Tem

Tem or TEM may refer to:

  • Tem, Tajikistan, a small town just outside Khorugh in the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province
  • Tem (Togo tribe), a tribe in the African country Togo living around Sokodé
  • Tem language
  • Tem another name for Atum, an Egyptian deity
  • Tem (queen), an ancient Egyptian queen consort
  • TEM beta-lactamase
  • Acronyms

  • Telecom Expense Management
  • TEM (currency), bartering system popular in Volos, Greece
  • Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway
  • Test Environment for Mailers, an online service environment of the United States Postal Service
  • Test For English Majors, a test similar to the College English Test
  • Tram Elettrici Mendrisiensi, a former tramway in the Swiss canton of Ticino
  • Transmission electron microscopy, a microscopy technique
  • Transverse electromagnetic mode, a transverse mode in electromagnetic transmission
  • Trans-European Motorways, a regional project of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe
  • Triethylenemelamine, a chemotherapeutic agent
  • Temurah (Talmud)

    Tractate Temurah is a tractate of the Babylonian Talmud, the greater part of which is an elaboration of the Law laid down in Leviticus 27:10 regarding dedication of an animal for sacrifice.

    In Jewish Law, temurah (Hebrew: תמורה, literally: "exchange") is the prohibition against attempting to switch the sanctity of an animal that has been sanctified for the Temple in Jerusalem with another non-sanctified animal. It explicitly stated in Leviticus 27:33. According to the law, both animals become sanctified, and the person who attempted the transfer is punished with lashes.

    This prohibition of exchange was counted by Maimonides as comprising 3 of the 613 commandments. The three commandments are:

  • Not to substitute another beast for one set apart for sacrifice
  • The new animal, in addition to the substituted one, retains consecration
  • Not to change consecrated animals from one type of offering to another
  • These are explained in the Babylonian Talmud in the tractate temurah, in order of Kodshim. Like many tractates in the order of Kodshim, Temurah was not often learned by many Talmud scholars. Its reopening was included in the general Kodshim Renaissance brought about by the Brisk yeshivas.

    List of craters on Mars: O-Z

    This is a list of craters on Mars. There are hundreds of thousands of impact crater on Mars, but only some of them have names. This list here contains only named Martian craters starting with the letter O Z (see also lists for A G and H N).

    Large Martian craters (greater than 60 km in diameter) are named after famous scientists and science fiction authors; smaller ones (less than 60 km in diameter) get their names from towns on Earth. Craters cannot be named for living people, and small crater names are not intended to be commemorative - that is, a small crater isn't actually named after a specific town on Earth, but rather its name comes at random from a pool of terrestrial place names, with some exceptions made for craters near landing sites. Latitude and longitude are given as planetographic coordinates with west longitude.

  • AG
  • HN
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
  • O

    P

    Q

    R

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    U

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    See also

  • List of catenae on Mars
  • List of craters on Mars
  • List of mountains on Mars
  • References

    Dutch

    Dutch usually refers to:

  • Something from or related to the Netherlands
  • Dutch people, people from the Netherlands or their descendants
  • Dutch language, spoken in the Netherlands, Belgium, Aruba, Curaçao, Sint Maarten, and Suriname
  • Dutch may also refer to:

    People

  • Dutch (nickname), a list of people
  • Johnny Dutch (born 1989), American hurdler
  • Dutch Savage, ring name of professional wrestler and promoter Frank Stewart
  • Sports

  • Bird's Opening, also known as the Dutch attack, a chess opening
  • Dutch Defence, another chess opening
  • Dutch Grand Prix, a former Formula One car race
  • Dutch Open (disambiguation)
  • Dutch TT, a motorcycle race, part of the MotoGP World Championship
  • Central Dutch, nickname of college athletic teams of Central College, Pella, Iowa
  • Other uses

  • Dutch (film), a 1991 American comedy starring Ed O'Neill
  • Dutch, the magazine, a magazine in English about the Netherlands and the Dutch
  • Dutch: A Memoir of Ronald Reagan, a 1999 biography with fictional elements by Edmund Morris
  • Alan "Dutch" Schaefer, protagonist of the film Predator, played by Arnold Schwarzenegger
  • Theodiscus

    Theodiscus (the Latinised form of a Germanic word meaning "vernacular" or "of the common people") is a Medieval Latin adjective referring to the Germanic vernaculars of the Early Middle Ages. It is the precursor to a number of terms in West Germanic languages, namely the English exonym "Dutch", the German endonym "Deutsch", and the Dutch exonym "Duits".

    The word theodism, a neologism for a branch of Germanic neopaganism, is based on the Old English form of the word.

    Etymology

    It is derived from Common Germanic *þiudiskaz. The stem of this word, *þeudō, meant "people" in Common Germanic, and *-iskaz was an adjective-forming suffix, of which -ish is the Modern English form. The Proto-Indo-European root *teutéh2- ("tribe"), which is commonly reconstructed as the basis of the word, is related to Lithuanian tautà ("nation"), Old Irish túath ("tribe, people") and Oscan touto ("community"). The various Latin forms are derived from West Germanic *þiudisk and its later descendants.

    The word came into Middle English as thede, but was extinct in Early Modern English (although surviving in the English place name Thetford, 'public ford'). It survives as the Icelandic word þjóð for "people, nation", the Norwegian (Nynorsk) word tjod for "people, nation", and the word for "German" in many European languages including German deutsch, Dutch Duits, Yiddish דײַטש daytsh, Danish tysk, Norwegian tysk, Swedish tyska, Spanish tudesco and Italian tedesco.

    List of Black Lagoon characters

    The following is a list of characters from the Japanese manga and anime Black Lagoon.

    The Lagoon Company

    The Lagoon Company is a mercenary/pirate group that is the main focus of the series. The Lagoon Company is for-hire service that is hired by various criminal organizations to do different jobs like locating and retrieving items and/or smuggling them.

    Rokuro "Rock" Okajima

    Voiced by: Daisuke Namikawa (Japanese), Brad Swaile (English)

    Rokuro Okajima (岡島緑郎 Okajima Rokurō), also known as Rock (ロック Rokku), is the male protagonist of the series. He was a Japanese salaryman for Asahi Industries in Tokyo until he was taken hostage by the crew of the Black Lagoon during their raid on the ship he was on. He joined the Lagoon Company after his department chief Kageyama abandoned him (Kageyama declared him dead) in an attempt to cover up the smuggling operation in which Rock had been an unwitting participant. Rock is a humble and mild-mannered person despite being on the business end of guns from friend and foe alike, and often seems surprised at the barbarity of the Southeast Asian crime world. He still wears his tie, short-sleeved dress shirt, and dress pants because although now a pirate, he still retains his business persona. He prefers to use words over weapons when interacting with others. Rock, after joining the Lagoon company, has wondered if he is experiencing Stockholm syndrome.

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