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Sax Range
Sax or SAX may refer to: * Saxophone (or sax), a family of woodwind instruments People * Oett M. Mallard (1915–1986), also known as Sax Mallard, Chicago-based jazz saxophonist and bandleader * Lincoln Thompson (1949–1999), Jamaican reggae singer, musician and songwriter also known as Sax * Sax (surname) * Sax Rohmer, pen name of Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward (1883–1959), English novelist best known for creating the villain Fu Manchu Places * 3534 Sax, an asteroid * Sax, a village in the Sennwald municipality in Switzerland * Sax, Alicante, a municipality in Spain * Sax, Minnesota, United States, an unincorporated community * Shanxi, a province of China (Guobiao abbreviation SAX) Other * Sax (cigarette), an Italian brand * "Sax" (song), a 2015 song English recording artist Fleur East * Seax, also spelled sax, an ancient Germanic, single-edged knife * Simple API for XML, an event-driven parsing model for XML * Baron of Sax, later Sax-Hohensax, a Swiss title; see Hohensax ...
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Saxophone
The saxophone (often referred to colloquially as the sax) is a type of single-reed woodwind instrument with a conical body, usually made of brass. As with all single-reed instruments, sound is produced when a reed on a mouthpiece vibrates to produce a sound wave inside the instrument's body. The pitch is controlled by opening and closing holes in the body to change the effective length of the tube. The holes are closed by leather pads attached to keys operated by the player. Saxophones are made in various sizes and are almost always treated as transposing instruments. Saxophone players are called '' saxophonists''. The saxophone is used in a wide range of musical styles including classical music (such as concert bands, chamber music, solo repertoire, and occasionally orchestras), military bands, marching bands, jazz (such as big bands and jazz combos), and contemporary music. The saxophone is also used as a solo and melody instrument or as a member of a horn section in som ...
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Hohensax Castle
Hohensax (german: Ruine Hohensax or german: Burg Hohensax) is a ruined castle in the Sennwald municipality in the Swiss canton St. Gallen. The castle was built around 1200 by the barons of Sax, and was destroyed in 1446. In 1248, the castle passed to Ulrich von Sax, founder of the Sax-Hohensax line of the noble family. The castle was plundered in a feud of 1393, and sold together with the villages of Sax and Gams to the dukes of Austria. In the Old Zürich War, the people of Appenzell captured and slighted the castle in 1446. After this, the barons of Hohensax resided in the nearby Forstegg castle at Salez. In 1640, the ruin passed to the barony of Sax-Forstegg, one of the constituent parts of the canton of Linth of the Helvetic Republic in 1798, and later the canton of St. Gallen. It included the villages of Sax, Salez and Gams. Gallery File:Hohensax Castle 4.JPG, View of the castle from below the tower File:Hohensax Castle 2.JPG, Castle walls File:Hohensax Castle 3.JPG, ...
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Small-angle X-ray Scattering
Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) is a small-angle scattering technique by which nanoscale density differences in a sample can be quantified. This means that it can determine nanoparticle size distributions, resolve the size and shape of (monodisperse) macromolecules, determine pore sizes, characteristic distances of partially ordered materials, and much more. This is achieved by analyzing the elastic scattering behaviour of X-rays when travelling through the material, recording their scattering at small angles (typically 0.1 – 10°, hence the "Small-angle" in its name). It belongs to the family of small-angle scattering (SAS) techniques along with small-angle neutron scattering, and is typically done using hard X-rays with a wavelength of 0.07 – 0.2 nm.. Depending on the angular range in which a clear scattering signal can be recorded, SAXS is capable of delivering structural information of dimensions between 1 and 100 nm, and of repeat distances in partially ordered s ...
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Saxe (other)
Saxe, meaning “Saxon,” may refer to: Places Germany * Saxe-Lauenburg * Saxe-Wittenberg * Saxe-Altenburg * Saxe-Coburg * Saxe-Coburg and Gotha * Saxe-Coburg-Eisenach * Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld * Saxe-Eisenach * Saxe-Eisenberg * Saxe-Gotha * Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg * Saxe-Hildburghausen * Saxe-Jena * Saxe-Meiningen * Saxe-Römhild * Saxe-Saalfeld * Saxe-Weimar * Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach United States * Saxe, Virginia Other uses * Saxe (surname) * ''Porcelaine de Saxe'', the French name for Meissen porcelain See also * * * Sachs * Sachse (other) * Sacks (surname) * Saks (other) * Sax (other) * Saxony (other) * Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) * Zaks (other) * Zax (other) Zax may refer to: *Andy Zax, music producer, historian, and information archivist *The Zax, a pair of Dr. Seuss characters from ''The Sneetches and Other Stories'' * Zax (Duke Power), a cartoon character used by Duke Power to educate children * Zax ...
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Saks (other)
Saks can refer to: *Saks (surname) *Saks, Alabama, a community in the United States *Saks, Inc., holding company of Saks Fifth Avenue *Saks Fifth Avenue, U.S. luxury department store See also * * *Sachs *Sachse (other) *Sacks (surname) *Saksida *Sax (other) *Saxe (other) *Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) *Zaks (other) *Zax (other) Zax may refer to: *Andy Zax, music producer, historian, and information archivist *The Zax, a pair of Dr. Seuss characters from ''The Sneetches and Other Stories'' * Zax (Duke Power), a cartoon character used by Duke Power to educate children * Zax ...
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Sacks (surname)
Sacks is a German surname meaning "man from Saxony" and may refer to: * Alan Sacks, US television producer * Andrew Sacks, US attorney * C. Jared Sacks, US founder of Channel Classics Records * David O. Sacks (b. 1972), South Africa-born US internet businessman and film producer * David Sacks (fl. 21st century), US television writer and producer * Gerald Sacks (b. 1933), US logician * Glenn Sacks (fl. 21st century), US radio personality * Greg Sacks (b. 1952), US racing car driver * Harvey Sacks (1935–1975), US sociologist * Hayley Anne Sacks (b. 1991), US figure skater who competed for Israel * Joel Sacks (b. 1989), Argentine football (soccer) player * Jonathan Sacks (1948–2020), Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom's main body of Orthodox synagogues * Jonathan Sacks (composer) (b. 1950), US musician and composer * Leon Sacks (1902–1972), Democratic member of US House of Representatives * Leslie Sacks (1952-2013), US art dealer and collector * Mark Sacks (1953-2008), British p ...
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Sachse, Texas
Sachse ( ) is a city in Collin and Dallas counties in the U.S. state of Texas and is part of the DFW metroplex. An eastern suburb of Dallas, the city population was 20,329, as of the 2010 census with an estimated population of 26,046 people today. Sachse is located off Texas State Highway 78 and is approximately north of the President George Bush Turnpike (Texas State Highway 190) and Firewheel Town Center. History Sachse was founded by William Sachse, a European immigrant from Herford, Prussia (included modern-day Germany, and parts of Poland and Eastern Europe), in 1845. researcherand veganbr>baketivist-->Purchasing from Collin County, Sachse erected the first cotton mills and gins in the county. After Sachse gave 100 feet of frontage through all of his holdings to the railroad in 1886, the railroad built a depot on the frontage and named the town Sachse. Since the depot was labeled 'Saxie', many old legal documents referred to the city as 'Saxie'. The flaw was later corre ...
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Sachs
Sachs is a German surname, meaning "man from Saxony". Sachs is a common surname among Ashkenazi Jews from Saxony, in the United States sometimes adopted in the variant Zaks, supposedly in reference to the Hebrew phrase ''Zera Kodesh Shemo'' (ZaKS), literally "his name is Holy Seed," a quotation from Isaiah 6:13.Elsdon Coles Smith, Dictionary of American Family Names (1956) Notable people with the surname Sachs include: *Albie Sachs (born 1935), South African Constitutional Court Justice *Andrew Sachs (1930–2016), German-British actor *Bernard Sachs (1858–1944), American neurologist *Curt Sachs (also Kurth Sachs, 1881–1959), German music historian * Ed Sachs (1918–1996), American professional basketball player *Eddie Sachs (1927–1964), American racecar driver * Edwin Sachs (1870–1919), British architect *Ernest Sachs (1879–1958), American neurosurgeon *Ernest Sachs, Jr. (1916–2001), American neurosurgeon *Gunter Sachs (1932–2011), German photographer, researcher ...
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Doctor Sax
''Doctor Sax'' (''Doctor Sax: Faust Part Three'') is a novel by Jack Kerouac published in 1959. Kerouac wrote it in 1952 while living with William S. Burroughs in Mexico City. The novel was written quickly in the improvisatory style Kerouac called “spontaneous prose.” In a letter to Allen Ginsberg dated May 18, 1952, Kerouac wrote, “I’ll simply blow mprovise like a jazz musicianon the vision of the Shadow in my 13th and 14th years on Sarah Ave. Lowell, culminated by the myth itself as I dreamt it in Fall 1948 . . . angles of my hoop-rolling boyhood as seen from the shroud.” In a letter to Ginsberg dated November 8 of the same year, Kerouac admits “''Doctor Sax'' was written high on tea arijuanawithout pausing to think, sometimes Bill urroughswould come in the room and so the chapter ended there, . . .” (ibid, p. 185). Plot summary The novel begins with Jackie Duluoz, based on Kerouac himself, relating a dream in which he finds himself in Lowell, Massachusetts, ...
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Bratislava Stock Exchange
Bratislava Stock Exchange ( Slovak: Burza cenných papierov v Bratislave, abbr. BSSE, BCPB) is a Stock Exchange in Bratislava, that began its existence on 15 March 1991 according to adjudication of Ministry of Finance of Slovakia in 1990. BSSE is the only organizer of the market with the security papers in Slovakia. It is in operation since 21 June 2001. The trading started at BSSE on 6 April 1993. The seat of the stock exchange is Vysoká 17, Bratislava. Index The official stock index for the Bratislava Stock Exchange is SAX (abbr. from ''Slovenský akciový index''; in Slovak: ''Slovak Share Index''). It is a capital-weighted index based on a comparison of market capitalization selected set of shares with a market capitalization of the same set of the reference date. It is an index that reflects the overall change of assets associated with investing in shares, which are included in the index. It includes changes in prices as well as dividend income and income related to ch ...
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Metroid Fusion
is an action-adventure game developed and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy Advance in 2002. It was developed by Nintendo Research & Development 1, which had developed the previous game in the series, ''Super Metroid'' (1994). Players control the bounty hunter Samus Aran, who investigates a space station infected with shapeshifting parasites known as X. Like previous ''Metroid'' games, ''Fusion'' is a side-scrolling game with platform game, platform jumping, shooting, and puzzle elements, but introduces mission-based progression that guides the player through certain areas. It was released the day before the GameCube game ''Metroid Prime'' in North America; both games can be linked using the GameCube – Game Boy Advance link cable to unlock additional content for ''Prime''. ''Fusion'' was acclaimed for its gameplay, controls, graphics and music, though its shorter length and greater linearity received some criticism. It received several awards, including Handheld Game of t ...
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Saa Language
Sa or Saa language is an Austronesian language spoken in southern Pentecost Island, Vanuatu. It had an estimated 2,500 speakers in the year 2000. Dialects and range Sa has numerous dialects, with no well-established names or boundaries. At a meeting in 2008, speakers recognised four main dialects, with sub-dialectal variation and mixing of dialects in some areas. The two central dialects are relatively similar to one another and are generally understood by all Sa speakers. Most writing and research in Sa has been in one of these dialects: * A western dialect ("Saa" with a long ''a'') is spoken on the west coast around Panas, Wali, Panngi and Ranputor. * An eastern dialect ("Sa" with a short ''a'') is spoken in the south-east around Ranwas. A variant of this dialect with longer vowels in certain words is spoken at Poinkros in the far south, and is used in the Bible Society's recent Gospel translations. There are also two outlying dialects, which are highly distinctive and diff ...
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