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CEK may refer to: * College of Engineering Karunagappally, College of Engineering, Karunagappally, a Government Engineering College in Kollam district of Kerala, India * Cek (Quba), a village in the Quba Rayon of Azerbaijan * Cek dialect, a dialect of the Kryts language, a Samur language of Azerbaijan * Chelyabinsk Airport, in Russia * Content encryption key, a cryptographic key type * Eastern Khumi language (ISO 639-3: cek), Kukish language of Burma * Özgür Çek (born 1991), Turkish footballer {{disambiguation ...
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College Of Engineering Karunagappally
) , mottoeng = "Dedicated person achieves knowledge " , established = 1999 , type = Public , principal = Prof. Jaya V. L. , head_label = Principal , academic_staff = 80 , administrative_staff = 50 , students = 900 , undergrad = 800 , postgrad = 100 , city = Karunagappally , state = Kerala , country = India , coordinates = , free_label = Acronym , free = CEK , campus = Rural () , website = , affiliations = A P J Abdul Kalam Technological University, AICTE, National Board of Accreditation The Government College of Engineering Karunagappally (CEK) is a public institute of engineering and technology in Karunagappally, in the north-west of Kollam district, Kerala, India. Established in 1999 by the Government of Kerala, it is the second engineering college in Kollam district the fourth engineering college under the aegis of the state government's Institute of Human Resourc ...
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Cek (Quba)
Cek (also, Jek, Dzheg and Dzhek) is a village in the Quba Rayon of Azerbaijan. The village forms part of the municipality of Əlik. They live, primarily, in the region around Mount Shahdag in Quba Rayon in northeastern Azerbaidzhan.Wixman, Ronald''The Peoples of the USSR: An Ethnographic Handbook'' New York: M.E. Sharpe and London, Macmillan. 1984. Population In 1886 their population was estimated at 7,767. In 1926 their population was estimated at 607. Although only 607 individuals claimed Dzhek ethnicity, 4,348 listed Dzhek as their native language. These were probably Dzheks who listed themselves as Azerbaidzhans speaking Dzhek as their native language. See also * Jek people *Jek language Cek, also known as Jek or Dzhek, is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken by about 1,500 to 11,000 Jek people in the village of Jek in the mountains of northern Azerbaijan. The Jek language is not a written language and Azeri serves as the li ... References Sources * Cek, A ...
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Cek Dialect
Cek, also known as Jek or Dzhek, is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken by about 1,500 to 11,000 Jek people in the village of Jek in the mountains of northern Azerbaijan. The Jek language is not a written language and Azeri serves as the literary language of the Jek, as well as all Shahdagh people Shahdagh people (also spelt ''Shah Dagh'', ''Shakhdag'', ''Shakhdagh'' and ''Shadag''; ''Şahdağ'' in Azerbaijani orthography) is a generic term for several small ethnic groups living in the vicinity of Mount Shahdagh in northern Azerbaijan, pa ...s.Wixman, Ronald''The Peoples of the USSR: An Ethnographic Handbook'' New York: M.E. Sharpe and London, Macmillan. 1984. References {{reflist External links Tərxan Paşazadə, "Dünyanın nadir etnik qrupu – Azərbaycan cekliləri", Azərbaycan qəzeti
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Chelyabinsk Airport
Chelyabinsk Airport is an airport in Russia located 18 km north of Chelyabinsk. It services large airliners and can park up to 51 aircraft. It also serves as a secondary hub for Ural Airlines and Yamal Airlines. History Passenger flights to Chelyabinsk were served by Chelyabinsk Shagol Airport from 1938 and until it was repurposed for military only use. The current Chelyabinsk airport, initially called Balandino Airport, was opened in late 1953 with a passenger terminal and a dirt runway. The runway was paved in December 1962. A year later, the first jet plane (a Tu-104) arrived to the airport. A new terminal was built in 1974 which remains in service to this day as one of the terminal buildings. In 1994, the government-owned airport was privatized and started its first international flights. Passenger traffic reached 1.1 million and declined heavily during the 1990s. In 2013, the airport handled 1.2 million passengers, breaking the Soviet-time record. The new, longer ...
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Content Encryption Key
This glossary lists types of keys as the term is used in cryptography, as opposed to door locks. Terms that are primarily used by the U.S. National Security Agency are marked ''(NSA)''. For classification of keys according to their usage see cryptographic key types. * 40-bit key - key with a length of 40 bits, once the upper limit of what could be exported from the U.S. and other countries without a license. Considered very insecure. ''See'' key size for a discussion of this and other lengths. * authentication key - Key used in a keyed-hash message authentication code, or HMAC. * benign key - (NSA) a key that has been protected by encryption or other means so that it can be distributed without fear of its being stolen. Also called BLACK key. * content-encryption key (CEK) a key that may be further encrypted using a KEK, where the content may be a message, audio, image, video, executable code, etc. * crypto ignition key An NSA key storage device ( KSD-64) shaped to look like an ...
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Eastern Khumi Language
Khumi, or ''Khumi Chin'', is a Kuki-Chin-Mizo language of Burma, with some speakers across the border in Bangladesh. Geographical distribution Khumi proper is spoken in the following townships of Myanmar (''Ethnologue''). *Kaladan river area in Paletwa township, Chin State *A few villages in Kyauktaw township, Rakhine State. Eastern Khumi (Khami) is spoken in the following townships of Myanmar (''Ethnologue''). * Matupi township, Chin State (in 4 villages) *Sami subtownship, Paletwa township, Chin State Chin State (, ) is a state in western Myanmar. The Chin State is bordered by Sagaing Division and Magway Division to the east, Rakhine State to the south, Bangladesh to the south-west, and the Indian states of Mizoram to the west and Manipur t ... (in 85 villages) Dialects ''Ethnologue'' lists the following dialects. *Khumi **Pi Chaung **Kaladan **Eastern Kaladan **Southern Paletwa *Eastern Khumi (Khami) **Nisay (Nise, Palyng, Tao Cha) **Nideun (Amlai, Ghu, Laungtha, Mar ...
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