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Salva Maldonado
Salva (Latin for "Save") may refer to: People *Francisco Salva Campillo (1751-1828), Spanish scientist *Ramon d'Salva (born 1921), Filipino actor * Héctor Salva (1939-2015), Uruguayan football midfielder *Salva Kiir Mayardit (born 1951), South Sudanese president * Salva Iriarte (born 1952), Spanish football midfielder and football manager * Antonio Salvá (born 1952), Spanish politician and urologist *Victor Salva (born 1958), American film director *Salva (footballer, born 1961), Spanish football defender *Salva Díez (born 1963), Spanish basketball player *Federica Salva (born 1971), Italian yacht racer *Salva Sanchis (born 1974), Spanish dancer *Salva Ballesta (born 1975), Spanish football striker * Salva (footballer, born 1981), Spanish football defender and football manager *Salva (music producer) (born 1981), American musician *Salva Sevilla (born 1984), Spanish football midfielder *Salva Arco (born 1984), Spanish basketball player *Bartolomé Salvá-Vidal (born 1986), Spani ...
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Francisco Salva Campillo
Francisco Salva Campillo (Catalan: Francesc Salvà i Campillo, July 12, 1751 – February 13, 1828) was a Spanish Catalan prominent late-Enlightenment period scientist known for working as a physician, physicist, meteorologist. Early life and education Francisco Salva Campillo was born in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, on July 12, 1751. He was the son of Dr. Jerome Salvà Pontich, a staff physician at Barcelona General Hospital and Eulalia Campillo, his mother came from a wealthy family that worked in the pharmacy industry. During his adolescence, his extraordinary abilities attracted the attention of the Bishop of Barcelona, Josep Climent, who advised his parents to let him study medicine in Valencia. He studied at the University of Valencia, where he completed his course in three years instead of the usual four. In 1771, he successfully passed the B.Phil. degree in Medicine from the University of Huesca, Spain. He later earned his doctorate in medicine at the University of To ...
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Julio Salvá
Julio César Salvá (born 18 May 1987) is an Argentine professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Atlético de Rafaela. Career Salvá started his career with Quilmes's academy. He departed to join Primera B Metropolitana's Estudiantes in 2008. Thirty-five league appearances followed, with his final game coming against Villa Dálmine on 2 March 2013. During his time with Estudiantes, Salvá was loaned out on two occasions - to Once Tigres in 2011 and to Justo José de Urquiza in 2012. In June 2013, Salvá was signed by Acassuso. He remained with the third tier team for five seasons, participating in a total of one hundred and nineteen matches. Salvá joined Primera B Nacional side Deportivo Morón in 2017. In February 2021, Salvá left Morón to join fellow league club Güemes. Ahead of the 2022 season, Salvá signed with Atlético de Rafaela Asociación Mutual Social y Deportiva Atlético de Rafaela, known simply as Atlético de Rafaela, is an Argentine sports ...
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Salvador (other)
Salvador, meaning "salvation" (or "saviour") in Catalan, Spanish, and Portuguese may refer to: * Salvador (name) Arts, entertainment, and media Music *Salvador (band), a Christian band that plays both English and Spanish music ** ''Salvador'' (Salvador album), 2000 * ''Salvador'' (Ricardo Villalobos album), 2006 * ''Salvador'' (Sega Bodega album) 2020 *"Salvador", a song by Jamie T from the 2007 album '' Panic Prevention'' Other uses in arts, entertainment, and media * ''Salvador'' (book), a 1983 book by Joan Didion *Salvador (character), a fictional character from the ''Borderlands'' video game series * ''Salvador'' (film), a 1986 motion picture about the Salvadoran civil war of the 1980s *''Salvador (Puig Antich)'', a 2006 Spanish film about Salvador Puig Antich * "Salvador" (short story), a 1984 science fiction short story by Lucius Shepard Places El Salvador * El Salvador, a Central American country ** San Salvador, the capital of El Salvador Philippines * El Salvador, Mi ...
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Salva Nos (other)
Salva Nos is a Latin phrase meaning "Save Us", and may refer to: * Salva Nos (album), the debut album by British Vocal Group Mediæval Bæbes, or a song from this album *A song from the anime Noir, composed by Yuki Kajiura {{disambig ...
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Salva Congruitate
''Salva congruitate'' is a Latin scholastic term in logic, which means "without becoming ill-formed", '' salva'' meaning ''rescue'', ''salvation'', ''welfare'' and '' congruitate'' meaning ''combine'', ''coincide'', ''agree''. Salva Congruitate is used in logic to mean that two terms may be substituted for each other while preserving grammaticality in all contexts. Remarks on ''salva congruitate'' Timothy C. Potts Timothy C. Potts describes ''salva congruitate'' as a form of replacement in the context of meaning. It is a replacement which preserves semantic coherence and should be distinguished from a replacement which preserves syntactic coherence but may yield an expression to which no meaning has been given. This means that supposing an original expression is meaningful, the new expression obtained by the replacement will also be meaningful, though it will not necessarily have the same meaning as the original one, nor, if the expression in question happens to be a pro ...
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Salva Veritate
The literal translation of the Latin "''salva veritate''" is "with (or by) unharmed truth", using ablative of manner: "''salva''" meaning "rescue," "salvation," or "welfare," and "''veritate''" meaning "reality" or "truth". Thus, ''Salva veritate'' (or intersubstitutivity) is the logical condition by which two expressions may be interchanged without altering the truth-value of statements in which the expressions occur. Substitution ''salva veritate'' of co-extensional terms can fail in opaque contexts. Leibniz The phrase occurs in two fragments from Gottfried Leibniz's ''General Science. Characteristics'': * In Chapter 19, Definition 1, Leibniz writes: "Two terms are the same (''eadem'') if one can be substituted for the other ''without altering the truth of any statement'' (''salva veritate'')." * In Chapter 20, Definition 1, Leibniz writes: "Terms which can be substituted for one another wherever we please ''without altering the truth of any statement'' (''salva veritate''), ...
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Salva (India)
The Salva or Salvi tribe is mentioned in Vedic period, Late Vedic texts (such as the Jaiminiya Brahmana) as a non-Vedic tribe that invaded Kurukshetra and defeated the Kuru Kingdom, probably 900 BCE. The prior history of the Salva tribe is obscure, although they appear to have been associated with the Trigarta Kingdom and the Punjab region. After invading the Kuru kingdom, the Salvas settled along the Yamuna river and the Alwar region of Rajasthan (near the Matsya Kingdom), and by the end of the Vedic period they had eventually adopted Vedic culture as they coalesced with the remaining Kurus and the Surasena mahajanapada. A passage in the Karna Parva of the Mahabharata praises the Salvas for following the "eternal Law of Righteousness" but also says that they "need full instruction," unlike the more perceptive Kurus and Panchalas who can "gather the sense from half-expressed words."Raychaudhuri (1972), pp.135-136 See also *Keśin Dālbhya *Sial tribe, a tribe living in Punjab Refe ...
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Salva (cheese)
Salva cheese from Crema is a PDO table cow's milk cheese made with raw curd. It is a washed-rind cheese that undergoes a medium or long aging period. Salva is traditionally eaten in the central plain of Lombardy and produced particularly in the area of Crema, Bergamo, and Brescia. It is also produced in the provinces of Lecco, Lodi, and Milan. Salva has many similarities to Quartirolo, though differs from it by having longer aging and a major aromatic complexity. Origin of the name Salva's name comes from the idea of ("saving the milk"), which is the tradition of saving the plentiful milk left over from the process of cheesemaking in spring, which is then used to produce Salva cheese. It is also called Salva cremasco (literally, "Salva from Crema") because of its origin and traditional consumption in Crema, although today it is more often produced elsewhere. History Its origins date back to the 17th and 18th centuries, when it becomes possible to identify the parallelepiped ...
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Common Sage
''Salvia officinalis'', the common sage or just sage, is a perennial, evergreen subshrub, with woody stems, grayish leaves, and blue to purplish flowers. It is a member of the mint family Lamiaceae and native to the Mediterranean region, though it has been naturalized in many places throughout the world. It has a long history of medicinal and culinary use, and in modern times it has been used as an ornamental garden plant. The common name "sage" is also used for closely related species and cultivars. Names ''Salvia officinalis'' has numerous common names. Some of the best-known are sage, common sage, garden sage, golden sage, kitchen sage, true sage, culinary sage, Dalmatian sage, and broadleaf sage. Cultivated forms include purple sage and red sage. The binomial nomenclature, specific epithet ''officinalis'' refers to plants with a well-established medicinal or culinary value. Taxonomy ''Salvia officinalis'' was described by Carl Linnaeus in 1753. It has been grown for centu ...
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Şəlvə, Lachin
Şəlvə () is a village in the Lachin District of Azerbaijan. History The village was located in the Armenian-occupied territories surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh, coming under the control of ethnic Armenian forces during the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in the early 1990s. The village subsequently became part of the breakaway Republic of Artsakh as part of its Kashatagh Province, where it was known as Shalua ( hy, Շալուա). It was returned to Azerbaijan as part of the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh ceasefire agreement. Historical heritage sites Historical heritage sites in and around the village include a grave field from between the 1st and 13th centuries, a medieval In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages or medieval period lasted approximately from the late 5th to the late 15th centuries, similar to the post-classical period of global history. It began with the fall of the Western Roman Empire ... bridge, a 12th/13th-century khachkar, a tombstone from 1629, two ...
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Şəlvə, Khojali
Rev ( hy, Ռև, also ) or Shalva ( az, Şəlvə) is a village that is, ''de facto'', in the Askeran Province of the breakaway Republic of Artsakh; ''de jure'', it is in the Khojaly District of Azerbaijan, in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh. History During the Soviet period, the village was a part of the Askeran District of the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast. Historical heritage sites Historical heritage sites in and around the village include an 18th/19th-century cemetery, St. Stephen's Church ( hy, Սուրբ Ստեփանոս եկեղեցի, Surb Stepanos Yekeghetsi) built in 1894, and a 19th-century spring monument. Economy and culture The population is mainly engaged in agriculture and animal husbandry. As of 2015, the village has a municipal building, a house of culture, and a medical centre. Students study in the secondary school of the neighboring village of Tsaghkashat. Demographics The village has an ethnic Armenian Armenian may refer to: * Some ...
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Salva, Bistrița-Năsăud
Salva ( hu, Szálva) is a Communes of Romania, commune in Bistrița-Năsăud County, Transylvania, Romania. It is composed of a single village, Salva, and included Runcu Salvei village until the latter was split off to form a separate commune in 2005. It is a relatively important local railway junction on the line to Sighetu Marmației and line to Vatra Dornei and Suceava. Natives *Maria Butaciu References

Communes in Bistrița-Năsăud County Localities in Transylvania {{BistriţaNăsăud-geo-stub ...
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