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A mid-17th century painting by Jacob Duck, called The Cotillion, is the earliest possible reference to a dance with this name.. The name cotillion appears to have been in use as a dance-name at the beginning of the 18th century but, though it was only ever identified as a sort of country dance, it is impossible to say of what it consisted at that early date.
Việt Nam Ký Ức. General entertainment (mainly Vietnamese culture programme and old Vietnamese movies) SCTV22. SSPORT1. Sports SCTV4K: High Definition 4K VTC5:
DatVietVAC (or Dat Viet VAC) is a Vietnamese media, entertainment and technology group. [1] [2] Founded in 1994 by Dinh Ba Thanh, [3] it is described as Vietnam's first and largest media company and launched the first private TV channel in the country. [4] The group operates the major Vietnamese OTT streaming platform VieON. [5] [6]
The Vietnamese Wikipedia initially went online in November 2002, with a front page and an article about the Internet Society.The project received little attention and did not begin to receive significant contributions until it was "restarted" in October 2003 [3] and the newer, Unicode-capable MediaWiki software was installed soon after.
Cotillion is an 18–19th century French dance. Cotillion may also refer to: Cotillions, a Billy Corgan album; Cotillion (Malazan), a character in the Malazan Book of the Fallen series; Cotillion, a 1953 Regency novel by Georgette Heyer; Cotillion ball, a formal presentation of young ladies, debutantes, to polite society
Cotillion is Georgette Heyer's twelfth regency romance, [1] published in the UK in January 1953 by Heinemann [2] and in the U.S. in February 1953 by G. P. Putnam's Sons.
Cốc Cốc was founded in 2008 [9] as iTim Technologies LLC [10] by Victor Lavrenko, a Soviet-born Israeli entrepreneur, the founding CTO of Mail.ru, and founder and CEO of the Russian search engine Nigma.ru, along with Vietnamese co-founders Lê Văn Thanh, Nguyễn Thanh Bình, and Nguyễn Đức Ngọc.
The United States, South Vietnam and their other allies in the Vietnam War agreed to a proposal from the VC and North Vietnam for three ceasefires to coincide with holidays. All fighting would halt from 07:00 24 December, until 07:00 on 26 December, as well as from the morning of New Year's Eve until the morning of 2 January 1967.