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  1. Rio de Janeiro (14538 bytes)
    1: :''This article is about the city called Rio de Janeiro. For the state with the same n...
    7: ...t inside an urban region, called "Floresta da Tijuca". The current mayor is [[Cesar Maia]].
    9: ... after [[S㯠Paulo]] and used to be the country's capital until 1960, when [[Bras�a]] took its place...
    13: ...Guanabara was actually the mouth of a river, they called it "Rio de Janeiro", which means January Rive...
    15: ...ntic]] transit of ships between Brazil, the [[Africa]]n colonies, and Europe. Fortresses were built an...
  2. Ella Fitzgerald (9400 bytes)
    1: ...rald.jpeg|thumb|Ella Fitzgerald photographed by [[Carl Van Vechten]], 1940]]
    2: ..." improvisational ability, particularly in her [[scat singing]].
    6: ...d several hit songs with them, including "(If You Can't Sing It), You'll Have to Swing It", but it was...
    10: ...uite perfectly [[Marilyn Monroe]]'s voice and typical gestures, as well as [[Louis Armstrong]]'s.
    12: ...ngers) toured [[Europe]] and North America, classically opening their shows with the famous Ellington'...
  3. Fanny Mendelssohn (2047 bytes)
    1: ...ments are being increasingly recognised as significant in themselves.
    3: ...wn brother. Like him, Fanny showed prodigious musical ability as a child and began to write music. How...
    7: ...her's compositions. Her public debut at the piano came in 1838, when she played Felix's piano [[concer...
    9: ...piano works are often in the manner of songs, and carry the name ''Lieder ohne Worte'' (''Songs withou...
    11: ...lssohn-Hensel died in [[Berlin]] in 1847 of complications of a [[stroke]] suffered while rehearsing on...
  4. Steffi Graf (16410 bytes)
    2: ...first player to achieve the "Golden Slam" – capturing all four Grand Slam titles and the [[Olymp...
    5: ===Early career===
    6: ...roduced to tennis by her father [[Peter Graf]], a car and insurance salesman and aspiring tennis coac...
    10: ... with her father and coach Pavel Slozil, Graf typically practiced for up to four hours a day, often he...
    12: ...tle in April [[1986]] at [[Hilton Head]], [[South Carolina]], defeating [[Chris Evert]] in the final. ...
  5. Germany (46412 bytes)
    1: ...[[industrialization|industrialised]] countries, located in the heart of [[Europe]]. It is bordered to ...
    17: ...kground:#f9f9f9;" | [[image:LocationGermany.png|Location of Germany]]
    21: |'''[[Capital]]''' || [[Berlin]]
    33: ... 14th]]<br>82,468,000 [http://www.destatis.de/indicators/e/vgr910ae.htm]<br>242/km&sup2;
    35: |'''Formation<br>Unification/reunification<br><br><br>'''
  6. World War II (58065 bytes)
    4: ...ed, cited as either the German [[Polish September Campaign|invasion of Poland]] on [[1 September]] [[1...
    6: ...ean Sea]], [[African Theatres of World War II|Africa]], the [[Middle East Theatre of World War II|Midd...
    8: ...]'s [[Unit 731]] experiments in [[Pingfan]]. As a case of [[total war]], it involved the "[[home front...
    10: ...on of Japan led to its democratization, and China came to split into the Communist [[People's Republic...
    22: ...olonies of the British Empire, Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, No...
  7. Morse code (33777 bytes)
    2: ...ver, with the development of more advanced communications technologies, the use of Morse code is now l...
    4: ...nical or visual signal (e.g. a flashing light). Because Morse code is transmitted using just two state...
    11: ...racters made it hard to adapt to automated communication, so it was largely replaced by more regular f...
    13: ...United States, became known as Railroad or [[American Morse code]], and is now very rarely used.
    17: ...n in 1844, marked a paper tape — when an electrical current was transmitted, the receiver's electrom...
  8. Pope Formosus (4107 bytes)
    2: ... was born around [[816]], in [[Ostia]]. He became Cardinal-Bishop of [[Porto]] in [[864]]. He undertoo...
    4: ... in July 872. In [[878]] the sentence of excommunication was withdrawn, after he had promised never to...
    8: ...rrel between the Archbishops of [[Cologne]] and [[Hamburg]] concerning the Bishopric of [[Bremen]]. In the ...
    10: ...lysis]] on the way and was unable to continue the campaign.
    14: ...meanwhile conferred orders on many other clerics, causing great confusion. Later the validity of Formo...
  9. Pope Benedict V (659 bytes)
    1: ...ex-pope was carried off to [[Hamburg]] where he became a [[deacon]], dying in July 965.
  10. Tsunami (29462 bytes)
    2: ... to generate a tsunami. The effects of a tsunami can range from unnoticeable to devastation.
    6: ...historically referred to as ''[[tidal wave]]s'' because as they approach land they take on the charact...
    8: ==Causes==
    10: ...by itself may trigger an undersea landslide quite capable of generating a tsunami.
    12: ...uch large vertical movements of the earth's crust can occur at [[plate boundaries]]. [[Subduction]] ea...
  11. July 24 (8660 bytes)
    1: ...in [[leap year]]s) of the year in the [[Gregorian Calendar]], with 160 days remaining.
    3: {{JulyCalendar}}
    7: ...]] to halt [[Jacob Brown]]'s [[United States|American]] invaders.
    10: ...tle of Kernstown]] - [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] General [[Jubal Anderson Early|Juba...
    11: ... the [[United States|Union]] following the [[American Civil War]].
  12. River (12397 bytes)
    1: [[Image:Nile_river.jpg|300px|right|thumb|A Feluca sailing down the nile river.Image provided by [ht...
    4: ...e level]], commonly called its mouth, a river typically widens at its end and forms what is known as a...
    7: ...nd leaving a remnant, [[oxbow lake]]. Rivers that carry large amounts of [[sediment]] develop conspicu...
    13: ...he area drained by a river and its tributaries is called its [[watershed]].
    22: ...vers are much different from those of the ocean because the water is [[fresh water|sweet]] (non-salty)...
  13. Phosphorus (11557 bytes)
    8: {{Elementbox_section_physicalprop | color1=#a0ffa0 | color2=black }}
    17: {{Elementbox_heatcapacity_jpmolkat25 | (white)<br />23.824 }}
    26: {{Elementbox_atomicradiuscalc_pm | [[1 E-11 m|98]] }}
    33: {{Elementbox_cas_number | 7723-14-0 }}
    36: {{Elementbox_isotopes_decay | mn=32 | sym=P | na=[[synthetic radioisotope|sy...
  14. Franz Xaver von Baader (10383 bytes)
    5: ...96 he returned from England, and in [[Hamburg]] became acquainted with [[Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi|F. ...
    7: ... the interference in civil matters of the [[Roman Catholic Church]], to which he belonged, and in cons...
    9: ...r reach the end it aims at, and maintains that we cannot throw aside the presuppositions of faith, chu...
    11: ...free and non-temporal act of God's love and will, cannot be speculatively deduced, but must be accepte...
    13: ...ccording to which he has been fashioned. The physical philosophy and anthropology which Baader, in con...
  15. Holocaust (53541 bytes)
    2: ...camps|Concentration camp]] inmates during the Holocaust]]
    4: The '''Holocaust''' was [[Nazi Germany]]'s systematic [[genocid...
    6: ...iderably. Estimates place the total number of Holocaust victims at up to 26 million men, women, and ch...
    10: ... by a large variety of authors to reference large catastrophes and massacres.
    12: ...y') people, who were also targeted during the Holocaust, use the word '''''[[Porajmos]]''''', meaning ...

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