User:นคเรศ/alllist/2
< User:นคเรศ | alllist
|
Last Q:
5 December 2024
|
Vol.1 No.1: 3 (Q201) — Jenna Jameson (Q400)
No.1 3—Sagas of Icelanders
[edit]- 3 (Q201): natural number
- 4 (Q202): natural number
- 5 (Q203): natural number
- zero (Q204): integer number
- infinity (Q205): mathematical concept
- Stephen Harper (Q206): 22nd prime minister of Canada from 2006 to 2015
- George W. Bush (Q207): President of the United States from 2001 to 2009
- rakfisk (Q208): Norwegian fish dish made from trout or char
- rectangle (Q209): quadrilateral with four right angles
- right angle (Q210): 90° angle (π/2 radians): an angle that bisects the angle formed by two halves of a straight line
- Latvia (Q211): sovereign state in northeastern Europe
- Ukraine (Q212): country in Eastern Europe
- Czech Republic (Q213): country in Central Europe
- Slovakia (Q214): country in Central Europe
- Slovenia (Q215): country in Central Europe
- Vilnius (Q216): capital and largest city of Lithuania
- Moldova (Q217): country in Eastern Europe
- Romania (Q218): country in Southeast Europe
- Bulgaria (Q219): country in Southeast Europe
- Rome (Q220): capital and largest city of Italy
- North Macedonia (Q221): country in southeastern Europe
- Albania (Q222): country in southeastern Europe
- Greenland (Q223): autonomous country within the Kingdom of Denmark on several islands including world's largest island by the same name
- Croatia (Q224): country in Central Europe
- Bosnia and Herzegovina (Q225): country in Southeast Europe
- Nuuk (Q226): capital of Greenland
- Azerbaijan (Q227): country in the Caucasus in Eastern Europe and Western Asia
- Andorra (Q228): sovereign microstate between France and Spain, in Western Europe
- Cyprus (Q229): Mediterranean island nation in Europe
- Georgia (Q230): country in the Caucasus
- Walloon Region (Q231): region of Belgium
- Kazakhstan (Q232): sovereign state in Eastern Europe and Central Asia
- Malta (Q233): sovereign state in Southern Europe situated on an archipelago in the Mediterranean Sea
- Flanders (Q234): land of the Flemish people
- Monaco (Q235): sovereign city-state on the French Riviera
- Montenegro (Q236): country in southeastern Europe
- Vatican City (Q237): Holy See's independent state, an enclave within Rome, Italy
- San Marino (Q238): sovereign state in southern Europe, enclaved within Italy
- City of Brussels (Q239): municipality and capital city of Belgium
- Brussels-Capital Region (Q240): city and region of Belgium
- Cuba (Q241): sovereign state situated on an island in the Caribbean Sea
- Belize (Q242): sovereign state in Central America
- Eiffel Tower (Q243): tower located on the Champ de Mars in Paris, France
- Barbados (Q244): island nation in the Caribbean
- Raspberry Pi (Q245): series of low-cost single-board computers used for educational purposes and embedded systems
- Volkswagen (Q246): German automotive brand; manufacturing subsidiary of Volkswagen Group
- Volkswagen Golf (Q247): small family car manufactured by Volkswagen
- Intel (Q248): American multinational technology corporation
- wireless communication (Q249): transfer of information or power that does not require the use of physical wires
- computer keyboard (Q250): device comprising an arrangement of buttons or keys used to input text in computers
- Java (Q251): object-oriented programming language
- Indonesia (Q252): island country in Southeast Asia and Oceania
- QWERTY (Q253): keyboard layout where the first line is "QWERTYUIOP"
- Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (Q254): Austrian composer of the Classical period (1756-1791)
- Ludwig van Beethoven (Q255): German composer (1770–1827)
- Turkish (Q256): Oghuz Turkic language of the Turkish people
- Mandelbrot set (Q257): fractal named after mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot
- South Africa (Q258): country in southern Africa
- Q259 none
- Jean-François Champollion (Q260): French classical scholar (1790-1832)
- Linkin Park (Q261): American rock band
- Algeria (Q262): country in North Africa
- Wikisource (Q263): online library that collects open-content source material
- Hurricane Sandy (Q264): Category 3 Atlantic hurricane in 2012
- Uzbekistan (Q265): sovereign state in Central Asia
- Drosera (Q266): genus of plants
- Cafeteria (Q267): genus of marine bicosoecid
- Poznań (Q268): Capital of the Greater Poland Voivodeship in west-central Poland
- Tashkent (Q269): capital of Uzbekistan
- Warsaw (Q270): capital and largest city of Poland
- Prytanée National Militaire (Q271): French military school
- Paul Morand (Q272): French writer (1888-1976)
- Islay (Q273): southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
- Ardbeg (Q274): Scotch whisky distillery
- Forth Bridge (Q275): cantilever bridge in the east of Scotland, carries the Edinburgh to Aberdeen railway line across Firth of Forth
- Eurovision Song Contest (Q276): annual song competition held among the member countries of the European Broadcasting Union
- Kilchoman distillery (Q277): distillery that produces single malt Scotch whisky on Islay
- Talisker distillery (Q278): whisky distillery in Highland, Scotland, UK
- Modena (Q279): Italian city and municipality
- Lagavulin Distillery (Q280): Scotch whisky distillery in Lagavulin, Islay, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, UK
- whisky (Q281): type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented grain mash
- wine (Q282): alcoholic drink typically made from grapes through the fermentation process
- water (Q283): chemical compound with raw molecular formula H₂O; main constituent of the fluids of most living organisms
- cognac (Q284): alcoholic beverage; variety of brandy
- Cognac (Q285): commune in Charente, New Aquitaine, France
- leather (Q286): durable and flexible material created by the tanning of animal rawhide and skin
- wood (Q287): fibrous material from trees or other plants
- Tours (Q288): city and commune in Indre-et-Loire, Centre-Val de Loire, France
- television (Q289): telecommunication medium for transmitting and receiving moving images
- biological sex (Q290): biological system that determines an individual's sexually reproductive function
- pornography (Q291): explicit portrayal of sexual acts and intercourse in media
Russian (Q292): East Slavic language- Eurymorion (Q293): genus of arachnids
- Icelandic (Q294): North Germanic language mainly spoken in Iceland
- Q295 none
- Claude Monet (Q296): French painter (1840–1926)
- Diego Velázquez (Q297): Spanish painter (1599-1660)
- Chile (Q298): country in South America
- Vidov (Q299): village and municipality in the South Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic
- Sagas of Icelanders (Q300): group of narratives
No.2 El Greco—Jenna Jameson
[edit]- El Greco (Q301): Greek artist, painter, sculptor and architect, (1541–1614)
- Jesus (Q302): central figure of Christianity (6 or 4 BC – AD 30 or 33)
- Elvis Presley (Q303): American singer and actor (1935–1977)
- Q304 none
- corporal punishment (Q305): punishment which is intended to cause physical pain to a person
- Sebastián Piñera (Q306): Chilean entrepreneur and politician (1949–2024)
- Galileo Galilei (Q307): Italian polymath (1564–1642)
- Mercury (Q308): smallest and closest planet to the sun in the Solar System
- history (Q309): past events and their tracks or records
- Taumatawhakatangihangakōauauotamateapōkaiwhenuakitānatahu (Q310): hill in New Zealand
- Père Lachaise Cemetery (Q311): cemetery in Paris, France
- Apple (Q312): American multinational technology company based in Cupertino, California
- Venus (Q313): planet second-closest to the Sun in the Solar System
- funeral litre (Q314): painted funeral band on the internal or external walls of a church
- language (Q315): structured system of communication
- love (Q316): strong, positive emotion based on affection
- dictatorship (Q317): autocratic form of government which is ruled by a sole leader
- galaxy (Q318): large gravitationally bound system of stars and interstellar matter
- Jupiter (Q319): fifth planet from the Sun and largest planet in the Solar System
- Michelle Bachelet (Q320): president of Chile
- Milky Way (Q321): spiral galaxy in the Local Group containing the Solar System; its appearance across the night sky in areas with little to no light pollution
- Llanfairpwllgwyngyll (Q322): village in Anglesey, Wales, United Kingdom
- Big Bang (Q323): hypothetical begin of the Universe through expansion out of an infinitely small and infinitely dense state
- Uranus (Q324): seventh planet in the Solar System from the Sun
- digital dark age (Q325): conceptual situation in which large swathes of historic digitised materials are inaccessible
- Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle (Q326): Chilean politician and president
- Brittany (Q327): cultural area located in northwestern France
- English Wikipedia (Q328): English-language edition of Wikipedia
- Nicolas Sarkozy (Q329): 23rd President of the French Republic from 2007 to 2012
- Battle of Marignano (Q330): 1515 battle between Switzerland and France
- Ricardo Lagos (Q331): Chilean politician
- Neptune (Q332): eighth and farthest planet from the Sun in the Solar System
- astronomy (Q333): scientific study of celestial objects and phenomena
- Singapore (Q334): sovereign island country and city-state in maritime Southeast Asia
- Patricio Aylwin (Q335): Chilean politician and former president (1918-2016)
- science (Q336): systematic endeavor that builds and organizes knowledge, and the set of knowledge produced by this system
- Lake Chaubunagungamaug (Q337): lake in the town of Webster, Massachusetts, United States
- cosmology (Q338): scientific study of the origin, evolution, and eventual fate of the universe
- Pluto (Q339): dwarf planet in the Solar System
- Montreal (Q340): largest city in Quebec, Canada
- free software (Q341): software distributed under terms that allow users to freely run, study, change and distribute it and modified versions
- Quimper (Q342): commune in Finistère, France
- La Flèche (Q343): commune in Sarthe, France
- future (Q344): events, developments or states in time which have yet to occur
- Mary (Q345): mother of Jesus
- Louis IX of France (Q346): King of France from 1226 to 1270
- Liechtenstein (Q347): country in Central Europe
- time capsule (Q348): cache of goods or data secured for some time to be opened at a date in the future
- sport (Q349): forms of recreational activity, usually physical
- Cambridge (Q350): city in Cambridgeshire, England
- Yellowstone National Park (Q351): first national park in the world, located in Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho in the United States
- Adolf Hitler (Q352): dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945
- Blanche of Castile (Q353): Queen consort of France (1188–1252)
- Piet Kraak (Q354): Dutch footballer and football coach (1921-1984)
- Facebook (Q355): American online social media and social networking service
- Google+ (Q356): social networking service
- Guantanamo Bay detention camp (Q357): United States military prison at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Base, Cuba
- heritage site (Q358): general term for a site of cultural heritage for a specific country (please avoid as a P31 value except for large sites containing multiple entities)
- WikiLeaks (Q359): NGO owned by Icelandic company Sunshine Press Productions ehf that has published news leaks provided by anonymous sources
- Julian Assange (Q360): Australian editor, publisher, and activist (born 1971)
- World War I (Q361): global war originating in Europe, 1914–1918
- World War II (Q362): 1939–1945 global conflict
- World War III (Q363): hypothetical future global conflict
- GitHub (Q364): hosting service for software projects using Git
- Cologne (Q365): most populous city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- corruption (Q366): form of dishonesty or criminal offense undertaken by a person or organization entrusted with a position of authority, to acquire illicit benefit or abuse power for one's private gain
- Wikibooks (Q367): collaborative development of free textbooks
- Augusto Pinochet (Q368): dictator of Chile from 1973 to 1990
- Wikiquote (Q369): open collection of quotes that anyone can edit
- Wikiversity (Q370): Wikiproject focused on learning, teaching, research, service and ideas materials and activities
- !!! (Q371): American dance-punk band from California
- We Live in Public (Q372): 2009 documentary film
- Wikivoyage (Q373): free online travel guide that anyone can edit
- vodka (Q374): distilled alcoholic beverage
- waffle (Q375): batter- or dough-based food cooked between two patterned, shaped plates
- clock (Q376): instrument that measures the passage of time
- Yanka Kupala (Q377): Belarusian writer (1882–1942)
May (Q378): fifth month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars- František Plánička (Q379): Czech association football player (1904-1996)
- Meta Platforms (Q380): American multinational technology corporation
- Ubuntu (Q381): Linux distribution developed by Canonical
January (Q382): first month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars
January (Q383): first month in the Julian and Gregorian calendars- Skopje (Q384): capital city of North Macedonia
- Gdynia (Q385): city in Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland
- Bixi (Q386): bicycle-sharing system in Montreal, Québec, Canada
- Old Bazaar (Q387): bazaar in Skopje, North Macedonia
- Linux (Q388): family of Unix-like operating systems
- Andrew and variants (Q389): male name, and its local variations
- Valdemar (Q390): Wikimedia disambiguation page
- Saint Catherine Street (Q391): primary commercial artery of downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada
- Bob Dylan (Q392): American singer-songwriter (born 1941)
- Szczecin (Q393): capital city of the West Pomeranian Voivodeship, Poland
- metrology (Q394): science of measurement and its application
- mathematics (Q395): field of study
- U2 (Q396): Irish rock band
- Latin (Q397): Indo-European language of the Italic branch
- Bahrain (Q398): country in the Persian Gulf
- Armenia (Q399): sovereign state in the South Caucasus region of Eurasia
- Jenna Jameson (Q400): American former pornographic actor (born 1974)