GP

Gp or GP may refer to:

Business and media

  • Georgia-Pacific LLC, a manufacturer and marketer of tissue, packaging, paper, pulp and building products
  • Girard-Perregaux, a luxury brand of Swiss watches
  • Gold Peak, a maker of the GP batteries and GP portable solar charger
  • Göteborgs-Posten, a daily Swedish newspaper
  • Grameenphone, a telecommunications service provider in Bangladesh
  • Jeep, an automobile marque
  • General Purpose (GP) tractor, a model of tractor built by Deere & Company (see List of John Deere tractors > GP tractor)
  • Google+, a social media service by Google
  • General Partner
  • Computing and video games

  • Gameplanet (New Zealand), a New Zealand video game community
  • GamePolitics.com, a blog about the politics of computer and video games
  • GamePro, a monthly video game magazine
  • Gangplank, a character from League of Legends
  • Genetic programming, an algorithmic technique in computer science
  • Geometric programming, an algorithmic technique in engineering and optimization
  • Gigapixel image, a unit of computer graphic resolution
  • Tatar language

    The Tatar language (татар теле, татарча, tatar tele, tatarça, تاتار تيلی or طاطار تيلي) is a Turkic language spoken by Volga Tatars mainly located in modern Tatarstan, Bashkortostan and Nizhny Novgorod Oblast. It should not be confused with the Crimean Tatar language, to which it is remotely related but with which it is not mutually intelligible.

    Geographic distribution

    Tatar language is spoken in Russia (about 5.3 million people), Ukraine, China, Finland, Turkey, Uzbekistan, the United States of America, Romania, Azerbaijan, Israel, Kazakhstan, Georgia, Lithuania, Latvia, and other countries. Total Tatars in the world are more than 7 million people.

    Tatar is also native for several thousand Maris. Mordva's Qaratay group also speak a variant of Kazan Tatar.

    In the 2010 census, 69% of Russian Tatars who responded to the question about language ability claimed a knowledge of the Tatar language. In Tatarstan, 93% of Tatars and 3,6% of Russians did so. In neighbouring Bashkortostan, 67% of Tatars, 27% of Bashkirs, and 1,3% of Russians did.

    Gaa Paa

    Gaa Paa! ("Forward!" or literally "Go On!") was a Norwegian language socialist publication established in the United States of America at Girard, Kansas in November 1903, before moving to Minneapolis, Minnesota the following year. The paper was forced to change its name in 1918 in an effort to avoid a ban from the US Mail, taking the name Folkets Røst (People's Voice). It appeared under that title until the publication's demise in October 1925.

    In the aftermath of the 1919 split of the Socialist Party of America (SPA) which led to the establishment of the Communist Party of America (CPA) and Communist Labor Party of America (CLP), Folkets Røst remained allied with the social democratic SPA and promoted the candidacies of other like-minded groups. The weekly newspaper was the largest and longest-running radical Dano-Norwegian (Bokmål) periodical in North America.

    Publication history

    Establishment

    In 1903, successful publisher Julius A. Wayland, publisher of the national weekly Appeal to Reason, decided to launch a Scandinavian language socialist newspaper from his base of operations at Girard, Kansas, a small town located in the southeastern part of the state. Wayland invited the married socialist activists Emil Lauritz Mengshoel and Helle Crøger Mengshoel to relocate to Kansas to edit this new publication.

    Podcasts:

    G.P.

    ALBUMS

    G.P.

    ALBUMS

    GP

    ALBUMS

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    G.p.

    by: Gram Parsons

    Oh, well, I was born in alittle bitty tar hut
    And they called me a man 'cause I couldn't
    keep my big, big mouth shut
    So what's the sense of me sitting here leaving
    When any ole day I might be even
    And Lord knows that New York City's got
    a lot to do with it
    I wish someday I could find the way
    to get it out of my grain
    This dirty old town's gonna sink right down
    and I don't want to go with it
    Well I wish there was a way that
    I knew to get even
    A way to get a lick in
    A 'bobbin' and a 'weavin'
    Any ole thing besides goin' and a'leavin'
    You can do on a train
    Well, I once knew a man who sailed around
    the world twice
    He would have made it three but he took
    a lot of bad advice
    So you just tell me what's the sense of me
    sittin' here leavin'
    When any ole day I might get even
    And Lord knows New York City's got
    alot to do with it
    I wish someday I could find a way to get it out
    of my brain
    This dirty old town's gonna sink right down
    and I don't want to go with it
    I wish there was a way that I knew to get even,
    way to get a lick in
    A 'bobbin' and a'weavin'
    Any ole thing besides goin' and a'leavin'
    You can do on a train
    Oh, yes!
    Well, I once knew a man who sailed around
    the world twice
    But his motor cooled down and now he's
    deliverin' ice
    Tell me what's the sense of him
    sittin' here leavin'
    When any ole day he might get even
    And Lord knows New York City's got
    a lot to do with it
    I wish someday he could find a way to get it out
    of his brain
    This dirty old town's gonna sink right down
    and I don't want to go with it
    I wish there was a way that I knew to get even
    Way to get a lick in
    A 'bobbin and a'weavin'
    And all the things besides goin' and a'leavin'
    You can do on a train
    Oh, yeah




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