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  2. List of blogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_blogs

    Satirical blog about the interests of upper class white Americans Christian Lander Surviving Grady: English Boston Red Sox blog Red and Denton (screen names) TV Newser: English American television news ticker blog Multi-author TechCrunch: English, French, Japanese Blog covering Web 2.0 products and companies Multi-author The Tehran Times: English

  3. Parent–teacher association - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parentteacher_association

    The National Parent Teacher Association was founded on 17 February 1897, [19] in Washington, D.C., as the National Congress of Mothers by Alice McLellan Birney and Phoebe Apperson Hearst at a meeting of over 2,000 parents, teachers, workers, and legislators. [20]

  4. Blog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blog

    Blog can also be used as a verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog. The emergence and growth of blogs in the late 1990s coincided with the advent of web publishing tools that facilitated the posting of content by non-technical users who did not have much experience with HTML or computer programming.

  5. Double-barrelled name - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double-barrelled_name

    Many double-barrelled names are written without a hyphen, causing confusion as to whether the surname is double-barrelled or not. Notable persons with unhyphenated double-barrelled names include politicians David Lloyd George (who used the hyphen when appointed to the peerage) and Iain Duncan Smith, composers Ralph Vaughan Williams and Andrew Lloyd Webber, military historian B. H. Liddell Hart ...

  6. Comparison of parser generators - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Comparison_of_parser_generators

    Context-free languages are a category of languages (sometimes termed Chomsky Type 2) which can be matched by a sequence of replacement rules, each of which essentially maps each non-terminal element to a sequence of terminal elements and/or other nonterminal elements.