User:นคเรศ/alllist/3
< User:นคเรศ | alllist
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Last Q:
12 July 2024
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Vol.1 No.1: cuneiform (Q401) — Ichiro Suzuki (Q600)
No.1 cuneiform—Citrus × limon
edit- cuneiform (Q401): ancient writing system used for many languages, including Akkadian and Hittite
- Higgs boson (Q402): elementary particle transmitting the Higgs field giving particles mass
- Serbia (Q403): country in Southeast Europe
- HTTP 404 (Q404): HTTP error response code
- Moon (Q405): Earth's only natural satellite
- Istanbul (Q406): city in Turkey located at the Bosporus Strait
- Linda Lovelace (Q407): American pornographic actress, later anti-porn activist
- Australia (Q408): country in Oceania
- Bob Marley (Q409): Jamaican reggae musician (1945–1981)
- Carl Sagan (Q410): American astrophysicist, cosmologist and author (1934–1996)
- astrobiology (Q411): study of the formation of life on Earth and elsewhere in outer space
- Pioneer plaque (Q412): plaque attached to the Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11 spacecraft in case extraterrestrial life finds them
- physics (Q413): study of matter and its motion, along with related concepts such as energy and force
- Argentina (Q414): sovereign state in South America
- Silbo Gomero (Q415): whistled language from la Gomera island, Spanish Canarias.
- disk magazine (Q416): electronic magazine to be read using computers
- biology (Q417): scientific study of living things, especially their structure, function, growth, evolution, and distribution
- telecommunication (Q418): electronic transmission of information between locations
- Peru (Q419): sovereign state in South America
- biology (Q420): scientific study of living things, especially their structure, function, growth, evolution, and distribution
- unidentified flying object (Q421): unusual apparent anomaly in the sky that is not readily identifiable
- Muséum de Toulouse (Q422): natural history museum in Toulouse, France
- North Korea (Q423): sovereign state in East Asia
- Cambodia (Q424): country in Southeast Asia
- Betsiboka River (Q425): river in central-north Madagascar
- animal rights (Q426): rights of non-human animals
- Kuiper Belt (Q427): area of the Solar System beyond the planetary orbits comprising small bodies
- Qur’an (Q428): foundational Islamic religious text
- Pcim (Q429): Polish village in Lesser Poland Voivodeship
- dinosaur (Q430): clade of sauropsid vertebrates that dominated the Mesozoic Era (including birds)
- zoology (Q431): scientific study of animals
- Islam (Q432): Abrahamic religion founded by Muhammad
- Gmina Kurów (Q433): rural gmina in Lublin Voivodeship, Poland
- Pyrus (Q434): genus of plants
- Library of Alexandria (Q435): one of the largest libraries in the ancient world, located in Alexandria, Egypt
- Szczebrzeszyn (Q436): city in Lublin Voivodeship, Poland
- Ljubljana (Q437): capital city of Slovenia
- Vrhnika (Q438): city in Slovenia
- Wąchock (Q439): town in Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, Poland
- Salvador Allende (Q440): 28th president of Chile (1908–1973)
- botany (Q441): science of plant life
- Natural History (Q442): encyclopedia published circa AD 77–79 by Pliny the Elder
- Ich bin ein Berliner (Q443): speech given by John F. Kennedy in West Berlin in June 1963
- Lech Wałęsa (Q444): statesman, pro-democracy activist, and former president of Poland
- Bibliotheca universalis (Q445): 1545–49 listing of all the books printed in Latin, Greek, or Hebrew then known
- wheel (Q446): circular item that rotates about an axial bearing; one of the six simple machines
- Encyclopédie (Q447): general encyclopedia published in Paris, France between 1751 and 1772
- Denis Diderot (Q448): French Enlightenment philosopher writer and encyclopædist (1713–1784)
- Georges Brassens (Q449): French singer-songwriter and poet
- mind (Q450): combination of cognitive faculties that provides consciousness, thinking, reasoning, perception, and judgement in humans and potentially other life forms
- Mundaneum (Q451): institution aimed to gather together all the world's knowledge, "paper internet"
- 52-hertz whale (Q452): individual whale which has been detected calling at 52 Hz, far above the normal whale vocal range
- Borken (Q453): town in the district of Borken, in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- peace (Q454): state of harmony characterized by lack of violent conflict and freedom from fear of violence
- Encyclopædia Britannica (Q455): general knowledge English-language encyclopaedia, first published in Scotland in 1768
- Lyon (Q456): commune in the metropolis of Lyon, France
- Poissy (Q457): commune in Yvelines, France
- European Union (Q458): political and economic union of 27 European states
- Plovdiv (Q459): second-largest city in Bulgaria
- Interpedia (Q460): first-proposed online encyclopedia
- Internet Archive (Q461): American non-profit organization
- Star Wars (Q462): epic space opera multimedia franchise created by George Lucas
- Rhône-Alpes (Q463): former administrative region of France
- Philipp Ludwig von Seidel (Q464): German mathematician
- DBpedia (Q465): online database project of structured data extracted from Wikipedia
- World Wide Web (Q466): global system of interlinked hypertext documents accessed via the Internet
- woman (Q467): female adult human
- Encyclopedia Galactica (Q468): fictional encyclopædia in several science-fiction universes
- Dyson sphere (Q469): hypothetical megastructure, originally described by Freeman Dyson
- World Brain (Q470): collection of essays by H. G. Wells
- Memex (Q471): hypothetical proto-hypertext system that was first described by Vannevar Bush in 1945
- Sofia (Q472): capital city of Bulgaria
- The Library of Babel (Q473): 1941 short story by Jorge Luis Borges
- aqueduct (Q474): structure constructed to convey water
- Eduardo Frei Montalva (Q475): President of Chile (1911-1982)
- Ñ (Q476): letter of the modern Latin alphabet, formed by an N with a diacritical tilde
- Istanbul (Q477): city in Turkey located at the Bosporus Strait
- Derval (Q478): commune in Loire-Atlantique, France
- God (Q479): principal object of faith in monotheistic religions, a divine entity that created and typically supervises all existence
- Don Quixote (Q480): 1605 novel by Miguel de Cervantes
- .xxx (Q481): sponsored top-level Internet domain intended for pornographic websites
- poetry (Q482): literary style characterized by a strong expressiveness of words
- Megaupload (Q483): former Hong Kong–based company
- laziness (Q484): disinclination to activity or exertion
- computer virus (Q485): type of computer program that, when executed, replicates itself by modifying other computer programs and inserting its own code
- Chernobyl disaster (Q486): 1986 nuclear accident in the Soviet Union
- smile (Q487): conscious or subconscious facial muscular movement conveying mirth or pleasure
- atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (Q488): 1945 use of nuclear weapons against Japan in World War II
- Bill Maher (Q489): American stand-up comedian and television host
- Milan (Q490): Italian commune and capital city of Lombardy
- friendship (Q491): relationship between people who have mutual affection for each other
- memory (Q492): mental faculties and processes involved in storing and retrieving information
- Arthur Rimbaud (Q493): French poet (1854–1891)
- Beakman's World (Q494): educational children's television show
- Turin (Q495): city and commune in Italy
- feces (Q496): solid or semisolid remains of the food that passes through the bowel, from any animal
- anus (Q497): digestive track waste expulsion opening
- Ulrich Frédéric Woldemar, Comte de Lowendal (Q498): German-born French soldier and statesmen (1700-1755)
- armpit (Q499): area of the human body beneath the joint between arm and torso
- Citrus × limon (Q500): nothospecies of plant
No.2 Charles Baudelaire—Ichiro Suzuki
edit- Charles Baudelaire (Q501): French poet and critic (1821–1867)
- Stendhal (Q502): 19th century French writer
- banana (Q503): elongated, edible fruit produced by several kinds of large herbaceous flowering plants in the genus Musa
- Émile Zola (Q504): French journalist, playwright and poet (1840–1902)
- 666 (Q505): year
- flower (Q506): sexual reproductive structure found on flowering plants
- googol (Q507): large number defined as ten to the power of 100
- googolplex (Q508): large number defined as ten to the power of one googol
- Lugdunum Musée et Théâtres (Q509): museum about Roman Gaul in Lyon, France
- Mariana Trench (Q510): deepest oceanic trench on Earth
- Museum of Fine Arts of Lyon (Q511): art museum in Lyon, France
- Vladimir Vysotsky (Q512): Soviet singer-songwriter and actor (1938–1980)
- Mount Everest (Q513): Earth's highest mountain above sea level, located in the Mahalangur Himal sub-range of the Himalayas
- anatomy (Q514): study of the internal structure of organisms and their parts
- city (Q515): large human settlement
- Hôtel de Ville de Lyon (Q516): city hall of Lyon, France
- Napoleon (Q517): French military leader, French Emperor 1804–1814 and again in 1815
- Betta edithae (Q518): species of fish in the Osphronemidae family
- shit (Q519): profane word referring to feces
- Olympus Mons (Q520): tallest volcano on Mars
- physiology (Q521): science regarding function of organisms or living systems
- Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol (Q522): communications protocol for controlling, monitoring, and diagnosing coffee pots
- star (Q523): astronomical object consisting of a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by its own gravity
- Mount Vesuvius (Q524): volcano on the southwestern coast of Italy
- Sun (Q525): star at the centre of the Solar System
- Betta brownorum (Q526): species of fish
- sky (Q527): everything that is above the surface of the Earth
- PSR B1257+12 (Q528): pulsar located 1000 light years from the Sun
- Louis Pasteur (Q529): French chemist and microbiologist (1822-1895)
- Ingemar Stenmark (Q530): Swedish alpine skier
- light-year (Q531): unit of astronomical length, defined as the distance that light travels in the vacuum in one year
- village (Q532): small clustered human settlement smaller than a town
- Betta channoides (Q533): species of fish
- Ordinance on Industrial Safety and Health (Q534): German law about health and safety in the workplace
- Victor Hugo (Q535): French novelist, poet, dramatist and politician (1802–1885)
- Peaceful betta (Q536): species of fish
- Prince Eugens Waldemarsudde (Q537): art museum in Stockholm, Sweden
- Insular Oceania (Q538): geographic region and continent comprising Melanesia, Micronesia, and Polynesia
- Giuseppe Garibaldi (Q539): Italian general, patriot, and republican (1807–1882)
- Hyphanet (Q540): peer-to-peer Internet platform for censorship-resistant communication
- Orvieto (Q541): Italian comune
- athletics (Q542): sports involving running, jumping, throwing and walking
- censorship (Q543): practice of suppressing speech or other public communication
- Solar System (Q544): the Sun, its planets and their moons
- Baltic Sea (Q545): sea in Northern Europe
- Trieste (Q546): city and seaport in northeastern Italy
- Witterschlick (Q547): locality in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- Vistula (Q548): river in East-Central Europe
- Siamese fighting fish (Q549): freshwater fish native to Thailand
- avenue des Champs-Élysées (Q550): avenue in Paris, France
- Q551 is none
- Oder (Q552): river in Central Europe flowing from the Czech Republic and along the Poland–Germany border
- tooth (Q553): hard, calcified structure found in the jaws (or mouths) of many vertebrates and used to break down food
- Cervelle de canut (Q554): French cheese spread; specialty of Lyon
- Rachel Maddow (Q555): American television news host and political commentator
- hydrogen (Q556): chemical element with symbol H and atomic number 1; lightest and most abundant substance in the universe
- Patti Smith (Q557): American singer, songwriter, author and poet
- Hedi Slimane (Q558): French Tunisian fashion designer
- Claude Bourgelat (Q559): French veterinary surgeon
- helium (Q560): chemical element with symbol He and atomic number 2; rare gas
- human tooth (Q561): calcified whitish structure in humans' mouths used to break down food
- Pierre Poivre (Q562): French horticulturalist (1719-1786)
- Brigitte Fontaine (Q563): French poet and artist
- hell (Q564): religious or mythological place of (often eternal) suffering
- Wikimedia Commons (Q565): online repository of free-use image, sound, and other media files; part of the Wikimedia ecosystem
- purgatory (Q566): intermediate state after death for purification, according to the belief of some Christians
- Angela Merkel (Q567): chancellor of Germany from 2005 to 2021
- lithium (Q568): chemical element with symbol Li and atomic number 3
- beryllium (Q569): chemical element with symbol Be and atomic number 4
- loudspeaker (Q570): electroacoustic transducer that converts an electrical audio signal into a corresponding sound
- book (Q571): medium for recording information (words or images) typically on bound pages or more abstractly in electronic or audio form
- Q572 is none
- day (Q573): unit of time lasting 24 hours, derived from the period of Earth's rotation about its axis
- East Timor (Q574): sovereign state situated on several islands in Southeast Asia
- night (Q575): period from sunset to sunrise in each twenty-four hours
- Jorge Alessandri (Q576): Chilean politician and President (1896-1986)
- year (Q577): estimated period of time for the Earth's orbit around the Sun and observed at a fixed geographic point (averaging 365.24 days); base later modified to define or adjust various calendars
- century (Q578): unit of time lasting 100 years
- Carlos Ibáñez del Campo (Q579): Chilean army officer and political figure (1877-1960)
- Łódź (Q580): city in Łódź Voivodeship in central Poland
- Canegrate (Q581): comune in the Metropolitan City of Milan, Lombardy, Italy
- Villeurbanne (Q582): commune in the metropolis of Lyon, France
- Mont Blanc (Q583): highest mountain in the Alps
- Rhine (Q584): river in Western Europe
- Oslo (Q585): capital city of Norway
- Bonn (Q586): city in and former capital of Germany
- All Saints' Day (Q587): Christian feast day
- Katowice (Q588): city in Silesian Voivodeship, Poland
- black hole (Q589): astronomical object so massive, that anything falling into it, including light, cannot escape its gravity
- Luís de Camões (Q590): 16th-century Portuguese poet
- Fontgombault Abbey (Q591): Benedictine monastery at Fontgombault, Berry, France
- gay (Q592): term referring to a homosexual person or the trait of homosexuality
- A Gang Story (Q593): 2011 film by Olivier Marchal
- The King of Rome (Q594): racing pigeon
- The Intouchables (Q595): 2011 film directed by Olivier Nakache and Éric Toledano
- 1 Ceres (Q596): dwarf planet in the Solar System and largest asteroid of the main asteroid belt
- Lisbon (Q597): capital city of Portugal
- Rzeszów (Q598): city in Poland
- wedding dress of Catherine Middleton (Q599): dress worn by Catherine Middleton on the day of her wedding to Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, in 2011
- Ichiro Suzuki (Q600): Japanese professional baseball player, MLB player (1973-)