Contents

Momo may refer to:

General [link]

  • Monochorionic-monoamniotic presentation of identical twins
  • Peach, a tree fruit (from "momo", romanization of the Japanese 桃, for peach)
  • Momo (food), a dumpling popular in South Asia
  • MOMO (company), manufacturer of automotive and racing gear
  • MoMo, abbreviation of Mozilla Messaging
  • MOMO syndrome, a rare genetic disorder
  • Siemens Modular Metro, a brand of electric train vehicle system
  • momo Car-Sharing, short for the EU project „more options for energy efficient mobility through Car-Sharing“
  • Joffrey Tower, originally named "Modern Momentum Building"
  • [ MoMO Galerie], an art space gallery in Paris curated by Romaric Tisserand and Margherita Ratti
  • Momo, a religious slur against people of the Mormon faith.
  • Internet phrase. Used to express sympathy. Created in the inside forum of Zhejiang University, China.
  • MoMo, a derogatory term used in reference to practitioners of Momentum investing
  • MOMO, Shorthand for Methoxymethyl-oxygen in organic chemistry

Places [link]

People [link]

Music [link]

  • Momo (singer), a J-pop singer who is a former member of "I've Sound" and a member of Por
  • Rei Momo, an album by David Byrne
  • Mohammed Fairouz, an Arab-American composer
  • "Momo", a Jazz instrumental song by Mindi Abair, from the album It Just Happens That Way
  • Momoko Tsugunaga, a j-pop singer and idol, member of group Berryz Koubou

Western culture [link]

Anime, manga, animation, and Japanese folklore [link]

Ships [link]

Video games [link]

See also [link]


https://wn.com/Momo

Momoe Nakanishi

Momoe Oe (大江 百重 Ōe Momoe, born July 7, 1980) is a Japanese retired professional wrestler, better known by her maiden name, Momoe Nakanishi (中西 百重 Nakanishi Momoe) Nakanishi made her debut for the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) in July 1996 at the age of sixteen and during the next seven years, won all of the promotion's top titles, including the WWWA World Championship and the WWWA World Tag Team Championship. In 2003, Nakanishi quit AJW to become a freelancer and went on to win the AtoZ World Championship later that same year and the NEO Single and NWA Women's Pacific Championships in 2004. Nakanishi retired from professional wrestling on January 7, 2005, at the age of just twenty-four. She now works as a trainer at the U.W.F. Snakepit gym.

Professional wrestling career

All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (1996–2003)

The Life Before Us

The Life Before Us (1975; French: La vie devant soi) is a novel by French author Romain Gary who wrote it under the pseudonym of "Emile Ajar". It was originally published in English as Momo then re-published in 1986 as The Life Before Us. It won the Prix Goncourt prize the same year it was published.

Synopsis

Momo, a Muslim orphan boy who is about 10 years old, lives under the care of an old Jewish woman named Madame Rosa, who was a prisoner at Auschwitz and later became a prostitute in Paris. Momo's mother abandoned him with Madame Rosa, who is essentially a babysitter for the children of prostitutes. They live on the sixth floor of an apartment building in Belleville, a district of Paris. In their apartment building, Madam Rosa made a small hideout in a cellar, where she keeps artifacts of her Jewish heritage. The young boy tells the story of his life in the orphanage and of his relationship with Madame Rosa as she becomes increasingly sick, culminating with her death, after she had expressed her desire to not die in hospital on life support, saying that she does not want to be a vegetable being forced to live.

Momo (department)

Momo is a department of Northwest Province in Cameroon. The department covers an area of 1792 km² and as of 2001 had a total population of 213,402.The capital of the department lies at Mbengwi.

Subdivisions

The department is divided administratively into 5 communes and in turn into villages.

Communes

  • Andek
  • Batibo
  • Mbengwi
  • Njikwa
  • Widikum-Boffe
  • Villages

  • Acha
  • Ashong
  • Bessi
  • Bome
  • Guneku
  • Mbemi
  • Mbengwi
  • Munam
  • Njah-Etu
  • Njindom
  • Njinibi
  • Nyen
  • Sang
  • Tugi
  • Wumnebit
  • Wumnemburg
  • Zang-Tebi
  • Zang-Tembeng
  • Ngyen-
  • TUDIG
  • References

    List of Avatar: The Last Airbender characters

    This features a list of significant characters from the animated television programs Avatar: The Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra created by Bryan Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino.

    Overview

    In The Last Airbender, a fictional universe composed of four sovereign nations, the Avatar —a being who represents the bridge between the physical and the spirit worlds— alone holds the power to master all four elemental powers, but has been missing for the past 100 years. During this absence, a war started by the Fire Nation resulted in the Air Nomads' genocide, the Southern Tribes' waterbending population near extinction, and the Earth Kingdom's extensive colonization. In The Legend of Korra, set 70 years later, Republic City, the capital of the United Republic of Nations, serves as the primary setting for the repercussions of said wars, leading to events such as the Equalization movement for non-benders, Harmonic Convergence of the spirit world, civil war in the southern polar region, and the reunification of the fractured Earth Kingdom.

    Kulintang

    Kulintang is a modern term for an ancient instrumental form of music composed on a row of small, horizontally laid gongs that function melodically, accompanied by larger, suspended gongs and drums. As part of the larger gong-chime culture of Southeast Asia, kulintang music ensembles have been playing for many centuries in regions of the Eastern Malay Archipelago—the Southern Philippines, Eastern Indonesia, Eastern Malaysia, Brunei and Timor, although this article has a focus on the Philippine Kulintang traditions of the Maranao and Maguindanao peoples in particular. Kulintang evolved from a simple native signaling tradition, and developed into its present form with the incorporation of knobbed gongs from Sunda. Its importance stems from its association with the indigenous cultures that inhabited these islands prior to the influences of Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Christianity or the West, making Kulintang the most developed tradition of Southeast Asian archaic gong-chime ensembles.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:
    ×