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10K may refer to: 10000 (number), the natural number following 9999 and preceding 10001; 10K run, a common road running race distance; 10,000 metres, a running track race distance; 10-K Thirst Quencher, a sports drink; Form 10-K, a form used by the Securities and Exchange Commission; 10K, la década robada, Argentine book by Jorge Lanata
Kenya has won eleven medals, although Naftali Temu is the only Kenyan to have won Olympic gold. It was not the first long-distance track event to feature at an Olympic competition: 5-mile (8 km) races featured at the 1906 Intercalated Games and the 1908 Summer Olympics before the metric 5000 metres and 10,000 m events were initiated.
South African rand: R ZAR Cent: 100 Ethiopia: Ethiopian birr: Br ETB Santim: 100 Falkland Islands: Falkland Islands pound £ FKP Penny: 100 Sterling £ GBP Penny: 100 Faroe Islands: Danish krone: kr DKK Øre: 100 Faroese króna: kr (none) Oyra: 100 Fiji: Fijian dollar $ FJD Cent: 100 Finland: Euro € EUR Cent: 100 France: Euro € EUR Cent ...
When President Jacob Zuma narrowly won a motion of no confidence in South Africa in August 2017, the rand continued to slide, dropping 1.7% that day. [23] In September 2017, Goldman Sachs said that the debt and corruption of Eskom Holdings was the biggest risk to South Africa's economy and the exchange rate of the rand.
This page shows the all-time medal table for the Commonwealth Games since the first British Empire Games in 1930.The table is updated as of 8 August 2022, the day the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham ended.
In road events, the course is not required to be a circuit, but the overall decrease in elevation between the start and finish shall not exceed 1:1000, i.e. 1 m/km. In road events, the start and finish points of a course, measured along a theoretical straight line between them, shall not be further apart than 50% of the race distance.
1000 or one thousand is the natural number following 999 and preceding 1001. In most English-speaking countries , it can be written with or without a comma or sometimes a period separating the thousands digit: 1,000 .
Wikipedia has won many awards, receiving its first two major awards in May 2004. [ W 123 ] The first was a Golden Nica for Digital Communities of the annual Prix Ars Electronica contest; this came with a €10,000 (£6,588; $12,700) grant and an invitation to present at the PAE Cyberarts Festival in Austria later that year.