Helene may refer to:

See also [link]


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Helene (name)

Helene (French: Hélène) is a female given name, a variant of Helen, using the French spelling. Helen is ultimately from Greek Ἑλένη.

As with other variants of Helen, Helene's saint's day is that of St. Helen.

People with the given name Helene

  • Helen of Anjou (1236-1314),was the queen consort of the Serbian Kingdom. Her husband was Stephen Uroš I and her children kings Dragutin and Milutin
  • Helene Mayer, German and American Olympic champion foil fencer
  • Hélène Conway-Mouret (born 1960), French politician.
  • Hélène Pastor (1937-2014), heiress and businesswoman from Monaco.
  • Helene Schjerfbeck, artist
  • Helene Speight, finalist in The Apprentice (UK Series Four)
  • Helene Holman, artist in the dramatic arts, and musician
  • People with the middle name Helene

  • Charlotte Helene Orléans, fictional sorceress
  • Hélène (song)

    "Hélène" is a 1989 pop song recorded by the Canadian singer Roch Voisine. It was the first single from his first studio album Hélène, and was released in November 1989. This song allowed the singer to launch his career and achieved great success in France.

    Song information

    The song was recorded at the Intercession studio. The guitars are played by Carl Katz, and the keyboards by Luc Gilbert.

    The cover for the CD maxi used the same photograph as that of the album Hélène : Roch Voisine's face with a black background. The song is mainly in French-language, but contains a line in English as follows: "Hélène things you do / Make me crazy about you".

    The music video features the singer and an air hostess who are in love, but who are forced to separate because of professional reasons. She may be French because when, in the video, she writes her name on a mirror with her lipstick, she does end it with an 'e' ('Helene'), as on the single cover. The model who plays the role of Hélène is Ariane Cordeau.

    Beef

    Beef is the culinary name for meat from bovines, especially cattle. Beef can be harvested from bulls, heifers or steers. Its acceptability as a food source varies in different parts of the world.

    Beef muscle meat can be cut into roasts, short ribs or steak (filet mignon, sirloin steak, rump steak, rib steak, rib eye steak, hanger steak, etc.). Some cuts are processed (corned beef or beef jerky), and trimmings, usually mixed with meat from older, leaner cattle, are ground, minced or used in sausages. The blood is used in some varieties of blood sausage. Other parts that are eaten include the oxtail, liver, tongue, tripe from the reticulum or rumen, glands (particularly the pancreas and thymus, referred to as sweetbread), the heart, the brain (although forbidden where there is a danger of bovine spongiform encephalopathy, BSE), the kidneys, and the tender testicles of the bull (known in the United States as calf fries, prairie oysters, or Rocky Mountain oysters). Some intestines are cooked and eaten as-is, but are more often cleaned and used as natural sausage casings. The bones are used for making beef stock.

    Rhonda Sing

    Rhonda Ann Sing (February 21, 1961 – July 27, 2001) was a Canadian professional wrestler. After training with Mildred Burke, she wrestled in Japan under the name Monster Ripper. In 1987, she returned to Canada and began working with Stampede Wrestling, where she was their first Stampede Women's Champion. In 1995, she worked in the World Wrestling Federation as the comedic character Bertha Faye, winning the WWF Women's Championship. She also wrestled in World Championship Wrestling to help generate interest in their women's division.

    Professional wrestling career

    Training

    While growing up in Calgary, Sing attended numerous Stampede Wrestling events with her mother. She knew she wanted to be a wrestler from a young age and frequently beat up the neighborhood children. As a teenager, Sing approached members of the Hart wrestling family and asked to be trained, but she was rejected as they did not train women wrestlers at the time.Bret Hart, however, claims it had more to do with scheduling conflicts. During a trip to Hawaii in 1978, she saw Japanese women's wrestling on television and decided she wanted to pursue the sport. She later wrote Mildred Burke, after a friend gave her a magazine with Burke's contact information, and sent her a biography and photo. Shortly thereafter, she joined Burke's training facility in Encino, California.

    Beef (disambiguation)

    Beef is the meat from cattle.

    Beef may also refer to:

  • Beef (film), a 2003 documentary film about hip hop feuds, also called beefs
  • Beef (comics), a character in the Marvel universe
  • Beef (band), a musical group
  • Beef (Nitro Girl), a stage name of professional wrestler Rhonda Sing with the Nitro Girls
  • Beef Creek, a stream in South Dakota
  • British Energy Efficiency Federation
  • Big Explosives Experimental Facility
  • "Beef", an episode of The Protector
  • "Beef", a song by Royce da 5'9" from Death Is Certain
  • Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    No Beef

    by: Afrojack

    I won’t break down tonight.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I won’t break down tonight.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I won’t break down tonight.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I feel it for the first time.
    I found a new place here.
    I’m coming down fast.
    I found a new place here.
    I’m coming down fast.
    I found a new place here.
    I’m coming down fast.
    I found a new place here.




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