Lowercase ɐ (in two story form) is used in the International Phonetic Alphabet to identify the near-open central vowel. A variant, turned alpha, ɒ, is also used in the IPA as the open back rounded vowel.
It was used in the 18th century by Edward Lhuyd and William Pryce as phonetic character for the Cornish language. In their books, both Ɐ and ɐ have been used. [1] It was used in the 19th century by Charles Sanders Peirce as a logical symbol for 'un-American' ("unamerican").[2]
The symbol ∀ has the same shape of a capital turned A, sans serif. It is used to represent universal quantification in predicate logic. When it appears in a formula together with a predicate variable, they are referred to as a universal quantifier. In traffic engineering it is used to represent flow, the number of units (vehicles) passing a point in a unit of time.
Ɐ is encoded in Unicode at U+2C6F Ɐ latin capital letter turned a (HTML: Ɐ) in the block Latin Extended-C, though very few fonts support it as of 2008, and ɐ is encoded in Unicode at U+0250 ɐ latin small letter turned a (HTML: ɐ) in the block IPA Extensions.
The similar turned alphas are at U+2C70 Ɒ latin capital letter turned alpha (HTML: Ɒ capital), and at U+0252 ɒ latin small letter turned alpha (HTML: ɒ).
The mathematical symbol ∀ is encoded at U+2200 ∀ for all (HTML: ∀ ∀), in the mathematical operators and symbols in Unicode, and only in a sans-serif form.
The Symbol font includes ∀ at position 34 (which would
produce the quotation mark in ASCII and Unicode).
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The Uralic Phonetic Alphabet (UPA) or Finno-Ugric transcription system is a phonetic transcription or notational system used predominantly for the transcription and reconstruction of Uralic languages. It was first published in 1901 by Eemil Nestor Setälä, a Finnish linguist.
This page contains rare Unicode characters. You may need to install Charis SIL, Code2000, etc. to view some characters.
Unlike the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) notational standard which concentrates on accurately and uniquely transcribing the phonemes of a language, the UPA is also used to denote the functional categories of a language, as well as their phonetic quality. For this reason, it is not possible to automatically convert a UPA transcription into an IPA one.
The basic UPA characters are based on the Finnish alphabet where possible, with extensions taken from Cyrillic and Greek orthographies. Small-capital letters and some novel diacritics are also used.
Alfred successfully defended his kingdom against the Viking attempt at conquest, and by the time of his death had become the dominant ruler in England.[1] He is the only English monarch to be accorded the epithet "the Great".[2][3] Alfred was the first King of the West Saxons to style himself "King of the Anglo-Saxons". Details of his life are described in a work by the 10th century Welsh scholar and bishop Asser. Alfred's reputation has been that of a learned and
merciful man who encouraged education and improved his kingdom's legal system and military structure.
The meanings of these terms have more depth when their Anglo-Saxon origins are considered. The concept of bookland arose in the seventh century and referred to land that could be 'alienated' (i.e., disposed of) at will. It evolved to resemble ownership in the modern sense. Folkland was land held under ancient, unwritten folk-law or custom and by that custom it could not be alienated (i.e., removed) from the kin of the holder, except under special circumstances. No such claim by the kin could be made on bookland. The definition of those ancient folk-laws and customs, and the definition of the word folkland, has long been the subject of controversy. The model suggested by the historian Patrick Wormald, given in the definition above, allows for the graceful sidestepping of that controversy.[2]
Muney Jordan uploaded a video 2 hours ago
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Throwback: Muney Jordan Wildin Out In Zone1 Wit Da Fam (ATL) 2007
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Untamed - The Darkside of Town (Dir by Pedro Films)
Free Download 1. Another World (Dark Forest) 02:52
2. Planet of Amethyst 01:54
3. I Don't 02:01
4. Dances With Killers (Clipped Remix) 01:50
5. I, Witness (& Reprise) 03:05
6. Superbillowy 01:48
7. Memphis After the Bomb-Drop 01:48
8. Razey Luurch Circuit 01:43
9. Cult T.V. (Ancientmonk Remix) 01:39
10. To The Mountains / And The Sea 03:02
about
sampling etc. -- Mojave Music
This field records your latest roll at its top.
Modified results that would produce a number less than one display as one.
Fighting: 2
Short Blades: 2
Throwing: 2
Dodging: 1
Stealth: 3
Stabbing: 2
For happy looking emoticons you usually want to use eyes that are high up. The best characters to use for these are ^, ´, `, or ⌒ among others. The best characters to use for mouths are ones like ▽, ∀ or ω if you want to be cute. You can also add * or # for rosey cheeks or add waving arms with things like \, /, ヽ or ノ. You can also always throw in stars or hearts too.(●´∀`●) (`・ω・´)” ヽ(;▽;)ノ
ヽ(;▽;)ノ (*´・v・) (((o(*゚▽゚*)o)))
☆*:.。. o(≧▽≦)o .。.:*☆ (⌒▽⌒)☆ ⊂((・▽・))⊃
(≧∇≦)/ (´∇ノ`*)ノ (・◇・)
( ´ ▽ ` )ノ (^_^) ( ̄ー ̄)
(*^▽^*) (^▽^) (’-’*)
∩( ・ω・)∩ (*≧▽≦) \(^ ^)/
O(≧∇≦)O ( ´∀`) (^~^)
\(@ ̄∇ ̄@)/ (☆^O^☆)Since this is the first pack in the series, here’s a little bit of introduction. While creating the sounds for this project, my goal was to treat the SID chip not only as a chiptune instrument, but also as a beautiful sounding analog synthesizer that it essentially is. Thus, these sample packs will include some famous SID sounds, but also some classic synth sounds you probably wouldn’t expect to hear comming from a C64. All samples are recorded 100% dry, with zero processing applied outside the SID for maximum autenticity (zero EQ, zero noise reduction).
@JSmithOTI Haha, nice. Are you back from vacation now? We should get the Super Sunday show going again.
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JSmith @JSmithOTI 2h
@Ohmwrecker Relative used to w
ork in military munitions. Best I got was a training dud bomb. Badass, but not as awesome as yours!
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Ryan @Ohmwrecker 2h
@DraculaFetus @ActionScottie Oh it's been claimed essentially, but it hasn't been transferred to me yet. The process at Google is slow.
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JSmith @JSmithOTI 2h
@RockLeeSmile @NorthernlionLP thank you! Great time out here but I surely miss you guys and #NLSS
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Skullgirls @Skullgirls 2h
In case you missed it: #Skullgirls' newest cast member is none other than chair-wielding
ALL THE WORDS OF WIZSDOM BUT NONE OF HEM AREM INE
IL ED U THROUZ THE VALLEY AND HURSZ YOU THRUG THE VIEN
HUG A TREZ
HUG A BUEAR
HIG A FEEEZL
LHHUGGH WH WPHWHWERHEWHERWHERWHERRR
Did you know...
From Wikipedia's newest content:
... that Franklin D. Roosevelt, Martin Van Buren and Henry James all either lived in or visited the townhouses on Elk Street (pictured) in the Lafayette Park Historic District in Albany, New York?
... that Sir Robert Peel couldn't be bothered to fix his cotton mills, so he proposed an Act of Parliament to do it for him?
... that the recently discovered Eocypselus rowei may be ancestral to both hummingbirds and swifts?
... that former British National Party fundraiser Jim Dowson is registered as the leader of the recently founded loyalist party Protestant Coalition?
... that Richard Buck opened the first session of the Virginia General Assembly at Jamestown, Virginia on July 30, 1619 with a prayer?
... that stolen beer bottles once led to the postponement of a football cup semi-final at Stangmore Park?
... that Du Jiahao, acting governor of China's Hunan province, began his career as a farm tool factory worker?
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Today's articles for improvementHackerspace – For Dummies – Aboriginal sacred site
The Raifuku shrine is actually based on two real-life shrines in Onomichi: the shrine building itself is from Ushitora-jinja, while the stairs and surroundings are based on Misode-tenmanguu.
Yurie's home is based on a house on the mainland, so in reality she wouldn't have needed to use the ferry to get to school.
The bench the four girls sit on in the title page picture is real. It offers a nice view of Onomichi's port and the bridge.
The depicted junior high scho
ol is based on the Tsuchido elementary school in Onomichi.
The city that Miko and Shoukichi escape to in the second unaired episode (eleventh in the overall chronology) is Fukuyama, as indicated by its position to the east of Onomich
i on the prefecture map, several shots of the Fukuyama Castle and, most notably, the statue in front of Fukuyama station. The playground where they wind up after dark still exists to this day and can be found on the castle grounds.
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La Femme D'Argent (1997) was sampled in
Sunrise by Just a Band (2010)
J'ai Dormi Sous L'eau (1997) was sampled in
06:10 - We All Fall Through the Air by The Kleptones (2006)
Le Soleil Est Près De Moi (1997) was sampled in
Departure (Paris 96) by Theophilus London (2010)
Les Professionnels (1997) was sampled in
All I Need by Air (1998)
All I Need (1998) was sampled in
Intro (Optional) by Unkle (1998)
Legalise It by UB40 (1998)
Side a (Part 2/3) by Skalpel (2001)
Ce Matin-Là (1998) was sampled in
Side a (Part 2/3) by Skalpel (2001)
Remember (1998) was sampled in
Side a (Part 2/3) by Skalpel (2001)
Sexy Boy (1998) was sampled in
Plug in Baby by Muse (2001)
Give Me a Beat by Girl Talk (2008)
Ce Matin La (2000) was sampled in
Lil B Smoking Young Blunts Remix by Lil B (2012)
Venus (2003) was sampled in
Let the Games Begin by Yak Ballz and Vast Aire (2004)
Weird by Young Zee and Mr. Green (2012)
Alone in Kyoto (2004) was sampled in
Outro (Kollegah Album) by Kollegah (2008)
Stationen by Ison & Fille feat. Stor and Aleks (2010)
Surfing on a Rocket (2004) was sampled in
Tax Evasion by Charles Hamilton (2010)
Moustache!