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Yea Angk
Yea, Ye-A, YEA, or yea may refer to: *An archaic form of yes, the opposite of nay Places * Yea, Victoria, a town in Australia *Yea River, Victoria, Australia *Shire of Yea, Victoria, Australia, a former local government area People *Lacy Walter Giles Yea (1808–1855), British Army colonel who distinguished himself in the Crimean War *Philip Yea (born 1954), British businessman and investor *Yea baronets Other uses * General and Speciality Workers' Union, a former trade union in Finland * ''Yea Chronicle'', a weekly newspaper in Victoria, Australia * IATA airport code for all airports serving Edmonton, Alberta, Canada: Edmonton International Airport and Edmonton City Centre Airport * yea, ISO 639-3 code for the Ravula language, spoken in Karnataka, India See also *Yeah (other) Yeah may refer to: * Yeah is a synonym of yes; see yes and no Music Albums * ''Yeah!!!'', by Aretha Franklin in 1965 * ''Yeah!'' (Brownsville Station album), 1973 * ''Yeah!'' (Char ...
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Yes And No
''Yes'' and ''no'', or word pairs with similar words, are expressions of the affirmative and the negative, respectively, in several languages, including English. Some languages make a distinction between answers to affirmative versus negative questions and may have three-form or four-form systems. English originally used a four-form system up to and including Early Middle English and Modern English has reduced to a two-form system consisting of 'yes' and 'no'. It exists in many facets of communication, such as: eye blink communication, head movements, Morse Code, and sign language. Some languages, such as Latin, do not have yes-no word systems. Answering yes/no question with single words meaning 'yes' or 'no' is by no means universal. Probably about half the world's languages typically employ an echo response: repeating the verb in the question in an affirmative or a negative form. Some of these also have optional words for 'yes' and 'no', like Hungarian, Russian , and Port ...
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Yea, Victoria
Yea ( ) is a town in Victoria, Australia north-east of the state capital Melbourne at the junction of the Goulburn Valley Highway and the Melba Highway, in the Shire of Murrindindi local government area. In an area originally inhabited by the Taungurung people, it was first visited by Europeans of the Hume and Hovell expedition in 1824, and within 15 years most of the land in the area had been taken up by graziers. Surveyed in 1855, the township grew as a service centre for grazing, gold-mining and timber-getting in the area. The town has had a fairly stable population (around 1,100) since 1900, though it now has a relatively old population. The town economy is based around servicing the farming sector, and tourism, with good road links but little public transport. The town has education supplied by three schools (state primary and high schools, and a Catholic primary). It has three churches, and active sporting clubs. Heritage sites around the town include the railway station ...
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Yea River
The Yea River, an inland perennial river of the Goulburn Broken catchment, part of the Murray-Darling basin, is located in the lower South Eastern Highlands bioregion and Northern Country/North Central regions of the Australian state of Victoria. Location and features The Yea River rises in the Toolangi State Forest north-east of and northwest of Mount Tanglefoot, part of the Great Dividing Range. The river generally flows in a northerly direction, generally aligned with the Melba Highway which crosses the river in its lower reaches. The river is joined by six tributaries including the Murrindindi River, flows east and north of the town of before reaching its confluence with the Goulburn River, near Ghin Ghin Bridge. The river descends over its course. The river is also crossed by the Goulburn Valley Highway, east of Yea. Etymology The suspected Aboriginal Taungurung language name for the river is ''Kayigai'', with no clearly defined meaning. A surveyor's map of giv ...
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Shire Of Yea
The Shire of Yea was a Local government in Australia, local government area about northeast of Melbourne, the state capital of Victoria (Australia), Victoria, Australia. The shire covered an area of , and existed from 1869 until 1994. The shire's population was dominated by the town of Yea, Victoria, Yea. History Yea was first incorporated as a Road districts of Victoria (Australia), road district on 1 February 1869, and became a shire on 28 November 1873. Its boundaries changed a number of times throughout its existence: Accessed at State Library of Victoria, La Trobe Reading Room. * 15 May 1907 - Annexed parts of the Rural City of Seymour, Shire of Seymour. * 20 May 1914 - Lost a part of North Riding to the Shire of Alexandra. * 21 April 1925 - Lost parts to the Shire of Healesville. * 19 April 1961 - Lost parts to the Shire of Seymour. * 1 October 1972 - Annexed parts of the Shire of Eltham, near Kinglake, Victoria, Kinglake. * 1 October 1980 - Annexed parts of the Shire of ...
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Lacy Walter Giles Yea
Lacy Walter Giles Yea (20 May 1808 – 18 June 1855) was a British Army colonel, known for his role in the Crimean War, where he was killed in action. Early life Born in Park Row, Bristol, on 20 May 1808, he was eldest son of Sir William Walter Yea, second baronet, of Pyrland, near Taunton, Somerset, who married, on 24 June 1805, Anne Heckstetter (d. 1846), youngest daughter of Colonel David Michel of Dulish House, Dorset. Lacy Yea was educated at Eton College. He was commissioned as ensign in the 37th foot on 6 October 1825, obtained an unattached lieutenancy on 19 December 1826, was appointed to the 5th Foot on 13 March 1827, and exchanged to the 7th (Royal Fusiliers) on 13 March 1828. He served with it in the Mediterranean and America, becoming captain 30 December 1836, major on 3 June 1842, and lieutenant-colonel on 9 August 1850. Crimean War In 1854 he went out in command of the Royal Fusiliers to Turkey and the Crimea, with a reputation as martinet. At the battle of Alm ...
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Philip Yea
Philip Edward Yea (born 11 December 1954) is a British businessman and private equity investor, and the chairman of Equiniti and Mondi plc. He is a non-executive director of Aberdeen Standard Asia Focus plc and Marshall of Cambridge (Holdings) Ltd. He is a former chairman of Greene King plc (2016 to 2019) and bwin.party digital entertainment plc (2014 to 2016). He was chairman of the trustees at the British Heart Foundation from 2009 to 2015, and was an independent trustee director of The Francis Crick Institute during its formation (2011 to 2018). Prior to this, he was chief executive of 3i Group plc, from 2005 to January 2009. Yea was a non-executive director of Vodafone Group plc from 2005 to 2017 and senior business adviser to Prince Andrew, Duke of York. between 2009 and 2014. In 2008, he was ranked 41st in The Times Power 100 list, a list which rates the most powerful people in British business. Early life He attended Wallington County Grammar School and later obtained ...
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Yea Baronets
The Yea baronetcy, of Pyrland in the County of Somerset, was a title in the Baronetage of Great Britain. It was created on 18 June 1759 for William Yea, who was High Sheriff of Somerset in 1760. The title became extinct on the death of the third Baronet in 1864. Yea baronets, of Pyrland (1759) *Sir William Yea, 1st Baronet (died 1806) *Sir William Walter Yea, 2nd Baronet (1784–1862) *Sir Henry Lacy Yea, 3rd Baronet (1798–1864) See also * Colonel Lacy Walter Giles Yea Lacy Walter Giles Yea (20 May 1808 – 18 June 1855) was a British Army colonel, known for his role in the Crimean War, where he was killed in action. Early life Born in Park Row, Bristol, on 20 May 1808, he was eldest son of Sir William Walter ..., oldest son of Sir William Walter Yea, 2nd Baronet References {{DEFAULTSORT:Yea Extinct baronetcies in the Baronetage of Great Britain ...
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General And Speciality Workers' Union
The General and Speciality Workers' Union ( fi, Yleis- ja erikoisalojen ammattiliitto, YEA) was a general union in Finland. The union was founded in 1960, as a split from the Finnish Food Workers' Union (SEL). At the time, the SEL was led by communists, as was the Finnish Federation of Trade Unions (SAK), to which it was affiliated. Supporters of the Social Democratic Party formed the Finnish Trade Union Federation (SAJ), and SEL members who wished to affiliate to the SAJ formed the "General and Speciality Workers' Union". As the union's name suggested, it was a general union and accepted workers from other industries who were not eligible to join another SAJ-affiliated union, including chemical workers.{{cite journal , title=Proceedings , journal=Proceedings of the 5th World Congress of the International Federation of Petroleum and Chemical Workers , date=1966 , page=112 This enabled it to grow rapidly, and by 1968, the union had 12,000 members. In 1969, the SAJ and the SAK mer ...
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Yea Chronicle
The ''Yea Chronicle'' is a weekly newspaper that circulates on Wednesdays throughout the western region of the Murrindindi Shire in Victoria, Australia. The newspaper started as ''The Yea Telegraph'' in October 1885. The name changed to ''The Yea Chronicle'' in 1890. An early owner was Frederick G. Purcell. It was later owned by Tom Dignam and who sold the paper to Ash and Fleur Long in 1984 and they in turn sold it to Geoff Heyes and Jenny Smith of Alexandra newspapers in May 1993. it has a circulation of 524. See also * List of newspapers in Australia This is a list of newspapers in Australia. For other older newspapers, see list of defunct newspapers of Australia. National In 1950, the number of national daily newspapers in Australia was 54 and it increased to 65 in 1965. Daily newspape ... References External links *{{trove newspaper, 124, Yea Chronicle, Yea, Vic. : 1891 - 1920 *Digitise''World War I Victorian newspapers''from the State Library of Victoria New ...
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Edmonton International Airport
Edmonton International Airport, as of August 29, 2022, officially branded YEG Edmonton International Airport is the primary air passenger and air cargo facility in the Edmonton Metropolitan Region of the Canadian province of Alberta. Designated as an international airport by Transport Canada and operated by Edmonton Airports, it is located south southwest of Downtown Edmonton in Leduc County on Highway 2 opposite of the city of Leduc. The airport offers scheduled non-stop flights to major cities in Canada, the United States, Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America and Europe. It is a hub facility for Northern Alberta and Northern Canada. The airport has a catchment area encompassing Central and Northern Alberta, northern British Columbia, and Yukon, the Northwest Territories and western Nunavut. Total catchment area is 1.8 million residents. It is Canada's largest major airport by total land area, covering just under 7,000 acres, the 5th busiest airport by passenger traff ...
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Edmonton City Centre Airport
Edmonton City Centre Airport (ECCA), also called Blatchford Field as well as Edmonton Municipal Airport, was an airport within the city of Edmonton, in Alberta, Canada. It was bordered by Yellowhead Trail to the north, Kingsway to the south, 121 Street to the west, and the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT) and Jefferson armouries to the east. It encompassed approximately of land just north of the city centre of Edmonton. The airport was originally called Blatchford Field, named for former mayor Kenneth Alexander Blatchford. It later was known as the Edmonton Municipal Airport, then as Edmonton Industrial Airport, and then Edmonton City Centre Airport (ECCA), finally ending as Blatchford Field at Edmonton City Centre Airport. Over the years, the three letter code "YXD" continued to be used for the airport by all of the airlines serving the airfield. The airport was closed in November 2013, and , the land is being redeveloped by the City of Edmonton as a planne ...
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Ravula Language
Ravula, known locally as ''Yerava'' or ''Adiyan'', is a Dravidian language of Karnataka and Kerala spoken by the Ravula and Adiyan. It is classified under the category ''Malayalam languages'' in both the linguistics and the Census of India. However their language exhibits a number of peculiarities which marks it off from Malayalam as well as from other tribal speeches in the districts of Kodagu and Wayanad. It is spoken by 25,000 Ravulas (locally called Yerava) in Kodagu district of Karnataka and by 1,900 Ravulas (locally called Adiyan) in the adjacent Wayanad district Wayanad () is a district in the north-east of Indian state Kerala with administrative headquarters at the municipality of Kalpetta. It is the only plateau in Kerala. The Wayanad Plateau forms a continuation of the Mysore Plateau, the southern ... of Kerala. The term 'Yerava' is derived from the Kannada word ''Yeravalu'' meaning borrow. Phonology Adiya's phonology is similar to Malayalam with a few differenc ...
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