FACTOID # 129: ‘Dollar’ is the most common currency name, followed by ‘franc,’ ‘pound,’ ‘dinar,’ ‘peso,’ and ‘rupee.’
 
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Look up do in
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Do and DO may refer to: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary (a portmanteau of wiki and dictionary) is a multilingual, Web-based project to create a free content dictionary, available in over 150 languages. ...

In other languages: Denominación de Origen (Designation of Origin - DO) is part of a regulatory classification system primarily for Spanish wines (similar to the French appellations) but also for other foodstuffs like honey, meats and condiments. ... It has been suggested that Clandestine service be merged into this article or section. ... A Chief Operating Officer (COO) is a corporate officer responsible for managing the day-to-day activities of the corporation. ... Osteopathic medicine (formerly known as osteopathy) is [1] Outside the United States, osteopathic medicine is often used interchangeably with osteopathy. Doctors of Osteopathic Medicine, or D.O.s, apply the philosophy of treating the whole person (a holistic approach) to the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of illness, disease and injury... Oxygen saturation or dissolved oxygen (DO) is a measure of amount of oxygen dissolved in a given medium. ... Delta Omicron was founded to create and foster fellowship, to develop character and to arouse and encourage the appreciation of good music and performance among musicians during their student days so that the highest degree of musicianship might be attained individually. ... Evolution-Data Optimized or Evolution-Data only, abbreviated as EV-DO or EVDO and often EV, is one telecommunications standard for the wireless transmission of data through radio signals, typically for broadband Internet access. ... D/O is the abbreviation for the term Delivery Order. ... In music, a scale is a collection of musical notes that provides material for part or all of a musical work. ... In music, solfege (or solmization) is a pedagogical technique for the teaching of sight-singing in which each note of the score is sung to a special syllable, called a solfege syllable (or sol-fa syllable). The seven syllables normally used for this practice in the West are: Do, Re... This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ... The electronic (gold-plated) contacts of an EF mount lens. ... Dominicana de Aviacion was the national and international airline of the Dominican Republic. ... Dornier logo. ... Prosigns or procedural signals are dot/dash sequences that have a special meaning in Morse Code transmissions. ... Japanese martial arts refers to the enormous variety of martial arts native to Japan. ... Do (Marshall Herff Applewhite) (May 17, 1931 - c. ... The logo used by the Heavens Gate cult Heavens Gate was the name of a cult co-led by Marshall Applewhite and Bonnie Nettles. ... Roll-on deodorant Rexona Degree brand Stick deodorant Deodorants are substances applied to the body, most frequently the armpits, to reduce the body odor caused by the bacterial breakdown of perspiration. ...

  • Do (दो دو), the Hindi and Urdu word for the number two.
  • It is used in Japanese as a suffix for various arts and implies that they are not just techniques but have spiritual elements. In this circumstance it is usually translated as "the way of". It is the same word and concept as the Chinese 道 (Dao). For example, Japanese tea ceremony is called "Sado" (茶道) and flower arrangement is called "Kado" (華道), these translate to "the way of tea" and "the way of flowers" respectively. Since the Meiji era, Japanese martial artists have adopted this suffix for names of martial arts such as Aikido, Judo and Kendo.
  • Do may refer to the Chinese character 道 (Pinyin: dào; Wade-Giles: tao⁴), which is pronounced dō in Japanese and do (도) in Korean. Its primary meaning is "road" or "way", as in the Korean martial art Taekwondo ("way of the foot and hand"), and derivative meanings include "Daoism", "province", and the very general meaning of "circuit".
  • In Korea, Do is the designation for "province". See Provinces of Korea
  • In Japan, means "circuit", when used in the name of Hokkaido (北海道) prefecture. See Prefectures of Japan
  • Do can refer to the Chinese character 島 (Pinyin: dǎo; Wade-Giles: tao³), which is pronounced do in Korean and means "island". It used in the names of the Korean islands
  • Do (Đỗ) may refer to a Vietnamese family name 杜.

Other: Hindi ( , Devanagari: or , IAST: , IPA: ), an Indo-European language spoken mainly in northern and central India, is the official language of the Union along with English. ... Urdu ( , , trans. ... 2 (two) is the natural number following 1 and preceding 3. ... For other uses of the words tao and dao, see Dao (disambiguation). ... This article describes the historical evolution of Koreas provinces (Do ; Hangul: 도; Hanja: 道). For detailed information on current administrative divisions, please see Administrative divisions of North Korea and Administrative divisions of South Korea. ... Circuits in the common law In law, a circuit is an appellate judicial district commonly seen in the court systems of many nations. ... The prefectures of Japan are the countrys 47 sub-national jurisdictions: one metropolis (都 to), Tokyo; one circuit (道 dō), Hokkaidō; two urban prefectures (府 fu), Osaka and Kyoto; and 43 other prefectures (県 ken). ... Islands of Korea are listed below, grouped by provinces, and not including most uninhabited islands and islets. ... Đỗ Mười (born February 2, 1917 in Dong My) was the General Secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam from 1991 to 1997. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Dos Centavos (0 words)
Moreover, it asserts that dying is something we do alone.
At the very least, the irreligious do not kill in the name of something that we're constantly told is "greater than we are".
To do nothing (or too-little) for the betterment of those in need, is not in itself a crime.
dos (the band) (9473 words)
lots of dos gigs at this time consisted of kira flying out to meet watt while he was on tour with firehose and open for them during a stretch of four or five dates.
dos songs have come from jams, from lyrics given to them, are covers of great female vocalists they admire, the songs come from other bands they have played in, are written together, are written with one writing both bass lines, just about any way a song can come about, they have.
dos gigs became fewer and fewer though with watt embarking on a solo career after releasing "ball-hog or tugboat" in 1995 for columbia that contained almost fifty people helping watt out to form a band for each song on it.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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