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W. C. Fields
W. C. Fields was an United States comedian and actor. Fields created one of the great American comic personas of the first half of the 20th century—a misanthrope who teetered on the edge of buffoonery but never quite fell in, an egotist blind to his own failings, a charming drunk; and a man who hated children, dogs, and women, unless they were the wrong sort of women.
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W. C. Handy
William Christopher Handy was an
African American blues composer and musician, often known as "List of people known as the father or mother of something."
W. C. Handy remains among the most influential of United States songwriters.
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W. H. Auden
Wystan Hugh Auden, known more commonly as W. H. Auden, was an England poet, often cited as one of the most influential of the 20th century. He spent the first part of his life in the United Kingdom, but emigrated to the United States in 1939, becoming a U.S.
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W. Somerset Maugham
William Somerset Maugham, Order of the Companions of Honour was an English language playwright, novelist, and short story writer, one of the most widely-known western authors of the 1930s and reportedly the highest paid.
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Wabash River
The Wabash River is a 475 mi long river in the eastern United States that flows southwest from northwest Ohio near St. Henry, Ohio across northern Indiana to Illinois where it forms the southern Illinois-Indiana border before draining into the Ohio River, of which it is the largest northern tributary.
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Wacko
Wacko is a 1983 arcade game by Bally Midway. It debuted during the "Golden Age of Arcade Games". It featured a unique angled, or "sloped" cabinet design and a combination of trackball and joystick controls.
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Wader
Waders, called Shorebirds in North America, are members of the order Charadriiformes, excluding the more marine web-footed seabird groups. The latter are the skuas, gulls, terns, skimmers , and auks. Also, the pratincoles and the Crab Plover, which look more similar to waders, are closely related to the seabirds.
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Waffle
A waffle is a batter cake cooked between two hot plates called a waffle iron. It has a distinctive gridlike appearance, the result of raised partitions on the waffle iron.
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Waffle iron
A waffle iron is a cooking appliance used to make waffles.
It usually consists of two hinged metal plates, molded to create the honey comb pattern found on waffles. The batter is poured between the plates, which are then closed to bake the waffle.
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Wagon
A wagon or dray is a wheeled vehicle, ordinarily with four wheels, usually pulled by an animal, or animals, such as horses, mules or oxen and used for transport of heavy good. Wagons were more commonly used before the popular use of automobiles.
In modern terms, a wagon often refers to a small cart on four wheels with a handle.
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Wagtail
The wagtails are a group of small perching bird birds with long tails which they wag frequently. Motacilla, the root of the family and main generic name, means moving tail.
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Wahoo
The Wahoo is a dark blue scombrid fish found worldwide in tropical and subtropical seas. Some say that the name "Wahoo" is a derivation of the name of the Hawaiian Island Oahu, which was sometimes spelled Wahoo. The fish is also known as Ono, after the Hawaiian word for "delicious", ono.
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Waikiki
Waikiki is a neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii, in the City & County of Honolulu, on the south shore of the Island of Oahu, Hawaii. Waikiki extends from the Ala Wai Canal on the west and north, to Diamond Head or Leahi on the east.
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Wainscoting
Wainscot or wainscoting is wooden or other paneling applied to the lower 1.2 to 1.5 m of an interior wall, below the dado rail or chair rail and above the skirting board or baseboard. It is traditionally constructed from tongue-and-groove boards, though beadboard or decorative panels are also common.
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Wainwright
Wainwright has become a moderately common surname all over the world. The name descends from the job of those who built and repaired wagons: wain being an English dialectical variant of the word wagon, a horse-drawn wheeled vehicle used for agricultural purposes, and wright meaning a craftsman or builder.
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Waist
The waist is the part of the Human abdomen between the ribcage and hips. On some people, the waist is the narrowest part of the torso.
Waistline refers to the horizontal line where the waist is narrowest, or to the general appearance of the waist. People who dieting are often said to be trying to "improve" their waistline.
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Waistcoat
*Undergarment
*Vest
Category:Tops
Category:Formalwear
Category:History of clothing
Category:History of clothing
da:Vest
de:Weste
ja:???????
nn:Klesplagget vest
sl:Brezrokavnik
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Waiter
A waiter is a male who "waits" on tables, often at a restaurant or a Bar. A female who "waits" on tables is often called a waitress. The gender-neutral language server and collective waitstaff can also be used.
Waiting tables is one of the most common occupations in the U.S..
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Wakashan languages
Wakashan is a family of languages spoken in British Columbia around and on Vancouver Island.
As typical of the Northwest Coast, Wakashan languages have large consonant inventories—the consonants often occurring in complex clusters.
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Wake
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A wake is the region of turbulence immediately to the rear of a solid body caused by the flow of air or water around the body.
In fluid dynamics, a wake is the region of turbulence around a solid body moving relative to the water, caused by the flow of liquid around the body.
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Wake Island
Wake Island is a coral atoll having a coastline of 12 miles in the North Pacific Ocean, located about two-thirds of the way from Honolulu to Guam . It is an unorganized territory, unincorporated territory of the United States, part of the United States Minor Outlying Islands, administered by the Office of Insular Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior.
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Wake Ups
"Wake Ups" are a brand of caffeine pills known for their simple white packaging which depicts a red- and blue-coloured rooster reminiscent of the Rossignol Rooster logo. The 12- and 36-pill packs come in foil-wrapped plastic housed in a cardboard sleeve featuring the words "Wake Ups" printed diagonally in bold red letters.
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Waldorf salad
A Waldorf salad is a salad consisting of apple, nuts, celery, and mayonnaise or a mayonnaise-based dressing. It was first created in 1896 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York, New York by Oscar Tschirky who was the matre d'htel. In 1896 Waldorf Salad appeared in "The Cook Book by "Oscar of the Waldorf".
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Wales
Wales is one of four Home Nations of the United Kingdom. Wales is located in the south-west of Great Britain and is bordered by the England counties of Cheshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire, and Gloucestershire to the east, the Bristol Channel to the south, St George's Channel to the south-west, and the Irish Sea to the west and north, and also by the estuary of the River Dee in the north-east.
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Walker Percy
Walker Percy was an American Southern literature whose interests included philosophy and semiotics. Percy is best known for his philosophical novels, the first of which, The Moviegoer, won the National Book Award for Fiction in 1962. He devoted his literary life to the exploration of "the dislocation of man in the modern age," and his work exhibited a unique combination of existentialism, southern sensibility, and deeply-felt Catholicism.
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Walkers
Walkers is a snack food manufacturer in the United Kingdom best known for manufacturing crisps.
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Walkie-talkie
A walkie-talkie is a hand-held portable, bi-directional radio transceiver. The first walkie-talkies were developed for military use. Major characteristics include a duplex channel and a push-to-talk switch that starts transmission. The typical physical format looks somewhat like a telephone handset, possibly slightly larger but still a single unit, with an antenna sticking out of the top.
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Walking
Walking is the main form of animal locomotion on Earth, distinguished from running and crawling . When executed in shallow water, it is usually described as wading and when executed vertically it becomes scrambling or climbing. The word walking is derived from the Old English language walcan .
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Walkman
The Walkman is a popular Sony brand used by the company to market its portable audio players, and is synonymously used to refer to the original Walkman portable personal stereo player. The original Walkman brought about a change in music listening habits, allowing people to carry their own choice of music with them.
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Walkway
A walkway is a path for walking that is generally not enclosed. It can be at ground level, or it can be elevated. It can be a simple constructed path or something more complex to cross a road or a body of water. It can also be used to board and remove passengers from aircraft to the Airport terminal building.
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Wall
A wall is a usually solid structure that defines and sometimes protects an area. Most commonly, a wall separates space in buildings into rooms, or protects or delineates a space in the open air. There are three principal types of structural walls: building walls, exterior boundary walls, and retaining walls.
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WALL
WALL is an Radio station on AM 1340. The station is licensed to Middletown, Orange County, New York and serves the southern Hudson Valley. WALL is owned and operated by Cunmulus Media and broadcasts Radio Disney full-time. Also since 1999 WALL has simulcast sister station WEOK 1370 licensed to Poughkeepsie, New York and serving the northern Hudson Valley.
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Wall Street
Wall Street is the name of a narrow street in lower Manhattan in New York City, running east from Broadway downhill to the East River. Considered to be the historical heart of the Financial District, Manhattan, it was the first permanent home of the New York Stock Exchange.
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Wall unit
A wall unit is a premanufactured furnishing that has become very popular the past 25 years. Comprised of several discrete components that are usually fixed to an internal wall of a room. Wall unit fixtures are usually customised per installation and range in style from contemporary to traditional in order to match the decore of the home or business establishment in which they are installed.
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Wallaby
A wallaby is any of about thirty species of macropod. Essentially, a wallaby is any macropod that isn't considered large enough to be a kangaroo and has not been given some other name. There is no fixed dividing line. In general, a wallaby is smaller and has a stockier build than a kangaroo; a wallaroo is any of a few species somewhat intermediate in size between a wallaby and a kangaroo.
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Wallace Stevens
Wallace Stevens was a major United States Modernism poet whose work contains some of the most original and beautiful, not to mention profoundly philosophical, writing to be found in American poetry.
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Wallet
A wallet is a small storage device used to keep credit cards, cash, driver's licenses and other such items in one place. Wallets are generally made of leather or fabrics such as Polyvinyl chloride. Some people who prefer carrying cash rather than cards use money clips, which are both small and simple.
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Walleye
The Walleye is a freshwater perciform fish native to most of Canada and to the northern United States. It is a North American close relative of the European Zander. The walleye is sometimes also called the yellow walleye to distinguish it from the extinct blue walleye.
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Wallflower
The genus Erysimum includes the wallflowers, which include both popular garden species and many wild forms. There are about 80 species, native to southwest Asia, the Mediterranean region, Macaronesia, and North America. They are small, short-lived perennial herbs or sub-shrubs, reaching 10-130 cm tall, with bright yellow to red or pink flowers produced throughout the spring and summer.
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Wallpaper
Wallpaper is material which is used to cover and decorate the interior walls of homes, offices, and other buildings; it is one aspect of interior decoration. Wallpapers are usually sold in rolls and are put onto a wall using wallpaper paste.
Wallpapers can come either plain so it can be painted or with patterned graphics or flavoured.
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Walnut
The walnuts are plants in the walnut family Juglandaceae. They are deciduous trees, 10-40m tall, with pinnate leaves 20-90cm long, with 5-25 leaflets; the shoots have chambered pith, a character shared with the wingnuts but not the hickory in the same family.
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Walpurgis Night
Walpurgis Night is a holiday celebrated on April 30 or May 1, in Germany, Finland, Sweden, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Romania, and the Czech Republic .
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Walrus
Walruses are large semi-aquatic mammals that live in the cold Arctic seas of the Northern Hemisphere. Two subspecies exist: the Atlantic, Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus, and the Pacific, Odobenus rosmarus divergens. The Pacific walrus is slightly larger, the male weighing up to 1,800 kg , but usually males only top out at 1,600 kg .
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Walrus moustache
The walrus style of moustache is bushy, thick, and droops down over the upper lip, typically curling up towards the ends, and its name is an allusion to the vibrissae on the upper lip of a walrus.
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Walt Disney
Walter Elias Disney , was an United States film producer, film director, screenwriter, voice actor, animator, and philanthropist. He was the son of parents Flora Disney and Elias Disney, and had three brothers and one sister. As the co-founder of Walt Disney Productions, Walt became one of the most well-known motion picture producers in the world.
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Walt Whitman
Walter "Walt" Whitman is widely considered to be one of America's best and most influential poets.
Translated into more than 25 languages, Whitman is said to have invented contemporary American literature as a genre. He abandoned the rhythmic and Meter structures of European poetry for an expansionist freestyle verse, which delivered his philosophical view that America was destined to reinvent the world as emancipator and liberator of the human spirit.
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Walt Whitman Bridge
The Walt Whitman Bridge is a suspension bridge spanning the Delaware River from Philadelphia to Gloucester City, New Jersey. Named after the poet Walt Whitman, who resided in nearby Camden toward the end of his life, the Walt Whitman Bridge is one of the larger bridges on the east coast of the United States.
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Walter Gropius
Walter Adolph Georg Gropius was a Germany architect and founder of Bauhaus.
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Walter Raleigh
Knighthood Walter Raleigh is a famed England writer, poet, courtier and explorer. Note that many alternate spellings of his surname exist, including Rawley, Ralegh, and Rawleigh; "Raleigh" appears most commonly today, though he, himself, used that spelling only once.
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Walter Reed
This article is about the U.S. army surgeon. For the actor, see Walter Reed.
Walter Reed, M.D., was an U.S. Army surgeon who led the team which confirmed the theory first set forth in 1881 and proven by the Cuban doctor and scientist Dr. Carlos Finlay that yellow fever is transmitted by mosquitoes rather than direct contact.
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Walter Scott
Sir Walter Scott, 1st Baronet was a prolific Scotland historical novel and poet popular throughout Europe during his time. In some ways Scott was the first author to have a truly international career in his lifetime, with many contemporary readers all over Europe, Australia, and North America.
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Waltzer
A waltzer is a Amusement ride that consists of a number of cars which are free to spin individually while rotating around a central point like a carousel. The floor of the ride is not flat and the cars lift and fall gently as the ride spins, the weight of the riders causing each car to rotate.
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Wampum
Wampum, or sewan, is a string or belt of beads historically used by some Native Americans in the United States, who regard it as a sacred object.
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WAND
WAND is an NBC affiliate in Decatur, Illinois, serving the Decatur–Springfield, Illinois–Champaign, Illinois area. It is a joint venture of LIN Television and Block Communications; however, in this case, LIN controls the station. In addition to NBC and local programming, WAND also shows Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy!.
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Wanda Landowska
Wanda Landowska, harpsichordist whose performances, teaching, recordings and writings played a large role in reviving the popularity of that instrument in the early 20th century. She was the first person to record Goldberg Variations on the harpsichord.
Landowska was born in Warsaw, where her father was a lawyer, and her mother a linguist who translated Mark Twain into Polish.
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Wandering Albatross
The Wandering Albatross , is a large seabird from the family Diomedeidae which has a circumpolar range in the Southern Ocean. It was the first species of albatross to be described, and was long considered the same species as the Tristan Albatross and the Antipodean Albatross.
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Wandering Jew
The Wandering Jew is a figure from Christian mythology, a Jewish man who, according to legend, taunted Jesus on the way to the Crucifixion and was then cursed to walk the earth until the Second Coming. The exact nature of the wanderer's indiscretion varies in different versions of the tale, as do aspects of his character; sometimes he is said to be a Shoemaking or other tradesman, and sometimes he is the doorman at Pontius Pilate's estate, and presumably a Roman Empire ra
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Wanderlust
Wanderlust is a German language loanword. It is commonly defined as a strong desire to travel, or by having an itch to get out and see the world . Some consider it to be a simple compound of wander and lust.
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Wandflower
The Wandflower, also known as the Harlequin flower or Sparaxis, is a perennial bulb that grows in well-drained sunny soil. It gained its name from its extremely colorful flowers which are bi or tri-coloured with a golden centre and a small ring of brown surrounded by another colour.
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Wankel engine
The Wankel rotary engine is a type of internal combustion engine, invented by Germany engineer Felix Wankel, which uses a rotary combustion engine instead of reciprocating piston engine. This design promises smooth high-rpm power from a compact, lightweight engine; however Wankel engines are criticized for poor fuel efficiency and emissions standard.
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Wanker
Wanker is a pejorative term of United Kingdom origin, also common in Republic of Ireland, Australia, Canada, New Zealand and South Africa.
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Wanted poster
A wanted poster is a poster put up to let the public know of a criminal whom authorities wish to apprehend. They will generally include either a picture of the criminal himself when a photograph is available, or of a facial composite image produced by a police artist. The poster will usually include a description of the wantee and the crime(s) with which he is charged.
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War
War is a conflict involving the organized use of weapons and physical force by states or other large-scale groups. Warring parties usually hold territory, which they can win or lose; and each has a leading person or organization which can surrender, or collapse, thus ending the war.
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War crime
In the context of war, a war crime is a punishable offense under International Law, for violations of the laws of war by any person or persons, military or civilian.
Every violation of the law of war in an inter-state conflict is a war crime, while violations in internal conflicts are typically limited to the local jurisdiction.
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War Hawk
War Hawk is a term originally used to describe a member of the United States House of Representatives of the Twelfth United States Congress of the United States who advocated going to war against United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in the War of 1812.
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War Machine
War Machine is a superhero in the Marvel Universe. War Machine's abilities came from an advanced suit of armor, designed using technology from Stark Industries, and later from an extraterrestrial life-built suit. He is well-known as the accomplice of Iron Man.
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War of 1812
The War of 1812 was fought between the United States of America and United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and its colonies in British North America from 1812 to 1815 on land and sea. The Americans had hoped for a quick win as Britain was at war with Napoleon. Despite several notable successes by US frigates and the menace of American privateers to British trade, the Royal Navy established a strict blockade of American trade causing economic hardship; however, success on land see-sawed back and forth be
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War of Nerves
"War of Nerves" was the fifth single released from the All Saints's debut album, All Saints. In the UK it peaked at #7 in the charts.
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War of the Spanish Succession
The War of the Spanish Succession was a major European conflict that arose in 1701 after the death of the last Spanish Habsburgs king, Charles II of Spain. Charles had bequeathed all of his possessions to Philip V of Spain - a grandson of the France Louis XIV of France - who thereby became Philip V of Spain.
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War Zone
"War Zone" is an episode from the first season of the television series Crusade.
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