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A reference to onycha as an annual plant [27] may be confusion with its annual yield. Rock rose usually produces labdanum annually, during the summer, to protect itself from the heat. A reference to onycha as a root [36] may be due to the practice of boiling the twigs and roots for labdanum extraction [37] [38] [39] or the use of cistus roots ...
The Serbian Wikipedia (Serbian: Википедија на српском језику, Vikipedija na srpskom jeziku) is the Serbian-language version of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Created on 16 February 2003, it reached its 100,000th article on 20 November 2009 before getting to another milestone with the 200,000th article on 6 July ...
Theclinesthes onycha, the cycad blue [1] is a small butterfly found in Eastern Australia, coastal and inland from Cape York Peninsula to the southern-most part of New South Wales. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Gallery
This film is based on a true story about events in Belgrade in 1979. Jesen u mojoj ulici [1] Autmn on My Street: Miloš Pušić: Filip Đurić, Nikola Spasojević, Milica Trifunović, Nada Dobanović, Nikola Ilić: Comedy/Youth drama: Besa [1] Solemn Promise: Srđan Karanović: Miki Manojlović, Iva Krajnc, Radivoje Bukvić: Drama/Romance film ...
In 1972, he entered Shota Rustaveli Theatre and Film State University, the faculty of film studies. In 1974, he moved to the faculty of film production and graduated in 1979. The same year he started working at a film studio “Georgian Film” as a film director. From 1980, he is a member of Film Union, and from 1981 a member of Writers' Union.
It was not referred to as “onycha” until the book of Exodus was rewritten in Greek— a very long time after the Babylonian exile. They may have replaced the word "shecheleth" with the word “onycha” because of the fingernail-like markings on the flower petals of the cistus or the resemblance of the black resin with the black onyx stone.
Nickelodeon (Serbian: Nickelodeon Srbija) is the Serbian version of Nick, launched on April 28, 2013 along with the Slovenian-language version of Nick. [1] It broadcasts in Serbia, North Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Montenegro.
The fact that it was the first Yugoslav film of its kind made Leptirica widely remembered as "the scariest film ever" by a number of people across former Yugoslavia. [1] [4] After the film was first aired, there were numerous rumors across Yugoslavia about people dying of heart attack while watching the film, but none of them was ever confirmed ...