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Hoover: Vacuum cleaner: Hoover Company: Widely used as a noun and verb. [112] De facto loss of trademark in the UK. [127] Hula hoop: Toy hoop Wham-O [128] Indomie: Instant noodle: Indofood: Common in Indonesia and Nigeria as a genericized mark for any instant noodle. Jacuzzi: Hot tub or whirlpool bath Jacuzzi [129] Jandals: Flip-flops: ACTSTA
Hoover index, Edgar Malone Hoover's inequality measure; Lockheed S-3 Viking, nicknamed Hoover; Operation Hoover; Hoover Institution, a public-policy think tank at Stanford University founded by Herbert Hoover, later US president; Hoover League, created by the Republican Party to campaign for the re-election of U.S. president Herbert Hoover
It Ends with Us is a 2024 American romantic drama film directed by Justin Baldoni from a screenplay by Christy Hall, based on the 2016 novel by Colleen Hoover. The film stars Blake Lively alongside Baldoni, Brandon Sklenar, Jenny Slate, and Hasan Minhaj. The story follows florist Lily Bloom (Lively), whose troubled relationship with ...
Hoover was born on December 11, 1979, [5] in Sulphur Springs, Texas, to Vannoy Fite [1] and Eddie Fennell. She grew up in Saltillo, Texas, [6] and she graduated from Saltillo High School in 1998. [7] She married Heath Hoover in 2000, [8] and they have three sons. [9] She graduated from Texas A&M-Commerce with a degree in social work. [10]
Hoover argued that it was the American system of liberty that allowed an individual to advance. Orphaned at an early age, Hoover just as Lincoln had done, had advanced in life on his own initiative.
Hoover is a 2000 American drama film starring Ernest Borgnine as J. Edgar Hoover. [1] [2] [3] Plot. This article needs a plot summary. Please add one in your own words.
Hoover is the great-granddaughter of U.S. President Herbert Hoover. [8] After graduating from college, Hoover moved to Taipei where she got her first job as a research assistant and editor in a Taiwanese law firm; she arrived on the day of the September 11 attacks. Quickly realizing she wanted to be back in the U.S., she returned home in 2002 ...
Hoover and Senator Carter Glass, another gold standard proponent, recognized that they needed to stop deflation by encouraging lending. Hoover was instrumental in passing the Glass–Steagall Act of 1932, which allowed for prime rediscounting at the Federal Reserve, in turn allowing further inflation of credit and bank reserves. [74]