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  2. Farrago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farrago

    Farrago is a Latin word, meaning "mixed cattle fodder", used to refer to a confused variety of miscellaneous things. As a name, it may refer to: Farrago, a genus of plants in the family Poaceae; Farrago, student newspaper at the University of Melbourne; Farrago rerum theologicarum, a book by Wessel Gansfort; Ronnie Scott's Jazz Farrago

  3. Mythimna ferrago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mythimna_ferrago

    Mythimna ferrago, the clay, is a moth of the family Noctuidae.The species was first described by Johan Christian Fabricius in 1787. It is distributed throughout Europe [1] and is also found in Morocco, Algeria, Turkey, Asia Minor, Armenia, Syria, Turkestan, Israel, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, Central Asia and the western parts of temperate North Asia.

  4. Farrago (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farrago_(magazine)

    Farrago encourages contributions from students in both written and/or visual forms, because without these it would not be an accurate representation of students at the university. Farrago contains the following sections: News, Non-Fiction, Creative. It previously contained a Science section, which was discontinued in recent years.

  5. Cyranides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyranides

    14th-century Arabic manuscript of the Cyranides. The original 4th-century Cyranides comprised three books, to which a redactor added a fourth. The original first book of the Cyranides, the Kyranis (Κυρανίς), was the second component of a two-part work, the first part of which was the Archaikê (Ἀρχαϊκἠ).

  6. Farrago racemosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farrago_racemosa

    Farrago is a genus of African plants in the grass family. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The only known species is Farrago racemosa , native to the Lindi Region of southeastern Tanzania .

  7. The Four Men: A Farrago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Men:_a_Farrago

    The Four Men: A Farrago is a 1911 novel by Hilaire Belloc that describes a 140-kilometre (90 mi) long journey on foot across the English county of Sussex from Robertsbridge in the east to Harting in the west.

  8. E. W. Tipping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E._W._Tipping

    He studied law at the University of Melbourne, [2] where he was an editor of the student newspaper Farrago, before being offered a position at the Melbourne Herald by Sir Keith Murdoch in 1939. He married Marjorie McCredie in 1942, with whom he had three sons. Tipping's third son, Peter, had intellectual and physical disabilities and died at ...

  9. Ronnie Scott's Jazz Farrago - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronnie_Scott's_Jazz_Farrago

    Ronnie Scott's Jazz Farrago is a book of articles collected from Jazz at Ronnie Scott's, the house magazine of Ronnie Scott's jazz club in London, England. The magazine was published for over twenty-five years from 1979–2006, producing 159 issues under editorship of its founder, Jim Godbolt .