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Tut Le Blanc
Tut may refer to: __NOTOC__ People * Tutankhamun, an Egyptian pharaoh often referred to as "King Tut" * Bernard Bartzen (born 1927), American tennis player nicknamed "Tut" * Tut Imlay (1902–1976), National Football League player (1926–1927) * Tut Taylor (born 1923), American bluegrass musician * Tin Tut (1895–1945), first foreign minister of the Union of Burma Places *Tut, Iran (other), various villages *Tut, Turkey, a district *Tut (river), Mizoram, India Other uses * TUT (other) * Dental click, a sound used to express disapproval in English, often spelled as "tut" or "tsk" * ''Tut'' (miniseries), a Spike miniseries about Tutankhamun * Tut or Thout, the first month of the ancient Egyptian and Coptic calendars * ISO 639 code for the proposed language family of Altaic languages * Truncated tetrahedron, a polyhedron See also * King Tut (other) * Tuts Washington Isidore "Tuts" Washington (January 24, 1907 – August 5, 1984) was an American bl ...
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Tutankhamun
Tutankhamun (, egy, twt-ꜥnḫ-jmn), Egyptological pronunciation Tutankhamen () (), sometimes referred to as King Tut, was an Egyptian pharaoh who was the last of his royal family to rule during the end of the Eighteenth Dynasty (ruled in the conventional chronology) during the New Kingdom of Egyptian history. His father is believed to be the pharaoh Akhenaten, identified as the mummy found in the tomb KV55. His mother is his father's sister, identified through DNA testing as an unknown mummy referred to as "The Younger Lady" who was found in KV35. Tutankhamun took the throne at eight or nine years of age under the unprecedented viziership of his eventual successor, Ay, to whom he may have been related. He married his paternal half-sister Ankhesenamun. During their marriage they lost two daughters, one at 5–6 months of pregnancy and the other shortly after birth at full-term. His names—''Tutankhaten'' and ''Tutankhamun''—are thought to mean "Living image of At ...
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Bernard Bartzen
Bernard "Tut" Bartzen (November 25, 1927 - July 10, 2019) was an American former tennis player in the mid-20th century, who later became a winning college tennis coach. Biography Born in 1927 in Austin, Texas, Bartzen moved with his family to San Angelo when he was 5 years old. He won three Texas state high school titles — two in singles and one in doubles — and the National Interscholastic singles championship. Bartzen attended the College of William & Mary, where the left-hander posted a 50–0 singles record. He also won the NCAA doubles title with Fred Kovaleski in 1948. Bartzen went on the American tennis circuit and was ranked in the top 10 nine straight years (1953–1961), two of them at No. 2 (1959 and 1960). Lance Tingay of The Daily Telegraph ranked him World No. 8 for 1959. During his career, he had wins over such future Hall of Famers as Vic Seixas and Tony Trabert. One of those wins over Trabert came in 1955 in the final at the event in Cincinnati, wher ...
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Tut Imlay
Talma W. "Tut" Imlay (March 20, 1902 – May 17, 1962) was an American football player who played two seasons in the National Football League in 1926 and in 1927. During those two years, Tut played for the Los Angeles Buccaneers and the New York Giants. In 1927, Tut won an NFL Championship with the Giants. In 1926, Imlay earned 1st Team All-NFL honors by the ''Green Bay Press-Gazette''. Early career Imlay attended Salinas High School in 1920 where he played for the school's first football team that played by American rules. In 2013, he was inducted into the Salinas Valley Sports Hall of Fame. College football Tut played college football at the University of California. In 1925 he was named the captain of the Golden Bears football team. While in college, Imlay once tossed a football to teammate Harold Muller from the top of a 415-foot building in San Francisco. On December 26, 1925, the first touchdown scored in East–West Shrine Game history was a 27-yard pass by Imlay to Brick ...
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Tut Taylor
Robert Arthur "Tut" Taylor Sr. (November 20, 1923 – April 9, 2015) was an American bluegrass musician. Taylor played banjo and mandolin as a child, and began playing dobro at age 14, learning to use the instrument with a distinctive flat-picking style. Taylor was a member of The Folkswingers in the 1960s, who released three albums; he recorded his debut solo effort in 1964. Later in the 1960s, he played with the Dixie Gentlemen and in John Hartford's Aereo-Plain band. Taylor became a local Nashville, Tennessee fixture. In 1970, he co-founded the instrument shop GTR there, soon after releasing another solo album. He also co-founded the Old Time Pickin' Parlor, a Nashville venue noted for performances of old-time music, as well as Tut Taylor's General Store. In a March, 1992 interview, Neil Young reported having bought Hank Williams' Martin D-28 Guitar from Tut Taylor. At the Grammy Awards of 1995, he was awarded the Grammy Award for Best Bluegrass Album for his work on ''T ...
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Tin Tut
Tin Tut, CBE ( my, တင်ထွဋ်, ; also spelt Tin Htut; 1 February 1895 – 18 September 1948) was the 1st Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Union of Burma, and the Minister of Finance in Aung San's pre-independence government. Educated at Dulwich and Queens' College, Cambridge, Tin Tut was the first Burmese to become an Indian Civil Service officer. He was Prime Minister Aung San's deputy in the government. However, he was not present in the cabinet meeting on 19 July 1947. On that day, assassination that claimed the lives of Aung San and six other cabinet ministers occurred . He was mortally wounded when a bomb exploded in his car on Sparks Street Sparks Street (''French:'' Rue Sparks) is a pedestrian mall in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was a main street in Ottawa that was converted into an outdoor pedestrian street in 1967, making it the earliest such street or mall in Canada.
on 18 September 1948. He died shortly after in
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Tut, Iran (other)
Tut ( fa, توت, link=no), in Iran, may refer to the following villages: * Tut, Lorestan * Tut, Markazi * Tut, Razavi Khorasan * Tut, Mehrestan, Sistan and Baluchestan Province * Tut, South Khorasan * Tut, Yazd See also * Tut-e Olya, Khuzestan Province * Tut-e Sofla, Khuzestan Province * Tut-e Safar, Razavi Khorasan Province * Tut-e Seyyed Mohammad, Razavi Khorasan Province {{geodis ...
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Tut, Turkey
Tut is a town of Adıyaman Province of Turkey, to the north-west of the city of Adıyaman in the range of the Taurus Mountains called the Haci Muhammed. It is the seat of Tut District.İlçe Belediyesi
Turkey Civil Administration Departments Inventory. Retrieved 22 December 2022.
Its population is 3,388 (2021). The mayor is Mehmet Kılıc for the
Republican People's Party The Republican People's Party ( tr, Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, , acronymized as CHP ) is a Kemalist and social-democratic political party in Turkey which currently stands as the main opposition party. It is also the oldest political party ...

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Tut (river)
The Tut is a river of Mizoram, northeastern India India, officially the Republic of India (Hindi: ), is a country in South Asia. It is the seventh-largest country by area, the second-most populous country, and the most populous democracy in the world. Bounded by the Indian Ocean on the so .... It is a tributary of the Tlawng River. References Rivers of Mizoram Rivers of India {{India-river-stub ...
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TUT (other)
Tut may refer to: __NOTOC__ People * Tutankhamun, an Egyptian pharaoh often referred to as "King Tut" * Bernard Bartzen (born 1927), American tennis player nicknamed "Tut" * Tut Imlay (1902–1976), National Football League player (1926–1927) * Tut Taylor (born 1923), American bluegrass musician * Tin Tut (1895–1945), first foreign minister of the Union of Burma Places *Tut, Iran (other), various villages *Tut, Turkey, a district *Tut (river), Mizoram, India Other uses * TUT (other) * Dental click, a sound used to express disapproval in English, often spelled as "tut" or "tsk" * ''Tut'' (miniseries), a Spike miniseries about Tutankhamun * Tut or Thout, the first month of the ancient Egyptian and Coptic calendars * ISO 639 code for the proposed language family of Altaic languages * Truncated tetrahedron, a polyhedron See also * King Tut (other) * Tuts Washington Isidore "Tuts" Washington (January 24, 1907 – August 5, 1984) was an American b ...
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Dental Click
Dental (or more precisely denti-alveolar) clicks are a family of click consonants found, as constituents of words, only in Africa and in the Damin ritual jargon of Australia. In English, the ''tut-tut!'' (British spelling, "tutting") or ''tsk! tsk!'' (American spelling, "tsking") sound used to express disapproval or pity is an unreleased dental click, although it is not a lexical phoneme (a sound that distinguishes words) in English but a paralinguistic speech-sound. Similarly paralinguistic usage of dental clicks is made in certain other languages, but the meaning thereof differs widely between many of the languages (e.g., affirmation in Somali but negation in many varieties of Arabic). The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents the place of articulation of these sounds is , a vertical bar. Prior to 1989, was the IPA letter for the dental clicks. It is still occasionally used where the symbol would be confounded with other symbols, such as prosod ...
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Tut (miniseries)
''Tut'' is a Canadian-American miniseries that premiered on U.S. cable network Spike on July 19, 2015. The three-part miniseries is based on the life of Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun. Development ''Tut'' was first announced by Spike in May 2014. The miniseries marks a return by the network towards scripted programming, and in particular, "event" series that cater to a "balanced" audience (in contrast to the remainder of Spike's programming at the time, which has typically skewed towards a male audience). Such event series have also been recently popular among other networks, such as History. ''Tut'' is produced by Muse Entertainment, best known for its other miniseries '' The Kennedys'' and ''The Pillars of the Earth''. Cast Main cast * Avan Jogia as Tutankhamun, the young Pharaoh of Egypt * Ben Kingsley as Ay, the Grand Vizier. * Nonso Anozie as General Horemheb, Tutankhamun's savvy and power hungry military strategist. * Sibylla Deen as Ankhesenamun, the calculating an ...
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Thout
Thout ( cop, Ⲑⲱⲟⲩⲧ, ), also known as Thoth ( grc-gre, Θωθ, ''Thōth'') and Tut. ( ar, توت), is the first month of the ancient Egyptian calendar, Egyptian and Coptic calendars. It lies between 11 September and 10 October of the Gregorian calendar. The month of Thout is also the first month of the Season of the Inundation, Season of ''Akhet'' (Inundation) in Ancient Egypt, when the Nile Flooding of the Nile, floods historically covered the land of Egypt; it has not done so since the construction of the Aswan High Dam, High Dam at Aswan. Name The name of the month comes from Thoth, the Ancient Egyptian God of Wisdom and Science, inventor of writing, patron of scribes, and "he who designates the seasons, months, and years." Thoth presided over the "House of Life," which were composed and copied all texts necessary for the maintenance and replenishment of life. Coptic Synaxarium of the month of Thout See also * Egyptian calendar, Egyptian, Coptic calendar, Coptic, ...
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