Lide (river)
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Lide (river)
Lide can refer to: * -lide, a chemistry suffix indicating an sp-hybridized carbanion ionically linked to a metal * Saint Lide, a legendary bishop People * Alice Alison Lide * Lide Meriwether Lide Smith Meriwether (October 16, 1829 – September 28, 1913) was a leader of the first generation of feminists and women's rights activists. She lobbied for prohibition, raising the legal age of consent, and woman's suffrage. Meriwether was pr ...
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Metallic Xdff Acetylide
Metallic may be a reference to: *Metal *Metalloid, metal-like substance *Metallic bonding, type of chemical bonding *Metallicity, in astronomy the proportion of elements other than helium and hydrogen in an object *Metallic color, a color that gives the appearance of metal *Metallic dragon, a classification of dragon found in the role playing game Dungeons & Dragons *Metallic paint, paint that provides the appearance of metal *Heavy metal music, a genre of rock music See also *Metallica (other) Metallica is an American heavy metal band. Metallica may also refer to: * ''Metallica'' (album) or ''The Black Album'', a 1991 album by Metallica * '' Guitar Hero: Metallica'' as well as: * ''Metallica'' (beetle), a beetle genus * Metallica Res ...
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Saint Lide
Saint Lide, also known as Elid or Elidius, was a legendary bishop who lived on the island of St Helen's in the Isles of Scilly. The name of the Island of St Helen's is supposed to be a corruption of Lide's name. His feast day is on 8 August and is celebrated on Scilly by the local churches holding a service on St Helen's on a mid-August Sunday. According to Rev. T. F. Thiselton-Dyer The Reverend Thomas Firminger Thiselton-Dyer, MA, Oxon (25 July 1848 – 14 July 1923) was a son of William George Thiselton-Dyer, physician and of Catherine Jane, née Firminger. He was educated at King's College School and at Pembroke College, O ...'s 1876 ''British Popular Customs,'' the first Friday in March is so called from Lide, Anglo-Saxon for March. This day is marked by a seriocomic custom of sending a young lad onto the highest mound or hillock of the work .e. tin mine and allowing him to sleep there as long as he can, the length of his siesta being the measure of the afternoon nap for the ...
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Alice Alison Lide
Alice Alison Lide (1890–1955) was the recipient of a Newbery Honor in 1930, for her book '' Ood-Le-Uk the Wanderer''. Alice was raised in Richmond, Alabama by her parents, Joseph D. and Annie Hearst Alison. Lide attended Converse College, in South Carolina and later moved on to Columbia University, in New York City New York, often called New York City or NYC, is the List of United States cities by population, most populous city in the United States. With a 2020 population of 8,804,190 distributed over , New York City is also the L .... Bibliography *''Ood-le-uk the Wanderer''. Boston; Little, 1930. *''Aztec Drums''. New York; Longman Green, 1938. *''Johnny of the 4-H Club''. Boston; Little, 1941. *''Lapland Drum''. Nashville; Abingdon, 1955. *''Little Indian Ongo''. Richmond, Va.; Johnson Pub. Co., 1948. *''Magic Word for Elin''. Nashville; Abingdon, 1958. *''Mystery of the Mahteb, a Tale of Thirteenth-Century Ethiopia''. New York; Longman Green ...
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