Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

Definition: T |
TNoun1. A unit of weight equivalent to 1000 kilograms. 2. A unit of information equal to one trillion (1,000,000,000,000) bytes. 3. The 20th letter of the Roman alphabet. 4. Thyroid hormone similar to thyroxine but with one less iodine atom per molecule and produced in smaller quantity; exerts the same biological effects as thyroxine but is more potent and briefer. 5. Hormone produced by the thyroid glands to regulate metabolism by controlling the rate of oxidation in cells; "thyroxine is 65% iodine". Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "t" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1350. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Computing | T /T/ 1. [from LISP terminology for `true'] Yes. Used in reply to a question (particularly one asked using The -P convention). In LISP, the constant T means `true', among other things. Some Lisp hackers use `T' and `NIL' instead of `Yes' and `No' almost reflexively. This sometimes causes misunderstandings. When a waiter or flight attendant asks whether a hacker wants coffee, he may absently respond `T', meaning that he wants coffee; but of course he will be brought a cup of tea instead. Fortunately, most hackers (particularly those who frequent Chinese restaurants) like tea at least as well as coffee -- so it is not that big a problem. 2. See time T (also since time T equals minus infinity). 3. [techspeak] In transaction-processing circles, an abbreviation for the noun `transaction'. 4. [Purdue] Alternate spelling of tee. 5. A dialect of LISP developed at Yale. (There is an intended allusion to NIL, "New Implementation of Lisp", another dialect of Lisp developed for the VAX). Source: Jargon File. |
Literature | T in music, stands for Tutti (all), meaning all the instruments or voices are to join. It is the opposite of S for Solo. -t- inserted with a double hyphen between a verb ending with a vowel and the pronouns elle, il, or on, is called "t ephelcystic," as, aime-t-il, dire-t-on. (See N, Marks In Grammar.) Marked with a T. Criminals convicted of felony, and admitted to the benefit of clergy, were branded on the brawn of the thumb with the letter T (thief). The law was abolished by 7 and 8 George IV., c. 27. It fits to a T. Exactly. The allusion is to work that mechanics square with a T-rule, especially useful in making right angles, and in obtaining perpendiculars on paper or wood. The saintly T's. Sin Tander, Sin Tantony, Sin Tawdry, Sin Tausin, Sin Tedmund, and Sin Telders; otherwise St. Andrew, St. Anthony, St. Audry, St. Austin [Augustine], St. Edmund, and St. Ethelred. Tooley is St. Olaf. Source: Brewer's Dictionary. |
Slang | Noun. Source: Technical foul. Definition: A shortere word for technical foul. A technical foul is assessed for excessive arguing with officials or other players, or for fighting. Context: Used when speaking of this particular kind of foul during a basketball game. Social Source: 2002 Oakridge High School Athletes. Source: Compiled by The University of Oregon. (additional references) |
Space | Tera, a multiplier x1012, from the Greek teras (monster). See the entry for CGPM. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
See Aozora Bunko
- 'Touyoubijutsuzufu' by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- 'Tsuchi' nitsuite by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Tabako to akuma by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tabemono no ki by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Tabi by Toson Shimazaki (March 25,1872 - August 22,1943)
- Tabibyasojitodekaketa Spain ryokoubaruiha 'wagamichi' no arukikata by Ichiro Shimada
- Tada-Dada of Alangri-Gloriban by Jun Tsuji (October 4,1884 - November 24,1944)
- Tadanaokyougyoujouki by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Taidan juuninenmenodaimonjigamoerukyoutode by Yuzo Toyoda
- Taifuu (Typhoon) by Akiko Yosano (December 7,1878 - May 29,1942)
- Tairanomasakado by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Taisetsunafun'iki by Narashige Koide (October 13,1887 - February 13,1931)
- Taishuufuubungaki by Akira Saifu
- Taiyouga yamanamini shizumutoki by Shanon Dan (b.1959)
- Tajuutosonoinu by Takashi Nagatsuka (April 3,1879 - February 8,1915)
- Takahamakyoshicho 'keitou' jo by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Takarajima (Treasure Island) by Robert Stevenson Louis (1850 - 1894)
- Takasebune by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Takasebune by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Takashimaishi by Shiro Kunieda (October 10,1887 - April 8,1943)
- Takekurabe by Ichiyo Higuchi (May 2,1872 - November 23,1896)
- Takibi by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Takiguchinyuudou by Chogyu Takayama (February 28,1871 - December 24,1902)
- Tamagawa no kusa by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Tamago by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Tamamo no mae by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Tamori-kun ha nishihe by [[Mitsuru Morino]
- Tandeki by Homei Iwano (January 20,1873 - May 9,1920)
- Taneko no yuuutsu by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Taneyamagahara by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Tani wo omou by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Tani by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Tanishi no shusse by Masao Kusuyama (November 4,1884 - November 26,1950)
- Tanizakijun'ichirou-shi by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tanoshii Soviet no kodomo by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Tanoshikishougai by Kanzo Uchimura (March 26,1861 - March 28,1930)
- Tanteishousetsu mansou by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Tanteishousetsu no miryoku by Shutaro Nanbu
- Tanteishousetsu no shinshimei by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Tanteishousetsu no shoutai by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Taroubou by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Taroutomachi by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Tasogare by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Tatsumuraheizoushi no geijutsu by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tayamakatai-kun' ni kotau by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Tazunebito by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Tebukurowokaini by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
- Tegami by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tegami by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Tegami by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Teihon'aoneko by Sakutaro Hagiwara (November 1,1886 - May 11,1942)
- Tejina by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Tejinashitobanzan by Kyukin Susukida (May 19,1877 - October 9,1945)
- Tengokutojigokunokekkon by William Blake
- Tenki by Noe Ito (January 21,1895 - September 16,1923)
- Tenkibo by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tenshukakunooto by Shiro Kunieda (October 10,1887 - April 8,1943)
- Tetsumenpi by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Tettsuinooto by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Tobidashi Knief by Ryoji Sano (b.1940)
- Tochinohana by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Tojounohan'nin by Shiro Hamao (April 24,1896 - October 29,1935)
- Tokaichizunobouchou by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Tokaide by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Tokaretazou by Torahiko Terada
- Tokatonton by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Tokinokan'nento entropy narabini probability by Torahiko Terada
- Tokkankikou by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Tokkyotawan'ningenhoushiki by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Tomogui by Mutsuo Honjo (February 20,1905 - July 23,1939)
- Tonbi to aburage by Torahi Terada
- Tongun by Denji Kuroshima (December 12,1898 - October 17,1943)
- Toranohanashi by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Tori by Riichi Yokomitsu (March 17,1898 - December 30,1947)
- Toribakosenseito fu nezumi by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Toribeyamashinjuu by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Tosanikki by Tsurayuki Kino (870 - 945)
- Toshishun by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tottei by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Toudaiki by Keikichi Osaka (March 20,1912 - July 2,1945)
- Toujuurounokoi by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Toukaidougojuusantsugi by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
- Toukan'nohanchou by Jitsuzo Kuwabara (December 7,1870 - May 24,1931)
- Toukyou romantic ren'aiki by Eisuke Yoshiyuki (May 10,1906 - July 8,1940)
- Toukyoudayori by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Toukyoujin'nodarakujidai by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Toukyounokougaiwoomou by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Toumeineko by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Touseikatsusha by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Touyoujin'nohatsumei by Jitsuzo Kuwabara (December 7,1870 - May 24,1931)
- Touyounoaki by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Touzaihokurokou by Kumaichi Horiguchi (January 28,1865 - October 30,1945)
- Touzaiirohatankahyoushaku by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Touzaikoutsuushijouyorimitarunihon'nokaihatsu by Jitsuzo Kuwabara (December 7,1870 - May 24,1931)
- Travelmate Kyuujuugo Travelmate kyuujuuhachi by Mitsuru Morino
- Troco by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tsubakihime by Terence Rattigan (1911 - 1977)
- Tsugaru by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Tsugarunomushinosu by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Tsugeshirouzaemon by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Tsuina by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Tsuioku by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Tsukifu by Keigetsu Omachi (January 24,1869 - June 10,1925)
- Tsukijigashi by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Tsukinihoeru by Sakutaro Hagiwara (November 1,1886 - May 11,1942)
- Tsukinoyo by Ichiyo Higuchi (May 2,1872 - November 23,1896)
- Tsumetasayowagamiwotsutsume by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Tsumi by Riichi Yokomitsu (March 17,1898 - December 30,1947)
- Tsuri by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Tsuruhayamiki by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Aozora Bunko: T."
(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 half-life of a radioactive isotope is the time it takes for half of the atoms in a pure sample of the isotope to decay into another element. It is a measure of the stability of an isotope; the shorter the half life, the less stable the atom. The decay of an atom is said to be spontaneous as one can only determine the probability of decay and not predict when an individual atom will decay. (Refer to the last section on the generalization of the concept of half-life to other scientific subjects)
All the atoms of a particular radioactive species have the same probability of disintegrating in a given time, so that an appreciable sample of radioactive material, containing many millions of atoms, always changes or disintegrates at the same rate. This rate at which the material changes is expressed in terms of the half-life, the time required for one half the atoms initially present to disintegrate, which is constant for any particular isotope.
Half-lives of radioactive materials range from fractions of a second for the most unstable to billions of years for those which are only slightly unstable. Decay is said to occur in the parent nucleus and produce a daughter nucleus. Decay from a parent to a daughter nucleus may produce alpha, beta particles, and neutrinos. Gamma radiation may be produced as the nucleus is de-excited but this is only after the alpha or beta decay has taken place. Radioactive decay results in a mass loss, which is converted to energy (the disintegration energy) according to the formula E = mc2. Often, the daughter nucleus is also radioactive, and so on down the line for several successive generations of nuclei until a stable one is finally reached. The three such naturally occurring series are shown in the following table:
Natural Radioactive Elements Series Starting Isotope Half-Life (years) Stable End Product Radium U-238 4.47x109 Pb-206 Actinium U-235 7.04x108 Pb-207 Thorium Th-232 1.41x1010 Pb-208 Note: there are naturally occurring radioactive isotopes (such as C-14) but they are not part of a series.
Other applications of the half-life concept
The concept of half life is not restricted to the decay of radioactive nuclei. The law is also useful in many processes where the rate of change of some property of a system depends itself on this property. In some chemical reactions, the rate of reaction depends on the concentration of a particular reactant. During the course of the reaction this concentration decreases, causing the rate of reaction also to go down. It is found that the time taken for the rate of reaction to halve is constant, if the reactant is said to be first order with respect to the rate. Enzyme-catalyzed reactions fall into this category.Half life is also important in calculating populations, although it is only applicable where the resources available to the population remain surplus to the needs. In these situations the population and its demands increase rapidly, so in reality the resources are always a limiting factor.
See also: radioactive decay, nuclear fission, radiometric dating, lifetime
Note: A separate article treats the Half-Life computer game.
- Physics for Scientists and Engineers, 4th edition, Raymond Serway, chp 45
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Half-life."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
In topology and related branches of mathematics, the T0 spaces or Kolmogorov spaces form a broad class of well behaved topological spaces. The T0 condition is one of the separation axioms.
Topological distinguishability
To define T0 spaces, we first define the concept of topologically distinguishable points. If X is a topological space and x and y are points in X, then x and y are topologically indistinguishable if and only if they have exactly the same neighbourhoodss. Otherwise, they are topologically distinguishable. For example, in an indiscrete space, any two points are topologically indistinguishable.
Alternatively, if x belongs to the closure of {y} and y belongs to the closure of {x}, then x and y are topologically indistinguishable; otherwise, they're topologically distinguishable. Topologically distinguishable points are automatically distinct. On the other hand, if the singleton sets {x} and {y} are separated, then the points x and y must be topologically distinguishable. (This is how the T0 axiom fits in with the rest of the separation axioms.)
Definition
The definition of a T0 space is now simple; X is T0 if and only if every pair of distinct points is topologically distinguishable.
This definition may also be formulated as follows: X is a T0 space if and only if for any two distinct points in X there exists an open subset of X which contains one of the points but not the other. This characterisation should be contrasted with an analogous characterisation of T1 spacess, where one can specify beforehand which points will belong to the open set.
T0 is nice
Almost every topological space studied in ordinary mathematics is T0. Indeed, when mathematicians in many fields, notably analysis, naturally run across non-T0 spaces, they usually replace them with T0 spaces, in a manner described below.
In general, when dealing with a fixed topology T on a set X, it's helpful if that topology is T0. On the other hand, when X is fixed but T is allowed to vary within certain boundaries, it can be annoying to force T to be T0, since the non-T0 topologies are often important special cases. Thus, it can be important to understand both T0 and non-T0 versions of the various conditions that can be placed on a topological space.
To motivate the ideas involved, let's consider a well known example. The space L2(R) is meant to be the space of all measurable functions f from the real line R to the complex plane C such that the Lebesgue integral of |f(x)|2 over the entire real line not only exists but also is finite. This space should become a normed vector space by defining the norm ||f|| to be the square root of that integral. The problem is that this is not really a norm, only a seminorm, because there are functions other than the zero function whose (semi)norms are zero. The standard solution is to define L2(R) to be a set of equivalence classes of functions instead of a set of functions directly. This constructs a quotient space of the original seminormed vector space, and this quotient is a normed vector space. It inherits several nice properties from the seminormed space, as we will see below.
Both the problem and the solution are reflected at the level of the topologies defined by the norm and seminorm. If a function's seminorm is zero, then it's topologically indistinguishable from the zero function. More generally, functions are identified in the construction of the quotient space precisely when they are topologically indistinguishable in the original seminormed space.
The Kolmogorov quotient
The general construction is the Kolmogorov quotient. Topological indistinguishability of points is an equivalence relation. No matter what topological space X might be to begin with, the quotient space under this equivalence relation is always T0. This quotient space is the Kolmogorov quotient of X, which we will denote KQ(X). Of course, if X was T0 to begin with, then KQ(X) and X are naturallyly homeomorphic.
Topological spaces X and Y are Kolmogorov equivalent iff their Kolmogorov quotients are homeomorphic. The nice thing about Kolmogorov equivalence is that many properties of topological spaces are preserved by this equivalence; that is, if X and Y are Kolmogorov equivalent, then X has such a property iff Y does. On the other hand, most of the other properties of topological spaces imply T0-ness; that is, if X has such a property, then X must be T0. Only a few properties, such as being an indiscrete space, are exceptions to this rule of thumb. Even better, many structuress defined on topological spaces can be transferred between X and KQ(X). The result is that, if you have a non-T0 topological space with a certain structure or property, then you can usually form a T0 space with the same structures and properties by taking the Kolmogorov quotient.
The example of L2(R) displays these nice features. From the point of view of topology, the seminormed vector space that we started with has a lot of extra structure; for example, it's a vector space, and it has a seminorm, and these define a pseudometric and a uniform structure that are compatible with the topology. Also, there are several properties of these structures; for example, the seminorm satisfies the parallelogram identity and the uniform structure is complete. When we form the Kolmogorov quotient, the actual L2(R), these structures and properties are preserved. Thus, L2(R) is also a complete seminormed vector space satisfying the parallelogram identity. But we actually get a bit more, since the space is now T0. A seminorm is a norm iff the underlying topology is T0, so L2(R) is actually a complete normed vector space satisfying the parallelogram identity -- otherwise known as a Hilbert space. And it is a Hilbert space that mathematicians (and physicists, in quantum mechanics) generally want to study.
Removing T0
You may notice that, although norms were historically defined first, people came up with the definition of seminorm as well, which is a sort of non-T0 version of a norm. In general, it is possible to define non-T0 versions of both properties and structures of topological spaces. First, consider a property of toplogical spaces, such as being Hausdorff. One can then define another property of topological spaces by defining the space X to satisfy the property if and only if the Kolmogorov quotient KQ(X) is Hausdorff. This is a sensible, albeit less famous, property; in this case, such a space X is called preregular. (There even turns out to be a more direct definition of preregularity.) Now consider a structure that can be placed on topological spaces, such as a metric. We can define a new structure on topological spaces by letting an example of the structure on X be simply a metric on KQ(X). This is a sensible structure on X; it is a pseudometric. (Again, there is a more direct definition of pseudometric.)
In this way, there is a natural way to remove T0-ness from the requirements for a property or structure. It's generally easier to study spaces that are T0, but it may also be easier to allow structures that aren't T0 to get a fuller picture. The T0 requirement can be added or removed at will, using the concept of Kolmogorov quotient.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Kolmogorov space."
(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
T
- TAB Crown Point International Airport, Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago
- TAS Vostochny International Airport, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
- TGU Toncontin International Airport, Tegucigalpa, Honduras
- TFS Reina Sofia Airport (Tenerife Southern Airport), Isle of Tenerife, Spain
- THF Tempelhof International Airport, Berlin, Germany
- TIA Rinas Mother Teresa Airport, Tirana, Albania
- TIJ General Abelardo L. Rodriguez International Airport, Tijuana, Mexico
- TLH Tallahassee Regional Airport, Tallahassee, Florida, United States
- TLL Tallinn Airport, Tallin, Estonia
- TLV Ben Gurion International Airport, Lod, Israel, near Tel Aviv
- TNR Annantarivo, Madagascar
- TPA Tampa International Airport, Tampa, Florida, United States
- TPE Chiang Kai Shek International Airport, Taoyuan, Taiwan, near Taipei
- TRF Sandefjord Airport Torp, Torp, Norway, near Sandefjord
- TRV Trivandrum International Airport, Trivandrum, India
- TSR Timisoara, Romania
- TUL Tulsa International Airport, Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States
- TUN Carthage Airport, Tunis, Tunisia
- TUS Tucson International Airport, Tucson, Arizona, United States
- TVC Cherry Capital Airport, Traverse City, Michigan, United States
- TXL Tegel International Airport, Berlin, Germany
- TYO All Airports, Tokyo, Japan
- TYS McGhee Tyson Airport, Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of airports: T."
(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
- Taanach, who humbles thee; who answers thee
- Taanach-shilo, breaking down a fig-tree
- Tabbath, good; goodness
- Tabeal, Tabeel, good God
- Taberah, burning
- Tabitha, clear-sighted; a roe-deer
- Tabor, choice; purity; bruising
- Tabrimon, good pomegranate; the navel; the middle
- Tadmor, the palm-tree; bitterness
- Tahan, beseeching; merciful
- Tahapenes, secret temptation
- Tahath, fear; going down
- Tahpenes, standard; flight; temptation
- Tahrea, anger; wicked contention
- Talitha-cumi, young woman, arise
- Talmai, my furrow; that suspends the waters; heap of waters
- Tamah, blotting or wiping out; smiting
- Tamar, palm; palm-tree
- Tammuz, abstruse; concealed; consumed
- Tanach, same as Taanach
- Tanhumeth, consolation; repentance
- Taphath, distillation; drop
- Tappuah, apple; swelling
- Tarah, a hair; a wretch; one banished
- Taralah, searching out slander, or strength
- Tarea, howling; doing evil
- Tarpelites, ravishers; succession of miracles
- Tarshish, contemplation; examination
- Tarsus, winged; feathered
- Tartak, chained; bound; shut up
- Tartan, a general (official title)
- Tatnai, that gives; the overseer of the gifts and tributes
- Tebah, murder; butchery; guarding of the body; a cook
- Tebaliah, baptism, or goodness, of the Lord
- Tebeth, good, goodness (the tenth month of the Hebrews)
- Tehinnah, entreaty; a favor
- Tekel, weight
- Tekoa, trumpet; that is confirmed
- Telabib, a heap of new grain
- Telah, moistening; greenness
- Telassar, taking away; heaping up
- Telem, their dew; their shadow
- Telharsa, suspension of the plow
- Tel-melah, heap of salt
- Tema, admiration; perfection; consummation
- Teman, Temani, the south; Africa; perfect
- Terah, to breathe; scent; blow
- Teraphim, images; idols
- Tertius, third
- Tertullus, third
- Tetrarch, governor of a fourth part
- Thaddeus, that praises or confesses
- Thahash, that makes haste; that keeps silence
- Thamah, that blots out; that suppresses
- Tharah, same as Terah
- Thebez, muddy; eggs; fine linen or silk
- Thelasar, same as Telassar
- Theophilus, friend of God
- Thessalonica, victory against the Thessalians
- Theudas, flowing with water
- Thomas, a twin
- Thummim, perfection; truth
- Thyatira, a perfume; sacrifice of labor
- Tibbath, killing; a cook
- Tiberias, good vision; the navel
- Tiberius, the son of Tiber
- Tibni, straw; hay
- Tidal, that breaks the yoke; knowledge of elevation
- Tiglath-pileser, that binds or takes away captivity
- Tikvah, hope; a little line; congregation
- Tilon, murmuring
- Timeus, perfect; admirable; honorable
- Timnah, forbidding
- Timnath, image; figure; enumeration
- Timnath-heres, or Timnath-serah, image of the sun; numbering of the rest
- Timon, honorable; worthy
- Timotheus, honor of God; valued of God
- Tiphsah, passage; leap; step; the passover
- Tirhakah, inquirer; examiner; dull observer
- Tiria, searching out
- Tirshatha, a governor
- Tirzah, benevolent; complaisant; pleasing
- Tishbite, that makes captive
- Titus, pleasing
- Toah, weapon; dart
- Tob, good; goodness
- Tob-adonijah, my good God; the goodness of the foundation of the Lord
- Tobiah, Tobijah, the Lord is good
- Tochen, middle
- Togarmah, which is all bone
- Tohu, that lives; that declares
- Toi, who wanders
- Tola, worm; grub; scarlet
- Tophet, a drum; betraying
- Trachonitis, stony
- Troas, penetrated
- Trophimus, well educated; well brought up
- Tryphena, delicious; delicate
- Tryphon, masculine of Tryphena
- Tryphosa, thrice shining
- Tubal, the earth; the world; confusion
- Tubal-cain, worldly possession; possessed of confusion
- Tychicus, casual; by chance
- Tyrannus, a prince; one that reigns
- Tyre, Tyrus, strength; rock; sharp
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 T."
(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 Note: Titles that begin with The should be listed under the next word in the title.
- Tai-Pan - James Clavell (1966), set in Hong Kong, around 1840.
- The Tailor of Panama - John le Carré (1996)
- Take Back Your Government: A Practical Handbook for the Private Citizen - Robert A. Heinlein (1992)
- The Tale of the Body Thief - Anne Rice (1992)
- A Tale of Two Cities - Charles Dickens (1859)
- The Talented Mr. Ripley - Patricia Highsmith (1955)
- Tales from Firozsha Baag - Rohinton Mistry (1992)
- Tales from Silver Lands - Charles Finger (1925 Newbery Medal)
- Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing - Judy Blume (1976)
- The Talisman - Stephen King, Peter Straub (1984)
- Tanach, Jewish scripture
- Tapestry - Belva Plain (1988)
- Tar Baby - Jerome Charyn (1973)
- Tar Baby - Toni Morrison (1981)
- Tara Road - Maeve Binchy (1999)
- Tartuffe - Molière
- The Tax Inspector, - Peter Carey (1991)
- TCSEC (Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria) ('Orange Book'), computer security standards
- The Teenage Liberation Handbook - Grace Llewellyn
- Tell England - Ernest Raymond (1922)
- Tell No Man - Adela Rogers St. Johns (1966)
- The Temple of My Familiar - Alice Walker (1989)
- Temporary Kings - Anthony Powell (1973)
- Temptations of Big Bear - Rudy Wiebe (1973)
- Ten North Frederick - John O'Hara (1955)
- The Tenth Insight - James Redfield (1996)
- Teranesia - Greg Egan
- Terms of Endearment - Larry McMurtry (1977)
- The Terrorist - Caroline B. Cooney
- The Testament - John Grisham (1999)
- Testimony of Two Men - Taylor Caldwell (1968)
- Texas - James A. Michener (1985)
- That Godless Woman - Merton H. Coleman (1969)
- That Hideous Strength - C.S. Lewis
- That Summer in Paris - Morley Callaghan (1963)
- Theatre of the World - Abraham Ortelius (1570), atlas
- Theatrum Orbis Terrarum - Abraham Ortelius (1570), atlas
- A Theory of Justice - John Rawls (1971)
- There Is A Tree More Ancient Than Eden - Leon Forrest (1973)
- Thimble Summer - Elizabeth Enright (1939 Newbery Medal)
- The Thin Red Line, - James Jones (1962)
- Things My Girlfriend and I Have Argued About - Mil Millington
- The Things They Carried - Tim O'Brien (1990)
- Thinks - David Lodge (2001)
- The Third Deadly Sin - Lawrence Sanders (1981)
- The Third Wave - Alvin Toffler (1980)
- The Thirty-Nine Steps - John Buchan (1915)
- The Thorn Birds, - Colleen McCullough (1977)
- Those Who Love - Irving Stone (1965)
- A Thousand Acres - Jane Smiley (1991)
- A Thousand Days - Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr (1966)
- Three by Heinlein - Robert A. Heinlein (1965)
- Three Californias Trilogy - Kim Stanley Robinson (1984-1990)
- Three Cheers for the Paraclete - Thomas Keneally (1968), comic novel of a doubting priest.
- The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch - Philip K. Dick (1965)
- Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carroll (1871)
- Through the Stones - Diana Gabaldon (1999)
- Through the Vast Halls of Memory - Haifa Zangana (1991)
- Thunderball - Ian Fleming (1961)
- Thy Neighbor's Wife - Gay Talese (1980)
- Tiberius the Politician - Barbara Levick
- The Tie That Binds - Kent Haruf (1984)
- Til We Meet Again - Judith Krantz (1988)
- Till We Have Faces: A Myth Retold - C. S. Lewis (1956)
- Time and Time Again - James Hilton (1953)
- Time Enough For Love - Robert A. Heinlein (1973)
- Time Flies - Bill Cosby (1987)
- A Time for Judas - Morley Callaghan (1983)
- Time for the Stars - Robert A. Heinlein (1956)
- The Time Machine - H. G. Wells (1896)
- A Time to Kill - John Grisham (1989)
- Timeline - Michael Crichton (1999)
- The Tin Drum - Gunter Grass (1959)
- Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy - John le Carré (1974)
- 'Tis - Frank McCourt (1999)
- Tjorven på Saltkråkan - Astrid Lindgren
- To Jerusalem and Back - Saul Bellow (1976)
- To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee (1960)
- To Sail Beyond the Sunset - Robert A. Heinlein (1987)
- Tom Jones - Henry Fielding (1749)
- Tom Sawyer - Mark Twain (1876)
- Tom Swift, Jr series - Harriet Stratemeyer Adams as Victor Appleton II (1954-1971) children's adventure
- The Tombs of Atuan - Ursula K. Le Guin
- Tomcat in Love - Tim O'Brien (1998)
- The Tommyknockers - Stephen King (1987)
- Tomorrow, When The War Began - John Marsden (1993)
- The Tontine - Thomas B. Costain (1955)
- Too Big To Fail - Walter Stewart (1993)
- Topaz - Leon Uris (1967)
- The Torch - Wilder Penfield (1960)
- The Tortilla Curtain - T.C. Boyle (1995)
- Total Recall - Piers Anthony (1989)
- A Touch of Danger - James Jones (1973)
- Toulouse-Lautrec: The Soul of Montmartre - Reinhold Heller (1997)
- Towards Asmara - Thomas Keneally (1989, the conflict in Eritrea.
- A Town Like Alice - Nevil Shute
- Trainspotting - Irvine Welsh (1993)
- Tramp Royale - Robert A. Heinlein (1992)
- Traumnovelle - Arthur Schnitzler (adapted as the film Eyes Wide Shut by American director Stanley Kubrick)
- Travels with Charley: In Search of America - John Steinbeck (1962)
- Travels with My Aunt - Graham Greene (1970)
- The Tree of Man - Patrick White (1955)
- The Trial (Der Prozess) - Franz Kafka (1925)
- The Tribe That Lost Its Head - Nicholas Monsarrat (1956)
- Trinity - Leon Uris (1976)
- Tristram Shandy - Laurence Sterne (1768)
- Triton - Samuel R. Delany (1976)
- Troilus and Cressida - Geoffrey Chaucer
- Tropic of Cancer - Henry Miller (1934)
- Troubling a Star - Madeleine L'Engle (1994)
- The True American, A Folk Fable - Melvin Van Peebles (1977)
- True History of the Kelly Gang - Peter Carey (2000), winner of the 2001 Booker Prize and the Commonwealth Writers Prize
- The Trumpet Of The Swan - E.B. White (1970)
- The Trumpeter of Krakow - Eric P. Kelly (1929 Newbery Medal)
- Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria (TCSEC) ('Orange Book'), computer security standards
- Truth and Method - Hans-Georg Gadamer (1960)
- The Truth - Terry Pratchett (2000)
- Tunnel in the Sky - Robert A. Heinlein (1955)
- The Twenty-One Balloons - William Pene du Bois, (1948 Newbery Medal)
- 'Twixt Twelve and Twenty - Pat Boone (1961)
- Two from Galilee - Marjorie Holmes (1972)
- Two Thousand and Ten: Odyssey Two (2010: Odyssey Two) - Arthur C. Clarke (1982)
- The Twyborn Affair - Patrick White (1979)
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: T."
(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 Tecklenburg 9,400 Steinfurt North Rhine-Westphalia Trier 99,700 -- Rhineland-Palatinate 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 T."
(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
- Turkiye Bilimsel ve Teknik Arastirma Kurumu
- Taegu University
- Taejeon Vocational Junior College
- Taft College
- Taipei Medical College
- Takuma National College of Technology
- Tallinn Technical University
- Tama Institute of Management and Information Sciences
- Tamkang University
- Tampere Institute of Technology
- Tampere University of Technology
- Tamsui Oxford University College
- Tanjore Medical College
- Tarleton State University
- Tatung Institute of Technology
- Taylor University
- Teachers College
- Technical University Kosice
- Technical University in Zvolen
- Technical University of British Columbia
- Technical University of Brno
- Technical University of Budapest
- Technical University of Cluj
- Technical University of Crete (T.U.C)
- Technical University of Denmark
- Technical University of Iasi
- Technical University of Nova Scotia
- Technical University of Targu Mures
- Technical University of Timisoara
- Technikon Southern Africa
- Technikum Vorarlberg
- Technikum Winterthur Ingenieurschule
- Technion, Israel Institute of Technology
- Technische Fachhochschule Berlin
- Technische Hochschule Darmstadt
- Technische Universität Berlin
- Technische Universität Braunschweig
- Technische Universität Chemnitz-Zwickau
- Technische Universität Clausthal
- Technische Universität Dresden
- Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg
- Technische Universität Graz
- Technische Universität Hamburg-Harburg
- Technische Universität Ilmenau
- Technische Universität München
- Technische Universität Wien
- Teikyo Post University
- Teikyo University
- Tel Aviv University
- Tele-Universite
- Telemark College
- Temasek Polytechnic
- Temple University
- Temple University Japan
- Tennessee State University
- Tennessee Technological University
- Texas A&M International University (Laredo, Texas)
- Texas A&M University (College Station, Texas)
- Texas A&M University at Galveston (Galveston, Texas)
- Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi (Corpus Christi, Texas)
- Texas A&M University - Kingsville (Kingsville, Texas)
- Texas Christian University (Fort Worth, Texas)
- Texas Southern University (Houston, Texas)
- Texas State Technical College (several locations in Texas)
- Texas State University-San Marcos
- Texas Tech University (Lubbock, Texas)
- Texas Woman's University (Denton, Texas)
- Thadomal Shahani Engineering College (TSEC)
- Thammasat University
- The American College
- The King's University College
- The Queen's College, Oxford
- Thomas College
- Thomas Edison State College
- Thomas Jefferson University
- Thomas More College
- Tianjin University
- Tidewater Community College
- Tilburg University
- Toccoa Falls College
- Tohoku University
- Tokai University
- Tokyo Gakugei University
- Tokyo Institute of Technology
- Tokyo International University
- Tokyo Kaseigakuin Tsukuba Junior College
- Tokyo Kogei Tanki University
- Tokyo Medical and Dental University
- Tokyo Metropolitan College of Aeronautical Engineering
- Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
- Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
- Tokyo Woman's Christian University
- Tokyo Women's Medial College
- Tomball College
- Tompkins Cortland Community College
- Tomsk State University
- Tongji University
- Toronto School of Theology
- Towson State University
- Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University
- Toyama University
- Tralee Regional Technical College
- Transylvania University
- Trent University
- Trenton State College
- Tri-State University
- Trinidad State Junior College
- Trinity College Dublin
- Trinity College (Carmarthen)
- Trinity College (Connecticut)
- Trinity College (Washington, DC)
- Trinity College (Florida)
- Trinity College (Vermont)
- Trinity College and Seminary
- The Trinity College and University
- The University of Trinity College
- Trinity University
- Trinity Western University
- Triton College
- Truckee Meadows Community College
- Truman State University
- Tsinghua University
- Tucson University
- Tufts University
- Tulane University
- Tung Nan Junior College of Technology
- Tunghai 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 T."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of Japanese authors
- Tabata Shuichiro (September 2,1903 - July 23,1943)
- Tachibana Minoru (born 1933)
- Tachihara Michizo (July 30,1914 - March 29,1939)
- Taguchi Kikutei (January 18,1875 - August 9,1943)
- Taguchi Ukichi (April 29,1855 - April 13,1905)
- Takada Choi (January 25,1886 - September 23,1930)
- Takagaki Matsuo (December 13,1890 - September 13,1940)
- Takagami Kakusho (1804 - 1948)
- Takahashi Korekiyo (July 27,1854 - February 26,1936)
- Takahashi Soan (1861 - December 12,1937)
- Takahashi Yuji (1938 - 1938)
- Takamura Koun (February 18,1852 - October 10,1934)
- Takano Atsushi (1963 - 1963)
- Takano Tsugi (August 15,1890 - March 19,1943)
- Takasaki Masakaze (July 28,1836 - February 28,1912)
- Takase Taiji
- Takasu Yoshijiro (April 13,1880 - February 2,1948)
- Takayama Chogyu (February 28,1871 - December 24,1902)
- Takayasu Gekko (February 16,1869 - February 26,1944)
- Takeda Rintaro (May 9,1904 - March 31,1946)
- Takehisa Yumeji (September 16,1884 - September 1,1934)
- Takekoshi Sansa (October 5,1865 - January 12,1950)
- Takekoshi Yosaburo (October 5,1865 - January 12,1950)
- Takenobu Yoshitaro (1863 - April 26,1930)
- Takenouchi Masashi (August 8,1898 - November 10,1922)
- Takeuchi Katsutaro (October 20,1894 - June 25,1935)
- Takeuchi Seiho (1864 - August 23,1942)
- Takeuchi Toshiko (September 10,1905 - April 7,1945)
- Taki Rentaro (August 24,1879 - June 29,1903)
- Taki Seiichi (December 12,1873 - May 17,1945)
- Tamaru Takuro (September 29,1872 - September 22,1932)
- Tamiya Maya
- Tamura Toshiko (April 25,1884 - April 16,1945)
- Tanaka Hidemitsu (January 10,1913 - November 3,1949)
- Tanaka Kotaro (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Tanaka Odo (December 30,1867 - May 9,1932)
- Tanaka Sanae (1884 - 1945)
- Tanaka Shozo (November 3,1841 - September 4,1913)
- Tanaka Suiichiro (March 7,1873 - August 13,1923)
- Taneda Santoka (December 3,1882 - October 11,1940)
- Tani Joji (January 17,1900 - June 29,1935)
- Taoka Reiun (November 21,1870 - September 7,1912)
- Tatsuta Ken'ichi (March 10,1891 - August 22,1942)
- Tayama Katai (January 22,1872 - May 13,1930)
- Tazawa Inabune (December 28,1874 - September 10,1896)
- Terada Torahiko (November 28,1878 - December 31,1935)
- Toda Ken Sakuga (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Togawa Shukotsu (December 18,1870 - July 9,1939)
- Togawa Zanka (October 22,1855 - December 8,1924)
- Togi Tetteki (July 24,1869 - February 14,1925)
- Tokai Sanshi (December 2,1852 - September 25,1922)
- Tokiwa Daijo (1870 - 1945)
- Tokuda Shusei (December 23,1871 - November 18,1943)
- Tokunaga Shin'ichi (1973 - 1973)
- Tokuno Bun (August 27,1866 - February 8,1945)
- Tokuo Toshihiko (December 14,1887 - October 29,1943)
- Tokutomi Kenjiro (October 25,1868 - September 18,1927)
- Tokutomi Roka (October 25,1868 - September 18,1927)
- Tokuyama Tamaki (July 27,1903 - January 28,1942)
- Tolstoi Lev (1828 - 1910)
- Tomari Masahiko (October 23,1908 - September 28,1946)
- Tominaga Taro (May 4,1901 - November 12,1925)
- Tominosawa Rintaro (March 25,1899 - February 24,1925)
- Tomioka Makoto (January 1,1897 - October 15,1926)
- Tomita Isao (born 1932)
- Tomita Michio (born 1952)
- Tomita Moppo (April 14,1897 - September 1,1923)
- Tomonaga Sanjuro (February 5,1871 - September 18,1951)
- Torii Sosen (July 4,1867 - March 10,1928)
- Toriyama Hiraku (1837 - 1914)
- Tosaka Jun (September 27,1900 - August 9,1945)
- Toyama Chuzan (September 27,1848 - March 8,1900)
- Toyama Masakazu (September 27,1848 - March 8,1900)
- Toyoda Yuzo
- Toyoshima Yoshio (November 27,1890 - June 18,1955)
- Tsubouchi Shoyo (May 22,1859 - February 28,1935)
- Tsuchida Kyoson (January 15,1891 - April 25,1934)
- Tsuji Jun (October 4,1884 - November 24,1944)
- Tsujimura Isuke (April 22,1886 - September 1,1923)
- Tsukahara Jushien (March 1,1848 - July 5,1917)
- Tsukahara Ryoshu (March 1,1848 - July 5,1917)
- Tsukahara Watashi
- Tsukamoto Atsuo (September 6,1903 - March 27,1946)
- Tsumura Kyoson (August 17,1893 - April 5,1937)
- Tsumura Nobuo (January 5,1909 - June 27,1944)
- Tsunashima Ryosen (May 27,1873 - September 14,1907)
- Tsuno Jun (born 1960)
- Tsuno Kaitaro (born 1938)
- Tsuruoka Yuji (born 1953)
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:T."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- T, Mr, (born 1952), actor
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: T."
(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 Ta-Tb - Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
Ta
- Tabor, June, musician
- Tabori, George, dramatist, author
- Tacer, Ales, poet
- Tacitus, Publius (or Gaius) Cornelius, (AD 56-120), . Roman historian, ethnologist
- Tacitus, M. Claudius, (200 AD-276 AD), Roman Emperor
- Tacuma, Jamaaladeen, (born 1957), jazz musician
- Taft, Robert Alphonso, (1889-1953), Senator from Ohio
- Taft, William Howard, (1857-1930), President of the United States, Chief Justice of the United States
- Taggard, Geneviere, (Calling Western Union)
- Tagle, Francisco Ruiz, president
- Taglioni, Fabio, (1920-2001), Italian motorcycle engineer
- Tagore, Rabindranath, (1861-1941), poet
- Tailleferre, Germaine, (1892-1983), French composer
- Taimanov, Mark, chess player
- Taimur Bin Faisal, (1913-1932), Oman sultan
- Taira no Kiyomori, (1118-1181), samurai warlord
- Taisho, emperor of Japan, (1879-1926)
- Taisuke, Itagaki, Japanese liberal activist
- Tait, Archibald Campbell, (1811-1882), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Takagi, Teiji, (1875-1960), mathematician
- Takakura, emperor of Japan
- Takaloo, world ranked boxer
- Takamine, Jokichi, (died 1922), chemist
- Takeda Shingen, Samurai warlord
- Takeishi, Stomu
- Takemitsu, Toru, (1930-1996), composer
- Takeshi, Kitano
- Tal, Mikhail, (USSR, 1936-1992), chess player
- Talalikhin, Victor Vasilyevich, (1918-1941), USSR WWII hero
- Talbot, Lyle, (1902-1996), actor
- Talbot, Thomas, US Governor of Massachusetts
- Talbot, William Fox, (1800-1877), photographer
- Talenti, Simone di Francesco, sculptor
- Talese, Gay, (born 1932), author
- Taliesin
- Tallchief, Maria, (born 1925), prima ballerina
- Talleyrand, Charles Maurice, (1754-1838), French diplomat
- Tallis, Thomas, (c.1505-1585), composer
- Talmadge, Constance, (1897-1973), actress
- Talmadge, Norma, (1893-1957), actress
- Talon, Jean, (1625-1694)
- Tal, Wasfi, (died 1971), Prime Minister of Jordan
- Tamblyn, Russ, (born 1934), actor, dancer, singer
- Tambo, Oliver, (born 1917), leader of the African National Congress
- Tamiroff, Akim, (1899-1972), actor
- Tam, Reuben, (born 1916), American painter
- Tam, Roman, (1950-2002)
- Tamagawa, Tsuneo, mathematician
- Tamaro, Susanna, novelist
- Tamm, Igor, (1895-1971), physicist
- Tan, Amy, (born 1952), American novelist
- Tanaka, Raizo, Rear Admiral and destroyer commander
- Tanc, Anton, (1887-1947), poet
- Tancred, (died 1194), King of Sicily
- Tandberg, Vebjørn, (1904-1978), industrialist
- Tandy, Jessica, (1909-1994), actor
- Tanenbaum, Andrew S, (born 1944), Minix
- Taney, Roger B, (1777-1864), United States Supreme Court Justice
- Taneyev, Sergey, (1856-1915), composer
- Tang Taizong, Emperor, of China, (died 649)
- Tange, Kenzo, architect
- Tani, Daniel, astronaut
- Taniyama, Yutaka, (1927-1958), mathematician
- Tanizaki, Junichiro, (1886-1965), Some Prefer Nettles, The Makioka Sisters
- Tank, Kurt, (1898-1983), aerospace engineer
- Tankian, Serj, (born 1967), singer for System of a Down
- Tanko, Matjaz, TV journalist.
- Tan, Mah Bow, industrial and systems engineer
- Tanner, Henry O, (1859-1937), painter
- Tanner, Joseph, astronaut
- Tapia, Johnny, (born 1967), world boxing champion
- Tapscott, Horace, musician
- Tarantino, Quentin, (born 1963), film director
- Tarasius, patriarch of Constantinople
- Tarbell, Ida, (1857-1944), journalist
- Tarbuck, Jimmy, stand-up comedian
- Tardieu, Jean, dramatist, author
- Tarkanian, Jerry, (born 1930), college basketball coach
- Tarkenton, Fran, (born 1940), Football Hall of Famer
- Tarkington, Booth, (1869-1946), American novelist
- Tarkovsky, Andrei, (1932-1986), Russian movie director
- Tarnover, Herman, US dietician
- Tarquinius Priscus, Lucius, Roman king
- Tarquinius Superbus, Lucius, Roman king
- Tarr, Judith, author
- Tarrant, Chris, (born 1946), television presenter
- Tarrasch, Siegbert, (1962-1934), chess player
- Tarrega, Francisco, (1852-1909), composer
- Tarsi, Michael, mathematician
- Tarski, Alfred, (1902-1983), Pole
- Tartaglia, Niccolo Fontana, (1500-1557), Italian mathematician
- Tartikoff, Brandon, (1949-1997), television producer.
- Tartini, Giuseppe, (1692-1770), composer
- Tashlin, Frank, (1913-1972), animator, director, screenwriter
- Tasker, Joe, (1948-1952), British climber
- Tasman, Abel Janszoon, (1603-1659), explorer
- Tassie, A.C, author
- Tasso, Torquato, (1544-1595), poet
- Tata, J. R. D, Indian businessman
- Tatarczyk, Tomasz, Polish painter
- Tate, Allen, (1899-1979), poet
- Tate, Howard, musician
- Tate, James, poet
- Tate, John, mathematician
- Tate, Sharon Marie, (1943-1969), actress
- Tati, Jacques, (1908-1982), French film director
- Tatiana of Russia, Grand Duchess, (1897-1918)
- Tatum, Art, (1909-1956), musician
- Tatum, Edward, (1909-1975), geneticist
- Tatum, Jack, (born 1948), American football star
- Tatwin, (St.) 731
- Taube, Evert, Swedish musician
- Taube, Gustaf Adam, Swedish soldier
- Tauber, Richard, (1891-1948), tenor
- Taufer, Veno, (born 1933), poet
- Taufer, Vida, (1903-1966), poet
- Taupin, Bernie, (born 1950), songwriting partner with Elton John
- Taurog, Norman, (died 1981), film director
- Taut, Bruno, architect
- Tavcar, Ivan, (1851-1923), author, lawyer, politician.
- Tavcar, Zora, poet
- Taveira, Tomás, (born 1938), (architect)
- Tavel, Franz Karl von, Swiss president
- Taverner, John, (c.1490-1545), composer
- Tavolara, Eugenio
- Tawes, J. Millard, US governor
- Tayler, John, US President
- Taylor, Alan John Percivale, (1906-1990), historian
- Taylor, Andy, guitarist, Duran Duran
- Taylor, Ann Jane, Twinkle,Twinkle,Little Star
- Taylor, Brook, (1685-1731), English mathematician
- Taylor, Cecil, (born 1930), musician
- Taylor, Charles, philosopher
- Taylor, Christine, (born 1971)
- Taylor, Cyclone, Frederick Taylor
- Taylor, Eleanor Ross, poet
- Taylor, Elizabeth, (born 1932), actor
- Taylor, E.P, entrepreneur, thoroughbred horse breeder
- Taylor, Estelle, actor
- Taylor, Frederick, (born 1856), industrial and systems engineer
- Taylor, Henry, (1800-1886), poet
- Taylor, James, (born 1948), singer-songwriter, musician
- Taylor, Jeannine, actor
- Taylor, Jeremy, (1613-1667), Anglican preacher
- Taylor, John, bassist, Duran Duran
- Taylor, John (jazz), musician
- Taylor, Johnnie, (died 2000), musician
- Taylor, Joseph, astronomer
- Taylor, Kevin, Canadian writer
- Taylor, Koko, (born 1935), musician
- Taylor, Lawrence, (born 1959), American football star
- Taylor, Lili, actor
- Taylor, Maxwell, (died 1987), general
- Taylor, Niki, (born 1975), fashion model
- Taylor, Paul, (born 1930), dancer, choreographer
- Taylor, Peter, author
- Taylor, Robert, (1911-1969), actor
- Taylor, Rod, (born 1930), Australian actor
- Taylor, Roger, (born 1960), drummer, ("Duran Duran")
- Taylor, Sam, musician
- Taylor, Tell (1876-1937) US songwriter
- Taylor, Terry Scott, (b. 1950) US songwriter
- Taylor, Zachary, (1784-1850), 12th President of the United States
- Tazenda
Tb
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: Ta-Tb."
(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 Ta-Tb - Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTc
- Tchaikovsky, Bram, musician
- Tchaikovsky, Pyotr Ilyich, (1840-1893), Russian
- Tcherepnin, Alexander, (born 1899), composer
Td
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: Tc-Td."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Teagarden, Jack, (1905-1964), musician
- Teasdale, Joseph P, US governor
- Teasdale, Sara, poet
- Tebbit, Norman
- Tecumseh, (1768-1813), Shawnee chief
- Teed, Cyrus, US proponent of a Hollow Earth theory
- Teena, Brandon, (died 1993), US transgender-bashing victim
- Tegnér, Esaias, Swedish writer
- Tehlirian, Soghomon, – assassin of Talaat Pasha
- Teichmuller, Oswald, (1913-1943), mathematician
- Teish, Luisah, Yoruban writer/teacher
- Tekb, Omar Faruk, musician
- Tek, Deniz, of the punk rock band Radio Birdman
- Telatko, Marjan, poet
- Telemann, Georg Philipp, (1681-1767), German composer
- Telesphorus, Pope, (125-136)
- Telford, Thomas, (1757-1834), roads and bridges
- Teller, (born 1948), of stage magic duo Penn and Teller
- Teller, Edward, (born 1908), US physicist, hydrogen bomb's father
- Teller, Raymond Joseph, magician
- Temmu, emperor of Japan
- Temple, Frederick, (1821-1902), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Temple, Shirley, (born 1928), US child actress
- Temple, William (1881-1944), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Templeton, Alec
- Temujin, (about 1165-1227), Genghis Khan of the Mongols
- Tench, Benmont, (born 1954), keyboardist
- Tendulkar, Sachin, (born 1973), Indian cricket player
- Tenet, George J
- Tenhumberg, Heinrich, (1915-1979), theologian, bishop of Münster
- Teniers, David, III, (died 1685), Flemish painter
- Tenison, Thomas, (1636-1715), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Tenniel, John, (born 1820), illustrator
- Tenji, emperor of Japan
- Tenney, Tabitha, US novelist
- Tennille, Toni, (born 1943), singer
- Tennyson, Alfred, (1809-1892), English poet
- Tenzin Gyatso (the Dalai Lama)
- Teodorakis, Mikis, Greek composer
- Tepez, Miran, alpine ski jumper, Olympic athlete.
- Terauchi, Hisaichi, (1879-1945), Japanese Field Marshal
- Terbrugghen, Hendrick, (1588-1629), painter
- Terence, dramatist
- Teresa, Mother, (1910-1997), Albanian-born nun, Missionary for Charity
- Tereshkova, Valentina, (born 1937), Soviet female cosmonaut
- Terkel, Studs, (born 1912), USA writer
- Terminator X
- Terrell, Tammi, (died 1970), musician
- Terrena, Guido, scholastic philosopher
- Terri, Salli, (1922-1996), singer, songwriter
- Terry, Brad, musician
- Terry, Ellen, (1848-1928), actor
- Terry, Fernando Belaunde, (died 2002), Peruvian politician, president of Peru (1963-1968) (1980-1985)
- Terry, Lucy, poet
- Terry, Sonny, musician
- Tertullian, early opponent of gnosticism
- Tervel, (701-718), Bulgarian monarch
- Teshigahara, Hiroshi, (1927-2001), Japanese director
- Tesh, John, (born 1952), musician
- Tesla, Nikola, (1856-1943), Serbian-born inventor of alternating current
- Testa, Pietro, (1617-1650), painter
- Tetmajer, Wlodzimierz, Polish painter
- Tetzel, Johann, (1465-1519)
- Teuffel, Wilhelm Siegmund, (born 1820), classical scholar
- Tevanian, Avie, author of the Mach kernel
- Tewksbury, Mark, Olympic Gold Medal
- Tex, Joe, (died 1982), musician
- Texier, Henri
- Tey, Josephine, (1896-1952), British detective author
- Tezuka, Osamu, (born 1928), Japanese manga artist
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: Te."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTf
Tg
Th
- Thackeray, William Makepeace, (1811-1863), UK author of Vanity Fair
- Thackray, Jake, British comedian
- Thagard, Norman, astronaut
- Thalberg, Irving, (1899-1936), film producer
- Thales, (circa BC624-BC547), philosopher
- Thalia, singer
- Thalmann, Ernst, (1886-1944), politician
- Thanarath, Sarith, (1959-1963), Thai prime minister
- Thant, U, (1909-1974), UN secretary-general
- Thatcher, Margaret, (born 1925), UK prime minister
- Thaw, Harry K, (1871-1947), playboy, killer of Stanford White
- Thaw, John, (1942-2002), British actor
- Thaw, Russell William, (1910-2002), World War I pilot
- Thayer, Ernest, (1863-1940), poet
- Thayer, Ernest Lawrence, (died 1940), poet
- Theakston, Rob, musician
- Theismann, Joe, (born 1949), American football star, sports commentator
- Theobald of Bec, (died 1161), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Theodora, (981-1056), Byzantine Empress
- Theodorakis, Mikis, (born 1925), Greek composer
- Theodore II of Alexandria, (Coadjutor)
- Theodore II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theodore I Lascaris, (died 1222), Byzantine Emperor
- Theodore I, Pope, (642-649)
- Theodore II Lascaris, (died 1258), Byzantine Emperor
- Theodore II, Pope
- Theodore I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theodore of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theodore of Tarsus, (602-690), (St.) 668
- Theodoret, theologian
- Theodoric of Freiburg, (c1250-1310), German scientist and monk
- Theodoric the Great, (454-526), King of Ostrogoths, ruler of Italy
- Theodoros II of Alexandria, (730-742), Coptic Pope
- Theodosios I of Alexandria, (535-566), Coptic Pope
- Theodosios III of Alexandria, (1300-1320), Coptic Pope
- Theodosius I, (346-395), Roman Emperor
- Theodosius II, (401-450), Roman Emperor
- Theodosius III, (716-717), Byzantine Emperor
- Theodosius II of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theodosius I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theodosius II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theodosius, Metropolitan of Moscow, (1461-1464)
- Theodosius of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theodotus of Byzantium, 2nd century theologian
- Theodotus of Cassiteras, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theodulf, (760-821), bishop of Orleans
- Theofelix, Maronite Patriarch
- Theognostus, (1328-1353), Metropolitan of Moscow
- Theoleptus II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theoleptus I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theonas of Alexandria, (282-300), Coptic Pope, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theophanes I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theophelios of Alexandria, (953-956), Coptic Pope
- Theophilus II, Byzantine Emperor
- Theophilus III of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theophilus of Alexandria, (385-412), Coptic Pope, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Theophrastus, (born 372 BC), biologist
- Theophylactus, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theophylactus of Alexandria, (Coadjutor)
- Theophylactus of Constantinople, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theophylactus, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Theremin, Leon, (1896-1993), Russian inventor
- Theresa, Mother, (born 1910)
- Theron, Charlize, (born 1975), US actress
- Theroux, Alexander, poet
- Theroux, Louis, (born 1970), television presenter
- Theroux, Paul, (born 1941), South African author
- Thesen, Sharon, Canadian writer
- Thesleff, Ellen, (1869-1954), painter
- Theudebert II, 595-612 (Austrasia)
- Theuderic II of Austrasia, 612-613 (Austrasia)
- Thibodeaux, Keith, (born 1950), actor
- Thich Nhat Hanh
- Thiedemann, Fritz, (1918-2000), equestrian
- Thiele, Gerhard, astronaut
- Thierry of Chartres, scholastic philosopher
- Thiers, Adolphe
- Thiess, Frank, (1880-1977), writer
- Thiessen, Tiffani-Amber, (born 1974), actress
- Thigpen, Lynne, (born 1948), actor
- Thiongo, Ngugi wa, (born 1938), Kenyan novelist
- Thirsk, Robert, astronaut
- Thoelke, Wim, (1927-1995), show master
- Thom, Rene, (1923-2002), mathematician
- Thoma, Ludwig, (1867-1921), narrator, dramatist and lyricist
- Thomas Kempis (c. 1380-1471), German Augustinian monk
- Thomas of Celaeno, (c. 1200-c. 1255), Franciscan hymnodist
- Thomas of Chobham, scholastic philosopher
- Thomas of Erfurt, scholastic philosopher
- Thomas of Sutton, scholastic philosopher
- Thomas I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Thomas II, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Thomas II Stanley of the Isle of Man, (1459-1504), king
- Thomas I Stanley of the Isle of Man, (1437-1459), king
- Thomas, Alma, (1894-1978), painter
- Thomas, Ambroise, (1811-1896), French composer
- Thomas, Andrew, astronaut
- Thomas, Arthur, (1850-1892), English composer
- Thomas, Audrey, Canadian writer
- Thomas, B.J, (born 1942), singer
- Thomas, Bertram, (1892-1950), British explorer and orientalist
- Thomas, Carla, musician
- Thomas, Clarence, (born 1948), associate justice, U.S. Supreme Court
- Thomas, Danny, (1914-1991), singer, comedia, actor
- Thomas, Dave, (1932-2002), founder of Wendy's International
- Thomas, David, actor/comedian
- Thomas, David Clayton, singer
- Thomas, Donald, astronaut
- Thomas, Dylan, (1914-1953), poet
- Thomas, Duke of Clarence, (died 1421), 2nd son of King Henry IV of England
- Thomas, E Donnal (born 1920), US scientist and Nobel Prize winner
- Thomas, Edward, (1878-1917), poet
- Thomas, Francis, US governor
- Thomas, George, (1909-1997), politician
- Thomas, George Henry, (1816-1870) general
- Thomas, George W, musician
- Thomas, Irma, musician
- Thomas, Isiah, (born 1961), basketball player, coach, owner
- Thomas, Jake (born 1990) actor
- Thomas, James, US governor
- Thomas, Jonathan Taylor, (born 1981), actor
- Thomas, Kurt, (born 1956), gymnast
- Thomas, Lewis, (born 1913), physician, essayist
- Thomas, Lowell, (1892-1981), travel writer
- Thomas, Mark, British stand-up comedian
- Thomas, Marlo, (born 1938), actress
- Thomas, Michael Tilson (born 1944), conductor and pianist
- Thomas, Mickey, (born 1949), singer ("Jefferson Starship")
- Thomas, Norman, (1884-1968), U.S. social reformer
- Thomas, Phillip Francis, US governor
- Thomas, Richard, (born 1951), actor
- Thomas, Ronald Stuart, (1913-2000), poet
- Thomas, Rufus, musician
- Thomas, St, (died AD53)
- Thomas, Seth, (1785-1859), clock manufacturer
- Thomas, Sidney Gilchrist, (1850-1885), English metallurgist and inventor
- Thomas, Theodore, (1835-1905), German-born US conductor
- see Thompson
- Thompson, Daley, (born 1958), English decathlete
- Thompson, Daniel Pierce, US novelist
- Thompson, D'Arcy Wentworth, (1860-1948), Scottish biologist
- Thompson, Dave, British comedian
- Thompson, David (explorer), (1770-1857)
- Thompson, E. P, (1924-1993), historian
- Thompson, Edward Herbert, (1856-1935), explorer
- Thompson, Emma, (born 1959), British actor
- Thompson, Flora Jane, (1876-1947), English novelist
- Thompson, Francis, (1859-1907), poet
- Thompson, Fred, (born 1942), Watergate counsel, Senator, actor
- Thompson, Hank, musician
- Thompson, Hunter S, (born 1937), US gonzo journalist
- Thompson, J. Eric S (1898-1975) UK Maya archeologist
- Thompson, John Sparrow David, (1845-1913), Canadian writer
- Thompson, Jenny, (born 1973), U.S. Olympic swimmer
- Thompson, Jim, (1906-1977), writer
- Thompson, John, (1845-1913), Canadian writer
- Thompson, John Griggs, mathematician
- Thompson, John Lee, film director
- Thompson, John Taliaferro, (1860-1940), US general and weapons designer
- Thompson, Kaye, Eloise
- Thompson, Ken, Unix, B (precursor of C)
- Thompson, Lea, (born 1961), actress
- Thompson, Marshall, (1925-1992), actor
- Thompson, Maurice, American novelist
- Thompson, Peter, (born 1929), golfer
- Thompson, Randall (1899-1984), composer
- Thompson, Richard, (born 1949), musician
- Thompson, Richard Wigginton, (born 1809), congressman
- Thompson, Robert, (1936-1966), painter
- Thompson, Robert Means, (1849-1930), USA naval officer
- Thompson, Sada, (born 1929), actress
- Thompson, Scott, comedian
- Thompson, Tom, ill fated wilderness painter
- Thompson, Tony, (1954-2003), rock drummer
- Thompson, Victoria, author
- Thomsen, Christian Jürgensen, (1788-1865), Danish archaeologist
- Thomsen, Vilhelm, (1842-1927)
- Thomson, Charles, (1774-1789)
- Thomson, James, (1834-1882), poet
- Thomson, John Sutherland, (1967-1971)
- Thomson, Joseph John, (1856-1940), physicist
- Thomson, Robert William
- Thomson, Roy, (1894-1976), "Lord Thomson of Fleet", entrepreneur, publisher
- Thomson, Roy Herbert, (died 1976), Lord Thomson of Fleet, publisher
- Thomson, Virgil, (1896-1989), composer
- Thomson, William, (1824-1907), physicist
- Thon, William, American painter
- Þórhallsson, Tryggvi, (1927-1932), prime minister
- Thorbecke, Johan Rudolf, (1798-1872), prime minister
- Þórðarson, Björn, (1942-1944), prime minister
- Thoreau, Henry David, (1817-1862), writer, Transcendentalist philosopher
- Thoresen, Magdalene, author
- Þorláksson, Jón, (1926-1927), prime minister
- Thorn, Gaston Edmont, (1981-1984), President of the European Commission
- Thorndike, Sybil, actor
- Thorne, Kip, (born 1940), astronomer
- Thornton, Big Mama, (born 1920), singer
- Thornton, Billy Bob, (born 1955), actor, writer
- Thornton, Elizabeth, Canadian writer
- Thornton, Kathryn, astronaut
- Thornton, Melanie, (died 2001), singer
- Thornton, William, (1759-1828), architect
- Thoroddsen, Gunnar, (1980-1983), prime minister
- Thorogood, George, (born 1951), musician
- Thorpe, Ian, (born 1982), swimmer
- Thorpe, Jim, (1888-1953), athlete
- Thors, "lafur, (1959-1963), prime minister
- Thorvaldsen, Bertel, (1770-1844), Danish sculptor
- Thrale, Henry, (born 1724-1730, died 1781), brewer and Member of Parliament
- Thrale, Hester Lynch, (1740-1821), diarist
- Thrasamund, (450-523), king of Vandals and Alans
- Throckmorton, James W, (1866-1867), Texas governor
- Throop, Enos T US politician
- Thsombe, Moise, (died 1969), Premier of Congo
- Thucydides, (c. 460-400 BC)
- Thulin, Ingrid, Swedish actor
- Thunder, Johnny, musician
- Thuot, Pierre, astronaut
- Thurber, James, (1894-1961), US humorist
- Thurman, Allen Granberry, (1813-1895)
- Thurman, Uma, (born 1970), US actress
- Thurmond, J. Strom, (1902-2003), US senator
- Thurston, Lorrin Andrews
- Thurston, Robert, author
- Thurston, William, (born 1946), mathematician
- Thushuy, Runa, musician
- Thys, Guy, (1922-2003), Belgian national football coach
- Thyssen, August, (1842-1926), industrialist
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: Tf-Th."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tibbets, Paul, (born 1915), US pilot of the "Enola Gay", dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan
- Tibbett, Lawrence, (1896-1960), actor
- Tiberius, (42 BC-AD 37), Roman Emperor
- Tiberius II Constantine, Byzantine Emperor
- Tiberius III, Byzantine Emperor
- Tibullus, (c. 54 BC-19 BC), poet
- Tichenor, Dr. George H, (1837-1923)
- Tickell, Thomas, poet
- Tidyman, Ernest, (1928-1984), writer
- Tieck, Ludwig, (1773-1853), poet
- Tiegs, Cheryl, (born 1947), fashion model
- Tiemann, Michael, GCC
- Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista, (1696-1770), Italian painter
- Tiernan, Cate, (born 1961), author
- Tierney, Gene, (1920-1991), actress
- Tierney, Lawrence, (1919-2002), actor
- Tiffany, Charles Louis, (1812-1902), jeweler
- Tiffany, Louis Comfort, (1848-1933), artist
- Tiffany (singer), (born 1971), American teen idol
- Tiger, Dick, boxer
- Tiglath-Pileser III, 744-727 BCE
- Tihec, Slavko, (1928-1993), sculptor.
- Tihomir, (ca 1166-1167), Serbian monarch
- Tikaram, Tanita, US singer-songwriter
- Tikhon, Patriarch, (1917-1925), Metropolitan of Moscow
- Tikkanen, Esa, Finnish ice hockey player
- Tilak, Balganghadar, (1856-1920)
- Tilden, Bill, (Canada)
- Tilden, Samuel J, (1814-1886), USA politician
- Tilghman, William, (died 1924), frontier marshal
- Tiller, Nadja, (born 1929), actress
- Tilley, Chris, archaeologist
- Tilley, Patrick, author
- Tillich, Paul, German philosopher
- Tillis, Mel, (born 1932), country and western singer
- Tillis, Pam, (born 1957), musician
- Tillmans, Wolfgang, (born 1968), photographer
- Tillotson, John, (1630-1694), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Tillstrom, Bur, (died 1985), puppeteer
- Tillstrom, Burr, (born 1917), puppeteer
- Tilly, Jennifer, (born 1958), actress
- Tilton, Robert, televangelist
- Timberlake, Justin, (born 1981), US musician
- Timman, Jan, (born 1951), chess player
- Timmendequas, Jesse, child rapist, murderer of Megan Kanka
- Timmerman, Jacobo, (1923-1999), writer, journalist
- Timms, Michele, (born 1965), basketball player, Phoenix Mercury WNBA
- Timoshenko, Semyon, Soviet Marshal
- Timoshenko, Stephen, engineering mechanics
- Timotheos III of Alexandria, (517-535), Coptic Pope
- Timotheus, patriarch of Constantinople
- Timotheus I, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Timotheus, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Timothy III of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Timothy II of Alexandria, (457-477), Coptic Pope, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Timothy IV of Alexandria, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Timothy of Alexandria, (380-385), Coptic Pope, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Timothy, Metropolitan of Moscow, (1757-1767)
- Timur, (1336-1405), 14th century conqueror in Asia
- Tinbergen, Jan, (1903-1994), economist
- Tinbergen, Nikolaas, (1907-1988), ecologist
- Ting Ju ch'ang, Chinese Admiral at the Battle of the Yalu (1894)
- Tinguely, Jean, (1925-1991), kinetic artist
- Tinker, Grant, (born 1925), television executive
- Tintoretto, (1518-1594), Italian painter
- Tiny Tim, (c. 1932-1996), musician
- Tiomkin, Dimitri, (died 1979), composer
- Tiozzo, Christophe, world champion boxer
- Tippett, Michael, (1905-1998), composer
- Tipton, Billy, (1914-1989), cross dresser jazz musician
- Tipton, Glenn, (born 1948), guitarist
- Tiptree, James, Jr, (1915-1987), US science fiction author
- Tirard, Pierre Emanuel, (1827-1893), civil engineer
- Tirpitz, Alfred von, (1849-1930), Naval Minister
- Tirunal, Swathi, Indian composer
- Tisdall, Bob, Olympic gold medal/400mH, 1932
- Tisler, Miha, (born 1926), chemist.
- Tisnikar, Joze, (1928-1998), painter.
- Tiso, Jozef, (1887-1947), president of separatist Slovakia
- Tissot, James, (1836-1902), painter
- Titchmarsh, Alan, (1949), gardener, TV presenter, writer
- Titian, (1488-1576), artist
- Tito, Dennis, astronaut
- Tito, Josip Broz, (1892-1980), president of Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
- Titov, Gherman, (1935-2000), astronaut
- Titov, Vladimir, astronaut
- Tits, Jacques, mathematician
- Titus Flavius, (AD 39-81), Roman Emperor
- Titus, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
- Tizard, Henry, (1885-1959), scientist, inventor
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: Ti."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tjader, Cal, (1925-1982), musician, (bongos)
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: Tj."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTk
- Tkachuk, David, Canadian senator
Tl
Tm
Tn
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: Tk-Tn."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Toback, James, (born 1944), writer, director
- Toba, emperor of Japan
- Tobey, Mark, (1890-1976), painter
- Tobin, James, (1918-2002), economist
- Tobolowsky, Stephen, (born 1951), actor
- Toch, Ernst, (1887-1964), composer
- Todaro, Lillian
- Todde, Antonio, (died 2002), old man from Sardinia
- Todd, Marilyn, author
- Todd, Mark, horseman
- Todd, Michael, (died 1958), producer
- Todd, Thelma, (1905-1935), actress
- Todt, Fritz, (born 1891), German autobahn developer
- Toffler, Alvin, (born 1928), US futurologist, author
- Tof, Tone Fornezzi, comedian.
- Tognini, Michel, astronaut
- Togo, Heihachiro
- Togo, Shigenori, Foreign minister
- Togukawa Ieyasu, founder of Tokugawa Shogunate
- Tojo Hideki, (1884-1948), Japanese WW2 general
- Tokarev, Valery, astronaut
- Toklas, Alice B, (1877-1967), personality
- Tokyo Rose
- Tolan, Eddie, (born 1908), United States athlete
- Tolan, Michael, (born 1925), actor
- Tola, Pasquale
- Tolbert, William, president of Liberia
- Toledo, Alejandro
- Tolkien, Christopher, (born 1924), son of JRR Tolkien
- Tolkien, J. R. R, (1892-1973), British writer
- Toll, Johan Kristoffer, (1743-1817), Swedish Field Marshal
- Tollemache, Thomas, (c. 1651-1694)
- Toller, Ernst, dramatist, author
- Tolmie, Simon Fraser
- Tolson, Melvin B, poet
- Tolstoy, Aleksey K, (1817-1875), novelist
- Tolstoy, Aleksey N, (1883-1945), novelist
- Tolstoy, Leo, (1828-1910), Russian Novelist
- Toman, Lovro, (1827-1870), poet
- Tomasic, Anton, (born 1937), TV and film director.
- Tomaszewski, Jan, athlete
- Tomayo-Mendez, Arnaldo, astronaut
- Tomazevic, Miha, (born 1942), constructional scientist.
- Tombaugh, Clyde, (USA, 1906-1997), US discoverer of Pluto
- Tomei, Marisa, (born 1964), US actress
- Tominc, Jozef, (1790-1866), painter.
- Tomjanovich, Rudy, NBA player, Houston Rockets]]
- Tomlin, Lily, (born 1939), US comedian
- Tomlinson, Ray, Internet-based e-mail
- Tomorrow, Tom, (born 1961), This Modern World US polticial cartoonist
- Tompion, Thomas, The Father of english clockmaking
- Tompkins, Barry (born circa 1940) United States sportscaster
- Tompkins, Daniel D, (1774-1825), United States politician
- Tomsic, France, (1905-1975), philologist.
- Tomsic, Tone, (1910-1942), communist and national hero.
- Tone, Franchot, (1905-1968), actor
- Tonegawa, Susumu, (born 1939), Japanese Nobel Prize winning molecular biologist
- Tone, Theobald Wolfe, (1763-1798), Irish patriot
- Tone, Wolfe, nationalist leader
- Tongolele, Vedette
- Tongue, Margaret, poet
- Took, Barry, (1928-2002), comedian
- Toole, John Kennedy, (1937-1969), writer
- Tools, Robert, (died 2001), artificial heart recipient
- Toombs, Robert, (1810-1885)
- Toomer, Jean, poet
- Toomey, Bill, (born 1939), track and field athlete
- Top, Carrot, comedian
- Topalov, Veselin, chess player
- Topelius, Zacharius, (1818-1898), Finnish writer, journalist and historian
- Törni, Lauri, (1919-1965), Finnish infantry captain
- Töpfer, Klaus, CDU
- Topol, (born 1935), actor
- Topol, Chaim, (born 1935), Israeli actor
- Topolski, Dan, (born 1945), rower
- Toporisic, Joze, (born 1926), linguist
- Topouzian, Ara, musician
- Tordenskjold, Peter Wessel, (1691-1720)
- Torkar, Edo, poet
- Torkar, Igor, (born 1913), poet
- Torke, Michael, (born 1961), composer
- Tork, Peter, (born 1942), musician and actor
- Torme, Mel, (1925-1999), singer, composer, actor
- Torn, David, musician
- Törneros, Adolf, Swedish writer
- Torn, Rip, (born 1931), US actor, director
- Torp, Oscar, (1951-1955), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Torrance, Bob, athlete
- Torre, Joe, (born 1940), baseball player, manager, New York Yankees
- Torrence, Dean, (born 1940), musician ("Jan and Dean")
- Torrence, Ridgely, poet
- Torres, Coraima, actress
- Torres, Dayanara, (born 1975)
- Torres, Guillermo José (born 1943) news reporter
- Torres, José, Puerto Rican world champion boxer
- Torres, Luis Vaez de, sea explorer
- Torres, Manuel Montt, president
- Torres y Quevedo, Leonardo, (1852-1936), Spanish inventor
- Torricelli, Evangelista, (1608-1647), early Italian scientist
- Tors, Ivan, (1916-1983), producer, writer, animal trainer
- Torstenson, Anders, (1641-1686), Swedish politician
- Torstenson, Lennart, (1603-1651), Swedish Field Marshal
- Tortelier, Paul, (died 1990), French musician
- Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri, (1864-1901), French painter
- Torvalds, Linus, (born 1969), Finnish-Swedish creator of Linux
- Torvill, Jayne, (born 1957), figure skater
- Toscanini, Arturo, (1867-1957), Italian conductor
- Tosh, Peter, (1944-1987), Jamaican reggae singer
- Toshimichi, Okubo, (1830-1878)
- Tott, Åke Henriksson, (1598-1640), Swedish soldier
- Tott, Clas Åkesson, Swedish soldier
- Toubia El Khazen, Maronite Patriarch
- Toucey, Isaac, (Democrat) 1846-1847
- Tough, Dave, musician
- Toure, Ali Farka, (born 1939), musician
- Tourney, Leonard, author
- Tousi, Khajeh Nasireddin-e, scientist
- Toussaint, Allen, musician, composer, record producer
- Touvier, Paul, (1915-1996), Nazi collaborator and only Frenchman to be convicted of war crimes against humanity
- Tovar, Manuel Felipe, president
- Towell, Larry, (born 1953), photographer
- Towne, Robert, (born 1934), writer, director, producer, actor
- Townsend, Sue, British writer of Adrian Mole books
- Townshend, Pete, (born 1945), singer-songwriter
- Toyotomi Hideyoshi, (1536-1598), Samurai warlord
- Towneley, Charles, (1737-1805)
- Toynbee, Arnold J, (1889-1975), historian
- Toynbee, Arnold, (1852-1883), British historian
- Toyo, Yoshida
- Toyoda, Eiji, Toyota Motor Corporation
- Toyoda, Soemu, admiral
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: To."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTp
Tq
Tr
- Trachtenberg, Michelle, (born 1985), actress
- Tracy, Paul
- Tracy, Spencer, (1900-1967), US actor
- Tracy, Steve, (died 1986), actor
- Traetta, Filippo, (died 1854), composer
- Trafficante, Santo, Mafia boss
- Traherne, Thomas, poet
- Traill, Catharine Parr, (1802-1899), Life in the Backwoods of Canada
- Trajan, (53-117), Roman Emperor
- Trakl, Georg, (1887-1914), poet
- Tranos, Jeremias, patriarch of Constantinople
- Tranter, Nigel, (1909-2000), Scottish historical novelist
- Tratnik, Fran, (1881-1957), drawer and painter.
- Trautmann, Bert, athlete
- Travers, P. L, (1899-1996), author
- Travers, Pamela L, (1899-1996), author of Mary Poppins
- Travers, Susan, (born 1909), French Foreign Legion member
- Travis, Merle, (1917-1983), country music singer
- Travis, Nancy, (born 1961), US actress
- Travis, Randy, (born 1959), musician
- Travolta, John, (born 1954), US actor and scientologist
- Traylor, Bill, (1854-1947), painter
- Trdina, Janez, (1830-1905), author.
- Treacy, John, Olympic silver medal/marathon, 1984
- Treacy, Philip, milliner
- Trease, Geoffrey, author
- Trebek, Alex, (born 1940), US game show host
- Trebonianus Gallus, Roman Emperor
- Treece, Henry, author
- Tree, Herbert Beerbohm, (1853-1917), actor
- Tregear, Mary, (born 1924), Oriental art historian
- Tregebov, Rhea, Canadian writer
- Trejo, Danny (born 1944), actor
- Tremayne, Peter, author
- Tremblay, Michel, (born 1942), author
- Trenchard, Hugh, (1873-1956)
- Trench, Richard Chenevix, (1807-1886), clergyman, philologist
- Trenter, Stieg, Swedish writer
- Trepov, Alexander
- Trepper, Leopold, Leader of Rote Kapelle
- Treschev, Sergei, astronaut
- Tretiak, Vladislav, hockey player
- Trevi, Gloria, (born 1970), singer
- Trevino, Lee, (born 1939), golfer
- Trevor, Claire, (1908-2000), actress
- Trevor, William, (born 1928), writer, member of Aosdána
- Trevor-Roper, Hugh, (1914-2003), British historian
- Tribhuvan Bir Bikram Shah, (1952-1955), King of Nepal
- Tribolo, sculptor
- Trice, Obie, (born 1977), American rapper
- Tricius, Jan, Polish painter
- Tridgell, Andrew, Samba, Rsync
- Trillin, Calvin, (born 1935), writer
- von Trier, Lars, (born 1956), German director
- Trimble, David, (born 1944), Northern Ireland politician
- Trinh, Eugene, astronaut
- Trinidad, Felix, (born 1971), world champion boxer
- Trinko, Ivan Zamejski, (1863-1954), poet
- Trintignant, Jean-Louis, (born 1930), French actor
- Trintignant, Marie, (1962-2003), French actress
- Trippe, Juan (1900-1981) Pan Am founder & owner
- Tritt, Travis, (born 1963), musician
- Troelstra, Jelles
- Troisi, Massimo, (1953-1994), Italian actor
- Trojanowski, Wincenty, Polish painter
- Troller, Ernst, (1893-1939), dramatist
- Trollope, Anthony, (1815-1882), UK novelist
- Trombeti, Ascanio, (born 1544), composer
- Trommeshauser, Dietmar, Canadian writer
- Tromp, Cornelis, naval officer
- Tromp, Maarten, (born 1598), naval officer
- Tronzo, David, musician
- Tropinin, Vasily Andreevich, (1776-1857), painter
- Trotsky, Leon, (1879-1940), Russian revolutionary
- Trottier, Maxine, Canadian writer
- Troughton, Patrick, (1920-1987), actor
- Troup, Bobby, (1918-1999), musician
- Troupe, Quincy, poet
- Trout, Jennie Kidd, (1841-1921)
- Trout, Robert, (1909-2000), journalist
- Trow, M.J, author
- Troy, Doris, musician
- Troy, John W, (Dem.) 1933-1939
- Trsar, Drago, (born 1927), sculptor.
- Trsar, Marjan, painter and graphic artist.
- Trstenjak, Anton, (1906-1996), psychologist, theologian.
- Trubar, Primoz, (1508-1586), Protestant reformer, author.
- Trucco, Manuel, president
- Trudeau, Garry, (born 1948), : Doonesbury
- Trudeau, Pierre, (1919-2000), Prime minister of Canada
- True, Chris, musician
- True, Rachel, (born approx. 1981) actress
- Trueman, Stuart Douglas, Canadian writer
- Trueta, Josep, doctor
- Truffaut, Francois, (1932-1984), French movie director
- Truganini, so-called last of the Tasmanian Aborigines
- Trujillo, Molina, (born 1891), President of the Dominican Republic
- Trujillo, Rafael, (born 1926), Dominican dictator
- Trujillo, Rafael Leonidas, (1891-1961), dictator of the Dominican Republic
- Truly, Richard, astronaut
- Truman, Bess, (born 1885), First Lady of the United States, wife of Harry S. Truman
- Truman, Harry S, (1884-1972), President of the United States
- Truman, Margaret, (born 1924), novelist
- Trumbo, Dalton, (1905-1976), USA writer
- Trumbull, James Hammond (1821-1897), US scholar
- Trumbull, Jonathan, (born 1756), Connecticut Governor
- Trump, Donald, (born 1946), US business tycoon
- Trumpler, Robert, (USA, 1886-1956), astronomer
- Trungpa, Chögyam, (1939-1987)
- Truscott, Lucian
- Truth, Sojourner, (1797?-1883), US ex-slave, abolitionist
- Tryggvason, Bjarni, astronaut
- Tryon, Tom, (1926-1991), actor, novelist
- Tryphon, patriarch of Constantinople
- Tryphon, Patriarch, patriarch of Constantinople
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: Tp-Tr."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTs
- Tscharner, Karl Friedrich, Swiss president
- Tschechowa, Olga, (1897-1980), actress
- Tschirnhaus, Ehrenfried Walter von, (1651-1708), mathematician
- Tschudi, Hans Peter, Swiss president
- Tschumi, Bernard, architect
- Tshombe, Moise, (died 1969), Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Tsibliyev, Vasily, astronaut
- Tsiolkovsky, Konstantin Eduardovitch, (1857-1935), rocket scientist and pioneer of astronautics
- Tsongas, Paul, Massachusetts state senator and US Presidential candidate
- Tsuchimikado, emperor of Japan
- Tsuyoshi, Inukai, (1855-1932)
- Tsvetaeva, Marina, (1892-1941), Russian poet
- Tszyu, Kostya, (born 1969), world champion boxer
Tt
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: Ts-Tt."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tubb, Ernest, (died 1984), country music singer
- Tubbs, Ralph, (born 1912), architect
- Tubby, King, (1941-1989), songwriter, musician
- Tubin, Eduard, (1905-1982), composer
- Tubke, Werner, (born 1929), painter
- Tubman, Harriet, (1820-1913), US organizer of underground railroad for slaves
- Tucci, Stanley, (born 1960), US actor
- Tuchman, Barbara W, (1912-1989), historian
- Tucholsky, Kurt, (1890-1935), German poet
- Tucker, Albert W, mathematician
- Tucker, Bessie, musician
- Tucker, Chris, (born 1971), US actor
- Tucker, Forrest, (1919-1886), actor
- Tucker, George, American novelist
- Tucker, Jim Guy, (Democrat) 1992-1996
- Tucker, Sophie, (1884-1966), musician
- Tucker, Tanya, (born 1958), musician
- Tucker, Wilson, US author
- Tuckerman, Bayard, novelist
- Tudjman, Franjo, (1922-1999), president of Croatia
- Tudor, David, (1926-1996), pianist and composer
- Tudor, Margaret, (1489-1541), widowed Queen consort of King James IV of Scotland
- Tull, Mary, poet
- Tullius, Servius, Roman king
- Tull, Jethro, US musician
- Tullus Hostilius, (673 BC-641 BC), Roman king
- Tulsi, Acharya, (1913-1977), Jainist ascetic and author
- Tumler, Franz, (1912-1998), Austrian narrator
- Tuna, Carl Carlsson Mörner af, Swedish soldier
- Tung Chao Yung, (1912-1982)
- Tung Chee Hwa, (born 1937)
- Tunnell, Jerrold, mathematician
- Tunney, Gene,world champion boxer
- Tunney, Robin (born 1972) actress
- Tupolev, Andrei, (1888-1972), Soviet aircraft designer
- Tupper, Charles, (1826-1912), sixth prime minister of Canada
- Turing, Alan, (1912-1954), British cryptographer, computer pioneer
- Turcotte, Elise, Canadian writer
- Turcotte, Ron, (born 1941), jockey of Secretariat
- Ture, Kwame, (born 1941), (born "Stokeley Carmichael"), civil rights activist
- Turgenev, Ivan, (1818-1883), author
- Turgot, Anne Robert, (1727-1781), statesman
- Turgot, Anne Robert Jacques , Baron de Laune, (died 1781), French statesman, economist
- Turkka, Jouko, Finnish theatrical director
- Turlington, Christy, (born 1969), fashion model
- Turnage, Mark-Anthony, (1960-), composer
- Turnebus, Adrianus, (1512-1565)
- see Turner
- Turner, Big Joe, (1911-1985), US singer
- Turner, Ethel, Seven Little Australians
- Turner, Frederick Jackson, (1861-1932), historian
- Turner, Ike, (born 1931), US record producer, guitarist, piano player
- Turner, Janine, (born 1962), US actress
- Turner, J.M.W, (1775-1850), painter
- Turner, John Herbert, 1895-March 4 to 1898-August 15
- Turner, Lana, (1920-1995), US actress
- Turner, Michael, Canadian writer
- Turner, Nat, (1800-1831), rebellious slave
- Turner, Ruth, biologist
- Turner, Stansfield, (born 1923), US admiral, director of the Central Intelligence Agency
- Turner, Ted, (born 1938), USA businessman
- Turner, Thomas Wyatt, (died 1978)
- Turner, Tina, (born 1939), US musician
- Turner, William, (1775-1851), painter
- Turow, Scott, (born 1949), author of Presumed Innocent
- Turpin, Ben, (c. 1872-1940), US silent film comedian
- Turpin, Dick, (died 1739), highwayman
- Turpin, Randy, (1928-1966), world champion boxer
- Turre, Steve, musician
- Turrini, Peter, dramatist, author
- Turtledove, Harry, (born 1949), US author
- Turturro, John, US actor
- Tussaud, Marie, (1761-1850), French Waxwork modeller
- Tutankhamun, pharoah
- Tutone, Tommy, musician
- Tutu, Desmond, (born 1931), South African bishop
- Tutuola, Amos, Nigerian writer
- Tüür, Erkki-Sven, (born 1959), composer
- Tuveri, Giovanni Battista
- Tu Wei-Ming, advocate of "New Confucianism"
- Tuwhare, Hone, (born 1922), poet
- Tuwim, Julian, 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: Tu."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tveitt, Geirr, (1908-1981), composer
- Tverberg, Helge, mathematician
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: Tv."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - 'Tw-Tx - Ty - TzTw
- Twain, Mark, (1835-1910), US novelist, humorist, lecturer
- Twain, Shania, (born 1965), pop singer
- Twardowski, Jan, poet
- Tweed, Karen, musician
- Tweed, William Marcy, (1823-1878), political boss
- Twelvetrees, Helen, (1908-1958), actress
- Twiggy, (born 1949), Lawson, fashion model
- Twilley, Dwight, musician
- Twitty, Conway, (1933-1993), US musician
- Twort, Flora, (1893-1985), artist
Tx
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: Tw-Tx."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tyagaraja, (died 1848), Indian composer
- Tyagaraja, Saint, Indian composer
- Tyan, Joseph, Maronite Patriarch
- Tyard, Pontus de, (c. 1521-1605), poet
- Tychonoff, Andrey Nikolayevich, (1906-1993), USSR mathematician
- Tyer, Kathy, author
- Tyler, Anne, (born 1941), novelist
- Tyler, Bonnie, (born 1951), US singer
- Tyler, John, (1790-1862), President of the United States
- Tyler, Julia, (born 1820), First Lady of the United States
- Tyler, Liv, (born 1977), US film actress.
- Tyler, Royall, novelist
- Tyler, Steven, (born 1948), musician ("Aerosmith")
- Tyler, Wat, (died 1381), leader of Peasants Revolt
- Tyler, William Ferdinand, Royal Navy
- Tylor, Edward Burnett (1832 - 1917), anthropologist
- Tyndale, William, (1484-1536), Protestant martyr, scholar
- Tyrese, (born 1978), singer
- Tyrrell, James, (died 1502), alleged murderer
- Tyson, Cicely, (born 1933), actress
- Tyson, Mike, (born 1966), US world champion boxer
- Tyson-Mosley, Barbara, (born 1950), painter
- Tyurin, Mikhail, astronaut
- Tyutchev, Fyodor, (1803-1873), 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: Ty."
(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 Ta-Td Tc-Td - Te - Tf-Th - Ti - Tj - Tk-Tn - To - Tp-Tr - Ts-Tt - Tu - Tv - Tw-Tx - Ty - Tz
- Tzara, Tristan, (1896-1963), dadaist
- Tzu, Lao
- Tzuke, Judie, singer-songwriter
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: Tz."
(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
- T cell immunodeficiency primary
- Tabatznik syndrome
- Tachycardia
- Taeniasis
- Takayasu arteritis
- Talipes equinovarus
- Tamari Goodman syndrome
- Tang Hsi Ryu syndrome
- Tangier disease
- TAR syndrome
- Tardive dyskinesia
- Tarsal tunnel syndrome
- Taste disorder
- TAU syndrome
- Taurodontia absent teeth sparse hair
- Taurodontism
- Tay syndrome ichthyosis
- Taybi Linder syndrome
- Taybi syndrome
- Tay-Sachs disease
- T-cell lymphoma
- Teebi Kaurah syndrome
- Teebi Naguib Alawadi syndrome
- Teebi Shaltout syndrome
- Teebi syndrome
- Teeth noneruption of with maxillary hypoplasia and genu valgum
- Tel Hashomer camptodactyly syndrome
- Telangiectasia ataxia variant V1
- Telangiectasia, hereditary hemorrhagic
- Telangiectasia
- Telecanthus hypertelorism pes cavus
- Telecanthus with associated abnormalities
- Telencephalic leukoencephalopathy
- Telfer Sugar Jaeger syndrome
- Temporal epilepsy, familial
- Temporomandibular ankylosis
- Temporomandibular joint dysfunction (TMJ)
- Temtamy Shalash syndrome
- TEN
- Ter Haar Hamel Hendricks syndrome
- Ter Haar syndrome
- Teratocarcinosarcoma
- Teratoma
- Teratophobia
- Testes neoplasm
- Testotoxicosis
- Tetanophobia
- Tetanus
- Tethered spinal cord disease
- Tetraamelia ectodermal dysplasia
- Tetraamelia multiple malformations
- Tetraamelia pulmonary hypoplasia
- Tetraamelia-syrinx
- Tetrahydrobiopterin deficiencies
- Tetraploidy
- Tetrasomy X
- Thaasophobia
- Thakker Donnai syndrome
- Thalamic degeneration symmetrical infantile
- Thalamic degenerescence infantile
- Thalamic syndrome
- Thalassemia major
- Thalassemia minor
- Thalassemia
- Thalassophobia
- Thanatophobia
- Thanatophoric dysplasia cloverleaf skull
- Thanatophoric dysplasia Glasgow variant
- Thanos Stewart Zonana syndrome
- Theodor Hertz Goodman syndrome
- Thiele syndrome
- Thiemann epiphyseal disease
- Thies Reis syndrome
- Thin ribs tubular bones dysmorphism
- Thiolase deficiency
- Thiopurine S methyltranferase deficiency
- Thomas Jewett Raines syndrome
- Thomas syndrome
- Thombocytopenia X linked
- Thompson Baraitser syndrome
- Thong Douglas Ferrante syndrome
- Thoracic celosomia
- Thoracic dysplasia hydrocephalus syndrome
- Thoracic outlet syndrome
- Thoraco abdominal enteric duplication
- Thoraco limb dysplasia Rivera type
- Thoracolaryngopelvic dysplasia
- Thoracopelvic dysostosis
- Thost-Unna palmoplantar keratoderma
- Thrombasthenia
- Thrombocytopathy asplenia miosis
- Thrombocytopathy
- Thrombocytopenia cerebellar hypoplasia short stature
- Thrombocytopenia chromosome breakage
- Thrombocytopenia multiple congenital anomaly
- Thrombocytopenia purpura
- Thrombocytopenia Robin sequence
- Thrombocytopenia
- Thrombocytopenic purpura, autoimmune
- Thrombocytosis
- Thrombomodulin anomalies, familial
- Thrombotic microangiopathy, familial
- Thumb absence hypoplastic halluces
- Thumb absent short stature immune deficiency
- Thumb deformity, alopecia, pigmentation anomaly
- Thumb deformity
- Thumb stiff brachydactyly mental retardation
- Thymic epithelial tumor
- Thymic renal anal lung dysplasia
- Thymoma
- Thymus neoplasm
- Thyrocerebrorenal syndrome
- Thyroglossal tract cyst
- Thyroid agenesis
- Thyroid cancer
- Thyroid carcinoma, follicular
- Thyroid carcinoma, papillary (TPC)
- Thyroid hormone plasma membrane transport defect
- Thyroid, renal and digital anomalies
- Tibia absent polydactyly arachnoid cyst
- Tibiae bowed radial anomalies osteopenia fracture
- Tibial aplasia ectrodactyly hydrocephalus
- Tibial aplasia ectrodactyly
- Tibial hemimelia cleft lip palate
- Tick paralysis
- Tick-borne encephalitis
- Tièche-Jadassohn nevus
- Tietz syndrome
- Tinnitus
- T-Lymphocytopenia
- Todd's paralysis
- Togaviridae disease
- Tollner Horst Manzke syndrome
- Tolosa-Hunt syndrome
- Toluene antenatal infection
- Tomaculous neuropathy
- Tome Brune Fardeau syndrome
- Tongue neoplasm
- Toni Debre Fanconi maladie
- Toni-Fanconi syndrome
- Topophobia
- TORCH syndrome
- Toriello Carey syndrome
- Toriello Lacassie Droste syndrome
- Toriello syndrome
- Toriello-Higgins-Miller syndrome
- Torres Ayber syndrome
- Torsion dystonia 7
- Torticollis keloids cryptorchidism renal dysplasia
- Torulopsis
- Tosti Misciali Barbareschi syndrome
- Total Hypotrichosis, Mari type
- Touraine-Solente-Golé syndrome
- Tourette syndrome
- Townes-Brocks syndrome
- Toxic Conjunctivitis
- Toxocariasis
- Toxopachyoteose diaphysaire tibio peroniere
- Toxoplasmosis congenital
- Toxoplasmosis
- Tracheal agenesis
- Tracheobronchomalacia
- Tracheobronchomegaly
- Tracheobronchopathia osteoplastica
- Tracheoesophageal fistula symphalangism
- Tracheoesophageal fistula
- Tracheophageal fistula hypospadias
- Tranebjaerg Svejgaard syndrome
- Transcobalamin II deficiency
- Transient erythroblastopenia of childhood
- Transient Global Amnesia
- Transient neonatal arthrogryposis
- Transitional cell carcinoma
- Transplacental infections
- Transposition of great vessels
- Transverse limb deficiency hemangioma
- Transverse myelitis
- TRAPS (TNF-receptor-associated periodic syndrome)
- Traumatophobia
- Treft Sanborn Carey syndrome
- Tremophobia
- Tremor hereditary essential
- Treponema infection
- Trevor disease
- Triatrial heart
- Trichinellosis
- Trichinosis
- Tricho dento osseous syndrome type 1
- Tricho odonto onycho dermal syndrome
- Tricho odonto onychodysplasia syndactyly dominant type
- Tricho onychic dysplasia
- Tricho onycho hypohidrotic dysplasia
- Tricho retino dento digital syndrome
- Trichodental syndrome
- Tricho-dento-osseous syndrome
- Trichodermodysplasia dental alterations
- Trichodysplasia xeroderma
- Trichoepithelioma multiple familial
- Trichofolliculloma
- Tricho-hepato-enteric syndrome
- Trichomalacia
- Trichomegaly cataract hereditary spherocytosis
- Trichomegaly retina pigmentary degeneration dwarfi
- Trichoodontoonychial dysplasia
- Trichopathophobia
- Trichorhinophalangeal syndrome type I
- Trichorhinophalangeal syndrome type II
- Trichorhinophalangeal syndrome type III
- Trichostasis spinulosa
- Trichothiodystrophy sun sensitivity
- Trichothiodystrophy
- Trichotillomania
- Tricuspid atresia
- Tricuspid dysplasia
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- Trigger thumb
- Trigonocephaly bifid nose acral anomalies
- Trigonocephaly broad thumbs
- Trigonocephaly ptosis coloboma
- Trigonocephaly ptosis mental retardation
- Trigonomacrocephaly tibial defect polydactyly
- Trihydroxycholestanoylcoa oxidase isolated deficiency
- Trimethadione antenatal infection
- Trimethylaminuria
- Triopia
- Triose phosphate-isomerase deficiency
- Triphalangeal thumb non opposable
- Triphalangeal thumb polysyndactyly syndrome
- Triphalangeal thumbs brachyectrodactyly
- Triple A syndrome
- Triplo X Syndrome
- Triploid Syndrome
- Triploidy
- Trismus pseudocamptodactyly syndrome
- Trisomy 1 mosaicism
- Trisomy 11 mosaicism
- Trisomy 12 mosaicism
- Trisomy 14 mosaicism
- Trisomy 2 mosaicism
- Trisomy 3 mosaicism
- Trisomy 6
- Trisomy
- Trochlear dysplasia
- Trophoblastic Neoplasms (gestational trophoblastic disease)
- Trophoblastic tumor
- Tropical Spastic Paraparesis
- Tropical sprue
- Tropophobia
- Troyer syndrome
- Trueb Burg Bottani syndrome
- Trypanophobia
- Trypanosomiasis, east-African
- Trypanosomiasis, west African
- Tsao Ellingson syndrome
- Tsukahara Azuno Kajii syndrome
- Tsukahara Kajii syndrome
- Tsukuhara syndrome
- Tuberculophobia
- Tuberculosis, pulmonary
- Tuberculosis
- Tuberculous meningitis
- Tuberculous uveitis
- Tuberous sclerosis, type 1
- Tuberous sclerosis, type 2
- Tuberous sclerosis
- Tucker syndrome
- Tuffli Laxova syndrome
- Tufted angioma
- Tularemia
- Tungiasis
- Tunglang Savage Bellman syndrome
- Turcot syndrome
- Turner Kieser syndrome
- Turner Morgani Albright
- Turner-like syndrome
- Turner's syndrome
- Tutuncuoglu syndrome
- Twin twin transfusion syndrome
- Typhoid
- Typhus
- Tyrosinemia
- Tyrosine-oxidase temporary deficiency
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 T."
(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
- "Take it Back" - The Division Bell by Pink Floyd
- "Take me to your Heaven" - Charlotte Nilsson
- "Take my Breath Away" - Berlin
- "Take Up Thy Stethoscope and Walk" - Piper at the Gates of Dawn by Pink Floyd
- "Tell me Lies" - Fleetwood Mac
- "The Apartment Song" - Full Moon Fever by Tom Petty
- "The Camera Eye" - Moving Pictures by Rush
- "The Final Cut" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
- "The Fletcher Memorial Home" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
- "The Ghost of Tom Joad" - The Ghost of Tom Joad by Bruce Springsteen
- "The Gnome" - Piper at the Gates of Dawn by Pink Floyd
- "The Grand Vizier's Garden Party" - Ummagumma by Pink Floyd
- "The Gunner's Dream" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
- "The Hero's Return" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
- "The Last Laugh" - Sailing to Philadelphia by Mark Knopfler
- "The Line" - The Ghost of Tom Joad by Bruce Springsteen
- "The New Timer" - The Ghost of Tom Joad by Bruce Springsteen
- "The Narrow Way (Parts 1-3)" - Ummagumma by Pink Floyd
- "The Post War Dream" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
- "Thriller" - Michael Jackson
- "Thunderball" - Tom Jones
- "Tom Sawyer" - Moving Pictures by Rush
- "Train On A Track" - Kelly Rowland
- "True" - Spandau Ballet
- "Truely Madley Deeply" - Savage Garden
- "Turn Back Time" - Aqua
- "Tusen och en Natt" - Charlotte Nilsson
- "Two Suns in the Sunset" - The Final Cut by Pink Floyd
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: T."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority, or MBTA, is a quasi-governmental organization which controls the Boston subway, bus, and commuter rail systems. The four-line subway system consists of the Red, Orange, Green, and Blue Lines.Originally the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, or the MTA, as immortalized in the popular folk-protest lament Charlie on the MTA.
See Boston Transportation.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Poker jargon:
No jargon listed at this time
- 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
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 T."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Student was the pseudonym of William Sealey Gosset (1876-1937), who, in 1908, published a pseudonymous paper showing that a certain probability distribution, now conventionally called Student's distribution or the t-distribution, arises in the problem of estimating the mean of a normally distributed population when the sample size is small. (Perhaps a "pure" mathematician would say "... when the sample size is small and the standard deviation is unknown and has to be estimated from the data." In practice the standard deviation of the population is always unknown and must be estimated from the data. Textbook problems treating the standard deviation as if it were known are of two kinds: (1) those in which the sample size is so large that one may treat a data-based estimate as if it were certain, and (2) those that illustrate mathematical reasoning; the problem of estimating the standard deviation is temporarily ignored because that is not the point that the author or instructor is then explaining.)Suppose X1, ..., Xn are independent random variables that are normally distributed with expected value μ and variance σ2. Let
be the "sample mean", and
be the "sample variance". It is readily shown that
is normally distributed with mean 0 and variance 1. Student found the probability distribution of
that distribution is "the t-distribution with n-1 degrees of freedom."
Clearly this distribution does not depend on the values of μ or σ. Its expected value is 0 and its variance is (n-1)/(n-3).
The interval whose endpoints are
where A is an appropriate percentage-point of the t-distribution, is a confidence interval for μ. The formula for the probability density function of the t-distribution with n-1 degrees of freedom is known and these confidence intervals can therefore be readily computed once the sample mean and sample variance have been determined.
The overall shape of the probability density function of the t-distribution resembles the bell shape of a normally distributed variable with mean 0 and variance 1, except that it is a bit lower and wider. As the number of degrees of freedom grows, the t-distribution approaches the normal distribution with mean 0 and variance 1.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Student's t-distribution."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
T is the twentieth letter of the modern Latin alphabet.
Tâw was the last letter of the Western Semitic alphabet - and of the Hebrew. The sound value of Semitic Taw, Greek Tαυ (Tau), and Etruscan and Latin T was /t/.
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
Tango represents the letter T in the NATO phonetic alphabet.
T is also:
Two-letter combinations starting with T:
- The symbol for the chemical element tritium, an isotope of hydrogen.
- A symbol for the SI derived unit for magnetic flux density, the tesla.
- The variable t commonly used for time.
- In the form of The T, a shorthand name for the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA).
- ta tb tc td te tf tg th ti tj tk tl tm tn to tp tq tr ts tt tu tv tw tx ty tz
Words beginning with the letter T, suitable for teaching children the alphabet
- table
- Texas
- talk
- Tammy
- teapot
- tee-pee
- telephone
- Teletubbies
- television
- tennis
- Thomas
- toilet
- tool
- towel
- tower
- treacle
- trolley
- t-shirt
- tub
- tumble
- turkey
- twinkle
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "T."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
In topology and related branches of mathematics, T1 spaces and R0 spaces are particularly nice kinds of topological spaces. The T1 and R0 properties are examples of separation axioms.A T1 space is also called an accessible space or a Fréchet space and a R0 space is also called an symmetric space.
Definitions
A topological space X is T1 if and only if either of the following equivalent conditions is satisfied:
X is R0 if and only if either of the following conditions is satisfied:
- Given any two distinct points x and y in X, each lies in an open set which does not contain the other. In other words, the singleton sets {x} and {y} are separated unless x = y.
- Given any x in X, {x} is a closed set. In other words, the fixed ultrafilter at x converges only to x.
- For every point x in X and every subset S of X, x is a limit point of S if and only if every open neighbourhood of x contains infinitely many points of S.
- Proof: Suppose singletons are closed in X. Let S be a subset of X and x a limit point of S. Suppose there is an open neighbourhood U of x that contains only finitely many points of S. Then U \\ (S \\ {x}) is an open neighbourhood of x that does not contain any points of S other than x. (Here is where we use the fact that singletons are closed.) This contradicts the fact that x is a limit point of S. Thus, every open neighbourhood of x contains infinitely many points of S. Conversely, suppose there is a point x in X such that the singleton {x} is not closed. Then there is a point y ≠ x in the closure of {x}. We claim that any open neighbourhood U of y contains x. For suppose not; then the complement of U in X would be a closed set containing x, and the closure of {x} would be contained in the complement of U. Since y is in the closure of {x}, this would force y not to be in U, contradicting the fact that U is a neighbourhood of y. We have shown that y is a limit point of S = {x}. But it is clear that X is a neighbourhood of y that does not contain infinitely many points of S. This completes the proof.
As before, the above conditions are equivalent.
- Given any two topologically distinguishable points x and y in X, each lies in an open set which does not contain the other. In other words, {x} and {y} are separated unless x and y are topologically indistinguishable.
- Given any x in X, the closure of {x} owns only the points that x is topologically indistinguishable from. In other words, the fixed ultrafilter at x converges only to the points that x is topologically indistinguishable from.
A space is T1 if and only if it's both R0 and T0 (which says that topologically indistinguishable points must be equal). Conversely, a space is R0 if and only if its Kolmogorov quotient (which identifies topologially indistinguishable points) is T1.
Do not confuse the term "Fréchet topology", which is equivalent to "T1 topology", with the term "Fréchet space" which refers to an entirely different notion from functional analysis.
Examples
The Zariski topology on an algebraic variety is T1. To see this, note that a point with local coordinates (c1,...,cn) is the zero set of the polynomials x1-c1, ..., xn-cn. Thus, the point is closed. However, this example is well known as a space that is not Hausdorff (T2).
For a more concrete example, let's look at the cofinite topology on an infinite set. Specifically, let X be the set of integers, and define the open sets OA to be those subsets of X which contain all but a finite subset A of X. Then given distinct integers x and y:
so the resulting space is T1 by each of the definitions above. This space is not T2, because the intersection of any two open sets OA and OB is OA∪B, which is never empty. Alternatively, the set of even integers is compact but not closed, which would be impossible in a Hausdorff space.
- the open set O{x} contains y but not x, and the open set O{y} contains x and not y;
- equivalently, every singleton set {x} is the complement of the open set O{x}, so it is a closed set;
We can modify this example slightly to get an R0 space that is neither T1 nor R1. Let X be the set of integers again, and using the definition of OA from the previous example, define a basis of open sets Gx for any integer x to be Gx = O{x, x+1} if x is an even number, and Gx = O{x-1, x} if x is odd. Then the open sets of X are, unionss of the basis sets
The resulting space is not T0 (and hence not T1), because the points x and x + 1 (for x even) are topologically indistinguishable; but otherwise it is essentially equivalent to the previous example.
- UA := ∪x in A Gx.
Generalisations to other kinds of spaces
The terms "T1", "R0", and their synonyms can also be applied to such variations of topological spaces as uniform spaces, Cauchy spaces, and convergence spaces. The characteristic that unites the concept in all of these examples is that limits of fixed ultrafilters (or constant netss) are unique (for T1 spaces) or unique up to topological indistinguishability (for R0 spaces).
As it turns out, uniform spaces, and more generally Cauchy spaces, are always R0, so the T1 condition in these cases reduces to the T0 condition. But R0 alone can be an interesting condition on other sorts of convergence spaces, such as pretopological spaces.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "T1 space."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Television is a telecommunication system for broadcasting and receiving moving pictures and sound over a distance. The term has come to refer to all the aspects of television programming and transmission as well.
History
A semi-mechanical analogue television system was first demonstrated in London in February 1924 by John Logie Baird and a moving picture by Baird on October 30 1925. The first long distance public television broadcast was from Washington, DC to New York City and occurred on April 7, 1927. The image shown was of then Commerce Secretary Herbert Hoover. A fully electronic system was demonstrated by Philo Taylor Farnsworth in the autumn of 1927. The first analogue service was WGY, Schenectady, New York inaugurated on May 11 1928. CBS's New York City station began broadcasting the first regular seven days a week television schedule in the U. S. on July 21, 1931. The first broadcast included Mayor James J. Walker, Kate Smith, and George Gershwin. The first all-electronic television service was started in Los Angeles, CA by Don Lee Broadcasting. Their start date was December 23, 1931 on W6XAO - later KTSL. Los Angeles was the only major U. S. city that avoided the false start with mechanical television.
The first live transcontinental television broadcast took place in San Francisco, California from the Japanese Peace Treaty Conference on September 4, 1955.
Programming is broadcast on television stations (sometimes called channels). At first, terrestrial broadcasting was the only way television could be distributed. Because bandwidth was limited, government regulation was normal. In the US, the Federal Communications Commission allowed stations to broadcast advertisements, but insisted on public service programming commitments as a requirement for a license. By contrast, the United Kingdom chose a different route, imposing a television licence fee (effectively a tax) to fund the BBC, which had public service as part of its Crown Charter. Development of cable and satellite means of distribution in the 1970s pushed businessmen to target channels towards a certain audience, and enabled the rise of subscription-based television channels, such as HBO and Sky. Practically every country with the technological capability has developed at least one television channel.
TV standards
The standard adopted by the US was called NTSC, which stood for National Television Standards Committee. NTSC is the television standard in the US, Canada, and Japan.
Germany developed the television standard called PAL, which stood for Phase Alternating Line, and introduced it in 1967. PAL is the television standard in the United Kingdom, much of Europe, Africa, Australia, and some parts of South America.
The French developed in 1967 the television standard called SECAM, Sequentiel Couleur avec Mémoire, French for "sequential color with memory". The SECAM standard was used mostly in France and Eastern European "Warsaw Pact" countries.
There are various kinds of television broadcast systems:
- Terrestrial television
- NTSC, PAL, PAL2 and SECAM analog signaling
- Satellite television using standard digital signaling
- Cable television
- both analog and digital systems are available.
- MMDS (Wireless cable)
TV aspect ratio
All of these early TV systems shared the same aspect ratio of 4:3, which was determined by the Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) manufacturing technology of the time -- today's CRT technology allows the manufacture of wider tubes. However, due to the negative heavy metal health effects associated with disposal of CRTs in landfills and the space-saving attributes of flat screen technologies that lack the aspect ratio limitations of CRTs, CRTs are becoming obsolete.
The switch-over to DTV systems co-incides with a change in picture format from a aspect ratio of 4:3 (1.33:1) to an aspect ratio of 16:9 (1.78:1). This enables TV to get closer to the aspect ratio of movies, which range from 1.85:1 to 2.35:1. The 16:9 format was first introduced for "widescreen" video and DVDs. The current technical implementation of 16:9 uses the same pixel raster as 4:3 video, in a full screen anamorphic format.
There is no technical reason for this aspect ratio change to be coupled with the introduction of DTV, but it has been decided to synchronize these changes for marketing reasons.
Aspect ratio incompatibility
A wide image on a conventional screen can be shown:
A conventional image on a wide screen can be shown:
- with "letterbox" black stripes at the top and bottom
- with the extreme left and right of the image falling off (or in "pan and scan", parts selected by an operator)
- with the image horizontally compressed
A common compromise is to shoot or create material at an aspect ratio of 14:9, and to lose some image at each side for 4:3 presentation, and some image at top and bottom for 16:9 presentation.
- with black parts at the left and right
- with the top and bottom of the image falling off
- with the image horizontally expanded
Horizontal expansion has advantages in situations in which several people are watching the same set; it compensates for watching at an oblique angle.
New developments
- Digital television (DTV)
- High Definition TV (HDTV)
- Pay Per View
- Web tv
- programming on-demand.
TV sets
The earliest television sets were radios with the addition of a television device consisting of a neon tube with a mechanically spinning disk (the Nipkow disk, invented by Paul Gottlieb Nipkow) that produced a red postage-stamp size image . The first publicly broadcast electronic service was in Germany in March 1935. It had 180 lines of resolution and was only available in 22 public viewing rooms. One of the first major broadcasts involved the 1936 Berlin Olympics. The Germans had a 441 line system in the fall of 1937. (Source: Early Electronic TV)
Television usage skyrocketed after World War II with war-related technological advances and additional disposable income. (1930s TV receivers cost the equivalent of $7000 today (2001) and had little available programming.)
Television in its original and still most popular form involves sending images and sound over radio waves in the VHF and UHF bands, which are received by a receiver (a television set). In this sense, it is an extension of radio.
Color television became available on December 30, 1953, backed by the CBS network. The government approved the color broadcast system proposed by CBS, but when RCA came up with a system that made it possible to view color broadcasts in black and white on unmodified old black and white TV sets, CBS dropped their own proposal and used the new one.
Starting in the 1990s, modern television sets diverged into three different trends:
There are many kinds of video monitors used in modern TV sets. The most common are direct view CRTs for up to 40" (4:3) and 46" (16:9) diagonally. Most big screen TVs (up to over 100") use projection technology. Three types of projection systems are used in projection TVs: CRT based, LCD based and reflective imaging chip based. Modern advances have brought flat screens to TV that use active matrix LCD or plasma display technology. Flat panel displays are as little as 4" thick and can be hung on a wall like a picture. They are extremely attractive and space-saving but they remain expensive.
- standalone TV sets;
- integrated systems with DVD players and/or VHS VCR built into the TV set itself (mostly for small size TV with up to 17" screen, the main idea is to have a complete portable system);
- component systems with separate big screen video monitor, tuner, audio system which the owner connects the pieces together as a high-end home theater system. This approach appeals to videophiles who prefer components which can be upgraded separately.
Nowadays some TVs include a port to connect peripherals to it or to connect the set to an A/V home network (HAVI), like LG RZ-17LZ10 that includes a USB port, where one can connect a mouse, keyboard and so on ( very interesting for WebTV).
Even for simple video, there are five standard ways to connect a device. These are as follows:
- Component Video- three separate connectors, with one brightness channel and two color channels, and is usually referred to as Y, B-Y, R-Y or Y Pr Pb. This provides for high quality pictures and is usually used inside professional studios. However, it is being used more in home theater for DVDs and high end sources. Audio is not carried on this cable.
- SCART- A large 21 pin connector that may carry Composite video, S-Video or for better quality, separate red, green and blue (RGB) signals and two-channel sound, along with a number of control signals. This system is standard in Europe but rarely found elsewhere.
- S-Video- two separate channels, one carry brightness, the other carrying color. Also referred to as Y/C video. Provides most of the benefit of component video, with slightly less color fidelity. Use started in the 1980s for S-VHS, Hi-8 and early DVD players to relay high quality video. Audio is not carried on this cable.
- Composite video- The most common form of connecting external devices, putting all the video information into one stream. Most televisions provide this option with a yellow RCA cable. Audio is not carried on this cable.
- Coaxial or RF (coaxial cable)- All audio channels and picture components are transmitted through one wire and modulated on a radio frequency. Most TVs manufactured during the past 15-20 years accept coaxial connection, and the video is typically "tuned" on channel 3 or 4.
Advertising
From the earliest days of the medium, television has been used as a vehicle for advertising. Since their inception in the USA in the late 1940s, TV commercialss have become far and away the most effective, most pervasive, and most popular method of selling products of all sorts. US advertising rates are determined primarily by Nielsen Ratings
US networks
In the US, television networks produce prime-time programs for their affiliate stations to air between 8pm and 11pm. (7pm and 10pm in the Central and Mountain time zones). Most stations have their own programming off the prime time.
Colloquial names
- Telly
- The Tube/Boob Tube
- The Goggle Box
- The Cyclops
Related articles
- List of 'years in television'
- Lists of television channels
- List of television programs
- List of television commercials
- List of television personalities
- List of television series
- Animation and Animated series
- Nielsen Ratings
- Home appliances
- Reality TV show
- Television network
- Video
- Voyager Golden Record
- V-chip
- Wasteland Speech
- DVB
External Links
See also Charles Francis Jenkins.
Further Reading
TV as social pathogen, opiate, mass mind control, etc
Alternate use of the term: Television (band)
- Marie Winn The Plug-in Drug
- Neil Postman Amusing Ourselves to Death
- Terence McKenna Food of the Gods
- Joyce Nelson The Perfect Machine
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Television."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The tesla (symbol T) is the compound derived SI unit of magnetic flux density or magnetic inductivity. At the Conference General des Poids et Mesures (CGPM) in Paris in 1960, the unit was named in honor of the Serbian-American inventor and electrical engineer Nikola Tesla who made several important contributions to the field of electromagnetism.
1 T = 1 V · s · m -2 = 1 kg · s -2 · A -1 = 1 N · A -1 m -1 = 1 Wb · m -2
A smaller derived unit, the gauss = 10-4 T, was once used.
Geophysics uses a unit of 1 γ = 10 -9 T. see also the full article on Nikola Tesla
- In outer space the magnetic flux density is between 10-10 T and 10-8 T,
- in the Earth's magnetic field at latitude of 50° is 2 · 10-5 T and on the equator at a latitude of 0° is 3,1 · 10-5 T,
- in the magnetic field of a huge horseshoe magnet 0,001 T,
- in a sunspot 10 T,
- strongest magnetic field yet produced in a laboratory (Florida State University's National High Magnetic Field Laboratory in Tallahassee, USA, September 2003), 25 T,
- on a neutron star 106 T to 108 T,
- on a magnetar, 108 to 1011 T,
- maximum theoretical field strength for a neutron star, and therefore for any known phenomenon, 1013 T.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Tesla."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
TEX (usually written TeX in plain text) is a typesetting system written by Donald Knuth, which is popular in academia, especially in the mathematics, physics and computer science communities. It has largely displaced Unix troff, the other favored formatter, in many Unix installations.
TeX is generally considered to be the best way to typeset complex mathematical formulas, but, especially in the form of LaTeX and other template packages, is now also being used for many other typesetting tasks. It can be used to compose mathematical expressions on Wikipedia pages: see Wikipedia:TeX markup.
History
Knuth began TeX because he had become annoyed at the declining quality of the typesetting in volumes I-III of his monumental The Art of Computer Programming. In a manifestation of the typical hackish urge to solve the problem at hand once and for all, he began to design his own typesetting language. He thought he would finish it on his sabbatical in 1978; he was wrong by only about 8 years. The language was finally frozen around 1985.Guy Steele happened to be at Stanford during the summer of 1978, when Knuth was developing his first version of TeX. When he returned to MIT that fall, he rewrote TeX's I/O to run under ITS.
The first version of TeX was written in the SAIL programming language to run on a PDP-10 under Stanford's WAITS operating system. For later versions of TeX, Knuth invented the concept of literate programming, a way of producing compilable source code and high quality cross-linked documentation (typeset in TeX of course) from the same original file. The language used is called WEB and produces programs in Pascal.
TeX has an idiosyncratic version numbering system. Since version 3, updates have been indicated by adding an extra digit at the end of the decimal, so that the version number asymptotically approaches pi. The current version is 3.14159. This is a reflection of the fact that TeX is now very stable, and only minor updates are anticipated.
The typesetting system
TeX commands start with a backslash. TeX is a macro based language: every command expands into a list of other commands or text (possibly with side effects), and the other commands are then expanded in turn until everything is fully expanded. Users can define their own macros. Loops and if-then-else constructs are available, making TeX a Turing-complete language.The TeX system has precise knowledge of the sizes of all characters and symbols, and using this information, it computes the optimal arrangement of letters per line and lines per page. It then produces a DVI file (for "device independent") containing the final locations of all characters. This dvi file can be printed directly given an appropriate printer driver, or it can be converted to other formats.
The ultimate reference works for TeX are the first two volumes of Knuth's Computers and Typesetting, The TeXbook and TeX: The Program (which includes the complete documented source code for TeX).
License
The license of TeX allows free distribution and modification but demands that any changed version not be called TEX, TeX, or anything confusingly similar, providing rights similar to those of a trademark.
Quality
Though well-written, TeX is so large (and so full of cutting edge technique) that it is said to have unearthed at least one bug in every Pascal system it has been compiled with. TeX runs on almost all operating systems.Knuth offers monetary awards to people who find and report a bug in it. The award per bug started at one cent and doubled every year until it was frozen at its current value of $327.68. This has not made Knuth poor, however, as there have been very few bugs and in any case a cheque proving that the owner found a bug in TeX is usually framed instead of cashed.
The name
The name TeX is intended to be pronounced "tekh", where "kh" represents the sound at the end of Scotish "loch" (but not English loch; in SAMPA: /tex/). The X is meant to be the Greek letter χ. TeX is the abbreviation of τεχνε, Greek for "art" and "craft," which is also the source word of "technical".The name is properly typeset with the "E" below the baseline; systems that do not support subscript layout use the approximation "TeX". Fans like to proliferate names from the word "TeX" - such as TeXnician (user of TeX software), TeXhacker (TeX programmer), TeXmaster (competent TeX programmer), TeXhax, and TeXnique.
Derived works
Several document processing systems are based on TeX, notably:Numerous extensions to TeX exist, among them BibTeX for bibliographies (distributed with LaTeX), PDFTeX, which bypasses dvi and produces output in Adobe Systems' Portable Document Format, and Omega, which allows TeX to use the Unicode character set. All TeX extensions are available for free from CTAN, the Comprehensive TeX Archive Network.
- LaTeX (Lamport TeX), which incorporates document styles for books, letters, slides, etc., and adds support for referencing and automatic numbering of sections and equations,
- AMS-TeX, produced by the American Mathematical Society, this has a lot of more user-friendly commands, which can be altered by journals to fit with the house style. Most of the features of AMS-Tex can be used in LaTeX by using the AMS "packages". This is then referred to as AMS-LaTeX. The main AMS-TeX manual is entitled The Joy of TeX.
- jadeTeX which uses TeX as a backend for printing from James' DSSSL Engine,
- Texinfo, the GNU documentation processing system.
Compatible tools
The TeXmacs text editor is a WYSIWYG scientific text editor that is intended to be compatible with TeX. It uses Knuth's fonts, and can generate TeX output. LyX is a similar tool.
TeX and Wikipedia
As of 2003, Wikipedia implements TeX markup, using <math>...</math> tags enclosing blocks of TeX. This capability is implemented via Texvc which is basically a script that pipes the markup through TeX, then dvips to produce a Postscript file which Ghostscript renders into a PNG image. Due to the nature of the web environment, this is done in an efficient (cached) and security-conscious way -- allowing third parties to pass unsanitised text through the standard TeX engine is a bad idea if you value your files.The example fragments of TeX below are rendered using Texvc, and simple ones such as can be used to generate , although it is recommended that one writes the HTML-rendered a/b instead.
TeX examples
A simple plain TeX example - Create a text file myfile.tex with the following content:hello \\byeThen open a command line interpreter and type
tex myfile.texTeX then creates a file myfile.dvi Use a viewer to look at the file. MikTeX for example contains a viewer called yap:
yap myfile.dviThe viewer shows hello on a page. \\bye is a TeX command which marks the end of the file and is not shown in the final output.
The dvi file can either be printed directly from the viewer or converted to a more common format such as PostScript using the dvips program.
To see TeX further in action, look at its formatting of mathematical formulas. For example, to write the well-known quadratic formula, try entering
The quadratic formula is ${-b\\pm\\sqrt{b^2-4ac} \\over {2a}}$ \\byeUse TeX as above, and you should get something that looks like
Notice how the formula is printed in a way a person would write by hand, or typeset the equation. In a document, entering math mode is done by starting with a $, then entering a formula in TeX semantics and closing again with another $. Display math, or math presented centered on a new line is done by using $$. For example, the above with the quadratic formula in display math:
- The quadratic formula is
The quadratic formula is $${-b\\pm\\sqrt{b^2-4ac} \\over {2a}}$$ \\byerenders as
- The quadratic formula is
See also:
References:
- Metafont and MetaPost
This article (or an earlier version of it) contains material from FOLDOC's article on TeX, used with permission.
- The TEX users group: http://www.tug.org/
- Comprehensive TEX Archive Network: http://www.ctan.org/ . Repository of the TEX source and hundreds of add-ons and style files.
- The LaTeX project: http://www.latex-project.org/ .
- Donald E. Knuth, The TEXbook (Computers and Typesetting Volume A), Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley, 1984. ISBN 0201134489.
- Norman Walsh, Making TeX Work, http://makingtexwork.sourceforge.net/mtw/index.html Free online book
- Omega (16 bit version of TeX; use lambda, not omega on the command line!)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "TeX."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Theater (also Theatre in British and Commonwealth English) is that branch of the performing arts concerned with acting out stories in front of an audience using combinations of speech, gesture, music, dance, sound and spectacle - indeed any one or more elements of the other performing arts. In addition to the standard narrative dialog style, theatre takes such forms as opera, ballet, mime, kabuki, chinese opera, and pantomime. Here is a list of acting terms.
Kinds of theater
"Drama" is that branch of theatre in which speech, either from written text (plays or "dramatic literature") or improvised, is paramount. "Musical theater" is a form of theatre combining music, songs, dance routines, and spoken dialogue. There is a particularly long tradition of political theater, intended to educate audiences on contemporary issues and encourage social change. Various creeds, Catholicism for instance, have built upon the entertainment value of theatre and created (for example) mystery plays and morality plays.There is an enormous variety of philosophies, artistic processes, and theatrical approaches to creating plays and drama. Some are connected to political or spiritual ideologies, and some are based on purely "artistic" concerns. Some processes focus on story, some on the theatre as event, some as theatre as a catalyst for social change. According to Aristotle's seminal theatrical critique Poetics, there are six elements necessary for theatre. They are Plot, Character, Idea, Language, Music, and Spectacle. The 17th-century Spanish writer Lope de Vega wrote that for theatre one needs "three boards, two actors, and one passion." Others notable for their contributtion to theatrical philosophy are Konstantin Stanislavski, Antonin Artaud, Bertolt Brecht, Orson Welles, Jerzy Grotowski.
20th Century American Playwrights
- Edward Albee
- Jane Anderson
- Christopher Durang
- Horton Foote
- Lorraine Hansberry
- George S Kaufmann
- Tony Kushner
- Neil LaBute (The Shape of Things)
- David Mamet
- Arthur Miller
- Terrence McNally
- Eugene O'Neill
- Neil Simon
- Stephen Sondheim
- Rodolfo Usigli
- Tennessee Williams
- Thornton Wilder
- August Wilson
- Lanford Wilson
20th Century British Playwrights
- Alan Ayckbourn
- Peter Barnes
- Caryl Churchill
- Michael Frayn (Noises Off)
- John Galsworthy
- David Hare
- Sarah Kane
- John Osborne
- Harold Pinter
- J.B. Priestley
- Terence Rattigan
- Tom Stoppard
20th Century German Language Playwrights
- Heiner Mueller
- Bertolt Brecht
- Thomas Bernhardt
- Elfriede Jelinek
- Friederich Durrenmatt
- Wolfgang Hildesheimer
20th Century Irish Playwrights
See also: Irish theatre
- Samuel Beckett
- Brendan Behan
- Paul Vincent Carroll
- Brian Friel
- Lady Gregory
- Denis Johnston
- John B. Keane
- Thomas Kilroy
- Martin McDonagh
- M. J. Molloy
- Sean O'Casey
- Lennox Robinson
- George Bernard Shaw
- George Shiels
- John Millington Synge
- W. B. Yeats
Other 20th Century English-language playwrights
This gives a brief listing of some of the better-known playwrights; but theatre is a highly collaborative, multi-person, multi-media craft. Plays are usually produced by a production team*artistic staff combined with various technical, support, and design staff. Among these are the director, scenic designer, the lighting designer, the costume designer, the dramaturge, and the stage manager and production manager. This is not an all inclusive list, and may include other personnel from the world of technical theatre.
- Athol Fugard
20th Century English Language Theatre Directors
- Julie Taymor
- Harold Prince
- Kelly Johnston
- Peter Sellars
- Tyrone Guthrie
- Peter Brook
- Mike Nichols
- Peter Hall
20th Century Russian and French Theatre Directors
- Konstantin Stanislavski
- Anton Artaud
20th Century Polish Theatre Director
- Jerzy Grotowski
20th Century German Language Theatre Directors
- Fritz Kortner
- Claus Peymann
- Peter Stein
- Peter Zadek
- Frank Castorf
- August Everding
- Max Reinhardt
Awards
See also*Repertory theatre, dramatist, list of dramatists, history of theatre, improvisational theatre, radio and television drama, summer stock, cinematic drama, suspension of disbelief
- European Theatre Award
- Laurence Olivier Awards (United Kingdom)
- Tony Award (USA)
Theater building
A theatre is also the building in which works and plays are performed. There are as many styles of performance space as there are styles of performance, but most theatres include a designated "stage" or playing space, a designated audience area or "house," and some sort of off-stage area for preparation and storage, called "backstage," which is typically concealed from the audience. Theatres range from ornate, cathedral-like structures to simple undecorated rooms or black box theatres.Some of these buildings are masterpieces of architecture. Others, often those known for opera, have become major cultural references and symbols.
The original Greek theatre was semicircular in form and was normally built on a hillside, often overlooking the sea. These theatres also typically included a "raked" or sloped stage, with the back of the stage being higher than the front. Such theatres were often constructed with excellent acoustics, so that a player standing centre stage could be clearly heard throughout the auditorium. The Romanss copied this style of building, but tended not to be so concerned about the location, being prepared to build walls and terraces instead of looking for a naturally-occurring site.
During the Elizabethan era in England, theatres were constructed of wood and were circular in form, like the Globe Theatre in London, home to William Shakespeare's troupe of actors. The Globe has now been rebuilt as a fully working and producing theatre near its original site (largely thanks to the efforts of film director Sam Wanamaker) to give modern audiences an idea of the environment for which Shakespeare and other playwrights of the period were writing.
Contemporary theatres are often non-traditional, such as very adaptable spaces, or theatres where audience and performers are not separated. A major example of this is the modular theatre, (see for example the Walt Disney Modular Theatre). This large theatre has floors and walls divided into small movable sections, with the floor sections on adjustable hydraulic pylons, so that the space may be adjusted into any configuration for each individual play. As new styles of theatre performance have evolved, so has the desire to improve or recreate performance venues. This applies equally to artistic and presentation techniques, such as stage lighting.
Specific designs of contemporary live theaters include proscenium, thrust, black box theater, theater in the round, amphitheater, and arena. A special kind of theater is one in a train carriage (picture). See also movie theater and puppet theater.
See also: Stagecraft,Technical theater, Theater Techniques, Opera house, Home Theater, Irish theatre
simple:Theater zh-cn:剧场 zh-tw:劇場
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Theater."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
T-interface: For basic rate access in an Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) environment, a user-to-network interface reference point that (a) is characterized by a four-wire, 144-kb/s (2B+D) user rate, (b) accommodates the link access and transport layer function in the ISDN architecture, (c) is located at the user premises, (d) is distance sensitive to the servicing network terminating equipment, and (e) functions in a manner analogous to that of the Channel Service Units (CSUs) and the Data Service Units (DSUs).Source: from Federal Standard 1037C
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "T-interface."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
There are three similar units of mass called the ton or tonne:
The word ton or tonne is derived from the Old English tunne, and ultimately from the Old French tonne, and referred originally to a large cask with a capacity of 252 gallons, which holds approximately 2016 pounds of water. Such a barrel is still called a tun in British English, but usage is now dying out.
- tonne (SI) or metric ton = 1000 kg (2204 lb). The official symbol is t, but mT and T are also used.
- short ton (or simply ton in casual use in U.S.) = 907.185 kg (2000 lb)
- long ton (or weight ton) = 1016.047 kg (2240 lb), commonly used in the UK and for petroleum products.
External link
The freight ton or measurement ton is also used as what is technically a measure of volume when measuring ship capacities (tonnage) or freights. One measurement ton is equal to:The amount of water displaced by a volume of one measurement ton has a mass similar to the tons of mass listed above, 1,132.7 kg or 2497.1 lb. The measurement ton is abbreviated as M/T, MT or MTON which can cause it to be confused with the metric ton.
- 40 cubic feet
- 1.48148 cubic yards
- 1,132.67 litres
- 1.13267 cubic metres
The register ton is also a unit of volume, defined as 100 cubic feet. It is often abbreviated as GRT for gross registered ton.
See 1 E-1 m³ for a comparison with other volumes, also orders of magnitude (volume).
External link
- Conversion Calculator for Units of Volume
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Ton."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
This is a glossary of some terms used in the branch of mathematics known as topology. Although there is no clear distinction between different areas of topology, this glossary focuses primarily on general topology and definitions that are fundamental to a broad range of areas. See the article on topological spaces for basic definitions and examples, and see the article on topology for a brief history and description of the subject area.The following articles may also be useful. These either contain specialised vocabulary within general topology or provide more detailed expositions of the definitions given below. The list of general topology topics will also be very helpful.
All spaces in this glossary are assumed to be topological spaces unless stated otherwise.
- Compact space
- Connected space
- Continuity (topology)
- Metric space
- Separated sets
- Separation axiom
- Uniform space
Isotonicity: Every set is contained in its closure.
- Accessible. See T1.
- Baire space. A space X is a Baire space if it is not meagre in itself. Equivalently, X is a Baire space if the intersection of countably many dense open sets is dense.
- Base. A set of open sets is a base (or basis) for a topology if every open set in the topology is a union of sets in the base. The topology generated by a base is the smallest topology containing the base elements; this topology consists of all unions of elements of the base.
- Basis. See Base.
- Borel algebra. The Borel algebra on a space X is the smallest σ-algebra containing all the open sets.
- Borel set. A Borel set is an element of a Borel algebra.
- Boundary. The boundary of a set is the set's closure minus its interior. Equivalently, the boundary of a set is the intersection of its closure with the closure of its complement.
- Cauchy sequence. A sequence {xi} in a metric space M with metric d is called a Cauchy sequence (or Cauchy for short) if for every positive real number r, there is an integer N such that for all integers m and n greater than N, the distance d(xm, xn) is less than r.
- Clopen. A set is clopen if it is both open and closed.
- Closed set. A set is closed if its complement is a member of the topology.
- Closed function. A function from one space to another is closed if the image of every closed set is closed.
- Closure. The closure of a set is the intersection of all closed sets which contain it. It is the smallest closed set containing the original set.
- Compact. A space is compact if every open cover has a finite subcover. Compact spaces are always Lindelöf and paracompact. Compact Hausdorff spaces are therefore normal.
- Complete. A metric space is complete if every Cauchy sequence converges.
- Completely metrizable/completely metrisable. See Topologically complete.
- Completely normal. A space is completely normal if any two separated sets have disjoint neighbourhoods.
- Completely normal Hausdorff. A completely normal Hausdorff space (or T5 space) is a completely normal T1 space. (A completely normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1, so the terminology is consistent.) Completely normal Hausdorff spaces are always normal Hausdorff.
- Completely regular. A space is completely regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and {p} are functionally separated.
- Completely regular Hausdorff. See Tychonoff.
- Completely T3. See Tychonoff.
- Component. See connected component.
- Connected. A space X is connected if it is not the union of a pair of disjoint nonempty open sets. Equivalently, a space is connected if the only clopen sets are the whole space and the empty set.
- Connected component. A connected component of a space is a maximal connected subspace. The connected components of a space form a partition of that space.
- Continuous. A function from one space to another is continuous if the preimage of every open set is open.
- Contractible. A space X is contractible if the identity map on X is homotopic to a constant map. Contractible spaces are always simply connected.
- Countably compact. A space is countably compact if every countable open cover has a finite subcover.
- Cover. A collection {Ui} of sets is a cover (or covering), if their union is the whole space. An open cover is a cover consisting of open sets.
- Covering. See Cover.
- Dense. A dense set is a set that meets every nonempty open set in the space. Equivalently, a set is dense if its closure is the whole space.
- Discrete topology. See Discrete space.
- Discrete space. A space X is discrete if every set is open. We say that X carries the discrete topology.
- Entourage. See Uniform space.
- Fσ set. An Fσ set is a countable union of closed sets.
- First category. See Meagre.
- First-countable. A space is first-countable if every point has a countable local base.
- Functionally separated. Two sets A and B in a space X are functionally separated if there is a continuous function from X into the interval [0,1] with the property that A is mapped to 0 and B is mapped to 1.
- Gδ set. A Gδ set is a countable intersection of open sets.
- Hausdorff. A space is Hausdorff (or T2) if every two distinct points have disjoint neighbourhoods. Hausdorff spaces are always T1.
- Hereditary. A property of spaces is said to be hereditary if whenever a space has that property, then so does every subspace of it. For example, second-countability is a hereditary property.
- Homeomorphism. A homeomorphism from a space X to a space Y is a bijective map f : X → Y such that f and f -1 are continuous. The spaces X and Y are then said to be homeomorphic. From the standpoint of topology, homeomorphic spaces are identical.
- Homogeneous. A space X is homogeneous if for every x and y in X there is a homeomorphism f : X -> X such that f(x) = y. Intuitively speaking, this means that the space looks the same at every point. All topological groups are homogeneous.
- Homotopic maps. Two continuous maps f, g : X -> Y are homotopic if there is a continuous map H: X× [0,1] → Y, such that H(x,0) = f(x) and H(x,1) = g(x) for all x in X. Here, the space X × [0,1] is given the usual product topology. The function H is called a homotopy between f and g.
- Indiscrete space. See Trivial topology.
- Indiscrete topology. See Trivial topology.
- Interior. The interior of a set is the union of all open sets contained in it. It is the largest open set contained in the original set.
- Isolated point. A point x is an isolated point if the singleton {x} is open.
- Kolmogorov. See T0.
- Kuratowski closure axioms. The Kuratowski closure axioms are a set of axioms satisied by the closure operator:
Idempotence: The closure of the closure of a set is equal to the closure of that set. Preservation of binary unions: The closure of the union of two sets is the union of their closures. Preservation of nullary unions: The closure of the empty set is empty.
d(x, y) ≥ 0
- Limit point. A point x in X is a limit point of a subset S if every open set containing x also contains a point of S other than x itself. This is equivalent to requiring that every neighbourhood of x contains a point of S other than x itself.
- Lindelöf. A space is Lindelöf if every open cover has a countable subcover.
- Local base. A set B of neighbourhoods of a point x of a topological space X is a local base (or local basis, neighbourhood base, neighbourhood basis) at x if every neighbourhood of x contains some member of B.
- Local basis. See Local base.
- Locally compact. A space is locally compact if every point has a local base consisting of compact neighbourhoods. Locally compact Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
- Locally connected. A space is locally connected if every point has a local base consisting of connected sets.
- Locally finite. A collection of subsets of a space is locally finite if every point has a neighbourhood which meets only finitely many of the subsets.
- Locally metrizable/Locally metrisable. A space is locally metrizable if every point has a metrizable neighbourhood.
- Locally path-connected. A space is locally path-connected if every point has a local base consisting of path-connected sets. A locally path-connected space is connected if and only if it is path-connected.
- Meagre. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then A is meagre in X (or of first category in X) if it is the countable union of nowhere dense sets. If A is not meagre in X, A is sometimes said to be of second category in X.
- Metric. See Metric space.
- Metric space. A metric space is a set M equipped with a function d : M × M → R satisfying the following conditions for all x, y, and z in M:
d(x, x) = 0 if d(x, y) = 0 then x = y (identity of indiscernibles) d(x, y) = d(y, x) (symmetry) d(x, z) ≤ d(x, y) + d(y, z) (triangle inequality) The function d is called a metric on M.
The empty set and X are in T.
- Metrizable/Metrisable. A space is metrizable if it is homeomorphic to a metric space. Metrizable spaces are always Hausdorff and paracompact (and hence normal and Tychonoff), and first-countable.
- Neighbourhood/Neighborhood. A neighbourhood of a set S is a set containing an open set which in turn contains the set S. (Note that the neighbourhood itself need not be open.) A neighbourhood of a point p is a neighbourhood of the singleton set {p}.
- Neighbourhood base. See Local base.
- Neighbourhood basis. See Local base.
- Net. A net in a space X is a map from a directed set A to X. A net from A to X is usually denoted (xα), where α is in an index variable ranging over A. Every sequence is a net, taking A to be the directed set of natural numbers with the usual ordering.
- Normal. A space is normal if any two disjoint closed sets have disjoint neighbourhoods. Normal spaces admit partitions of unity.
- Normal Hausdorff. A normal Hausdorff space (or T4 space) is a normal T1 space. (A normal space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T1, so the terminology is consistent.) Normal Hausdorff spaces are always Tychonoff.
- Nowhere dense. A nowhere dense set is a set whose closure has empty interior.
- Open cover. See Cover.
- Open set. A set is open if it is a member of the topology.
- Open function. A function from one space to another is open if the image of every open set is open.
- Paracompact. A space is paracompact if every open cover has an open locally finite refinement. Paracompact Hausdorff spaces are normal.
- Partition of unity. A partition of unity of a space X is a set of continuous functions from X to [0,1] such that any point has a neighbourhood where all but a finite number of the functions are identically zero, and the sum of all the functions on the entire space is identically 1.
- Path-connected. A space X is path-connected if for every two points x, y in X, there is a path p from x to y, i.e., a continuous map p: [0,1] → X with p(0) = x and p(1) = y. Path-connected spaces are always connected.
- Point. This term is often used to refer to elements of the topological space.
- Polish. A space is called Polish if it is metrizable with a separable and complete metric.
- Product topology. If {Xi} is a collection of spaces and X is the (set-theoretic) product of {Xi}, then the product topology on X is the weakest topology for which all the projection maps are continuous.
- Punctured neighbourhood/Punctured neighborhood. A punctured neighbourhood of a point p is a neighbourhood of p, minus {p}. For instance, the interval (-1,1) = {x : -1 < x < 1} is a neighbourhood of 0 in the real line, so the set (-1,0) ∪ (0,1) = (-1,1) - {0} is a punctured neighbourhood of 0.
- Quotient space. If X and Y are spaces and f : X → Y is any function, then the quotient space on Y induced by f is the weakest topology for which f is continuous. The most common example of this is to consider an equivalence relation on X, with Y the set of equivalence classes and f the natural projection map.
- Refinement. A cover K is a refinement of a cover L if every member of K is a subset of some member of L.
- Regular. A space is regular if whenever C is a closed set and p is a point not in C, then C and p have disjoint neighbourhoods.
- Regular Hausdorff. A space is regular Hausdorff (or T3) if it is a regular T0 space. (A regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.)
- Residual. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then A is residual in X if the complement of A is meagre in X.
- Second category. See Meagre.
- Second-countable. A space is second-countable if it has a countable base for its topology. Second-countable spaces are always separable, first-countable and Lindelöf.
- Separable. A space is separable if it has a countable dense subset.
- Separated. Two sets A and B are separated if each is disjoint from the other's closure.
- Sierpinski space. Let S = {0,1}. Then T = is a topology on S, and the resulting space is called Sierpinski space. The Sierpinski space is the simplest example of a space that does not satisfy the T1 axiom.
- Simply connected. A space X is simply connected if it is path-connected and every continuous map f: S1 → X is homotopic to a constant map.
- Subbase. A set of open sets is a subbase (or subbasis) for a topology if every open set in the topology is a union of finite intersections of sets in the subbase. The topology generated by a subbase is the smallest topology containing the subbase elements; this topology consists of all finite intersections of unions of elements of the subbase.
- Subbasis. See Subbase.
- Subcover. A cover K is a subcover (or subcovering) of a cover L if every member of K is a member of L.
- Subcovering. See Subcover.
- Subspace. If X is a space and A is a subset of X, then the subspace topology on A induced by X consists of all intersections of open sets in X with A.
- T0. A space is T0 (or Kolmogorov) if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, either there is an open set containing x but not y, or there is an open set containing y but not x.
- T1. A space is T1 (or accessible) if for every pair of distinct points x and y in the space, there is an open set containing x but not y. (Compare with T0; here, we are allowed to specify which point will be contained in the open set.) Equivalently, a space is T1 if all its singletons are closed. T1 spaces are always T0.
- T2. See Hausdorff.
- T3. See Regular Hausdorff.
- T3½. See Tychonoff.
- T4. See Normal Hausdorff.
- T5. See Completely normal Hausdorff.
- Topological space. A topological space is a set X equipped with a collection T of subsets of X satisfying the following conditions:
The union of any collection of sets in T is also in T. The intersection of any pair of sets in T is also in T. The collection T is called a topology on X.
if U is in Φ, then U contains { (x, x) : x in X }.
- Topologically complete. A space is topologically complete if it is homeomorphic to a complete metric space.
- Topology. See Topological space.
- Totally disconnected. A space is totally disconnected if it has no connected subset with more than one point.
- Trivial topology. The trivial topology on a set X consists of precisely the empty set and the entire space X.
- Tychonoff. A Tychonoff space (or completely regular Hausdorff space, completely T3 space, T3½ space) is a completely regular T0 space. (A completely regular space is Hausdorff if and only if it is T0, so the terminology is consistent.) Tychonoff spaces are always regular Hausdorff.
- Uniform space. A uniform space is a set U equipped with a nonempty system Φ of subsets of the Cartesian product X × ''X'\' satisfying the following:
if U is in Φ, then { (y, x) : (x, y) in U } is also in Φ if U is in Φ and V is a subset of X × X which contains U, then V is in Φ if U and V are in Φ, then U ∩ V is in Φ if U is in Φ, then there exists V in Φ such that, whenever (x, y) and (y, z) are in V, then (x, z) is in U. The elements of Φ are called entourages, and Φ itself is called a uniform structure on U.
- Uniform structure. See Uniform space.
- Weak topology. The weak topology on a set, with respect to a collection of functions from that set into topological spaces, is the weakest topology on the set which makes all the functions continuous.
- Weakly hereditary. A property of spaces is said to be weakly hereditary if whenever a space has that property, then so does every closed subspace of it. For example, compactness and the Lindelöf property are both weakly hereditary properties, although neither is hereditary.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Topology glossary."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Traditional Chinese characters (正體字) are one of two standard character sets of printed contemporary Chinese written language. The other form is Simplified Chinese. This form of writing is most popular in Hong Kong, Macau, Taiwan, and overseas Chinese communities.
Among Chinese people, Traditional Chinese characters are also called Complicated Chinese characters (繁體字) or orally Old characters (老字).
When printing text, people in Mainland China and Singapore use mainly the simplified system, which was developed by the People's Republic of China government in the 1950s. However, the PRC also prints material intended to be read outside of Mainland China using traditional characters. When handwriting text, most Chinese will use informal individual simplifications, and there are some characters in which an informal simplified form is more common even in traditional Chinese text.
In computer text applications, Traditional Chinese is most often rendered using the Big5 character encoding scheme.
See also: Chinese character
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Traditional Chinese character."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
A transcendental number is any complex number that is not an algebraic number, i.e., it is not the solution of any polynomial equation of the form
where n ≥ 1 and the coefficients ai are integers (or, equivalently, rationals), not all 0.
The set of algebraic numbers is countable while the set of all real numbers is uncountable; this implies that the set of all transcendental numbers is also uncountable, so in a very real sense there are many more transcendental numbers than algebraic ones. However, only a few classes of transcendental numbers are known and proving that a given number is transcendental can be extremely difficult. Another property of the normality of one number might also help to distinguish it to be transcendental.
The existence of transcendental numbers was first proved in 1844 by Joseph Liouville, who exhibited examples, including the Liouville constant:
in which the nth digit after the decimal point is 1 if n is a factorial (i.e., 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720, ...., etc.) and 0 otherwise. The first number to be proved transcendental without having been specifically constructed to achieve this was e, by Charles Hermite in 1873. In 1882, Carl Louis Ferdinand von Lindemann published a proof that the number &pi is transcendental. In 1874, Georg Cantor found the argument described above establishing the ubiquity of transcendental numbers.
Here is a list of some numbers known to be transcendental:
where is the floor function. For example if β = 2 then this number is 0.1010001000000010000000000000001000...
- ea if a is algebraic and nonzero
- &pi
- eπ
- 2√2 or more generally ab where a ≠ 0,1 is algebraic and b is algebraic but not rational. The general case of Hilbert's seventh problem, namely to determine whether ab is transcendental whenever a ≠ 0,1 is algebraic and b is irrational, remains unresolved.
- sin(1)
- ln(a) if a is positive, rational and ≠ 1
- Γ(1/3) and Γ(1/4) (see Gamma function).
- Ω, Chaitin's constant.
The discovery of transcendental numbers allowed the proof of the impossibility of several ancient geometric problems involving ruler and compass construction; the most famous one, squaring the circle, is impossible because π is transcendental.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Transcendental number."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Tritium (symbol T or 3H) is an isotope of hydrogen. The nucleus of tritium contains one proton and two neutrons, whereas a normal hydrogen nucleus consists of just one proton. Its atomic weight is 3.016049. It is a gas (T2 or 3H2) at standard temperature and pressure.
It is radioactive (an average 6 keV beta emitter) and has a half-life of 12.26 years. The low-energy beta radiation from tritium cannot penetrate human skin, so tritium is only dangerous if consumed in large quantities. Its low energy also makes it difficult to detect tritium labelled compounds except by using liquid scintillation counting.
Tritium occurs naturally due to cosmic rays interacting with deuterium in the atmosphere. It is produced in nuclear reactors by exposing Li6 to a neutron source.
Tritium figures prominently in studies of nuclear reactions, especially nuclear fusion due to its favorable reaction cross section and high energy yield. All atomic nuclei, being composed of protons and neutrons, repel one another because of their positive charge. However, if the atoms have a high enough temperature (as is the case in the core of the Sun, for example), than their random motions can overcome such electrical repulsion, and they can be be jammed together into new atoms. Since tritium has the same charge as ordinary hydrogen, it experiences the same electrical repulsive force. However, due to its higher mass, it is less responsive to such forces, and thus can more easily fuse with other atoms. The same is also true, albeit to a lesser extent, of deuterium, and that is why brown dwarfs (so called failed stars) can't burn hydrogen, but do indeed burn deuterium.
Atmospheric nuclear testing (prior to the Partial Test Ban Treaty) proved unexpectedly useful to oceanographers, as the sharp spike in surface tritium levels could be used over the years to measure the rate at which the lower and upper ocean levels mixed.
Small amounts are used with phosphors for self-illuminating devices such as watches and exit signs.
Tritium was first produced in 1934 from deuterium, another isotope of hydrogen, by Ernest Rutherford, working with Marcus L. Oliphant and Paul Harteck . Rutherford was unable to isolate the tritium, a job that was left to Luis Alvarez, who correctly deduced that the substance was radioactive. W. F. Libby discovered that tritium could be used for dating water, and therefore geological samples and vintage wines.
Tritium combines with oxygen to form a liquid called tritiated water (T2O).
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Tritium."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
A typical blues chord progression, taking twelve 4/4 bars to the verse.
A basic example of the progression would look like this, using T to indicate the tonic, S for the subdominant, and D for the dominant, and representing one chord per measure:
T T T T S S T T D S T TMany variations are possible. For instance, seventh chords are often used just before a change, and more changes can be added. A more complicated example might look like this, where "7" indicates a seventh chord:
T S T T7 S S7 T T7 D S T D7When the last bar contains the dominant, that bar can be called a turnaround.
Finally, here is an example showing the pattern in the key of D, and how it fits with the lyrics of a given verse. One chord symbol is used per beat, with "-" representing the continuation of the previous chord:
D - - - Woke up this morning with theG - - - D - - - D7 - - - blues down in my soul
G - - - Woke up this morning with the
G7 - - - D - - - D7 - - - blues down in my soul Saying "My
A - - A7 baby gone and left me, got a
G - - G7 D - - - D - A A7 heart as black as coal"
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Twelve bar blues."
| 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 |
T | Danish | Thymidin | Medicine |
T | Dutch | Totale aan een monster toegevoegde radioactiviteit (cpm of dpm) | Chemistry, Meteorology & Standards |
T | English | Terminal | N/A |
T | French | Règle transformationelle | N/A |
T | German | Tag | Geography, Meteorology & Standards |
T | Greek | τοξικό | European Union, Chemistry |
T | Italian | Radioattivit totale (cpm o dpm) indotta nel campione | Chemistry, Meteorology & Standards |
t | Latin | Tempus | Meteorology & Standards |
T | Portuguese | Tóxico | European Union, Chemistry |
T | Spanish | Racor en T | Building & Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering |
| T + | Danish | Meget giftige | European Union, Chemistry |
| CCL type T | Dutch | Chronische T-cel lymfoïde leukemie | Medicine |
| B I B N E T T | English | Norwegian Library Network | N/A |
| T k o | French | Tonne-kilomètre offerte | Meteorology & Standards, Transportation |
| T SKE | German | T Steinkohleneinheit | Meteorology & Standards |
| T + | Greek | πολύ τοξικό | European Union, Chemistry |
| T + | Italian | Altamente tossico | European Union, Chemistry |
| T + | Spanish | Muy tóxico | European Union, Chemistry |
Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |||
Synonyms: TSynonyms: liothyronine (n), metric ton (n), tetraiodothyronine (n), thyroxin (n), thyroxine (n), tonne (n), triiodothyronine (n). (additional references) |
| Domain | Usage | |
Screenplays | You see a girl a couple of t imes a week and sooner or later she thinks you'll divorce your wife (The Apartment; writing credit: Billy Wilder ; I.A.L. Diamond) Proximo will be here t midnight and take you to the gate (Gladiator; writing credit: David Franzoni) Please don t do anything stupid (Panic Room; writing credit: David Koepp) I think it's T double E double R double I double F double I double C C C C C. (Charlotte's Web; writing credit: E.B. White; Earl Hamner Jr.) The formula they all laughed at -- Z sub A, A sub T ZaAt (Zaat; writing credit: Ron Kivett; Lee O. Larew) | |
Lyrics | NO, that's that Continental T (Guilty Until Proven Innocent; performing artist: Jay-Z) It's not a front, F to the R to the O to the N to the T (O.P.P.; performing artist: Naughty By Nature) T double D, he off in that 'Xcursion (Take it to Da House; performing artist: Trick Daddy) | |
Clever | Seen on a T shirt in Australia: "My wife says that I don't listen… At least I think that's what she said. (references; author: unknown) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Egy T Sz elnökröl (1960) T Is for Tumbleweed (1958) The Tall T (1957) Slay T (1998) Con t de tarde (1997) | |
Song Titles | Get It On (performing artist: T Rex) Hot Love (performing artist: T Rex) Metal Guru (performing artist: T Rex) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title | ||
References |
| ||
Books |
| ||
Periodicals | |||
Theater & Movies | |||
Music |
| ||
High Tech |
| ||
Consumer Goods | |||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Thumbnail | Description & Credit | Thumbnail | Description & Credit |
![]() | Wild T -2 observations Note witness post. Credit: Coast & Geodetic Survey Historical Image Collection. | ![]() | British Base T on Adelaide Island. Credit: Paths Less Taken - NOAA at the Ends of the Earth. |
![]() | Weddell seals at old British Base T at Cape Geddes. Credit: Paths Less Taken - NOAA at the Ends of the Earth. | ![]() | Currents and Temperature - Atlantic waters enter the Mediterranean through the Straits of Gibraltar and flow east along the North African coast, becoming more saline as evaporation exceeds freshwater inflows. Thus, the Mediterranean is mor e saline than the Atlantic. Strong temperature, salinity, and available nutrien t gradients lead to high biodiversity reflected by regional faunal differences. Credit: Fisheries. |
![]() | Methods of setting Spanish mackerel gill-nets. Fig. 1. Straight set Fig. 2. Circle set. Fig. 3. Crooked set. Fig. 4. Hook set. Fig. 5. T set Fig. 6. Square set. Fig. 7. Triangle set. Fig. 8. Harpoon set. From Report U. S. Fish Commission, Part VIII, 1880. Credit: National Marine Fisheries Historical Image Collection. | ![]() | Figure 48. Lucas sounding machine, invented by Francis Lucas. Lucas began his career laying submarine cable in 1856. He subsequently became chief engineer at the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company. He invented this lightweig t wire-sounding machine in 1878 and first used on the ALERT the same year. This type of machine was used by British hydrographic ships after 1887. Credit: Sailing for Science - the NOAA Fleet Then and Now. |
![]() | Figure 11. Six's thermometer, Miller and Casella, 1869 model. This thermometer was made at the request of Doctor William Miller, vice-presiden t of the Royal Society, and produced by the firm of Louis Casella. This thermometer was designed to resist the effects of pressure. This instrument was first used in May 1869. Credit: Sailing for Science - the NOAA Fleet Then and Now. | ![]() | F-16 Fighting Falcons from the 555th Fighter Squadron, Aviano Air Base, Italy, arrived in Sidi Slimane Air Base, Morocco, in support of exercise African Eagle. African Eagle is a biannual exercise designed to practice dissimilar air to air training with t. |
![]() | German Air Force Capt. Fred Schmidt, a MiG-29 Fulcrum pilot from the 73rd Fighter Squadron, Laage Air Base, Germany, de-briefs Maj. Andreas Zube (center) and U.S. Air Force Capts. Jeff Johnson and Chris Colcord, F-16 pilots. The U.S. pilots are deployed t. | ![]() | Oscar Stevens (left), and Eric Banks (right), NRCS Soil Conservationist, inspect a zucchini squash blossom. Stevens grows a number of unique vegetables. Local restaurants enjoy a white zucchini produced on his farm. Reginald Stevens and Darryl Herrin in t. Credit: Bob Nichols. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
| Play | Caption |
| Drumming; drum; beating; methodical; analytical; businesslike; careful; deliberate; disciplined; exact; fixed; framed; methodic; methodized; meticulous; neat; ordered; orderly; planned; precise; regular; scrupulous; set up; structured; systematic; tidy; t. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Health | Their T cells also show a variety of defects. (references) | |
In general, these extra T cells donÕt cause a problem. (references) | ||
Each T cell is named for the markers found on its surface. (references) | ||
Business | They may also interact by voice with third parties to provide services, but t is illegal to allow other companies to hop on and off their networks to communicate with other parties and avoid trunk-call charges. (references) | |
Economic History | Russia | Transfers overseas of forex purchased by residents are accomplished through T accounts, as for non-residents. (references) |
Russia | Instead of T and I accounts, non-residents will be able to have K (convertible), N, (non-convertible), or F (individual) accounts. (references) | |
Bulgaria | The service sector of the economy, which generates approximately 51 percent of Bulgaria's gross domestic product (GDP), continues to experience strong t growth. (references) | |
Lexicography | Devil's Dictionary | SYMBOLIC, adj. Pertaining to symbols and the use and interpretation of symbols. They say 'tis conscience feels compunction; I hold that that's the stomach's function, For of the sinner I have noted That when he's sinned he's somewhat bloated, Or ill some other ghastly fashion Within that bowel of compassion. True, I believe the only sinner Is he that eats a shabby dinner. You know how Adam with good reason, For eating apples out of season, Was "cursed." But that is all symbolic: The truth is, Adam had the colic. G.J. T T, the twentieth letter of the English alphabet, was by the Greeks absurdly called tau. In the alphabet whence ours comes it had the form of the rude corkscrew of the period, and when it stood alone (which was more than the Phoenicians could always do) signified Tallegal, translated by the learned Dr. Brownrigg, "tanglefoot." |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| "T" is generally used as an alphabetical symbol -- approximately 70.01% of the time. "T" is used about 7,458 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 | 70.01% | 5,221 | 1,871 |
| Noun (proper) | 16.27% | 1,214 | 6,408 |
| Unclassified Items | 10.78% | 804 | 8,660 |
| Pronoun (personal) | 2.89% | 216 | 20,583 |
| Infinitive Marker "to" | 0.04% | 3 | 202,518 |
| Total | 100.00% | 7,458 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
| Country | Name | Country | Name |
| Japan | T & K Toka Co., Ltd. | Sweden | N & T Argonaut AB |
| Switzerland | BT & T Time A.G. | United Kingdom | T & S Stores Plc |
| USA | BB & T Corporation | ||
| (more examples...) |
Source: compiled by the editor from Icon Group International, Inc.
Expressions using "t": ain t ♦ basic T ♦ bridged T network ♦ C G T ♦ C T ♦ camp Joseph T Ro ♦ CD4 T cell ♦ CD8 T cell ♦ coactivated T cells ♦ cytotoxic T cell ♦ cytotoxic T cells ♦ cytotoxic T lymphocyte ♦ D and T ♦ e t c ♦ fit to a T ♦ helper lymphocytes T ♦ helper T cell ♦ hierro en T ♦ Hotelling's T ♦ hybrid T ♦ inducer T cell ♦ inducer T lymphocyte ♦ killer T cell ♦ landing t ♦ magic T ♦ Peptide T ♦ Poly T ♦ prekiller T lymphocyte ♦ Reg T ♦ Regulation T ♦ Roxanol T ♦ series T ♦ shunt T ♦ since time T equals minus infinity ♦ suit smb. to a t ♦ suppressive T cell ♦ suppressor T cell ♦ suppressor T lymphocyte ♦ T account ♦ T aestivum ♦ T albiventris ♦ T Aliciae ♦ T alpina ♦ T Alpinum ♦ T Americana ♦ T Americanus ♦ T angustifolia ♦ T arvense ♦ T Aubryi ♦ T bandage ♦ T calcaneus ♦ T canutus ♦ T Caribbaeus ♦ T Carolinensis ♦ T Carolinus ♦ T cart ♦ T cell ♦ T conchiflora ♦ T connection ♦ T cornuta or tadorna ♦ T crassus ♦ T cupido ♦ T decumbens ♦ T depressa ♦ T elephantopus ♦ T ephemeraeformis ♦ T equinus ♦ T Europaeus ♦ T falcatus ♦ T flavifrontella ♦ T flavipes ♦ T fuscescens ♦ T fuscus ♦ T gigantea ♦ T gigas ♦ T grandiflora ♦ T hiemalis ♦ T Himalayensis ♦ T hinge ♦ T iron ♦ t is ♦ T junction ♦ T kanchil ♦ T latirostris ♦ T lead ♦ T lepterus ♦ T Lisp ♦ T Ludovicianus ♦ T lymphocyte ♦ T mannifera ♦ T marinus ♦ T maritima ♦ T mediocanellata ♦ T melanoleucus ♦ T montanus ♦ T occidentalis ♦ T ocellatus ♦ T of wine ♦ T officinale ♦ T Ontariensis ♦ T paradisi. Additional references. | |
| Hyphenated Usage | |
Beginning with "t": T-1, T-2 Toxin, T-3, T-50, t-a, t-ach, t-aigeach, t-antigen-gene-transformed, t-axis, T-B, t-bands, T-bar, T-barb, t-bars, t-bass, T-bill, T-bird, T-birds, t-block, t-boat, t-bond, t-bonds, T-bone, T-bone steak, t-bones, t-box, T-Box Domain Proteins, t-butyl, T-carrier system, T-Cell, T-cell, T-cell depletion, T-cell lymphoma, T-cell-deficient, T-cell-mediated, t-cells, T-cells, T-cell-science, T-cell-tropic, T-connected, t-connector, t-connectors, t-counter, t-cut, T-cytotoxic, T-DAB, T-day, t-dna, t-end, T-even, T-factor, T-fitting, T-gap, T-gel, T-gen, T-get-away-with-anything, T-grain, t-grammar, t-group, t-grouping, t-groups, T-head, t-helper, t-i, T-Independent, T-inducer, T-in-t, t-iron, t-jetty, T-junction, t-junctions, T-life, T-line, t-lymphocyte, T-Lymphocyte, T-Lymphocyte Subsets, t-lymphocytes, t-lymphocytopenia, T-man, t-maps, t-maze, T-network, T-note, T-nut, t-o-y-s, t-pa, T-part, T-Phages, t-piece, t-pieces, T-plan, t-profile, T-R, t-ratios, T-rex, T-ride, T-rna, t-scope, t-score, t-section, t-sections, t-series, t-shape, t-shaped, t-shi, T-shirt, t-shirted, t-shirts, t-short, T-shorts, T-ski, t-sneachda, T-square, t-squares, t-statistics, t-stem, t-strathain, t-suidhe, T-suppressor, t-switch, t-switches, t-system, T-tabitha, t-tail, t-tailed, t-tails, T-taiwan, t-talk, t-talking, t-tea, t-tell, t-test, t-tests, T-timber, T-timber, t-to, t-told, t-tomorrow, t-tonight, t-took, t-top, t-topic, t-trim, T-trinyl, t-try, t-t-total, T-t-trunchbull, T-t-two, t-tube, t-tubule, t-tunnel, T-Type, t-type, T-types, T-union, t-unit, t-units, t-weighted, t-word, T-Y, t-year, T-zers, t-zone. | |
Ending with "t": Delta-t, Ice-t, Twin-t. | |
Containing "t": b-u-t-t-o-n. | |
| 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 |
t mobile | 27,497 | dolphin t shirt | 1,170 |
at t wireless | 17,903 | rogers at t | 1,111 |
t shirt | 11,179 | wildlife t shirt | 1,099 |
t | 9,237 | t maxx | 1,057 |
wet t shirt | 6,885 | t shirt design | 1,033 |
funny t shirt | 5,042 | bird t shirt | 1,004 |
cat t shirt | 4,022 | wholesale t shirt | 970 |
dog t shirt | 3,926 | custom t shirt | 948 |
animal t shirt | 3,241 | mountain lion t shirt | 879 |
bb and t | 3,066 | t 2460 | 877 |
t mobile.com | 3,051 | don t try wanna | 863 |
lion t shirt | 2,815 | t rex | 831 |
t rowe price | 2,387 | humor t shirt | 766 |
wet t shirt contest | 2,125 | mr t | 710 |
mobil t | 2,020 | t mobile sidekick | 695 |
m and t bank | 1,798 | christian t shirt | 692 |
tiger t shirt | 1,516 | t mobile phone | 689 |
moble t | 1,218 | free t shirt | 660 |
vintage t shirt | 1,191 | t b | 651 |
card t universal | 1,179 | marine corps t shirt | 644 |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Translations for "t"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Afrikaans | T-hemp (T-shirt). (various references) | |
Danish | T-led i H-plan (shunt T), T-celle lekæmivirus hos simian (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3), Tc-lymfocyt (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte), T-forskruning (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), T-led i E-plan (series T), T-netværk med bro (bridged T network), T-plasmocytær lymfom (lymphoma of T plasmocytic cells), T-profil med bred fod (inequal T sections), troyunse (ABR UK:oz tr., ABR USA:oz t, troy ounce), Ts-lymfocyt (supressor T lymphocyte), T-stykke (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), T-suppressor lymfocyt (supressor T lymphocyte), T-suppressor-lymfocytter (suppressive cell, suppressive lymphocyte, suppressive T cell, suppressor T cell, suppressor T lymphocyte), T-rør (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), T-hjælpeceller (helper lymphocytes T), det amerikanske centralbanksystems forordning T (Reg T, Regulation T), firkanttopnøgle med T-greb (single-head straight socket wrench for squares, solid box spanner for squares with T handle, solid T box spanner for squares, square socket wrench with pin handles), Fællesskabsprogram til udvikling af visse ugunstigt stillede regioner i Fællesskabet gennem bedre adgang til avancerede telekommunikationstjenester (Community programme for the development of certain less-favoured regions of the Community by improving access to advanced telecommunications services-S pecial T elecommunications A ction for R egional Development), Fællesskabsaktion inden for undervisningsteknologi-det teknologiske fremskridt i undervisningens tjeneste i Europa-forsøgsaktion (Community action in the field of learning technologies-D evelopment of E uropean l earning through t echnological a dvance-exploratory action, DELTA), Fællesskabsaktion for videnskabelige og teknologiske fremtidsstudier og vurderinger (Community action in the field of f orecasting and a ssessment in s cience and t echnology, FAST), Fællesskabsaktion for prognoser og vurderinger på det videnskabelige og teknologiske område (Community action in the field of f orecasting and a ssessment in s cience and t echnology, FAST), Europæisk samarbejde om videnskabelig og teknisk forskning (COST, European Co operation in the field of S cientific and T echnical Research, European Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research), E-H-led (hybrid T), cytotoksisk T-lymfocyt (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte), Særprogram for forskning og teknologisk udvikling inden for havforskning og-teknologi (MAST, Specific research and technological development programme in the field of ma rine s cience and t echnology), fragttarif for dellast (special tariff for part-load consignment between 1 and 5 t), hybrid T-led (hybrid T), i den foreliggende standard defineres 6 Rockwell-haardhedsskalaer:3 Rockwell N-skalaer og 3 Rockwell T-skalaer;i produktstandarden angives,hvilken haardhedsskala der skal anvendes (this standard defines 6 hardness scales:three Rockwell N scales, three Rockwell T scales;the product standard stipulates the hardness scales to be used), killer T lymfocyt (killer T lymphocyte), magiske T (magic T), Program for samarbejde mellem universiteter og virksomheder om uddannelse på teknologiområdet (COMETT(COMETT II 1990-1994), Programme on cooperation between universities and enterprises regarding training in the field of technology-Com munity Action Programme in E ducation and T raining for T echnology), coronare T-takker (coronary T wave), Regulation T (Reg T, Regulation T), Welch-Satterthwaite t-test (Welch-Satterthwaite t test), suppressor-T-celler (suppressive cell, suppressive lymphocyte, suppressive T cell, suppressor T cell, suppressor T lymphocyte), underrubrikken sedler og moent samt transferable indlaan paa anfordring,i fremmed valuta,omfatter udenlandske pengerepraesentativer og indlaan paa anfordring i udenlandsk valuta,for hvilke man kan kraeve oejeblikkelig omveksling til national valuta uden n (and which are transferable by cheque, banker's order or the like, the sub-heading currency and transferable sight deposits in foreign currency covers notes and coin and sight deposits in foreign currency which are immediately convertible into national currency without any kind of restriction and without any cost other t), unse (ABR UK:oz tr., ABR USA:oz t, ounce, troy ounce), Programmet for faglig bistand til Samfundet af Uafhængige Stater (Programme for t echnical a ssistance to the C ommonwealth of I ndependent S tates, TACIS). (various references) | |
Dutch | T-geheugenlymfocyt (memory T cell, memory T lymphocyte), T stuk (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), T-verbindingsstuk (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), T-geheugencel (memory T cell, memory T lymphocyte), T H-I-lymfocyt (inflammatory T cell), T-koppeling (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), tover-T (magic T), T-plasmocyten lymfoom (lymphoma of T plasmocytic cells), T-stalen met brede voet (inequal T sections), T-stuk (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, tee, tee fitting, Tee junction, Tee piece union, Union T), T-suppressorcel (supressor T lymphocyte), T-suppressorcellen (suppressive cell, suppressive lymphocyte, suppressive T cell, suppressor T cell, suppressor T lymphocyte), t-test van Welch-Satterthwaite (Welch-Satterthwaite t test), T4-lymfocyten (CD4 lymphocytes, CD4 T lymphocytes), hybride T (hybrid T), H-vlak-T-stuk (shunt T), helper T-cel (helper T lymphocyte), Grootschalig doelgericht project P1 op het gebied van de micro-elektronica (LST P1, Microelectronics L arge-S cale T argeted Project(P1)), geheugen-T-lymfocyt (memory T cell, memory T lymphocyte), E-vlak-T-stuk (series T), Europese samenwerking op het gebied van het wetenschappelijk en technisch onderzoek (COST, European Co operation in the field of S cientific and T echnical Research, European Cooperation in the field of Scientific and Technical Research), deze norm definiëert zes schalen voor de hardheid:3 Rockwell N-schalen en 3 Rockwell T-schalen;de produktnorm geeft aan welke schaal moet worden toegepast (this standard defines 6 hardness scales:three Rockwell N scales, three Rockwell T scales;the product standard stipulates the hardness scales to be used), de subrubriek chartaal geld en overdraagbare direct opeisbare deposito's in buitenlandse valuta omvat het buitenlandse fiduciaire geld en de in buitenlandse valuta uitgedrukte direct opeisbare deposito's waarvan onmiddellijke en onbeperkte omzetting in na (and which are transferable by cheque, banker's order or the like, the sub-heading currency and transferable sight deposits in foreign currency covers notes and coin and sight deposits in foreign currency which are immediately convertible into national currency without any kind of restriction and without any cost other t), cytotoxische T-lymfocyt (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte), killer T-lymfocyt (killer T lymphocyte), Communautair programma voor de ontwikkeling van bepaalde minder ontwikkelde regio's van de Gemeenschap door een betere toegang tot geavanceerde telecommunicatiediensten (Community programme for the development of certain less-favoured regions of the Community by improving access to advanced telecommunications services-S pecial T elecommunications A ction for R egional Development), Programma voor technische bijstand aan het Gemenebest van Onafhankelijke Staten (Programme for t echnical a ssistance to the C ommonwealth of I ndependent S tates, TACIS), Communautaire actie inzake prognose en evaluatie op het gebied van wetenschap en technologie (Community action in the field of f orecasting and a ssessment in s cience and t echnology, FAST), kruisstuk (built-up obtuse crossing, cross, diamond crossing, double frog, field Tee, four-way tee, pipe tee, spider, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, Union T), lymfocyten T-helpercellen (helper lymphocytes T), ounce troy (ABR UK:oz tr., ABR USA:oz t, troy ounce), overbrugd T-netwerk (bridged T network, bridged-T network), partijvrachttarief (special tariff for part-load consignment between 1 and 5 t), auto-immuun T-lymfocyt (autoimmune T cell, autoimmune T lymphocyte), Programma betreffende samenwerking tussen universiteit en onderneming inzake opleiding op het gebied van de technologie (COMETT(COMETT II 1990-1994), Programme on cooperation between universities and enterprises regarding training in the field of technology-Com munity Action Programme in E ducation and T raining for T echnology), regeling T (Reg T, Regulation T), Semian T-lymfotroopvirus (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3), serie-T-stuk (series T), shunt-T-stuk (shunt T), Specifiek programma voor onderzoek en technologische ontwikkeling op het gebied van mariene wetenschap en technologie (MAST, Specific research and technological development programme in the field of ma rine s cience and t echnology), STLV,STLV-I blijkt grote gelijkenis te vertonen met het HTLV-I en werd bij apen geïsoleerd,waardoor men veronderstelt dat de mens vanuit dit dierenreservoir in Afrika is besmet (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3), pijpsleutel (hand dog, pipe tongs, pipe wrench, single-head straight socket wrench for squares, solid box spanner for squares with T handle, solid T box spanner for squares, square socket wrench with pin handles). (various references) | |
Farsi | هرچیزی شبیه حرفT , بیستمین حرف الفبای انگلیسی . (various references) | |
Finnish | T-50-koe (T-50 test), T1 (T1, T-1 carrier), T4-imusolu (helper cell, helper lymphocyte, helper T lymphocyte, T4 cell), T-50-testi (T-50 test), taika-T (magic T), tappaja-T-lymfosyytti (killer T lymphocyte), T-B-pesä (T-B cell, transmitter blocker cell), terrestrinen digitaalinen ääniradiolähetys (T-DAB, terrestrial digital audio broadcasting), T-imusolu (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), T-uramutteri (tapped T-head, T-nut), T-kappale (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, T piece, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, T-fitting, T-piece, T-union, Union T), T-liitin (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, T piece, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, T-fitting, T-piece, T-union, Union T), T-liitos (T junction, Tee junction), T-luupihvi (porter house steak, T-bone steak), T-lymfosyytti (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), T-sääntö (Reg T, Regulation T), T1-linja (T1, T-1, T1 carrier), T-vartinen neliöhylsyavain (single-head straight socket wrench for squares, solid box spanner for squares with T handle, solid T box spanner for squares, square socket wrench with pin handles), T-johto (T lead, T wire, tip, tip conductor, tip lead, tip wire), kertahengitysilma (tidal volume, V T T), kolmihaara (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, T piece, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, T-fitting, T-piece, T-union, Union T), krooninen lymfaattinen T-soluleukemia (T cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia), hybridi-T (E-H tee, hybrid T), lujuusluokiteltu puutavara (structural timber, T-timber), auttajasolu (helper lymphocytes T, T-helper cells), lepohengitystilavuus (tidal volume, V T T), H-tason T-liitos (H-plane T junction, shunt T), E-tason T-liitos (E-plane T junction, series T), E-H-T-liitos (E-H tee, hybrid T), CD4-solu (CD8, helper cell, helper lymphocyte, helper T lymphocyte, T4 cell, T8), auttaja-T-solu (helper cell, helper lymphocyte, helper lymphocytes T, helper T lymphocyte, T4 cell, T-helper cells), maanpäällinen digitaalinen ääniradiolähetys (T-DAB, terrestrial digital audio broadcasting), silloitettu T-piiri (bridged T network, bridged-T network), CD4-imusolu (helper cell, helper lymphocyte, helper T lymphocyte, T4 cell), pilkulleen (exactly, to a T), pitkäaikainen lymfaattinen T-soluleukemia (T cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia), plasmasytoidinen T-solu-non-Hodgkinlymfooma (lymphoma of T plasmocytic cells), plasminogeenin aktivaattori (tissue plasminogen activator, tissue-type plasminogen activator, t-PA), rinnakkais-T (H-plane T junction, shunt T), rintakehän komplianssi (C T, thoracic compliance), rintakehän venyvyys (C T, thoracic compliance), sarja-T (E-plane T junction, series T), apinan T-soluleukemiavirus (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3), silloitettu T-nelinapa (bridged T network, bridged-T network), Welchin-Satterthwaiten t-testi (Welch-Satterthwaite t test), suppressorisolu (suppressive cell, suppressive lymphocyte, suppressive T cell, suppressor T cell, suppressor T lymphocyte, T-suppressor cell), suppressori-T-lymfosyytti (supressor T lymphocyte), sytotoksinen T-lymfosyytti (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte, T-cytotoxic cell), siirtäjä-RNA (transfer ribonucleic acid, transfer RNA, t-RNA). (various references) | |
French | t, 1 tonne. (various references) | |
German | t (metric ton, mobile communications center, mobile service switching center, mobile service switching centre, mobile services switching centre, mobile switching center, mobile switching centre, mobile telephone exchange, mobile telephone switching center, mobile telephone switching centre, mobile telephone switching office, MTSO, toxic, trimmer), 1 tonne. (various references) | |
Greek | t (toxic), αμερικάνικος τόννος, τόννος, 907,185 kg, 1000 kg, 1000 χιλιόγραμμα, 0,984207 βρετανικοί τόννοι. (various references) | |
Hebrew | מזוית (t square). (various references) | |
Hungarian | trikó (singlet, stockinet, tricot, t-shirt, undershirt, vest). (various references) | |
Italian | t (everybody), 1 tonnellata. (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | N響 (bikini thong, NHK Symphony Orchestra, O-back, rs232 cable, skirt with peek-a-boo hole in rump, T-back, T-shirt), 丁字路 (T junction), 丁字形定規 (T square), 丁字形 (T-shaped), 丁字定規 (T square), 丁字帯 (T bandage), 丁定規 (T square). (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | Tバック (bikini thong, T-back), Tシャツ (T-shirt), ていじたい (T bandage), ていじがたじょうぎ (T square), ていじょうぎ (T square), ていじろ (T junction), ていじけい (T-shaped), ていじじょうぎ (T square). (various references) | |
Manx | yiarn T (T section), junt T (T union), jeh cummey T (T-shaped), glen (chaste, clean, clear, clearcut, cloudless, downright, emphatic, fair, flat, flat of refusal, fresh-coloured, hygienic, liquidate, nett, peremptory, pure, sheer, to a T, unclouded, unclouded of vision, undefiled), cruinn jeeragh (to a T), croshvaccart (T square). (various references) | |
Papiamen | tíshert (T-shirt). (various references) | |
Pig Latin | tay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | tonelada curta (short ton), tonelada americana, 907 Kg., 1000 kg., 1 tonelada. (various references) | |
Romanian | obiect în formã de t, etichetã aplicatã pe un colet, capãt metalic. (various references) | |
Russian | рейсшина (t square, T-square), футболка (t-shirt), тенниска (polo shirt, tennis shoes, t-shirt). (various references) | |
Scottish | gun (d, followed by asp.con., s excepted, that, without). (various references) | |
Serbo-Croatian | majica (t-shirt). (various references) | |
Spanish | t (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, T piece, tee fitting, Tee piece union, T-fitting, toxic, T-piece, T-union, Union T), 1 tonelada. (various references) | |
Swedish | T-cell (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), T1 (T1, T-1 carrier), T-1-bärare (T1, T-1 carrier), T-50 återgångsprovning (T-50 test), t-benstek (t-bone steak), T-DAB (T-DAB, terrestrial digital audio broadcasting), T-grening (T junction, Tee junction), T-hjälparceller (helper lymphocytes T, T-helper cells), thymus-beroende cell (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), thymus-beroende lymfocyt (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), T-lymfocyt (T cell, T lymphocyte, thymus-dependent cell, thymus-dependent lymphocyte, thymus-derived cell), T-mutter (tapped T-head, T-nut), tPA (tissue plasminogen activator, tissue-type plasminogen activator, t-PA), t-tröja (tee-shirt, t-shirt), T-50 provning (T-50 test), T-profil med grovt liv (inequal T sections), T-virke (structural timber, T-timber), T-suppressorcell (supressor T lymphocyte), T-stångnyckel med 4-kanthål (single-head straight socket wrench for squares, solid box spanner for squares with T handle, solid T box spanner for squares, square socket wrench with pin handles), t-shirt (t-shirt), tRNA (transfer ribonucleic acid, transfer RNA, t-RNA), transport-RNA (transfer ribonucleic acid, transfer RNA, t-RNA), transfer-RNA (transfer ribonucleic acid, transfer RNA, t-RNA), T-rör (cross, field Tee, pipe tee, T piece, tee, tee fitting, Tee piece union, T-fitting, T-piece, T-union, Union T), CD8-positiv lymfocyt (killer T lymphocyte), suppressorceller (suppressive cell, suppressive lymphocyte, suppressive T cell, suppressor T cell, suppressor T lymphocyte, T-suppressor cell), markbunden digital ljudrundradio (T-DAB, terrestrial digital audio broadcasting), cytotoxisk T-lymfocyt (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte, killer T lymphocyte, T-cytotoxic cell), differentialgrening (E-H tee, hybrid T), K-cell (killer T lymphocyte), mördarcell (killer T lymphocyte), mördar-T-cell (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte, T-cytotoxic cell), magiskt T (magic T), cytotoxisk T-cell (cytotoxic T cell, cytotoxic T lymphocyte, T-cytotoxic cell), markbunden digital rundradio (T-DAB, terrestrial digital audio broadcasting), sändarblockerare (T-B cell, transmitter blocker cell), serie-T (E-plane T junction, series T), shunt-T (H-plane T junction, shunt T), STLV (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3), suppressor-T-cell (supressor T lymphocyte), vävnads-plasmin-aktivator (tissue plasminogen activator, tissue-type plasminogen activator, t-PA), vävnadsaktivator (tissue plasminogen activator, tissue-type plasminogen activator, t-PA), överbryggad T-länk (bridged T network, bridged-T network), vinkellinjal (t square), simian T cell leukemia virus (simian T cell leukemia virus, STLV-3). (various references) | |
Turkish | t-kemikli biftek (t-bone steak), tişört (tee-shirt, t-shirt), tam uymak (suit smb. to a t), tam oturmak (sit, suit smb. to a t), tam olarak (accurately, completely, evenly, every bit, exactly, fairly, flat, fully, implicitly, in depth, in full, Plumb, positively, quite, right, rightdown, rootedly, roundly, slap bang, smack, straight, strictly, to a t, true), tam (absolute, accomplished, according to cocker, accurate, all out, at the time, bang, bang on, blank, clear, complete, consummate, correct, dead, desperately, downright, due, engrained, entire, even, exact, exactly, factual, full, full complement, fully, holo-, implicit, ingrained, intact, integral, intimate, just, literal, mathematical, on time, out and out, outright, overall, perfect, plenary, Plumb, plunk, precise, precisely, prize, prompt, proper, punctual, rank, right, rightdown, root and branch, round, sharp, sheer, simple, slap bang, slick, solid, spot-on, Square, stark, straight, strict, the very, thorough, thoroughgoing, to a t, true, trueborn, unalloyed, unambiguous, unmitigated, unredeemed, unreserved, utter, very, whole), tıpatıp (all of a piece, to a t), t cetveli (t square), t şeklinde demir (t-iron), gönye (miter, miter joint, mitre, rule, setsquare, Square, t square), aynen (ditto, do, exactly, just as, just the same, sic, so, the same, to a t, with fidelity). (various references) | |
Turkmen | maяka (r) (t-shirt). (various references) | |
Ukrainian | рейсшина (t square), теніска (polo shirt, t-shirt). (various references) | |
Vietnamese | áo lót dệt kim ngắn tay (tee-shirt, t-shirt). (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
| Language | Period | Translations |
| Latin | 500 BCE-Modern | tribuni, tribunis, tribuno, tribunorum, tribunos, tribunosque, tribunum, tribunus. (various references) |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Language | Date | Source | Luke Chapter 5, Verse 14 |
| Greek (transliterated) | 250 BC | Septuagint | Kai autoV parhggeilen autw mhdeni eipein alla apelqwn deixon seauton tw ierei kai prosenegke peri tou kaqarismou sou kaqwV prosetaxen mwshV eiV marturion autoiV |
| Latin | 405 | Vulgate | Et ipse praecepit illi ut nemini diceret sed vade ostende te sacerdoti et offer pro emundatione tua sicut praecepit Moses in testimonium illis |
| Old English | 990 | West Saxon | And he bebead him þæt he hit nanum men ne sæde. ac ga t and ætyw þe þam sacerde. and bring for þinre clænsunga swa moyses bebead him on gewitnesse; |
| Middle English | 1395 | Wyclif | And Jhesus comaundide to hym, that he schulde seie to no man; But go, schewe thou thee to a preest, and offre for thi clensyng, as Moises bad, in to witnessyng to hem. |
| Renaissance English | 1526 | Tyndale | And he warned him that he shuld tell no man: but that he shuld goo and shewe him selfe to the Preste and offer for his clensynge accordinge as Moses commaundement was for a witnes vnto them. |
| Jacobean English | 1611 | King James | And he charged him to tell no man: but go, and shew thyself to the priest, and offer for thy cleansing, according as Moses commanded, for a testimony unto them. |
| Victorian English | 1833 | Webster | And he charged him to tell no man: but go, and show thyself to the priest, and offer for thy cleansing, according as Moses commanded for a testimony to them. |
| Basic English | 1964 | Ogden | And he gave him orders: Say nothing to any man, but let the priest see you and give an offering so that you may be made clean, as the law of Moses says, and for a witness to them. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Luke Chapter 5, Verse 14 |
| Cebuano | Ug iyang gitugon siya sa dili pagsugilon kang bisan kinsa; hinoon giingnan niya siya, "Umadto ka ug magpakita ka sa sacerdote, ug himoa ang halad alang sa imong pagkahinlo, sumala sa gisugo ni Moises, ingon nga pagpamatuod ngadto sa katawhan." |
| Chinese | 耶 穌 囑 ' 他 、 切 不 可 告 訴 人 . 只 要 去 把 身 " 給 祭 司 察 看 、 又 要 為 得 了 " 淨 、 照 摩 西 所 吩 ' 的 、 獻 上 禮 物 、 對 眾 人 作 證 " 。 |
| Croatian | I zapovjedi mu: "Nikome ni rijeèi, nego otiði, pokaži se sveæeniku i prinesi za svoje oèišæenje kako propisa Mojsije, njima za svjedoèanstvo." |
| Danish | Og han bød ham, at han skulde ikke sige det til nogen, men "gå bort, og fremstil dig for Præsten, og offer for din Renselse, således som Moses har befalet, til Vidnesbyrd for dem!" |
| Dutch | En Hij gebood hem, dat hij het niemand zeggen zou; maar ga heen, zeide Hij, vertoon uzelven den priester, en offer voor uw reiniging, gelijk Mozes geboden heeft, hun tot een getuigenis. |
| Finnish | Ja hän kielsi häntä siitä kenellekään puhumasta ja sanoi: "Mene, näytä itsesi papille, ja uhraa puhdistumisestasi, niinkuin Mooses on säätänyt, todistukseksi heille". |
| French | Puis il lui ordonna de n`en parler personne. Mais, dit-il, va te montrer au sacrificateur, et offre pour ta purification ce que Moïse a prescrit, afin que cela leur serve de témoignage. |
| German | Und er gebot ihm, daß er's niemand sagen sollte; sondern "gehe hin und zeige dich dem Priester und opfere für deine Reinigung, wie Mose geboten, ihnen zum Zeugnis". |
| Indonesian-Bahasa Sehari-hari | Lalu Yesus melarang orang itu menceritakan hal itu kepada siapa pun, kata-Nya, "Pergilah kepada imam, dan minta dia untuk memastikan engkau sudah sembuh. Lalu pergilah mempersembahkan kurban seperti yang diperintahkan Musa, sebagai bukti kepada orang-orang bahwa engkau sungguh-sungguh sudah sembuh." |
| Indonesian-Terjemahan Lama | Maka berpesanlah Yesus kepadanya, "Jangan mengatakan kepada seorang jua pun, melainkan pergilah menunjukkan dirimu kepada imam, dan persembahkanlah persembahan karena ketahiranmu, seperti yang dipesankan oleh Musa, yaitu akan menjadi suatu tanda kepada mereka itu." |
| Italian | Gli ingiunse di non dirlo a nessuno: «V , mostrati al sacerdote e f l'offerta per la tua purificazione, come ha ordinato Mosè, perché serva di testimonianza per essi». |
| Manx Gaelic | As hug eh currym er gyn eh dy insh shoh da dooinney erbee: agh immee, as jeeagh oo hene da'n taggyrt, as cheb son dty ghlenney, myr ta Moses er harey, dy ve son feanish daue. |
| Maori | A ka whakatupato ia i a ia kia kaua e korerotia ki te tangata; Engari haere, kia kite te tohunga i a koe, kawea atu hoki mo tou whakamakanga nga mea i whakaritea e Mohi, hei mea whakaatu ki a ratou. |
| Norwegian | Og han bød ham at han ikke skulde si det til nogen; men gå og te dig for presten og ofre for din renselse, således som Moses har påbudt, til et vidnesbyrd for dem! |
| Portuguese | Ordenou-lhe, então, que a ninguém contasse isto. Mas vai, disse ele, mostra-te ao sacerdote e faze a oferta pela tua purificação, conforme Moisés determinou, para lhes servir de testemunho. |
| Rumanian | Apoi i -a poruncit sq nu spunq nimqnui. ,,Ci du-te``, i -a zis El, ,,de te aratq preotului, wi adu pentru curqyirea ta ce a rknduit Moise, ca mqrturie pentru ei.`` |
| Shuar | Túrasha Jesus chicharuk "Ameka nu etserkaip, Tímiayi. Antsu Israer-shuar Patrii werim ame pénker ajasmanum Muisáis akupkamia Núnismek susata. Nujai Ashí shuar ame pénker ajasmarmin nekaawartatui" Tímiayi. |
| Swahili | Yesu akamwamuru: "Usimwambie mtu yeyote; bali nenda ukajionyeshe kwa kuhani, ukatoe sadaka kwa ajili ya kutakasika kwako kama inavyotakiwa na Sheria ya Mose, iwe uthibitisho kwao kwamba umepona." |
| Uma | Oti toe, Yesus mpotagi-i, na'uli': "Neo' nulolita to jadi' tohe'i hi hema-hema. Hilou-moko ulu mpopehuwu woto-nu hi imam, bona nahilo kamo'uri' -numi, pai' keni pepue' -nu ntuku' parenta to na'uki' Musa, bona monoa' hi hawe'ea tauna kamo'uri' -nu mpu'u-mi." |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
| Words containing the letters "t" | |
+1 letter: at, et, it, ta, ti, to, ut. | |
+2 letters: act, aft, ait, alt, ant, apt, art, ate, att, bat, bet, bit, bot, but, cat, cot, cut, dit, dot, eat, eft, eta, eth, fat, fet, fit, gat, get, git, got, gut, hat, het, hit, hot, hut, its, jet, jot, jut, kat, kit, lat, let, lit, lot, mat, met, mot, mut, net, nit, not, nth, nut, oat, oft, oot, opt, ort, out, pat, pet, pht, pit, pot, put, qat, rat, ret, rot, rut, sat, set, sit, sot, sty, tab, tad, tae, tag, taj, tam, tan, tao, tap, tar, tas, tat, tau, tav, taw, tax, tea, ted, tee, teg, tel, ten, tet, tew, the, tho, thy, tic, tie, til, tin, tip, tis, tod, toe, tog, tom, ton, too, top, tor, tot, tow, toy, try, tsk, tub, tug, tui, tun, tup, tut, tux, twa, two, tye, uta, uts, vat, vet, wat, wet, wit, wot, yet, zit. | |
| 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. Sounds | 9. Quotations: Non-fiction 10. Usage Frequency 11. Names: Company Usage 12. Expressions | 13. Expressions: Internet 14. Translations: Modern 15. Translations: Ancient 16. Bible Trace | 17. Abbreviations 18. Acronyms 19. Anagrams 20. Bibliography |
Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.