 to 1516, in Navarre from 1425 to 1479, and in Naples from 1442 to 1501.
Trastuzumab Trastuzumab (more commonly known under the trade name Herceptin) is a monoclonal antibody that acts on the HER2/neu (erbB2) receptor. Herceptin's principal use is as an anti-cancer therapy in breast cancer in patients whose tumors overexpress (produce more than the usual amount of) this receptor.
Trat Province Trat () is a province (changwat) of Thailand. It is located in the east of Thailand, at the border to Battambang, Pursat and Koh Kong of Cambodia, at the shore to the Gulf of Thailand. The neighboring province is Chanthaburi to the northeast.
Trata On the Tuesday following Easter in every alternate year, the women of Megara take part the traditional dance known as the Trata on the open space before the tiny church known as Saint John the Dancer. It is popularly believed to commemorate the building of this chapel during a single day during the years of Ottoman rule over Greece.
Trato hecho Trato hecho is the Spanish-language version of the Hatos-Hall game show, Let's Make a Deal. The show was produced in Spain and in Mexico; in addition, a version was recently produced in Los Angeles, California for the UnivisiĂłn television network.
Trattoria The trattoria is a specifically Italian institution more akin to an eating club than a conventional restaurant. There are no menus, the service is casual, the prices low, and the emphasis is on a steady clientele rather than on haute cuisine.
Traube's space Traube's (semilunar) space is an anatomic region of some clinical importance. It's a crescent-shaped space, encompassed by the lower edge of the left lung, the anterior border of the spleen, the left costal margin and the inferior margin of the left lobe of the liver.
Traum Schallplatten Traum Schallplatten, is a label group consisting of four labels Traum, Trapez, Trapez ltd and MBF. It is run by Jacqueline Klein and Riley Reinhold/ Triple R and it is part of the influential Cologne minimal techno scene.
Trauma and the arts In recent decades, with the development of the ideas behind psychological trauma and PTSD, becoming just as much a cultural phenomenon as a medical or legal one, artists have begun to engage the issue in their work. Unlike those artists who explored psychoanalysis and trauma as it pertained to them personally, Cindy Sherman for example, this new generation of artists intend to mediate the domains of culture, history and memory.
Trauma center A trauma center is a hospital equipped to perform as a casualty receiving station for the emergency medical services by providing the best possible medical care for traumatic injuries 24 hours a day, 365 days per year. Trauma centers were established as the medical establishment realized that such injuries often require immediate and complex surgery to save the patient.
Trauma Center: Under the Knife is a surgical simulation game developed for the Nintendo DS and the first in the Trauma Center series. As of June 27, 2006, Atlus has confirmed that they will be relaunching the game by the end of July in the US market, due to the high demand and popularity of the game.
Trauma model of mental disorders Trauma models of mental disorder emphasise the effects of psychological trauma, particularly in early development, as the key causal factor in the development of some or many psychiatric disorders (in addition to post-traumatic stress disorder). Trauma models are typically founded on the view that traumatic experiences (including but not limited to actual physical or sexual abuse) are more common or more serious than thought in the histories of those diagnosed with mental disorders.
Trauma shears Trauma shears, often known by the nickname tuff cuts, are scissors used by paramedics and other emergency medical personnel to cut clothes off injured people. They usually consist of a plastic handle with a metal blade, which is traditionally bent at about 150 degrees, giving them an unusual appearance as compared to normal scissors.
Trauma surgery Trauma surgeons practice the most recent subspecialty of general surgery. Comfortable operating on most body parts and cavities, trauma surgeons carry on the tradition of military surgeons as depicted in the novel M*A*S*H.
Trauma system A Trauma System is an organized and coordinated plan within a region that delivers the full range of care to injured patients. It often consists of a trauma center that provides a higher level of specialty care.
Trauma team A Trauma team is a group of healthcare workers who attend to seriously ill or injured casualties who arrive at a hospital emergency department. The team is composed of a number of specific roles, with a typical team consisting of:
Traumatic incident reduction Traumatic incident reduction is a brief, one-on-one, person-centered, simple and highly structured method for permanently eliminating the negative effects of past traumas. It involves repeated viewing of a traumatic memory under conditions designed to enhance safety and minimize distractions.
Traumatology Traumatology (from Greek "Trauma" meaning injury or wound), is the study of wounds and injuries caused by accidents or violence to a person, and the surgical therapy and repair of the damage. Traumatology is a branch of medicine.
Traunreut Traunreut is a small city in the south-eastern part of Bavaria, Germany in the Traunstein district. It is located at , placed in the heart of the region called Chiemgau between Munich and Salzburg -- approximately 10 km east of the lake Chiemsee, 25 km north of the Alps, and 35 km west of Salzburg.
Traunstein Traunstein is a town in the south-eastern part of Bavaria, Germany and is the administrative center of a district by the same name. It is situated at the heart of a region called Chiemgau, approximately 11 km east of Lake Chiemsee between Munich and Salzburg, 15 km north of the Alps, and 30 km west of Salzburg.
Traunstein (district) Traunstein is a Kreis (district) in the southeastern part of Bavaria, Germany. Neighboring districts are (from the north clockwise) Mühldorf, Altötting, the Austrian states Upper Austria and Salzburg, the district Berchtesgadener Land, the Austrian states of Salzburg and Tyrol, and the district Rosenheim.
Traunviertel The Traunviertel (literally German for the Traun quarter or district) is an Austrian region belonging to the state of Upper Austria: it is one of four "quarters" of Upper Austria the others being Hausruckviertel, MĂĽhlviertel, and Innviertel. It is so-called because of the river Traun which passes through it.
Travail (band) Travail was a rapcore/nu-metal style contemporary Christian music rock band based in the Dallas/Fort Worth area in Texas. Fronted by Matt Leslie, it had an intense following at a local club called Club 412 in southwest Fort Worth.
Travan Travan is a type of 8 mm magnetic tape cartridge developed by the 3M company, used for the storage of data in computer backups and mass storage. Over time, subsequent versions of Travan cartridges and drives have been developed that provide greater data capacity, while retaining the standard 8 mm width and 750' length.
Travancore Travancore or Thiruvithaamkoor (Malayalam: തിരŕµŕ´µŕ´żŕ´¤ŕ´ľŕ´™ŕµŤŕ´•ൂര്‍ [], തിരŕµŕ´µŕ´żŕ´¤ŕ´ľŕ´‚കൂര്‍ [], തിരŕµŕ´µŕ´żŕ´¤ŕ´ľŕ´™ŕµŤŕ´•ോട് []) was a princely state in India with its capital at Trivandrum (Thiruvananthapuram). The state comprised most of south Kerala and the modern Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu and it had a 19-gun salute in the British Empire.
Travares Tillman Travares Arastius Tillman (born October 8, 1977 in Lyons, Georgia) is a American football safety for the Miami Dolphins of the NFL. He has previously played with the Carolina Panthers, Houston Texans and the Buffalo Bills, and played college football at Georgia Tech.
Travaux préparatoires The travaux préparatoires (French: "preparatory work", in the plural) is the official record of a negotiation. Sometimes published, the "travaux" are often useful in clarifying the intentions of a treaty or other instrument, reflected in VCLT Art 34.
Travco The Travco motorhome was an aerodynamic Class A Recreational Vehicle built on a Dodge motorhome chassis from 1965 until the late 1980s. The Travco design originally emerged as a 1962 model called the "Dodge Motor Home" and marketed with the assistance of the Chrysler Corporation, who were the makers of its chassis.
Trave The Trave is a river of Schleswig-Holstein in northern Germany. It is approximately 124 kilometres long, running from its source near a village named GieĂźelrade in Ostholstein to TravemĂĽnde where it flows into the Baltic Sea.
Travel + Leisure Travel + Leisure is an American magazine initially published in 1971. It is put out by American Express Publishing, who also publish Food & Wine, Travel + Leisure Golf, Travel + Leisure Family, and Departures magazines.
Travel + Leisure Golf Travel + Leisure Golf is a bi-monthly magazine published by American Express. Unlike other golf magazines, Travel + Leisure Golf focuses more on the affluent golf lifestyle—with regular features on cars, resorts, wines and spirits—than on the sport itself.
Travel advisory A travel advisory is a public notice issued by a government agency to provide information about the relative safety of traveling to or visiting one or more specific destinations. The purpose is to allow travelers to make an informed decision about a particular travel destination, and to help them prepare adequately for what may be encountered on their trip.
Travel agency A travel agency is a business that sells travel related products and services to end-user customers on behalf of third party travel suppliers, such as airlines, hotels and cruise lines. Customers of travel agencies include tourists and business travellers.
Travel blending Travel Blending is a technique, developed in Australia, for encouraging people to make more efficient and environmentally sound transportation choices. The technique involves governments encouraging citizens to deal with a greater number of tasks on one given trip rather than making several trips to multiple locations at different times, hopefully thus improving travel efficiency and decreasing the strain on transportation networks.
Travel card A Travel card is a ticket usable on more than one journey, route or mode of public transport within a specific area using bulk or discounted payment; some schemes only cover travel by disabled or elderly people. Their validity is generally for a fixed period from the time of issue to the end of the day or for longer periods up to one year.
Travel cost analysis The travel cost method of economic valuation or a "travel cost analysis" is a method of economic valuation used in cost-benefit analysis when the value of something, such as ecosystem services that cannot be obtained through market prices. The travel cost method of economic valuation is a revealed preference method because it looks at actual human behavior to try to define the value people place on something.
Travel Coventry Travel Coventry (formed on 9th December 2002) is the trading name for all Travel West Midlands bus services operating from their depot in Coventry, in the West Midlands region of England. It is a subsidiary of the National Express Group.
Travel document A travel document is an identity document issued by a government or international treaty organization to facilitate the movement of individuals or small groups of persons across international boundaries. Travel documents usually assure other governments that the bearer or bearers may return to the issuing country and are issued in booklet form to allow other governments to place visas as well as entry and exit stamps in them.
Travel Channel The Travel Channel is a cable television network that features documentaries and how-to shows related to travel and leisure around the United States and throughout the world. Programming has included shows in African animal safaris, tours of grand hotels, and visits to significant cities and towns, with recent programming putting an emphasis on how the rich travel and on "haunted" destinations, like Most Haunted.
Travel Channel (UK) Travel Channel (UK) is operated from London and serves both the United Kingdom and other countries in Europe and Africa with travel related programs, ranging from travelogues to teleshopping for package holidays. The US-based Travel Channel owned by Discovery Communications is unconnected to this channel, and operates as Discovery Travel & Living in territories where the Travel Channel exists.
Travel In Taiwan Travel In Taiwan, an English-language bimonthly magazine, is produced in Taipei, Taiwan by Vision International Publishing Co Ltd on behalf of Taiwan's Tourism Bureau an agency of the country's Ministry of Transportation and Communications.
Travel literature Travel literature is literature which records the people, events, sights and feelings of an author who is touring a foreign place for the pleasure of travel. An individual work is sometimes called a travelogue or itinerary.
Travel Media Association of Canada MISSION STATEMENT: TMAC, the premier travel media association in Canada, brings together travel media and tourism industry members to foster excellence, uphold ethical standards, and promote professional development.
Travel Midland Metro Travel Midland Metro is the name of the company that operates the Midland Metro tram system between Birmingham and Wolverhampton in the UK. Travel Midland Metro is a fully-owned subsidiary of the National Express Group, who also owns the local bus company Travel West Midlands.
Travel search Travel search engines focus specifically on helping visitors purchase travel products, such as airline tickets, automobile rentals, hotel rooms, cruise tickets, and so on. They are "domain-specific" in contrast to search engines which search all sites on the World Wide Web.
Travel Sick Travel Sick (2001–2003) was a hybrid comedy-travel television show which placed UK writer Grub Smith in a different region of the world in each episode. In each destination Smith was asked to complete five undesirable challenges posed by the show's producers.
Travel South Yorkshire The South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive is the Passenger Transport Executive for South Yorkshire in northern England. It is supervised by the South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Authority, which consists of representatives from the metropolitan boroughs of Sheffield, Rotherham, Doncaster, and Barnsley.
Travel to Romantis Travel to Romantis was the third single from Flowers, an album by Swedish pop band Ace of Base. The song was released on November 16, 1998 in Germany and Scandinavia and followed the singles "Life is a Flower" and "Cruel Summer".
Travel trailer A travel trailer or caravan is a small trailer in which people can live and travel simultaneously. Caravans in general as well as other types of camping accommodations have had a long and varied history (see below).
Travel Technology Travel Technology is a term used to describe applications of Information Technology (IT), or Information and Communications Technology (ICT), in travel, tourism and hospitality industry. Travel technology may also be referred to as tourism technology or even hospitality automation.
Travel Town Museum The Travel Town Museum is an outdoor transportation museum in Griffith Park in Los Angeles, California. The primary collection focus of the Travel Town Museum is the history of railroad transportation in the western United States from 1880 to the 1930s.
Travel West Midlands Travel West Midlands (formerly known as West Midlands Travel) is the biggest bus operator in the West Midlands, including the cities of Birmingham, Coventry (trading as Travel Coventry) and Wolverhampton as well as the boroughs of Dudley, Sandwell, Solihull and Walsall.
Travelcard A Travelcard is an inter-modal ticket, valid for a period of time varying from one day to a year, for use on most public transport in London. The ticket is issued by Transport for London and National Rail outlets and can be used on the services of either.
Travelcard Zone 1 Travelcard Zone 1 is the central zone of Transport for London's zonal system used for calculating co-ordinated inter-modal Travelcard fares within London. London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Travelcard Zone 2 Travelcard Zone 2 is the second most inward zone of Transport for London's zonal system used for calculating co-ordinated inter-modal Travelcard fares within London. In this system, London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Travelcard Zone 3 Travelcard Zone 3 is the third-outward zone of Transport for London's zonal system used for calculating coordinated intermodal Travelcard fares within London. In the Travelcard zonal system, London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Travelcard Zone 4 Travelcard Zone 4 is the fourth outward zone of Transport for London's zonal system used for calculating co-ordinated inter-modal Travelcard fares within London. In the Travelcard zonal system, London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Travelcard Zone 5 Travelcard Zone 5 is the fifth outward zone of the Transport for London zonal system used for calculating co-ordinated inter-modal Travelcard fares within London. In this zonal system, London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Travelcard Zone 6 Travelcard Zone 6 is the sixth outward concentric zone of the Transport for London zonal system used for calculating co-ordinated inter-modal Travelcard fares within Greater London. In this zonal system, Greater London is split into six (approximately concentric) zones for the purpose of determining the cost of a Travelcard.
Traveler (mascot) Traveler, a white horse, is the mascot of the University of Southern California. It appears at all USC home football games in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as well as many other outdoor events, including numerous Rose Parades.
Traveler (Star Trek) In the fictional Star Trek universe, The Traveler is a highly advanced humanoid from Tau Alpha C. The Traveler is exceptionally skilled mentally and is able to make a bridge between space, time, and thought which he, and presumably those of his kind, uses to travel throughout the galaxy.
Traveler's diarrhea Traveler's diarrhea or Traveller's Diarrhoea (TD) is the most common illness affecting travelers. Traveler's diarrhea is defined as three or more unformed stools in 24 hours, commonly accompanied by abdominal cramps, nausea, and bloating.
Traveler's cheque A traveler's cheque (also traveller's cheque, traveler's check, or travelers cheque) is a preprinted, fixed-amount cheque designed to allow the person signing it to make an unconditional payment to someone else as a result of having paid the issuer (usually a bank) for that privilege. As traveller's cheques can usually be replaced if lost or stolen, they are often used by people on vacation in place of cash.
Travelers Championship The Travelers Championship is a golf tournament on the PGA Tour. It has been played annually in Cromwell, Connecticut since 1984, and since 1991 the tournament has been held on the course at the TPC at River Highlands.
Travelers of a Hundred Ages Travelers of a Hundred Ages is a nonfiction work on the literary form of Japanese diaries by Donald Keene, who writes in his Introduction that he was introduced to Japanese diaries during his work as a translator for the United States in World War II when he was assigned to translate captured diaries of soldiers; he found them moving enough that he continued to study that genre. It takes the form of self-contained long chapters (as the chapters were originally published as essays in Japanese in Asahi Shimbun) dealing with a single diary, each of which is valuable in its own right as a literary work "…but, as far as I know, only in Japan did the diary acquire the status of a literary genre comparable in importance to novels, essays, and other branches of literature that elsewhere are esteemed more highly than diaries.
Travelgrove Headquartered in Carson City, Nevada and founded in April 2004, Travelgrove, Inc is run by Peter Suhayda (CEO) and Stefan Serduelt (CTO). The company runs a travel meta search portal that allows users to search many different travel sites at once.
Travelin' Soldier "Travelin' Soldier" is a country song written and originally recorded by Bruce Robison in 1996 and then in rewritten form, in 1999. It was made famous through a rendition by the Dixie Chicks in 2002, on their album Home.
Traveling carnival In the US, traveling carnivals are made up of amusement rides, food, games, and other things that comes to town. There can be special booths, and appearances by different people (Radio Station DJs) along with some musical entertainment.
Traveling Players Ensemble Traveling Players Ensemble, often known as TPE, is a non-profit professional theatre organization dedicated to bringing great theatre into the great outdoors through its thriving educational program. The educational program’s main feature is a summer camp with two four-week Middle School Ensembles, one four-week High School Ensemble, and the six-week Traveling Troupe.
Traveling Riverside Blues "Traveling Riverside Blues" is a blues song written and recorded in Dallas, Texas by legendary bluesman Robert Johnson. Johnson's June 20, 1937 recording has a typical 12 bar blues structure, played on a single guitar tuned to open G, with a slide.
Encyklopedie (cz) Encyklopédia (sk) Enzyklopädie (de)