Lélé

Lélé may refer to:

  • Lélé River, a river in Cameroon
  • Lélé, Cameroon, a town in southern Cameroon.
  • See also

  • Lele (disambiguation)

  • LL

    LL or L.L. may refer to:

    Companies and organizations

  • Trade mark of the 1864 in Paris founded firm Léon & Lévy specialized in stereoscopic views and postcards
  • Logo of Lincoln Laboratory, a US Federally Funded Research and Development Center
  • La Línea, a criminal organization from Ciudad Juárez, Mexico
  • Lumber Liquidators, a US retailer of hardwood flooring
  • Common abbreviation for Bayer's LibertyLink gene, found in many modern food crops
  • Liberland, a self-proclaimed micronation, situated at an unclaimed parcel of land on the western bank of the Danube river between Croatia and Serbia
  • Concepts

  • The word legis (Latin for laws) in law degrees
  • LL parser in computer science
  • Other

  • LL - The ICAO prefix for airports in Israel
  • L.L. are the initials of Leslie Lamport
  • Miami Air International (IATA code: LL)
  • The Evil of the Daleks, a Doctor Who episode (production code: LL)
  • Labyrinth Lord, a fantasy role-playing game
  • Liquid Limit in geotechnical engineering
  • Alternative name for the clothing size "XL"
  • ll, a command to list files in long format in many Unix and Unix-like operating systems, as an alternative to ls -l
  • Interpunct

    An interpunct ( · ), also known as an interpoint,middle dot, middot, and centered dot (UK centred dot), is a punctuation mark consisting of a vertically centered dot used for interword separation in ancient Latin script. (Word-separating spaces did not appear until some time between A.D. 600 and 800.) It appears in a variety of uses in some modern languages and is present in Unicode as code point U+00B7 · MIDDLE DOT (HTML · · ·).

    The multiplication dot (U+2219 BULLET OPERATOR (HTML ∙) or U+22C5 DOT OPERATOR (HTML ⋅ · ⋅)), whose glyphs are similar or identical to the interpunct, is a multiplication sign optionally used instead of the styled ×: ab is equivalent to a × b or "a times b". The same sign is also used in vector multiplication to discriminate between the scalar product (a b) and the vector cross product (a × b) or exterior product (ab). As a multiplication operator, it is also encountered in symbols for compound units such as the newton-meter (N∙m or Nm). The multiplication dot is a separate Unicode character (U+22C5), but is often silently replaced by the interpunct or bullet (U+2022 BULLET (HTML • · •)).

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×