Tramontana S74
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Tramontana S74
Tramontana, Tramontane, or Tramuntana may refer to: Tramontana * "Tramontana", a short story by Gabriel García Márquez, in ''Strange Pilgrims'' * Tramontana (sports car), a Spanish sports car firm * Sebi Tramontana (born 1960), jazz trombonist most often associated with avant-garde jazz and free improvisation music * Spanish submarine Tramontana, Submarine S74 Tramontana of the Spanish Navy Tramontane * Tramontane, a northern wind (''tramontana'' in Italian and ''tramuntana'' in Catalan) * "Tramontane", an instrumental by the rock group Foreigner, from their album Double Vision (Foreigner album), ''Double Vision'' (Foreigner album); served as the "B" side to their single "Hot Blooded" * Tramontane (film), ''Tramontane'' (film), a 2016 Lebanese drama film * The Pole star, a visible star * ''Tramontane'', a science fiction novel by Emil Petaja Tramuntana

* Serra de Tramuntana, a small mountain chain in Majorca * 35725 Tramuntana, the name of an asteroid {{disambiguation es:T ...
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Strange Pilgrims
''Strange Pilgrims'' (original Spanish-language title: ''Doce cuentos peregrinos'') is a collection of twelve loosely related short stories by the Nobel Prize–winning Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez. Not published until 1992, the stories that make up this collection were originally written during the seventies and eighties. Each of the stories touches on the theme of dislocation and the strangeness of life in a foreign land, although quite what "foreign" means is one of García Márquez's central questions. García Márquez himself spent some years as a virtual exile from his native Colombia. The 12 Stories The twelve stories are: # Bon Voyage, Mr President ''(Buen Viaje, Señor Presidente)'' # The Saint ''(La Santa)'' # Sleeping Beauty and the Airplane ''(El Avión de la Bella Durmiente)'' # I Sell My Dreams ''(Me Alquilo para Soñar)'' # "I Only Came to Use the Phone" ''(Solo Vine a Hablar por Teléfono)'' # The Ghosts of August ''(Espantos de Agosto)'' # María d ...
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Tramontana (sports Car)
The Tramontana is a Spanish single or twin-seat sports car with styling inspired by open wheel racing cars. It is built by Advanced Design Tramontana in Palau de Santa Eulalia, Girona, Catalonia (Spain), and costs €500,000 or more. It was launched as a concept at the 2005 Geneva Motor Show, and subsequently modified for production. It features a mid-mounted twin turbocharged Mercedes-Benz 5.5 litre, single overhead cam V12 engine producing . This is mated to a 6-speed sequential gearbox and rear wheel drive giving a top speed of and a 0–100 km/h time of 3.6 seconds. The body and interior are a mix of aluminium and carbon fibre, while the twenty-inch wheels are a mix of carbon fibre and magnesium. The car weighs and the suspension is an adjustable double wishbone suspension. If the two seat option is chosen, the passenger sits directly behind and slightly higher than the driver. The bonnet badge is made of solid white gold Pure gold is slightly reddish yello ...
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Sebi Tramontana
Sebi Tramontana (born December 12, 1960 in Rosolini, Sicili) is a jazz trombonist most often associated with avant-garde jazz and free improvisation music. A member of the Italian Instabile Orchestra, Tramontana has also recorded with such musical artists as Jeb Bishop, Joëlle Léandre, Mario Schiano, and Carlos Zingaro Carlos Zíngaro (or Carlos "Zíngaro" Alves, born 15 December 1948 in Lisbon, Portugal) is a Portuguese violinist and electronic musician active in free improvisation. Biography Zingaro studied classical music at the Lisbon Music Conservatory fro .... Discography * * With the Italian Instabile Orchestra * * * * * * As contributor * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * References {{DEFAULTSORT:Tramontana, Sebi 1960 births Italian jazz trombonists Living people Avant-garde jazz trombonists Free improvising musicians Italian jazz musicians 21st-century trombonists Italian Instabile Orchestra members ...
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Spanish Submarine Tramontana
''Tramontana'' (S-74) is an built for the Spanish Navy by Bazán at Cartagena, Spain. It is in service with the Spanish Navy. History The submarine was launched in 1984 and commissioned in 1985. It was involved in a collision during naval exercises near Cartagena, in 2001 as well as the Perejil Island crisis in 2002. It was deployed as part of the Spanish contribution to the multi-national task force enforcing the United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973 "to take all necessary measures to protect civilians under threat of attack" in Libya on March 22, 2011. Between 19 and 23 March 2012, the submarine participated in the INSTREX-12 exercise, along with 11 other ships and the Portuguese ''Tridente''-class submarine, '' Arpao''. On 24 May 2013, Pedro Argüelles, Secretary of State for Defence, declared at the Congress of Deputies that shipbuilding company Navantia would review the technical delays of the S-80 Submarine, which had previously been discarded. Media ...
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Tramontane
Tramontane ( ) ; french: tramontane ; el, τραμουντάνα, tramountána, ; it, tramontana ; la, trānsmontānus ; mt, tramuntana ; sl, tramontana ; sh, tramontana ; es, link=no, tramontana . is a classical name for a northern wind. The exact form of the name and precise direction varies from country to country. The word came to English from Italian ''tramontana'', which developed from Latin ''trānsmontānus'' (''trāns-'' + ''montānus''), "beyond/across the mountains", referring to the Alps in the North of Italy. The word has other non-wind-related senses: it can refer to anything that comes from, or anyone who lives on, the other side of mountains, or even more generally, anything seen as foreign, strange, or even barbarous. Traditions in various countries and regions Spain In Spain the wind is called the ''tramuntana'' or in Catalan and ''tramontana'' in Spanish, Galician and Basque. The wind also lends its name to the Serra de Tramuntana in Mallorca. Th ...
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Double Vision (Foreigner Album)
''Double Vision'' is the second studio album by the British-American rock band Foreigner, released on 20 June 1978 by Atlantic Records. Recorded between December 1977 and March 1978, it was Foreigner's only album co-produced by Keith Olsen and the last recording with bass guitarist Ed Gagliardi who would be later replaced by Rick Wills. ''Double Vision'' was the first in the line of many other recordings in which A&R executive John Kalodner would simply have his name listed twice in liner notes, as a play on the title of this album. The phrase "John Kalodner: John Kalodner" originated when the producer Olsen was wondering just how to credit Kalodner's involvement in the band and the album. In keeping with the double vision theme, guitarist Mick Jones came up with an idea of doubling the name. "Tramontane" is the only instrumental track Foreigner have released to date on a studio album. Mick Jones takes the lead vocals on "Back Where You Belong" and "I Have Waited So Long". ...
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Tramontane (film)
''Tramontane'' ( ar, ربيع, Rabīʿ, spring (season)) is a 2021 Lebanese drama film directed by Vatche Boulghourjian. It premiered in the Critics' Week section of the 2021 Cannes Film Festival where it was awarded the Grand Rail d'Or Audience Award. Plot A young man who is visually impaired has decided to discover where he was born and his origin. He travels across Lebanon, where he gathers some minor clues of his actual identity. Cast * Barakat Jabbour as Rabih * Julia Kassar as Samar * Toufic Barakat as Hisham * Michel Adabachi as Wissam * Abido Bacha as Mounir * Odette Makhlouf as Hana * Georges Diab as Nabil Reception On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes Rotten Tomatoes is an American review-aggregation website for film and television. The company was launched in August 1998 by three undergraduate students at the University of California, Berkeley: Senh Duong, Patrick Y. Lee, and Stephen Wang ..., the film holds an approval rating of 86% based on 7 reviews ...
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Pole Star
A pole star or polar star is a star, preferably bright, nearly aligned with the axis of a rotating astronomical body. Currently, Earth's pole stars are Polaris (Alpha Ursae Minoris), a bright magnitude-2 star aligned approximately with its northern axis that serves as a pre-eminent star in celestial navigation, and a much dimmer magnitude-5.5 star on its southern axis, Polaris Australis (Sigma Octantis). From around 1700 BC until just after 300 AD, Kochab (Beta Ursae Minoris) and Pherkad (Gamma Ursae Minoris) were twin northern pole stars, though neither was as close to the pole as Polaris is now. History In classical antiquity, Beta Ursae Minoris (Kochab) was closer to the celestial north pole than Alpha Ursae Minoris. While there was no naked-eye star close to the pole, the midpoint between Alpha and Beta Ursae Minoris was reasonably close to the pole, and it appears that the entire constellation of Ursa Minor, in antiquity known as '':wikt:Cynosura, Cynosura'' (Greek ...
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Emil Petaja
Emil Petaja (12 April 1915 – 17 August 2000) was an American science fiction and fantasy writer whose career spanned seven decades. He was the author of 13 published novels, nearly 150 short stories, numerous poems, and a handful of books and articles on various subjects. Though he wrote science fiction, fantasy, horror stories, detective fiction, and poetry, Petaja considered his work part of an older tradition of "weird fiction." Petaja was also a small press publisher. In 1995, he was named the first ever Author Emeritus by the Science Fiction Writers of America. Of Finnish descent, Petaja's best known works are a series of science fiction novels based on the Kalevala, the Finnish verse epic. Petaja's series brought him readers from around the world, while his particular mythological approach to science fiction has been discussed in scholarly publicationsKailo, Kaarina. "Spanning the Iron and Space Ages: Emil Petaja's Kalevala-based fantasy tales". ''Kanadan Suomalainen'', T ...
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Serra De Tramuntana
The Serra de Tramuntana (, es, Sierra de Tramontana) is a mountain range running southwest–northeast which forms the northern backbone of the Spanish island of Mallorca. It is also the name given to the comarca of the same area. On 27 June 2011, the Tramuntana Range was awarded World Heritage Status by UNESCO as an area of great physical and cultural significance. Geography The highest peak is the Puig Major, which at 1,436 meters, is the highest mountain in the Balearic Islands. The second highest peak is Penyal de Migdia which is at 1,398 meters. It is followed by the Puig de Massanella, which stands at 1,364 meters. The mountain range also host the deepest cave of Majorca, the Cova de sa Campana at -358 meters, and the deepest underground lake at -334 meters. The climate in the Tramuntana Range is significantly wetter than the rest of the island, recording as much as 1507 mm (59.3 inches) of precipitation per year, in comparison with some other parts of the island ...
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35725 Tramuntana
__NOTOC__ Year 357 ( CCCLVII) was a common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Constantius and Iulianus (or, less frequently, year 1110 ''Ab urbe condita''). The denomination 357 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years. Events By place Roman Empire * April 28 – Emperor Constantius II enters Rome for the first time to celebrate his victory over Magnentius. He address the Senate and the Roman people. * August 25 – Battle of Strasbourg: Julian, ''Caesar'' (deputy emperor) and supreme commander of the Roman army in Gaul, wins an important victory against the Alemanni at Strasbourg ( Argentoratum), driving the barbarians back behind the Rhine. * The Imperial Library of Constantinople is founded. * Ammianus Marcellinus describes the Pantheon ...
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Tramuntana (desambiguación)
Tramontane ( ) ; french: tramontane ; el, τραμουντάνα, tramountána, ; it, tramontana ; la, trānsmontānus ; mt, tramuntana ; sl, tramontana ; sh, tramontana ; es, link=no, tramontana . is a classical name for a northern wind. The exact form of the name and precise direction varies from country to country. The word came to English from Italian ''tramontana'', which developed from Latin ''trānsmontānus'' (''trāns-'' + ''montānus''), "beyond/across the mountains", referring to the Alps in the North of Italy. The word has other non-wind-related senses: it can refer to anything that comes from, or anyone who lives on, the other side of mountains, or even more generally, anything seen as foreign, strange, or even barbarous. Traditions in various countries and regions Spain In Spain the wind is called the ''tramuntana'' or in Catalan and ''tramontana'' in Spanish, Galician and Basque. The wind also lends its name to the Serra de Tramuntana in Mallorca. T ...
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