List

A list is any enumeration of a set of items. List or lists may also refer to:

People

Places

  • List auf Sylt, the northernmost village in Germany, on the island of Sylt
  • Enumerations

  • Electoral list, a grouping of candidates
  • Listicle, an article in list format
  • Mailing list, collection of names and addresses to send material to multiple recipients
  • Task list, sometimes a to-do list, a prioritization strategy for time management
  • Computing

  • Comma-separated values, sometimes character-separated values, a file type that stores tabular data in plain-text form
  • Electronic mailing list
  • List (abstract data type), sometimes called a sequence
  • Organizations

  • List College, an undergraduate division of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America
  • SC Germania List, German rugby union club
  • Other uses

  • List (watercraft), the leaning to either port or starboard of a ship
  • Lists (jousting), the barriers used to designate the tournament area where medieval knights jousted
  • List, an alternative term for roll in flight dynamics
  • Jousting

    Jousting is a martial game or hastilude between two horsemen wielding lances with a blunted tips, often as part of a tournament. The primary aim was to replicate a clash of heavy cavalry, with each opponent endeavoring to strike the opponent while riding towards him at high speed, if possible breaking the lance on the opponent's shield or jousting armour, or unhorsing him. The joust became an iconic characteristic of the knight in Romantic medievalism. Jousting matches were notably depicted in Ivanhoe(a novel).

    The term is derived from Old French joster, ultimately from a Late Latin iuxtare "to approach, to meet". The word was loaned into Middle English around 1300, when jousting was a very popular sport among the Anglo-Norman knighthood. The synonym tilt dates ca. 1510.

    Jousting is based on the military use of the lance by heavy cavalry. It transformed into a specialised sport during the Late Middle Ages, and remained popular with the nobility both in England and Germany throughout the whole of the 16th century (while in France, it was discontinued after the death of King Henry II in an accident in 1559). In England, jousting was the highlight of the Accession Day tilts of Elizabeth I and James I, and also was part of the festivities at the marriage of Charles I.

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