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Yon Kwang-mu
Yon may refer to: * Yon (name), including a list of people with the name * Yon (river), France * Yon Mound and Village Site, a prehistoric archaeological site in Florida * '' Yön'' ("Direction" in English), a Turkish weekly leftist political magazine published between 1961 and 1967 * YON, IATA code for Yongphulla Airport, Bhutan * yon, ISO 639-3 code for the Yonggom language of West Papua and Papua New Guinea * YON, the United States Navy hull classification symbol for "fuel oil barge (non-self propelled)" * Pietro Yon, an Italian-born organist and composer who made his career in the United States {{Disambig ...
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Yon (name)
Yon is a given name and a surname. Notable people with the name include: Given name * Yon García (born 1979), Spanish former figure skater and five-time Spanish national champion * Yon Goicoechea (born 1984), Venezuelan lawyer and political activist * Yon González (born 1986), Spanish actor * Pak Yǒn, Korean name taken by shipwrecked Dutch sailor Jan Jansz. Weltevree (1595-?) * Yon Soriano (born 1987), Dominican sprinter * Yon Tumarkin (born 1989), Israeli actor and singer * Yon (fl. 1996-2011), a captive Iriomote cat Surname * Yon Hyong-muk (1931-2005), North Korean politician and Prime Minister of North Korea * Marco Yon (1929-1970), Guatemalan revolutionary * Michael Yon (born 1964), American writer and photographer * Pietro Yon (1886–1943), Italian organist and composer * Tom A. Yon (1882-1971), American politician * Simon "Yon" Hall, a member of the Australian musical comedy trio Tripod A tripod is a portable three-legged frame or stand, used as a platform for su ...
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Yon (river)
The Yon () is a long river in the Vendée ''département'', western France. Its source is at Saint-Martin-des-Noyers. It flows generally south. It is a right tributary of the Lay into which it flows between Rosnay and Le Champ-Saint-Père. Communes along its course This list is ordered from source to mouth: *Vendée: Saint-Martin-des-Noyers, La Chaize-le-Vicomte, La Ferrière, Dompierre-sur-Yon, La Roche-sur-Yon, Nesmy, Saint-Florent-des-Bois Saint-Florent-des-Bois () is a former commune in the Vendée department in the Pays de la Loire region in western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Rives-de-l'Yon.Chaillé-sous-les-Ormeaux, Le Tablier,
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Yon Mound And Village Site
The Yon Mound and Village Site ( 8LI2) is a prehistoric archaeological site located two miles west of Bristol, Florida on the east bank of the Apalachicola River. The site was occupied by peoples of the Fort Walton Culture (a regional variation of the Mississippian culture). On December 15, 1978, it was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places as reference number 78000952. Site description Located in the middle Apalachicola River valley of northwest Florida, the site was first occupied briefly during the Swift Creek period at approximately 320 CE. About 1200 CE peoples of the Middle Fort Walton period began occupying the site with the construction of platform mound and associated village site. These people are thought to have been connected with the Cayson Mound and Village Site. The site was later occupied during the protohistoric period by Lamar phase peoples who migrated down the lower Chattahoochee-Apalachicola River, possibly in the wake of initial European ...
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Yön
''Yön'' ( Turkish: ''Direction'') was a weekly Turkish political magazine published between 1961 and 1967. It was a Kemalist and leftist magazine. In fact, ''Yön'' was more than a publication in that its contributors represented a political movement in the 1960s, Yön movement, which was a successor of another leftist-Kemalist movement of the 1930s, Kadro movement, which appeared also around a publication, ''Kadro''. History and profile ''Yön'' started publication in Ankara on 20 December 1961. The founders included Doğan Avcıoğlu, Mümtaz Soysal, İlhan Selçuk and İlhami Soysal. Avcıoğlu was also the editor of ''Yön''. The first issue of the magazine contained a declaration of 500 Turkish intellectuals about a formal doctrine of socialism. ''Yön'' was an organ of Doğan Avcıoğlu's movement, namely direction-revolution movement, which is one of the most influential leftist movements between 1961 and 1971 in Turkey. In line with this function the magazine had a soc ...
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Yongphulla Airport
Yongphulla Airport (also known as Yonphula Airport) is a domestic airport in Bhutan, one of the country's four airports. It is located near Trashigang. History The airport was originally constructed by the Border Roads Organisation in the 1960s. Yongphulla Airport was a simple airstrip at that time, located high atop mountainous terrain and largely unused. In the early 2000s, the airport was renovated with the aim of becoming a domestic airport. It was completed and inaugurated in December 2011. Six months later it closed for runway surface repairs, after Drukair suspended operations citing safety concerns. During construction, budget constraints had allowed only half of the runway to receive 'patchwork repairs'. The runway had not been resurfaced since the 1960s. When the airport reopened in January 2013, following a complete resurfacing of the runway, Drukair scheduled flights to Yongphulla remained suspended because of regulatory requirements and further safety concerns. The ...
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Yonggom Language
Yonggom is one of the Ok languages of West Papua and Papua New Guinea. It is very close to North Muyu, which is also called 'Yonggom'. Phonology Consonants * /b, d/ can become fricatives ², ðintervocalically in fast speech. * /k/ can be heard as a fricative £in fast speech. * /ɾ/ becomes in word-initial position. * /j/ is heard as an affricate Ê’when following a plosive. Vowels * /i/ becomes ªwhen before /s/ or a word-final /n/. * /É›/ becomes more close as when before a sonorant back consonant. References External links * Paradisec The Pacific and Regional Archive for Digital Sources in Endangered Cultures (PARADISEC) is a cross-institutional project that supports work on endangered languages and cultures of the Pacific and the region around Australia. They digitise reel-to ... has an open access collection thaincludes Yonggom language materials Languages of Western Province (Papua New Guinea) Ok languages {{papuan-lang-stub ...
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Hull Classification Symbol
The United States Navy, United States Coast Guard, and United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) use a hull classification symbol (sometimes called hull code or hull number) to identify their ships by type and by individual ship within a type. The system is analogous to the pennant number system that the Royal Navy and other European and Commonwealth navies use. History United States Navy The U.S. Navy began to assign unique Naval Registry Identification Numbers to its ships in the 1890s. The system was a simple one in which each ship received a number which was appended to its ship type, fully spelled out, and added parenthetically after the ship's name when deemed necessary to avoid confusion between ships. Under this system, for example, the battleship ''Indiana'' was USS ''Indiana'' (Battleship No. 1), the cruiser ''Olympia'' was USS ''Olympia'' (Cruiser No. 6), and so on. Beginning in 1907, some ships also were referred to alternatively ...
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