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A complete listing and criticism of all English translations of at least one of the three cantiche (parts) was made by Cunningham in 1966. [12] The table below summarises Cunningham's data with additions between 1966 and the present, many of which are taken from the Dante Society of America's yearly North American bibliography [13] and Società Dantesca Italiana [] 's international ...
Tatyana was born in Voroshilovgrad on 14 May 1972. Her father was a military commissioned officer. Her mother was a technologist at the factory. Soon after her birth, the family moved to Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, where Tatyana attended the school No.4 and started to study in a local music school.
It is named after how most of the water in the river gets into the river: from snowmelt. The river starts in the Khamar-Daban mountains, where snow melting during warm weather (and rainfall) gets into the river and runs down the mountain. It is 173 kilometres (107 mi) long, and has a drainage basin of 3,020 square kilometres (1,170 sq mi). [1]
Kai (English: / k aɪ /) in Danish and Norwegian (often spelled Kay or Kaj in other European languages including English), a little boy who lives in a large city, in the garret of a building across the street from the home of Gerda, his playmate, whom he loves dearly. He falls victim to the splinters of the troll-mirror and the blandishments of ...
Snezhnaya, a river in Russia with the feminine form of the placename Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name.
The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night (1888), subtitled A Plain and Literal Translation of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, is the only complete English language translation of One Thousand and One Nights (the Arabian Nights) to date – a collection of Middle Eastern and South Asian stories and folk tales compiled in Arabic during the Islamic Golden Age (8th−13th centuries) – by ...
The 2011–2013 Russian protests, which some English language media referred to as the Snow Revolution (Russian: Снежная революция, romanized: Snezhnaya revolyutsiya), [13] began in 2011 (as protests against the 2011 Russian legislative election results) and continued into 2012 and 2013.
Full translation from English. Croatian: 2001: Stjepan A. Szabo: Partial translation in narrative form. 2006: Slavko Peleh: Full translation using the German translation partially. Low German: 2001 [13] Herbert Strehmel: Oriya: 2001 [13] Mahendra Kumar Mishra: Prose translation. Udmurt: 2001 [13] Anatoli Uvarov: Summary. Veps: 2003 [13] Nina ...