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Gin (other)
Gin is an alcoholic beverage flavoured with juniper berries. Gin or Gins may also refer to: People * Gin (name) * Gin people, China Places * Gin, Mississippi * Gin Branch, a river in Tennessee * Gin River, a river in Sri Lanka * Ginza stop, a Light Rail stop in Hong Kong * GIN, ISO-3166-1 alpha-3 code of Guinea Art, entertainment, and media * Gin (Border Collie), on TV series ''Britain's Got Talent'' * Gin rummy, a card game * ''Gin'' (album), by Cobalt, 2009 Other uses * Cotton gin, a machine to separate cotton fibers and seedpods * Gin Gliders, a South Korean manufacturer * GINS (protein complex) in DNA replication * An assembler for GEORGE (operating system) * Horse gin See also * Gin trap, a spring-loaded trap for catching small animals, such as rabbits. * Gin gang, horse mill structure * Gin Gin (other) * Gines (other) * Djin * Gene (other) * Jin (other) Jin is a toneless pinyin romanization of various Chinese names and ...
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Gin (name)
Gin is the name of: *Gin people, a Việt Kinh group * Gin Chow (1857–1933), Chinese immigrant who gained fame in California as a prophet and fortune teller *Gin Wigmore (born 1986), New Zealand singer songwriter * Madeline Gins (1941–2014), American artist, architect, and poet Characters Gin (pronounced with a hard G) is also the name of the following Japanese fictional characters: * Gin Ichimaru, a character in ''Bleach'' * Gin (''Case Closed''), a member of the Black Organization in ''Case Closed'' * Ghin (''One Piece''), a character in ''One Piece'' * Gin, a character in '' Hotarubi no Mori e'' * A fictional Akita Inu bear-hunting dog in '' Ginga: Nagareboshi Gin and Ginga Densetsu Weed'' * Gintoki Sakata, a character in ''Gintama'' * Suigintou, a character in ''Rozen Maiden'' * Gin Ibushi, a character in ''Kimi ga Shine'' * Minowa Gin, one of the three main characters of '' Washio Sumi is a Hero''. *, a character in '' Bungo Stray Dogs'' * Gin Gagamaru (我牙丸吟 ...
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Gin Gliders
Gin Gliders Inc. is a South Korean aircraft manufacturer based in Yongin, founded by competition pilot Gin Seok Song in 1998. The company specializes in the design and manufacture of paragliders in the form of ready-to-fly aircraft.Bertrand, Noel; Rene Coulon; et al: ''World Directory of Leisure Aviation 2003-04'', page 18. Pagefast Ltd, Lancaster UK, 2003. The company's paragliders are designed by Gin Seok Song and Robert Graham. The company has produced a wide variety of paragliders, including the competition Gin Boomerang, the intermediate Bolero Plus, Gangster, Nomad and Oasis, as well as the two-place Bongo. Paragliders Summary of aircraft built by Gin Gliders: * Gin Atlas * Gin Bandit * Gin Bobcat * Gin Bolero * Gin Bolero Plus * Gin Bonanza * Gin Bonanza 2 * Gin Bonanza 3 * Gin Bongo * Gin Boomerang * Gin Camino * Gin Carrera * Gin Explorer * Gin Explorer 2 * Gin Falcon * Gin Fluid * Gin Fuse *Gin Gangster The Gin Gangster is a South Korean single-place, pa ...
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Djin
Jinn ( ar, , ') – also romanized as djinn or anglicized as genies (with the broader meaning of spirit or demon, depending on sources) – are invisible creatures in early pre-Islamic Arabian religious systems and later in Islamic mythology and theology. Like humans, they are accountable for their deeds, can be either believers (''Muslim'') or unbelievers (''kafir''); depending on whether they accept God's guidance. Since jinn are neither innately evil nor innately good, Islam acknowledged spirits from other religions and was able to adapt spirits from other religions during its expansion. Jinn are not a strictly Islamic concept; they may represent several pagan beliefs integrated into Islam. To assert a strict monotheism and the Islamic concept of ''Tauhid'', Islam denies all affinities between the jinn and God, thus placing the jinn parallel to humans, also subject to God's judgment and afterlife. The Quran condemns the pre-Islamic Arabian practise of worshipping the ...
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Gines (other)
Gines is a municipality in the south-west Spain, in the province of Seville, Andalusia. It is part of the metropolitan area of Seville. Gines has a population of 13,529 inhabitants as of 2021 and an area of . Founded in Roman times, the land has been inhabited since prehistoric times, and for centuries the production of olives and olive oil has been of great importance due to the fertility of its land. Since the mid-twentieth century a process population growth began due to the proximity to Seville. By the end of the century almost all of the land area was built-up, forming a conurbation with nearby towns. Today it has a service based economy and it is one of the municipalities with the highest income in Andalusia. Geography Gines is located on the Aljarafe plateau, at an altitude of 123 metres above sea level and about 6 km from Seville (which is almost at sea level). The municipalities closest to Gines are Bormujos, Valencina de la Concepción, Espartinas and Casti ...
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Gin Gin (other)
Gin Gin may refer to: * Gin Gin, Queensland, a town in the Bundaberg Region, Australia * Gin Gin, New South Wales See also * Gingin, Western Australia * Shire of Gingin, Western Australia * RAAF Gingin RAAF Gingin , sometimes also RAAF Base Gingin or RAAF Base Gin Gin, is a Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) small military airfield located at Gingin, in Western Australia. History Constructed during the 1960s, the airfield is set on ; predomi ...
, Western Australia, a military airfield {{geodis ...
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Gin Gang
A gin gang, wheelhouse, roundhouse or horse-engine house, is a structure built to enclose a horse engine, usually circular but sometimes square or octagonal, attached to a threshing barn. Most were built in England in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. The threshing barn held a small threshing machine which was connected to the gin gang via wooden gears, drive shafts and drive belt, and was powered by a horse which walked round and round inside the gin gang. Operation and structure The ''gin'' (short for "engine") was the motive power driving a small threshing machine, and the horse did the ''gang'', or ''going''. The gin gang was always attached to the main threshing barn, where the gin was situated. It was almost always of one storey and it could be circular, polygonal or square. There was a hole for a drive−shaft or drive−belt, linking it with the threshing barn. The gin was connected by cogs to a vertical spindle. The spindle was connected to a horizontal arrangemen ...
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Gin Trap
Animal trapping, or simply trapping or gin, is the use of a device to remotely catch an animal. Animals may be trapped for a variety of purposes, including food, the fur trade, hunting, pest control, and wildlife management. History Neolithic hunters, including the members of the Cucuteni-Trypillian culture of Romania and Ukraine (c. 5500–2750 BCE), used traps to capture their prey. An early mention in written form is a passage from the self-titled book by Taoism, Taoist philosopher Zhuangzi (book), Zhuangzi describes Chinese methods used for trapping animals during the 4th century BCE. The Zhuangzi reads, "The sleek-furred fox and the elegantly spotted leopard ... can't seem to escape the disaster of nets and traps." "Modern" steel jaw-traps were first described in western sources as early as the late 16th century. The first mention comes from Leonard Mascall's book on animal trapping. It reads, "a griping trappe made all of yrne, the lowest barre, and the ring or ...
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Horse Gin
A horse mill is a mill, sometimes used in conjunction with a watermill or windmill, that uses a horse engine as the power source. Any milling process can be powered in this way, but the most frequent use of animal power in horse mills was for grinding grain and pumping water. Other animal engines for powering mills are powered by dogs, donkeys, oxen or camels. Treadwheels are engines powered by humans. History The donkey or horse-driven rotary mill was a 4th-century BC Carthaginian invention, with possible origins in Carthaginian Sardinia. Two Carthaginian animal-powered millstones built using red lava from Carthaginian-controlled Mulargia in Sardinia were found in a 375–350 BC shipwreck near Mallorca. The mill spread to Sicily, arriving in Italy in the 3rd century BC. The Carthaginians used hand-powered rotary mills as early as the 6th century BC, and the use of the rotary mill in Spanish lead and silver mines may have contributed to the rise of the larger, animal-powered mill. ...
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GEORGE (operating System)
GEORGE was the name given to a series of operating systems released by International Computers and Tabulators (ICT) in the 1960s, for the ICT 1900 series of computers. These included GEORGE 1, GEORGE 2, GEORGE 3, and GEORGE 4. Initially the 1900 series machines, like the Ferranti-Packard 6000 on which they were based, ran a simple operating system known as Executive which allowed the system operator to load and run programs from a Teletype Model 33 ASR based system console. In December 1964 ICT set up an Operating Systems Branch to develop a new operating system for the 1906/7. The branch was initially staffed with people being released by the end of work on the OMP operating system for the Ferranti Orion. The initial design of the new system, named George after George E. Felton head of the Basic Programming Division, was based on ideas from the Orion and the spooling system of the Atlas computer. (In public it was claimed that George stood for GEneral ORGanisational Envir ...
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GINS (protein Complex)
GINS is a protein complex essential to the DNA replication process in the cells of eukaryotes. The complex participates in the initiation and elongation stages of replication. The name GINS is an acronym created from the first letters of the Japanese numbers 5-1-2-3 (''go-ichi-ni-san'') in a reference to the 4 protein subunits of the complex: Sld5, Psf1, Psf2, and Psf3. A similar complex has been identified in Archaea Archaea ( ; singular archaeon ) is a domain of single-celled organisms. These microorganisms lack cell nuclei and are therefore prokaryotes. Archaea were initially classified as bacteria, receiving the name archaebacteria (in the Archaebac .... References {{reflist Protein complexes ...
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Cotton Gin
A cotton gin—meaning "cotton engine"—is a machine that quickly and easily separates cotton fibers from their seeds, enabling much greater productivity than manual cotton separation.. Reprinted by McGraw-Hill, New York and London, 1926 (); and by Lindsay Publications, Inc., Bradley, Illinois, (). The fibers are then processed into various cotton goods such as calico, while any undamaged cotton is used largely for textiles like clothing. The separated seeds may be used to grow more cotton or to produce cottonseed oil. Handheld roller gins had been used in the Indian subcontinent since at earliest AD 500 and then in other regions. The Indian worm-gear roller gin, invented sometime around the 16th century, has, according to Lakwete, remained virtually unchanged up to the present time. A modern mechanical cotton gin was created by American inventor Eli Whitney in 1793 and patented in 1794. Whitney's gin used a combination of a wire screen and small wire hooks to pull the cot ...
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Gin People
The Gin or Jing people (; Yale: ''Gīng juhk''; Vietnamese: ''người Kinh'' tại Trung Quốc) are a community of descendants of ethnic Vietnamese people living in China. They mainly live on an area called the Jing Islands (京族三岛) off the coast of Dongxing, Fangchenggang, in the Chinese autonomous region of Guangxi. These territories were administered by the Nguyễn dynasty, but were later ceded by the French to the Qing dynasty due to the convention 1887 of Sino-French war. Prior to 1958, the Việt were labelled as ''Yue'' with the Cantonese groups (; Vietnamese: ''người Việt tại Trung Quốc''), before the name "Kinh", "Gin" or "Jing" was used to classify Vietnamese ethnic group separately. The Gin population was 33,112 as of 2020. This number does not include the 36,205 Vietnamese nationals studying or working in Mainland China recorded by the 2010 national population census. Terminology In Vietnamese, ''Kinh'' and ''Việt'' are used interchangeabl ...
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