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Diabolo (other)
A diabolo or diablo is a prop used in juggling. Diabolo may also refer to: * ''Diabolo'' (manga), a 2001 manga set in Japan * The most common air gun pellet, design * The Diabolo project, a railway line serving Brussels Airport * In mathematics, the second polyabolo * Diabolus, the devil * ''Diabolo'' (drink), a non-alcoholic mixed drink, popular in France, consisting of a lemonade mixed with a syrup. * Tritone, a musical interval referred to as diabolo * ''Diabolo'', a genus of moths * ''Diabolo'' (film), a 1992 Ghanaian film See also *Devil sticks The manipulation of the devil stick (also devil-sticks, devilsticks, flower sticks, stunt sticks, gravity sticks, or juggling sticks) is a form of gyroscopic juggling or equilibristics, consisting of manipulating one stick (" baton", 'center st ..., a similar juggling prop to the diabolo * Diablo (other) * Diavolo (other) {{disambiguation ...
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Diabolo
The diabolo ( ; commonly misspelled ''diablo'') is a juggling or circus prop consisting of an axle () and two cups (hourglass/egg timer shaped) or discs derived from the Chinese yo-yo. This object is spun using a string attached to two hand sticks ("batons" or "wands"). A large variety of tricks are possible with the diabolo, including tosses, and various types of interaction with the sticks, string, and various parts of the user's body. Multiple diabolos can be spun on a single string. Like the Western yo-yo (which has an independent origin), it maintains its spinning motion through a rotating effect based on conservation of angular momentum. History Origin The Diabolo is derived from the Chinese yo-yo encountered by Europeans during the colonial era. However, the origin of the Chinese yo-yo is unknown. The earliest mention of the Chinese yo-yo is in the late Ming dynasty Wanli period (1572–1620), with its details well recorded in the book ''Dijing Jingwulue'' by th ...
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Diabolo (manga)
is a Japanese manga series by Kaoru Ohashi and Kei Kusunoki. It was serialized by Shueisha from 2001 to 2003. Plot ''Diabolo'' revolves around teenagers in Japan being converted to followers of the "Diabolo" by a secret society, in exchange for the fulfillment of their wishes. Teens who have made a pact with the Devil begin to go crazy at age 17, often manifesting in acts of brutality and homicide, and upon turning 18 reach a point of no return to their original selves. The phenomenon is a mystery to the adult world and media, who try to ascertain the origin of mass teen violence. There are six great spirits (also teenagers) that serve the Devil, each of which has a hand in destroying the world. The main characters, Ren and Rai, use their own Devil-given powers to stop them while searching for their cousin Mio, saving other teenagers from their pacts, and racing against their approaching 18th birthdays. It describes its plot as "The age where the ensured bend to temptation ...
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Pellet (air Gun)
A pellet is a non-spherical projectile designed to be shot from an air gun, and an airgun that shoots such pellets is commonly known as a pellet gun. Air gun pellets differ from bullets and shot used in firearms in terms of the pressures encountered; airguns operate at pressures as low as 50 atmospheres, while firearms operate at thousands of atmospheres. Airguns generally use a slightly undersized projectile that is designed to obturate upon shooting so as to seal the bore, and engage the rifling; firearms have sufficient pressure to force a slightly oversized bullet to fit the bore in order to form a tight seal. Since pellets may be shot through a smoothbore barrel, they are often designed to be inherently stable, much like the Foster slugs used in smoothbore shotguns. Types Diabolo pellet The diabolo pellet (or "wasp waist pellet") is the most common design traditionally found in airguns. It consists of a solid front portion called the ''head'', which can have a flat ("w ...
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Diabolo Project
The Diabolo project created a new railway line serving Brussels National Airport. It is so called because of its shape, resembling a Chinese yo-yo: the line forms a chord between the Brussels-Leuven line 36 going east and the new Brussels-Antwerp line 25N going north, and connects with them via a triangular junction at each end. Its addition to the network permits a much more flexible airport railway service to be provided: as well as mainline trains going north and east, future high-speed services between London, Paris, Amsterdam and Cologne could call there. This would make Brussels National Airport a fully-fledged international railway station on the model of Amsterdam's Schiphol or Paris' Charles de Gaulle. Before the project, the airport had another station, a terminus, linked only to the Brussels-Leuven line with a single track and only connecting to/from Brussels. The outline of track can still be seen on maps and satellite images, it entered the airport terminal from th ...
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Polyabolo
In recreational mathematics, a polyabolo (also known as a polytan) is a shape formed by gluing isosceles right triangles edge-to-edge, making a polyform with the isosceles right triangle as the base form. Polyaboloes were introduced by Martin Gardner in his June 1967 "Mathematical Games column" in ''Scientific American''. Nomenclature The name ''polyabolo'' is a back formation from the juggling object 'diabolo', although the shape formed by joining two triangles at just one vertex is not a proper polyabolo. By false analogy, treating the di- in diabolo as meaning "two", polyaboloes with from 1 to 10 cells are called respectively monaboloes, diaboloes, triaboloes, tetraboloes, pentaboloes, hexaboloes, heptaboloes, octaboloes, enneaboloes, and decaboloes. The name ''polytan'' is derived from Henri Picciotto's name ''tetratan'' and alludes to the ancient Chinese amusement of tangrams. Combinatorial enumeration There are two ways in which a square in a polyabolo can consist of two ...
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Devil
A devil is the personification of evil as it is conceived in various cultures and religious traditions. It is seen as the objectification of a hostile and destructive force. Jeffrey Burton Russell states that the different conceptions of the devil can be summed up as 1) a principle of evil independent from God, 2) an aspect of God, 3) a created being turning evil (a ''fallen angel''), and 4) a symbol of human evil. Each tradition, culture, and religion with a devil in its mythos offers a different lens on manifestations of evil.Jeffrey Burton Russell, ''The Devil: Perceptions of Evil from Antiquity to Primitive Christianity'', Cornell University Press 1987 , pp. 41–75 The history of these perspectives intertwines with theology, mythology, psychiatry, art, and literature developing independently within each of the traditions. It occurs historically in many contexts and cultures, and is given many different names— Satan, Lucifer, Beelzebub, Mephistopheles, Iblis—and at ...
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Diabolo (drink)
A diabolo is a non-alcoholic mixed drink available in most restaurants and bars in France. It consists of a common lemon soda mixed with syrup. Popular flavours include mint, strawberry, lemon or grenadine. Origins The diabolo drink appeared before 1920, and became popular in France in the 1920s. The drink was around that time described as a mixture of a lemon soda and a 'very light tincture of liqueur', a lemonade and a cassis liquor, or a lemon-lime soda and a syrup. Translation in other languages ''Diabolo'' has no equivalent in Italian, but a lemon soda mixed with different syrups can approximately be translated as a '. Variants A ''diabolo flamand'' is a cocktail composed of jenever, lemon soda and often a violet syrup. Gallery Diabolo menthe à Montmartre (7499547216).jpg, Two mint diabolos on a table of a bar at Montmartre. Popular culture * 1977 : '' Diabolo menthe (Peppermint Soda)'', movie by Diane Kuris See also * Lemonade Lemonade is a swee ...
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Tritone
In music theory, the tritone is defined as a musical interval composed of three adjacent whole tones (six semitones). For instance, the interval from F up to the B above it (in short, F–B) is a tritone as it can be decomposed into the three adjacent whole tones F–G, G–A, and A–B. Narrowly defined, each of these whole tones must be a step in the scale, so by this definition, within a diatonic scale there is only one tritone for each octave. For instance, the above-mentioned interval F–B is the only tritone formed from the notes of the C major scale. More broadly, a tritone is also commonly defined as any interval with a width of three whole tones (spanning six semitones in the chromatic scale), regardless of scale degrees. According to this definition, a diatonic scale contains two tritones for each octave. For instance, the above-mentioned C major scale contains the tritones F–B (from F to the B above it, also called augmented fourth) and B–F (from B to the F abo ...
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Diabolo Diantoniorum
''Diabolo'' is a genus of moths belonging to the family Tortricidae. It contains only one species, ''Diabolo diantoniorum'', which is found in Ecuador Ecuador ( ; ; Quechua: ''Ikwayur''; Shuar: ''Ecuador'' or ''Ekuatur''), officially the Republic of Ecuador ( es, República del Ecuador, which literally translates as "Republic of the Equator"; Quechua: ''Ikwadur Ripuwlika''; Shuar: ' ...., 2007, Notes and descriptions of some Neotropical ''Chlidanotini'' (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), ''Entomologische Zeitung'' 117 (3): 127-131 References External linkstortricidae.com Chlidanotini Moths described in 2007 Moths of South America {{Chlidanotinae-stub ...
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Diabolo (film)
Diabolo is a 1992 Ghanaian film that tells the story of a man who has the power to transform into a serpent. He uses this power to sexually assault and kill women, mostly sex workers. The character is played by Bob Smith Junior, subsequently popularly referred to as Diabolo Man or Snake Man. The film has been studied as an example of Pentacostal Pentecostalism or classical Pentecostalism is a Protestant Charismatic Christian movement
influence in Ghanaian film.


Cast

* Bob Smith Junior * Eddi ...
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Devil Sticks
The manipulation of the devil stick (also devil-sticks, devilsticks, flower sticks, stunt sticks, gravity sticks, or juggling sticks) is a form of gyroscopic juggling or equilibristics, consisting of manipulating one stick ("baton", 'center stick') between one or two other sticks held one in each hand. The baton is lifted, struck, or stroked by the two control sticks ('handsticks', 'sidesticks', or 'handles'), stabilizing the baton through gyroscopic motion. Manipulating devil sticks is one of the circus arts and is sometimes called devil-sticking, twirling, sticking, or stick juggling. History Devil sticks are believed to have originated in China in the distant past, in the form of simple wooden juggling sticks. It was apparently brought to Britain sometime around 1813, when a publication mentioned that previous generations had not known of it. The first scientific analysis of the physics of the game, called "the Devil on Two Sticks," was published in 1855 by Benjamin Peirce. ...
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Diablo (other)
Diablo or El Diablo may refer to: Arts and entertainment Fictional entities * Diablo (Disney), a raven in ''Sleeping Beauty'' * Diablo (Marvel Comics), a Fantastic Four villain * El Diablo (comics), several fictional characters from DC Comics * Diablo, a character in the '' Diablo video game series'' ** a playable character in the video game ''Heroes of the Storm'' * a character in the video game ''Primal Rage'' * El Diablo, a superhero in the video game '' Freedom Force'' * El Diablo, a character in '' The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run'' Film and television * ''El Diablo'' (1990 film), an American Western comedy * ''Diablo'' (2011 film), an Argentinian drama * ''Diablo'' (2015 film), Canadian-American revisionist Western psychological thriller * "El Diablo" (''The Killing''), a 2011 episode of the TV series Gaming * ''Diablo'' (series), a video game series ** ''Diablo'' (video game), the first game of the series *** '' Diablo: Hellfire'', a 1997 expansion ** ''Di ...
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