Talis (moth)

Talis is a genus of moths of the Crambidae family.

Species

  • Talis afghanella Bleszynski, 1965
  • Talis afra Bethune-Baker, 1894
  • Talis arenella Ragonot, 1887
  • Talis caboensis Asselbergs, 2009
  • Talis cashmirensis (Hampson, 1919)
  • Talis chamylella Staudinger, 1899
  • Talis cornutella Wang & Sung, 1982
  • Talis dilatalis Christoph, 1887
  • Talis erenhotica Wang & Sung, 1982
  • Talis evidens Kosakjewitsch, 1979
  • Talis gigantalis Filipjev & Diakonoff, 1924
  • Talis grisescens Filipjev & Diakonoff, 1924
  • Talis menetriesi Hampson, 1900
  • Talis mongolica Bleszynski, 1965
  • Talis pallidalis Hampson, 1900
  • Talis povolnyi Roesler, 1975
  • Talis pulcherrimus (Staudinger, 1870)
  • Talis qinghaiella Wang & Sung, 1982
  • Talis quercella (Denis & Schiffermüller, 1775)
  • Talis renetae Ganev & Hacker, 1984
  • Talis wockei Filipjev, 1929
  • References

  • Natural History Museum Lepidoptera genus database
  • Moth

    Moths comprise a group of insects related to butterflies, belonging to the order Lepidoptera. Most lepidopterans are moths and there are thought to be approximately 160,000 species of moth, many of which are yet to be described. Most species of moth are nocturnal, but there are also crepuscular and diurnal species.

    Differences between butterflies and moths

    While the butterflies form a monophyletic group, the moths, comprising the rest of the Lepidoptera, do not. Many attempts have been made to group the superfamilies of the Lepidoptera into natural groups, most of which fail because one of the two groups is not monophyletic: Microlepidoptera and Macrolepidoptera, Heterocera and Rhopalocera, Jugatae and Frenatae, Monotrysia and Ditrysia.

    Although the rules for distinguishing moths from butterflies are not hard and fast, one very good guiding principle is that butterflies have thin antennae and (with one exception) have small balls or clubs at the end of their antennae. Moth antennae can be quite varied in appearance, but in particular lack the club end. The divisions are named by this principle: "club-antennae" (Rhopalocera) or "varied-antennae" (Heterocera).

    Moth (dinghy)

    The Moth Class is the name for a small development class of sailing dinghy. Originally a cheap home built sailing boat designed to plane, now it is an expensive largely commercially produced boat designed to hydroplane on foils. Many of the older design Moths still exist and are fun recreational boats but far slower.

    Types

    The Moth types have been (not all may still exist):

  • the International Moth, a fast sailing hydrofoil dinghy with liberal restrictions;
  • the Classic Moth, a traditional dinghy with tighter restrictions
  • the British Moth, a one design sailboat similar to those sailed in the 1930s
  • the New Zealand Mark 2 scow moth which became abundant in the 1970s.
  • the earlier Restricted Moth of the 1960s and 70s which had fewer restrictions allowing for class development. Confusingly, this nomenclature was sometimes used interchangeably with the term International Moth in Australia and NZ.
  • History

    Beginnings

    The current International Moth is a result of merging two separate but similar historical developments. The first occurred in Australia in 1928 when Len Morris built a cat rigged (single sail) flat bottomed scow(horizontal bow rather than the "normal" vertical) to sail on Andersons' Inlet at Inverloch, a seaside resort, 130 km from Melbourne. The scow was hard chined, was 11 feet (3.4 m) long, and carried 80 square feet (7.4 m2) in single mainsail. The craft was named "Olive" after his wife. The construction was timber with an internal construction somewhat like Hargreave's box kite. "Olive's" performance was so outstanding, that a similar boat "Whoopee" was built. Len Morris then sold "Olive", and built another boat called "Flutterby", and with those three boats, the Inverloch Yacht Club was formed. Restrictions for the class known as the Inverloch Eleven Footer class were then drawn up, with the distinguishing characteristic that of being not a one-design boat but rather that of a boat permitting development within the set of design parameters.

    Moth (album)

    Moth is the third full-length album by American indie band Chairlift, released in the United States via Columbia Records on January 22, 2016.

    Critical reception

    Before being released, Consequence of Sound, Pitchfork, Stereogum, and Billboard included Moth in their lists of most anticipated albums of 2016, and it has received generally favorable reviews.Brooklyn Magazine named the album its "Album of the Month" for January 2016.

    In a positive review for Exclaim!, Stephen Carlick wrote that "with Moth, Chairlift make a strong claim to being one of pop music's best songwriting teams, with the production and vocal chops to bring their compositions fully and vibrantly to life."Rolling Stone praised the album as "a record where love, music and love for music come together beautifully."

    Track listing

    Source: Pitchfork Media

    References

    Talis

    Talis is a Latin adjective meaning "such, of such a sort", and may refer to:

  • Talis (moth), a genus of moths of the Crambidae family
  • Talis bag, a bag in which to carry one's talis (prayer shawl)
  • Talis Group, a software company in Birmingham, England
  • Talis J. Colberg, attorney general of Alaska, appointed 2006
  • Talis Kitsing, Estonian kickboxer and politician
  • Talis Kimberley, English folk singer-songwriter
  • Talis, Pakistan, a village in Ghanche District, Pakistan
  • Tallit, a Jewish prayer shawl
  • Talış (disambiguation), places in Azerbaijan
  • Metaclazepam, an anxiolytic drug (trade name)
  • See also

  • Tallis (disambiguation)
  • Thales (disambiguation)
  • Thalys, a train service between Paris, Brussels, Cologne and Amsterdam
  • Talis Group

    Talis Group Ltd. is a software company based in Birmingham, England that develops software for Higher Education. They were previously involved in development of library management software and a Semantic Web application platform. In 2005 Talis was voted one of the top ICT Employers in the United Kingdom.

    History

    In 1969 a number of libraries founded a small co-operative project, based in Birmingham, to provide services that would help the libraries become more efficient. The project was known as the Birmingham Libraries Co-operative Mechanisation Project, or BLCMP, and included the library of the University of Birmingham. At this time the concept of library automation was so new that the term mechanisation was often used in its place.

    BLCMP began a co-operative catalogue of bibliographic data at the start of its work, a database that now contains many millions of records. For this an adaptation of UKMARC coding was used. This shared approach to creating metadata is the forefather of later, Internet-based, community ventures such as IMDb, Freebase and others. But this was back in 1969 when shipping this data around involved printing cards and putting boxes on trucks. More libraries became members of BLCMP, e.g. many of the academic libraries of Manchester and Salford.

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