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Definition: G |
GNoun1. A metric unit of weight equal to one thousandth of a kilogram. 2. The cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100. 3. A unit of force equal to the force exerted by gravity; used to indicate the force to which a body is subjected when it is accelerated. 4. A unit of information equal to one billion (1,000,000,000) bytes or one thousand megabytes. 5. (physics) the universal constant relating force to mass and distance in Newton's law of gravitation. 6. The 7th letter of the Roman alphabet. Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "g" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1350. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Computing | G pref.,suff. [SI] See {quantifiers. Source: Jargon File. |
Literature | G This letter is the outline of a camel's head and neck. It is called in Hebrew gimel (a camel). Source: Brewer's Dictionary. |
Meteorology & Standards | The symbol g denotes a unit of acceleration equal in magnitude to the local value of gravity, unless otherwise specified. Source: European Union. (references) |
Slang | Letter of the alphabet. Source: From the english alphabet. Definition: A person who is a member of a gang or thought of as a gangsta. Context: Used to call themselves and one another G's to let others know they are gangsters. Social Source: Bay Area Ghetto Rap Thugs. Source: Compiled by The University of Oregon. (additional references) |
Space | The symbol used for the acceleration due to gravity. At the Earth's surface it averages 9.81 meters/second2, directed towards the Earth's center. In common talk, "g forces" are stresses due to acceleration, e.g. on astronauts or payloads. In the same vein, "zero g" is the condition when no acceleration is sensed, because gravity is already fully employed supplying the centripetal force which holds the object in its orbit (or alternatively from the rotating frame of reference, because gravity is fully balanced by the centrifugal force). (references) |
| Gram, a thousandth of the metric standard unit of mass (see kg). The gram was originally based upon the weight of a cubic centimeter of water, which still approximates the current value. (references) | |
| Giga, a multiplier, x109, from the Latin "gigas" (giant). See the entry for CGPM. (references) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
See Aozora Bunko
- Jigoku by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Gachou by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Gadorufu no yuri by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Gagakkou jidai by Shoen Uemura (1875 - 1949)
- Gaikatsuteki tousoujidaikan by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Gaikotsu kan by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Gaitei no youkouro by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Gaitou karamita shintoukyou no rimen by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Gaitou no gieikyou by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Gaitou (Street lights) by Nikolai Gogol (March 12,1809 - February 21,1852)
- Gaka to Seliselisu by Shutaro Nanbu (October 12,1892 - June 22,1936)
- Gake no shita by Isota Kamura (December 15,1897 - November 30,1933)
- Gakuhen'okusetsu by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Gakusei jidai (Studenthood) by Rohan Koda
- Gakusha to meiyo (Scholar and fame) by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Gama no chi by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Gangu (Toys) by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Ganjitsu by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Ganryuujima by Sanjugo Naoki
- Ganseki no aida by Toson Shimazaki (March 25,1872 - August 22,1943)
- Gantaiki by Tamio Hojo (September 22,1914 - December 5,1937)
- Garanto to Bazaar (The Cathedral and the Bazaar) by Eric Raymond translated by Hiroo Yamagata
- Garasudo no uchi by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Gariba ryokouki by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Geijutsu sonota by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Gekashitsu by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Gekidou no naka wo yuku by Akiko Yosano (December 7,1878 - May 29,1942)
- Gen' oji by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Genbakuhisaiji no note by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Genbakukaisou by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Genbakushoukei by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Gendainihon' no kaika by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Gendaishi by Rintaro Takeda (May 9,1904 - March 31,1946)
- Gendan by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Gengotai no bunshou to ukigumo by Rohan Koda
- Genjidai no moukojin by Jitsuzo Kuwabara (December 7,1870 - May 24,1931)
- Genjimo no gatari by Shikibu Murasaki
- Genkainadamikkou by Saryan Kim (March 3,1914 - 1950)
- Genkakusanbou by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Genroku juusan'nen by Fubo Hayashi (January 17,1900 - June 29,1935)
- Genshibakudan by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Gesakuzanmai by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Gesakuzanmai by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Gesshoku by Kyusaku Yumeno
- Getsureijuunitai by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Gijin' no sugata by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Gijin'nosugata by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Giketsukyouketsu by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Giketsukyouketsu by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Gikiru to Haido by Robert Stevenson Louis (1850 - 1894)
- Gimin jinbee by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Giminjinbee by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Gimon to kuusou by Terada Torahiko
- Gimontokuusou by Torahiko Terada
- Gingatetsudou no yoru by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Girisha oyobi Roma and koryo by Kinzo Kafuku (1885 - 1948)
- Giwaku by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Giwaku by Shutaro Nanbu (October 12,1892 - June 22,1936)
- Gogatsu no asa no hana by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
- Goishiwo nond ayacchan by Takeo Arishima (March 4,1878 - June 9,1923)
- Gojiingahara no katakiuchi by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Gojoushusse by Atsushi Nakajima (May 5,1909 - December 4,1942)
- Gokanenkeikaku to Soviet doumei no bunkatekihiyaku by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Gokanenkeikaku to Soviet nogeijutsu by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Gokuchuuki (Dairy at prison) by Sakae Osugi (January 17,1885 - September 16,1923)
- Gokuchuuseikatsu by Toshihiko Sakai (November 25,1871 - January 23,1933)
- Goshikionsen Ski nikki by Katsunobu Itakura (February 12,1898 - January 17,1923)
- Gougai (Extra issue) by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Gouku by Isota Kamura (December 15,1897 - November 30,1933)
- Gubijinsou by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Guddo Bai (Good Bye) by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Gujin' no doku by Fuboku Kosakai (October 8,1890 - April 1,1929)
- Gun'youzame by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Gurigori no hobaku by Hideaki Shirata
- Guuzen ha toumeinaao by Megumi Kamei (b.1971)
- Gyakkou by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Gyakkou by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Gyakkou by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Gyogenki by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Gyomin kaitai by ?Ҥ’Ot ?ĤE (Hirata, Tsuyoshi - 1964)
- Gyuujin by Atsushi Nakajima (May 5,1909 - December 4,1942)
- Gyuujin by Atsushi Nakajima (May 5,1909 - December 4,1942)
- Gyuuniku to bareisho by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Gyuunikutobareisho by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Aozora Bunko: G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Any tributes to the individuals lost in this tragedy are welcome and encouraged at our memorial site. Some articles originally posted to wikipedia have been moved there - if you are looking for such an article, please check there.See also Missing Persons, Foreign casualties, and Survivors.
Casualties Planes - World Trade Center - Pentagon
A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - ZAs of October 29, 2003, 2,995 people were presumed dead as a result of all four September 11 attacks. This includes the casualties at the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, on the airplanes and the hijackers.
Planes
265 people killed on four planes; 232 passengers, 25 flight attendants, 8 pilots. (Note that this total includes the 19 hijackers, who reportedly boarded the planes as passengers.)
See also: Memorial wiki tributes to the occupants of each plane
- American Airlines flight 11 BOS-LAX (north tower of World Trade Center): 93 people: 82 passengers (including 5 hijackers), 9 flight attendants, 2 pilots
- United Airlines flight 175 BOS-LAX (south tower of World Trade Center): 65 people: 56 passengers (including 5 hijackers), 7 flight attendants, 2 pilots
- American Airlines flight 77 IAD-LAX (The Pentagon): 64 people: 58 passengers (including 5 hijackers), 4 flight attendants, 2 pilots
- United Airlines flight 93 EWR-SFO (Pittsburgh): 44 people: 37 passengers (including 4 hijackers), 5 flight attendants, 2 pilots
World Trade Center
By October 29, 2003, 2605 people were listed as confirmed dead and 1058 bodies had been identified. (Note: this total does not include the 127 passengers and 20 crew on the two aircraft or the 10 hijackers).The listing and memorial.
See also:
- Memorial wiki tributes to the Fire Department of New York
- Memorial wiki tributes to companies in the WTC
Missing Persons
The number of missing people grew to estimates as high as over 6000 in the months following the attack, but steadily declined as stories were checked and duplicate entries removed. (See Timeline of WTC missing).
As of August 2002, there were approximately 90 people who were officially missing; that is, their remains had not been identified and no family members had requested a death certificate.
Detailed listing.
Survivors
The great majority of the over 40,000 people working at the World Trade Center at the time of the attack evacuated safely, including 18 who escaped from above the impact zone in the second tower hit. By 9/20/2001 6291 people, including rescue and recovery workers, had been treated for injuries.
Detailed listing.
Pentagon
The Pentagon reports 125 staffers killed or missing, with 121 remains recovered and identified, as of Sept. 11, 2002. At least one person died later as a result of wounds incurred.
The listing and memorial.
Missing Persons
The Pentagon reports 4 staffers missing. One passenger on the airliner which hit the Pentagon was also never identified.
Detailed listing.
Survivors
88 treated at hospital.
Detailed entry.
Victim legends
Due to the very large number of World Trade Center casualties and missing persons, victim legends were a common form of September 11, Terrorist Attack urban legends. These were tales of victims who did not exist, spread by word-of-mouth and the Internet. Official sites, such as http://www.september11victims.com, contain accurate entries and are trusted content. Because Wikipedia, and many other websites allowed freely adding victims, there were no doubt many obvious fake entries. Fake victims added to these lists were often simply missing at the time of the attacks, or actually survivors of the attacks.
See also
September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack - Donations - Assistance - Memorials and ServicesSource: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Casualties of the September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attacks."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The seventh letter in the Roman alphabet, G,
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z
The letter G was created by the Romans because they felt that C was not an adequate letter to represent both /k/ AND /g/. Fascinatingly, the alleged inventor is a known historical figure, Spurius Carvilius Ruga (who flourished around 230 BC). G, which at this time took the place of the letter Z, came to represent the sound /g/. As the sound /k/ did, /g/ also developed palatal and velar allophones which is the reason why today, G has different sound values in all Romance languages and English (due to French influence).
In English, the letter can be pronounced as a "soft G" (SAMPA: [dZ]), as in: giant, ginger, geology, or it can be pronounced as a "hard G" (SAMPA: [g]), as in: goose, gargoyle, game.
Golf represents the letter G in the NATO phonetic alphabet.
G is also:
See also:
- A musical note
- As G, giga, an SI prefix meaning 109 = 1,000,000,000 (one billion) or a binary prefix used in computing to mean 230 = 1,073,741,824.
- As G, a symbol for the gravitational constant
- As g, a unit for acceleration, see gee force.
- As g, an SI unit for mass, see Gram (unit).
- The stock symbol for The Gillette Company
- A British film, G, made in 1974
- The variable G for conductance
- Short for the slang word "gangsta" or gangster
Two-letter combinations starting with G:
- "Ĝ" and "ĝ
- "Ğ" and "ğ
- ga gb gc gd ge gf gg gh gi gj gk gl gm gn go gp gq gr gs gt gu gv gw gx gy gz
Words beginning with the letter G, suitable for teaching children the alphabet
- garbage can
- gentle
- George
- gerbil
- Germany
- ghost
- giant
- giggle
- ginger snap
- giraffe
- girl
- glad
- gladiola
- go
- governess
- Grandmother, Grandfather
- green
- grin
- gum
- guppy
- gypsy
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
g theory, which was named by Charles Spearman, stems from the observation that the scores of individuals on a variety of cognitive test correlate positively. g can be derived from these test scores using the method of principle component analysis as the principle (or general) factor. Each cognitive test score can thus be broken down into general (g) and test-specific parts.g is generally associated with a common conception of intelligence.
g is important in almost every cognitive task studied, including regular daily activities, job perforance, and even reaction time.
The heritability of g is approximately 0.5. Moreover, the heritability of most test performance is primarily a result of g.
Race difference in cogntive test scores tend to be primarily on g. See race and intelligence.
There are many biological and neurological factors that correlate with g. The preponderance of the evidence suggests a biological basis for g.
The exact relationship between g and other factors of cognitive ability is a matter of debate. See the Carroll model.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "G theory."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
G2 is the name of a Lie group (and also its Lie algebra). It is one of the exceptional simple Lie groups.
Roots of G2
Although they span a 2-dimensional space, it's much more symmetric to consider them as vectors in a 2-dimensional subspace of a three dimensional space.(1,-1,0),(-1,1,0)
(-1,0,1),(1,0,-1)
(0,1,-1),(0,-1,1)
(2,-1,-1),(-2,1,1)
(-1,2,-1),(1,-2,1)
(-1,-1,2),(1,1,2)
Simple roots
(0,1,-1), (1,-2,1)
Weyl/Coxeter group
It's Weyl/Coxeter group is the dihedral group, D6.
Cartan matrix
See also Simple Lie group, Lie group, Weyl group, Dynkin diagram.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "G2 (mathematics)."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
In baseball statistics, games played (denoted by G) indicates the total number of games in which a player has participated (in any capacity). It does not matter in how much of the game the player was active. If player A plays the whole game until there are two out in the bottom of the ninth inning, and then is replaced by player B as a pinch-runner for the final third of an inning, then both A and B are credited with one game played.See also: Baseball statistics
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Games played."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
A gas is one of the phases of matter. Gases are, like liquids, fluids: they have the ability to flow and do not resist deformation. Unlike liquids, however, unconstrained gases do not occupy a fixed volume, but instead expand to fill whatever space they occupy. The kinetic energy in a gas is the greatest of the states of matter. Because of this increased kinetic energy, gas atoms and molecules tend to bounce off of one another, more so as the kinetic energy is increased.
Also see Ideal gas and Kinetic theory of gases
The term gas is also used to mean:
- Natural gas, which is about 80% methane, with varying proportions of ethane, propane and butane, and is used as a fuel.
- Gasoline, a colloquial shortening of the word.
- Laughing gas, or nitrous oxide, used to induce and maintain general anesthesia.
- Acetylene, used for welding.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gas."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
g (also gee, g-force or g-load) is a unit of acceleration defined as exactly 9.806 65 m/s², approximately equal to the acceleration due to gravity on the Earth's surface. Gravity due to the earth is experienced the same as being accelerated upward with an acceleration of 1 g. The total g-force is found by vector addition of the opposite of the actual acceleration (in the sense of rate of change of velocity) and a vector of 1 g downward for the ordinary gravity (or in space, the gravity there). Weightlessness means a zero g-force, which is the result when acceleration due to movement is equal to that due to gravity.
The symbol g is always written in lowercase, to distinguish it from the symbol G, the gravitational constant, which is always written in uppercase.
The value of g defined above is an average over the whole of the Earth's surface. It is sometimes written as gN or g0 to distinguish it from the local value of g that varies with position. The actual acceleration of a body at the Earth's surface depends on the location at which it is measured, for two reasons. The first is that the rotation of the Earth imposes an additional acceleration on the body that opposes that due to gravity. The net downward force on the body is therefore offset by a centrifugal force that acts upwards, reducing its weight. This effect on its own would result in a range of values of g from 9.789 m/s² at the equator to 9.823 m/s² at the poles. The second reason is the Earth's equatorial bulge, which causes objects at the equator to be further from the planet's centre than objects at the poles. Because the force due to gravitational attraction between two bodies (the Earth and the object being weighed) varies inversely with the square of the distance between them, objects at the equator experience a weaker gravitational pull than objects at the poles. Measurements show that the combined result of these two effects is a variation of 0.052 m/s² in the value of g. Practically, this means that the weight of an object can vary by 0.5% depending on where on Earth it is weighed.
The UK's National Physical Laboratory gives the following formula for estimating g:
where
The g is used almost entirely in aerospace fields, where it is a convenient magnitude when discussing the loads on aircraft and spacecraft. For instance, most civilian aircraft are capable of being stressed to 4.33 g, which is considered a safe value. This is much more convenient than saying that it is stressed to 138 ft/m², which would then have to be converted between various measurement standards.
- A = 0.005 302 4
- B = 0.000 005 9
- L = latitude
- H = height in metres above sea level.
One often hears the term being applied to the limits that the human body can withstand without "blacking out", sometimes referred to as g-loc. A typical person can handle about 5 g before this occurs, but through the combination of special g-suits and efforts to strain muscles, modern pilots can typically handle 9 g. Gee is also the name for a WWII radio navigation device built and implemented by the RAF for use in night bombing.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gee."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Gee Vaucher, born Dagenham, East London, 1945.
Gee Vaucher (standing) pictured with Penny Rimbaud, 2003
Her work with Anarcho-punk band Crass was seminal to the 'protest art' of the 1980s. Vaucher has always seen her work as a tool for social change, in the foreword to her 1999 retrospective collection Crass Art And Other Postmodernist Monstrosities Ian Dury writes;
- "In its original form, Gee's work is intricate and tactile, and while the imagery is sometimes almost overwhelming, the primary concerns are those of a painter; dealing with form and space. Mere newsprint would hardly do justice to it's subtle tones. When the work is printed, the space becomes more simple and the graphic images take on a different life. The concerns are those of delivery, and the message is clear."
- An interview with Gee Vaucher http://www.regenerationtv.net/ram/Vaucher1.mod.ram
above- Gee Vaucher's artwork for Crass' 'Bloody revolutions' (gauche, 1980)
above- untitled work (tranfer print, 1997)
Further reading
- Crass Art And other Postmodernist Monsters- A collection of work by Gee Vaucher (AK Press 1999)
See also
- Dial House
- Anarchism in the arts
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gee Vaucher."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
German (Deutsch) is one of the world's major languages, a member of the western group of the Germanic languages. It is spoken primarily in Germany, Austria, the major part of Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, the Südtirol (South Tyrol) region of Italy, the Opole Voivodship of Poland, parts of Belgium, parts of Romania and the Alsace (Elsass) region of France. Additionally, several former colonial possessions of these countries, such as Namibia, have sizable German-speaking populations, and there are German-speaking minorities in several eastern European countries, including Russia, and in the United States. Approximately 125 Million people have German as their mother tongue. German is the third most popular foreign language worldwide, and the second most popular in Europe and East Asia (Japan). It is an official language of the European Union.
History
The dialects that participated in the second German vowel shift during medieval times are regarded as those of the German language.
As a consequence of the colonization patterns, the Völkerwanderung (pronounced: 'fœl ker 'van der ung), the routes for trade and communication (chiefly the rivers), and of physical isolation (high mountains and deep forests) very different regional dialects developed. These dialects, sometimes mutually unintelligible, were used across the Holy Roman Empire. As Germany was divided into many different states, there was for long no force working for a unification or standardization of German, until Martin Luther translated the Bible (the New Testament in 1521 and the Old Testament in 1534).
The regional variety (dialect) into which Martin Luther translated the Bible is now regarded as the guideline language upon which Standard German is built. Media and written works are almost all produced in this variety of High German (usually called Standard German in English or Hochdeutsch in German) which is understood in all areas of German languages (except by pre-school children in areas which speak only dialect - but in the age of TV even they usually learn to understand Standard German before school age).
The first dictionary of the Brothers Grimm, the 16 parts of which were issued between 1852 and 1960, was and still is the most complete census of the words of the German language. In 1860, grammatical and orthographical rules first appeared in the Duden Handbook. In 1901, this was declared the standard definition of the German language in these matters. Official revisions of some of these rules were not issued until 1998.
Status
German is the only official language in Germany, Liechtenstein and Austria; it shares official status in Belgium (with French and Dutch), Italy (with Italian, French and Slovenian), Switzerland (with French, Italian and Romansh), Luxembourg (with French and Luxembourgish). It is one of 11 official languages in the European Union.
It is also a minority language in Denmark, France, Russia, Tajikistan, Poland, Romania, Togo, Cameroon, the USA, Namibia, Paraguay, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, the Netherlands, Slovenia, Ukraine, Croatia, Moldavia, Australia, Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania.
Increasing influence from the English language has affected German recently.
Dialects of German
The term "German" is used for several dialects of Germany and surrounding countries and in North America.
The dialects of Germany are typically divided into Low German and High German. The Low German dialects, or Low Saxon as they are sometimes known more precisely, are more closely related to Lower Franconian languages like Dutch than to the High German dialects, and from a linguist's perspective are not part of the German language proper. The High German dialects spoken by Ashkenazi Jews have several unique features, and are usually considered the separate language Yiddish. There are also distinctive dialects of German which are or were primarily spoken in North America, including Pennsylvania German, Texas German, and Hutterite German.
The modern dialects of German proper are divided into Middle German and Upper German; Standard German is a Middle German dialect, while Austrian and Swiss German are Upper German. A moderately complete listing of these dialects may be found at High German.
Development of the German language
- Old High German
- Middle High German
Language Codes
- SIL code: GER
- ISO 639-1: de
- ISO 639-2(B): ger
- ISO 639-2(T): deu
See also
- German grammar
- Common phrases in different languages
- List of German expressions in English
- Umlaut, Ess-tsett
- German spelling reform
- Germish
Reference
- George O. Curme, A Grammar of the German Language (1904, 1922) - the most complete and authoritative work in English
External links
- Ethnologue report for German
- Free online resources for learners
- Verein Deutsche Sprache
- A beginning German Language Textbook under development at Wikibooks
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "German language."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Giga (symbol: G) is a prefix in the SI system of units denoting 109, or 1,000,000,000.
In computer science a giga can sometimes mean 1,073,741,824 (230), instead of 1,000,000,000, especially when used to prefix the bit or byte, giving a gigabit or gigabyte.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Giga."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
- Gram (unit) - A unit of measurement of mass.
- Gram (mythology) - A sword in Norse mythology.
- Gram, Denmark - A municipality in Denmark.
- Gram staining - a method of distinguishing bacteria.
- Gram is sometimes used to refer to chickpeas and similar plants with edible seeds.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gram."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
A gram (older spelling gramme) is a unit of measurement of mass, and is defined in the SI system of units as one thousandth of a kilogram. See 1 E -3 kg for comparisons with other masses.
The symbol for gram is g. Sometimes gm is incorrectly used.
A cubic centimetre (10-6 m3) of water has a mass of approximately one gram. It is approximately equal to the mass of a paper clip.
It is not an SI base unit, although it is a base unit of the cgs system of units.
See also SI prefix, conversion of units
External link
- Conversion Calculator for Units of MASS (& Weight)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gram (unit)."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The gravitational constant G is a fundamental physical constant which appears in Newton's law of gravitation and in Einstein's theory of general relativity.
In terms of metric units, the constant of gravitation is approximately:
This small number is the attraction in newtons of two objects of mass 1 kg each, at a distance of 1 m apart (between two objects of 1000 kg each, 1 m apart, the force is ca. 6.7 × 10-5 N, approximately equal to the pull of Earth's surface gravity on a 6.8 mg mass).
- G = 6.67259 × 10-11 m3 s-2 kg-1
Only the first four digits are known to be correct. Thus, the gravitational constant is among the least precisely determined physical constants. Equally uncertain is the mass of the sun. The position of the planets are known far more accurately, and also the product of G and the mass of the sun. Therefore calculations in celestial mechanics are carried out using the unit of solar mass rather than the standard SI unit kg. In this case we use the Gaussian gravitational constant:
G was first measured by Henry Cavendish (Philosophical Transactions 1798). He used a horizontal torsion beam with lead balls whose inertia (in relation to the torsion constant) he could tell by timing the beam's oscillation. Their faint attraction to other balls placed alongside the beam was detectable by the deflection it caused. See torsion bar experiment.
- k = 0.01720209895 A3D-2S-1
The gravitational constant plays a fundamental role in Einstein's equation of general relativity. In combination with Planck's constant and the speed of light in a vacuum, it is possible to create a system of units known as Planck units in which the gravitational constant, [[Plancks constant|Planck's constant]] and the speed of light all take the numerical value 1.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Gravitational constant."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of airports: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
G
- GCI Guernsey, United Kingdom
- GCM Owen Roberts International Airport, near Georgetown, Cayman Islands
- GDA Lech Walesa International Airport, Gdansk, Poland
- GDL Guadalajara, Mexico
- GEG Spokane International Airport, Spokane, Washington, United States
- GEO Cheddi Jagan International Airport, Georgetown, Guyana
- GIG Rio De Janeiro International Airport, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil
- GJT Grand Junction, Colorado, United States
- GLA Glasgow International Airport, Glasgow, United Kingdom
- GLH Mid-Delta Regional Airport, Greenville, Mississippi, United States
- GMP Gimpo Airport, Gimpo, South Korea, near Seouk (formerly SEL)
- GND Port Salines International Airport, Grenada
- GNV Gainesville Regional Airport, Gainesville, Florida, United States
- GOA Genoa, Italy
- GOT Gothenburg-Landvetter Airport, Gothenburg, Sweden
- GPA Araxos, Greece
- GPT Gulfport-Biloxi International Airport, Gulfport, Mississippi, United States
- GRB Green Bay, Wisconsin, United States
- GRJ George Airport, George, South Africa
- GRR Gerald R. Ford International Airport, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States
- GRU Guarulhos International Airport, Sao Paulo, Brazil
- GSO Piedmont Triad International Airport, Greensboro, North Carolina, United States, near High Point, North Carolina and Winston-Salem, North Carolina
- GSP Greenville-Spartanburg International Airport, Greer, South Carolina, United States, near Greenville, South Carolina and Spartanburg, South Carolina
- GTF Great Falls, Montana, United States
- GTR Golden Triangle Regional Airport, serving the towns of Columbus, Mississippi, West Point, Mississippi, and Starkville, Mississippi, United States
- GUA Guatemala City International Airport, Guatemala City, Guatemala
- GUB Guerrero Negro, Mexico
- GUM Antonio B. Won Pat International Airport, Tamuning, Guam, United States, near Hagåtña, Guam
- GVA Cointrin International Airport, Geneva, Switzerland
- GWY Galway Airport, Carnamore, Ireland, near Galway
- GYE Simon Bolivar International Airport, Santiago de Guayaquil, Ecuador
- GYM Guaymas, Mexico
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of airports: G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of Biblical names
A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - Y - Z
- Gaal, contempt; abomination
- Gaash, tempest; commotion
- Gabbai, the back
- Gabbatha, high; elevated
- Gabriel, God is my strength
- Gad, a band; a troop
- Gadarenes, men of Gadara, i.e., a place surrounded or walled
- Gaddi, my troop; a kid
- Gaddiel, goat of God; the Lord my happiness
- Gaius, lord; an earthly man
- Galal, a roll, a wheel
- Galatia, white; the color of milk
- Galeed, the heap of witness
- Galilee, wheel; revolution
- Gallim, who heap up; who cover
- Gallio, who sucks, or lives on milk
- Gamaliel, recompense of God; camel of God
- Gammadims, dwarfs
- Gamul, a recompense
- Gareb, a scab
- Garmites, men of Garmi, ie., bones, or, my cause
- Gatam, their lowing; their touch
- Gath, a wine-press
- Gath-rimmon, the high wine-press
- Gaza, strong; a goat
- Gazabar, a treasurer
- Gazer, a dividing; a sentence
- Gazez, a passing over
- Gazzam, the fleece of them
- Geba, a hill; cup
- Gebal, bound; limit
- Geber, manly, strong
- Gebim, grasshoppers; height
- Gedaliah, God is my greatness
- Geder, Gederah, Gederoth, a wall
- Gederothaim, hedges
- Gehazi, valley of sight
- Geliloth, rolling, wheel, heap
- Gemalli, wares; a camel
- Gemariah, accomplishment or perfection of the Lord
- Gennesaret, garden of the prince
- Genesis, beginning
- Genubath, theft; robbery
- Gera, pilgrimage, combat; dispute
- Gerar, same as Gera
- Gergesenes, those who come from pilgrimage or fight
- Gerizim, cutters, hatchets
- Gershom, a stranger here
- Gershon, his banishment; the change of pilgrimage
- Geshur, Geshuri, sight of the valley; a walled valley
- Gether, the vale of trial or searching
- Gethsemane, a very fat or plentiful vale
- Geuel, God's redemption
- Gezer, dividing, sentence
- Giah, to guide; draw out; produce; a groan or sigh
- Gibbar, strong, manly
- Gibbethon, a back; a high house
- Gibeah, a hill
- Gibeon, hill; cup; thing lifted up
- Giddel, great
- Gideon, he that bruises or breaks; a destroyer
- Gideoni, same as Gideon
- Gihon, valley of grace
- Gilalai, a wheel
- Gilboa, revolution of inquiry
- Gilead, the heap or mass of testimony
- Gilgal, wheel; rolling; heap
- Giloh, he that rejoices; he that overturns
- Gimzo, that bulrush
- Ginath, Ginnetho, a garden
- Girgashite, who arrives from pilgrimage
- Gispa, coming hither
- Gittah-hepher, digging; a wine-press
- Gittaim, a wine-press
- Gittites, men of Gath, ie., of a wine-press
- Goath, his touching; his roaring
- Gob, cistern; grasshopper
- Gog, roof; covering
- Golan, passage; revolution
- Golgotha, a heap of skulls; something skull-shaped
- Goliath, passage; revolution; heap
- Gomer, to finish; complete
- Gomorrah, rebellious people
- Goshen, approaching; drawing near
- Gozan, fleece; pasture; who nourisheth the body
- Gudgodah, happiness
- Guni, a garden; a covering
- Gur, the young of a beast; a whelp
- Gur-baal, the governor's whelp
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Biblical names starting with G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of books in alphabetical order by title:A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
- The Gabriel Hounds - Mary Stewart (1967)
- Gadsby - Ernest Vincent Wright (1939)
- Gai-Jin - James Clavell, set in Japan, around 1880.
- The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight - Jimmy Breslin (1970)
- Gargantua and Pantagruel - François Rabelais (1534)
- A Gathering of Days: A New England Girl's Journal - Joan Blos, (1980 Newbery Medal)
- Gay Neck, the Story of a Pigeon - Dhan Gopal Mukerji (1928 Newbery Medal)
- Generation X: Tales From An Accelerated Culture - Douglas Coupland (1991)
- Generations - William Strauss and Neil Howe
- Georgics - Vergil
- Georgy Girl - Margaret Forster (1965)
- Get Shorty - Elmore Leonard (1990)
- Ghost - Piers Anthony (1986)
- The Ghost - Danielle Steel (1997)
- Ghost Story - Peter Straub (1979)
- Ghost Writer - Philip Roth (1979)
- Ghosts - Henrik Ibsen (1881)
- Giant - Edna Ferber (1952)
- The Gift - Danielle Steel (1994)
- Gilgamesh (700 BC)
- The Ginger Man - J. P. Donleavy (1955)
- Ginger Pye - Eleanor Estes, (1952 Newbery Medal)
- The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon - Stephen King (1999)
- The Girl with the Pearl Earring - Tracy Chevalier (2002)
- Girlfriend in a Coma - Douglas Coupland (1998)
- The Giver - Lois Lowry, (1994 Newbery Medal)
- Giving Something Back - Robert N. Kucey (2001)
- The Glass-Blowers - Daphne Du Maurier (1963)
- The Glitter Dome - Joseph Wambaugh (1981)
- Glory Road - Robert A. Heinlein (1963)
- Glue - Irvine Welsh (2001)
- Go Tell It on the Mountain - James Baldwin (1953)
- Go to the Widow-Maker - James Jones (1967)
- The God of Small Things - Arundhati Roy (1997)
- Gödel, Escher, Bach - Douglas Hofstadter (1979)
- Gods and Generals - Jeff Shaara (1996)
- The Gods Themselves - Isaac Asimov (1972)
- The Godfather - Mario Puzo (1969)
- Going After Cacciato - Tim O'Brien (1978)
- The Gold Coast - Kim Stanley Robinson (1988)
- The Goldberg Variations - Nancy Huston (1996)
- The Golden Cup - Belva Plain (1986)
- Goldfinger - Ian Fleming (1959)
- Gone With the Wind - Margaret Mitchell (1936)
- A Good Man is Hard to Find - Flannery O'Connor (1955)
- Good Omens - Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman (1990)
- Goodbye, Columbus - Philip Roth (1959)
- Goodbye, Janette - Harold Robbins (1981)
- Gorky Park - Martin Cruz Smith (1981)
- Gossip from the Forest - Thomas Keneally (1975), tells of the negotiation of the armistice that ended World War I.
- The Gown of Glory - Agnes Sligh Turnbull (1952)
- Gradmother and the Priests - Taylor Caldwell (1963)
- The Grass Is Singing - Doris Lessing (1950)
- The Grass is Always Greener over the Septic Tank - Erma Bombeck (1976)
- Grave Secrets - Kathy Reichs (2002)
- Gravity's Rainbow - Thomas Pynchon (1973)
- The Great Bridge - David McCullough (1972)
- The Great Divorce - C.S. Lewis
- Great Expectations - Charles Dickens (1861)
- The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgerald (1925)
- Great Grandma's Rocking Chair - Carol Biberstein (2001)
- The Great Hunt - Robert Jordan (1990)
- Great Lion of God - Taylor Caldwell (1970)
- The Great Train Robbery - Michael Crichton (1975)
- The Green Berets - Robin Moore (1965)
- Green Eggs and Ham - Dr. Seuss (1960)
- The Green Hills of Earth - Robert A. Heinlein (1951)
- The Green Man - Kingsley Amis (1969)
- Greenhouse: The 200-Year Story of Global Warming - Gale E. Christianson (2001)
- Grendel - John Gardner (1971)
- The Grey King - Susan Cooper, (1976 Newbery Medal)
- Grosses Universal-Lexicon (18th century), encylopedia
- The Group - Mary McCarthy (1963)
- Grumbles from the Grave - Robert A. Heinlein (1989)
- Der Grune Kakadu - Arthur Schnitzler
- Guards! Guards - Terry Pratchett (1989)
- Guinness book of Astronomy - Patrick Moore
- Guinness Book of Records - Ross and Norris McWhirter (1955-present)
- Gulliver's Travels - Jonathan Swift (1726)
- The Guns of August - Barbara Tuchman (1962)
- The Gunslinger - Stephen King (1982)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of books by title: G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of cities in Germany: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
Town Population District Bundesland Gardelegen 12,200 Altmarkkreis Salzwedel Saxony-Anhalt Geilenkirchen 27,800 Heinsberg North Rhine-Westphalia Geldern 33,100 Cleves North Rhine-Westphalia Gelsenkirchen 286,400 -- North Rhine-Westphalia Gera 109,900 -- Thuringia Gescher 16,800 Borken North Rhine-Westphalia Gevelsberg 33,600 Ennepe-Ruhr North Rhine-Westphalia Gifhorn 42,500 Gifhorn Lower Saxony Gladbeck 77,800 Recklinghausen North Rhine-Westphalia Goch 32,700 Cleves North Rhine-Westphalia Görlitz 63,300 -- Saxony Goslar 45,700 Goslar Lower Saxony Gößnitz 4,400 Altenburger Land Thuringia Göttingen 126,500 Göttingen Lower Saxony Greifswald 57,700 -- Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Grevesmühlen 11,300 Nordwestmecklenburg Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Grimmen 12,500 Nordvorpommern Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Gronau 44,900 Borken North Rhine-Westphalia Gschwend 5,037 Ostalbkreis Baden-Württemberg Gummersbach 53,300 Oberbergischer Kreis North Rhine-Westphalia Güstrow 34,000 Güstrow Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Gütersloh 95,200 Gütersloh North Rhine-Westphalia A "--" in the district column means, that the town is a district-free town, i.e. it is by itself a district.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of cities in Germany starting with G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- Q -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y -- Z
- Godollo University of Agricultural Sciences
- Goteborgs Universitet
- GMI Engineering and Management Institute
- GNA - Globewide Network Academy, Inc
- Gainesville College
- Gajra Raja Medical College
- Gallaudet University
- Galveston College
- Gannon University
- GateWay Community College
- Gateshead College
- Gazi University
- Gdansk Medical Academy
- Gdansk Technical University
- Gdynia Maritime Academy
- Gembloux Faculte Universitaire des Sciences Agronomiques
- Geneva College
- George Fox University
- George Mason University
- George Washington University
- Georgetown College
- Georgetown University
- Georgia Institute of Technology
- Georgia Military College
- Georgia Southern University
- Georgia Southwestern College
- Georgia State University
- Georgian College of Applied Arts and Technology
- Gettysburg College
- Girne American University
- Gjovik College
- Glasgow University - see University of Glasgow
- Glendale Community College
- Goddard College
- Golden Gate University
- Golden West College
- Goldey-Beacom College
- Goldsmiths College, University of London
- Gonzaga University
- Gooding Institute of Nurse Anesthesia
- Gordon College
- Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
- Goshen College
- Gothenburg University
- Gothenburg School of Economics and Commercial Law
- Goucher College
- Government College of Engineering, Pune
- Government College of Engineering, Salem
- Government College of Technology, Coimbatore
- Grace College
- Graceland College
- Graduate Institute of International Studies
- Graduate School, USDA
- Grand Rapids Baptist Seminary
- Grand Rapids Community College
- Grand Valley State University
- Grant MacEwan Community College
- Grays Harbor Community College
- Grayson County College
- Graz University of Technology
- Green Mountain College
- Greenville Technical College
- Gresham College
- Griffith University
- Grinnell College
- Grossmont Community College
- Grossmont-Cuyamaca Community College District
- Grove City College
- Guildford College
- Guilford College
- Guilford Technical Community College
- Gulf Coast Community College
- Gunma University
- Gustavus Adolphus College
- Gutenberg College
- Gwynedd Mercy College
- Gyeongsang National University
- See also : Colleges and universities
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of colleges and universities starting with G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of acronyms ("words made from parts of other words, pronounceable") used by the government and the military:Please add your own, in alphabetical order.
See also: List of US Army acronyms
- ASEAN - Association of South East Asian Nations
- AWOL - Absent Without Leave (military jargon)
- Gulag The Chief Administration of Collective Labor Camps (Russian Главное Управление Лагерей, "Glavnoye Upravleniye Lagerey")
- Interpol -- International Criminal Police Organization
- NAFTA - North American Free Trade Agreement
- NATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization
- USA PATRIOT Act - Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of government and military acronyms."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of Japanese authors
- Goto Asataro (April 16,1881 - August 9,1945)
- Goto Chugai (December 23,1866 - June 12,1938)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of Japanese authors:G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
Ga-Gd - Ge - Gf-Gh - Gi - Gj-Gl - Gm-Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga-Gd - Ge - Gf-Gh - Gi - Gj-Gl - Gm-Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
Ga
- Gaaikema, Seth, (born 1939), Dutch comedian
- Gaarder, Jostein, Sophie's World
- Gabaldon, Diana, author
- Gabin, Jean, (1904-1976), French actor
- Gable, Clark, (1901-1960), US actor
- Gable, Dan, (born 1948), amateur wrestling champion, coach
- Gabor, Eva, (1921-1995), actress
- Gaboriau, Emile, (1833-1873), writer
- Gabrieli, Andrea, (c.1510-1586), composer
- Gabrieli, Giovanni, (1557-1612), composer
- Gabriel III of Alexandria, (1268-1271), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel III, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gabriel II of Alexandria, (1102-1128), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gabriel I of Alexandria, (910-921), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gabriel IV of Alexandria, (1370-1378), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel IV, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gabriel, Juan, songwriter
- Gabriel (Maronite Patriarch)
- Gabriel, of Blaouza, Maronite Patriarch
- Gabriel, of Hjula, Maronite Patriarch
- Gabriel, Peter, (born 1950), British musician
- Gabriel, Roman, (born 1940), professional football player
- Gabriel, Tony, Canadian athlete
- Gabriel VIII of Alexandria, (1590-1601), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel VII of Alexandria, (1526-1569), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel VI of Alexandria, (1466-1475), Coptic Pope
- Gabriel V of Alexandria, (1408-1427), Coptic Pope
- Gabrijelcic, Metka, (born 1934), actress.
- Gacy, John Wayne, (1942-1994), US serial killer
- Gadamer, Hans-Georg, (1900-2002), philosopher
- Gadda, Carlo Emilio, novelist
- Gaddis, William, (1922-1998), American novelist
- Gade, Niels Wilhelm, (1817-1890), composer
- Gaetano, of Thiene, scholastic philosopher
- Gaffney, Francis, astronaut
- Gagarin, Yuri, (1934-1968), Soviet cosmonaut
- Gagnan, Emile, underwater apparatus
- Gagne, Eric
- Gagnon, Marc, (born 1975), Olympic Gold medalist
- Gagnon, Sylvain
- Gahagan, Helen (1900-1980) US actress, politician
- Gahan, David, (born 1962), musician (Depeche Mode)
- Gahl, Christoph, dramatist, author
- Gailit, August, (born 1891), Estonian, writer
- Gaillard, Slim, musician
- Gaiman, Neil, (born 1960), British-born comics writer
- Gaines, Steve, (died 1977), musician (Lynyrd Skynyrd)
- Gainsborough, Thomas, (1727-1788), English painter
- Gainsbourg, Charlotte, musician
- Gainsbourg, Serge, (1928-1991), French songwriter, musician
- Gajcy, Tadeusz, poet
- Galanos, James, (born 1924), fashion designer
- Galante, Carmine, US Mafia boss
- Galarraga, Andres, Baseball player
- Galba, (ca. 54-68), Roman Emperor
- Galbraith, John Kenneth, (born 1908), economist
- Galczynski, Konstanty Ildefons, poet
- Galdos, Perez, novelist
- Gale, Crystal, musician
- Gale, Joze, (born 1913), actor, film director and pedagogue.
- Galen, (131-201 AD), classic Greek surgeon
- Galerius, Roman Emperor
- Galesiotes, Joseph, patriarch of Constantinople
- Galilei, Galileo, (1564-1642), Italian astronomy pioneer
- Galindez, Victor, (1948-1980), world champion boxer
- Galindo, Juan (1802-1839) Central American explorer, officer
- Gallagher, (born 1947), comedian
- Gallagher, Liam, (born 1972), British singer-songwriter
- Gallagher, Noel, British singer-songwriter
- Gallagher, Peter, (born 1956), actor
- Gallagher, Rory, (died 1995), musician
- Galland, Adolf, Luftwaffe fighter ace
- Gallant, Mavis, (born 1922), (See also France)
- Gallatin, Albert, (1761-1849), US Treasury Secretary, diplomat
- Gallaudet, Thomas, (1787-1851), educator
- Gallegos, Romulo, (1884-1969), Canaima, Doña Bárbara
- Galle, Johann Gottfried, (1812-1910), astronomer
- Gallen-Kallela, Akseli, (1865-1931), Finnish painter
- Gall, Grover, Canadian writer
- Galli-Curci, Amelita (1889-1963), operatic soprano
- Gallico, Paul, (1897-1976), author
- Gallieni, Joseph, (1849-1916), General
- Gallienus, (218-268), (Roman Emperor)
- Gallignani, Giuseppi, (born 1851), composer
- Gallivan, Danny, play-by-play announcer
- Gallo, Crazy Joe, (1929-1972), US Mafioso
- Gallup, George, (born 1901), statistician, opinion pollster
- Gallus, Jacobus, (1550-1591), composer and conductor.
- Gallus, Thomas, scholastic philosopher
- Galois, Evariste, (1811-1832), mathematician
- Galouye, Daniel F, (died 1976), science fiction author
- Galsworthy, John, (1867-1933), dramatist
- Galtieri, Leopoldo Fortunato, (1926-2003), civil engineer
- Galton, Francis, (1822-1911), British scientist
- Galuppi, Baldassare, (1706-1785), composer
- Galvani, Luigi, (1737-1798), Italian physician, physicist
- Galvez, Byron, (born 1941), painter
- Galway, James, (born 1939), musician
- Gambale, Frank, musician
- Gambino, Carlo, (1902-1976), US Mafioso
- Gamble, Hamilton Rowan, US governor
- Gamboa, Joan, world boxing champion
- Gambon, Michael, (born 1940), Irish-born actor
- Gamelin, Maurice Gustave, French general
- Gamow, George, (1904-1968), Ukrainian astronomer
- Gams, Ivan, (born 1923), geographer.
- Gance, Abel, (1889-1981), film writer, director, producer, actor
- Gandara, Antonio de la, (1861-1917), French painter
- Gandhi, Indira, (1917-1984), Indian prime minister
- Gandhi, Mohandas, (1869-1948), Indian statesman
- Gandhi, Rajiv, Indian prime minister
- Gandini, Mauro, (born 1965), economist
- Gandolfini, James, (born 1961), US actor
- Ganghofer, Ludwig, (1855-1920), writer
- Gang Hong-rip, (1560-1627), commander-in-chief
- Gang, James, musician
- Gangl, Engelbert, (1873-1950), poet
- Gann, Thomas, explorer
- Gano, Gordon, singer-songwriter
- Gans, Joe, boxer
- Gansevoort, Leonard, (1751-1810), US political leader
- Gansevoort, Peter, (1749-1812), American Revolutionary War Colonel
- Gantt, Henry, inventor of the Gantt chart
- Ganz, Bruno, (born 1941), actor
- Gaprindashvili, Nona, chess player
- Garay, Sindo, (1867-1968), Cuban singer, musician
- Garbarek, Jan, musician
- Garbarra, Carin, (born 1965), football player
- Garber, Victor, actor
- Garbo, Greta, (1905-1990), Swedish-born Hollywood actor
- Garborg, Arne, author
- Garcia, Andres, (born 1941) Dominican/Mexican Telenovela actor
- Garcia, Andy, (born 1956), US actor
- García, Calixto
- Garcia, Fernando L (1929-1952) first Puerto Rican medal of honor winner
- Garcia, Jeff, (born 1970), athlete
- Garcia, Jerry, (1945-1995), US singer-songwriter of Grateful Dead
- Garcia, Odalys, singer and show host
- Garcia Lopez, Antonio (1943-1995), Puerto Rican jail escapee, aka Tono Bicicleta
- Garcia-Viardot, Pauline, (1821-1910), opera singer & composer
- Gardel, Carlos, Argentinean tango singer
- Gardelle, Theodore, (died 1761), Swiss enameller
- Garden, Graeme, (born 1943), comedian
- Garden, Mary (1874-1967), Scotts Operatic Soprano
- Gardner, Ava, (1922-1990), US actor
- Gardner, Dale, astronaut
- Gardner, Erle Stanley, (1889-1970), US creator of Perry Mason
- Gardner, Frederick D, US governor
- Gardner, Gerald, (1884-1964), British founder of Gardnerian Wicca
- Gardner, Guy, astronaut
- Gardner, John C, American novelist, teacher
- Gardner, Martin, (born 1914), American writer on mathematics and games
- Garfield, James, (1831-1881), US president
- Garfield, John, (1913-1952), actor
- Garfunkel, Art, (born 1941), musician
- Garibaldi, Giuseppi, (1807-1882), Italian statesman
- Garland, Alex, author of The Beach
- Garland, Augustus Hill, Attorney General of the US
- Garland, Hamlin, American novelist
- Garland, Judy, (1922-1969), US actor
- Garmendia, Anibal Pinto, Chilean president
- Garmers, Sonia, (born 1933), author
- Garn, Jake, senator, astronaut
- Garneau, Marc, (born 1949), Canadian astronaut
- Garneau, Saint-Denys, Canadian poet, writer
- Garner, Alan, The Owl Service
- Garner, Erroll, (1921-1977), jazz musician
- Garner, Helen, novelist
- Garner, James, (born 1928), actor
- Garner, Jennifer, (born 1972), US actress
- Garnier, Charles, (1825-1898), French architect
- Garnier, Francis, (1839-1873), French explorer
- Garnier, Robert, (c.1545-1600), French poet
- Garnier-Pages, Etienne Joseph Louis, (1801-1841), French politician
- Garnier-Pages, Louis Antoine, (1803-1878), French politician
- Garofalo, Janeane, (born 1964), US comedian
- Garrett, Almeida, writer, dramaturge
- Garrett, Betty, (born 1919), actress, dancer
- Garret, Thomas
- Garrett, Kenny, alto
- Garrett, Pat, (1850-1908), US Western lawman
- Garrett, Peter, singer, songwriter, activist
- Garrett, Randall, author
- Garrick, David, (1717-1779), actor
- Garrigue, Jean, poet
- Garrincha, athlete
- Garriott, Owen, astronaut
- Garrison, Jim, (1921-1992), district attorney
- Garrison, William Lloyd, (1879-1879), US activist
- Garroway, Dave, (1913-1982), television host
- Garson, Greer, (1904-1996), actor
- Garth, Samuel, poet
- Garvey, Marcus Mosiah, (1887-1940), US politician and prophet
- Gary, Romain, (1914-1980), Russian-born French writer
- Gascoigne, George, (1525-1577), poet
- Gascoigne, Paul, English football player
- Gascoyne, David, poet
- Gaskell, Elizabeth, English novelist
- Gasol, Pau, (born 1981), basketball player
- Gasparyan, Djivan, musician
- Gassendi, Pierre, (1592-1655), philosopher mathematician
- Gassman, Vittorio, (1922-2000), Italian actor
- Gass, William H, author
- Gasteyer, Ana, comedian
- Gates, Bill, (born 1955), US computer monopolist
- Gates, Darryl, LA police chief
- Gates, David, (born 1940), singer-songwriter
- Gates, Gareth, musician
- Gatling, Richard (1818-1903), US Gatling gun inventor
- Gatlin, Larry, musician
- Gatti, Arturo, (born 1972), world champion boxer
- Gatti, Enrico, Italian small-time terrorist
- Gattorno, Francisco, Cuban born, Mexican nationalized actor
- Gaudí, Antoni, (1852-1926), Spanish architect
- Gaughan, Dick, musician
- Gaughan, Jack, science fiction visual artist
- Gauguin, Paul, (1848-1903), French painter
- Gaultier, Denis, (died 1672), French lutenist, composer
- Gaultier de Varennes et de la Vérendrye, Pierre, (1685-1749), explorer
- Gaultier, Jean-Paul, (born 1952), fashion designer
- Gaunilo, of Marmoutiers, scholastic philosopher
- Gaus, Gunter, (born 1929), publicist and politician
- Gauss, Carl Friedrich, (1777-1855), mathematician
- Gauthier, David, philosopher
- Gauthier, Jean-Robert, Canadian senator
- Gavazzi, Artur, (1861-1944), geographer
- Gavilan, Kid, (1926-2003), world champion boxer
- Gavin, John, (born 1928), actor
- Gaye, Marvin, (1939-1984), musician, singer-songwriter
- Gayheart, Rebecca, (born 1972), US actress
- Gay, John, (1685-1732), songwriter, poet
- Gayle, Crystal, (born 1951), country music singer
- Gay-Lussac, Joseph Louis, (1778-1850), physicist
- Gaynor, Gloria, (born 1949), US singer
- Gaynor, Janet, (1906-1984), actor
- Gaynor, Mitzi, (born 1931), actress
- Gazzara, Ben, (born 1930), actor
Gb
Gc
Gd
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Ga-Gd."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga-Gd - Ge - Gf-Gh - Gi - Gj-Gl - Gm-Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Geach, Peter, philosopher
- Gear, William, (1915-1997), painter
- Gébler, Carlo, member of Aosdána
- Geens, Gaston, 1981-1992, CVP
- Geer, Will (1902-1978), actor
- Geesink, Anton, (born 1934), judoka
- Gehrig, Lou, US baseball player
- Gehry, Frank, (born 1929), architect
- Geiger, Hans, (1882-1945), inventor
- Geiger, Roy, marine commando general
- Geißler, Heiner, (1982-1985), German government minister of family anf health
- Gelasius I, Pope, (492-496
- Gelasius II, Pope, (1118-1119)
- Gelder, Aert de, (1645-1727), painter
- Geldof, Bob, (born 1951), British songwriter, singer of Boomtown Rats and third-world aid activist
- Gelfand, Boris, chess player
- Gelfer, Joseph, (born 1974), author
- Gellar, Sarah Michelle, (born 1977), US actress
- Geller, Efim, (USSR, 1925-1998), chess player
- Geller, Uri, Israeli magician and alleged psychokinetic
- Gelli, Licio, (born 1919)
- Gellis, Roberta, author
- Gell-Mann, Murray, (born 1929), US physicist
- Gemar, Charles, astronaut
- Gemayel, Bashir, (1947-1982)
- Gemayel, Philip, Maronite Patriarch
- Geminiani, Francesco, (1687-1762), composer
- Gemma, Giuliano, actor
- Gemmei, empress of Japan
- Gemmell, David, (born 1948), US author
- Genda, Minory, Japanese fighter commander
- Genet, Jean, (1910-1986), French author
- Genghis Khan, (c. 1165-1227), Mongol leader
- Gennadius, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gennadius II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gennadius I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gennadius, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gen'nai, Kusaka
- Gennes, Pierre-Gilles de, physicist, Nobel prize winner
- Genovese, Vito, US Mafia boss
- Genscher, Hans-Dietrich, (1927-1992 affairs), German politician
- Gensho, empress of Japan
- Gensho, Empress, of Japan
- Gentileschi, Artemesia, painter
- Gentle, Mary, British science fiction author
- Gento, athlete
- Gentzen, Gerhard, (1909-1945), mathematician
- Geoffrey of Monmouth, churchman/historian
- Geoffrion, Bernie, "Boom-Boom", ice hockey player
- George, Boy, (born 1961), UK singer
- George, Chief Dan, actor
- George, Henry, (1839-1897), economist
- George III of the United Kingdom, (1801-1820), British monarch
- George II, King, king of England
- George II, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- George II of Greece, (1935-1947), king
- George II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- George I, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- George I of Great Britain, (1660-1727)
- George I of Greece, (1863-1913), king
- George I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- George IV of the United Kingdom, (1762-1830)
- George, Jean, My Side of the Mountain
- George, Margaret, author
- George of Podebrady, (1458-1471), Bohemian aristocrat
- George of Saxony, (1832-1904), King of Saxony (1902-1904)
- George, Saint
- George, Stefan, poet
- George VI of the United Kingdom, (1895-1952), British monarch
- George V of Hanover, (1819-1878), King of Hanover (1851-1866)
- George V of the United Kingdom, (1910-1936), British monarch
- Georgescu-Roegen, Nicholas (1906-1994), economist
- Georgine, Constance , Countess Markiewicz, politician
- Geraint of Dumnonia
- Gerard, of Abbeville, scholastic philosopher
- Gerard of Cremona, scholastic philosopher
- Gérards, Balthazar, – assassin of William I of Orange
- Gerasimus III, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gerasimus III, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gerasimus II, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gerasimus II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gerasimus I, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gerasimus I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gere, Richard, (born 1949), US actor
- Gerhardsen, Einar, (1963-1965), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Gerhardt, Paul, (c. 1606-1676), poet
- Gerho, of Reichersberg, scholastic philosopher
- Gericault, Theodore, (1791-1824), painter
- Gericke, Katharina, dramatist, author
- Germaine de Staël, Anne Louise, (1766-1817), Madame de Staël
- Germain, Sophie, (1776-1831), mathematician
- German, Edward, (1862-1936), composer
- Germanicus, (15 BC-AD 19)
- Germanus III, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Germanus II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Germanus I of Constantinople, patriarch of Constantinople
- Germanus IV, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Germanus V, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Germi, Pietro, film director
- Gernhardt, Michael, astronaut
- Gernsback, Hugo, (1884-1967), US science fiction editor
- Geronimo, (1829-1909), Apache warrior
- Gerontius, (1473-1489), Metropolitan of Moscow
- Gerry, Elbridge, (1744-1814), US Governor of Massachusetts
- Gers, Janick, (born 1957), musician (Iron Maiden)
- Gerschwiler, Hans, World champion figure skater
- Gershon, Gina, (born 1962), US actor
- Gershwin, George, (1898-1937), US composer
- Gershwin, Ira, (1896-1983), composer, songwriter
- Gersonides, (1288-1344 CE), scholastic philosopher
- Gerson, John, (1363-1429), scholastic philosopher
- Gerson, Wojciech, Polish painter
- Gertz, Bruce
- Gerulaitis, Vitas, (United States)
- Gervais, Ricky, (born 1961), comedian
- Gesell, Silvio, (1862-1930)
- Gessle, Per, Swedish musician
- Gessner, Conrad, (1516-1565)
- Gesualdo, Carlo, (c.1561-1613), composer
- Gesualdo, Don Carlo, composer
- Gettier, Edmund, (born 1927), philosopher
- Getty, Donald, premier of Alberta 1985-11-01 to 1992-12-13
- Getty, J. P, (1892-1976), businessman
- Getz, Stan, tenor
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Ge."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga-Gd - Ge - Gf-Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Ghazi of Iraq, (1933-1939), Iraqi king
- Gherman, Metropolitan of Moscow
- Ghiberti, Lorenzo, (1378-1455), sculptor
- Ghirardelli, Domingo, (1817 - 1897), chocolateer
- Ghirlandaio, Domenico, (1449-1494), Italian painter
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gf-Gh."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Giacconi, Riccardo, astronomer
- Giacomelli, Mario, photographer
- Giacometti, Alberto, (1901-1966), sculptor, painter
- Giamatti, A. Bartlett, (1938-1989), baseball commissioner
- Giambologna, (1529-1608), sculptor
- Giancana, Sam, (1908-1975), US Mafia boss
- Gianfrancesco, (1380-1459), Italian humanist
- Gianneo, Luis, (born 1897), composer
- Gianni, Lapo, poet
- Giannini, Giancarlo, (born 1942), actor
- Giap, General Vo Nguyen, Vietnamese general
- Giardello, Joey, boxer
- Gibb, Andy, (1958-1988), pop singer
- Gibb, Barry, (born 1946), singer-songwriter
- Gibb, Maurice, (1949-2003), singer-songwriter
- Gibb, Robin, (born 1949), singer-songwriter
- Gibbon, Edward, (1737-1794), author
- Gibbons, Orlando, (1583-1625), composer
- Gibbons, Stella, author of Cold Comfort Farm, found something nasty in Mary Webb's woodshed.
- Gibbs, Cecil Armstrong, (1889-1960), composer
- Gibbs, Josiah Willard, (1839-1903), physicist
- Gibbs, Marla, (born 1946), actress
- Gibran, Khalil, (1883-1931), Lebanese poet and painter
- Gibson, Althea, (born 1927), tennis player
- Gibson, Bob, (born 1935), member of the Baseball Hall of Fame
- Gibson, Charles, (born 1943), U.S. telvision anchor
- Gibson, Charles Dana, (1867-1944), artist
- Gibson, Deborah 'Debbie', (born 1970), singer
- Gibson, Don, musician
- Gibson, Edward, author, astronaut
- Gibson, Henry, (born 1935), actor
- Gibson, Hoot, (1892-1962), actor
- Gibson, Margaret, Canadian writer
- Gibson, Mel, (born 1956), US actor, USA born, Australian raised
- Gibson, Robert, astronaut
- Gibson, William, (born 1948), US-born cyberpunk author
- Gidzenko, Yuri, astronaut
- Giehse, Therese, (1898-1975), actress
- Gielgud, Sir John, (died 2000), 96, British actor
- Gierek, Edward, (1913-2001), Polish president
- Gierowski, Stefan, Polish painter
- Gierymski, Aleksander, Polish painter
- Gierymski, Maksymilian, Polish painter
- Giese, Albrecht, IV, (died 1580)
- Gieseler, Johann Karl Ludwig, (1792-1854), German church historian
- Gieselmann, David, dramatist, author
- Giffard, Henry Alexander, (1902-1908), British bailiff
- Giffen, Robert, (1837-1910), British economist
- Gifford, Frank, (born 1930), pro football player, sports announcer
- Gift, Roland, (born 1962), musician ("Fine Young Cannibals")
- Giger, H. R, (born 1940), Swiss illustrator
- Gigli, Beniamino, (1890-1957), tenor
- Gilbert, Anthony, author
- Gilbert, Cass, (1859-1934), architect
- Gilbert, Eddie, (died 1978), cricketer
- Gilbert, Humphrey, (1539-1583)
- Gilbert, Jean, (born 1879), composer
- Gilbert, John, (1899-1936), actor
- Gilbert, Lewis, film director
- Gilbert, Martin, England: best known for multiple books on Winston Churchill
- Gilbert, Melissa, (born 1964), US actress, president of the Screen Actors Guild
- Gilbert, Michael, author
- Gilberto, Astrud, (born 1940), singer, songwriter
- Gilbert, of Poitiers, scholastic philosopher
- Gilbert, Stephen, (born 1910), painter
- Gilbert, William, (1544-1603), physicist
- Gilbert, W. S, (1836-1911), UK comic writer
- Gilbreth, Frank, Cheaper by the Dozen
- Gilbreth, Lillian, time and motion studies (University of California, Berkeley)
- Gilchrist, Albert W, American Governor of Florida
- Gildas, (c. 510-c.570)
- Gilder, Richard, poet
- Gildersleeve, Basil Lanneau, (1931-1924), scholar
- Gildner, Gary, (Letters from Vicksburg)
- Gildo, Rex, (died 1999), German singer, aged 63
- Gilels, Emil Grygoryevich, (1916-1985), pianist
- Giles, of Rome, scholastic philosopher
- Gil, Gilberto, (born 1942), singer
- Gil, Julian, model who has become famous in Puerto Rico
- Gill, Aurelien, Canadian senator
- Gill, David, (1843-1914), astronomer
- Gill, Eric, (1882-1940), sculptor, illustrator
- Gillette, King Camp, (1855-1932), inventor
- Gillette, William, (1855-1937), American actor and dramatist
- Gilliam, Terry, (born 1940), US animator, director and ex-member of Monty Python
- Gilllespie, Dizzy, (1917-1993), US jazz musician
- Gillman, Sid, (1911-2003), athlete
- Gill, Vince, (born 1957), musician
- Gilly, Mickey, (born 1937), country music performer
- Gilman, Billy, (born 1988), singer
- Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, (1860-1935), US feminist writer
- Gilman, Sid, (born 1911), American football player, coach, manager
- Gilmore, Artis, (born 1949), basketball star
- Gilmore, Gary, (died 1977), US serial killer
- Gilmore, Jimmie Dale, (born 1945), musician
- Gilmore, John, computer innovator
- Gilmore, John, jazz trumpeter
- Gilmour, David, (born 1946), singer-songwriter
- Gilson, Paul, (1965-1942), composer
- Gimenez, Susana, vedette, singer and actress
- Gimmel, musician
- Ginastera, Alberto, (1916-1983), composer
- Ginger, Ann Fagan, (born 1925), American lawyer and political activist
- Ginger, Ray, (1924-1975), American historian
- Gingold, Hermione, (1897-1987), actress
- Gingrich, Newt, (born 1943), American politician
- Gini, Corrado, (1884-1965), statistician
- Ginobili, Emanuel, (born 1977), basketball player
- Ginsberg, Allen, (1926-1997), US eccentric writer
- Ginsberg, Ernst, (1904-1964), actor and film director
- Ginuwine, (born 1975), singer
- Ginzburg, Natalia, (1916-1991), novelist
- Gioia, Dana, (essays on poetry)
- Giolitti, Giovanni
- Giordano, Umberto, (1867-1948), Italian composer, opera composer
- Giorgio, Giovanni (1871-1950}, Italian scientist and engineer
- Giotto, (1267-1337), Italian painter
- Giovanni, Aria, (born 1977), model
- Giovanni, Nikki, (born 1943), poet
- Giovanni, Paolo di, sculptor
- Gipson, Fred, Old Yeller
- Girard, George, (1930-1957), musician
- Girard, Pierre, (1765-1836), French mathematician
- Girardon, Francois, (1628-1715), painter
- Girardot, Annie, French actor
- Giraud, Albert, (1860-1929), Belgian poet
- Giraud, Henri, French WWI & WW2 general
- Giraud, Jean, French comics artist
- Giraudoux, Jean, (1882-1944), French dramatist
- Gisevius, Hans Bernd, (1904-1974), diplomat
- Gish, Dorothy, (1898-1968), actress
- Gish, Lilian, (1893-1993), US actress
- Giuffre, Jimmy, musician
- Giuliani, Carlo, (died 1997), Italian activist
- Giuliani, Mauro, composer
- Giuliani, Rudy, (born 1944), former Mayor of New York
- Giusti, Giuseppe, (1809-1850), poet
- Givens, Robin, (born 1964), US actress
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gi."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj-Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - GzGj
Gk
Gl
- Gladstone, William Ewart, (1809-1898), British prime minister
- Glaisher, James, (1809-1903), British meteorologist and aeronaut
- Glanvill, Joseph, (1636-1680), philosopher
- Glas, Uschi, German actress
- Glasgow, Ellen, American novelist
- Glass, Joanna, Canadian writer
- Glass, Louis, composer
- Glass, Philip, (born 1937), composer, opera composer
- Glazer, Janko, (1893-1975), poet
- Glazkov, Yuri, astronaut
- Glazunov, Alexander, (1865-1936), composer
- Gleason, Jackie, US television personality
- Glendening, Parris N, US governor
- Glendower, Owen, (1359-1416), ('Prince of Wales')
- Glenn, John, (born 1921), US astronaut
- Gliere, Reinhold, (1875-1956), composer
- Glinka, Mikhail, (1804-1857), composer of Russlan and Ludmilla
- Glitter, Gary, (born 1940), musician
- Globevnik, Josip, (born 1945), mathematician.
- Gloeden, Wilhelm von, (1856-1931), photographer
- Glover, Denis, (1912-1980), poet
- Gluck, Christoph Willibald, (1714-1798), composer, opera composer
- Gluck, Louise, (Bobbitt Prize winner)
- Gluvić, Goran, (born 1957), poet
- Glycerius, (ca. 420-480), Roman Emperor
- Glykys, John, patriarch of Constantinople
- Glynn, Martin H, Democratic, 1913-1914
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gj-Gl."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga-Gd - Ge - Gf-Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm-Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gmeiner, Eugen Friedl, organist
- Gnägi, Rudolf, (1917-1985), Swiss Federal Councilor
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gm-Gn."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gobat, Charles Albert, (1843-1914), 1902 Nobel Peace Prize
- Gobec, Radovan, (born 1909), composer, conductor and choirmaster.
- Gobel, George, (1919-1991), comedian
- Gobert, Boy, (1925-1986), actor
- Go-Daigo, emperor of Japan
- Godard, Jean-Luc, (born 1930), French actor
- Godbout, Jacques, Canadian writer
- Goddard, Paulette, (1911-1990), US actress
- Goddard, Robert, British novelist
- Gödel, Kurt, (USA, 1906-1978), Czech mathematician
- Godden, Rumer, (1907-1998), novelist
- Godfred V of the Isle of Man, (1153-1158), king
- Godfrey, Arthur, (1903-1983), television host
- Godfrey, David, Canadian writer
- Godfrey, of Fontaines, scholastic philosopher
- Godfrey, of Poitiers, scholastic philosopher
- Godina, Karpo, (born 1943), film director, cameraman and montage editor.
- Godowsky, Leopold, (1870-1938), composer
- Godrèche, Judith, (born 1972), actress/author
- Godse, Naturam, Indian assassin of Mahatma Gandhi
- Godunov, Alexander, (born 1949), composer, ballet dancer
- Godunov, Boris, (1551-1605), Russian tzar
- Godwin, Gail, (born 1937), author
- Godwin, Linda, astronaut
- Godwin, Mary, (born 1759), feminist, activist, author
- Godwin, William, (1756-1836)
- Godwinson, Harold, (died 1066), English monarch
- Goebbels, Joseph, (1897-1945), Nazi Chancellor & propaganda chief
- Goebel, Henrey von, (1818-1893), inventor
- Goell, Kermi, dramatist, author
- Go-En'yu, emperor of Japan
- Goering, Reinhard, dramatist, author
- Goethals, George Washington, civil engineer
- Goeth, Amon Leopold, SS officer, concentration camp commandant
- Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, (1749-1832), author, poet
- Goetz, Kurt, (1888-1960), author
- Goffin, Gerry, (born 1939), lyricist
- Go-Fukakusa, emperor of Japan
- Go-Fushimi, emperor of Japan
- Gogarty, Deirdre, (born 1969)
- Gogh, Vincent Van, (1853-1890), painter
- Gogol, Nikolai, (1809-1852), author, Dead Souls
- Go-Hanazono, emperor of Japan
- Emperor Go-Horikawa, emperor of Japan
- Emperor Go-Ichijo, emperor of Japan
- Goizueta, Roberto, Coca-Cola CEO
- Go-Kameyama, emperor of Japan
- Go-Kashiwabara, emperor of Japan
- Go-Kogon, emperor of Japan
- Go-Komatsu, emperor of Japan
- Go-Komyo, emperor of Japan
- Golan, Menahem, (born 1929), Israeli movie producer
- Golar, Cvetko, (1879-1965), poet
- Gold, Thomas, (born 1920), astronomer, astrophysicist
- Goldbach, Christian, (1690-1764), mathematician
- Goldberg, Adele (linguist)
- Goldberg, Lea, (1911-1970), poet
- Goldberg, Rube, (1883-1970), US cartoonist
- Goldberg, Whoopi, (born 1949), US actress
- Goldblum, Jeff, (born 1953), US actor
- Golden, Rumer, (In Noahs Ark)
- Goldfaden, Abraham, (died 1908), Yiddish stage performer
- Goldin, Nan, (born 1953), photographer
- Golding, William, (1911-1993), British author
- Goldman, Bo, (born 1932), screenwriter
- Goldman, Emma, (1869-1940), US socialist
- Goldman, William, (born 1931), screenwriter
- Goldmark, Karl, (1830-1915), composer
- Goldmark, Peter, (1906-1977), inventor, engineer
- Goldoni, Carlo, (1707-1793), Italian dramatist
- Goldsborough, Charles, US governor
- Goldsborough, Phillips Lee, US governor
- Goldsmith, Oliver, (1730-1774), author
- Goldsmith, Paul, astronomer
- Goldsworthy, Peter, novelist
- Goldthwait, Bobcat, (born 1962), actor, comedian
- Goldwater, Barry, (1909-1998), US politician
- Goldwyn, Samuel, (1882-1974), film studio executive
- Golia, Pavel, (1887-1959), poet
- Golic, Ljubo, (born 1932), chemist.
- Goll, Yvan, (1891-1950), lyricist and dramatist
- Gollwitzer, Helmut, (1908-1993), theologian
- Golob, Drago, (born 1937), oboist.
- Golob, Jani, (born 1948), composer and violinist.
- Golota, Andrew, (born 1968), boxer
- Golovanov, Nicolai, conductor
- Goltz, Colmar von der, German soldier
- Gom, Leona, Canadian writer
- Gombrowicz, Witold, (1904-1969), novelist
- Gomes, Antônio Carlos, (1836-1896), Brazilian composer
- Gómez, Juan Vicente, Venezuelan president
- Gómez, Máximo
- Gomez,Wilfredo, (born 1956), world champion boxer
- Gomez-Preston, Reagan (born 1980) actress
- Go-Mizunoo, emperor of Japan
- Go-Momozono, emperor of Japan
- Gompers, Samuel, (1850-1924), labor union leader
- Gomringer, Eugen, poet
- Gomulka, Wladyslaw, (1905-1982), Polish president
- Go-Murakami, emperor of Japan
- Go-Nara, emperor of Japan
- Gonçalves, Nuno
- Goncharov, Ivan Alexandrovich, (1812-1891), Oblomov
- Goncourt, Edmond de, (1822-1896), writer
- Goncourt, Jules de, (1830-1870), Prix Goncourt
- Gong Li, (born 1965)
- Gongora, Luis de, Spanish poet
- Góngora y Argote, Luis de, (1561-1627)
- Gongsun Du, Chinese warlord
- Gongsun Kang, Chinese warlord
- Gongsun Yuan, Chinese warlord
- Go-Nijo, emperor of Japan
- Gonsalvo, of Spain, scholastic philosopher
- Gontard, Susette, (1769-1802), girl-friend of poet Friedrich Hölderlin
- Gonzales, Pancho, (died 1995), tennis professional
- Gonzalez, Araceli, actress
- Gonzalez, Betulio, world champion boxer
- Gonzalez, Charles, Congressman
- Gonzalez, Delia, (born 1970), world champion boxer
- Gonzalez, Elian, (born 1994), Cuban refugee
- Gonzalez, Ernie, (born 1985), boxing prospect
- Gonzalez, Fernando, (Chile)
- Gonzalez, Henry B (died 2000), Congressman
- Gonzalez, Humberto (born 1966) world boxing champion
- Gonzalez, Justo, historian and theologian
- Gonzalez, Luis, baseball player, World Series hero
- Gonzalez Malave, Alejandro, (c. 1958-1986), Puerto Rican secret agent
- Gonzalez, Pancho, (1928-1995), tennis player
- Gonzalez, Raul, Univision show host
- Gonzalez, Ray, poet
- Goodall, Frederick, painter
- Goodall, Jane, (born 1934), US zoologist
- Gooding, Cuba, Jr, (born 1968), actor
- Goodison, Lorna, poet
- Goodkind, Terry, (born 1948), US fantasy author
- Goodman, Andrew, (died 1964), civil rights activist
- Goodman, Benny, (1909-1986), US musician
- Goodman, John, (born 1952), US actor, comedian
- Goodman, Nelson, (born 1906), philosopher
- Goodnight, Charles, (died 1929), cattle baron
- Goodrick, Mick, musician
- Goodson, Mark, (1915-1992), game show producer
- Goodwin, Ron, (1925-2003), composer
- Goodwin, William, American novelist
- Goodyear, Charles, (1800-1860), American rubber magnate
- Goodyear, Scott
- Goolagong, Evonne, (born 1951), (Australia)
- Gorbach, Hubert (born 1956), Austrian politician
- Gorbachev, Mikhail Sergeyevich, (born 1931), last general secretary of Soviet Union
- Gorbachev, Raisa, (died 1999), last First Lady of the Soviet Union
- Gorbatko, Viktor, (born 1934), astronaut
- Gorbunovs, Anatolijs, Latvian president
- Gordian II, (AD 159-238), Roman Emperor
- Gordian III, (ca. 224-244), Roman Emperor
- Gordievsky, Oleg, KGB defector
- Gordimer, Nadine, (born 1923), Nobel Prize-winning author
- Gordon, Alexander, (born 1955), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, Alistair, (1920-2002), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, Archibald, (1913-1984), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, Charles, co-owner of Tri-City Beverages and inventor of "Dr. Enuf" beverage (University of Vermont)
- Gordon, David, (1908-1974), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, Dexter, (1923-1990), (tenor)
- Gordon, Dudley Gladstone, (1883-1972), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, Gale, (1906-1995), actor
- Gordon, George, 1st Earl of Aberdeen, (1637-1720)
- Gordon, George, 2nd Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair, (1879-1965), Scottish Earl
- Gordon, George, 3rd Earl of Aberdeen, (1722-1801)
- Gordon, George Hamilton, 4th Earl of Aberdeen, (1784-1860), ; Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
- Gordon, George Hamilton, 5th Earl of Aberdeen, (1816-1864), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
- Gordon, George Hamilton, 6th Earl of Aberdeen, (1841-1870)
- Gordon, Huntley, (1887-1956), actor
- Gordon, Jeff, (born 1971), NASCAR racer
- Gordon, Michael, composer
- Gordon, Richard, astronaut
- Gordon, Ruth, (1896-1985), actress
- Gordon, William, (~1679-1745)
- Gordon, Wycliffe, musician
- Gordy, Berry, Jr, (born 1929), record company owner (Motown)
- Gore, Al, (born 1948), US vice-president
- Gore, Albert, Sr, US Senator, father of Al Gore
- Gore, Lesley, (born 1946), singer
- Gore, Martin Lee, (born 1961), singer, musician (Depeche Mode)
- Gore, Spencer, (England) 1st Wimbledon - winner
- Gore, Tipper, (born 1948), US author, activist for "Parental Advisory" labels on music
- Górecki, Henryk, (born 1933), Polish composer
- Go-Reizei, emperor of Japan
- Goremykin, Ivan, (1914-1916)
- Goren, Charles, (born 1901), bridge expert
- Gorey, Edward, (1925-2000), illustrator
- Gorham, Nathaniel, (1738-1796), early US statesman
- Gorie, Dominic, astronaut
- Göring, Hermann, (1893-1946), Nazi Germany's commander of Luftwaffe
- Gorjan, Vojko, (1949-1975), poet
- Gorky, Arshile, painter
- Gorky, Maxim, (1868-1936), author
- Gorman, Charles
- Gorman, Dave, British comedian
- Gorme, Eydie, (born 1931), singer
- Gorokhovskaya, Maria, (born 1921), gymnast
- Gorton, John, (1911-2002), Australian politician and prime minister
- Görtz, Georg Heinrich von, (1668-1719)
- Go-Saga, emperor of Japan
- Go-Sai, emperor of Japan
- Go-Sakuramachi, Empress, of Japan, (1740-1813)
- Gosar, Peter, (born 1923), physicist.
- Goscinny, René, (1926-1977), French comics writer of Asterix fame
- Gosden, Freeman F, (died 1982), actor
- Go-Shirakawa, emperor of Japan
- Gosho Heinosuke, film director
- Gosling, James, (born 1956), creator of Java, Gosling Emacs, NeWS
- Gosse, Philip Henry, (died 1888), British scientist
- Gossett, Louis, Jr, (born 1936), US actor
- Gosset, William Sealey, (1876-1937), (known as "Student")
- Go-Suzaku, emperor of Japan
- Gotama, Siddhatta, founder of Buddhism
- Gotard, Jan, Polish painter
- Gotlieb, Phyllis, author
- Go-Toba, emperor of Japan
- Goto, Hiromi, Canadian writer
- Go-Tsuchimikado, emperor of Japan
- Gott, William
- Gottfried, Gilbert, comedian
- Gotthelf, Jeremias, (1797-1854), author known as Jeremias Gotthelf
- Gotti, John, (1940-2002), US Mafioso
- Gottlieb, Leopold, Polish painter
- Gottlieb, Maurycy, Polish painter
- Gottschalk, Louis Moreau, (1829-1869), pianist & composer
- Gottschalk, Thomas, (born 1950), show master
- Gottwald, Klement, (1896-1953)
- Go-Uda, emperor of Japan
- Gough, Hubert, general
- Goulart, Ron, author
- Gould, Chester, (died 1985), US cartoonist
- Gould, Elliott, (born 1938), actor
- Gould, Glenn, (1932-1982), pianist, composer, philosopher
- Gould, Gordon, laser
- Gould, Jay, (1836-1892), entrepreneur
- Gould, Morton, (1913-1996), composer
- Gould, Richard Nash, architect
- Gould, Stephen Jay, (1941-2002), US paleontologist
- Gould, William, English cleric and naturalist
- Goulet, Robert, (born 1933), singer, actor
- Gounod, Charles, (1818-1893), composer
- Gourgaud, Jean-Henry, (1746-1809), French actor
- Gouveia, Joana de
- Govier, Katherine, Canadian writer
- Govorov, Leonid, marshal, liberator of Leningrad
- Gow, Ian
- Gowdy, Barbara, The Romantic; The White Bone and short stories
- Gowdy, Curt, (born 1919), sports announcer
- Gowen, Zach, (born 1983) one-legged professional wrestler
- Gower, David, (born 1957), cricketer
- Gowers, William Timothy, mathematician
- Goya, Francisco de, (1746-1828), Spanish painter
- Goyco, Freddie, comedian, Charytin's cousin
- Goyen, Jan van, (1596-1656), painter
- Go-Yozei, emperor of Japan
- Goytisolo, Juan, : El sitio de los sitios
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Go."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Graaf, Volkert van der, (born 1969), alleged assassin of Pim Fortuyn
- Grabbe, Christian Dietrich, dramatist, author
- Grabec, Igor, (born 1939), physicist.
- Grabe, Ronald, astronaut
- Graber, Pierre, (1908-2003), Swiss Federal Councilor
- Graça, Fernando Lopes, (composer)
- Grace, Mark, former Major League Baseball player
- Grace, W. G, (1848-1915)
- Gracner, Natasa Barbara, actress.
- Gradl, Johann Baptist, (1965-1966), German government minister
- Gradnik, Alojz, (1882-1968), poet
- Grado, John, Retired Chairman and CEO of Technographics, Inc. (University of Vermont)
- Grafenauer, Niko, (born 1940), poet
- Graff, Anton, (1736-1813), painter
- Graf, Steffi, (born 1969), German tennis player
- Grafstein, Jerahmiel S, Canadian senator
- Grafström, Gillis, Swedish athlete
- Graham, B. Alasdair, Canadian senator
- Graham, Billy, (born 1918), US evangelist
- Grahame, Kenneth, (1859-1932), British author of The Wind in the Willows fame
- Graham, Franklin, televangelist
- Graham, George, athlete
- Graham, Lola
- Graham, Neile, Canadian writer
- Graham, Paul, Yahoo! Store, On Lisp, ANSI Common Lisp
- Graham, Thomas, not to be confused with :
- Graham, William Hardin, chemist
- Grainger, Percy, (1882-1961), composer
- Gramatky, Hardie, Little Toot
- Gram, Hans Christian, (1853-1928)
- Grammaticus, John, patriarch of Constantinople
- Grammaticus, Nicholas, patriarch of Constantinople
- Grammer, Kelsey, (born 1955), comedian, television personality
- Gramsci, Antonio, (1891-1937), writer and politician
- Granados, Enrique, (1827-1916), composer
- Granche, Pierre, sculptor
- Grande, Rita, (Italy)
- Grandin, Temple, (born 1947), US autistic professor
- Granit, Ragnar, Nobel Prize laureate in Medicine
- Graneheim, Anders, (born 1962), Swedish bodybuilder
- Grant, Amy, (born 1960), US singer
- Grant, Cary, (1904-1986), British-born actor
- Grant, George, philosopher
- Grant, Hugh, (born 1960), British-born actor
- Grant, Peter, (1935-1995), manager, actor
- Grant, Ulysses Simpson, (1822-1885), US general, President
- Grant, W.V, televangelist
- Granville, Christine (1915-1952), SOE agent, heroine of WW II
- Grappelli, Stephane, (1908-1997), jazz musician
- Graser, Jörg, dramatist, author
- Grason, William, US governor
- Grass, Günter, (born 1927), German author
- Grassmann, Hermann Günther, (1809-1877), mathematician
- Gratas, Enrique, television news reporter
- Gratianus, Roman Emperor
- Grattan, Henry, (1746-1820), Irish patriot
- Grau, Shirley Ann, writer
- Grave, Elsa, Swedish writer
- Graves, Michael, (born 1934), architect
- Graves, Milford, musician
- Graves, Robert, (1895-1985), British author
- Gray, Alasdair
- Gray, David, singer-songwriter, musician
- Gray, John de, (died 1214), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Gray, Macy, musician
- Gray, Simon, dramatist
- Gray, Thomas, (1716-1771), British poet
- Graziani, Rodolfo (1882-1955), Italian WW2 Marshal
- Graziano, Rocky, boxer
- Greacen, Robert, Aosdána
- Greaves, Jimmy, (born 1940), athlete
- Greb, Harry, boxer
- Grechaninov, Alexander, composer
- Grechko, Georgy, astronaut
- Greco, El, (1541-1614), Greek painter
- Greeley, Horace, (1811-1872)
- Green, Al, (born 1946), singer-songwriter, musician
- Green, Anna Katharine, (1846-1935), author
- Green, Ben K, American author, novelist
- Green, Charlie, musician
- Green, Freddie, musician
- Green, Grant, (1931-1979), musician
- Green, Hetty, US businesswoman famed for her stinginess, her estate was more than $100,000,000.
- Green, Justin, comic creator
- Green, Keith, (1953-1982), gospel singer
- Green, Peter, ancient history
- Green, Rick, actor/comedian
- Green, Seth, (born 1974), actor
- Greenaway, Kate, illustrator
- Greenaway, Peter, (born 1942),British film director
- Greenaway, Roger, songwriter
- Greenberg, Hank, (died 1931), baseball player
- Graham Greene|Greene, Graham, (1904-1991), British author
- Greene, Graham, (born 1952), Canadian amerindian actor
- Greene, Lorne, (1915-1987), US actor, TV news anchor
- Greene, Maurice, (born 1974), athlete
- Greene, Maurice (composer), (1696-1755)
- Greene, Nancy (born 1943), Canada's Female Athlete of the 20th Century.
- Greene, Nathanael
- Greene, Nathaniel, (1742-1786), American Revolutionary War general
- Greene, Robert, (1560-1592), poet
- Greenfield, Herbert, (1869-1949), 1921-08-13 to 1925-11-23
- Greenough, Horatio, (1805-1852), sculptor
- Greenspan, Alan, (born 1926), US economist, IMF chief
- Greenspan, Dan
- Greenstreet, Sydney, (1879-1954), actor
- Green, Tom, (born 1971), actor/comedian
- Green, Tony, (born 1954), painter
- Greenwood, Kerry, novelist
- Greer, Germaine, (born 1939), feminist
- Greer, Sonny, musician
- Gregorcic, Simon, (1844-1906), poet
- Gregorec, Pankracij, (1867-1920), poet
- Gregoric, Barbara, (born 1964), poet
- Gregory, Frederick, astronaut
- Gregory, Horace, poet
- Gregory III, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gregory III, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gregory III, Pope, (731-741)
- Gregory II (Maronite Patriarch)
- Gregory II, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gregory II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gregory II, Pope, (715-731)
- Gregory I (Maronite Patriarch)
- Gregory I, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gregory I, Pope, (590-604)
- Gregory IV, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gregory IV, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gregory IV, Pope, (827-844)
- Gregory IX, Pope, (1227-1241)
- Gregory, James, (1638-1675), reflecting telescope
- Gregory, Lady, (1852-1932), playwright, Abbey Theatre founder
- Gregory, of Halate, Maronite Patriarch
- Gregory, of Rimini, scholastic philosopher
- Gregory of Tours, (538-594), historian
- Gregory, Philippa, (born 1954), author
- Gregory, Susanna, author
- Gregory the Illuminator, Saint
- Gregory VIII, Pope
- Gregory VII, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gregory VII, Pope, (1073-1085)
- Gregory VI, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Gregory VI, Pope, (1045-1046)
- Gregory V, of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Gregory V, Pope, (996-999)
- Gregory, William, astronaut
- Gregory XIII, Pope, (1572-1585)
- Gregory XII, Pope, (1406-1415)
- Gregory XI, Pope, (1370-1378)
- Gregory XIV, Pope, (1590-1591)
- Gregory X, Pope, (1271-1276)
- Gregory XVI, Pope, (1831-1846)
- Gregory XV, Pope, (1621-1623)
- Gregson, Clive, musician
- Greim, Robert von, German soldier
- Gremillon, Jean, film director
- Grenadier, Larry
- Grenfell, Joyce, (1910-1979), British comedian
- Grennan, Eamon, poet
- Grenville, Kate, novelist
- Grese, Irma, (1923-1945), Nazi death-camp supervisor
- Gress, Drew
- Gretzky, Wayne, (born 1961), Canadian hockey player
- Greville, Fulk, (1554-1628), poet
- Grey, Al, musician
- Grey, John, Canadian writer
- Griardon, François, sculptor
- Grieg, Edvard, (1843-1907), composer
- Griffin, Cyrus, early US statesman
- Griffin, Patty, musician
- Griffin, Susan, artist and jeweler
- Griffin, Walter Burley, (1876-1937), architect
- Griffith, Arthur, (died 1922), 1921 Treaty delegation leader
- Griffith, D. W, (1875-1948), US film director
- Griffith, Emile, (born 1938), world champion boxer
- Griffith, Nanci, musician
- Griffith, Nicola, science fiction author
- Griffiths, Rachel, actor
- Griggs, Stanley, astronaut
- Grignard, Francois Auguste Victor, chemist
- Grillparzer, Franz, dramatist, author
- Grimald, Nicholas, (1519-1562), poet
- Grimke, Angelina Weld, poet
- Grimke, Charlotte Forten, poet
- Grimm, Jakob, (1785-1863), parlamentarian
- Grimm, Wilhelm, (1786-1859), parlamentarian
- Grimond, Jo, (1913-1993), Liberal Party leader from 1956 to 1967
- Grimsson, Ólafur Ragnar, (born 1943), Icelandic president
- Grimwood, Ken, author
- Grinberg, Uri Tsvi, poet
- Grindal, Edmund, (c. 1519-1583), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Grisey, Gerard, (1946-1998), composer
- Grisham, John, (born 1955), legal thrillers
- Gris, Juan, (1887-1927), painter
- Grissom, Virgil, (1926-1967), US astronaut
- Grivas, George, in Cyprus
- Groban, Josh, musician
- Grochowiak, Stanislaw, poet
- Groen, Dora van der, actress
- Groener, Wilhelm
- Groening, Matt, (born 1954), US cartoonist of Life In Hell & The Simpsons fame
- Grofé, Ferdinand Rudolph von, composer
- Grohar, Ivan, (1867-1911), painter.
- Grohl, Dave, (born 1969), of Nirvana and The Foo Fighters
- Groiset, Gerald, Dutch psychic
- Gromyko, Andrei Andreyevich, (1908-1989), USSR Foreign Minister
- Gronchi, Giovanni, Italian president
- Grönholm, Marcus, rally driver
- Gröndal, Benedikt, (1979-1980), prime minister
- Groome, James B, US governor
- Groote, Geert
- Gropius, Walter, (1883-1969), German Bauhaus architect
- Groselj, Milan, (1902-1979), classical philologist.
- Groselj, Pavel, (1883-1940), biologists and belletrist.
- Grosjean, Sebastien, (France)
- Grosseteste, Robert, (c. 1175-1253), scholastic philosopher
- Grossmith, George, (1847-1912), English comic actor
- Grossmith, Weedon, (1852-1919), English writer
- Gross, Paul, actor
- Gross, Philip, poet
- Grosz, George, (1893-1959), artist
- Grothendieck, Alexander, (died 224), mathematician
- Grotius, Hugo, (1583-1645), jurist
- Grottger, Artur, Polish painter
- Groulx, Lionel, (1878-1967), priest, historian
- Grove, Andrew, Intel CEO
- Grove, Frederick Phillip, Canadian writer
- Grove, Lefty, (1900-1975)
- Grove, Richard, Canadian writer
- Grover-Williams, William, (1903-1945), race car driver, WW II hero
- Groves, Leslie, (1896-1970), US general & supervisor of Manhattan Project
- Gruber, Franz
- Gruden, Igo, (1893-1948), poet
- Gruening, Ernest, (Dem.) 1939-1953
- Grumiaux, Arthur, violinist
- Grundel-Helmfelt, Simon, Swedish soldier
- Grünewald, Matthias, (1470-1528), painter
- Grunsfeld, John, astronaut
- Gryglewski, Aleksander, Polish painter
- Gryner, Emm, singer, songwriter, pianist, guitarist
- Grynszpan, Herschel
- Gryphius, Andreas, dramatist, author
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gr."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gscheidle, Kurt, SPD (Postal services)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gs."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Guang, Sima, (1019-1086), historiographer and politician
- Guaraldi, Vince, (1928-1976), musician
- Guardi, Francesco, (1712-1793), Italian painter
- Guarecschi, Giovanni, (1908-1968), Italian author and satirist
- Guare, John, dramatist
- Guarini, Guarino, architect
- Guarini, Justin, American Idol winner
- Guarnieri, Carmago, (1907-1993), composer
- Guastavino, Carlos, (1912-2000), composer
- Guattari, Felix, (1930-1992), philosopher
- Gubaidulina, Sofia, (born 1931), composer
- Gubarev, Aleksey, astronaut
- Gucci, Maurizio, (died 1995)
- Guccini, Francesco, musician
- Guccione, Bob, (born 1930), US publisher of Penthouse magazine
- Guchkov, Alexander, Octobrist leader
- Gude, Max, (1902-1984), attorney
- Guderian, Heinz, (1888-1954), German tank general
- Guðmundsdóttir, Björk, (1965- ), Icelander singer
- Gudmundson, Per, musician
- Guedes, Alvarez, comedian and author
- Guericke, Otto von, (1602-1686), vacuum pump
- Guerin, Roland
- Guerisse, Albert, member of Belgian/French resistance
- Guerra, Juan Luis (born approx. 1957) singer
- Guerrero, Daniel, actor
- Guerrero, Lisa, sportscaster, actress and writer
- Guerrero, Vincente, (died 1831), Mexican revolutionary hero
- Guerric, of Saint-Quentin, scholastic philosopher
- Guest, Christopher, (born 1948), comedian
- Guest, Cornelia, (born 1964), debutante
- Guest, Edgar, (born 1881), poet
- Guest, Richard, author
- Guevara, Ana, track and field
- Guevara, Che, (1928-1967), Argentinean-born revolutionary
- Guggenheim, Benjamin, (1865-1912), businessman
- Guggenheim, Peggy, (1898-1979), art collector
- Guiard, of Laon, scholastic philosopher
- Guibourg, Georges, (1891-1970)
- Guidoni, Umberto, astronaut
- Guido of Arezzo, (c.995-c.1050), composer
- Guido, of Orchelles, scholastic philosopher
- Guillaume, Charles-Edouard, (1861-1938), 1920 Nobel Prize in Physics
- Guillaume, Günther, Soviet spy in West Germany
- Guillaume, Robert, (born 1927), actor
- Guille, Jean, (1843-1845), British bailiff
- Guillen, Jorge, (1893-1984), poet
- Guillen, Nicolas, (1902-1989), poet
- Guillen, Ozzie, baseball player
- Guillermin, John, film director
- Guillotin, Joseph-Ignace, (died 1814), inventor of the guillotine
- Guillot, Olga, singer
- Guillou, Jan, Swedish novelist, writer
- Guimera, writer
- Guimera, Angel, writer
- Guinan, Texas, (1884-1933), US bootlegger, actress, musician
- Guiner, Lani
- Guiney, Louise Imogen, poet
- Guinizzelli, Guido, poet
- Guinness, Alec, (1914-2000), British actor
- Guinness, Arthur, brewer
- Güiraldes, Ricardo, (1886-1927), Don Segundo Sombra
- Guisan, Henri, (1874-1960), General during WWII
- Guisewite, Cathy, (born 1950), cartoonist
- Guiteau, Charles J, (1841-1882), assassin of the American President James Garfield
- Guitry, Sacha, (1885-1957), dramatist, writer, director, actor
- Guizot, François Pierre Guillaume, (1787-1874), Prime Minister
- Gulbransson, Olaf, (1873-1958), painter
- Guldin, Paul, (1577-1643), mathematician
- Guleghina, Maria, opera soprano
- Gulik, Robert Van,(1910-1967), Dutch diplomat and author of Judge Dee books
- Gullit, Ruud, (born 1962), football player
- Gullotta, Leo, (born 1946), actor
- Gullotti, Bob, musician
- Gulpilil, David, actor & dancer
- Gumbel, Bryant, (born 1948), US television anchor
- Gumbel, Emil, (1891-1966), German mathematician and pacifist
- Gumilyov, Nikolay, (1886-1921), poet
- Gundissalinus, Dominicus, scholastic philosopher
- Gunn, Genni, Canadian writer
- Gunn, James (1753-1801) US Senator from Georgia
- Gunn, James (1843-1911) US Congressman from Idaho
- Gunn, Sir James) (1893-1965) UK Portrait painter
- Gunn, James (1867-1927) American industrial engineer and educator
- Gunn, James (born 1923) American science fiction author
- Gunn, James (born 1938) American Astronomer
- Gunn, James (born ?) American film maker and cartoonist
- Gunn, Thom, (born 1929), poet
- Gunthamund, (died 496), king of the Vandals
- Gunther, Johann Christian, (born 1695), German poet
- Guntram, 561-592 (Burgundy)
- Gurdjieff, Georgij, (1866?-1949), Russian-born mystic
- Gurewitz, Brett, (born 1955), guitarist for Bad Religion and NOFX
- Gurney, A.R, dramatist
- Gurney, Ivor, (1890-1937), poet
- Gurragcha, Judgerdemidiyin, astronaut
- Gurthrie, Arlo, musician
- Guru (rapper), American rapper
- Gusenon, Creole George, musician
- Gushiken, Yoko, boxer
- Gusmao, Bartholomeu de
- Gustafson, Jon, (died 2002), editor
- Gustafson, Leonard J, Canadian senator
- Gustafson, Tomas, speed skater
- Gustav III of Sweden
- Gustav I of Sweden, (1496-1560), Swedish politician
- Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, Swedish military commander
- Gustav VI Adolf of Sweden, (1882-1973), archaeologist
- Gustincic, Jurij, TV journalist and narrator.
- Gustloff, Wilhelm, (1895-1936), Swiss Nazi Party leader
- Gutenberg, Johann, (circa 1390s-1468), German inventor of printing
- Guth, Alan, astronomer
- Guth, Heinz, (born 1941), painter
- Guthrie, Arlo, (born 1947), musician
- Guthrie, Janet, (born 1938), automobile racer
- Guthrie, Ramon, poet
- Guthrie, Tyrone, (1900-1971), actor, Artistic Director of Canada's Stratford Festival
- Guthrie, Woody, (1912-1967), musician
- Gutierrez, Horacio, concert pianist
- Gutierrez, Sidney, astronaut
- Gutsu, Tatyana, (born 1976), gymnast
- Guttenberg, Steve, (born 1958), US actor
- Guttuso, Renato, (1912-1987), painter
- Gutzkow, Karl Ferdinand, dramatist, author
- Guy, Buddy, (born 1936), musician
- Guyler, Deryck, (1914-1999), British comedian
- Guynn, Jack, President of the Federal Reserve Bank-Atlanta (VT)
- Guzman, Alejandra, rock singer
- Guzman, Enrique, actor
- Guzman, Juan, world boxing champion
- Guzman, Miguel A, singer, winner of the Protagonistas De La Musica contest.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gu."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gvardjancic, Herman, (born 1943), painter.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gv."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gwanghaegun, the 15th king of Joseon (modern-day Korea).
- Gwendolyn, MacEwen, poet
- Gwilym, Dafydd ap, (about 1320-about 1370), poet
- Gwozdecki, Gustaw, Polish painter
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gw."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gyanendra, King of Nepal
- Gyergyek, Ludvik, (born 1922), electrical engineer.
- Gygax, Gary, (born 1938), US co-inventor of Dungeons & Dragons
- Gyllenhielm, Carl Carlsson, (1574-1650), Swedish soldier
- Gysin, Brion, (1916-1986), poet
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gy."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of people by name: A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z Ga - Gb - Gc - Gd - Ge - Gf - Gg - Gh - Gi - Gj - Gk - Gl - Gm - Gn - Go - Gp - Gq - Gr - Gs - Gt - Gu - Gv - Gw - Gx - Gy - Gz
- Gzowski, Peter, radio personality
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Gz."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
This list of rare diseases was originally taken from the NIH public domain resource at http://ord.aspensys.com/asp/diseases/diseases.asp .A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
- G syndrome
- Galactocoele
- Galactokinase deficiency
- Galactorrhoea-Hyperprolactinaemia
- Galactosamine-6-sulfatase deficiency
- Galactose-1-phosphate uridyltransferase deficiency
- Galloway Mowat syndrome
- Gamborg Nielsen syndrome
- Game Friedman Paradice syndrome
- Gamma aminobutyric acid transaminase deficiency
- Gamma-cystathionase deficiency
- Gamma-sarcoglycanopathy
- Gamstorp episodic adynamy
- Ganglioglioma
- Gangliosidosis (Type2)(GM2)
- Gangliosidosis GM1 type 3
- Gangliosidosis type1
- GAPO syndrome
- Garcia Torres Guarner syndrome
- Gardner Morrisson Abbot syndrome
- Gardner Silengo Wachtel syndrome
- Gardner-Diamond syndrome
- Gardner's syndrome
- Garret Tripp syndrome
- Gas/bloat syndrome
- Gastric lymphoma
- Gastritis, familial giant hypertrophic
- Gastrocutaneous syndrome
- Gastroenteritis, eosinophilic
- Gastro-enteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumor
- Gastroesophageal reflux
- Gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumor
- Gastrointestinal neoplasm
- Gaucher disease type 1
- Gaucher disease type 2
- Gaucher disease type 3
- Gaucher Disease
- Gaucher ichthyosis restrictive dermopathy
- Gaucher-like disease
- Gaucher's disease
- Gay Feinmesser Cohen syndrome
- Geen Sandford Davison syndrome
- Gelatinous ascites
- Geleophysic dwarfism
- Gelineau disease
- Geliphobia
- Gemignani syndrome
- Gemss syndrome
- Genée-Wiedemann syndrome
- Generalized malformations in neuronal migration
- Generalized resistance to thyroid hormone
- Generalized seizure
- Generalized torsion dystonia
- Genes syndrome
- Genetic Diseases, Inborn
- Genetic reflex epilepsy
- Genetic susceptibility to infections caused by BCG
- Geniophobia
- Genital anomaly cardiomyopathy
- Genital dwarfism, Turner type
- Genital dwarfism
- Genito palatocardiac syndrome
- Genu valgum, st. Helena familial
- Genu varum
- Genuphobia
- Geographic tongue
- German syndrome
- Germinal cell aplasia
- Gerodermia osteodysplastica
- Gershinibaruch Leibo syndrome
- Gerstmann syndrome
- Gestational diabetes mellitus
- Gestational pemphigoid
- Gestational trophoblastic disease
- Ghosal syndrome
- Ghose Sachdev Kumar syndrome
- Gianotti-Crosti syndrome
- Giant axonal neuropathy
- Giant cell arteritis
- Giant cell myocarditis
- Giant congenital nevi
- Giant ganglionic hyperplasia
- Giant hypertrophic gastritis
- Giant mammary hamartoma
- Giant papillary conjunctivitis
- Giant pigmented hairy nevus
- Giant platelet syndrome
- Giardiasis
- Giedion syndrome
- Gigantism advanced bone age hoarse cry
- Gigantism partial, nevi, hemihypertrophy, macrocephaly
- Gigantism
- Gilbert's syndrome
- Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome
- Gingival fibromatosis dominant
- Gingival fibromatosis facial dysmorphism
- Gingival fibrosis
- Gingivitis
- Girate atrophy of choroid and retina
- Gitelman syndrome
- Glanzmann thrombasthenia
- Glass Chapman Hockley syndrome
- Glaucoma ecopia microspherophakia stiff joints short stature
- Glaucoma iridogoniodysgenesia
- Glaucoma sleep apnea
- Glaucoma type 1C
- Glaucoma, congenital
- Glaucoma, hereditary adult type 1A
- Glaucoma, hereditary juvenile type 1B
- Glaucoma, hereditary
- Glaucoma, primary infantile type 3A
- Glaucoma, primary infantile type 3B
- Glioblastoma multiforme
- Glioblastoma
- Glioma
- Gliomatosis cerebri
- Gliosarcoma
- Globel disaccharide intolerance
- Glomerulonephritis sparse hair telangiectases
- Glomerulonephritis
- Glomerulosclerosis
- Gloomy face syndrome
- Glossodynia
- Glossopalatine ankylosis micrognathia ear anomalies
- Glossopharyngeal neuralgia
- Glossophobia
- Glucagonoma
- Glucocorticoid deficiency, familial
- Glucocorticoid resistance
- Glucocorticoid sensitive hypertension
- Glucose 6 phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
- Glucose-6-phosphate translocase deficiency
- Glucose-galactose malabsorption
- Glucosephosphate isomerase deficiency
- Glucosidase acid-1,4-alpha deficiency
- Glut2 deficiency
- Glutamate decarboxylase deficiency
- Glutamate-aspartate transport defect
- Glutaricaciduria I
- Glutaricaciduria II
- Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency
- Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency
- Glycine synthase deficiency
- Glycogen storage disease type 1B
- Glycogen storage disease type 1C
- Glycogen storage disease type 1D
- Glycogen storage disease type 6, due to phosphorylation
- Glycogen storage disease type 7
- Glycogen storage disease type 9
- Glycogen storage disease type II
- Glycogen storage disease type V
- Glycogen storage disease type VI
- Glycogen storage disease type VII
- Glycogen storage disease type VIII
- Glycogenosis type II
- Glycogenosis type III
- Glycogenosis type IV
- Glycogenosis type V
- Glycogenosis type VI
- Glycogenosis type VII
- Glycogenosis type VIII
- Glycogenosis, type 0
- Glycosuria
- GM2 gangliosidosis, 0 variant
- GM2-gangliosidosis, B, B1, AB variant
- Gms syndrome
- Goldberg Bull syndrome
- Goldberg syndrome
- Goldblatt Wallis syndrome
- Goldblatt Wallis Zieff syndrome
- Goldblatt Viljoen syndrome
- Goldenhar disease
- Goldskag Cooks Hertz syndrome
- Goldstein Hutt syndrome
- Gollop Coates syndrome
- Gollop syndrome
- Goltz syndrome
- Gombo syndrome
- Gomez and López-Hernández syndrome
- Gonadal dysgenesis mixed
- Gonadal dysgenesis Turner type
- Gonadal dysgenesis XY type associated anomalies
- Gonadal dysgenesis, XX type
- Gonadal dysgenesis, XY female type
- Gonadal dysgenesis
- Goniodysgenesis mental retardation short stature
- Gonococcal conjunctivitis
- Gonzales Del Angel syndrome
- Goodman camptodactyly
- Goodpasture pneumorenal syndrome
- Goodpasture's syndrome
- Gordon hyperkaliemia-hypertension syndrome
- Gordon syndrome
- Gorham syndrome
- Gorham-Stout disease
- Gorlin Bushkell Jensen syndrome
- Gorlin Chaudhry Moss syndrome
- Gottron's syndrome
- Gougerot-Sjogren syndrome
- Gouty nephropathy, familial
- Graft versus host disease
- Graham Boyle Troxell syndrome
- Grand Kaine Fulling syndrome
- Grant syndrome
- Granulocytopenia
- Granuloma annulare
- Granulomas, congenital cerebral
- Granulomatosis, lymphomatoid
- Granulomatous allergic angiitis
- Granulomatous hypophysitis
- Granulomatous rosacea
- Graphite Pneumoconiosis
- Graves' disease
- Gray platelet syndrome
- Great vessels transposition
- Greenberg dysplasia
- Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome GCPS
- Griscelli disease
- Grix Blankenship Peterson syndrome
- Groll Hirschowitz syndrome
- Grosse syndrome
- Grover's disease
- Growth deficiency brachydactyly unusual facies
- Growth delay, constitutional
- Growth hormone deficiency
- Growth mental deficiency syndrome of Myhre
- Growth retardation alopecia pseudoanodontia optic
- Growth retardation hydrocephaly lung hypoplasia
- Growth retardation mental retardation phalangeal hypoplasia
- Grubben Decock Borghgraef syndrome
- GTP cyclohydrolase deficiency
- Guanidinoacetate methyltransferase deficiency
- Guérin-Stern syndrome
- Guibaud Vainsel syndrome
- Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Guizar Vasquez Luengas syndrome
- Guizar Vasquez Sanchez Manzano syndrome
- Gunal Seber Basaran syndrome
- Gupta Patton syndrome
- Gurrieri Sammito Bellussi syndrome
- Gusher syndrome
- Gymnophobia
- Gyrate atrophy of the retina
- Gyrate atrophy
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of rare diseases starting with G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of songs by name: 0 - A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
- "Galveston Bay" - The Ghost of Tom Joad by Bruce Springsteen
- "Garageland" - The Clash
- "Garden of Earthly Delights" - XTC
- "Gates of the West" - The Clash
- "Generals and Majors" - XTC
- "Get Over It And Move On" - Graham Parker
- "Get Started Start A Fire" - Graham Parker
- "Get Your Filthy Hands off My Desert" - Pink Floyd
- "Ghetto Defendant" - The Clash
- "Ghosts" - The Jam
- "Giorigo" - Lys Assia
- "Girl At the End Of the Pier" - Graham Parker
- "Girl on the Phone" - The Jam
- "Girlfriend" - Matthew Sweet
- "Girlfriend Is Better" - Talking Heads
- "Girls Just Want to Have Fun" - Cyndi Lauper
- "Girls Talk" - Elvis Costello
- "Girls Talk" - Dave Edmunds
- "Glass Jaw" - Graham Parker
- "Gloria" - Them
- "Glory Days" - Bruce Springsteen
- "God Give Me Strength" - Burt Bacharach / Elvis Costello
- "God Save the King" - National Anthem of UK when monarch is male.
- "God Save the Queen" - National Anthem of UK when monarch is female.
- "God's Comic" - Elvis Costello
- "God's Footballer" - Billy Bragg
- "Good As She Could Be" - John Hiatt
- "Goodbye Girl" - Squeeze
- "Goon Squad" - Elvis Costello
- "Going Underground" - The Jam
- "Goldeneye" - Tina Turner
- "Goldfinger" - Shirley Bassey
- "Gorilla, You're a Desperado" - Warren Zevon
- "Grantchester Meadows" - Pink Floyd
- "Grass" - XTC
- "Great Fire" - XTC
- "Green Monkeys" - Graham Parker
- "Green Shirt" - Elvis Costello
- "Great Curve, The" - Talking Heads
- "Greatest Thing, The" - Elvis Costello
- "Greetings To The New Brunette" - Billy Bragg
- "Groovy Times" - The Clash
- "Growin' Up" - Bruce Springsteen
- "Guardian Angels" - Graham Parker
- "Guns of Brixton, The" - The Clash
- "Guns on the Roof" - The Clash
- "Gypsy Blood" - Graham Parker
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of songs by name: G."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Poker jargon:
; garbage
- A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
; grinder
- The muck.
- A worthless hand.
; guts, guts to open
- A player who earns a living by making small profits over a long period of consistent, conservative play. See "rock".
; gutshot
- A game with no opening hand requirement; that is, where the only requirement to open the betting is "guts", or courage.
- Any of several poker variants where pots accumulate over several hands until a single player wins. See guts (poker).
; gypsy
- An inside straight draw.
- To enter the pot cheaply by just calling the blind rather than raising. Also "limp".
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Poker jargon starting with G."
| The following table is compiled from various sources, across various languages. When English abbreviations or acronyms come from a non-English source, this is noted. | |||
| Entry | Source | Expression | Field |
G | Danish | Graddøgn | N/A |
g | Dutch | Toonaard van g(= sol)kleine terts,g klein,g mineur | N/A |
G | English | Green primary | N/A |
G | French | Centre de gravité | Food & Agriculture |
G | German | Grüne Primärfarbe | N/A |
G | Greek | οριζοντιότητα απολαβής | Electrical Engineering |
G | Italian | Gruppo ecologista | Law, Politics & International Affaires |
G | Spanish | Golf | Post & Telecom, Transportation |
| BH G | English | Better Homes and Gardens | N/A |
| Cd + G | Italian | Compact Disc + Graphics è stato progettato per il mercato consumer(è utilizzato spesso nei sistemi karaoke)e si basa su audio immagazzinamento in formato Cd Digital Audio,al quale sono aggiunti testi e grafica. | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |||
Synonyms: GSynonyms: chiliad (n), constant of gravitation (n), gee (n), gm (n), gram (n), gramme (n), grand (n), gravitational constant (n), one thousand (n), thou (n), thousand (n), universal gravitational constant (n), yard (n). (additional references) |
Crosswords: G |
| English words defined with "g": Diazeutic, Dutch case-knife bean ♦ G clef ♦ Heterography ♦ inverse function ♦ linear operator ♦ One-valued function ♦ penicillin O, penicillin V, Phaseolus coccineus, Phaseolus multiflorus, phenoxymethyl penicillin ♦ runner bean ♦ scarlet runner, scarlet runner bean, steam boiler ♦ transpose, treble clef. (references) |
| Specialty definitions using "g": G or g, Goodman-Kruskal G statistic ♦ negative g ♦ Penicillin G, Benzathine, Penicillin G, Procaine, Peptide Elongation Factor G, PL/I Subset G. (references) |
| Non-English Usage: "G" is also a word in the following languages with English translations in parentheses. Afrikaan (married), German (g, letter), Hungarian (ginseng), Portuguese (g, gravitational acceleration unit), Swedish (g), Turkmen (a lot). |
| Domain | Usage | |
Screenplays | You know why you were assigned to G Company (From Here to Eternity; writing credit: Ernest Tidyman) Preparations A through G were a complete failure (Austin Powers in Goldmember; writing credit: Mike Myers) You're muckin' with a G here, pal (The Untouchables; writing credit: Oscar Fraley; Eliot Ness) G or F (Whose Line Is It Anyway?; writing credit: Dan Patterson; Mark Leveson) G vs E, that's what it is (G vs E; writing credit: David Burris; Janice Engel) | |
Lyrics | Cause thats my peeps and we row G (No Diggity; performing artist: Blackstreet) I'm the kinda G the little homies wanna be like (Gangsta's Paradise; performing artist: Coolio) Your chances of jackin me are slim G (Keep Their Headz Ringin; performing artist: Dr. Dre) The Guc' frames got the same gold G (Can't Deny It; performing artist: Fabolous) Done got your ass sent up the creek G (Ms. Jackson; performing artist: Outkast) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Operación G (1962) Rule G (1915) The Chef at Circle G (1915) Ali G in da USAiii (2003) G (2002) | |
Song Titles | Ooh Aah…Just A Little Bit (performing artist: Gina G) Songbird (performing artist: Kenny G) Auld Lang Syne (performing artist: Kenny G) This D.J. (performing artist: Warren G) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title | ||
References |
| ||
Books |
| ||
Periodicals | |||
Theater & Movies | |||
Music |
| ||
High Tech |
| ||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Thumbnail | Description & Credit | Thumbnail | Description & Credit |
![]() | Zero G. Credit: NASA. | This is a NASA's Hubble Space Telescope image of the impact sites of fragments "D" and "G" ... Credit: NASA. | |
![]() | The old base camp G at Admiralty Bay, King George Island. Credit: Paths Less Taken - NOAA at the Ends of the Earth. | ![]() | F/V MARY G heading to sea for yellowfin tuna. Credit: Fisheries. |
![]() | Figure 66. Momzikoff and Comelli double bottle. This bottle was built followin g the specifications of Andre Momzikoff for water chemistry studies, in particul ar trace elements. The prototype was constructed by Jean Comelli in 1966 and used in the waters close to Monaco in 1967. Many models of this type have since been constructed. Left:descending. Right: ascending. Credit: Sailing for Science - the NOAA Fleet Then and Now. | ![]() | Figure 17. Model of the HIRONDELLE's winch. From the beginnings of Prince Albert I of Monaco's oceanographic explorations, he became occupied with equipping his vessels with basic indispensable deck equipment and tools includin g winches, reels of cable, etc. He gave the engineer Jules LeBlanc responsibili ty for this but became a principle collaborator in this area. Credit: Sailing for Science - the NOAA Fleet Then and Now. |
![]() | GOES G ends in a fiery explosion as the Cape Canaveral Range Safety Officer destroys Delta Launch Vehicle 178 after 91 seconds. Credit: NOAA in Space. | ![]() | GOES G going for a short ride aboard Delta Launch Vehicle 178. 71 seconds into the mission the first stage engine shut down necessitating destruction 20 seconds later. Credit: NOAA in Space. |
![]() | Staff Sgt. John McCampbell, from the 28th Communications Squadron at Ellsworth Air Force Base, S.D., was learning the ins and outs of the new Theater-Deployable Communications equipment package during a two-week hands-on course at Robins Air Force Base, G. | ![]() | [Base "G", Hollandia, Dutch New Guinea]. Credit: National Library of Medicine. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
![]() | ![]() |
| "C O N V E R G E" by Kevin C Commentary: "I had my friend brian bang some sticks with embers together at night, some of what you see is the resulting sparks, some is the swinging embers. ah yet another memory from senior survival! visit my manip site: blindgorgon.deviantart ..." | "Nimbus G 3" by A. Carlos Herrera Commentary: "Nimbus G series." |
Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers. | |
| Play | Caption |
| A low G played on a piano. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Author | Date | Quotation |
Treaty of Versailles | 1919 | Contracts of insurance entered into before the war between an insurer and a person who subsequently became an enemy, other than contracts dealt with in paragraphs g to 18, shall be treated in all respects on the same footing as contracts of fire insurance between the same persons would be dealt with under the said paragraphs. (reference) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Title | Author | Quote |
Walden | Thoreau, Henry David | In globe, glb, the guttural g adds to the meaning the capacity of the throat |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Health | The interaction of the G protein ectodomain and specific cell surface receptors may be involved. (references) | |
Immunoglobulin G (IgG) follows on the heels of IgM. It is the main immunoglobulin working in the blood and tissues. (references) | ||
Translation, which involves the synthesis of the N, P, M, G and L proteins, occurs on free ribosomes in the cytoplasm. (references) | ||
Business | These technologies are considered 2.5G technologies as they are seen as stepping stones to the third generation (3G) mobile network that provides the "always on" nature of Internet connectivity of 3G but not quite at the capacity and quality of 3G. 2.5 G technologies are backward compatible with 2G (GSM network), meaning the new GPRS/EDGE network elements are compatible with current back operation/business support systems. (references) | |
Economic History | Senegal | See Appendix G for a list of upcoming events. (references) |
Equatorial Guinea | In late 1999 Triton Energy, a U.S. independent, discovered La Ceiba in block G in an entirely new area offshore the mainland of the country. (references) | |
Uae | The Asab Gas Development project (AGD) will process 825 mn cfd of sour gas for reinjection, generating 100,000 b/d of condensate from the Thamama F and G reservoirs of the Asab field. (references) | |
Trade | Kazakhstan | For more information on World Bank activities in Kazakhstan, contact: Elena Karaban, Resident Representative, World Bank, 41 Kazybek Bi, Building A, 4th floor, Almaty, Kazakhstan 480100, Tel: 7-(3272)608-580; Fax: 7-(3272)608-581. In Washington, D.C., contact: Charlie Kesterbaum, U.S. Liaison Officer, World Bank, 1776 G St. NW, Washington, DC 20433; Tel: (202) 458-0120; Fax: (202) 477-2967. (references) |
Lexicography | Devil's Dictionary | LAND, n. A part of the earth's surface, considered as property. The theory that land is property subject to private ownership and control is the foundation of modern society, and is eminently worthy of the superstructure. Carried to its logical conclusion, it means that some have the right to prevent others from living; for the right to own implies the right exclusively to occupy; and in fact laws of trespass are enacted wherever property in land is recognized. It follows that if the whole area of terra firma is owned by A, B and C, there will be no place for D, E, F and G to be born, or, born as trespassers, to exist. A life on the ocean wave, A home on the rolling deep, For the spark the nature gave I have there the right to keep. They give me the cat-o'-nine Whenever I go ashore. Then ho! for the flashing brine -- I'm a natural commodore! Dodle |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| "G" is generally used as an alphabetical symbol -- approximately 62.77% of the time. "G" is used about 5,737 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Alphabetical Symbol | 62.77% | 3,601 | 2,700 |
| Noun (proper) | 25.84% | 1,482 | 5,480 |
| Noun (common) | 6.72% | 386 | 14,302 |
| Unclassified Items | 4.67% | 268 | 17,996 |
| Total | 100.00% | 5,737 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
| Country | Name | Country | Name |
| Mexico | Consorcio G Grupo Dina, S.A. de C.V. | South Korea | Dong San C & G Ltd. |
| Sweden | G & L Beijer AB | USA | G & K Services, Inc. |
| (more examples...) |
Source: compiled by the editor from Icon Group International, Inc.
Expressions using "g": C G S ♦ C G T ♦ Delaware Water G ♦ Fort George G Me ♦ G alba ♦ G albogularis ♦ G Americana ♦ G Aparine ♦ G Arabica ♦ G Bankiva ♦ G Barbadense ♦ G Bennetti ♦ G borealis ♦ G canis ♦ G Cells ♦ g clef ♦ G code ♦ G coronata ♦ G crinita ♦ G delicata ♦ G detonsa ♦ G dorcas ♦ G electricus ♦ G euchore ♦ G felina ♦ g file ♦ g flat ♦ g flat major ♦ G flu ♦ G giganteus ♦ G glabra ♦ G globosa ♦ G griseus ♦ G herbaceum ♦ G Islandica ♦ G lanceolatum ♦ G Lasianthus ♦ G major ♦ G Mangostana ♦ G melas ♦ G Mexicana ♦ g minor ♦ G mohr ♦ G mollugo ♦ G Morella ♦ G murinus ♦ G neglectus ♦ G niger ♦ G orientalis ♦ G pardina ♦ G Philadelphia ♦ G pictoria ♦ G Pneumonanthe ♦ G protein ♦ G resinosa ♦ G Robertianum ♦ G setosa ♦ g sharp ♦ G Stanleyi ♦ G Stearnsii ♦ G stipulacea ♦ G subgutturosa ♦ G suit ♦ G Suits ♦ G Tetrahit ♦ G tibicen ♦ G tinctoria ♦ G triacanthus ♦ G trichas ♦ G trifoliata ♦ G varius ♦ immunoglobulin G ♦ minus g ♦ negative g ♦ Penicillin G ♦ Peptide Elongation Factor G ♦ PL/I Subset G ♦ Poly G ♦ Prostaglandins G ♦ Regulation G ♦ residual G ♦ Selfridge A N G ♦ type G pilot ♦ vitamin G. Additional references. | |
| Hyphenated Usage | |
Beginning with "g": g-2, g-6-p-d, G-a-a, G-aazp, g-abox, g-acdp, G-acmn, G-actin, G-acus, G-adha, g-adpr, g-aduv, G-aebb, G-aedu, g-aeeh, g-aehm, g-aeim, G-aevs, g-affi, g-ahcl, g-ahri, g-ajrs, g-ajxl, g-akby, G-akfc, g-akir, g-akpf, G-akxs, G-alna, G-alsa, g-amgd, G-amhf, g-amino, G-amtd, G-a-n-d-e-l-l, G-anlk, g-apdb, g-apup, G-apwa, g-arfh, g-argg, G-arhf, G-arju, G-aryn, G-asay, g-askh, g-asop, g-assm, g-astg, g-atbg, g-atjm, G-avil, G-avod, g-avor, g-a-w-n, g-axop, g-axpg, G-ayec, G-ayih, G-aywt, G-ayxt, g-bact, g-band, g-banded, g-banding, g-bands, G-bebp, g-bell, g-bgau, G-bipo, G-bisu, G-bkra, G-boyz, g-buch, g-bucj, g-bucm, G-budl, G-bues, G-buez, G-bulo, G-bulu, g-bulv, g-bum, g-bumf, G-bump, g-buoi, g-burr, G-camm, g-cells, g-cjci, G-Code, g-component, g-cramp, G-CSF, G-day, G-efte, G-extr, G-farce, g-file, G-flix, g-force, g-forces, g-formation, G-fuga, g-gave, g-get, g-g-g-g-got, g-g-g-girl, g-g-going, G-g-goodness, g-girl, g-girls, g-go, g-good, g-got, G-gwyn, G-hook, g-i, g-imino, G-iv, G-ivar, g-ixcc, G-jetn, g-jetp, G-Jo, G-joey, G-kyak, g-lader, G-link, g-lizy, g-loadings, G-loc, G-lock, G-man, g-mate, G-mek, G-men, g-meter, G-mex, g-micro, g-modifications, g-moul, G-mydz, g-o-a-a-a-a-l, g-o-a-a-a-l, G-ojvc, g-omig, G-o-o-o, G-orby, g-orgi, g-o-s, G-otsw, g-part, g-pawn, G-protein, G-protein-coupled, G-protein-regulated, G-proteins, g-pyrimidine, g-reaction, g-registered, g-registration, g-residues, g-rich, G-r-r-r-r-owf, G-r-r-ruff, g-seai, g-series, g-seven, g-show, g-sized, g-speed, G-sport, G-spot, g-statistics, G-string, g-strings, G-suit, G-taff, g-taxichip, g-test, G-thea, G-t-o, G-to-a, g-type, g-ustv, g-util, g-values, G-wagen, g-wako, G-wax, g-wing, G-yelt. | |
Ending with "g": a-g, helico-g, super-g. | |
Containing "g": A-l-g-a-r, anti-g suit, p-r-o-g-r-a-m-m-e-d. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com. |
| Expression | Frequency per Day | Expression | Frequency per Day |
g | 12,064 | pse g | 311 |
g string | 6,181 | g string pic | 304 |
g spot | 4,087 | e4stebuch g | 300 |
g unit | 1,561 | g howard rita stern | 300 |
g gundam | 1,475 | g k | 298 |
kenny g | 1,013 | girl in g string | 295 |
ali g | 942 | punto g | 293 |
bh and g | 754 | g love and special sauce | 291 |
g force | 614 | g string thong | 280 |
d g | 529 | man g string | 279 |
warren g | 515 | g string divas | 276 |
g shock | 481 | casio g shock | 269 |
g rita | 445 | baby g watch | 266 |
g taste | 408 | hombres g | 264 |
g mud | 398 | g tech | 261 |
allen g hansen mark robert victor | 353 | g shock watch | 261 |
b g | 348 | franky g | 242 |
g string bikini | 343 | edwards a g | 239 |
g gordon liddy | 328 | g 8 | 234 |
p g | 320 | male and g spot | 233 |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Translations for "g"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Danish | Goodman-Kruskal G stikprøvefunktion (Goodman-Kruskal G statistic), G-C-procent (DNA base composition, mol percent G + C, mol percent guanine + cytosine), restacceleration (residual G), residualacceleration (residual G), Regulation G (Regulation G), orange G (orange G), negativ gravitationskonstant (negative acceleration, negative G, negative load factor), negativ acceleration (foot-to-head acceleration, minus g, negative g), immunglobulin G-underklasser (immunoglobulin G subclasses), immunglobulin G (immunoglobulin G), hepatitis G (hepatitis G), det amerikanske centralbankssystems forordning G (Regulation G), deceleration (braking effect, deceleration, negative acceleration, negative G, negative load factor), afbrydelig tændbrænder (interrupted pilot, transient pilot, type G pilot), afbrudt tændblus (interrupted pilot, transient pilot, type G pilot). (various references) | |
Dutch | g-versnelling (foot-to-head acceleration, minus g, negative g), waakvlam die dooft als de hoofdbrander is ontstoken (interrupted pilot, transient pilot, type G pilot), regeling G (Regulation G), molaire percentage van G% C (DNA base composition, mol percent G + C, mol percent guanine + cytosine), min-g (negative acceleration, negative G, negative load factor), immunoglobuline G-subklassen (immunoglobulin G subclasses), immunoglobuline G (immunoglobulin G), hepatitis G (hepatitis G), associatiemaat G van Goodman-Kruskal (Goodman-Kruskal G statistic). (various references) | |
Farsi | حرف هفتم الفبای انگلیسی . (various references) | |
Finnish | putoamiskiihtyvyysyksikkö (gravitational acceleration unit). (various references) | |
French | g, unité d'accélération de la pesenteur. (various references) | |
German | g (letter). (various references) | |
Greek | G-CSF (G-CSF), παράγοντας g (G factor), οδηγός παροδικής σταθεροποιητικής λειτουργίας (interrupted pilot, transient pilot, type G pilot), ανοσοσφαιρίνη G (immunoglobulin G), αρνητικά g (foot-to-head acceleration, minus g, negative g), αρνητική επιτάχυνση (negative acceleration), αρνητική επιτάχυνση βαρύτητας (negative acceleration, negative G, negative load factor), αρνητικό G (negative acceleration, negative G, negative load factor), ακτίνη σφαιρική (G-actin, globular actin), Σύστημα πληροφόρησης για τα ευρωπαϊκά "γκρίζα" κείμενα (S ystem for i nformation on g rey l iterature in E urope, SIGLE), ηπατίτιδα G (hepatitis G), υποτάξεις ανοσοσφαιρίνης G (immunoglobulin G subclasses), πορτοκαλλί-G (orange G), κρίκος-G (G-hook, G-link), παράγων G (g factor), παράγων διέγερσης κοκκιoκυττάρων (G-CSF), γάντζος-G (G-hook, G-link), γραμμομοριακό ποσοστό G+C (DNA base composition, G + C percent, G+C content, mol percent G + C, mol percent guanine + cytosine), στολή αντί-g (anti-g suit, g-suit), στολή αντι-g (g-suit), στατιστική συνάρτηση G των Goodman-Kruskal (Goodman-Kruskal G statistic), στατιστικές συναρτήσεις g (g-statistics), ρακί (kind of strong spirit (like g, rum), έλλειμμα σε G6PD (G6PD deficiency, g-6-p-d deficiency, glucose 6-dehydrogenase deficiency, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency), έλεγχος g (g-test), υπόλοιπη βαρύτητα (residual G). (various references) | |
Hungarian | g-kulcs (g-clef). (various references) | |
Italian | gravità (graveness, gravity, momentousness, seriousness, severity), g (gram, gravitational acceleration unit, green, r or rev. 2, revolution), unità di accelerazione gravitazionale (gravitational acceleration unit), sol (so, Sol). (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | 匁 , ト音記号 (G clef), ト長調 (dawk, doughnut, extreme close-up, G major), ト短調 (G minor), 引数 (argument, G n), 引き数 (argument, G n), シンボル操作 (Conference of Ministers of the Group of Five, diesel, dungarees, G5, gaps between bones or muscles, gene, gene bank, gene engineering, General Infantery, genetic engineering, genius, GI, G-mark, G-men, GNP, Good design mark, government men, gross national product, jeans, jeans jacket, jeans pants, jeep, spaces, symbol manipulation, symmetric, symmetry, sympathetic, symposium). (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | トたんちょう (G minor), トおんきごう (G clef), トちょうちょう (G major), ひきすう (argument, G n), いんすう (argument, factor, G n), もんめ, ジーマン (G-men, government men), ジーマーク (G-mark, Good design mark). (various references) | |
Pig Latin | gay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | g (gravitational acceleration unit), unidade de aceleração gravitacional (gravitational acceleration unit). (various references) | |
Romanian | Detectiv (detective, Dick, ferret, G-man, tec). (various references) | |
Russian | соль (sal, sal 2, saline, salt). (various references) | |
Serbo-Croatian | generalni štab (general staff), sedmo slovo engleske abecede, nota sol. (various references) | |
Spanish | gravedad (gravity, heaviness, nastiness, seriousness, severity), gramos (grammes, grams), gramo (gram, gramme), g (Golf, gravitational acceleration unit), unidad de aceleración gravitatoria (gravitational acceleration unit), todos los públicos, sol (day star, Soh, Sol, sun, sunlight, sunshine), notable (arresting, considerable, marked, notable, noteworthy, noticeable, remarkable, sizable, striking), mil libras (grand), mil dólares (grand). (various references) | |
Swedish | g. (various references) | |
Thai | พยัญชนะอังกฤษตัวที่ 7. (various references) | |
Turkish | sol notası (so, Soh, Sol), bin dolar (grand), bin (kilo-, mil, thousand). (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
| Words containing the letters "g" | |
+1 letter: ag, go. | |
+2 letters: aga, age, ago, bag, beg, big, bog, bug, cig, cog, dag, dig, dog, dug, egg, ego, eng, erg, fag, fig, fog, fug, gab, gad, gae, gag, gal, gam, gan, gap, gar, gas, gat, gay, ged, gee, gel, gem, gen, get, gey, ghi, gib, gid, gie, gig, gin, gip, git, gnu, goa, gob, god, goo, gor, gos, got, gox, goy, gul, gum, gun, gut, guv, guy, gym, gyp, hag, hog, hug, jag, jig, jog, jug, keg, lag, leg, log, lug, mag, meg, mig, mog, mug, nag, nog, peg, pig, pug, rag, reg, rig, rug, sag, seg, tag, teg, tog, tug, ugh, veg, vig, vug, wag, wig, wog, zag, zig. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. | |
| 1. Definition 2. Synonyms 3. Crosswords 4. Usage: Modern | 5. Usage: Commercial 6. Images: Slideshow 7. Images: Photo Album 8. Images: Digital Art | 9. Sounds 10. Quotations: Historic 11. Quotations: Fiction 12. Quotations: Non-fiction | 13. Usage Frequency 14. Names: Company Usage 15. Expressions 16. Expressions: Internet | 17. Translations: Modern 18. Abbreviations 19. Acronyms 20. Anagrams | 21. Bibliography |
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