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Bidia SC
Bidia may refer to: * Bidia people, an ethnic group of Australia * Bidia language Pirriya (also ''Birria'', ''Bidia'', ''Kunggari'', ''Kulumali'', and ''Kungadutji'') is an extinct language, extinct and unclassified Australian Aboriginal languages, Australian Aboriginal language. It was spoken by the Bidia people (also know ..., a language of Australia * Elias Bidía, Brazilian footballer * Bidia Dandaron, Soviet Buddhist scholar * Bidia (food), an African swallow food See also * Bidiya * Bidya {{Disambiguation ...
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Bidia People
The Bidia, also called Biria, are an Aboriginal Australian people of the central west and western regions of the state of Queensland. Their language is known as Pirriya (also known as Biria/Birria). Language The Pirriya language, also known as Bidia, Birria and other variations, was proposed by Gavan Breen to be one of a group he called Karnic languages. There is now some doubt about the validity of that category. Robert M. W. Dixon classifies it as one of two languages, the other being Kungkari, forming a subgroup of the Maric languages. Country Bidia country enclosed some . The western frontier was around Whitula Creek, the eastern one at Keeroongooloo and the Canaway Range. The Bidia lived on the western side of the Thomson River and Cooper Creek, from Jundah across to the vicinity of Gilpeppee. Customs The Biria were one of the tribes that practiced initiatory circumcision. Tooth evulsion was imposed on males at the age of 12. The Bidia built huts out of hollowed sand, ...
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Bidia Language
Pirriya (also ''Birria'', ''Bidia'', ''Kunggari'', ''Kulumali'', and ''Kungadutji'') is an extinct language, extinct and unclassified Australian Aboriginal languages, Australian Aboriginal language. It was spoken by the Bidia people (also known as ''Biria'') of the western and central western Queensland, including Shire of Barcoo, Barcoo Shire, Whitula Creek, Cooper Creek, and Jundah, Queensland, Jundah. It is not to be confused with the Biri language and its dialects, also a Queensland language, spoken by the Biria people. Classification Geographically it lay between the Karnic language, Karnic and Maric languages, Maric languages, but had no obvious connection to either; the data is too poor to draw any conclusions on classification. Dixon (2002) classes Pirriya with Kungkari language, Kungkari as a subgroup of the Maric languages while Breen (1990) suggests it may be a Karnic language. Vocabulary Some words from the Birria language, as spelt and written by Birria auth ...
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Elias Bidía
Elias Nascimento Felício (born 9 February 1992), known as Elias Bidía or Bidía, is a Brazilian footballer A football player or footballer is a sportsperson who plays one of the different types of football. The main types of football are association football, American football, Canadian football, Australian rules football, Gaelic football, rugby le ... who plays for Londrina as a midfielder. Career statistics References External links *Elias Bidiaat ZeroZero {{DEFAULTSORT:Bidia, Elias 1992 births Living people Brazilian men's footballers Men's association football midfielders Campeonato Brasileiro Série B players Campeonato Brasileiro Série C players Campeonato Brasileiro Série D players Londrina Esporte Clube players Brusque Futebol Clube players FC Cascavel players Resende FC players ...
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Bidia Dandaron
Bidia Dandaron (Vidyadhara, russian: Бидия Дандарович Дандарон) (December 28, 1914, Soorkhoi, Kizhinga, Buryatia — October 26, 1974, Vydrino, Buryatia) was a major Buddhist author and teacher in the USSR. He also worked in academic Tibetology, contributed to the Tibetan-Russian Dictionary (1959) and made several translations from Tibetan into Russian. He is mostly remembered as a Buddhist teacher whose students in Russia, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania continued both religious and scholarly work, and as an early Buddhist author who wrote on European philosophy, history, and science within a Buddhist framework. Among his students were Alexander Piatigorsky and Linnart Mäll. Biography Born to a Buryat Buddhist tantric practitioner named Dorji Badmaev, Bidia studied both secular and Buddhist subjects from an early age. Then, he was recognized as the tulku of Gyayag Rinpoche (Wilie: rGya yag rin po che), a Buddhist master of Gelug tradition from Kumbum Mona ...
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Bidia (food)
or ( Angola) or (Congo - DCR and the Congo Republic) is a traditional African swallow made of cassava flour whisked into boiling water. It can also be made with sorghum, maize, or millet. It can be served with textured vegetable, fish, or meat stew, as well as other vegetable, meat, and fish dishes. ''Funge'' is a staple food in African cuisine. Some richer and more flavorful versions may be made with stock, like fish stock, instead of water. It is also known as (literally "food"). Funge is eaten with the fingers, and a small ball of it can be dipped into an accompanying stew, side dish or sauce. Funge is a traditional staple in Angolan cuisine. In the Lesser Antilles, a similar food is known as ''fungi'' or ''cou-cou''. In Ghana there are two variations, usually made with ground corn, though the variation known as '' banku'' is sometimes made from a mixture of grated cassava and corn. The corn is allowed to ferment before it is cooked. To make ''banku'' the fermented ...
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Bidiya
Bidiya or Bidiyyah ( ar, بِـدِيَّـة) is a town in ''Wilayah Bidiyyah'' ( ar, ولايـة بـديـة, Province of Bidiyyah), in the middle of the Eastern Region of the Sultanate of Oman. It is located about from the capital city, Muscat. It comprises fifteen villages, including Al Muntarib, Al Gabbi, Shahik, Al Rakah, Al Hawiyah, Al Shariq, Al Wasil and Al Dhahir.Ministry of Interior
Translated.


Tourism

It is well known for the golden sand dunes that attract tourists from Oman and outside Oman. There are some ancient forts spread over Bidiyah, including the Al Muntarib Fort which was renowned by the Ministry of Culture. In addition,