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In 2011 the Spanish Ministry of Culture began maintenance of KOBLI, a tailored version of Koha [13] based on an earlier report. [14] [15] The project was concluded in 2018. [16] In 2014 the Ministry of Culture (Turkey) started to use Koha–Devinim in 1,136 public libraries with more than 17 million items and around 2 million active users. [17]
YWAM Koha is a New Zealand-registered Medical Aid Ship, built in 1968 as the buoy tender Konrad Meisel for the German Government and later owned in South Africa as Isibane. As the Claymore II she provided the essential transport links to the remote Pacific territory of Pitcairn Island from New Zealand and French Polynesia , part-funded by the ...
Kōha in Meiji student culture referred to the faction of students who were showing their "toughness" by wearing the more casual, rough, and traditionally Japanese bushi style of clothing, compared to nanpa [2] who were dandies affecting an elegant, European-style fashion and enjoyed courting girls.
Koha may refer to: Koha (custom), a New Zealand Māori custom of gift giving; Koha (software), an open-source integrated library system; Koha, Iran, a village; Kalju Koha, Estonian politician; Koharu Kusumi, a Japanese pop singer; KOHA-LD, a low-power television station (channel 27) licensed to serve Omaha, Nebraska, United States
The koha reflects the mana of both the giver and the recipient, reflecting what the giver is able to give, and the esteem they hold of the person or group they are making the gift to – and hence plays an important part in cementing good relations, and is taken very seriously, with misunderstanding having the potential to give offence. [2] [3]
Kohavision (shortened to KTV, previously also Koha Vision) is a Kosovan free-to-air television channel launched on September 21, 2000. [2] It was founded by politician and journalist Veton Surroi as part of KOHA Group, a media house currently led by Flaka Surroi .
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The Spectator, writing on 25 January 1908 and prior to the release of the second half of the series, notes a handful of shortcomings including a fleeting portrayal of Homer and a questioning of the historicity of Christ, but states that "the general reader...will find here a great treasury of knowledge" and that "they form an extremely interesting shelfful."