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  1. Maple (3638 bytes)
    1: {{Taxobox_begin | color = lightgreen | name = Maple}}
    2: ...Maple7951.JPG|250px|Red Maple]] | caption = Red Maple flowers }}
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = lightgreen }}
    4: {{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Plant]]ae}}
    5: {{Taxobox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}

Page text matches

  1. Maple (3638 bytes)
    1: {{Taxobox_begin | color = lightgreen | name = Maple}}
    2: ...Maple7951.JPG|250px|Red Maple]] | caption = Red Maple flowers }}
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = lightgreen }}
    4: {{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Plant]]ae}}
    5: {{Taxobox_divisio_entry | taxon = [[Flowering plant|Magnoliophyta]]}}
  2. Flowering plant (29088 bytes)
    1: ...or = lightgreen | name = Magnoliophyta (Flowering plants)}}
    3: {{Taxobox_begin_placement | color = lightgreen }}
    4: {{Taxobox_regnum_entry | taxon = [[Plant]]ae}}
    6: {{Taxobox_end_placement}}
    7: ...axobox_section_subdivision | color = lightgreen | plural_taxon = [[Class (biology)|Classes]]}}
  3. List of flowers (2544 bytes)
    1: The [[flower]]s produced by [[flowering plants]] (Division Magnoliophyta) are of great inter...
    3: ... then cleared out by late fall (autumn) after the plants have finished flowering.
    5: ...takes between twelve and twenty-four months to complete its lifecycle.
    7: A '''[[Perennial plant|perennial]]''' is a plant that lives for several years and may not even ...
    9: ... several years (2-100 years). After flowering the plant will die, giving seeds (and therefore flowers)...
  4. Bassoon (11661 bytes)
    2: ...cal piece of wood, doubled over onto itself, and split into several sections so it can be disassembled...
    6: ...the modern instrument,frequently constructed of maple, with thick walls to allow finger-holes to be dr...
    10: ...knowledge made possible great improvements in the playability of the instrument. A Dutch painting, "De...
    16: ...he desired tuning. <!--The bocal, made of ... and plated with ... and must be carefully matched to the...
    18: ...istance between the widely-spaced holes with a complex system of keywork, which extends throughout nea...
  5. Banjo (6143 bytes)
    2: [[Image:BanjTony.JPG|right|200px|Musician playing the banjo]]
    6: ...ted right hand, although there are many different playing styles.
    8: ...onstruction vary, but are often combinations of maple, walnut, and ebony for fingerboards, pegheads, a...
    10: ...n]] and gut used on simple fretless banjos and by players of the classical banjo style. The two most c...
    12: ...ideas. He worked with a New York drum maker to replace the banjar's skin-covered gourd with the moder...
  6. Canada (35540 bytes)
    1: ...e you have arguments or evidence to the contrary, please provide them on the talk page, and wait until...
    3: ...or Canada. To keep this overview article concise, please consider adding information instead to one of...
    10: ...e for [[as of 2005|June 2005]] is 32.2 million people [http://www.statcan.ca/english/edu/clock/populat...
    21: ...tates|U.S.]], with which it has had a long and complex relationship (''see'' [[U.S.-Canada relations]]...
    86: ... that the [[Aboriginal peoples in Canada|First Peoples]] have inhabited parts of what is now called Ca...
  7. Maine (17312 bytes)
    36: ...r possibility for the name 'Maine' is that the people living on islands along the coast of Maine used ...
    38: Originally settled in [[1607]] by the [[Plymouth Company]], the coastal areas of western Mai...
    72: ... political organization into local units. For example, the [[Northwest Aroostook, Maine]] "territory" ...
    90: ...ry products, cattle, blueberries, apples, and [[maple sugar]]. [[Aroostook County, Maine|Aroostook Cou...
    92: Maine ports play a key role in national transportation. Around 1...
  8. Wisconsin (18812 bytes)
    40: ..." or "Great Rock." ''Wisconsin'' originally was applied to the Wisconsin River, and later to the area ...
    47: ...ean Nicolet]] became Wisconsin's first European explorer. The French controlled the area until [[1763]...
    51: ...te due to its residents being relatively equally split between voting for the [[United States Democrat...
    65: ... popularly termed "socially progressive". For example, in [[1982]] sexual orientation was added by the...
    79: ... largest cities. In the southwest, the [[Western Upland]] is a rugged landscape with a mix of forest a...
  9. Vermont (39851 bytes)
    36: ...he [[Green Mountains]] in the west and [[Lake Champlain]] in the northwest. It borders [[Massachusetts...
    38: ...amous for its scenery, [[dairy]] products and [[maple syrup]], Vermont has long been known for its [[L...
    44: ...iver itself is part of New Hampshire). [[Lake Champlain]], the major lake in Vermont, is the sixth-lar...
    46: ...northwest off Lake Champlain is the fertile [[Champlain Valley]]. In the south of the valley is [[Bomo...
    48: ... state is covered by forest, the rest in meadow, uplands, lakes, ponds and swampy wetlands.
  10. Rhode Island (15004 bytes)
    3: ... = The State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations |
    37: ...originally consisted of the mainland [[Providence Plantations]], which was originally all part of the ...
    40: In 1614 the Dutch explorer Adriaen Block visited the island that is now ...
    42: ... He called the site Providence and declared it a place of religious freedom for [[Baptist]] settlers....
    44: ...assachusetts]] for expressing her beliefs that people could talk to God by themselves, not necessarily...
  11. West Virginia (24258 bytes)
    46: ...ern part of Virginia and plantation owners in the plains and tidewater regions. Under the United Stat...
    70: ...g|right|thumbnail|Shaded relief map of Cumberland Plateau and Ridge and Valley Appalachians on the Vir...
    72: ...egion is extremely rugged in most areas. (The two plateaus are essentially the same, the difference be...
    74: ...rdwood]] [[forest]] of [[oak]], [[chestnut]], [[maple]], [[beech]], and [[Eastern White Pine|white pin...
    78: ...e for a long time. This process of rounding up people already spread around here and there results in ...
  12. List of reference tables (55289 bytes)
    10: Please use the new section editing feature if your b...
    17: ...s/List_of_mis|11,]] [[Special:Allpages/List_of_people_by_name:_Zz|12,]] [[Special:Allpages/List_of_tel...
    29: **[[Lists of people]]
    63: **List of [[Resin identification code|plastic recycling codes]]
    90: *[[Classification of finite simple groups]]
  13. String instrument (8163 bytes)
    4: ...AGK bass1 full.jpg|thumb|The string bass is often plucked or bowed depending on the genre and piece.]]
    7: ...ents like the [[cello]] and [[rebec]] are usually played by drawing a [[bow (music)|bow]] across the s...
    8: ... played the [[electric guitar]] this way, for example).
    10: ...r example is the [[hammered dulcimer]], where the player herself wields the hammers. It should be not...
    12: ...he maneuver can also be executed with a finger on plucked and bowed instruments, where it gives equall...
  14. Tree (23723 bytes)
    3: ...shrub]] for comparison). Compared with most other plant forms, trees are long-lived. A few species of ...
    5: ...g [[orchard]] crops (e.g. [[apple]]s). Trees also play an important role in many of the world's [[myth...
    9: ...gy)|orders]] and [[family (biology)|families]] of plants. Trees thus show a wide variety of growth for...
    11: ...lant]]s and conifers. The listing below gives examples of many well known trees and how they are typic...
    13: ...fined largely by the trees that inhabit them; examples are [[rainforest]] and [[taiga]] (see [[ecozone...
  15. Crossbow (7510 bytes)
    2: ... invention in China, but the crossbow nonetheless played a significant role in the history of European...
    10: A crossbow contains a string which is held in place by a nut when the bolt is loaded and the cross...
    12: ...nds to loosen over time, and must be carefully respliced when appropriate.
    18: ...rly 1400s. [[Leonardo da Vinci]] designed many complicated triggers for crossbows, ultimately producin...
    28: ...le of the [[15th century]]. The advantage of a simple wooden prod is that the bow as a whole was light...
  16. Ice hockey (16008 bytes)
    1: ...]. It is one of the world's fastest sports, with players on [[skates]] capable of going high speeds o...
    5: ..., subject to certain restrictions. One of the six players is typically a ''[[goaltender]]'', whose pri...
    8: ...final change. When players are substituted during play, it is called changing ''on the fly''.
    10: ...ed with a ''[[faceoff]]''. There are two rules of play in ice hockey that limit the movement of the pu...
    12: ...mpetitive leagues, each team may carry at most 23 players on its game roster, two of whom are typicall...
  17. Dollhouse (4191 bytes)
    3: ...or play value, but the making, decorating, and display of dollhouses also forms a [[hobby]] for [[adul...
    7: ...plexity from ad-hoc structures to sophisticated replicas of actual houses.
    11: ...a number of [[magazine]]s on the subject, with supplies available from shops and elsewhere. Dollhouse ...
    16: ...l ways to acquire a dollhouse. The majority of people buy a ready-made and decorated house first and p...
    18: The same principle applies to miniature objects to go inside dollhouses, ...
  18. Leaf (20580 bytes)
    2: ... [[food]] and [[water]], and are modified in some plants for other purposes. The comparable structures...
    4: [[image:Leaf.jpg|thumb|250px|Fallen leaf of a maple. Note areas where chlorophyll (green) has been d...
    8: A structurally complete leaf of an [[flowering plant|angiosperm]] consists of a '''''petiole''''' (...
    10: A leaf is considered to be a plant organ, typically consisting of the following t...
    16: ...ering the leaf. It forms the boundary between the plant and the external world. The epidermis serves s...
  19. Guitar (36953 bytes)
    4: ...layed with the [[fingerpicking|fingers]], or a [[plectrum]] ([[guitar pick]]). The sound is produced ...
    8: ...lectric guitar|electric]] (i.e. with electrical amplification) or both.
    15: [[image:Elam-tar.jpg|thumb|left|Figurines playing the ancestor of the Guitar. Excavated in Sus...
    16: ...a carvings and statues recovered from the Iranian Plateau. The name, guitar, is a combination of two w...
    20: ... throughout the World. The guitar is a minute example of how Persian culture influenced the world.
  20. Timpani (31735 bytes)
    3: ...ni evolved from [[military]] drums to become a staple of the [[Classical music|classical]] [[orchestra...
    5: ...ich the Italian word descends. A [[musician]] who plays the timpani is known as a '''''timpanist'''''....
    18: ...mber of tuning [[screw]]s called ''tension rods'' placed regularly along the circumference. The head's...
    20: ...tributes to the tone quality of the drum. For example, [[Hemisphere|hemispheric]] bowls produce bright...
    22: ...et]] ''La cré¡´ion du monde'', the timpanist must play the F sharp at the bottom of the treble clef!

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