Saint James

Saint James or St. James may refer to:

People

Saints

  • James (brother of Jesus), also known as 'the Lord's brother', "the Brother of Jesus' or 'James the Just'; considered the author of the Epistle of James in the New Testament, and the first bishop of Jerusalem
  • James, son of Zebedee, apostle, brother of John the Apostle, sometimes called "James the Great"
  • James, son of Alphaeus, apostle (sometimes identified as 'James the Just')
  • James the Less, son of Clopas and Mary of Clopas, often identified with the son of Alphaeus
  • Jacob of Nisibis, 4th century bishop
  • James Intercisus, 5th century Persian, cut into pieces for expression of his beliefs
  • James the Deacon, 7th century missionary to England
  • Saint James Matamoros, 8th century Spanish legend
  • One of the Ethiopian martyrs Abraham, Ethnus, Acrates, James, and John
  • Blessed James Salomoni, Venetian priest and ascetic
  • Surname

  • Rebecca St. James (born 1977), Australian-American Christian pop and rock artist and actress
  • Susan Saint James (born 1946), American actress and activist
  • James the Apostle

    James the Apostle may refer to:

  • James, son of Alphaeus, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus.
  • James, son of Zebedee, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus and patron saint of Spain.
  • See also

  • James the Just, traditionally attributed to be the author of the Epistle of James.
  • James the Less, who may or may not be the same person as James the Just or James, son of Alphaeus.
  • James (automobile company)

    The James automobile company (called the J&M Motor Car Company) was created in 1909 by H. K. James.

    History

    The first car, called a Model A, was tested on April 2, 1909 on a 100 mile test run. A reporter wronte that the James "will climb and ordinary hill with two or four passengers." The Model A was a highwheeler and cost between $700 and $800. Production was minimal, and in 1911 the company quit production of the car for a larger car called the Dearborn. It lasted one year.

    Models

    References

    Altered

    Altered may refer to:

  • An Altered (drag racing), a type of drag racing car
  • Altered (film), a 2006 film

  • Altered (film)

    Altered is a 2006 science fiction horror film directed by Eduardo Sánchez and written by Jamie Nash. It was Sánchez's first solo effort as director following his co-directing of The Blair Witch Project in 1999.

    The plot is an inversion of the standard alien abduction formula, as four men abduct a lone alien, planning to wreak revenge on the invading species. In its early stages, the film was entitled Probed, and was intended as a comic homage to work of Sam Raimi and Troma Entertainment.

    Plot synopsis

    Altered is the story of four men who seek revenge on aliens that abducted them and murdered their friend many years ago. As is explained via dialogue throughout the film, fifteen years before the events shown in the film, a group of five fifteen-year-old friends living in a remote American town were captured and experimented on by aliens while on a hunting trip. Only four of the friends returned alive. The main character (Wyatt) has since distanced himself from his childhood friends and is shown to have decided to live with the past, albeit in apparent constant paranoia. Two of the remaining three characters however have been obsessed by revenge and have persuaded the remaining, somewhat leadable, character that this is the correct course of action to take. The story opens with the tracking and subsequent capture of a lone alien - the consequences of which Wyatt and the three friends soon become deeply involved in.

    Alternation (geometry)

    In geometry, an alternation or partial truncation, is an operation on a polygon, polyhedron, tiling, or higher dimensional polytope that removes alternate vertices.

    Coxeter labels an alternation by a prefixed by an h, standing for hemi or half. Because alternation reduce all polygon faces to half as many sides, it can only be applied for polytopes with all even-sided faces. An alternated square face becomes a digon, and being degenerate, is usually reduced to a single edge.

    More generally any vertex-uniform polyhedron or tiling with a vertex configuration consisting of all even-numbered elements can be alternated. For example the alternation a vertex figure with 2a.2b.2c is a.3.b.3.c.3 where the three is the number of elements in this vertex figure. A special case is square faces whose order divide in half into degenerate digons. So for example, the cube 4.4.4 is alternated as 2.3.2.3.2.3 which is reduced to 3.3.3, being the tetrahedron, and all the 6 edges of the tetrahedra can also be seen as the degenerate faces of the original cube.

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