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Hinke Gorter
Hinke is a unisex given name and a surname. Notable people with the name are as follows: Given name * Hinke Bergegren (1861–1936) , Swedish politician * Hinke Osinga (born 1969), Dutch mathematician Surname * Gustav Hinke Gustav Adolf Hinke (24 August 1844 – 5 August 1893) was a German classical oboist. Life Born in Dresden, Hinke was born in 1844 as the son of a musician. He attended the Dresden Kreuzschule from 1857 and studied oboe with Rudolf Hiebendahl at ... (1844–1893), German oboist {{given name, type=both Unisex given names Surnames of German origin ...
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Hinke Bergegren
Henrik "Hinke" Bergegren (1861–1936) was a Swedish socialist, anarchist Anarchism is a political philosophy and movement that is skeptical of all justifications for authority and seeks to abolish the institutions it claims maintain unnecessary coercion and hierarchy, typically including, though not neces ..., writer, and agitator. References * * 1861 births 1936 deaths Swedish Social Democratic Party politicians Swedish communists Swedish Comintern people Swedish anarchists Anarcho-syndicalists {{Anarchist-stub ...
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Hinke Osinga
Hinke Maria Osinga (born 25 December 1969) is a Dutch mathematician and an expert in dynamical systems. She works as a professor of applied mathematics at the University of Auckland in New Zealand.. As well as for her research, she is known as a creator of mathematical art. Education and career Osinga earned a master's degree in 1991 and a Ph.D. in 1996 from the University of Groningen. Her doctoral dissertation, jointly supervised by dynamical systems theorist Henk Broer and computational geometer Gert Vegter, was on the computation of invariant manifolds. After postdoctoral studies at The Geometry Center and the California Institute of Technology, and a short-term lecturership at the University of Exeter, she became a lecturer at the University of Bristol in 2001, and was promoted to reader and professor there in 2005 and 2011, respectively. She moved to Auckland in 2011, becoming the first female mathematics professor at Auckland and the second in New Zealand. Mathematical ...
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Gustav Hinke
Gustav Adolf Hinke (24 August 1844 – 5 August 1893) was a German classical oboist. Life Born in Dresden, Hinke was born in 1844 as the son of a musician. He attended the Dresden Kreuzschule from 1857 and studied oboe with Rudolf Hiebendahl at the Dresden Conservatory from 1859 to 1864. He was also taught piano by Julius Adolf Rühlmann and others. In 1865 he became an aspirant in the Staatskapelle Dresden. In 1867 he then became a member (1st oboist) in the Gewandhausorchester in Leipzig. In addition he taught from 1873 to 1878 at the Leipzig Conservatory. Among his students was Alfred Gleißberg. Hinke was editor of an oboe school by C. F. Peters Musikverlag in Leipzig. Hinke died in Leipzig at age 48. Works * ''Praktische Elementarschule für Oboe''. C. F. Peters Musikverlag. * Alfred Sous Alfred Sous (24 November 1925 – 6 April 2011) was a German classical oboist, University lecturer and writer. Life Born in Rheydt, at the age of 14 Sous began his music educat ...
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Unisex Given Names
A unisex name (also known as an epicene name, a gender-neutral name or an androgynous name) is a given name that is not gender-specific. Unisex names are common in the English-speaking world, especially in the United States. By contrast, some countries have laws preventing unisex names, requiring parents to give their children sex-specific names. In other countries or cultures, social norms oppose such names and transgressions may result in discrimination, ridicule, and psychological abuse. Names may have different gender connotations from country to country or language to language. For example, the Italian male name ''Andrea'' (derived from Greek ''Andreas'') is understood as a female name in many languages, such as English, German, Hungarian, Czech, and Spanish. Parents may name their child in honor of a person of another sex, which – if done widely – can result in the name becoming unisex. For example, Christians, particularly Catholics, may give a child a second/middle ...
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