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  2. Funaná - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funaná

    Female funaná dancers. The funaná is a music and dance genre from Cape Verde. Funaná is an accordion-based music. The rhythm is usually provided by the ferrinho much like the use of washboards in zydeco, the saw in Caribbean ripsaw music [citation needed], the scraper in Sub-Saharan African music [citation needed] and the güiro in Latin and Pre-Columbian music [citation needed].

  3. Du Fu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Du_Fu

    —from "Early Autumn, Miserable Heat, Papers Piling Up"; translation by William Hung. He moved on in the summer of 759; this has traditionally been ascribed to famine, but Hung believes that frustration is a more likely reason. He next spent around six weeks in Qinzhou (now Tianshui, Gansu province), where he wrote more than sixty poems. Chengdu In December 759, he briefly stayed in Tonggu ...

  4. Akounak Tedalat Taha Tazoughai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akounak_Tedalat_Taha_Tazoughai

    Akounak Tedalat Taha Tazoughai, (English: Rain the Color of Blue with A Little Red In It), is a 2015 Niger drama musical film directed by Christopher Kirkley and co–produced by Sahel Sounds, L'Improbable and Tenere Films. [2] [3] It is the world's first Tuareg-language fiction film. [4]

  5. A light rain continued falling for 10 or 15 minutes. People pulled on ponchos. There was most likely a napkin shortage, too, as fans used fistfuls of them to wipe down seats.

  6. It Takes a Little Rain (To Make Love Grow) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It_Takes_a_Little_Rain_(To...

    "It Takes a Little Rain (To Make Love Grow)" is a song written by Roger Murrah, Steve Dean and James Dean Hicks, and recorded by American country music group The Oak Ridge Boys. It was released in February 1987 as the first single from the album Where the Fast Lane Ends .

  7. The Land of Little Rain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Land_of_Little_Rain

    The Land of Little Rain has been published six times. The first publication was in 1903 by Houghton Mifflin.Subsequent publications include a 1950 abridged version with photographs by Ansel Adams (also by Houghton Mifflin), a 1974 illustrated version by E. Boyd Smith published by University of New Mexico Press, a 1988 edition with an introduction by Edward Abbey published as part of the ...

  8. Slow Learner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slow_Learner

    Slow Learner is the 1984 published collection of five early short stories by the American novelist Thomas Pynchon, originally published in various sources between 1959 and 1964.

  9. Scuffy the Tugboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scuffy_the_Tugboat

    Scuffy is a toy tugboat who wishes for "bigger things" than sailing in the bathtub. The Man with the Polkadot Tie (who owns a toy store) and his son take Scuffy to a small brook in a pasture, and soon the current carries him away.