Éric

Éric ['eʁik] is a French masculine given name, the equivalent of English Eric. In French-speaking Canada and Belgium it is also sometimes unaccented, and pronounced "Eric" as English with the stress on the "i". A notable French exception is Erik Satie, born Éric, but who in later life signed his name "Erik" pronounced as in English.

As with Étienne, Émile, Édouard, Élisabeth, Édith the accent É is sometimes omitted in older printed sources, though French orthography is to include accents on capitals.

People named Éric

  • Éric Abidal (1979-) French footballer
  • Éric Bourdon (1979-) French painter
  • Éric Cantona (1966-) French footballer, known as "Eric Cantona" as an actor
  • Éric Elmosnino (1964-) French actor and musician
  • Éric Fottorino (1960-) French journalist and author
  • Éric Geoffroy (1956-) French philosopher, islamologist and writer
  • Éric Guirado (1968-) French film director and writer
  • Éric Hassli (1981-) French footballer
  • Éric Pichet (1960-) French economist
  • Éric Rohmer (1920-2010) French film director
  • Richard Taylor (cartoonist)

    Richard Taylor (1902–1970) was a Canadian cartoonist best known for his cartoons in the magazine The New Yorker. He signed his work Ric. Canadian comics historian John Bell called Taylor "one of the greatest New Yorker cartoonists".

    Taylor was born in 1902 in Fort William, Ontario, in Canada. In the 1920s, he contributed to Toronto-based publications; he constirbuted for a year to Toronto Telegram newspaper, from 1927 to the University of Toronto's humour magazine The Goblin, and the Communist Party of Canada newspaper The Worker. Aside from cartooning, he produced commercial art and in his spare time painted. In 1935, The New Yorker began publishing his work, and he thereafter moved to the United States, where there were more opportunites for better pay for cartoonists. Taylor died in Bethel, Connecticut, in the United States in 1970.

    References

    Works cited

    Further reading

  • "Richard Taylor". The New York Times Biographical Service. New York Times & Arno Press. 1970. p. 1169. 
  • RIC

    Ric may refer to:

    Companies

  • Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, a rehabilitation hospital in Chicago
  • Rickenbacker International Corporation, a guitar manufacturer
  • RIC TV (Rede Independência de Comunicação), a Brazilian television network
  • Regulated investment company
  • Royal

  • Royal Institute of Chemistry
  • Royal Institution of Cornwall
  • Royal Irish Constabulary
  • Codes and regulations

  • Radio Identity Code, an address used in the POCSAG protocol for pagers
  • Resin identification code, codes/symbols for recycling of plastics
  • Reuters Instrument Code, a ticker-like code used by Thomson Reuters to identify financial instruments
  • Richmond International Airport (IATA: RIC)
  • Rickmansworth station, England, National Rail station code RIC
  • Regolamento Internazionale delle Carrozze (International Coach Regulations), technical requirements for passenger coaches in Europe
  • Science and mathematics

  • Reduced intensity conditioning, in oncology
  • RIC, symbol for the Ricci curvature tensor in mathematics
  • Other

  • Ric, pen name of Canadian cartoonist Richard Taylor (1902–1970)
  • Regulus

    Regulus (α Leo, α Leonis, Alpha Leonis) is the brightest star in the constellation Leo and one of the brightest stars in the night sky, lying approximately 79 light years from Earth. Regulus is a multiple star system composed of four stars that are organized into two pairs. The spectroscopic binary Regulus A consists of a blue-white main-sequence star and its companion, which has not yet been directly observed, but is probably a white dwarf. Located farther away is the pair Regulus B and Regulus C and D, which are dim main-sequence stars.

    Observations

    Regulus is 0.46 degree from the ecliptic, the closest of the bright stars, and is regularly occulted by the Moon. Occultations by the planets Mercury and Venus are possible but rare, as are occultations by asteroids.

    The last occultation of Regulus by a planet was on July 7, 1959, by Venus. The next will occur on October 1, 2044, also by Venus. Other planets will not occult Regulus over the next few millennia because of their node positions. An occultation of Regulus by the asteroid 166 Rhodope was observed by 12 researchers from Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece on October 19, 2005. Differential bending of light was measured to be consistent with general relativity. Regulus was occulted by the asteroid 163 Erigone in the early morning of March 20, 2014. The center of the shadow path passed through New York and eastern Ontario, but no one is known to have seen it, due to cloud cover. The International Occultation Timing Association recorded no observations at all.

    Regulus (disambiguation)

    Regulus may also mean:

    In Latin:

  • Regulus, a Latin name for the Basilisk
  • In astronomy:

  • Regulus is a star.
  • In mathematics:

  • Regulus is the locus of lines meeting three given skew lines.
  • People:

  • Saint Regulus, early Christian saint, purported to have brought the relics of St. Andrew to Scotland
  • Saint Regulus (San Regolo), Christian saint, venerated in Italy
  • Marcus Atilius Regulus, a Roman consul
  • Animals:

  • Regulus (genus), a bird genus
  • Regulus (horse), a Thoroughbred racehorse and sire
  • Minerals:

  • Regulus, the metallic form of antimony
  • In Fiction:

  • Regulus, a story named for the consul, in Rudyard Kipling's Stalky & Co. collection
  • Regulus is the name of a Nemean Lion that is currently employed under Sairaorg Bael's peerage in the light novel series HS DxD.
  • Regulus, one of the main characters in the Bomberman 64 and The Second Attack video games
  • Regulus, the first chapter in the Weapon Master mode of the Soulcalibur II computer game
  • Regulus, the central city of Mechanus, and the seat of the One and the Prime, in the Planescape Dungeons and Dragons cosmology
  • SSM-N-8 Regulus

    The SSM-N-8A Regulus was a ship- and submarine-launched, nuclear-armed turbojet-powered cruise missile deployed by the United States Navy from 1955 to 1964. Its barrel-shaped fuselage resembled that of numerous fighter aircraft designs of the era, but without a cockpit. When the missile was ready for launch, it was fitted with two large booster rockets on the aft end of the fuselage.

    History

    Design and development

    In October 1943, Chance Vought Aircraft Company signed a study contract for a 300-mile (480 km) range missile to carry a 4,000-pound (1,800 kg) warhead. The project stalled for four years, however, until May 1947, when the United States Army Air Forces awarded Martin Aircraft Company a contract for a turbojet powered subsonic missile, the Matador. The Navy saw Matador as a threat to its role in guided missiles and, within days, started a Navy development program for a missile that could be launched from a submarine and use the same J33 engine as the Matador. In August 1947, the specifications for the project, now named "Regulus," were issued: Carry a 3,000-pound (1,400 kg) warhead, to a range of 500 nautical miles (930 km), at Mach 0.85, with a circular error probable (CEP) of 0.5% of the range. At its extreme range the missile had to hit within 2.5 nautical miles (4.6 km) of its target 50% of the time.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×