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

Definition: K |
KAdjective1. Denoting a quantity consisting of 1,000 items or units. Noun1. The basic unit of thermodynamic temperature adopted under the System International d'Unites. 2. A light soft silver-white metallic element of the alkali metal group; oxidizes rapidly in air and reacts violently with water; is abundant in nature in combined forms occurring in sea water and in carnallite and kainite and sylvite. 3. The cardinal number that is the product of 10 and 100. 4. A unit of information equal to 1024 bytes. 5. The 11th letter of the Roman alphabet. Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "k" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1550. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Computing | K /K/ n. [from kilo-] A kilobyte. Used both as a spoken word and a written suffix (like meg and gig for megabyte and gigabyte). See {quantifiers. K&R [Kernighan and Ritchie] n. Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie's book "The C Programming Language", esp. the classic and influential first edition (Prentice-Hall 1978; ISBN 0-13-110163-3). Syn. White Book, Old Testament. See also New Testament. k- pref. [rare; poss fr. `kilo-' prefix] Extremely. Rare among hackers, but quite common among crackers and warez d00dz in compounds such as `k-kool' /K'kool'. Source: Jargon File. |
Census | (kilo) Designation for one thousand. (references) |
Literature | K K To be branded with a K (kalumnia). So, according to the Lex Memmia, false accusers were branded in the forehead. K The three bad K's. The Greeks so called the Karians, Kretans, and Kilikians. The Romans retained the same expression, though they spelt the three nations with C instead of K. Source: Brewer's Dictionary. |
Slang | Abbreviation. Source: Computer. Definition: It means a number of things. That you could be saying laright, or sure, or asking if someone is doing fine by just saying ok. Context: Used as an abbreviation of "ok" not much of a difference but its ok! ha. Social Source: Instant Messenger Users. Source: Compiled by The University of Oregon. (additional references) |
| Phrase. Source: Short for OK. Definition: Sure, that's fine, go ahead. Context: Used when giving consent. Social Source: 2002 Oakridge High School Athletes. Source: Compiled by The University of Oregon. (additional references) | |
| Noun. Source: Unknown. Definition: Strikeout, in baseball. Context: Used in place of strikeout. Social Source: 2002 Oakridge High School Athletes. Source: Compiled by The University of Oregon. (additional references) | |
Space | Kilo, a multiplier, x103 from the Greek "khilioi" (thousand). See the entry for CGPM. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
See Aozora Bunko
- 'kyoukazenshuu' mokuroku kaikou by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- 'kyoukinitsuite' nado by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- 'kyourakuza' no purorogu by Jun Tsuji (October 4,1884 - November 24,1944)
- Ka-rairu hakubutsukan by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kabanrashi kunaikaban (Bug that doesn't look like a bug) by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kabi by Shusei Tokuda (December 23,1871 - November 18,1943)
- Kaeru (Frog) by Fumiko Hayashi (December 31,1903 - June 28,1951)
- Kafu no joya by Kanzo Uchimura (March 26,1861 - March 28,1930)
- Kagaku to bungaku (Science and literature) by Torahiko Terada
- Kagakusha to atama (Scientist and head) by Torahiko Terada
- Kagakusha to geijutsuka (Scientist and artist) by Torahiko Terada
- Kagami no naka no tsuki (The moon in the mirror) by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kagamimochi by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kagayakeruasa (Shining morning) by Senko Mizuno (December 3,1888 - May 31,1919)
- Kage wo fumaretaon'na by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Kage (Shadow) by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kagikara nukedashita on'na (Woman who has got out from a key) by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kagiya no tsuji by Sanjugo Naoki (February 12,1891 - February 24,1934)
- Kago by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kagotsurube by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Kagura-zaka kitan by Masato Uematsu (b.1962)
- Kagura-zaka nanafushigi (Seven wonder at Kagura-zaka) by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kagurazakano han'eri by Senko Mizuno (December 3,1888 - May 31,1919)
- Kahei (Currency) by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kai no hi by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Kaiboushitsu by Sosen Mishima (July 30,1876 - March 7,1934)
- Kaichouon by Bin Ueda (October 30,1874 - July 9,1916)
- Kaigara by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kaihin' ichijitsu by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kaiikou by Torahiko Terada
- Kaijin juumankan (maruzen'enjounoki) by Roan Uchida (April 5,1868 - June 29,1929)
- Kaika no otto by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kaika no satsujin by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kaikyuu tousou no kanatahe by Akiko Yosano (December 7,1878 - May 29,1942)
- Kaime tsu no jokyoku by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Kaimetsu no jokyoku by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Kaimu by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kain' no matsuei (Kain' descendant) by Takeo Arishima (March 4,1878 - June 9,1923)
- kainoananikappanoirukoto by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kairokou by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kairyuu by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kaisei gan by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kaisou by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Kaitei to shi by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kaizoku to henro by Denji Kuroshima (December 12,1898 - October 17,1943)
- Kaji to pochi by Takeo Arishima (March 4,1878 - June 9,1923)
- Kakeino hanashi by Motojiro Kajii
- Kakekomiuttae by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kakenai tanteishousetsu by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kakeochi by Rilke, Rainer Maria translated by Ougai Mori and Rintaro Ougai
- Kakeochi by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kakioki nitsuite (About will) by On Watanabe (August 26,1902 - February 10,1930)
- Kako by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kamagasaki by Rintaro Takeda (May 9,1904 - March 31,1946)
- Kamigami no bishou by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kamikirimushi by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kamikouchifuukeihogoron by Usui Kojima (December 29,1873 - December 13,1948)
- Kamisan ga oritekita by Masato Uematsu (b.1962)
- Kamome by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kan'eiaiaigasa by Fubo Hayashi (January 17,1900 - June 29,1935)
- Kanaduchi by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kanadukaiiken by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Kanashiki chichi by Zenzo Kasai (January 16,1887 - July 23,1928)
- Kanashiki gangu by Takuboku Ishikawa (February 20,1886 - April 13,1912)
- Kanashimi no hiyori by Shizu Shiraki (March 26,1895 - January 29,1918)
- Kanchuu no ki no me by Kanzo Uchimura (March 26,1861 - March 28,1930)
- Kanenichinuru by Torahiko Terada
- kankaku to kagaku (Feeling and Science) by Torahiko Terada
- Kankan mushi satsujinjiken by Keikichi Osaka (March 20,1912 - July 2,1945)
- Kano jokokoni nemuru (She is sleeping here) by Toriko Wakasugi (December 21,1892 - December 18,1937)
- Kanoyouni (Like that) by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Kanryakujiden by Sasaki, Toshiro
- Kanzan-jittoku by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Kanzan-rakuboku amakiichi by Shiki Masaoka (September 17,1867 - September 19,1902)
- Kao no bi nitsuite by Mansaku Itami (January 2,1900 - September 21,1946)
- Kao (Face) by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kappa by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Karada by Shusei Tokuda (December 23,1871 - November 18,1943)
- Karasu to shougakubou by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Karasuuri no hana to ga by Torahiko Terada
- Kare ha dare wo koroshitaka by Shiro Hamao (April 24,1896 - October 29,1935)
- Kare ha mukashinokarenarazu by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kare by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Karea daini by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Karei by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
- Kareno no tabi by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Karenoshou by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kari no douji by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Karisakagoe by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Karuizawade by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Karumen by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kashoku by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kashuuhyou by Michizo Tachihara (July 30,1914 - March 29,1939)
- Kasou jinbutsu by Shusei Tokuda (December 23,1871 - November 18,1943)
- Kasoukan' oukai by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kassai by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Katachi by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Katakoi (Half love) by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Katararezaru tetsugaku by Kiyoshi Miki (January 5,1897 - September 26,1945)
- Katayama-kun gaiku by Mitsuru Morino
- Katei no dokushoshitsu by Roan Uchida (April 5,1868 - June 29,1929)
- Katei no koufuku by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kawa by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
- Kawabatayasunari daiyontanpenshuu "shinjuu" wo shudaitoseru variation by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kawaii Pole by Tamio Hojo (September 22,1914 - December 5,1937)
- Kawaisounaane by On Watanabe (August 26,1902 - February 10,1930)
- Kazan' no nanitsuite (About the name of the volcano) by Torahiko Terada
- Kazan wo meguru onsen by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Kaze no matasaburou by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Kaze to suso by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
- Kazeni nottekuru koropokkoru by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kazenotayori by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kazuisuchika by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Ke no yubiwa by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Keeberu sensei no kokubetsu by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Keeberu sensei by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kei noshouten by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Keiba by Sakunosuke Oda (October 26,1913 - January 10,1947)
- Keikaku by Shu Hiraide (April 3,1878 - March 17,1914)
- Keikichi by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- ''Keisatsukan shokumu shikou hou (Police officer's job description)
- Keiseikaitoranomaki by Sanjugo Naoki (February 12,1891 - February 24,1934)
- Keishuoshou no tensekigaiken by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Kekkon' nan' narabini ren'ainan by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- ''Ken'jin'ton' kouen no pitapan' by James Barrie Matthew (May 9,1860 - June 19,1937)
- Kenja no okurimono (Sage's gift) by O.henry, (1862 - 1910)
- Kesa no yuki by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kesa to moritoo by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Keshi no naka by Riichi Yokomitsu (March 17,1898 - December 30,1947)
- Ki no koseppou by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Ki no miyako by Sakunosuke Oda (October 26,1913 - January 10,1947)
- Kibutsudou jiken (Kibutsudou incident) by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kibutsudoujiken by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kichigai Jigoku by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kidou mukashi gatari by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Kidoumukashigatari by Kido Okamoto (October 15,1872 - March 1,1939)
- Kigakutekigenkaku by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kigakutekigenkaku by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kiguu by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kiguu by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kikai by Riichi Yokomitsu (March 17,1898 - December 30,1947)
- Kikai by Riichi Yokomitsu (March 17,1898 - December 30,1947)
- Kikaina saikai by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kikainasaikai by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kikansha wo minagara by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Kikansha by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kikansha by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kikanshawominagara by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Kikiri tsutsu ri by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kikoku by Katai Tayama (January 22,1872 - May 13,1930)
- Kikoku by Katai Tayama (January 22,1872 - May 13,1930)
- Kikoubunka no mure - tayamakataishi - by Usui Kojima (December 29,1873 - December 13,1948)
- Kikoubunkanomure ayamakataishi by Usui Kojima (December 29,1873 - December 13,1948)
- Kiku shokumotsu toshiteno by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kiku??shokumotsutoshiteno by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kikumoyousarayamakidan by San'yutei, Encho (April 1,1839 - August 11,1900)
- Kikumoyousarayamakidan by San'yutei, Encho (April 1,1839 - August 11,1900)
- Kimama monono nikki by Yamanaka Sadao
- Kimamamonononikki by Sadao Yamanaka
- Kimamateishujinmanroku by Shuzo Machino (November 18,1943 - December 5,2002)
- Kimamateishujinmanroku by Shuzo Machino (November 18,1943 - December 5,2002)
- Kimi to ha ikenai by Tetsuo Shimizu (b.February 15,1938)
- Kimito hai kenai by Tetsuo Shimizu
- Kimono (novel) by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kimono by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kin' no kubikazari by Hiroshi Ono (June 29,1894 - October 21,1933)
- Kindaishina no bunkaseikatsu by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Kingangeisha to meikyuujiken by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kinkichihou ni okerujinja by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Kinoii kazandan by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Kinoiikazandan by Kenji Miyazawa (August 27,1896 - September 21,1933)
- Kinokoseppou by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kinomiyako by Sakunosuke Oda (October 26,1913 - January 10,1947)
- Kinosaki wo omou by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kinosakiwoomou by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kinoshita Mokutarou "Karakusa hyoushi jo by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kinoshitamokutarou arakusahyoushi by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kinou kyou no kusabana by Kumagusu Minakata (April 15,1867 - December 29,1941)
- Kinoukyounokusabana by Kumagusu Minakata (April 15,1867 - December 29,1941)
- Kinshougun by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kinshu no kokoro by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kinzokuningen by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kirakouzuke no tachiba by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Kiraretasani by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kiri no yoruni by Shutaro Nanbu (October 12,1892 - June 22,1936)
- Kirishitohoro shouninden by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kiseru by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kiseru by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kisetsu no shokubutsuchou by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kisetsunoshokubutsuchou by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kisonoyoshinakaron by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kisonoyoshinakaron by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kissaten' nite by Sakutaro Hagiwara (November 1,1886 - May 11,1942)
- Kissaten'nite by Sakutaro Hagiwara (November 1,1886 - May 11,1942)
- Kisuduri by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kisuduri by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kiteki by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kiteki by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kitsuenguse by Toshiro Sasaki
- Kitsuenguse by Toshiro Sasaki
- Kitsune no techou by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Kitsune by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
- Kitsune by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
- Kitsunenotechou by Kotaro Tanaka (March 2,1880 - February 1,1941)
- Kitsunetsuki by Atsushi Nakajima (May 5,1909 - December 4,1942)
- Kitsunetsuki by Atsushi Nakajima (May 5,1909 - December 4,1942)
- Kizoku ha shiharau by Juza Unno
- Kizokuhashiharau by Juza Unno
- Kizokuhigan by Juza Unno
- Kizokuhigan by Juza Unno
- Kizu by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Kizu by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Koganemaru by Sazanami Iwaya (June 6,1870 - September 5,1933)
- Koi no ippaiuri by Eisuke Yoshiyuki (May 10,1906 - July 8,1940)
- Koi wo koisuruhito (Person who love loving) by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Koi by On Watanabe
- Koiwai no ikka by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kojiki gakusei (Hungry student) by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kojikimonogatari by Miekichi Suzuki (September 29,1882 - June 27,1936)
- Kokoro no kawa by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kokoro (Mind) by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kokugoon'in' no hensen by Shinkichi Hashimoto (December 24,1882 - January 30,1945)
- Kokuiseibo by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kokukoku by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kokuminsei to bungaku by Ryosen Tsunashima (May 27,1873 - September 14,1907)
- Kokusaisatsujindan' no houkai by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kokyou no shougatsu by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Kokyou wo omou by Saryan Kim (March 3,1914 - 1950)
- Kooribana by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Koorigura no nikai by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kooriya no hata by Takuboku Ishikawa (February 20,1886 - April 13,1912)
- Kosakunin heno kokubetsu by Takeo Arishima (March 4,1878 - June 9,1923)
- Koubi by Motojiro Kajii (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kouboudaishi no bungei by Konan Naito (July 18,1866 - June 26,1934)
- Koudaiji by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Koufu by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Koufuku no ouji by Oscar Wilde (October 16,1854 - November 30,1900)
- Kougasaburoushi ni kotau by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Koujin by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Koujou no madoyori by Yoshiki Hayama (March 12,1894 - October 18,1945)
- Kouryoumu by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kousei heno saidaiibutsu by Kanzo Uchimura (March 26,1861 - March 28,1930)
- Kouseigo ni by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Koushaku fujin by Noel Coward (1899 - 1973)
- Koushijima no moufu by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Koushoku by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kousui shinshi by Keikichi Osaka (March 20,1912 - July 2,1945)
- Kouun' no hokuro (Lucky mole) by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kouyahijiri by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kouzan' no yuki by Usui Kojima (December 29,1873 - December 13,1948)
- Ku-gatsu juu-yokka no asa (Morning at September 14) by Shiki Masaoka (September 17,1867 - September 19,1902)
- Kubi ga ochita hanashi by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kubi wo ushinatta tonbo by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kuchi mane by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kuchi ni irete ureshii by Shiroyasu Suzuki (b.May 19,1935)
- Kuchibue wo fukubushi by Fubo Hayashi (January 17,1900 - June 29,1935)
- Kuchikusarentosuru bunjin by Roan Uchida (April 5,1868 - June 29,1929)
- Kugenuma zakki by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Kui (Regretting) by Senko Mizuno (December 3,1888 - May 31,1919)
- Kuma no derukaikonchi by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kumachan by Chiaki Konaka
- Kumiaiki wo oru by Mitsugu Nagasaki (November 23,1908 - December 12,1934)
- Kumo no iroiro by Rohan Koda
- Kumo no ito by Ryunosuke Akutagawa (March 1,1892 - July 24,1927)
- Kunisadaegaku by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kunou no nenkan by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kunshou wo morau hanashi by Kan Kikuchi (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Kurara no shukke by Takeo Arishima (March 4,1878 - June 9,1923)
- Kuri no hana no sakukoro by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kurisumasu karoru by Charles Dickens (February 7,1812 - June 9,1870)
- Kuriton by Plato (427 - 347)
- Kuriyamadaizen by Ogai Mori (February 17,1862 - July 9,1922)
- Kuroi atama (Black head) by Kyusaku Yumeno
- Kuroichitai by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kurokami by Shuko Chikamatsu (May 4,1876 - April 23,1944)
- Kuroneko (Black cat) by Edgar Poe Allan (January 19,1809 - October 7,1849)
- Kuroneko (Black cat) by Kensaku Shimaki (September 7,1903 - August 17,1945)
- Kurushikuutsukushikinatsu by Tamiki Hara (November 15,1905 - March 13,1951)
- Kusa no shitashimiE@karikusanonioiE@ichi by Kyukin Susukida (May 19,1877 - October 9,1945)
- Kusaayame by Kyoka Izumi (November 4,1873 - September 7,1939)
- Kusamakura by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kusanchisu by Albert Akutagawa) translated by [[Mougai Mori and Rintaro Mori
- Kusari-koujou by Sakae Osugi (January 17,1885 - September 16,1923)
- Kusatori by Roka Tokutomi (October 25,1868 - September 18,1927)
- Kusayabu by Tsugi Takano (August 15,1890 - March 19,1943)
- Kuurii-gashira no hyoujou by Kinzo Satomura (March 13,1902 - February 23,1945)
- Kuusou to ganbou by Bokusui Wakayama (August 24,1885 - September 17,1928)
- Kuuwotobu Parasoru by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kyokou no haru by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kyoshikun he by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kyou ni tsukeru yuube by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kyou (Unfortune) by Ryunosuke Akutagawa
- Kyoudou kousaku by Yuriko Miyamoto (February 13,1899 - January 21,1951)
- Kyoudoujo no koi by Kanoko Okamoto (March 1,1889 - February 18,1939)
- Kyoufujou by Toshiro Sasaki (April 14,1900 - March 13,1933)
- Kyougen' no kami by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kyouiku no minshushugika wo youkyuusu by Akiko Yosano (December 7,1878 - May 29,1942)
- Kyouiku to bungei by Soseki Natsume (February 9,1867 - December 9,1916)
- Kyoujin ha warau by Kyusaku Yumeno (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kyoukaku no shurui by Rohan Koda (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kyouou fujin by Osamu Dazai (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kyouran by Shuko Chikamatsu (May 4,1876 - April 23,1944)
- Kyouryuu-tou by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kyouryuutei no bouken by Juza Unno (December 26,1897 - May 17,1949)
- Kyoushuu by Toshiro Sasaki
- Kyouzou no chichi (Kyouzou's father) by Sakujiro Kano (January 10,1885 - August 5,1941)
- Kyuuchou no negai by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Kyuuchounonegai by Takiji Kobayashi (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Kyuukon by Torahiko Terada
- Kyuukon by Torahiko Terada
- Kyuushi by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Kyuushi by Doppo Kunikida (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Kyuushujin (Former host) by Toson Shimazaki (March 25,1872 - August 22,1943)
- Kyuushujin by Toson Shimazaki (March 25,1872 - August 22,1943)
- Kyuusukekun' no hanashi (Kyuusuke's tail) by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
- Kyuusukekun'nohanashi by Nankichi Niimi (July 30,1913 - March 22,1943)
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Aozora Bunko: K."
(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)
A complete graph is a simple graph where an edge connects every pair of vertices. A complete graph on n vertices has n vertices and n(n−1)/2 edges, and is indicated by the notation Kn. It is a regular graph of valence n−1.A complete bipartite graph is a graph with vertices segregated into two sets, where an edge connects every pair of vertices where they are not in the same set.
Complete graphs on n vertices, for n between 1 and 8, are shown below:
n Kn n Kn
1 5 2 6 3 7 4 ![]()
8 Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Complete graph."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The eleventh letter of the Latin alphabet, K comes from the Greek &Kappa or &kappa (Kappa) developed from the Semitic Kap, symbol for an open hand. The Semitic sound value /k/ was maintained in most Classic as well as Modern Languages, although Latin abandoned K almost completely, preferring C. Therefore, the Romance languages have K only in foreign words.
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
Kilo represents the letter K in the NATO phonetic alphabet.
K is also:
Note that k as in kilo (SI) is lowercased, whereas K as in kelvin or kilo (computing) is uppercased.
- As k, kilo, an SI prefix meaning 103 = 1,000 (one thousand) or K, a binary prefix used in computing to mean 210 = 1,024.
- The symbol for kelvin (K) in the SI system
- In chemistry, a symbol for the element potassium
- An abbreviation for ketamine
- In the Library of Congress classification, the designation for books about law
- The stock symbol for Kellogg Company
- In baseball, the abbreviation for strike-out
- In Hong Kong, from 2002-now, the informal abbreviation for karaoke.
- The simplest system of modal logic (K stands for Kripke).
Two-letter combinations starting with K:
- ka kb kc kd ke kf kg kh ki kj kk kl km kn ko kp kq kr ks kt ku kv kw kx ky kz
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
The kelvin (symbol: K) is a unit to measure temperature. It is one of the seven SI base units. It is defined by two factors: zero kelvin is absolute zero (when molecular motion stops), and one kelvin is the fraction 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water (0.01 °C). The Celsius temperature scale is now defined in terms of the kelvin.
It is named after the physicist and engineer William Thomson, who became Lord Kelvin when he was made a peer.
The kelvin as an SI unit is correctly written with a lowercase k (unless at the beginning of a sentence), and is never preceded by the words degree or degrees, or the symbol °, like Fahrenheit, Celsius or centigrade. This is because the latter three are scales of measurement, whereas the kelvin is a unit of measurement.
Conversion factors
kelvin to Celsius
Celsius to kelvin
kelvin to Fahrenheit
Fahrenheit to kelvin
electron volts to kelvin
kelvin to electron volts
External link
- Conversion Calculator for Units of TEMPERATURE
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Kelvin."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Kilo (symbol: k) is a prefix in the SI system denoting 103 or 1,000. For example:
"Kilo" is often used by itself as an abbreviation for "kilogram".
- kilogram is 1000 gramss
- kilometre is 1000 metres
- kilowatt is 1000 watts
- kilojoule is 1000 joules
In computing, kilo does not always exactly denote 1000 but is usually equivalent to 1024 (210), most often when denoting storage. For example, a kilobyte is 1024 bytes, not 1000 bytes. However, kilo and mega often have their traditional SI meanings when referring to rates of data transfer. For instance, 56 kilobits per second is 56,000 bits per second, not 57,344 bits per second.
A common convention is to use k for 1000 and K for 1024.
Kilo is also the letter K in the NATO phonetic alphabet
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Kilo."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
In physics, kinetic energy is energy possessed by a body by virtue of its motion. In Newtonian mechanics, a body with mass m, moving in a straight line with velocity v, has a translational kinetic energy of
If a body is rotating, its rotational kinetic energy equals
- .
where I is its moment of inertia and ω its angular velocity.
- ,
In Einstein's relativistic mechanics, the kinetic energy of a body is
where m is its total mass, m0 is its mass (or rest mass), and c is the speed of light in vacuum. Relativity theory states that the total mass of an object grows towards infinity as its velocity approaches the speed of light, and thus that it is impossible to accelerate an object beyond this boundary.
Where gravity is weak, and objects move at much slower velocities than light (e.g. in everyday phenomena on Earth), Newton's formula is an excellent approximation of relativistic kinetic energy.
See also:
- momentum
- recoil
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Kinetic energy."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Given a field K (or even a commutative ring), K-Vect is the category with vector spaces over K as objects and linear transformations as morphisms.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "K-Vect."
(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
K
- KBL Kabul International Airport, Kabul, Afghanistan
- KBP Kyiv, Ukraine
- KEF Keflavik International Airport, Keflavik, Iceland, near Reykjavic
- KHH Kaohsiung International Airport, Kaohsiung, Taiwan
- KHI Karachi International Airport , Karachi, Pakistan
- KIJ Niigata, Japan
- KIM Kimberley Airport, Kimberley, South Africa
- KIN Norman Manley International Airport, Kingston, Jamaica
- KIX Kansai International Airport, Osaka, Japan
- KOA Keahole Airport Kailua, Hawaii and Kona, Hawaii, United States
- KOJ Kagoshima, Japan
- KPB Zhulyany International Airport, Kiev, Ukraine
- KRK John Paul II International Airport, Cracow, Poland
- KSC Kosice, Slovakia
- KUL Kuala Lumpur International Airport, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (KUL1 was used by Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport, which is now SZB. KUL2 was used by the modern KLIA)
- KWI Kuwait International Airport, Kuwait City, Kuwait
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of airports: K."
(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
- Kabzeel, the congregation of God
- Kadesh, holiness
- Kadesh-barnea, holiness of an inconstant son
- Kadmiel, God of antiquity; God of rising
- Kadmonites, ancients; chiefs
- Kallai, light; resting by fire; my voice
- Kanah, of reeds
- Kareah, bald; ice
- Karkaa, floor; dissolving coldness
- Karkor, they rested
- Karnaim, horns
- Kartah, calling; meeting
- Kedar, blackness; sorrow
- Kedemah, oriental; ancient; first
- Kedemoth, antiquity; old age
- Kehelahath, a whole; a congregation
- Keiiah, she that divides or cuts
- Kelaiah, voice of the Lord; gathering together
- Kelitah, same as Kelaiah
- Kemuel, God hath raised up, or established him
- Kenah, buying; possession
- Kenan, buyer; owner
- Kenaz, this purchase; this lamentation
- Kenites, possession; purchase; lamentation
- Kenizzites, possession; purchase
- Keren-happuch, the horn or child of beauty
- Kerioth, the cities; the callings
- Keros, crooked; crookedness
- Keturah, that makes the incense to fume
- Kezia, superficies; the angle; cassia
- Keziz, end; extremity
- Kibroth-hattaavah, the graves of lust
- Kibzaim, congregation
- Kidron, obscure; making black or sad
- Kinah, same as Kenah
- Kir, a city; wall; meeting
- Kirharaseth, Kirharesh, city of the sun; wall of burnt brick
- Kirioth, same as Kerioth
- Kirjath, city; vocation; meeting
- Kirjathaim, the two cities; callings; or meetings
- Kirjath-arba, city of four; fourth city
- Kirjath-arim, city of those who watch
- Kirjath-baal, city of Baal, or of a ruler
- Kirjath-huzoth, city of streets; populous city
- Kirjath-jearim, city of woods
- Kirjath-sannah, city of enmity, or of a blackberry bush
- Kirjath-sepher, city of letters, or of the book
- Kish, hard; difficult; straw; for age
- Kishi, hardness; his gravity; his offense
- Kishion, hardness; soreness
- Kishon, hard; sore
- Kithlish, it is a wall; the company of a lioness
- Kitron, making sweet; binding together
- Kittim, breaking; bruising small; gold; coloring
- Koa, hope; a congregation; a line; a rule
- Kohath, congregation; wrinkle; bluntness
- Kolariah, voice of the Lord
- Korah, baldness; ice; frost
- Kushaiah, same as Kishi
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 K."
(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
- Kaleidoscope - Danielle Steel (1987)
- Kamouraska - Anne Hébert (1970)
- The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby - Tom Wolfe (1965)
- Kane and Abel - Jeffrey Archer (1979)
- Kapiti coast; Maori history and place names - W. Carkeek (1966)
- Kara Kush - Idries Shah (1986)
- Karl Liebknecht, man without a country - Karl Meyer (1957)
- Karuk Indian myths - John Peabody Harrington (1932)
- Katar (The Chain of Chance) - Stanislaw Lem (1975)
- Katherine - Anya Seton (1954)
- Kava: the Pacific Drug - Vincent Lebot (1992)
- Keep the Aspidistra Flying - George Orwell (1936)
- The Key to Rebecca - Ken Follett (1980)
- Kids Say the Darndest Things - Art Linkletter (1957)
- Kiki: Reine de la Montparnasse - Lou Mollgaard (1988)
- Kiki's Memoirs - Kiki, (translation by Samuel Putnam) (1996)
- Kim - Rudyard Kipling (1901)
- The Kindly Ones - Anthony Powell (1962)
- Kindred - Octavia Butler (1979)
- King Alcohol Dethroned - Ferdinand Cowle Iglehart (1919)
- King of the Wind - Marguerite Henry, (1949 Newbery Medal)
- King of Torts - John Grisham (2003)
- King Rat - James Clavell, set in Japanese POW camp, 1940s.
- King Solomon's Mines - H. Rider Haggard (1885)
- A Kiss Before Dying - Ira Levin (1953)
- The Kitchen God's Wife - Amy Tan (1991)
- Klondike and the Yukon country, a description of our Alaskan land of gold - Louis Arthur Coolidge (1897)
- The Klone and I - Danielle Steel (1998)
- Kolanut production and trade in Nigeria - Ade Akinbode (1982)
- Kon-Tiki - Thor Heyerdahl (1950)
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: K."
(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 Kaiserslautern 101,300 -- Rhineland-Palatinate Karlsruhe 276,600 -- Baden-Württemberg Kassel 199,500 -- Hesse Kaufbeuren 42,100 -- Bavaria Kempten 61,500 -- Bavaria Kiel 250,000 -- Schleswig-Holstein Kirchheim 2,067 Ostalbkreis Baden-Württemberg Kirspe 18,324 Märkischer Kreis North Rhine-Westphalia Koblenz 109,400 -- Rhineland-Palatinate Korb 10,150 Rems-Murr Baden-Württemberg Krefeld 238,100 -- North Rhine-Westphalia A "--" in the district column means, that the town is a district-free town, i.e. it is by itself a district.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of cities in Germany starting with K."
(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
- Kagoshima University
- Kakatiya Institute of Technology and Science
- Kalamazoo College
- Kamloops International College
- Kanazawa University
- Kangwon National University
- Kansai University
- Kansas State University
- Kao-Yuan Junior College of Technology and Commerce
- Kara Harb Okulu
- Karl Franzens University
- Karlstad University
- Karolinska Institute
- Kasetsart University
- Katholieke Hogeschool Sint-Lieven
- Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
- Katholische Universitat Eichstatt
- Katolicki Uniwersytet Lubelski (KUL)
- Kazan University
- Kean College of New Jersey
- Keele University
- Keene State College
- Keimyung University
- Keio University
- Keio University of Science and Technology
- Kemper Military School and College
- Kennedy Western University
- Kent State University
- Kenyon College
- Keyin Technical College
- Khon Kaen University
- King Alfred's College
- King College
- King's College, Cambridge
- King's College, London
- King's College, Halifax
- King's College, Hong Kong
- King's College School of Medicine and Dentistry (part of King's College, London)
- Kingston University
- Kinjo Gakuin University
- Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine
- Kirtland Community College
- Kishwaukee College
- Kitasato University
- Klaipeda University
- Knox College
- Kobe University
- Koc University
- Kochi National College of Technology
- Kochi University
- Kodiak College
- Kogakuin University
- Kon-Kuk University
- Konan University
- Kongu Engineering College
- Kookmin University
- Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
- Korea University
- Kristianstad University College -- see University College of Kristianstad
- Kumamoto National College of Technology
- Kumamoto Prefecture College
- Kumamoto University
- Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan -- see Royal Institute of Technology
- Kurume institute of Technology
- Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
- Kuwait University
- Kwangju University
- Kwangwoon University
- Kwansei Gakuin University
- Kwantlen University College
- Kyoto Institute of Technology
- Kyoto University
- KyungSung University
- Kyungpook National University
- Kyushu Institute of Design
- Kyushu Institute of Technology
- Kyushu Sangyo University
- Kyushu 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 K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
List of Japanese authors
- Kafuku Kinzo (1885 - 1948)
- Kagitani Tokusaburo (1867 - April 21,1924)
- Kagutsuchi Midori (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kaijaku Ranpei (January 4,1889 - March 11,1936)
- Kajii Hisashi (1870 - 1946)
- Kajii Motojiro (February 17,1901 - March 24,1932)
- Kakuda Kokokakyaku (1869 - 1916)
- Kamei Megumi (born 1971)
- Kameo Eishiro (November 5,1898 - October 11,1945)
- Kametaka Tokuhei (January 12,1872 - June 1,1935)
- Kameyabara Toku (June 13,1898 - March 21,1942)
- Kamitsukasa Shoken (December 15,1874 - September 2,1947)
- Kamo Chomei (1153 - 1216)
- Kamura Isota (December 15,1897 - November 30,1933)
- Kanada Chizuru (November 19,1902 - August 17,1934)
- Kanagaki Robun (January 6,1829 - November 8,1894)
- Kanaya Kanji (May 1,1901 - January 5,1946)
- Kanbara Ariake (March 15,1875 - February 3,1952)
- Kanbe Takashi (September 4,1901 - June 15,1938)
- Kaneko Chikusui (January 10,1870 - June 1,1937)
- Kaneko Fumiko (1903 - July 26,1926)
- Kaneko Kun'en (November 30,1876 - March 30,1951)
- Kaneko Misuzu (April 11,1903 - March 10,1930)
- Kaneko Motoomi (December 1,1868 - February 28,1944)
- Kanno Domei (April 9,1865 - February 11,1938)
- Kano Kokichi (July 28,1865 - December 22,1942)
- Kano Sakujiro (January 10,1885 - August 5,1941)
- Kanze Sakon Nijuyonsei
- Kasagi Ichiro
- Kasai Zenzo (January 16,1887 - July 23,1928)
- Katagami Noburu (February 20,1884 - March 5,1928)
- Kataoka Teppei (February 2,1894 - December 25,1944)
- Kato Asatori (September 19,1886 - May 17,1938)
- Kato Buntaro (1905 - 1936)
- Kato Kazuo (February 28,1887 - January 25,1951)
- Katsu Kaishu (January 30,1823 - January 19,1899)
- Kawabata Bosha (August 17,1897 - July 17,1941)
- Kawabata Yasunari (1899 - 1972)
- Kawahigashi Hekigoto (February 26,1873 - February 1,1937)
- Kawai Eijiro (February 13,1891 - February 15,1944)
- Kawakami Bizan (March 5,1869 - June 15,1908)
- Kawakami Hajime (October 20,1879 - January 30,1946)
- Kawatake Mokuami (February 3,1816 - January 22,1893)
- Kawazu Sen (January 20,1875 - March 28,1943)
- Kikuchi Kan (December 26,1888 - March 6,1948)
- Kikuchi Yoshinori (born 1979)
- Kikuchi Yuho (October 27,1870 - July 21,1947)
- Kim Saryan (March 3,1914 - 1950)
- Kimura Akebono (March 3,1872 - October 19,1890)
- Kimura Motomori (March 11,1905 - February 12,1946)
- Kimura Sota (February 3,1889 - April 15,1950)
- Kimura Taiken (August 11,1881 - May 16,1931)
- Kimura Tomiko (October 10,1890 - December 26,1944)
- Kineya Kangorou Gosei (January 1,1875 - January 1,1917)
- Kineya Kangorou Sansei (January 1,1815 - January 1,1877)
- Kineya Rokusaburo Yonsei (January 1,1779 - November 30,1855)
- Kineya Rokuzaemon Jusansei (March 15,1870 - March 23,1940)
- Kineya Sakichi Yonsei (September 14,1887 - December 13,1945)
- Kino Tsurayuki
- Kinoshita Mokutaro (August 1,1885 - October 15,1945)
- Kinoshita Naoe (September 8,1869 - November 5,1937)
- Kinoshita Rigen (January 1,1886 - February 15,1925)
- Kipling Rudyard (1865 - 1936)
- Kiryu Yuyu (May 20,1873 - September 10,1941)
- Kishida Ryusei (June 23,1891 - December 20,1929)
- Kishida Tatsuya (1892 - October 16,1944)
- Kita Ikki (April 3,1883 - August 19,1937)
- Kitabatake Takaya (1967 - 1967)
- Kitahara Hakushu (January 25,1885 - November 2,1942)
- Kitamura Tokoku (December 29,1868 - May 16,1894)
- Kiuchi Takane (1896 - June 7,1951)
- Kiyomoto Enjudayu Godai (August 13,1862 - May 22,1940)
- Kiyomoto Kin (born January 1,1940)
- Kiyosawa Kiyoshi (February 8,1890 - May 21,1945)
- Koba Takeshi (born 1976)
- Kobayashi Takiji (October 13,1903 - February 20,1933)
- Kobayashi Yoshio (November 30,1881 - October 1,1946)
- Koda Rohan (July 23,1867 - July 30,1947)
- Kodama Kagai (July 7,1874 - September 20,1943)
- Kodera Yukichi (December 8,1895 - March 29,1945)
- Kodo Tokuchi (1843 - March 22,1913)
- Koga Saburo (October 5,1893 - February 14,1945)
- Koide Narashige (October 13,1887 - February 13,1931)
- Koizumi Chikashi (September 26,1886 - August 11,1927)
- Koizumi Chozo (February 6,1878 - February 22,1941)
- Koizumi Hidemasa (born 1948)
- Koizumi Makoto (November 23,1882 - October 21,1952)
- Koizumi Setsuko (1868 - 1932)
- Koizumi Yakumo (June 27,1850 - September 26,1904)
- Kojima Kikuo (October 10,1887 - July 5,1950)
- Kojima Teisuke (August 2,1907 - February 25,1946)
- Kojima Usui (December 29,1873 - December 13,1948)
- Konaka Chiaki
- Kondou Sakufuu (January 1,1880 - January 15,1915)
- Konoe Naomaro (July 22,1900 - July 22,1932)
- Korolenko Vladimir Galaktionovick (1853 - 1921)
- Kosakai Fuboku (October 8,1890 - April 1,1929)
- Kotoku Shusui (September 23,1871 - January 24,1911)
- Koyama Sakunosuke (December 11,1863 - June 27,1927)
- Kubo Yoshihide (April 22,1883 - November 11,1942)
- Kubota Kohei (1912 - 1945)
- Kuga Katsunan (October 14,1857 - September 2,1907)
- Kujo Takeko (October 20,1887 - February 7,1928)
- Kuki Shuzo (February 15,1888 - May 6,1941)
- Kunieda Shiro (October 10,1887 - April 8,1943)
- Kunikida Doppo (July 15,1871 - June 23,1908)
- Kurata Hyakuzo (February 23,1891 - February 12,1943)
- Kuribayashi Hajime (born 1958)
- Kurishima Kigoromo (April 1,1876 - November 6,1945)
- Kuriyagawa Hakuson (November 19,1880 - September 2,1923)
- Kuroda Seiki (June 29,1866 - July 15,1924)
- Kuroita Katsumi (September 3,1874 - December 21,1946)
- Kuroiwa Ruiko (September 29,1862 - October 6,1920)
- Kuroki Shunpei (June 19,1909 - June 13,1948)
- Kuroshima Denji (December 12,1898 - October 17,1943)
- Kusaka Yoko (March 27,1931 - December 31,1952)
- Kusuyama Masao (November 4,1884 - November 26,1950)
- Kuwabara Ichiyo
- Kuwabara Jitsuzo (December 7,1870 - May 24,1931)
- Kuwaki Gen'yoku (June 25,1874 - December 15,1946)
- Kuwata Shunpu (January 4,1877 - May 4,1935)
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:K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Some poker games just don't fit neatly into the categories of draw poker, stud poker, or community card poker, and some have features of more than one of these categories.
Oxford stud
Though called "stud", this is a combination stud/community card game that was popular at MIT in the 1960s, in which players receive individual downcards, individual upcards, and community cards. Many variations on this are possible by changing what kinds of cards and how many are dealt in various rounds.
One difficulty with such a combination is deciding the betting order: in stud games, the player with the best upcards showing bets first in each round (except sometimes the first, where the worst upcard is forced to begin the betting with a Bring-in). In community card games, each betting begins with the same player (because there generally are no upcards), making it more positional. Oxford stud chooses to use the players' individual upcards for this purpose, which makes it play more like stud.
First, each player is dealt two downcards and one upcard as in seven-card stud, followed by a first betting round. Like stud, the game is usually played with a Bring-in, the lowest upcard being forced to pay it, and betting follows after that. After the first round is complete, two community cards are dealt to the table, followed by a second betting round, beginning with the player with the highest-ranking incomplete poker hand (as in stud) made from his upcard plus the two community cards. For example, if one player has a K upcard, and a second player has a 7 upcard, and the community cards are 10-7, the second player bets first (since he has a pair of 7s, and the other player only has K-high). Then a second upcard is dealt to each player, followed by a third betting round, again beginning with the player who can make the best partial hand with his two upcards and the board. Finally, a third community card is dealt to table, followed by a fourth betting round and showdown. Note that as with Mississippi stud, each player has five cards of his hand exposed at this point (two of his own plus three on the board), so it is possible for a flush or straight to be the high hand for the purpose of first bet. At showdown each player makes the best five-card hand he can from the four cards he is dealt plus the three community cards, in any combination. This game is usually played High-low split.
Billabong (and Shanghai)
Just as Oxford stud is a mixed stud/community card version of Texas hold'em, Billabong is a mixed version of Manila. Each player is dealt two downcards and one upcard. Low upcard starts the betting with a Bring-in if you are playing with one, otherwise high card starts the betting. Next, two community cards are dealt, followed by a second betting round, beginning with the player with the best exposed partial poker hand (counting the community cards, as in Oxford stud). Then a third community card is dealt, followed by a third betting round. Finally a fourth community card and fourth betting round and showdown. Each player plays the best five-card hand he can make from the three in his hand plus the four on the board in any combination.
Shanghai is the same game with an extra hole card, but no more than two hole cards play. That is, the game begins with each player being dealt three downcards and one upcard; each player must discard one of his hole cards at some point during the game as determined ahead of time. The most common variation is to discard immediately as in Pineapple; the second most common is to discard just before showdown as in Tahoe.
Guts
Guts is quite different from most other poker games (in fact classifying it as a poker game at all is somewhat questionable). Rather than the customary rounds of betting followed by a single showdown, guts features multiple rounds, each of which consist of the decision to be "in" or "out", and each of which contains a showdown. Only the players who stay "in" participate in the showdown. In the most common version, the player who stays in with the best hand receives the current pot, while all other players who stayed in must match the pot. (For example, if the pot is $5 and three people stay in, then one player will receive the $5 pot and two players will be forced to add $5 each to the pot, thus doubling it.) Then the hand is re-dealt, and all players (even those who were "out" in the last round) can participate again. The game ends when only a single player has the guts to stay "in", and thus the pot is taken without replenishment.
Each player's hand usually consists of a reduced poker hand of either 2 or 3 cards. The cards are ranked as in regular 5-card poker, but in some variations straights and flushes count and in some they do not.
Declaring "in" or "out" is similar to declaring high or low in high-low games. Each player takes a chip, places their hands under the table, and either places the chip in one fist or not. Each player then holds their closed fist above the table, and the players simultaneously open their hands to reveal their decision (a chip represents "in", an empty hand represents "out").
Because the pot can double (or more) each round, the stakes can grow exponentially, and pots of 50 or 100 times the original ante are not unheard of.
There are many variations. Sometimes only the single player with the worst hand (who stayed in) must add to the pot, but they must double the pot rather than match it. In an especially vicious variation, nobody wins the pot unless nobody else stays in. This can degenerate quickly, when one player must add a large amount to the pot, and decides to stay in until he wins it back. Thus the game continues indefinitely, with one player continually adding larger and larger amounts to the pot. The pot may grow so big that no player has enough cash to match it, leading to arguments about how to end the game. (This variation is not recommended when playing among friends. Often this variation is abandoned after the first really big pot leads to conflict.)
One solution to the exponentially growing pots is to cap them at 50x or 100x the ante. That is, if there are 5 players with an ante of $1, the pot started at $5. If there were 3 doublings, the pot is now at $40. Suppose the "cap the pot at $50" rule were in force. Then, if another doubling occurred, each loser would pay $40, but the pot would now be at $50 and the extra $30 would be set aside as the ante once there's a hand with a winner and no loser.
Indian poker
Indian Poker is similar to five-card stud, however, the player's "down card" is visable to everyone but him. This is accomplished by taping or otherwise attaching the card to the player's forhead. If this game is played to a showdown, which rarely happens, every player knows exactly what every hand is but their own.
Strip poker
Strip poker is not a particular game of poker, but a method of betting. As there is no betting in the traditional manner, the game is often played as five-card draw or five-card stud. After the hands are dealt out, and any draw occures, the players have a showdown and the player with the lowest hand must doff an article of clothing. Strip poker is generally played as a form of foreplay.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of miscellaneous poker variants."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - KzSource: 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: K."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - KzKaa
- Kaas, Patricia, (born 1966), French singer
Kab
- Kabalevsky, Dmitry, (1904-1987), Russian composer
- Kabila, Laurent-Desire, (1939-2001), president of the DRC 1997-2001
Kac
- Kacan, Metin, novelist
- Kacic, Mila, (1912-2000), poet
- Kacjan, Olga, (born 1952), actress.
- Kac, Mark, (USA, 1914-1984), mathematician
- Kaczynski, Theodore, (born 1942), The Unabomber
Kad
- Kadare, Ismail, Albanian poet
Kae
- Kael, Pauline, (died 2001), American movie critic
Kaf
- Kafka, Franz, (1883-1924), Czech-jewish author
Kag
- Kaga Takeshi, Japanese television personality
- Kagel, Mauricio, (born 1931), composer
- Kagg, Lars, (1595-1661), Swedish soldier
- Kaggwa, Apolo, (1864-1927), Bugandan Prime Minister
Kah
- Kahanamoku, Duke, (1890-1968), American swimmer
- Kahane, Meir, (1932-1990), Israeli rabbi and politician
- Kahlo, Frida, (1907-1954), Mexican artist
- Kahn, Herman, futurologist
- Kahn, Louis, (1901-1974), architect
- Kahn, Madeline, (1942-1999), actor, comedian
- Kahnweiler, Henry, (1884-1979), Montparnasse art promoter
Kai
- Kaibara, (died 1714), Japanese philosopher
- Kain, Conrad, (1883-1934), mountain guide - first ascent of Mount Robson
- Kain, Karen, ballerina
- Kaiser, Henry, (died 1967), industrialist
- Kaiser, Henry J, (born 1882), industrialist
Kaj
- Kajuh, Karel Destovnik, (1922-1944), poet
Kak
- Kakinomoto no Hitomaro, (662-710), Japanese poet
Kal
- Kalashnikov, Mikhail, (born 1919), Russian gun designer
- Kaldor, Nicholas, (1908-1986), economist
- Kalf, Willem, (1619-1693), painter
- Kaliman I of Bulgaria, (1241-1246), Bulgarian monarch
- Kaline, Al, (born 1934), Baseball Hall of Famer
- Kalinin, Mikhail, (1875-1946), Soviet head of state
- Kalin, Zdenko, (1911-1990), sculptor.
- Kallas, Aino, (1878-1956), Finnish female poet
- Kallikrates, architect
- Kallio, Kyösti, (1873-1940), president of Finland 1937-1940
- Kalocsay, Kálmán, (1891-1976), poet
- Kaltenbrunner, Ernst, (1903-1946), Austrian Nazi
Kam
- Kamehameha I, (1758-1819), King of Hawaii
- Kamehameha I of Hawaii, (1758-1819), Hawaiian king
- Kamitsukasa, Shoken, (born 1874), Japanese writer.
- Kammu, emperor of Japan, (737-806)
- Kamprad, Ingvar, (born 1926), entrepreneur
- Kampus, Ivana, (born 1945), poet
Kan
- Kanaris, Constantine, (1818-1848), Greek admiral and politician
- Kanawa, Kiri Te, (born 1944), Maori-born opera singer
- Kandinsky, Vasily, (1866-1944), Russian-born artist
- Kane, Bob, (born 1915), US cartoonist and creator of Batman
- Kane, Carol, (born 1952), actress
- Kane, Elisha Kent
- Kane, Gil, (1926-2000), US comic book artist
- Kanelba, Rajmund, (1897-1960), Polish painter
- Kane, Paul, (1810-1871), painter
- Kane, Sarah, (1971-1999), dramatist
- Kang Song-san, (1992-1997), prime minister
- Kanin, Garson, (1912-1999), writer, director
- Kanka, Megan Nicole (1987-1994), young victim of crime
- Kanther, Manfred, (1993-1998), German government minister
- Kant, Hermann, (born 1926), author
- Kant, Immanuel, (1724-1804), German philosopher
- Kantorovich, Leonid Vitalyevich, (USSR, 1912-1986), mathematician
- Kantor, Tadeusz, (1915-1990), Polish painter
Kao
- Kao, Charles, (born 1933), (Inventor of optical fiber)
Kap
- Kapoor, Anish, (born 1954), sculptor
- Kapor, Mitch, Lotus 1-2-3, founded Lotus Development Corporation
- Kapp, Colin, (born 1928), English author
- Kapp, Joe, (born 1939), American football star
- Kapteyn, Jacobus, (1851-1922), astronomer
Kar
- Karaca, Cem, (born 1945), Turkish rock musician
- Karadzic, Vuk Stefanovic, (1787-1864), Serb
- Karamanlis, Konstantinos, (1907-1998), Greek politician
- Karan, Donna, (born 1948), US fashion designer
- Kardelj, Edvard, (1910-1979), politician and statesman.
- Karensky, Alexander, (1881-1970), Russian politician
- Karimov, Islam, (born 1938), Uzbek president
- Karle, Jerome, (born 1918), crystallographer, recipient of the Nobel Prize in chemistry 1985
- Karlfeldt, Erik Axel, (1864-1931), Swedish writer
- Karl of Austria, (1916-1918), Bohemian aristocrat
- Karloff, Boris, (1887-1969), US actor
- Karlowicz, Mieczyslaw, (ł-aw łowicz), Polish composer
- Karlsson, Jan O (born 1939), Swedish minister
- Karlstadt, Liesl, (born 1892)
- Karmal, Babrak, (1929-1996), president of Afghanistan
- Kármán, Theodore von, (1881-1963), aerospace engineer
- Karon, Jan, (born 1937), American author, novelist
- Karpinski, Alfons, (1875-1961), Polish painter
- Karpov, Anatoly, (born 1951), Soviet chess champion
- Karrer, Paul, (1889-1971), 1937 chemistry Nobel laureate
- Karsh, Yousuf, (1908-2002), photographer
- Kar-wai, Wong, (born 1958), film director
- Karzai, Hamid, (born 1957), President of Afghanistan
Kas
- Kasack, Hermann, (1896-1966), writer
- Kasdan, Lawrence, (born 1949), US film director
- Kasem, Casey, (born 1932), American disc jockey
- Kasparov, Gary, (born 1963), Russian chess champion
- Kassebaum, Nancy, (born 1932), US Senator (1978-1996)
- Kastelic, Miha, (1796-1868), poet
- Kastner, Abraham Gotthelf, (1719-1800), mathematician
- Kastner, Erich, (1899-1974), lyricist and narrator
Kat
- Kath, Terry, (1946-1978), musician
- Katz, Alex, (born 1927), American painter
- Katzenberg, Jeffrey, (born 1950), US producer
Kau
- Kauffmann, Angelica, (1741-1807), painter
- Kauffman, Stuart, biologist
- Kaufman, Andy, (1949-1984), comedian, actor
- Kaufman, George S, (died 1961), playwright
- Kaukonen, Jorma, (born 1940), Finnish musician
- Kaunda, Kenneth David, (born 1924), Zambian president
- Kaunitz, Wenzel Anton von, (1711-1794), diplomat
- Kauranen, Anja, Finnish author
- Kaurismäki, Aki, (born 1957), Finnish movie director
- Kautner, Helmut, (1908-1980), actor and film director
Kav
- Kavadh II of Persia, year 628.
- Kavadh I of Persia, from 488 to 531.
- Kavanagh, Patrick, (1904-1967), Irish writer
- Kavcic, Jani, (born 1923), film director.
- Kaviani, Nicolas, (born 1977), composer
Kaw
- Kawabata, Yasunari, (1899-1972), Japanese writer, 1968 Nobel Prize
Kay
- Kayak, Tito, (born 1958), Puerto Rican anti-military leader
- Kaye, Danny, (1913-1987), US entertainer
- Kaye, Sammy, (1910-1987), US musician and band leader
- Kay, Guy Gavriel, Canadian fantasy writer
- Kay, John, (born 1944), of Jamiroquai
- Kay-Shuttleworth, Sir James, (1804-1877), English doctor and educationist
Kaz
- Kazan, Elia, (born 1909), Greek-born US film director
- Kazan, emperor of Japan, (968-1008)
- Kazantzakis, Nikos, (1883-1957), Greek writer
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: Ka."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Keach, Stacy, (born 1941), US actor
- Kean, Edmund, (1787-1833), English actor
- Keane, Molly, (1904-1996), US playwright, author
- Kearny, Philip, (1814-1862), general
- Kearny, Stephen W (1794-1848), general
- Keating, Charles H. Jr, (born 1923), US businessman convicted of fraud
- Keating, Tom, (1917-1984), English art forger
- Keaton, "Buster, (1895-1966), US comedian
- Keaton, Diane, (born 1946), US actress
- Keaton, Michael, (born 1951), US actor
- Keats, John, (1795-1821), Irish poet
- Keble, John, (1792-1866), Oxford Movement leader
- Kedron of Alexandria, (96-106), Coptic Pope, Patriarch of Alexandria
- Keegan, John, military historian
- Keeler, Christine, (born 1942), UK Profumo scandal figure
- Keeler, Ruby, (1910-1993), actor
- Keel, Howard, (born 1919), actor, singer, former president of the Screen Actors Guild
- Keenan, Brian, (born 1951), Irish writer, Hizbollah hostage
- Keene, Carolyn, British author
- Kefauver, Estes, (1903-1963), US senator
- Keiko, emperor of Japan, (dates unknown)
- Keillor, Garrison, (born 1942), US writer
- Keino, Kipchoge, (born 1940), Kenyan Olympic athlete
- Keitai, emperor of Japan, (dates unknown)
- Keitel, Harvey, (born 1939), US actor
- Keitel, Wilhelm, (1882-1946), German field marshal
- Keith, Brian, (1921-1997), actor
- Keith, David, (born 1954), actor
- Keith, Penelope, (born 1940), actor
- Ke, Jing, Chinese failed assassin
- Kekkonen, Urho, (1900-1986), president of Finland
- Kekulé von Stradonitz, Friedrich August, (1829-1896), German chemist
- Keller, Ferdinand, (1842-1922), painter
- Keller, Gottfried, (1819-1890), Swiss author
- Keller, Hans Peter, (1915-1989), writer
- Keller, Helen, (1880-1968), Blind-deaf US writer
- Kellerman, Jonathan, (born 1949), mystery writer
- Keller, Marthe, (born 1945), actress
- Kelley, David E, (born 1956), US writer, television producer
- Kelley, DeForest, (1920-1999), US actor
- Kelley, Kenneth, (born 1943), American singer
- Kell, George, (born 1922), baseball player
- Kelly-Bootle, Stan, (born 1929), English author
- Kelly, Ellsworth, (born 1923), painter
- Kelly, Emmett, (1898-1979), clown
- Kelly, Gene, (1912-1996), US dancer
- Kelly, Grace, (1929-1982), US actress and Princess of Mocano
- Kelly, Mark, astronaut
- Kelly, Ned, (c. 1854-1880), Australian outlaw
- Kelly, Petra, (1947-1992), German Green politician
- Kelly, R, musician
- Kelly, Robert, (born 1969), US R&B singer
- Kelly, Ruth, (born 1968), Treasury minister
- Kelly, Walt, (1913-1973), US cartoonist, Pogo
- Kelly, William, (1811-1888), iron manufacturer, inventor
- Kelvin, William, (1824-1907), English physicist
- Kemal, Yashar, (born 1922), Turkish author
- Kemble, Fanny, (born 1809), actress
- Kempenaer, Jacob M. de, (1848-1870)
- Kemp, Gary, (born 1959), musician, actor
- Kemp, Ross, (born 1964), actor
- Kemp, John, (c. 1380-1454), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Kempowski, Walter, (born 1929), author
- Kenda, Jozef, (1859-1929), poet
- Kendal, Felicity, US actor
- Kendricks, Eddie, (1939-1992), singer
- Keneally, Thomas, (1968-1970), Australian novelist
- Kennan, George, (1845-1924), US explorer of Russia
- Kennan, George F, (born 1904), US diplomat, historian
- Kennedy, Charles, (born 1959), British politician
- Kennedy, Edward, (born 1932), US politician
- Kennedy, George, (born 1925), actor
- Kennedy, Jayne, (born 1951), sportscaster, actress
- Kennedy, John F, (1917-1963), US President
- Kennedy, John F., Jr, (1960-1999), US publisher
- Kennedy, Joseph P., Sr, (died 1969), patriarch of the Kennedy family
- Kennedy, Robert F, (1925-1968), US Senator
- Kennedy, Rose, (1890-1995), matriarch of the Kennedy family
- Kennedy, William, (born 1928), author
- Kenneth I of Scotland, (843-858), British monarch
- Kenney, Kerri (born 1970), US actress
- Kenney, Larry (born 1947), US voice actor
- Kenny, Elizabeth, (1880-1952), Australian polio treatment pioneer
- Kenny, Pat
- Kensit, Patsy, (born 1968), British actress
- Kenton, Stan, (1912-1979), jazz musician, big band leader
- Kent, Rockwell, (1882-1971), US painter
- Kent, William, (1684-1748), English architect
- Kenyatta, Jomo, (1892?-1978), Kenyan President
- Kenyon, Kathleen, (1906-1978), English archaeologist
- Kenzo, emperor of Japan, (dates unknown)
- Kepler, Johannes, (1571-1630), Germanic astronomer
- Keppard, Freddie, (1890-1933), US jazz cornetist
- Kerensky, Aleksandr, ((1881-1970), Russian Prime Minister
- Keres, Paul, (1916-1975), chess player
- Kernighan, Brian, programmer
- Kern, Jerome David, (1885-1945), US composer
- Kernstock, Ottokar, (1848-1928), poet
- Kerouac, Jack, (1922-1969), US writer
- Kerr, Brooke, (born 1973), US actress
- Kerr, Deborah, (born 1921), Scottish actor
- Kerrigan, Nancy, (born 1969), US figure skater
- Kerr, Jean, (born 1923), author
- Kerr, Steve, (born 1965), US professional basketball player
- Kerr, Walter, (died 1996), movie critic
- Kerrl, Hanns (1887-1941), Nazi minister
- Kerry, John, (born 1943), US politician
- Kerschbaumer, Sepp, (1913-1964), activist for the freedom of South Tyrol
- Kershaw, Doug, (born 1939), musician
- Kershaw, Sammy, (born 1958), musician
- Kerwin, Brian, (born 1949), actor
- Kesey, Ken, (1935-2001), US author
- Kesselring, Albrecht, (1881-1960), German field marshal
- Kesten, Heinrich, (1900-1996), author
- Ketcham, Hank, (1920-2001), US cartoonist, Dennis the Menace
- Ketchel, Stanley, (1886-1910), US world champion boxer
- Kette, Dragotin, (1876-1899), poet
- Kettering, Charles F, (born 1876), inventor of the electric starter
- Keun, Irmgard, (1910-1982), author
- Kevorkian, Jack, (born 1928), US pro-euthanasia doctor
- Kewis, Wyndham, (1884-1957), painter
- Keyes, Evelyn, (born 1919), actress
- Key, Francis Scott, (c. 1779-1843), US lawyer, anthem lyricist
- Keynes, John Maynard, (1883-1946), British economist
- Keys, Alicia, (born 1981), singer, musician
- Keys, Ancel, (born 1904), scientist
- Keyzer, Carl De, (born 1958), photographer
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: Ke."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Khail III of Alexandria, (880-907), Coptic Pope
- Khail II of Alexandria, (849-851), Coptic Pope
- Khaldun, Ibn, Arabic philosopher
- Khaled, Leila, (born 1944), Palestinian PLO/PFLP hijacker
- Khalilzad, Zalmay
- Khalifa, Mohammed Jamal, brother-in-law of Osama Bin Laden
- Khan, Aga, (1933-2003), UN High Commissioner for Refugees
- Khan, Ayub
- Khan, Chaka, (born 1953), singer
- Khan, Ismail
- Khan, Mohammed Daoud, (born 1909), Afghan president
- Khan, Noor Inayat, (1914-1944), SOE agent, WW II heroine
- Khan, Yahya, (1917-1980)
- Kharlamov, Valery, (1948-1981), Russian hockey player
- Khatami, Mohammad, President
- Khatchaturian, Aram, (1903-1978), Russian composer
- Khattab, Amir, (died March 2002) former leader of Chechen rebels
- Khayyam, Omar, (1048-1122), Persian poet
- Khlebnikov, Velemir, (1885-1922), poet
- Khodasevich, Vladislav, (1886-1939), poet
- Khodorkovsky, Mikhail,(born 1963), billionaire
- Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah, (1900-1989), Iranian muslim leader
- Khosrau I of Persia, (531-579), from 531 to 579
- Khosrau II of Persia, (died 610), from 590 to 628
- Khristosolos of Alexandria, (1047-1077), Coptic Pope
- Khrunov, Yevgeny, (1933-2000), astronaut
- Khrushchev, Nikita, (1894-1971), Soviet general secretary
- Khumalo, Leleti, 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: Kh."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kibaki, Mwai, (born 1931)
- Kibalchich, Nikolai, (1853-1881)
- Kidder, Margot, (born 1948), US actress - Superman's Lois Lane"
- Kidd, William (Captain), (1645-1701), Scottish-born pirate
- Kidinnu, (circa 400 BC-310 BC), astronomer
- Kidman, Nicole, (born 1967), Australian-born actress
- Kidric, Boris, (1912-1953), politician, statesman and economist
- Kidric, France, (1880-1950), literary historian.
- Kiechle, Ignaz, (1983-1994), German government minister
- Kiedis, Anthony, (born 1962), of the Red Hot Chili Peppers
- Kiefer, Anselm, (born 1945), painter
- Kienbusch, Wiliam, (1914-1980), American painter
- Kienzle, William X, (died 2001), novelist
- Kierkegaard, Søren, (1813-1855), Danish theological philosopher
- Kier, Udo, (born 1944), actor
- Kiesinger, Kurt Georg, (1904-1988), federal chancellor (CDU)
- Kieslowski, Krzysztof, (1941-1996), Polish-born movie director
- Kikoine, Michel,(1892-1968), painter
- Kilar, Wojciech, (born 1932), Polish composer
- Kilbride, Percy, (1888-1964), actor (Pa Kettle)
- Kilby, Jack Saint Claire, (born 1923) invented the integrated circuit
- Kildall, Gary, (1942-1997), computer programmer
- Kiley, Richard, (1922-1999), actor
- Kilgallen, Dorothy, (1913-1965), newspaper columnist, early television personality
- Killanin, Lord, (died 1999), International Olympic Committee head
- Killy, Jean-Claude, (born 1943), skier
- Kilmer, Joyce, (1886-1918), poet
- Kilmer, Val, (born 1959), US actor
- Kilmister, Lemmy, (born 1945), English musician
- Kilwardby, Robert, (died 1279), philosopher, Archbishop of Canterbury
- Kimball, Ward, (1914-2002), US Disney animator, jazz musician
- Kimber, Cecil, (born 1888), founder of MG
- Kim Dae-jung, South Korean president
- Kim, Duk Koo, (1959-1982), south Korean boxer
- Kim Il Sung, (1948-1976), Korean prime minister
- Kimmei, emperor of Japan, (509-571)
- Kimmel, Husband E, US
- Kimmel, Jimmy, (born 1967), US talk-show host and comedian
- Kind, Rosalyn, (born 1951), singer
- King, Alan, (born 1927), stand-up comedian
- King, B. B, (born 1925), [US [blues]] musician
- King, Ben E, (born 1938), US musician
- King, Billie Jean, (born 1943), US tennis player
- King, Carole, (born 1942), singer-songwriter
- King-Clark, Rex
- King, Coretta, (born 1927), civil rights activist and widow of the Reverend Martin Luther King
- King, Don, (born 1932), US boxing promoter
- King, Earl, (1934-2003), US musician
- King, Henry, (1592-1669), poet
- King, James, (born 1979), actress
- King, Larry, (born 1933), US television personality
- King, Martin Luther, (1929-1968), US Pastor, civil rights leader
- King, Micki, (born 1944), Olympic gold medal diver
- King, Paul, (born 1948), musician (Blue Oyster Cult)
- Kingsley, Ben, (born 1943), actor
- Kingsley, Charles, (1819-1875), English novelist
- Kingsolver, Barbara, (born 1944), author
- King, Stephen, (born 1947), US horror author
- King, Wayne, (born 1901), band leader ("The Waltz King")
- King, William, (1663-1712), poet
- King, William Lyon Mackenzie, (1874-1950), Canadian prime minister
- Kinkel, Gottfried, (1815-1882), poet
- Kinkel, Klaus, (1991-1992 , 1992-1998 affairs), German government minister
- Kinnock, Neil, (born 1942), British Labour Party politician
- Kinsey, Alfred, (1894-1956), US sex researcher
- Kinski, Klaus, (1926-1991), German actor
- Kinski, Nastassja, (born 1960), German-born model, actress
- Kipling, Rudyard, (1865-1936), British writer
- Kipphardt, Heinar, (1922-1922), dramatist, author
- Kiraly, Karch, (born 1960), volleyball star
- Kirby, Jack, (1917-1994), US cartoonist
- Kirby, Ronald William "Josh, (1928-2001), UK commercial artist
- Kirchhoff, Gustav Robert, (1824-1887), German physicist
- Kirchner, Néstor, (born 1950), Argentinean politician
- Kirchschlager, Rudolf, (1915-2000), Austrian President
- Kirellos II of Alexandria, (1078-1092), Coptic Pope
- Kirellos III of Alexandria, (1235-1243), Coptic Pope
- Kirellos IV of Alexandria, (1854-1861), Coptic Pope
- Kirellos VI of Alexandria, (1959-1971), Coptic Pope
- Kirellos V of Alexandria, (1874-1928), Coptic Pope
- Kirkland, Gelsey, (born 1952), dancer
- Kirkpatrick, Chris, (born 1971), singer
- Kirkpatrick, Jeane, (born 1926), US right-wing politician
- Kirkpatrick, Wayne, writer
- Kirk, Rahsaan Roland, (1935-1977), musician
- Kirkwood, Daniel, (1814-1895), astronomer
- Kirkwood, James, Jr, (1924-1989), novelist
- Kirov, Sergei, (1886-1934), Soviet politician
- Kirsch, Sarah, (born 1935), lyricist
- Kirshner, Don, (born 1934), television producer, composer
- Kirzner, Israel, (born 1930), economist
- Kisch, Egon Erwin, (1885-1948), journalist and author
- Kisling, Moise, (1891-1953), Polish painter
- Kissinger, Henry A, (born 1923), German-born US diplomat
- Kitasato, Shibasaburo, (1852-1931), Japanese physician
- Kitchener, "Lord, (1922-2000), Trinidadian musician
- Kitchener, Lord Horatio, (1850-1916), UK general
- Kitt, Eartha, (born 1928), US singer and actress
- Kivi, Aleksis, (1834-1872), First Finnish author
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Ki."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kjaersgaard, Pia, (born 1947), Danish politician
- Kjærstad, Jan, (born 1953), author
- Kjaerulff, Peter, Danish novelist
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: Kj."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Klaas, Polly, California kidnap and murder victim
- Klebold, Dylan Bennett (1981-1999), perpetrator of the Columbine High School massacre
- Klec, Milan, (born 1954), poet
- Kleene, Stephen Cole, (1909-1994), US mathematician, computer scientist
- Klee, Paul, (1879-1940), Swiss-born painter
- Kleiber, Erich, (1890-1956), conductor
- Klein, Calvin, (born 1942), US clothing designer
- Klein, Felix, (1849-1925), geometer
- Klein, Lawrence, (born 1920), economist
- Klein, Melanie, (1882-1960), psychologist
- Klein, Ralph, (born 1942), Canadian politician
- Klein, Yves, (1928-1962), painter
- Kleiser, Randal, (born 1946), film director
- Kleist, Heinrich von, (1777-1811), dramatist, author
- Kleitman, Nathaniel, (1895-1999), sleep researcher
- Klemperer, Otto, (1885-1973), conductor
- Klenau, Paul August von, (born 1883), composer
- Klerk, Frederik Willem de, (born 1936), South African president
- Klimt, Gustav, (1862-1918), Austrian artist
- Klinar, Marjan, (1922-1983), poet
- Klinger, Friedrich Maximilian, (1752-1831), dramatist, author
- Klinger, Max, (died 1920), artist
- Klipping, Erik V, (died 1286), king of Denmark (murder)
- Klopcic, Mile, (1905-1984), poet
- Klopstock, Friedrich Gottlieb, (1724-1803), poet
- Klose, Miroslav, (born 1978), football player, National Team of Germany
- Kluge, Alexander, (born 1932), dramatist, author
- Klugman, Jack, (born 1922), 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: Kl."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Knaff, Alain, (born 1969), programmer
- Knapp, Jennifer, (born 1980), US gospel singer
- Knauss, Sarah, (born 1880)
- Kneebone, Tom (c1932-2003), comedian
- Knef, Hildegard, (1925-2002), actress, singer, writer
- Kneipp, Sebastian, (1821-1897), naturopathist
- Kne, Majda, (born 1954), poet
- Knievel, Evel, (born 1938), US professional daredevil
- Knight, Bobby, (born 1940), US basketball coach
- Knight, Damon, (1922-2002), US science fiction author
- Knight, Frank (1885-1972), economist
- Knight, Gladys, (born 1944), US soul singer
- Knight, Suge, (born 1965), record producer
- Knight, Ted, (died 1986), actor
- Knittel, John, (1891-1970), dramatist
- Knobelsdorff, Georg Wenzeslaus von, (1699-1753), master builder
- Knopfler, Mark, (born 1949), US Dire Straits musician
- Knotts, Don, (born 1924), actor
- Knox, Henry, (1750-1805), US soldier, Secretary of War
- Knox, John, (1505-1572), Protestant Reformer of Scotland
- Knox, Ronald, (1888-1957), author
- Knoxville, Johnny, (born 1971), ("Jackass"), television personality
- Knudsen, Gunnar, (1908-1910), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Knüsel, Melchior Josef Martin, (1813-1889), Swiss president
- Knuth, Donald E, (born 1938), computer scientist
- Knuth, Gustav, (1901-1978), actor
- Knyphausen, Dodo, (1583-1636), Swedish soldier
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: Kn."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kobal, Fran, (1881-1937), poet
- Kobal, Josip, (1870-1888), poet
- Kobav, Andrej, (born 1593), Slovene mathematician.
- Kobayashi, Masaki, (born 1916), Japanese director
- Kobe, Boris, (1905-1981), architect, painter.
- Kobell, Wolfgang Franz von, (1803-1882), mineralogists
- Kobelt, Karl, (1891-1968), President of Switzerland
- Kobilca, Ivana, (1861-1926), paintress.
- Kobo, Abe, (died 1993), Japanese author
- Kobun, emperor of Japan, (648-672)
- Kocbek, Edvard, (1904-1981), poet
- Kocbek, Matjaz, (born 1946), poet
- Kochanowski, Jan, (born 1530), poet
- Koch, Edward I
- Köchel, Ludwig Alois Ferdinand, (born 1800), Austrian researcher on music
- Kocher, Emil Theodor, (1841-1917), Swiss physiologist
- Koch, Helge von, (1870-1924), mathematician
- Koch, Ilse, (1906-1967), German wife of Karl Otto Koch "Bitch of Buchenwald"
- Kochina, Pelagaeia Polubarinova, (1899-1999), mathematician
- Koch, Karl Otto, (1897-1945), Nazi death camp head
- Koch, Robert, (1843-1910), German physician and bacteriologist
- Koch, Walter Karl, surgeon
- Kodaira, Kunihiko, (1915-1997), Japanese mathematician
- Kodály, Zoltán, (1882-1967), composer
- Koder, Anton, (1851-1918), poet
- Koder, Urban, (born 1928), composer, conductor, jazz trumpeter
- Koechlin, Charles, (born 1867), composer
- Koehler, Robert, (1850-1917), German-born US painter
- König, Franz Cardinal, Archbishop emeritus of Vienna
- Koenig, Walter, (born 1936), US actor
- Koeppen, Wolfgang, (born 1906)
- Koerber, Ernst von, (1850-1919), Minister-President of Austria (1916)
- Koestler, Arthur, (1905-1983), Hungarian-born writer
- Kogan, Leonid, (1924-1982), violinist
- Kogon, emperor of Japan, (1313-1364)
- Kogyoku, empress of Japan, (594-661)
- Kohlberg, Lawrence, (1927-1987), psychologist
- Kohl, Hannelore, (died 2001), wife of ex-chancellor of Germany Helmut Kohl
- Kohl, Helmut, (1930-1998), German chancellor 1982-1998
- Kohn, Walter, (born 1923)
- Kohout, Pavel, (born 1928), writer
- Kohrs, Conrad, (died 1920), rancher
- Koirala, Manisha, Indian Actress
- Koivisto, Mauno, (born 1923), president of Finland 1982-1994
- Koivu, Saku, Finnish-born ice hockey player
- Koji Kondo, (born 1960), Japanese composer
- Kokaku, emperor of Japan
- Koken, empress of Japan
- Kokhba, Simon bar, leader of the second Jewish revolt
- Koko, emperor of Japan
- Kokoschka, Oskar, (1886-1980), dramatist, author
- Kokot, Andrej, (born 1936), poet
- Kok, Wim, (born 1938), Dutch prime minister
- Kolb, Claudia, (born 1949), swimming star
- Kolbe, Adolph Wilhelm Hermann Kolbe, (1818-1884), chemist
- Kolbe, Maximillian, (1894-1941)
- Kolehmainen, Hannes, (1889-1966) Finnish athlete
- Kollek, Teddy, (born 1911), mayor of Jerusalem
- Koller, Arnold, (born 1933), Swiss Federal Councilor
- Kollo, Rene, (born 1937), tenor
- Kollontai, Alexandra, Soviet official
- Kollwitz, Kathe, (1867-1945), painter
- Kolmogorov, Andrey Nikolaevich, (1903-1987), mathematician
- Kolmogorov, Andrey Nikolayevich, (1903-1987), mathematician
- Kolping, Adolf, (1813-1865), theologian
- Kolstad, Peder L, (1931-1932), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Kolthoff, Isaac, (born 1894), chemist
- Koltschina, Alevtina, (born 1930), Soviet skier
- Kolzig, Olaf, (born 1970), NHL goalie
- Komarov, Vladimir, (1927-1967), Soviet cosmonaut
- Komei, emperor of Japan, (1771-1840), Emperor of Japan
- Komelj, Miklavz, (born 1970), poet
- Komunyakaa, Yusef, (born 1948), US poet
- Konin, emperor of Japan, (709-782)
- Konoe Fumimaro, (1891-1945), Japanese WW2 Prime Minister
- Konopka, Tadewurz Wladzui/Tadeus Wladyslaw (1923-1986), aka Ted Knight
- Konow, Gunnar, (1913-1920), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Konow, Wollert, (1910-1912), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Konrad II Ota, (1189-1191), Bohemian aristocrat
- Konrad I of Poland, (1241-1243), Polish ruler
- Konsalik, Heinz G, (1921-1999), writer, aged 78
- Kontsevich, Maxim, (born 1964), mathematician
- Koolhaas, Rem, (born 1944), Dutch-born architect
- Kool Keith, (unknown-), US rapper
- Kooning, Willem de, (1904-1997), painter
- Koons, Jeff, (born 1955), US kitsch artist
- Koontz, Dean R, US horror author
- Kooti, Te, (c. 1820-1891), Māori leader
- Kopelew, Lew, (1912-1997), (Lev Kopelev), author
- Kopitar, Jernej, (1780-1844), philologist.
- Koppel, Ted, (born 1940), US journalist
- Kops, Jan, (died 1849), agriculturist, vicar
- Koranter, Sonja, (born 1948), poet
- Korbut, Olga, (born 1955), gymnast
- Korchnoi, Viktor, (born 1931), chess player
- Korczak, Janusz, (1878-1942), Polish child expert
- Korda, Alexander, (1893-1956), film director
- Korekiyo, Takahashi, (1854-1936), Japanese author
- Koresh, David, (1959-1993), US Branch Davidian cult leader
- Korman, Harvey, (born 1927), actor, comedian
- Kornbluth, Cyril M, (1923-1958), US science fiction author
- Korner, Alexis, (1928-1984), English musician
- Korner, Theodor, (1873-1957), general and politician
- Kornhauser, Aleksandra, (born 1926), chemist.
- Kornilov, Lavr Georgevich, (1870-1918), Russian general
- Koroknay-Palicz, Alex, (born 1981), activist
- Korolev, Sergei, (1907-1966), Soviet rocket designer
- Kortner, Fritz, (1892-1970), director
- Korvald, Lars, (1972-1973), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Korzybski, Alfred, (1879-1950), Polish-born semanticist
- Kosciuszko, Tadeusz, (1746-1817), Pole
- Koseski, Jovan, (1798-1884), poet
- Kosinski, Jerzy, (1933-1991), US writer
- Kosmac, France, (1922-1974), poet, film director, publicist.
- Kosmac, Rudi, (1932-1981), actor
- Kosma I of Alexandria, (729-730), Coptic Pope
- Kosma II of Alexandria, (851-858), Coptic Pope
- Kosma III of Alexandria, (921-933), Coptic Pope
- Kosovel, Srecko, (1904-1926), poet
- Kossak, Wojciech, (born 1857), Polish painter
- Koss, Johann Olav, (born 1968), speed skater
- Koster, Henry, (1905-1988), film director
- Kostina, Oksana, (died 1993), Russian gymnast.
- Kosto, Aad, (born 1938), theologian, actor, assistant Secretary of Justice of the Netherlands
- Kosuta, Miroslav, (born 1936), poet
- Kos, Vladimir, (born 1924), poet
- Kosygin, Alexei, (1904-1980), former Soviet premier
- Kotnik, Rudolf, (1931-1996), painter.
- Kotoku, emperor of Japan, (597-654)
- Kotoku Shusui, (1871-1911), Japanese anarchist
- Kotto, Yaphet, (born 1937), African-born US actor
- Kotzebue, August Friedrich Ferdinand von, (1761-1819), German Dramatist.
- Koudelka, Josef, (born 1938), photographer
- Koufax, Sandy, (born 1935), MLB player
- Kournikova, Anna, (born 1981), Russian professional tennis player
- Kovacevich, Dick, CEO, Wells Fargo
- Kovacs, Ernie, (1919-1962), US comedian
- Kovalevskaya, Sofia, (1850-1891), mathematician
- Kovic, Kajetan, (born 1931), poet
- Kowa, Seki, (1642-1708), mathematician
- Kozina, Marjan, (1907-1965), composer.
- Kozler, Peter, (1824-1879), lawyer, geographer, politician, manufacturer.
- Kozlovsky, Alexey, (died 1977), composer
- Kozole, Damjan, (born 1964), film director and scenarist.
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: Ko."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kraepelin, Emil, (1856-1926), psychologist
- Krafft-Ebing, Richard von, (1840-1902), sexologist
- Kraft, William, composer
- Krahl, Hilde, (1917-1999), actress
- Krajicek, Richard, (Netherlands)
- Krakar, Lojze, (1929-1995), poet
- Kralj, Alojz, (born 1937), electrical engineer.
- Kralj, Franc, (1895-1960), painter
- Kralj, Tone, (1900-1975), painter
- Krall, Diana, (born 1964), jazz pianist
- Kramberger, Ivan, (1936-1992), charitable man
- Kramberger, Taja, (born 1970), poet
- Kramer, Jack, (born 1921), tennis star
- Kramer, Jerry, (born 1936), American football star
- Kramer, Josef, (1906-1945), head of Bergen-Belsen concentration camp
- Kramer, Stanley, (1913-2001), US film director
- Kramnik, Vladimir, (born 1975), chess player
- Kramp, Willi, (1909-1986), writer
- Krantz, Judith, (born 1937), US author
- Krasovec, Metka, (born 1941), painter, graphic artist
- Kraus, Alfredo, (died 1999)
- Kraus, Joseph Martin, (1756-1792), composer
- Kraus, Karl, (1874-1936), dramatist, author
- Kravitz, Lenny, (born 1964), US guitarist & singer
- Kravos, Marko, (born 1943), poet
- Krebs, Johann Tobias, (died 1762), composer
- Kreisky, Bruno, (1911-1990), Chancellor of Austria
- Kreskin, (born 1935), mentalist
- Kress, Nancy, (born 1948), US science fiction writer
- Kretschmer, Otto, (1912-1998), U-boat commander
- Kreuger, Ivar, industrialist
- Kreuk, Kristin, (born 1982), US actress
- Kreutzmann, Bill, (born 1946), of The Grateful Dead
- Kreviazuk, Chantal, Canadian singer
- Krieger, Robby, (born 1946), musician ("The Doors")
- Krienbühl, Franz, (1929-2002), speed skater
- Kripke, Saul, (born 1940), philosopher
- Krishnamurti, Jiddu, (1895-1986), Indian philosopher
- Kristel, Sylvia, (born 1952), French erotic actress
- Kristen, Wulf, (born 1934), writer and recipient of the Heinrich Mann Prize 1989
- Kristl, Stanko, (born 1922), architect.
- Kristofferson, Kris, (born 1936), US singer-songwriter
- Krizaj, Bojan, (born 1957), alpine skier, Olympic athlete.
- Krizkovsky, Pavel, (born 1820), composer
- Kroc, Ray, (1902-1984), business person
- Kroetz, Franz Xaver, (born 1946), dramatist, author
- Krog, Nicolay Johan Lohmann, (1840-1841), Norwegian Prime Minister
- Krol, Joe, Canadian athlete
- Kroller-Muller, Helene, (1869-1939), German-born Dutch art collector
- Kroll, Leon, (1884-1974), American painter
- Kronecker, Leopold, (1823-1891), mathematician
- Kropotkin, Peter, (1842-1921), Russian anarchist
- Kroto, Sir Harold, (born 1939), English chemist
- KRS One, US rapper
- Krug, Manfred, (born 1937), actor
- Kruger, Paul, (1825-1904), South African statesman
- Krugman, Paul, (born 1953), American economist and newspaper columnist
- Krum, (died 814), khan of Bulgaria (brain haemorrage)
- Krupa, Gene, (1909-1973), US jazz drummer
- Krupp, Alfred, (died 1887), (Alfried Felix Alwyn Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach}, German munitions manufacturer
- Krupp, Friedrich Alfred, (1854-1902), industrialist
- Kruse, Martin, (born 1929), theologian
- Krusenstern, Adam Johann von, (1770-1846), naval commander
- Krush, Irina, (born 1983), chess player
- Kruss, James, (1926-1997), author
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of people by name: Kr."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kubasov, Valeri, (born 1935), Russian astronaut
- Kublai Khan, (1215-1294), Mongol emperor
- Kubrick, Stanley, (1928-1999), American film director
- Kucan, Milan, (born 1941), president of Slovenia
- Kucera, Jan, (born 1928), author
- Kucey, Robert N, (born 1940), Canadian novelist, writer
- Kudrow, Lisa, (born 1963), American actress
- Kuehn, Dieter, (born 1935), narrator, dramatist and essayist
- Kuehn, Heinz, (1912-1992), politician
- Kuenneke, Eduard, (1885-1953), composer
- Kuhar, Lovro, (1893-1950), author.
- Kuhn, Thomas, (1922-1996), philosopher of science
- Kuhn, Thomas Samuel, (1922-1996), writer and philosopher
- Kuiper, Gerard, (1905-1973), astronomer
- Kujau, Konrad, (1938-2000), German forger of The Hitler diaries
- Kujo Yoritsugu, (1239-1256), Japanese shogun
- Kujo Yoritsune, (1218-1256), Japanese shogun
- Kukeiha, Club, composer
- Kulik, Ilia, (born 1977), figure skating champion
- Kulongoski, Ted, (born 1940), US Oregon Governor
- Kumar, Dilip, Legendary Actor (India).
- Kunanbaev, Abai, (1845-1904)
- Kun, Bela, (1886-1936), Hungarian communist
- Kundera, Milan, (born 1929), Czech writer
- Kunert, Gunter, (born 1929), writer and lyricist
- Kung, Hans, (born 1928), theologian
- Kung, H. H, (1881-1967)
- Kuniaki, Koiso, (1880-1950), Japanese WW2 lieutenant general
- Kuniyoshi, Yasuo, (1893-1953), American painter
- Kunstler, William, (1919-1995), U.S. lawyer, liberal activist
- Kuntner, Tone, (born 1943), poet
- Kupcinet, Irv, (1912-2003), newspaper columnist
- Kupcinet, Karyn, (died 1963), actress
- Kupka, Frantisek, (1871-1957), Czech painter
- Kupkovic, Ladislav, (born 1936), composer
- Kuralt, Charles, (1934-1997), television reporter
- Kuratowki, Kazimierz, (1896-1980), Polish mathematician
- Kurmangazy, (1823-1896)
- Kurosawa Akira, (1910-1998), Japanese film director
- Kürten, Peter, (1883-1932), the "Vampire of Düsseldorf"
- Kurtz, Swoosie, (born 1944), actress
- Kusar, Meta, (born 1952), poet
- Kuscer, Ivan, (1918-1979), physicist.
- Kutcher, Ashton, (born 1978), actor
- Kutta, Martin Wilhelm, (1867-1944), mathematician
- Kuttner, Henry, (died 1958), US science fiction author
- Kuzmin, Mikhail Alekseevich, (1872-1936), poet
- Kuznetsov, Nikolai Gerasimovich, (1904-1974), USSR 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: Ku."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kwan, Michelle, (born 1980), US figure skater
- Kwasniewski, Aleksander, (born 1954), Polish president
- Kweli, Talib, singer-songwriter
- Kwontaek, Im, (born 1936)
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: Kw."
(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 Ka - Kb - Kc - Kd - Ke - Kf - Kg - Kh - Ki - Kj - Kk - Kl - Km - Kn - Ko - Kp - Kq - Kr - Ks - Kt - Ku - Kv - Kw - Kx - Ky - Kz
- Kyd, Thomas, (1558 - 1594), English dramatist
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: Ky."
(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
- Kabuki make up syndrome
- Kalam Hafeez syndrome
- Kaler Garrity Stern syndrome
- Kallikrein hypertension
- Kallman syndrome with Spastic paraplegia
- Kallmann syndrome with heart disease
- Kallmann syndrome, type 1, X linked
- Kallmann syndrome, type 3, recessive
- Kalyanraman syndrome
- Kantaputra Gorlin syndrome
- Kaolin pneumoconiosis
- Kaplan Plauchu Fitch syndrome
- Kaplowitz Bodurtha syndrome
- Kaposi sarcoma
- Kaposiform hemangio-endothelioma
- Kapur Toriello syndrome
- Karandikar Maria Kamble syndrome
- Karsch Neugebauer syndrome
- Kartagener syndrome
- Kashani Strom Utley syndrome
- Kasznica Carlson Coppedge syndrome
- Kathisophobia
- Katsantoni Papadakou Lagoyanni syndrome
- Katz syndrome
- Kaufman oculocerebrofacial syndrome
- Kawasaki syndrome
- KBG syndrome
- Kearns-Sayre syndrome
- Keloids
- Kennedy disease
- Kennerknecht Sorgo Oberhoffer syndrome
- Kennerknecht Vogel syndrome
- Kenny Caffey syndrome
- Kenny-Caffey syndrome, Type 1
- Keratitis, hereditary
- Keratoacanthoma familial
- Keratoacanthoma
- Keratoconjunctivitis sicca
- Keratoconus posticus circumscriptus
- Keratoconus
- Keratoderma hypotrichosis leukonychia
- Keratoderma palmoplantar deafness
- Keratoderma palmoplantar spastic paralysis
- Keratoderma palmoplantaris transgrediens
- Keratolytic winter erythema
- Keratomalacia
- Keratosis focal palmoplantar gingival
- Keratosis follicularis dwarfism cerebral atrophy
- Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans
- Keratosis palmoplantaris adenocarcinoma of the colon
- Keratosis palmoplantaris esophageal colon cancer
- Keratosis palmoplantaris papulosa
- Keratosis palmoplantaris with corneal dystrophy
- Keratosis palmoplantar-periodontopathy
- Keratosis, seborrheic
- Kerion celsi
- Kernicterus
- Keutel syndrome
- Ki-1cell lymphoma
- KID syndrome
- Kifafa seizure disorder
- Kikuchi disease
- Kimura disease
- King-Denborough syndrome
- Kleeblattschaedel syndrome
- Kleine Levin Syndrome
- Kleiner Holmes syndrome
- Klippel Feil deformity conductive deafness absent vagina
- Klippel Feil syndrome dominant type
- Klippel Feil syndrome recessive type
- Klippel Trenaunay Weber syndrome
- Klippel-Feil syndrome
- Klumpke paralysis
- Kluver-Bucy syndrome
- Kniest dysplasia
- Kniest like dysplasia lethal
- Knobloch layer syndrome
- Knuckle pads, leuconychia and sensorineural deafness
- Kobberling-Dunnigan syndrome
- Kocher-Debré-Semélaigne syndrome
- Kohler disease
- Kohlschutter Tonz syndrome
- Konigsmark Knox Hussels syndrome
- Koone Rizzo Elias syndrome
- Korsakoff's syndrome
- Korula Wilson Salomonson syndrome
- Kostmann syndrome
- Kosztolanyi syndrome
- Kotzot-Richter syndrome
- Kousseff Nichols syndrome
- Kousseff syndrome
- Kowarski syndrome
- Kozlowski Brown Hardwick syndrome
- Kozlowski Celermajer syndrome
- Kozlowski Massen syndrome
- Kozlowski Ouvrier syndrome
- Kozlowski Rafinski Klicharska syndrome
- Kozlowski Tsuruta Taki syndrome
- Kozlowski Warren Fisher syndrome
- Kozlowski-Krajewska syndrome
- Krabbe leukodystrophy
- Krasnow Qazi syndrome
- Krause-Kivlin syndrome
- Krauss Herman Holmes syndrome
- Krieble Bixler syndrome
- Kumar Levick syndrome
- Kurczynski Casperson syndrome
- Kuskokwim disease
- Kuster Majewski Hammerstein syndrome
- Kuster syndrome
- Kuzniecky syndrome
- Kyasanur Forrest disease
- Kyphosis brachyphalangy optic atrophy
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "List of rare diseases starting with K."
(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
- "Kamera" - Yankee Hotel Foxtrot (2002) by Wilco
- "Kangaroo" - Third-Sister Lovers (1975) by Big Star
- "Karma Patrol" - They Sure Don't Make Basketball Shorts Like They Used To (1998) by Hoobastank
- "Karma Police" - OK Computer (1997) by Radiohead
- "Kashmir" - Physical Graffiti (1975) by Led Zeppelin
- "Kathy With a K's Song" - Oh Holy Fools: The Music of Son, Ambulance & Bright Eyes (2001) by Bright Eyes
- "Katie Come True" - Oh Holy Fools: The Music of Son, Ambulance & Bright Eyes (2001) by Son, Ambulance
- "Katy Too" - Johnny Cash
- "Keep on, Keeping On" - Bad As I Wanna Be (1996) by MC Lyte
- "Keep Talking" - The Division Bell (1994) by Pink Floyd
- "Keep Your Shit the Hardest" - Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood (1996) by DMX
- "Keeping the Faith" - De La Soul Is Dead (1991) by De La Soul
- "Kick in the Door" - Life After Death (1997) by Notorious B.I.G
- "Kicked out of the House" - De La Soul Is Dead (1991) by De La Soul
- "Kicker of Elves" - Bee Thousand (1994) by Guided by Voices
- "Kill All the White Man" - Longest Line (1992) by NOFX
- "Kill You" - The Marshall Mathers LP (2000) by Eminem
- "Killer" - Adamski (released as single in 1990, and remixed on Liveandirect later that year)
- "Killer in the Home" - Kings of the Wild Frontier (1980) by Adam & the Ants
- "Killer Queen" - Sheer Heart Attack (1974) by Queen
- "Killer Wolf" - Danzig II: Lucifuge (1990) by Danzig
- "Killin' Time" - Killin' Time (1989) by Clint Black
- "Killing Me Softly With His Song" - Killing Me Softly (1973) by Roberta Flack, later covered by The Fugees
- "King for a Day" - Nimrod (1997) by Green Day
- "King of Comedy" - Monster (1994) by R.E.M
- "King of New Orleans" - Friction Baby (1996) by Better Than Ezra
- "King of the Road" - Roger Miller (1965), later covered by Jewel Akens, Randy Travis, Faron Young, Glen Campbell, Dean Martin, David Houston, Ray Coniff, Billy Preston and Boxcar Willie
- "King Rides By" - What Would the Community Think (1996) by Cat Power
- "King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown" - King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown (1976) by King Tubby and Augustus Pablo
- "Kings of the Wild Frontier" - Kings of the Wild Frontier (1980) by Adam & the Ants
- "Kiss and Tell" - Coast to Coast Motel (1995) by G. Love & Special Sauce
- "Kiss Me Where It Smells Funny" - ''One Fierce Beer Coaster (1996) by Bloodhound Gang
- "Kiss Me, Son of God" - Lincoln (1988) by They Might Be Giants
- "Kiss Off" - Violent Femmes (1981) by Violent Femmes
- "Kiss the Bride" - Too Low for Zero (1983) by Elton John
- "Kiss the Floor" - Congregation (1991) by Afghan Whigs
- "Kitchenware and Candybars" - Purple (1994) by Stone Temple Pilots
- "Kitty's Back" - The Wild, the Innocent and the E-Street Shuffle (1973) by Bruce Springsteen & the E-Street Band
- "Kizza Me" - Third-Sister Lovers (1975) by Big Star
- "Knickers" - What You See Is What You Get (2000) by Chumbawumba
- "Knock Knock" - Veni Vidi Vicious (2000) by The Hives
- "Knock Me Down" - Mother's Milk (1989) by Red Hot Chili Peppers
- "Knocking on Heaven's Door" - Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid (1973) soundtrack by Bob Dylan, later covered by Guns n' Roses (Use Your Illusion II, 1991), Jerry Garcia (Run for the Roses, 1982) and Eric Clapton (After Midnight, 1984)
- "Knocks Me Off My Feet" - Songs in the Key of Life (1976) by Stevie Wonder
- "Know Your Chicken" - Viva! La Woman (1996) by Cibo Matto
- "Knowledge" - Energy (1990) by Operation Ivy
- "Kola Kola" - London Calling (1979) by The Clash
- "Kozmic Blues" - I Got Dem Ol' Kozmic Blues Again Mama (1969) by Janis Joplin
- "KRS-One" - 40 Oz. to Freedom (1992) by Sublime
- "Kyoto Song" - The Head on the Door (1985) by The Cure
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: K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Like Monty Cantsin, Karen Eliot and Luther Blissett, Michael K. is a nom de plume that anyone is welcome to use for an artistic endeavour. These multiple identies are a situationist inspired antic that are also practised by the Mail Art community and Neoist conceptual artist and author Stewart Home.In particular the use of the Michael K. identity has konnections with The KLF. Michael K. first appeared in the KLF mythos in connection with The White Room movie and myth.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Michael K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Momentum is the Noether charge of translational invariance. As such, even fields as well as other things can have momentum, not just particles. However, in curved spacetime which isn't asymptotically Minkowski, momentum isn't defined at all.
In physics, momentum is a physical quantity related to the velocity and mass of an object.
Momentum in classical mechanics
In classical mechanics, momentum (traditionally written as p) is defined as the product of mass and velocity. It is thus a vector quantity.
The SI unit of momentum is newton-seconds, which can alternatively be expressed with the units kg.m/s.
An impulse changes the momentum of an object. An impulse is calculated as the integral of force with respect to duration.
using the definition of force yields:
See also angular momentum.
Momentum in relativistic mechanics
It is commonly believed that the physical laws should be invariant under translationss. Thus, the definition of momentum was changed when Einstein formulated Special relativity so that its magnitude would remain invariant under relativistic transformations. See physical conservation law. We now define a vector, called the 4-momentum thus:
where E is the total energy of the system, and p is called the "relativistic momentum" defined thus:
- [E/c p]
and
- E = γmc2
- p = γmv
The "length" of the vector that remains constant is defined thus:
- .
Massless objects such as photons also carry momentum; the formula is p=E/c, where E is the energy the photon carries and c is the speed of light.
Momentum in quantum mechanics
In quantum mechanics momentum is defined as an operator on the wave function. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle defines limits on how accurately the momentum and position of a single observable system can be known at once.
Figurative use
A process may be said to gain momentum. The terminology implies that it requires effort to start such a process, but that it is relatively easy to keep it going.
See also Slippery slope.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Momentum."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Poker jargon:
; Kansas City low
- 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
; keep (a bettor) honest
- Deuce-to-seven lowball.
; kicker
- To call a final bet while not expecting to win, for the primary purpose of discouraging future bluffs.
; kill, kill pot
- A card not directly involved in evaluating a hand, but that may be used for breaking ties. See kicker. Also "side card".
- A non-paired card kept before the draw in draw poker in hope of pairing it.
; kilter
- An occasional hand played at double the usual stakes at an agreed-upon time; often when a player wins two hands in a row, or when a player scoops in a split-pot game. The "lucky" player is often required to post an extra blind for double the usual blind amount. See also "half-kill".
; kitty
- A non-standard poker hand of various description. Also "pelter".
- A pool of money built by collecting small amounts from certain pots, often used to buy refreshments, cards, and so on. The home-game equivalent of a rake.
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 K."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Potassium is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol K and atomic number 19. This is a soft, silvery-white metallic alkali metal that occurs naturally bound to other elements in seawater and many minerals. It oxidizes rapidly in air, is very reactive, especially in water, and resembles sodium chemically.
Potassium - Calcium Na
K
Rb
Full tableGeneral Name, Symbol, Number Potassium, K, 19 Series Alkali metals Group, Period, Block 1(IA), 4 , s Density, Hardness 856 kg/m3, 0.4 Appearance silvery white Atomic Properties Atomic weight 39.0983 amu Atomic radius (calc.) 220 (243) pm Covalent radius 196 pm van der Waals radius 275 pm Electron configuration [Ar]4s4s1 e- 's per energy level 2, 8, 8, 1 Oxidation states (Oxide) 1 (strong base) Crystal structure cubic body centered Physical Properties State of matter solid Melting point 336.53 K (146.08 °F) Boiling point 1032 K (1398 °F) Molar volume 45.94 ×1010-3 m3/mol Heat of vaporization 79.87 kJ/mol Heat of fusion 2.334 kJ/mol Vapor pressure 1.06×10-4Pa at __ K Speed of sound 2000 m/s at 293.15 K Miscellaneous Electronegativity 0.82 (Pauling scale) Specific heat capacity 757 J/(kg*K) Electrical conductivity 13.9 106/m ohm Thermal conductivity 102.4 W/(m*K) 1st ionization potential 418.8 kJ/mol 2nd ionization potential 3052 kJ/mol 3rd ionization potential 4420 kJ/mol 4th ionization potential 4420 kJ/mol 5th ionization potential 7975 kJ/mol 6th ionization potential 9590 kJ/mol 7th ionization potential 11343 kJ/mol 8th ionization potential 14944 kJ/mol 9th ionization potential 16963.7 kJ/mol 10th ionization potential 48610 kJ/mol 'Most Stable Isotopes\'
iso NA half-life DM DE MeV DP 39K 93.26% K is stable with 20 neutrons 40K 0.012% 1.277 E9y beta-
epsilon1.311
1.50540Ca
40Ar41K 6.73% K is stable with 22 neutrons SI units & STP are used except where noted. Notable Characteristics
Potassium is the second lightest and the most reactive and most electropositive of the metals. This is a soft solid that easily is cut with a knife and is silvery in color on fresh surfaces. It oxidizes in air rapidly and must be stored in mineral oil for preservation.Similar to other alkali metals potassium decomposes in water with the release of hydrogen. When in water it catches fire spontaneously and its salts emit a violet color when exposed to a flame.
Applications
Many potassium salts are very important, and include, potassium; bromide, carbonate, chlorate, chloride, chromate, cyanide, dichromate, hydroxide, iodide, nitrate, sulfate.
- Potassium oxide, best known as potash, is primarily used in fertilizer.
- Potassium chloride is used as a substitute for table salt and is also used to stop the heart in executions by lethal injection. It is also used in fertilizer.
- Potassium nitrate is used in gunpowder.
- Potassium carbonate is used in glass manufacture
- This element is an essential component needed in plant growth and is found in most soil types.
- In animal cellss potassium is vital to keeping cells alive (see Na-K pump)
- NaK an alloy of sodium and potassium is used as a heat-transfer medium.
History
Potassium (English, potash L. kalium) was discovered in 1807 by Sir Humphry Davy who derived it from caustic potash (KOH. This alkali metal and was the first metal that was isolated by electrolysis.Occurrence
This element makes up about 2.4% of the weight of the Earth's crust and is the seventh most abundant element in it. Due to its insolubility, it is very difficult to obtain potassium from its minerals.However other minerals, such as carnallite, langbeinite, polyhalite, and sylvite are found in ancient lake and sea beds. These minerals form extensive deposits in these envrionments making extracting potassium and its salts more economical. The principle source of pottassium, potash is mined in California, Germany, New Mexico, Utah, and in other places around the world. At 3000 ft below the surface of Saskatchewan lies large deposits of potash which may become important sources of this element and its salts in the future.
The oceans are another source of potassium but the quantify present in a given volume of seawater is relatively low compared to sodium.
Potassium is never found unbound in nature and is produced through electrolysis of its hydroxide in a process that has changed little since Davy. Thermal methods also are employed in potassium production
Isotopes
There are seventeen isotopes of potassium known to exist. The non-synthetic form of potassium are composed of three isotopes: K-39 (93.3%), K-40 (0.01%) and K-41 (6.7%). Naturally occurring K-40 decays to stable Ar-40 (11.2%) by electron capture and by positron emission, and decays to stable Ca-40 (88.8%) by negatron emission; K-40 has a half-life of 1.250 × 109 years.The decay of K-40 to Ar-40 is commonly used as a method for dating rocks. The conventional K-Ar dating method depends on the assumption that the rocks contained no argon at the time of formation and that all the subsequent radiogenic argon (i.e., Ar-40) was quantitatively retained, i.e., closed system. Minerals are dated by measurement of the concentration of potassium, and the amount of radiogenic Ar-40 that has accumulated. The minerals that are best suited for dating include biotite, muscovite, and plutonic/high grade metamorphic hornblende, and volcanic feldspar; whole rock samples from volcanic flows and shallow instrusives can also be dated if they are unaltered.
Outside of dating, K isotopes have been used extensively in studies of weathering; K isotopes have also be used for nutrient cycling studies because K is a macro-nutrient required for life.
Precautions
Potassium reacts violently with water. This metal should therefore be kept under a mineral oil such as kerosene for this reason.
External Links
- WebElements.com - Potassium
- EnvironmentalChemistry.com - Potassium
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Potassium."
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Vitamin K is a group of 2-methilo-naphthoquinone derivatives.It is a human vitamin, lipophilic (i.e. soluble in lipids) and therefore hydrophobic (i.e. insoluble in water). It is needed in the synthesis of proteins required for blood coagulation.
Normally it is produced by bacteria in the intestines, and dietary deficiency is extremely rare unless the intestines are heavily damaged.
Vitamin K is involved in the formation of calcium-binding groups in proteins. These calcium-binding groups are called Gla-residues, and the proteins containing these residues are designated as Gla-proteins. The Gla-residues are essential for the biological activity of all Gla-proteins. At this time fewer than 12 human Gla-proteins have been discovered, and they play key roles in the regulation of three physiological processes:
Vitamin K-deficiency may occur by disturbed intestinal uptake (such as would occur in a bile duct obstruction), by therapeutic or accidental intake of vitamin K-antagonists or, very rarely, by nutritional vitamin K-deficiency. As a result of the acquired vitamin K-deficiency, Gla-residues are not or incompletely formed and hence the Gla-proteins are inactive. Lack of control of the three processes mentioned above may lead to the following: risk of uncontrolled and massive bleeding, cartilage calcification and severe malformation of developing bone, or deposition of insoluble calcium salts in the arterial vessel walls.
- blood coagulation,
- bone metabolism,
- vascular biology.
Discovery of vitamin K
In the late 1920s, Danish scientist Henrik Dam investigated the role of cholesterol by feeding chickens with a cholesterol-depleted diet. After several weeks, the animals developed hemorrhages and started bleeding. These defects could not be restored by adding purified cholesterol to the diet. It appeared that - together with the cholesterol - a second compound had been extracted from the food, and this compound was called the coagulation vitamin. The new vitamin received the letter K because the initial discoveries were reported in a German journal, in which it was designated as Koagulations Vitamin.
For several decades the vitamin K-deficient chick model was the only method of quantitating of vitamin K in various foods: the chicks were made vitamin K-deficient and subsequently fed with known amounts of vitamin K-containing food. The extent to which blood coagulation was restored by the diet was taken as a measure for its vitamin K content.
The precise function of vitamin K was not discovered before 1974, when the vitamin K-dependent coagulation factor prothrombin was isolated from cows which had received a high dose of the vitamin K-antagonist warfarin. It was shown that normal prothrombin contained 10 unusual amino acid residues which were identified as g-carboxyglutamate (abbreviation: Gla). Prothrombin isolated from warfarin-treated cows had normal glutamate at the Gla-positions, and was designated as descarboxyprothrombin. The extra carboxyl group in Gla made clear that vitamin K plays a role in a carboxylation reaction during which Glu is converted into Gla.
"Vitamin K" is also a slang term for the chemically and functionally unrelated drug Ketamine.
Figure 1: Chemical structures of vitamin K1 (phylloquinone, left structure) and vitamin K2 (menaquinones, right structure). Both contain a functional naphthoquinone ring and an aliphatic side chain. Phylloquinone has a phytyl side chain, whereas in menaquinone the side chain is composed of a varying number of isoprenoid residues. Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Vitamin K."
| 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 |
K | Danish | Kilobyte | Computing |
K | Dutch | Getal van Knudsen | Meteorology & Standards, Transportation |
K | English | Kayser | Chemistry, Meteorology & Standards |
k | Finnish | Kilo- | Electrical Engineering, Meteorology & Standards |
K | French | Cathode | Electrical Engineering |
K | German | Karat | Chemistry, Meteorology & Standards |
K | Greek | μήκος περιορισμού του συνελικτικού κώδικα | Computing |
K | Italian | Grado Kelvin | Meteorology & Standards |
| K + R | Dutch | Zoen- en Zoefplek | Social Sciences, Transportation |
| 1 K EEPROM | English | 1,000 bit electrically erasable programmable read only memory | N/A |
| T k o | French | Tonne-kilomètre offerte | Meteorology & Standards, Transportation |
| R K | German | Ring und Kugel | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |||
Synonyms: KSynonyms: a thousand (adj), one thousand (adj), thousand (adj), atomic number 19 (n), chiliad (n), grand (n), kelvin (n), potassium (n), thou (n), yard (n). (additional references) |
| Domain | Usage | |
Screenplays | K is back (Men in Black II; writing credit: Lowell Cunningham; Robert Gordon) K that won't work he's a Balchinian (Men in Black II; writing credit: Lowell Cunningham; Robert Gordon) Am I K in your book (The English Patient; writing credit: Anthony Minghella) | |
Lyrics | Hummin, hummin comin up at cha like Ralph K (Funkdafied; performing artist: Da Brat) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Fists of the Double K (1974) Milácku...? Hodíme se k sobe (1974) K Is for Killing (1974) El Extraño caso de Rachel K (1973) | |
Song Titles | I Got A Man (performing artist: Positive K) | |
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 |
![]() | Test Firing of 750 K Motor for ELV. Credit: NASA. | ![]() | Meteorological satellite NOAA K being readied for launch. Credit: NOAA in Space. |
![]() | Four F-15 Eagles from the 18th Wing, Kadena Air Base, Japan, fly next to Mt. Fuji, Japan, Nov. 22. Flying in the F-15D (foreground) is Secretary of the Air Force Whit Peters and pilot Capt. Joel Carey, 44th Fighter Squadron. (P.; photo by Master Sgt. Marvin K.. | ![]() | Capt. Joel Carey, 44th Fighter Squadron, provides a pre-flight briefing to Secretary of the Air Force Whit Peters prior to their F-15 Eagle flight to Kadena Air Base, Japan, Nov. 22. Peters is touring bases in the Pacific. (P.; photo by Master Sgt. Marvin K.. |
![]() | Architectural drawing for a drugstore and restaurant ("Whelan's Drugs"), Connecticut Avenue and K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. Perspective rendering. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | K N quick step dedicated to the Know Nothings. Credit: Library of Congress. |
![]() | Suter's Tavern, K Street at 31st, Washington, D.C. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | Exterior of Convention Hall, successor to Center Market, 5th and K streets, Washington, D.C.]. Credit: Library of Congress. |
![]() | Washington, D.C. Patients in Ward K of Armory Square Hospital. Credit: Library of Congress. | ![]() | View from the 2nd story of the residence of Mrs. Comre. John Rodgers, Franklin Row, K Street at 12 & 13 Sts, Washington, D.C., overlooking the backyard and adjacent neighborhood, and showing children standing on balconies. Credit: Library of Congress. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
![]() | ![]() |
| "Deaf Alphabet - K" by Luis Alves Commentary: "Deaf Alphabet - One Hand --------------------------- Notice: You can use this image, but please send me an e-mail if you use it, I really like to know when and where it's used, thanks :-)." | "Rise up" by Keith Corcoran Commentary: "Clibing out of the trenches every morning is no easy task. so i sit the camera on the handrail and snap away. this one looks decent. www.k eithcorcoran.com ." |
Source: photographs selected by the editor, with permission from the photographers. | |
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Health | Supplements of vitamins A, D, E, and K are given to ensure good nutrition. (references) | |
Most are consumed in your diet (exceptions being vitamins K and D which are produced by intestinal bacteria and sunlight on the skin, respectively). (references) | ||
They also should take vitamin K supplements after 34 weeks of pregnancy to reduce the risk of a blood-clotting disorder in infants called neonatal coagulopathy that can result from fetal exposure to epilepsy medications. (references) | ||
Economic History | Russia | Instead of T and I accounts, non-residents will be able to have K (convertible), N, (non-convertible), or F (individual) accounts. (references) |
Georgia | Georgia maintains an embassy in the United States at Suite 424, 1511 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005, telephone (202) 393-5959, fax (202) 393-4532. (references) | |
Colombia | OPIC joined Chase Manhattan Bank and other lending institutions to support K & M Engineering and Consulting Corporation in the Mamonal project (now owned by KMR Power Corporation), a natural gas-fired generation facility being built in Cartagena. (references) | |
Lexicography | Devil's Dictionary | JUSTICE, n. A commodity which is a more or less adulterated condition the State sells to the citizen as a reward for his allegiance, taxes and personal service. K K is a consonant that we get from the Greeks, but it can be traced away back beyond them to the Cerathians, a small commercial nation inhabiting the peninsula of Smero. In their tongue it was called Klatch, which means "destroyed." The form of the letter was originally precisely that of our H, but the erudite Dr. Snedeker explains that it was altered to its present shape to commemorate the destruction of the great temple of Jarute by an earthquake, circa 730 B.C. This building was famous for the two lofty columns of its portico, one of which was broken in half by the catastrophe, the other remaining intact. As the earlier form of the letter is supposed to have been suggested by these pillars, so, it is thought by the great antiquary, its later was adopted as a simple and natural -- not to say touching -- means of keeping the calamity ever in the national memory. It is not known if the name of the letter was altered as an additional mnemonic, or if the name was always Klatch and the destruction one of nature's pums. As each theory seems probable enough, I see no objection to believing both -- and Dr. Snedeker arrayed himself on that side of the question. |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| "K" is generally used as an alphabetical symbol -- approximately 74.24% of the time. "K" is used about 3,176 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 | 74.24% | 2,358 | 3,778 |
| Noun (proper) | 24.41% | 775 | 8,892 |
| Unclassified Items | 1.35% | 43 | 52,181 |
| Total | 100.00% | 3,176 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
| Country | Name | Country | Name |
| Australia | K & S Corporation Limited | Germany | K & S AG |
| Japan | K B Co., Ltd. | Malaysia | K & N Kenanga Holdings Berhad |
| United Kingdom | K S Biomedix Holdings Plc | USA | D & K Healthcare Resources, Inc. |
| (more examples...) |
Source: compiled by the editor from Icon Group International, Inc.
Expressions using "k": Amino Acid K ♦ Endopeptidase K ♦ Friedman's rank test for k correlated samples ♦ K band ♦ K Care ♦ K Ceylonensis ♦ K fruticosa ♦ K I Sawyer A F B ♦ K particle ♦ K ration ♦ K triandra ♦ milli K ♦ Neurokinin K ♦ Nilo K ♦ vitamin K ♦ Vitamin K Deficiency. Additional references. | |
| Hyphenated Usage | |
Beginning with "k": K-ar, K-atpase, K-band, K-board, K-brace, k-car, K-chell, k-class, k-club, k-co, k-creative, K-cut, K-day, K-dependent, K-Dur, k-edge, K-factor, k-factors, k-fold, k-i-c-k, k-iii, k-keen, K-k-k-katy, K-korea, K-line, K-lor, K-lyte, K-map, K-mart, K-max, k-meson, k-mesons, k-modification, k-motronic, k-nine, K-paul, K-post, k-promoted, k-ras, k-rase, k-razy, k-reg, k-registered, k-registration, k-rhodizonate, k-rich, k-richterite, k-richterites, k-r-y-t-r-o-n, k-samples, k-selected, k-series, k-space, K-spool, k-stars, k-statistic, k-statistics, k-surface, k-swiss, k-tables, K-tel, K-telestar, K-test, K-tone, K-tuple, k-tuples, k-two, k-type, K-value, K-y. | |
Ending with "k": constant-k. | |
Containing "k": 401-k plan, Bay-K-8644, J-o-k-e, M-l-c-k-e-y, S-K reduction machine, Uni-k-swiss. | |
| 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 |
k | 6,892 | k nagra parminder | 268 |
k 12 | 1,536 | k reliant | 244 |
relient k | 1,286 | k b toy | 241 |
k n | 1,275 | k swiss shoes | 235 |
education k 12 | 1,047 | julie k smith | 233 |
k lite | 1,032 | special k | 233 |
vitamin k | 855 | k os | 226 |
k swiss | 764 | k tv | 215 |
k rock | 561 | codec k lite pack | 190 |
k ci jojo | 545 | k n.com | 185 |
h k | 408 | m k | 181 |
k love | 404 | circle k | 179 |
pre k furniture | 370 | bud k | 174 |
anna k | 366 | k company | 167 |
hamilton laurell k | 360 | k 1 | 165 |
b k | 340 | k l | 161 |
k lyrics relient | 333 | k line | 159 |
k lite.tk | 319 | 92.3 k rock | 157 |
k s | 315 | k tool | 154 |
g k | 298 | k and n air filter | 151 |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Translations for "k"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Danish | vitamin K (menadione, vitamin K3, vitamine K), reaktivitetsenhed milli-K (milli K), Nilo K (Nilo K), jordtransport over en afstand af: (transport of excavated material for a distance of ... k), Friedmans rangordentest for k-korrelaterede stikprøver (Friedman's rank test for k correlated samples). (various references) | |
Dutch | vitamine K (vitamine K), Nilo K (Nilo K), milli-K (milli K), grondtransport over een afstand van ... km (transport of excavated material for a distance of ... k), fyllochinon (vitamine K), Friedman-test (Friedman's rank test for k correlated samples). (various references) | |
Farsi | یازدهمین حرف الفبای انگلیسی , هرچیزی شبیهK . (various references) | |
Finnish | k-tunnusluvut (k-statistics), K-testi (K-test), K-taajuusalue (K band), K-monikko (K-tuple), K-kaista (K-band), k-avaruus (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space), kalium-argonmenetelmä (K-A dating), kalium-argoniänmääritys (K-A dating), K1-vitamiini (phylloquinone, vitamin K1, vitamine K), k:n otoksen ongelma (k-samples problem), luokan K maaperä (K soil), leikkaus solmujen vierestä (K-cut, knot cut), fyllokinoni (phylloquinone, vitamin K1, vitamine K), aaltolukuavaruus (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space). (various references) | |
French | Kaon (k meson), milli-K (milli K), bande K (K band, K-band), coefficients k (k-statistics), complexe K (K-complex), coupe K (K-cut), datation potassium-argon (K-A dating), espace des nombres d'ondes (k-space), indice k (k value), jour K (K-day), assemblage en K (K-brace), méson lourd (k meson), vitamine K (vitamine K), N-uplet (K-tuple), paramètres k (k-statistics), problème des k-échantillons (k-samples problem), protéinase K (K proteinase), sol K (K soil), table de Karnaugh (K-map), test de Friedman de k échantillons appariés (Friedman's rank test for k correlated samples), test K de Mann (K-test), transport de terre sur une distance de ... km (transport of excavated material for a distance of ... k), valeur k (k value), méson k (k meson). (various references) | |
German | k (candle power, carat, karat), tausend-. (various references) | |
Greek | K-TONE (K-tone), K-LINE (K-line), k-στατιστικές συναρτήσεις (k-statistics), κοπή K (K-cut, knot cut), χάρτης Karnaugh (Karnaugh map, K-map), χώρος κυματικού αριθμού (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space), πρόβλημα k-δειγμάτων (k-samples problem), μεταφορά γαιών σε απόσταση.....χιλιομέτρων (transport of excavated material for a distance of ... k), νυάδα (K-tuple), βιταμίνη Κ (vitamine K), φυλλοκινόνη (phylloquinone, vitamin K1, vitamine K), έλεγχος K (K-test), Nilo K R (Nilo K), καίι τόουν (K-tone), καίι-λάιν (K-line), κόψιμο K (K-cut, knot cut), σύμπλεγμα-Κ (K-complex). (various references) | |
Hungarian | k-nap (k-day). (various references) | |
Italian | Lettera non presente nell'alfabeto italiano. (various references) | |
Pig Latin | kay.(various references) | |
Portuguese | vitamina K (vitamine K), teste K de Mann (K-test), teste K (K-test), quadro de Karnaugh (Karnaugh map, K-map), problema de K-amostras (k-samples problem), mapa Karnaugh (Karnaugh map, K-map), estatística K de Fisher (k-statistics), estatística K (k-statistics), espaco dos numeros de onda (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space), datação pelo método K/Ar (K-A dating), corte K (K-cut, knot cut), complexo K (K-complex), banda K (K band, K-band). (various references) | |
Russian | неприкосновенный запас (emergency store, K-ration). (various references) | |
Spanish | kastanozem (K soil), vitamina K (vitamine K), suelo K (K soil), prueba de K (K-test), prueba de Friedman (Friedman's rank test for k correlated samples), problema de k muestras (k-samples problem), mapa de Karnaugh (Karnaugh map, K-map), filoquinona (vitamine K), estadística-k (k-statistics), espacio del número de ondas (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space), corte K (K-cut, knot cut), complejo K (K-complex), banda K (K band, K-band). (various references) | |
Swedish | Ktest (K-test), K-skärning (K-cut, knot cut), k-sampelproblem (k-samples problem), k-rum (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space), k-parametrar (k-statistics), K-meson (heavy meson, k meson, Kaon), K-jordmån (K soil), K-bandet (K-band), kastanozem (K soil), kaon (heavy meson, k meson, Kaon), kalium-argondatering (K-A dating), vitamin K (vitamine K), Nilo K (Nilo K), milli-k (milli K), impulsrum (k-space, momentum space, wavenumber space). (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
| Language | Date | Source | Romans Chapter 9, Verse 29 |
| Greek (transliterated) | 250 BC | Septuagint | Kai kaqwV proeirhken hsaiaV ei mh kurioV sabawq egkatelipen hmin sperma wV sodoma an egenhqhmen kai wV gomorra an wmoiwqhmen |
| Latin | 405 | Vulgate | Et sicut praedixit Esaias nisi Dominus Sabaoth reliquisset nobis semen sicut Sodoma facti essemus et sicut Gomorra similes fuissemus |
| Old English | 990 | West Saxon | Hit is swa Isaia hæfde æror gesægd:"Þy læs þe ælmihtig God hæfde us eoforan gelæten,sceoldon we beon swa Sodom,sceoldon we beon swa Gomora." k |
| Middle English | 1395 | Wyclif | And as Ysaye bifor seide, But God of oostis hadde left to vs seed, we hadden be maad as Sodom, and we hadden be lijk as Gommor. |
| Renaissance English | 1526 | Tyndale | And as Esaias sayd before: Except the Lorde of sabaoth had left us seede we had bene made as Zodoma and had bene lykened to Gomorra. |
| Jacobean English | 1611 | King James | And as Esaias said before, Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, we had been as Sodoma, and been made like unto Gomorrha. |
| Victorian English | 1833 | Webster | And as Isaiah said before, Except the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, we had been as Sodom, and been made like Gomorrah. |
| Basic English | 1964 | Ogden | And, as Isaiah had said before, If the Lord of armies had not given us a seed, we would have been like Sodom and Gomorrah. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Romans Chapter 9, Verse 29 |
| Cebuano | Ug ingon sa gitagna ni Isaias: Kon ang Ginoo sa mga kasundalohan wala pa magbilin kanatog mga kaliwat, mahisama unta kita sa Sodoma ug mahimo unta kitang ingon sa Gomorra." |
| Croatian | Tako je Izaija i prorekao: Da nam Gospodin nad Vojskama ne ostavi sjeme, ko Sodoma bismo bili i Gomori nalik. |
| Danish | Og som Esajas forud har sagt: "Dersom den Herre Zebaoth ikke havde levnet os en Sæd, da vare vi blevne som Sodoma og gjorte lige med Gomorra." |
| Dutch | En gelijk Jesaja te voren gezegd heeft: Indien de Heere Sebaoth ons geen zaad had overgelaten, zo waren wij als Sodom geworden, en Gomorra gelijk gemaakt geweest. |
| Finnish | Niinkuin Esaias myös on ennustanut: "Ellei Herra Sebaot olisi jättänyt meille siementä, niin meidän olisi käynyt niinkuin Sodoman, ja me olisimme tulleet Gomorran kaltaisiksi". |
| French | Et, comme Ésaïe l`avait dit auparavant: Si le Seigneur des armées Ne nous eût laissé une postérité, Nous serions devenus comme Sodome, Nous aurions été semblables à Gomorrhe. |
| German | Und wie Jesaja zuvorsagte: "Wenn uns nicht der HERR Zebaoth hätte lassen Samen übrig bleiben, so wären wir wie Sodom und Gomorra." |
| Indonesian-Bahasa Sehari-hari | Yesaya berkata begini juga, "Seandainya Allah Yang Mahakuasa tidak meninggalkan kepada kita keturunan, pasti kita semua sudah menjadi seperti Sodom dan Gomora." |
| Indonesian-Terjemahan Lama | Dan seperti sabda Yesaya terdahulu: Jikalau kiranya tiada Tuhan segala bala tentara itu meninggalkan suatu benih bagi kita, niscaya sudahlah kita menjadi sama seperti Sodom dan Gomorah. |
| Latvian | Kâ jau Isajs iepriekð pateicis: Ja Kungs Sabaots nebûtu atstâjis mums sçklu, mçs bûtu kïuvuði kâ Sodoma un lîdzinâtos Gomorai. |
| Maori | A, e ki ra a Ihaia i mua ra, Me kahore te toe i te Atua o nga mano he whanau mo tatou, kua pera tatou me Horoma, kua rite ano hoki ki Komora. |
| Norwegian | Og som Esaias forut har sagt: Hadde ikke den Herre Sebaot levnet oss en sæd, så var vi blitt som Sodoma og gjort like med Gomorra. |
| Portuguese | E como antes dissera Isaías: Se o Senhor dos Exércitos não nos tivesse deixado descendência, teríamos sido feitos como Sodoma, e seríamos semelhantes a Gomorra. |
| Rumanian | Wi, cum zisese Isaia mai knainte: ,,Dacq nu ne-ar fi lqsat Domnul Savaot o sqmknyq, am fi ajuns ca Sodoma, wi ne-am fi asemqnat cu Gomora.`` |
| Shuar | Núnisan Isayas ataksha tawai: "Ashí akupeana Nú Yus iin waitnentramachkurninkia Sutuma péprusha Kumura péprusha takamtsuk Jákarmia Núnisan Jákaaji." |
| Spanish | Y como dijo antes Isaías: Si el Señor de los Ejércitos no nos hubiera dejado descendencia, habríamos llegado a ser como Sodoma y seríamos semejantes a Gomorra. |
| Swahili | Ni kama Isaya alivyosema hapo awali: "Kama Bwana Mwenye Nguvu asingalituachia baadhi ya watoto wa Israeli, tungalikwisha kuwa kama Sodoma, tungalikwisha kuwa ma Gomora." |
| Swedish | Och det är såsom redan Esaias har sagt: "Om Herren Sebaot icke hade lämnat en avkomma kvar åt oss, då vore vi såsom Sodom, vi vore Gomorra lika." |
| Uma | Ria wo'o lolita pelowa nabi Yesaya to mpo'uli': Ane rapa' -na Pue' Alata'ala to mobaraka' uma mpetoro-taka ba hangkuja dua pomuli, ke ropu' mpu'u-tamo, hewa pue' ngata Sodom pai' Gomora owi." |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
| Words containing the letters "k" | |
+1 letter: ka. | |
+2 letters: ark, ask, auk, dak, eke, elk, ick, ilk, ink, irk, kab, kae, kaf, kas, kat, kay, kea, kef, keg, ken, kep, kex, key, khi, kid, kif, kin, kip, kir, kit, koa, kob, koi, kop, kor, kos, kue, lek, oak, oka, oke, ska, ski, sky, tsk, uke, wok, yak, yok, yuk, zek. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. | |
| 1. Definition 2. Synonyms 3. Crosswords 4. Usage: Modern | 5. Usage: Commercial 6. Images: Slideshow 7. Images: Photo Album 8. Images: Digital Art | 9. Quotations: Non-fiction 10. Usage Frequency 11. Names: Company Usage 12. Expressions | 13. Expressions: Internet 14. Translations: Modern 15. Bible Trace 16. Abbreviations | 17. Acronyms 18. Anagrams 19. Bibliography |
Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.