Contents

Magpie may refer to:

Birds [link]

Fish [link]

  • Magpie perch or Magpie Morwong, Cheilodactylus nigripes, is a morwong of the family Cheilodactylidae

Moths [link]

  • Abraxas grossulariata, a moth in the family Geometridae, called The Magpie in Great Britain and Ireland
  • Eurrhypara hortulata, a moth in the family Pyralidae, called the Small Magpie in Great Britain and Ireland
  • Nyctemera amicus, a moth in the family Arctiidae, from south-east Asia and Australasia, sometimes called the Magpie Moth
  • Nyctemera annulata, a moth in the family Arctiidae, called the Magpie Moth in New Zealand

Places [link]

Ships [link]

  • HMS Magpie, one of the eight Royal Navy ships that have been given this name

Sports clubs [link]

Various football clubs may be known, formally or informally, as the Magpies:

Australia

Britain

Music [link]

  • La gazza ladra or "The Thieving Magpie," an opera semiseria in two acts by Gioachino Rossini
  • "Magpie", a song by The Mountain Goats on their album The Sunset Tree
  • "Magpie", a B-side song by the English rock band Blur on their 1994 single "Girls & Boys"
  • "Magpie", a song by Patrick Wolf on the album The Magic Position
  • Magpie Records, British record label set up in 1976 by Bruce Bastin
  • Magpie Lane, English folk group, based in Oxford
  • The Thieving Magpie (album), musical album by Marillion
  • Magpie, a folk duo since the 1970s
  • Magpie, an album by Stephen Fretwell.
  • "Morning Mr. Magpie", a song by the English band Radiohead on their 2011 album The King of Limbs
  • "Magpie to the Morning". a song by the American folk singer Neko Case from her 2009 album Middle Cyclone

Other [link]


https://wn.com/Magpie_(disambiguation)

List of minor DC Comics characters

Throughout its history, DC Comics has introduced many characters, including numerous minor characters. These characters range from supporting characters, heroes and villains that appear infrequently, to characters that only take part in a single story.

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    Airstryke

    Airstryke is a villain in the DC Universe.

    Within the context of the stories, William Kavanagh was given the ability to transform into a pterodactyl/man hybrid by a weapons company Meta/Tech and took the name Airstryke. Count Viper took advantage of these new abilities and used Airstryke to distract Hawkman while Viper tried to take command of the Justice League and thus the world. Airstryke and Viper were soon defeated and Airstryke was sent to Belle Reve Prison. He remained here until he was freed by Neron and was given the chance to sell his soul along with numerous other villains. Airstryke chose not to sell his soul and continued his life of crime. Eventually, Airstryke was returned to prison where he became a victim of Joker's Joker gas. Again, he was defeated and returned to prison. This time he was sent to the Slab. During his stay, Brother Blood attempted to break all the villains out of the prison so they could assist him on his mission. Airstryke was the first to question Blood on his plan. Brother Blood then shot and killed Airstryke for his hubris.

    Magpie (TV series)

    Magpie was a British children's television programme shown on ITV from 30 July 1968 to 6 June 1980. It was a magazine format show intended to compete with the BBC's Blue Peter, but attempted to be more "hip", focusing more on popular culture. The show's creators Lewis Rudd and Sue Turner named the programme Magpie as a reference to the magpie's habit of collecting small items, and because of "mag" being evocative of "magazine", and "pie" being evocative of a collection of ingredients.

    Broadcast history

    The programme, made by Thames Television, was first transmitted on 30 July 1968 which was Thames Television's first day of broadcasting, and was shown weekly until 1969. From that point, until it ended on 6 June 1980, it went out twice a week with approximately 1,000 episodes being made, each 25 minutes in duration. It was not fully networked to all other ITV companies until the autumn of 1969.

    The first presenters were the former BBC Radio 1 disc jockey Pete Brady, Susan Stranks and Tony Bastable. Brady left the show in 1969 to be replaced by Douglas Rae, and Bastable left in 1972 when he was replaced by Mick Robertson. Jenny Hanley replaced Susan Stranks in 1974. This lineup remained until 1977, when Tommy Boyd replaced Rae.

    Distance

    Distance is a numerical description of how far apart objects are. In physics or everyday usage, distance may refer to a physical length, or an estimation based on other criteria (e.g. "two counties over"). In mathematics, a distance function or metric is a generalization of the concept of physical distance. A metric is a function that behaves according to a specific set of rules, and is a concrete way of describing what it means for elements of some space to be "close to" or "far away from" each other. In most cases, "distance from A to B" is interchangeable with "distance between B and A".

    Overview and definitions

    Physical distances

    A physical distance can be mean several different things:

  • The length of a specific path traveled between two points, such as the distanced walked while navigating a maze
  • The length of the shortest possible path through space between two point that could be taken if there were no obstacles (usually formalized as Euclidean distance)
  • The length of the shortest path between two points while remaining on some surface, such as the great-circle distance along the curve of the Earth
  • Cosmic distance ladder

  • Light green boxes: Technique applicable to star-forming galaxies.
  • Light blue boxes: Technique applicable to Population II galaxies.
  • Light Purple boxes: Geometric distance technique.
  • Light Red box: The planetary nebula luminosity function technique is applicable to all populations of the Virgo Supercluster.
  • Solid black lines: Well calibrated ladder step.
  • Dashed black lines: Uncertain calibration ladder step.
  • The cosmic distance ladder (also known as the extragalactic distance scale) is the succession of methods by which astronomers determine the distances to celestial objects. A real direct distance measurement of an astronomical object is possible only for those objects that are "close enough" (within about a thousand parsecs) to Earth. The techniques for determining distances to more distant objects are all based on various measured correlations between methods that work at close distances and methods that work at larger distances. Several methods rely on a standard candle, which is an astronomical object that has a known luminosity.

    A Loss for Words

    A Loss for Words (formerly Last Ride) was an American pop punk band from Abington/Hanover, Massachusetts.

    History

    Early years (1999–2004)

    Matty Arsenault and Danny Poulin from Lions Lions started a new band, Last Ride, in 1999, it would soon feature Kreg Dudley, Chris Murphy, and Evan Cordeiro. The band had five names listed in a notebook before they changed it, and one of the names was A Loss for Words. The band would change its name to A Loss for Words after attending a minister's service. Mike Adams was soon drafted to play bass after the original bass player had no desire to play in front of people. Marc Dangora, from Mommy a Fly Flew Up My Pee Hole, joined in 2004.

    Coming Soon to a Theater Near You, These Past 5 Years (EP), and split with They Sleep the Dream (2004–2007)

    By April 2004, several tracks were posted on the band's PureVolume account: "Bullets Leave Holes", "Death or Glory", "Rose Colored Lens", "Shoot for Seven", "Faze 3", and "Warren's Eyes". The band recorded 3 songs with Matt Squire in College Park, Maryland, in January 2005. A track listing for a release called Coming Soon to a Theater Near You, released in 2004, was put up in February. In March, it was announced the band were in a studio recording six songs that would be released on an EP, to be released by Rock Vegas, with a planned release month of May. The tracks were finished being mixed by April, and a new release month set, June. Unmastered versions of two tracks, "A Theme for Your Ego" and "Bullets Leave Holes", from the EP were posted online in May. "A Theme for Your Ego" featured guest vocals by Brendan Brown from The Receiving End of Sirens. The band released their first EP on Rock Vegas on 1 July, called These Past 5 Years (2005). The EP sold over 1,000 copies in under two months. On September 23, Rock Vegas revealed the EP sold out in 4 weeks, and that they were repressing it with new disc art.

    Podcasts:

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