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Tuathal Teachtmhar Tuathal Teachtmhar or Techtmar was a legendary High King of Ireland, reputed to have ruled in the 1st or 2nd century. His name derives from Celtic *Teuto-valos ("leader of the tribe, people") and his epithet may mean "great crossing", "great possession", or "legitimate".
TuÄŤepi TuÄŤepi (pronounced Toochepee) is a small town and municipality in the Split-Dalmatia county of Croatia. It is located on the Adriatic coast of Dalmatia known as Makarska riviera, about 5 km southeast of Makarska, population 1,763 (2001).
Tub Ring Tub Ring is a Chicago based band that formed in 1992 as a high school punk band. The band really took form with addition of keyboard player Rob Kleiner, who spent his teenage years following around the band Mr.
Tubabao Tubabao is an island near Samar, in the east central Philippines. Tubabao was used by the International Refugee Organization in 1949 to provide a temporary refuge for 5,000 Russian refugees escaping from China.
Tubac Presidio State Historic Park Tubac Presidio State Historic Park, located in Tubac, Arizona, preserves the ruins of the Tubac Presidio and various other buildings, thereby presenting a timeline of human settlement in this Southern Arizona town. The park contains a museum, a number of historic sites, an underground archeology exhibit displaying the excavated foundations of the Tubac Presidio, and a picnic area.
Tubachristmas Tubachristmas is a music concert in cities worldwide to celebrate those who play, teach, and compose music for instruments in the tuba family. Instruments in the tuba family that often appear are the tuba, sousaphone, baritone horn, and euphonium, while some bring the older hélicon, ophicleide and serpent.
Tubal tonsil The Tubal Tonsil is one of the four main tonsil groups which include the Palatine tonsil, the Lingual tonsil, the Pharyngeal tonsil, and the Tubal Tonsil. its location is posterior the openings of the pharyngotympanic tubes into the pharynx.
Tubal Uriah Butler Tubal Uriah "Buzz" Butler (1897-1977), was a Grenadian-born preacher and labour leader in Trinidad and Tobago. He is best known for leading a series of labour riots between June 19 and July 6, 1937 and for forming a series of personalist political parties (the British Empire Citizens' and Workers' Home Rule Party, the Butler Home Rule Party and finally the Butler Party) that focused its platform on the improvement of the working class.
Tuban Tuban is a small town and regency in East Java, Indonesia. It is located on the north coast of Java, about 110 km east of Surabaya, and borders Lamongan and Bojonegoro regencies, and to the west, Rembang, Central Java.
Tubatulabal language Tubatulabal (also TĂĽbatulabal, called Pakaanil by its speakers) is an endangered Uto-Aztecan language spoken by some elders in southern California. Ethnologue has assigned the language the code "tub" but lists it as "may be extinct".
Tubbataha Reef Tubbataha Reef is an atoll coral reef located in the Sulu Sea, 98 nautical miles southeast of Puerto Princesa City, Palawan, Philippines. It is a marine sanctuary protected as Tubbataha Reef National Marine Park.
Tubby Hayes Edward Brian "Tubby" Hayes (30 January 1935–8 June 1973) was a British jazz multi-instrumentalist, best known for his tenor saxophone playing in groups with fellow sax player Ronnie Scott and with trumpeter Jimmy Deuchar.
Tubby protein The tubby protein is an upstream cell signaling protein common to multicellular eukaryotes. The original tubby gene was identified in mice, but proteins that are homologous to tubby are known as "tubby-like proteins" (TULPs) and share a common and characteristic tertiary structure that consists of a beta barrel packed around an alpha helix in the central pore.
Tubby Spencer Edward Russell Spencer (January 26, 1884 - February 1, 1945) born in Oil City, Pennsylvania was a Catcher for the St. Louis Browns (1905-08), Boston Red Sox (1909), Philadelphia Athletics (1911) and Detroit Tigers (1916-18).
Tube & Berger Tube & Berger is the alias of Dance/Electronica producers Arndt Rörig and Marco Vidovic from Germany. The duo is best known in the United States for their 2004 #1 Billboard Dance Top 40 hit "Straight Ahead", featuring Chrissie Hynde on vocals.
Tube Alloys Tube Alloys was the code-name for the British nuclear weapon programme during World War II, when the very possibility of nuclear weapons was kept at such a high level of secrecy that it had to be referred to by code even in the highest circles of government. The Tube Alloys programme was eventually subsumed into the American Manhattan Project.
Tube caddy A tube caddy was a very large carrying case sometimes with hundreds of compartments for vacuum tubes. They were carried by repair technicians who did home service calls in the days when radios and television sets were too large and heavy for the average homeowner to bring to the repair shop.
Tube feet Tube feet are the many small tubular projections found most famously on the ventral face of a sea star's arms, but are characteristic of the water vascular system of the echinoderm phylum which also includes sea urchins, sand dollars and sea cucumbers and many other sea creatures.
Tube lemma In mathematics, in the field of topology, the tube lemma is a result which states that if X and Y are topological spaces with Y compact, then in the product space, any open cover of a slice over Y also covers a tube about that slice. More formally, if there is an open cover C of open sets in X times Y of the set {x} times Y for some x in X, then there exists a neighborhood U of x such that C also covers U times Y.
Tube Lines Tube Lines Limited is a private company, responsible for the maintenance, renewal and upgrade of the infrastructure, including track, trains, signals, civil work and stations, on three London Underground lines. It is a consortium of Amey (a subsidiary of Grupo Ferrovial) and Bechtel and its main headquarters is 15 Westferry Circus
Tube socket Tube sockets were ubiquitous in early electronic equipment to allow vacuum tubes (also known as valves) to be easily removed for testing and replacement. Tubes often failed because the filament burned out, but other failure modes were common.
Tube Time Tube Time was a programming block that ran on the Hong Kong television channel Atv world in the late 80s and 90s. It ran for 2 hours between 16:30 and 18:30 and was made up of the various current cartoons and educational children's programs from the UK and North America.
Tube-dwelling spider The tube-dwelling spiders (family Segestriidae) consist of two large and widespread genera (Segestria and Ariadna) and one monotypic genus (Gippsicola from Australia). The family is easily recognized because its members have six eyes (most spiders have eight) arranged in a semicircle and have the first three pairs of legs arranged forward (most spiders have only the first two pairs so arranged.
Tuber A tuber, or stem tuber, is a development of a stolon, or above-ground rhizome, thickened for use as a storage organ. The tuber usually, though not always, develops when the stolon becomes subterranean, such as in a potato.
Tuber (genus) Tuber, the true truffles, is a genus of hypogeous ascomycetes that contain several valuable and highly sought-after edible species. All Tuber species are ectomycorrhizal and are therefore found in close association with trees.
Tuberaria Tuberaria (rockrose) is a genus of about 12 species of annual or perennial plants in the rockrose family Cistaceae, native to western and southern Europe. They occur on dry, stony sites, often close to the sea.
Tubercle of the femur A prominence, of variable size, occurs at the junction of the upper part of the neck with the greater trochanter, and is called the tubercle of the femur; it is the point of meeting of five muscles: the Gluteus minimus laterally, the Vastus lateralis below, and the tendon of the Obturator internus and two Gemelli above.
Tuberculosis diagnosis A complete medical evaluation for tuberculosis (TB) must includes a medical history, a physical examination and a chest X-ray. It may include a tuberculin skin test, other scans and X-rays, surgical biopsy, microbiologic smears and cultures.
Tuberculosis in Montreal The association of tuberculosis (TB) with poverty has long been recognized, yet it may reflect not only characteristics of poor individuals, but also housing and neighborhood features which promote airborne spread. It is determined whether dwelling and building features, residential density and crowding are independently associated with TB occurrence
Tuberculosis treatment Active tuberculosis will kill about two of every three people affected if left untreated. Treated tuberculosis has a mortality rate of less than 5% (or less in developed countries where intensive supportive measures are available).
Tuberculum impar During the third week there appears, immediately behind the ventral ends of the two halves of the mandibular arch, a rounded swelling named the tuberculum impar, which was described by His as undergoing enlargement to form the buccal part of the tongue.
Tuberoinfundibular pathway The tuberoinfundibular pathway refers to a population of dopamine neurons in the arcuate nucleus of the mediobasal hypothalamus (the 'tuberal region') that project to the median eminence (the 'infundibular region'). It is one of the four major dopamine pathways in the brain.
Tuberose The tuberose (Polianthes tuberosa) is a perennial plant of the agave family Agavaceae, extracts of which used as a top note in perfumery. The common name derives from the Latin tuberosa, meaning swollen or tuberous in reference to its root system.
Tuberosity of the ulna At the junction of the antero-inferior surface of the coronoid process with the front of the body is a rough eminence, the tuberosity of the ulna (or ulnar tuberosity), which gives insertion to a part of the Brachialis; to the lateral border of this tuberosity the oblique cord is attached.
Tuberous receptor Tuberous receptors are electroreceptors that are specialized to respond to high-frequency electrical fields (electric organ discharges or EODs), and hence are found only in fish with an active electrical sense that can generate their own electrical fields. They are mostly found on weakly electric fishes such as gymnotiforms and mormyrids.
Tubing (recreation) Tubing, also known as inner tubing, is the recreational activity of riding an inner tube, either on water, snow, or more recently, through the air. The tubes themselves are also known as "donuts" or "biscuits" due to their shape.
Tubmanburg Tubmanburg, also known as Bomi, is the capital of Bomi County in Liberia. It lies in the Bomi Hills north of Monrovia and was an iron ore and diamond mining centre until is was largely destroyed in the Liberian Civil War.
Tubou Tubou is a village on the Fijian island of Lakeba. One of eight villages on Lakeba, it is considered the capital of the Lau Islands, being the seat of the Vuanirewa clan, a powerful chiefly family from which Fiji's longtime Prime Minister and President, Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara (1920-2004), hailed.
Tubten Kunga Center Tubten Kunga Center (TKC), a member of the FPMT (Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition), is a non-profit organization, devoted to the transmission of the Mahayana Buddhist tradition and values through teaching, meditation, and community service. TKC provides integrated education through which people's minds and hearts can be transformed into their highest potential for the benefit of others, inspired by an attitude of universal responsibility.
Tubthumper Tubthumper (1997) is an album by the formely anarcho-punk band Chumbawamba, and is the album that catapulted them into the mainstream. Many of the tracks address specific social issues, such as homelessness, the Liverpool Dockers' Strike or racism.
Tubuai (Austral Islands) Tubuai is the name of a group of islands and also the name of its main island, being part of the Austral Islands, French Polynesia, in the Pacific Ocean. Tubuai, the main island of the Tubuai Island group, is located at .
Tubular bridge A tubular bridge is a bridge built as a rigid box girder section within which the traffic is carried. Famous examples include the original Britannia Bridge over the Menai Strait and the Conwy railway bridge over the River Conwy, both designed and built by Robert Stephenson between 1846 and 1850.
Tubular lock pick A tubular lock pick is a specialized lockpicking tool used for opening a tubular pin tumbler lock. Tubular lock picks are all very similar in design and come in sizes to fit all major tubular locks, including 6, 7, and 8-pin locks.
Tubular NDT Tubular NDT (nondestructive testing) is the application of various technologies to detect anomalies such as corrosion and manufacturing defects in metallic tubes. Tubing can be found in such equipment as boilers and heat exchangers.
Tubular pin tumbler lock A tubular pin tumbler lock, also known as Ace lock or "axial pin tumbler lock" or "radial lock", is a variety of pin tumbler lock in which 6-8 pins are arranged in a circular pattern, and the corresponding key is tubular or cylindrical in shape.
Tubuloglomerular feedback In the physiology of the kidney, tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) is one of several mechanisms the kidney uses to regulate glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Changes in GFR are detected by the renal tubule, which sends feedback signals to the glomerulus, initiating a cascade of events that ultimately brings GFR to an appropriate level.
Tucana Tucana (IPA: , ) is a southern constellation. The constellation was one of twelve constellations created by Pieter Dirkszoon Keyser and Frederick de Houtman between 1595 and 1597, and it first appeared in Johann Bayer's Uranometria of 1603.
Tucano people The Tucano are a group of indigenous South Americans living in the northwestern Amazon, along the Vaupés river and the surrounding area. They are present in both Colombia and Brazil, although most live on the Colombian side of the border.
Tuccianus Tuccianus is s possible name for a governor of Britannia Inferior, a province of Roman Britain around AD 237. Little else is known of him although the damaged inscription bearing his name does record him adding a building at Carrawburgh under Maximinus.
Tuck comb dolls Tuck comb dolls are dolls that are often referred to as "German" Tuck combs, probably because they were sold in the German Nuremberg Toy Market. They are also sometimes incorrectly called Dutch Dolls perhaps due to the similarity to the word "German" or "Deutsch".
Tuck Carbunkle Tucker Cornelius "Tuck" Carbunkle is a fictional character created for the Nickelodeon animated series My Life as a Teenage Robot. He is Brad Carbunkle's little brother and another friend of Jenny Wakeman (whom he at first mistook for an "evil cyborg robot").
Tuck Everlasting Tuck Everlasting is a children's book by Natalie Babbitt published in 1975. The book explores the concept of immortality, and the reasons why it might not be as beneficial as it appears at first glance for its audience.
Tuck shop A tuck shop is a small, food-selling retailer, found in schools and youth clubs.For example, see this school and this youth club It is a term principally used in the UK and Queensland, Victoria and New South WalesFor example, see this school in New South Wales, and this school in Queensland.
Tucker Estate In 1775, Mary Alice Tucker, a rich nobleman’s daughter, caused a scandal when she eloped with Patrick Molloy, a Catholic a stable boy. Mary’s family was disgraced because this was a very rude and deplorable situation that caused an uproar.
Tucker Frederickson Ivan Charles "Tucker" Frederickson (born January 12, 1943 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida) was a running back for the New York Giants of the NFL. Frederickson attended Auburn University, and was a two-way player with the Tigers football team (averaging 4.
Tucker Glacier Tucker Glacier () is a major valley glacier of Victoria Land, about 144 km (90 mi) long, flowing southeast between Admiralty Mountains and Victory Mountains to the Ross Sea. There is a snow saddle at the glacier's head, just west of Homerun Range, from which Ebbe Glacier flows northwestward.
Tucker Max Tucker Tibor Max (born 1975 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an author and the creator of Tuckermax.com, which features explicit stories about his excessive drinking and sexual encounters and a heavily-moderated messageboard.
Tucker telephone The Tucker Telephone is a torture device designed using parts from an old-fashioned crank telephone. The electric generator of the telephone is wired in sequence to two batteries so that the instrument can be used to administer electric shocks to another person.
Tucker Youth Soccer Association The Tucker Youth Soccer Association, or TYSA, is a non-profit volunteer orginization that promotes the sport of soccer in the Tucker, Georgia community. TYSA is the largest soccer organization in DeKalb County and the 4th largest in the state of Georgia.
Tucson Bird Count The Tucson Bird Count (TBC) is a community-based program that monitors bird populations in and around the Tucson, Arizona, USA metropolitan area. With nearly 1000 sites monitored annually, the Tucson Bird Count is among the largest urban biological monitoring programs in the world.
Tucson Convention Center The Tucson Convention Center (TCC), previously named the Tucson Community Center, is a large multi-purpose convention center located in Tucson, Arizona. Built in 1971, the location includes a 9,275-seat indoor arena, two performing arts venues, and 205,000 square feet of meeting space.
Tucson Gem & Mineral Show The Tucson Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase is one of the premier gem and mineral shows in the world. The event takes place annually in late January and February at approximately 35 to 40 different locations across the city of Tucson, Arizona.
Tucson Mirage The Tucson Mirage played two exhibition games in the Professional Indoor Football League (PIFL) in 1998, losing both. The Mirage was scheduled to join the league as a full-time team in 1999, which never happened.
Tucson Raceway Park Tucson Raceway Park is a 3/8-mile paved oval race track located in Tucson, Arizona. It currently hosts races from the NASCAR Dodge Weekly Series and was the home of Winter Heat Series before it was moved to Phoenix International Raceway.
Tucson Scorpions The Tucson Scorpions are an International Fight League team based in Tucson, Arizona. Coached by MMA and UFC legend Don Frye, the Scorpions were one of four new teams established at the beginning of the 2007 season.
Tucson Sidewinders The Tucson Sidewinders (1998-present) are a minor league baseball team based in Tucson, Arizona. The team, which plays in the Pacific Coast League, is the Triple-A affiliate of the Arizona Diamondbacks major-league club.
Tucson Symphony Orchestra The Tucson Symphony Orchestra, or TSO, is the primary professional orchestra of Tucson, Arizona. Founded in 1928, when the season consisted of just two concerts, the TSO is the oldest continuously running performing arts organization in the Southwest.
Tucson Theological Seminary Tucson Theological Seminary is located in Tucson,Arizona and is under the umbrella of Tucson Minisrtries, formerly Abbey Ministries which began in July 2005. The ministry was founded by Christy Smalley and her daughter Genevieve Gardner.
Tucumán San Miguel de Tucumán (usually referred to as simply Tucumán) is the largest city in northwestern Argentina, with a population (2001) of 525,853. The metropolitan area totals 806,000, making it the fifth-largest in the country.
Tucume Pyramids The plains of Tucume are part of the Lambayeque Valley, the largest valley of the North Coast of Peru. The Lambayeque Valley offers scores of natural and man-made waterways and is also a region of about 250 brick pyramids.
Tucuxi The Tucuxi (Sotalia fluviatilis) is a dolphin found both in the rivers of the Amazon Basin and in the coastal waters to the north and east of South America. The word "tucuxi" (pronounced too-koo-shi) is derived from the Tupi language (spoken by the Mayanas Indians) word tuchuchi-ana and has now been adopted as the species' common name.
Tuczyn Tuczyn (, ) is a village in the Rivne Oblast (province) of western Ukraine. It is located in the Rivnensky Raion (district) in the historic region of Volhynia, approximately 18 km east from the oblast capital, Rivne.
Tuda of Lindisfarne Tuda of Lindisfarne (died 664 CE) also known as Saint Tuda was Bishop of Lindisfarne for less than a year. Although raised in Ireland, he was a staunch believer in Roman Catholic practices he succeeded the Celtic Christianity supporter Saint Colman in the bishopric.
Tudhaliya III Tudhaliya III was a short-lived king of the Hittite Empire (New Kingdom) ca. 1358 BCE; he may have been the son and successor of Hattusili II, however he is normally viewed as the son of Tudhaliya II (according to the king count used here).
Tudjaat Tudjaat are Madeleine Allakariallak and Pheobe Atagotaaluk, two Inuit women from Nunavut, Canada who are keeping the ancient tradition of Inuit throat singing alive. Tudjaat got its start when Madelaine, who performed as part of a backup chorus with Susan Aglukark's third CD, was noticed by its producer, Randall Prescott.
Tudmir Teodomiro, or Theodemir, cited by contemporary Arabs as Tudmir sometimes Tadmir, was a Visigothic count from the VIII century. He was governor of an Eastern region of the Iberian peninsula (in the current Spanish provinces of Alicante and Murcia).
Tudor bonnet A tudor bonnet (also referred to as a "round cap") is a soft round black academic cap, with a tassel hanging from a cord (both often gold in colour) attached to the centre of the top of the hat. It is mostly worn as part of academic dress by a person who holds a doctorate degree, mainly by those holding a research or professional doctorate degree.
Tudor Bompa Tudor Bompa was one of the fathers of periodization, a training system developed by the Soviets that aimed for optimal performance by varying the training stress throughout the year rather than maintaining a constant training focus. Bompa's training theory was laid out in his seminal work Theory and Methodology of Training.
Tudor City Tudor City is an apartment complex located on the East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is borded by E 40th Street to the South, First Avenue to the East, Second Avenue to the West and E 43rd Street to the North.
Tudor dynasty The Tudor dynasty or House of Tudor (Welsh: Tudur) was a series of five monarchs of Welsh origin who ruled England and Ireland from 1485 until 1603. The three main monarchs (Henry VII, Henry VIII and Elizabeth I) each played an important part in turning England from a European backwater still immersed in the Middle Ages into a powerful Renaissance state that in the coming centuries would dominate much of the world.
Tudor House School The Tudor House School, is a private day and boarding, preparatory school for boys in Moss Vale, New South Wales, Australia. The school is Australia's only preparatory boarding school, marketing itself as "a school that understands boys and where the joy of boyhood experiences is celebrated".
Tudor myth The "Tudor myth" is the tradition in English history, historiography and literature that presents the period of the 15th century, including the Wars of the Roses, in England as a dark age of anarchy and bloodshed. It served the political purpose of promoting the Tudor period of the 16th century as a golden age of peace, law and order, and prosperity.
Tudor re-conquest of Ireland The Tudor re-conquest of Ireland took place under the English Tudor dynasty during the 16th century. It was begun under Henry VIII of England, who reacted to a rebellion by the Geraldine dynasty by trying to recover English control over Ireland, which had been lost in the previous two hundred years.
Tudor style architecture The Tudor style in English architecture is the final development of medieval architecture during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond, for conservative college patrons. It followed the Perpendicular style and, although superseded by the English Renaissance in domestic building of any pretensions to fashion, the Tudor style still retained its hold on English taste, portions of the additions to the various colleges of Oxford and Cambridge being still carried out in the Tudor style which overlaps with the first stirrings of the Gothic Revival.
Tudor Vianu Tudor Vianu (January 8 1898-May 21 1964) was a Romanian literary critic, art critic, poet, philosopher, academic, and translator. Known for his left-wing and anti-fascist convictions, he had a major role on the reception and development of Modernism in Romanian literature and art.
Tudor Watkins Tudor Elwyn Watkins, Baron Watkins (9 May 1903 - 2 November 1983) was a British Labour politician. He was Member of Parliament for Brecon and Radnor from 1945 until his retirement in 1970, after which he was given a peerage.
Tudor's Biscuit World Tudor's Biscuit World is a restaurant chain based in Nitro, West Virginia, most commonly found in West Virginia. Most West Virginia locations share a building with Gino's Pizza and Spaghetti, although the chain is more extensive than the exclusive to West Virginia Gino's, having locations in southeastern Ohio, eastern Kentucky, western Virginia and the coast of South Carolina.
Tudorbethan architecture The Tudorbethan Style, also called Mock Tudor in the 20th century, first manifested itself in domestic architecture in the United Kingdom in the mid to late 19th century. It later became an influence in some other countries, especially the British colonies.
Tudun In pre-Islamic Turkic empires, particularly those of the Göktürks and the Khazars, a tudun was a governor resident in a town or other settlement. The tudun was the personal representative of the imperial government and could function both as an administrator and a diplomat.
Tudweiliog Tudweiliog is a small, predominantly Welsh-speaking village on the northern coast of the LlĹ·n Peninsula in north-west Wales. Agriculture is the main industry, with tourism also playing an important role in the village economy during the summer.
Tue Bjørn Thomsen Tue Bjørn Thomsen (born December 21, 1972 – died April 23, 2006) was a professional boxer from Denmark, whose best performance as an amateur was winning the bronze medal at the 1997 World Amateur Boxing Championships in Budapest, Hungary. Born in Egedesminde, Greenland, he made his professional debut in late 1997.
Tue Brook railway station Tue Brook railway station was a station located on the north side of West Derby Road, Tuebrook, Liverpool, England, opposite Newsham Park on the Canada Dock Branch, it opened on the July 1 1870. It closed to passengers on 31 May 1948.
Tueeulala Falls Tueeulala Falls is located on the north side of Hetch Hetchy Valley in Yosemite National Park, at . At roughly 840 feet it is the smaller of two large waterfalls that spill into Hetch Hetchy Reservoir, the other being Wapama Falls.
Tuen Mun Tuen Mun () was a market town near the mouth of Tuen Mun River and Castle Peak Bay in the New Territories, Hong Kong. It was one of the earlies settlements in Hong Kong which can be dated back to the Neolithic period.
Tuen Mun District Tuen Mun District () is one of the 18 administrative districts of Hong Kong. It is the westernmost continental district of Hong Kong, located about 32 km from the Kowloon Peninsula, 7 km southwest of Yuen Long and 18 km west of Tsuen Wan.
Tuensang Tuensang is a town, a town area committee and the district headquarter of Tuensang District, the easternmost and the largest district of Nagaland. The town was founded in 1947 for the purpose of administrating the erstwhile North Eastern Frontier Agency (NEFA) that comprised the present day Tuensang, Mon, Longleng and Kiphire districts.
Tuesday Tuesday is considered either the second or the third day of the week, between Monday and Wednesday. The word "Tuesday" comes from Middle English Twisday, from Old English Tiwes dæg, a rendering of Latin Martis dies.
Tuesday (band) Tuesday was a Pop-Punk/Emo band that was formed by three ex-members of the Chicago Ska band Slapstick after the latter's 1996 breakup. Dan Andriano (bass/vocals), Matt Stamps (guitar), and Rob Kellenberger (drums/vocals) released their first EP Early Summer on Asian Man Records in 1997.
Tuesday in Texas Tuesday In Texas was a World Wrestling Federation pay-per-view event that took place on December 3 1991 from the Freeman Coliseum in San Antonio, Texas. The event was an attempt by the WWF to establish Tuesday as a secondary pay-per-view night.
Tuesday morning (single) Tuesday Morning was a single released by The Pogues in 1993, from their first post-Shane Macgowan Album, Waiting for Herb. it was the Band's Last single to make the UK top 20, and the first single to feature Spider Stacy on Vocals.
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