Lolo can refer to:

These places:

These people:

In games:

Other:


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Yi people

The Yi or Lolo people are an ethnic group in China, Vietnam, and Thailand. Numbering 8 million, they are the seventh largest of the 55 ethnic minority groups officially recognized by the People's Republic of China. They live primarily in rural areas of Sichuan, Yunnan, Guizhou, and Guangxi, usually in mountainous regions. As of 1999, there were 3,300 "Lô Lô" people living in Hà Giang, Cao Bằng, and Lào Cai provinces in northeastern Vietnam.

The Yi speak various Loloish languages, Sino-Tibetan languages closely related to Burmese. The prestige variety is Nuosu, which is written in the Yi script.

Location

Of the more than 8 million Yi people, over 4.5 million live in Yunnan Province, 2.5 million live in southern Sichuan Province, and 1 million live in the northwest corner of Guizhou Province. Nearly all the Yi live in mountainous areas, often carving out their existence on the sides of steep mountain slopes far from the cities of China.

The altitudinal differences of the Yi areas directly affect the climate and precipitation of these areas. These striking differences are the basis of the old saying that "The weather is different a few miles away" in the Yi area. This is the primary reason why the Yi in various areas are so different from one another in the ways they make a living.

Loló

Lourenço Tomás Cuxixima, commonly known as Loló (born 3 December 1981) is an Angolan footballer who plays as a forward.

Loló appeared in one match for the Angola national team, in 2002.

National team statistics

References

External links

  • Loló profile at ForaDeJogo
  • Lolo at National-Football-Teams.com

  • Split

    Split(s) or The Split may refer to:

    Places

  • Split, Croatia, the largest coastal city in Croatia
  • Split Island, an island in Hudson Bay, Canada
  • Split Island, Falkland Islands
  • Hạf’liua or Split Island, an island in the Rotuma Group of Fiji
  • Music

  • Split album, an album by two or more artists
  • "Split" (KMFDM song), 1991
  • "Split" a song from the Tesla Boy album The Universe Made of Darkness
  • Split (The Groundhogs album), 1971
  • Split (The Huntingtons and Darlington album), 2000
  • Split (Lush album), 1994
  • Split (Zeke/Peter Pan Speedrock album), 2005
  • The Split CD, a 1998 EP by Queens of the Stone Age and Beaver
  • Split, an album by Patricia Barber
  • Split (composition), a 2015 orchestral composition by Andrew Norman
  • Games

  • Split (poker), the division of winnings in the card game
  • Split (bowling)
  • Split, a possible player decision in blackjack
  • Split Dynasty, an alien species of the X game series
  • Sports and dance

  • Split (gymnastics), a body position
  • Split leap or jumping, a class of dance leaps
  • Split jump, a type of jump in figure skating
  • Splitting lemma

    In mathematics, and more specifically in homological algebra, the splitting lemma states that in any abelian category, the following statements for a short exact sequence are equivalent.

    Given a short exact sequence with maps q and r:

    one writes the additional arrows t and u for maps that may not exist:

    Then the following statements are equivalent:

    The short exact sequence is called split if any of the above statements hold.

    (The word "map" refers to morphisms in the abelian category we are working in, not mappings between sets.)

    It allows one to refine the first isomorphism theorem:

  • the first isomorphism theorem states that in the above short exact sequence, C \cong B/q(A) (i.e. "C" isomorphic to the coimage of "r" or cokernel of "q")
  • if the sequence splits, then B = q(A) \oplus u(C) \cong A \oplus C, and the first isomorphism theorem is just the projection onto C.
  • It is a categorical generalization of the rank–nullity theorem (in the form V \approx \ker T \oplus \operatorname{im}\,T) in linear algebra.

    Proof

    First, to show that (3) implies both (1) and (2), we assume (3) and take as t the natural projection of the direct sum onto A, and take as u the natural injection of C into the direct sum.

    Split (Lush album)

    Split is the second album by British shoegazing act Lush, released on 4AD on June 13, 1994 in the UK and a day later in the US. Two singles were released from the album: "Desire Lines" and "Hypocrite," both released on May 30, 1994. Split was reissued by 4AD on CD in July 2001.

    Reception

    Select gave the album a negative review of two out of five. The review described the album as "mid-paced stuff, fitting between melancholy and listlessness." "There's nothing wrong with a dose of heavyweight introspection per se. But a pretty deft touch is needed to translate it movingly to the recording studio."

    Andy Kellman, writing for Allmusic, was far more positive, giving the album 4.5 stars out of five: "Split touches on most forms of emotional turbulence. A legitimizing stunner, the record prevented the band from being lost amidst the bunker of form-over-function dream pop bands. Split shattered every negative aspect of those failed acts with flying colors. A fantastic record within any realm."

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